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Riders from the storm

written by John Walton | March 2, 2019

This story about how Osaka Kansai Airport recovered from the devastating impact of Typhoon Jebi by John Walton first appeared in the January-February 2019 edition of Australian Aviation.

Kansai Airport is a recognised engineering marvel. (Shutterstock)
Kansai Airport is a recognised engineering marvel. (Shutterstock)

When September’s Typhoon Jebi slammed into Kansai Airport in Osaka Bay with winds of over 200km/h, the realities of climate change hit home as hard as the 2,591-tonne fuel tanker Houn Maru, which broke free from its moorings and collided with the single 3km bridge to the island airport, severing links to the mainland and stranding thousands of passengers who were sheltering in the airport and thousands more staff at work.

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Comment (1)

  • Richard

    says:

    Very informative John especially for those planning a trip to Japan during the Typhoon season.
    My studies of USN operations in the Philippine and South China Seas and those around Formosa and Japan itself from the 1920’s to 1945, reveal that Typhoons were a common occurrence.
    Maybe they had climate change as well then!

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