Saturday, February 8, 2014

A Rare Heavy Snowfall Hits Tokyo, Stalls Travel

February 8,2014
 
 
 
 
 
A man walks against snowstorm on a snow-covered road in Yokohama, Japan, Saturday, Feb. 8, 2014. The Japan Meteorological Agency issued the first heavy snowfall warning for central Tokyo in 13 years. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Heavy snow disrupted flights and train services across Japan Saturday, as the weather agency issued a severe storm warning for Tokyo.
NHK reported 27 centimeters (just under 11 inches) of snow blanketed central Tokyo by late Saturday night, local time. The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) issued its first heavy snowfall warning for central Tokyo in 13 years.
"Tokyo only averages 4.3 inches of snow each year. The last time they picked up an eight-inch-plus snowstorm was Feb. 12, 1994," said weather.com meteorologist Nick Wiltgen.
(MORE: 6 Snowiest Cities in America)
The JMA warned that snow and rain would continue through the night, but that skies would clear gradually Sunday.
Several universities in Tokyo delayed the start of entrance exams because of delays in metropolitan trains and subways, known for almost always being on time.
Major carriers Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways suspended domestic flights from Tokyo's Haneda airport. Some bullet trains were delayed and parts of expressways were closed.
Japanese media said dozens of injuries were being reported from people slipping and falling, or crashing their cars.
Weather.com meteorologist Jonathan Erdman said it takes a true "Goldilocks" scenario for Tokyo snow. "In this case, low pressure skirted close enough to the coast, but wasn't too strong to dislodge cold air near the surface. Hence, the rare heavy blanket of snow in Japan's capital."
MORE: Winter Storm Orion Hitting Coast-to-Coast
A traffic jam, Feb. 6, 2014, near Albany, Ore. As many of 25 vehicles collided in clusters in southbound lanes near Albany, the state Department of Transportation said. (Flickr/Oregon Department of Transportation)

No comments:

Post a Comment