Two people killed, thousands without power as Typhoon Talas hits central Japan

Weather agency forecasts further torrential rain and urges caution for landslides and flooding

A police officer moves a sign under heavy rain in the Ginza district of Tokyo on Saturday. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP via Getty Images
A police officer moves a sign under heavy rain in the Ginza district of Tokyo on Saturday. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP via Getty Images

A typhoon hit central Japan on Saturday with torrential rain and fierce winds, killing two and leaving tens of thousands of households without power, the country’s Kyodo news agency reported.

Shizuoka city, southwest of the capital, Tokyo, was hit especially hard, seeing a record 417mm (16.42 inches) of precipitation since the rain started on Thursday, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

Winds at the centre of Typhoon Talas were blowing at about 65kph, with peak gusts of about 90kph, it said.

A man in his 40s was killed in a landslide and a 29-year-old man was found dead after his car plunged into a reservoir, the news agency reported.

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Power was also cut to about 120,000 households, supplier Chubu Electric Power Grid Co said, adding that a landslide had knocked over two electricity pylons.

“We apologise deeply for the inconvenience caused by this power outage. The outage is being prolonged due to landslides, among other factors, but we are doing all we can to fix it as swiftly as possible,” the company said on Twitter.

By Saturday afternoon, power had returned to the majority of households, though some 2,800 were still without power. Chubu Electric Power Grid estimated that it would take a few months for the pylons to be restored, according to Kyodo.

Central JR restarted some of its bullet train services, which had been suspended from Friday evening because of the rain.

Although the Japan Meteorological Agency downgraded the typhoon to an extratropical cyclone on Saturday morning, it forecast further torrential rain in Shizuoka and urged caution for landslides and flooding.

Yokohama city, some 30km south of Tokyo, also issued an evacuation advisory at about noon on Saturday to about 3,000 residents.

Typhoon Nanmadol, one of the biggest storms to hit Japan in years, killed at least two people and brought ferocious winds and record rainfall to the west of the country on Monday. — Reuters