Typhoon Khanun Expected to Make Landfall in South Korea with 126 KPH Winds
|Here is an update on the typhoon that will soon make landfall on South Korea:
A woman looks at high waves at a beach in Gangneung, 163 kilometers east of Seoul, on Aug. 8, 2023, as Typhoon Khanun is forecast to hit the country’s southeastern region two days later. (Yonhap)
Typhoon Khanun is expected to make landfall on South Korea’s southern coast this week and proceed northward to North Korea, putting the entire country under its influence and dumping heavy rains nationwide, the weather agency said Tuesday.
Khanun, which was moving northward from waters 300 kilometers south of Japan’s Kagoshima as of 9 a.m., is expected to reach 30 km west of the southern coastal city of Tongyeong at 9 a.m. Thursday to make landfall in South Korea, the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) said.
The typhoon may head further north to pass South Korea by early Friday morning and reach 70 km northeast of North Korea’s capital Pyongyang at 9 a.m. Friday, the agency said.
Yonhap
You can read more at the link, but the storm is not particularly strong with 126 kilometer per hour winds, but as we have seen earlier this summer, flooding from the rain will likely be the most deadly part of this storm.
DiHydrogen Monoxide (DHM) is one of the biggest threats to humans caused by Typhoons. These large and intense storms often separate that from seawater and deposit it on land.
As has been reported many times, this disparately impacts poorer families unable to flee to shelters specifically designed to withstand DHM.
Inquiring minds want to see how South Korea will weather this challenge.