Climate Change: City and Power

climate change: As of 10 p.m, according to The Japan Times. Sunday, some 110,000 households were still without power. A focus is on whether lessons learned from the typhoon can be used in the future at a time when the severity of natural disasters has intensified amid global climate change. ; As many as 930,000 households were hit by blackouts due to Faxai, the 15th named storm of the year. Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. expected power supply to return to the city of Chiba mostly by Monday, but said Sunday that about 10 more days are needed in some parts of the city, as well as the city of Futtsu and the town of Kujukuri in the east of the prefecture and the cities of Tateyama and Minamiboso, located in the south of the Boso Peninsula. One of the reasons why the blackouts spread is the collapse of two steel towers in Kimitsu, which is estimated to have cut electricity to 100,000 households. Since a heavy thunderstorm was forecast to hit the region from Sunday night to Monday morning, the firm said the recovery work could be suspended, causing further delays. (news.financializer.com). As reported in the news.

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