Due to the affect of the entrance and heat and moist air, the atmospheric circumstances are very unstable from western Japan to northern Japan.
In the Tokai and the Izu Islands of Tokyo, a “linear rain belt” fashioned by rain clouds that developed one after one other within the morning of the seventh might happen, and the chance of disasters might improve sharply.
Be looking out for landslides, be careful for flooding of low-lying lands, swollen rivers and flooding.
In addition, Typhoon No. 13 strikes northward over the seas south of Japan and is prone to strategy japanese Japan from the seventh to the ninth, so please take note of the newest data.
Weather forecaster Kimiharu Saida explains the outlook for rain and the course of Typhoon No. 13.
*This video was broadcast on “News Watch 9” on September sixth.
(The video is 2 minutes and 21 seconds and can’t be considered on knowledge broadcasting.)

