Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update October 18, 2011: More info on industrial estates

Very briefly:

Today’s Bangkok Post has a story with a couple of new maps.

Here’s a satellite photo of Bangkok and central Thailand flooding:

2011 10 18 bangkok flooding

And here’s a map of the industrial estates that have been affected:

2011 10 18 flooding industrial estates

Meanwhile, the WSJ says today:

Damages from Thailand’s worst flooding in decades continued to mount as parts of another industrial estate were inundated and residents worried that Bangkok remained vulnerable despite recent receding waters.

And yesterday’s NYT reported:

Fortified by dikes, runoff channels and walls of sand bags, and with workers digging and dredging around the clock, Bangkok appeared on Monday to have withstood the worst of the slow-motion tsunami that has been bearing down on it in recent days from the flooded north.

The government’s PR department has an English language update with details on tourist destinations.

The Tourism Authority of Thailand has more.

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Thailand

Thailand flooding update October 17, 2011: Bloomberg on ‘obsolete’ Thai weather radar

Quick note to point out an important story from Bloomberg today.

The headline is “‘Obsolete’ Thai Weather Radar Blamed for Failure to Predict Rain Severity.”

It begins:

Thailand’s weather service blamed obsolete equipment for failing to predict the severity of rains that killed 307 people, saying authorities ignored upgrade requests that could have mitigated the impact of flooding.

Requests from Thailand’s Meteorological Department for a 4 billion baht ($130 million) overhaul of its radar and modeling systems have gone unheeded since 2009, deputy director-general Somchai Baimoung said. The new equipment would allow the department to more accurately forecast seasonal rains, he said, giving dam operators information needed to adjust water levels.

“If we can get this new system, it can help people,” Somchai said in a phone interview yesterday. “No one expected rainfall would be this much. Right now our system, including hardware and software, is obsolete.”

Worth a read.

A recent BP post on Thailand’s dams is also worth checking out.

(All emphasis mine.)

(Bloomberg story via several folks on Twitter.)

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update 2, Oct. 16, 2011: Is Bangkok in the clear?

Here’s the latest as of 11:45 p.m. today, October 16, 2011:

Overview

Reports suggest the worst may have passed here in central Bangkok, with no major flooding. (See news reports below.)

As I mentioned earlier, though, other parts of greater Bangkok — such as the north, west, and east — have been hit.

Ayutthaya and central Thailand have also faced major flooding.

Industrial estates in this part of the country have also been affected. (See below.)

More maps

Google Crisis Response has released an English language map. Below is a screen grab.

2011 10 16 thailand flooding

The map is online here.

This is a good resource, as it allows viewing different sets of data at once or individually.

Here, for example, is the a map of the parts of Thailand that have been affected by floods:

2011 10 16 thailand flooding google map

Traffy.in.th is a map that shows video from traffic Web cams. This could be useful for assessing road conditions.

Here’s what the map of Bangkok looks like. The camera icons can be clicked to see the videos.

2011 10 16 bangkok traffic map

The map is online here.

ThaiRainMap.com shows the portions of Thailand where rain is (or was recently?) falling.

Note that it’s unclear to me how this meterorological information is sourced. Here’s a screen grab:

2011 10 16 thailand rain map

The map is at ThaiRainMap.com.

News Reports

The AP says:

The government expressed confidence Sunday that Bangkok will escape Thailand’s worst flooding in decades, as the capital’s elaborate barriers held strong and floodwaters began receding from submerged plains to the north.

Agriculture Minister Theera Wongsamut said the largest mass of runoff water flowing southward had passed through Bangkok’s Chao Phraya river and into the Gulf of Thailand, and that the river’s levels would rise no higher. He stopped short of saying the threat to Bangkok had passed completely.

The BBC has more:

Thailand’s government has expressed confidence that the capital Bangkok will escape the worst of the country’s current flooding.

Agriculture Minister Theera Wongsamut said there were “good signs” that water levels on the city’s key Chao Phraya river would rise no higher.

The Bangkok Post reports that industrial estates have been affected:

Massive floods swamped a fourth major industrial estate in Ayutthaya yesterday, forcing authorities to order the evacuation of workers.

Water breached floodwalls to inundate Bang Pa-in Industrial Estate despite the efforts of the army and factory workers to reinforce defences.

Bang Pa-in district chief Nathee Borsuwan said people were ordered to move immediately to safe ground.

The water level was recorded at 80cm to one metre.

Soldiers and workers had raced to repair a broken floodwall on the eastern side of the estate since early on Friday but failed due to the strong flow of water.

Since the Chao Phraya River overflowed and burst a dyke at Wat Chaiwattanaram on Oct 4, Ayutthaya and downstream areas have been inundated. The Saha Rattana Nakorn, Rojana and Hi-Tech industrial estates were flooded, causing billions of baht of damage.

PBS NewsHour has a transcript from an Oct. 14 show about the flooding. Here’s a passage that caught my eye.

I was wondering if someone might reference Bush and Katrina:

CATHARIN DALPINO: Well, this is really a test for the new prime minister, for Prime Minister Yingluck, the kind of test that the Bush administration had with Hurricane Katrina, that the Japanese government had with the tsunami and the earthquake.

And every government on this planet, with the possible exception of one or two, now operates under performance legitimacy. How well do they do in these kinds of natural disasters? Certainly, in the past five years, Thailand has been very divided politically. It’s interesting in the past couple of days to see the bipartisan spirit or the multi-partisan spirit.

Yesterday, former Prime Minister Abhisit made a call upon Prime Minister Yingluck. He of course was her rival and he was the one that she turned out in the election. And that was a very, very important symbol.

(All emphasis mine.)

For ongoing info, I suggest the Thai Travel News blog.

And a reminder: previous posts with maps, news reports, and more can be found by clicking the Thailand flooding tag.

That’s it for now. If you’ve sent me an email and I haven’t respond yet, please be patient.

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update, Oct. 16, 2011

Here’s a quick update as of 10 a.m. Bangkok time today, October 16, 2011:

Remember that all past posts — including maps, links to news stories, etc. — can be found by clicking the Thailand flooding tag.

I’m a bit pressed for time, but briefly:

People have written in asking about central Bangkok. What I wrote earlier still holds: Ayutthaya and central Thailand have been hardest hit, and western, northern, and eastern Bangkok are at risk.

Central Bangkok, for the most part, is still dry — from what I’ve seen.

While I’ve noticed that some shops and hotels have erected sandbag defenses here in central Bangkok, I have not seen any major flooding issues for now.

The U.S. embassy in Bangkok has some tips for dealing with the floods.

And their flood information page — especially the maps page — has links to some good resources.

Here are some news reports:

Bloomberg has an overview as of this morning:

Thailand moved to protect the capital, Bangkok, and the main international airport from flood waters as Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said 10 provinces are still at “critical risk” after being inundated.

And there’s this, on the affect on Thailand’s industrial estates:

Yingluck said the situation remains “critical” in 10 of the 26 provinces still affected by flooding. Floodwaters have swamped industrial estates in Ayutthaya province, 67 kilometers (42 miles) north of Bangkok, halting production at factories operated by Japanese manufacturers including Nikon Corp. and Pioneer Corp.

And the AP has this story from last night that provides a good summary of what’s up:

Beside a wall of white sandbags that has become a front line in Thailand’s battle to prevent an epic season of monsoon floods from reaching Bangkok, needlefish swim through knee-high water inside Sawat Taengon’s home.
On one side, a cloudy brown river pours through a canal diverting water around the Thai capital, just to the south. On the other side, homes just like his are unscathed. Whether floodwaters breach fortified barriers like these this weekend will decide whether Bangkok will be swamped or spared.
As of late Saturday at least, the alarmed metropolis of glass-walled condominiums and gilded Buddhist temples remained unscathed, and authorities were confident it would narrowly escape disaster.

More soon…

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update 2, Oct. 14, 2011: Sandbags on lower Sukhumvit

5:30 p.m. Bangkok time, October 14, 2011:

As I have noted in my previous posts on the flooding here in Thailand, central Bangkok has so far been largely unaffected.

Since several people have emailed me to ask about this part of town, I thought I would share the cell phone pic below, which I snapped earlier this afternoon.

I noticed a few large puddles on one of the city’s main thoroughfares, Sukhumvit Rd., most likely due to the recent downpours.

But I was somewhat surprised to see that near Sukhumvit Soi 14 and the Asoke BTS station, someone — likely merchants in the buildings on the left — had set up several sandbag barriers:

2011 10 14 sukhumvit sand bags

For the record: I spoke with a vendor who told me these were, indeed, meant to protect the area from potential flooding.

The sandbags weren’t meant meant, she said, to simply shield the shops from puddles that had already accumulated due to rain.

Again, I did not see any flooding along Sukhumvit, and have not seen any evidence of flooding in central Bangkok.

But as I’ve noted earlier, and as the maps I’ve posted show, other parts of the city — especially to the west, north, and east — have been affected and/or are at risk in the days to come.

As ever, I’ll continue sharing updates.

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update, Oct. 14, 2011: more maps

Here’s the latest as of 12:30 p.m. today, Fri., October 14, 2011.

See my previous Thailand flooding posts for an overview of the situation. This brief dispatch will cover some new maps, as they seem hard to come by.

The Nation today has a detailed map, based on government data, of Bangkok areas that could be at risk in the weeks ahead:

2011 10 14 thailand flooding nation map

Here’s a bigger version.

The Google.org Crisis Response service has a map of Thailand displaying data from various sources. Here’s an embedded image, below.

2011 10 14 thailand floooding google maps

The clickable map is here.

On the right side of the map, you can choose to display various data sources.

This led me to a detailed UN map showing flood waters in central Thailand as of Oct. 11.

Here’s a screen grab, below.

2011 10 14 thailand flooding UN map

The full 3.5 MB PDF file can be downloaded here.

Stay tuned. As ever, you can follow me on Twitter for more updates.

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update, Oct. 13, 2011: today’s map of Bangkok’s threatened areas

Here’s an update on the flooding here in Thailand as of 11:45 p.m. Bangkok time today, October 13, 2011:

Summmary

  • Much of central Bangkok is still okay, but there are ongoing worries about parts of the city outside the center, especially to the west, north, and east. (See new map below.) Much will depend on rains and tides in the coming days.
  • The international airport, Suvarnabhumi, so far appears to be fine.
  • Ayutthaya and central Thailand have been hit hard.
  • Hundreds have died and many more displaced throughout Thailand. But for those wondering about tourism in Thailand, again: most of central Bangkok has not been affected.

    The areas near the Chao Phraya river, however, and particularly the western and northern portions of Bangkok, are at risk. And again, Ayutthaya and central Thailand have faced serious flooding.

New flooding map

Today’s Bangkok Post has a map of the city’s areas that could be hit:

2011 10 13 bangkok flooding map

News reports

Bloomberg has more info on the flooding’s economic implications:

Thailand said floods that have killed more than 283 people and hurt exports may last until the month’s end, swamp Bangkok and cut deeper into economic growth.

The NYT reports on the big picture:

As some of Thailand’s worst flooding in half a century bears down on Bangkok, submerging cities, industrial parks and ancient temples as it comes, experts in water management say it is human activity that is causing nature to run amok.

Deforestation, overbuilding in catchment areas, the damming and diversion of natural waterways, urban sprawl, and the filling-in of canals are combining with bad planning to turn an unusually heavy monsoon season into a disaster, they say.

The AP describes efforts to dig canals:

Workers hurriedly dredged canals and cut new waterways around Thailand’s capital on Thursday in an attempt to protect the city from the country’s worst floods in decades.

And:

Bangkok has been mostly spared so far, but areas on its outskirts have been inundated and authorities fear that flood waters rushing from the north will combine with rains in the next few days to flood the city.

For photos of the floods, see this Atlantic In Focus post from yesterday.

Additional resources

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post:

More updates to come. If you have reports or photos to share, feel free to email me: newley@gmail.com.

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding update: Oct. 12, 2011: Map of Bangkok flood defenses and more

This site continues to receive significant amounts of traffic from folks looking for information on flooding in Thailand.

So here’s a summary of the situation as of 9:45 p.m. Bangkok time today, October 12, 2011:

Summary

Much of greater Bangkok has not been hit by floodwaters. But there are concerns that as tides rise in the coming days, that may change.

The international airport, Suvarnabhumi, so far appears to be unaffected.

Generally, areas near the Chao Phraya river — in Bangkok and in central Thailand — are most at risk. This includes old Bangkok, downtown, near the river.

Much of Ayutthaya has been affected.

Here’s a map called “Bangkok’s Flood-Prevention Plan,” from The Nation.

You can see how authorities are dealing with the flooding here in the Thai capital:

2011 10 12 bkk flooding

Here’s a larger version.

And here, again, is the map of Thailand I posted yesterday, so you can get a sense of which parts of the country have been hit:

2011 10 11 thaiflood

Some news reports from today:

The WSJ describes how industries operating here have been affected:

With rescue teams and troops racing to prevent swelling floodwaters from breaching the defenses of Thailand’s low-lying capital Bangkok, foreign and local businesses continued to calculate the cost of swamped factories and broken supply chains Wednesday, while the prime minister warned retailers against profiteering.

Another WSJ story provides more info on auto makers:

Thailand’s auto exporters are being hit by supply-chain disruptions following the worst flooding the country has seen in nearly half a century.

Bloomberg says that Bangkokians have started hoarding food and water:

Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra urged food producers not to raise prices as Bangkok residents started hoarding rice, instant noodles and bottled water amid conflicting government warnings about floods threatening to inundate the capital this week.

The AP has a dispatch from Ayutthaya:

The lucky ones traverse this flood-submerged Thai city in navy boats and motorized canoes. The rest float on whatever they can find – inner tubes, swan-shaped pedal boats, huge chunks of muddied white plastic foam.

Other resources:

Stay tuned. You can follow me on Twitter for more updates.

Categories
Thailand

Thailand flooding, Oct. 11, 2011: Map of affected areas, links to news reports, Twitter resources, and more

I’m back. More soon on where I’ve been, but for now, here’s an update on the flooding here in Thailand.

I’ve received emails on the topic, and my previous posts have been drawing a lot of traffic. So I wanted to provide a quick update.

Map of flooding

First off, here’s a map of the affected areas as of today, October 11, 2011:

2011 10 11 thaiflood

Visit ThaiFlood.com for more. It appears that the map is updated daily. (Note: It’s unclear to me how this information has been sourced, but it appears to me to be accurate.)

You can see that central Thailand, in low-lying areas near the Chao Phraya and other rivers, has been hit the hardest.

Overview

Bloomberg has the latest details:

  • This is Thailand’s worst flooding in more than 50 years.
  • 269 people have died since July 25.
  • In the last two months, floods have affected 60 of the country’s 77 provinces.
  • High tides will peak early next week — Oct. 16-18. Bloomberg reports that the areas that could be at risk then include central Bangkok; the area around Bangkok’s international airport; and areas near the Chao Phraya.
  • Various industries have been affected, as have rice farms.

Bangkok

I haven’t been down to the area surrounding the Chao Phraya river recently, but I’ve seen images from downtown Bangkok that show its waters are — expectedly — quite high. My understanding is that the areas near the river, in Thonburi and to the north of Bangkok, are most at risk.

The parts of central Bangkok I’ve seen, in addition to the southeast of the city, near the airport, are fine for now.

Ayutthaya

The BBC has a TV report on the situation from Ayutthaya.

Food, shelter, and water are on hand for those who need it, authorities say. Officials are encouraging people to evacuate when they’re told to do so, rather than staying behind to protect their belongings.

Tourism

Thailand’s Public Relations Department says:

The floods are mainly affecting land in low-lying agricultural areas and adjacent to major waterways such as the Chao Phraya River. Warnings of heavy rains resulting in localized flash floods and landslides in mountainous areas or areas adjacent to waterways have been issued for several provinces.

And:

The crest of the floodwaters is currently passing through Bangkok. Most parts of the city have not been affected, while flooding is occurring in some areas adjacent to the Chao Phraya River.

And:

All airports throughout Thailand are operating as per normal. Train services from Bangkok to northern destinations beyond Lop Buri are suspended, with only limited services in the areas affected by the flooding.

And finally:

Tourists planning to travel to the provinces affected by the floods are advised to check the latest weather forecasts for their destination and confirm arrangements with the transportation providers with which they will be travelling. Tourists can also call the TAT Information Line at 1672 to check local conditions, or visit the Thailand Meteorological Department web site at http://www.tmd.go.th/en for updated weather forecasts.

More news reports

Here’s more from The AP, Reuters, and the BBC.

A Google News search will yield additional reports.

Twitter

You can follow the Twitter hashtag #thaiflood for updates.

And a reminder: I maintain a Twitter list of Bangkok journalists, bloggers, and media folks. Many of them are tweeting about the floods.

(All emphasis mine.)

Categories
Misc.

No posts until Oct. 11

2011 09 28 gone fishin

I won’t be posting anything here until Oct. 11.

In the meantime, you might catch me on Twitter, but dispatches there will likely be minimal.

A few administrative reminders:

  • I occasionally post material to my public Facebook page. You can “like” the page to connect with me there.
  • You can sign up to receive RSS updates for all Newley.com posts, of course.
  • I recently decided to start an email list, so I’ll be sending periodic messages in the future.

    These won’t be emailed versions of Newley.com posts, but perhaps more personal missives about what’s new in my world. You can sign up here.

  • And finally, I always welcome feedback on the site. If you’d like to get in touch, send me an email at: newley@gmail.com.

As ever, thanks for reading.

(Image: via.)