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Meteorological Department Warns Of More Violent Seas In South


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Posted

WEATHER

Met warns of more violent seas in South

The Nation

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The eastern coast of Thailand will likely face three to four more rounds of high and violent waves over the next few months, according to the Meteorological Department.

Waves of up to five metres in height have been lashing many southern provinces since Sunday.

"It's the monsoon surge," the department's deputy director-general, Somchai Baimuang, said yesterday, "The phenomenon will recur three to four more times before the end of February."

In the wake of threatened ongoing big waves, evacuations were needed in some areas and many locals were panicked about the possibility of a tsunami and storm surge.

An unprecedented tsunami disaster ravaged six southern provinces on December 26, 2004.

Smith Dhammasaroj, a former chief of the Meteorological Department, reportedly described the high waves in the South as a result of "storm surge" that then triggered even wider panic.

"That's not true," said Assoc Prof Dr Thanawat Jarupongsakul about Smith's reported comment. Thanawat heads the unit studying disasters and area-oriented information in the Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University.

According to this academic, a storm surge will emerge only if a typhoon or a tropical storm strikes.

"But the high waves along the coast of Thailand's South now result from southwest and northeast monsoons," Thanawat said.

He said the waves were higher than before just because of climate change.

"In the past, waves in the Gulf of Thailand were one to three metres high. But the height [now] goes up to around five or six metres," Thanawat said.

He said Malaysia and Indonesia had seen a similar trend.

Like Somchai, Thanawat said the big and strong waves would continue because cold weather was heading to Thailand.

"Follow the weather news and you won't get easily panicked," Thanawat said.

Somchai said when sea conditions are getting rough, the Meteorological Department always issued warnings. Some precautions, however, had proved insufficient.

In Surat Thani's Don Sak district, the high waves swept across the breakwater and damaged the road running along the coastline.

In Chumphon, about 10 tourists were stranded on Pitak Island when waves were too high for them to travel back to the mainland. "The waves were over four metres high," Tambon Bang Nam Jued Administrative Organisation chairman Banyong Intamart said.

Paknam Laungsuan Municipality mayor Winai Anantamek said the waves had already caused more than Bt20 million in damage to local authorities.

In Songkhla, more than 50 locals in Ban Tha Khen yesterday evacuated to a temple after big waves damaged their seaside homes. Songkhla Governor Krissada Boonraj said relief items were already being given to the affected locals.

"We will inspect the damage caused to consider further remedial action," he said.

In Ranong, a storm uprooted many trees and caused a power blackout.

"We have warned people to be extra careful when going out to sea," the province's disaster-prevention and mitigation chief Chasan Kongruang said.

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-- The Nation 2011-12-27

Posted

The weather forecast for the 1st of Jan is up to 4.5 metres at my current location 100km East of Koh Samui. The forecast was pretty accurate the other day at the same location, so it may be a good idea to be ready for it.

Cheers

Posted

The weather forecast for the 1st of Jan is up to 4.5 metres at my current location 100km East of Koh Samui. The forecast was pretty accurate the other day at the same location, so it may be a good idea to be ready for it.

Cheers

Are you on an oil platform in the middle of the gulf? What is 100km east of Samui?

Posted

The weather forecast for the 1st of Jan is up to 4.5 metres at my current location 100km East of Koh Samui. The forecast was pretty accurate the other day at the same location, so it may be a good idea to be ready for it.

Cheers

Are you on an oil platform in the middle of the gulf? What is 100km east of Samui?

Correct first time, oil and gas facility.

Posted

Nakhon Si Thammarat on high alert for evacuation after stronger wave warning

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NAKHON SI THAMMARAT, Dec 28 – The southern province of Nakhon Si Thammarat is prepared to evacuate coastal areas after a warning from the government’s disaster response agency Wednesday morning.

The Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department warned seaside residents that ocean waves will intensify Dec 29-30, while strong, high waves continue to pummel shoreline in Thailand’s southern provinces, causing damage to coastal houses.

Nakhon Si Thammrat Governor Wirote Jiwarangsan and local Red Cross officials visited residents on the Taloompuk peninsula in Pak Phanang district where the situation is still worrying and wave keeps striking shore communities, which continue to take a beating with flooding in a number of seaside villages.

Some villagers evacuated to higher roadside areas seeking shelter from possibly encroaching water.

The governor distributed relief supplies to local residents and advised them to pay close attention to weather news. Small fishing boats are advised to stay ashore.

The provincial administrative organisation has provided proper temporary shelters for evacuees and provided them with initial assistance. (MCOT online news)

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-- TNA 2011-12-28

Posted

This is not a recreational thread. This is a warning topic about serious weather conditions. Off topic posts deleted.

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