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Monsoon rains end Phuket's worst drought in 30 years


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Monsoon rains end Phuket's worst drought in 30 years
Phuket Gazette

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Heavy rains are forecast for tomorrow and Wednesday. Photo: Saran Mitrarat

PHUKET: -- Phuket’s worst drought in the last 30 years appears to be at an end, after heavy showers soaked parts of the island over the weekend and more are forecast for the coming days.

“The rainy season has officially begun; these rains are part of the southwest monsoon,” Suntad Panbanpeaw, director of the Meteorological Department’s Phuket office, told the Phuket Gazette today.

Heavy rain is forecast over 90 per cent of Phuket for tomorrow and Wednesday, he added.

The driest January-to-March period in 30 years led Governor Maitri Inthusut to call a special meeting to prepare for water shortages in March.

As a result, the Phuket office of the Provincial Waterworks Authority (PWA) reduced its water output; local municipalities were ordered to submit weekly water reports; and islanders were told to be aware of increased risk of fire (story here).

The 3.3 million cubic meters of water in the Bang Wad Reservoir in March has shrunk to 1.38mn cubic meters, Prapan Deinsirirat, head of water allocation at the Royal Irrigation Department’s Phuket office told the Gazette today.

“Bang Wad is only 18.8 per cent full, and it won’t be completely re-filled until November – the end of the rainy season – but with the rain coming, the island’s water shortages should improve,” Mr Prapan said.

Though the Phuket Provincial Administration Organization (PPAO) had received numerous complaints of water problems throughout the island, sending out water trucks to dry communities as recently as Friday, it received no requests for water on Saturday or Sunday, a PPAO staffer told the Gazette today.

However, anyone who continues to experience water shortages can call the PPAO at 076-213711 or 076-211877, the PWA at 076-319173, or PWA Manager Pisak Chonlayut at 087-0120295.

— Woranut Pechdee

Source: http://www.phuketgazette.net/phuket-news/Monsoon-rains-end-Phukets-worst-drought-30/29411#ad-image-0

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-- Phuket Gazette 2014-05-12

Posted

Thank you for the rain ...

And best of luck with this 'help' line ...

"However, anyone who continues to experience water shortages can call the PPAO at 076-213711 or 076-211877, the PWA at 076-319173, or PWA Manager Pisak Chonlayut at 087-0120295."

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Posted

Though the Phuket Provincial Administration Organization (PPAO) had received numerous complaints of water problems throughout the island, sending out water trucks to dry communities as recently as Friday, it received no requests for water on Saturday or Sunday, a PPAO staffer told the Gazette today.

I presume they were closed this weekend?

Posted

Had a water shortage here in Paklok for about 30minutes... nothing to cry home about... yet... still waiting for that nice monsoon rain though... see lots of lightning every night but hardly any rain.

Posted

Had a water shortage here in Paklok for about 30minutes... nothing to cry home about... yet... still waiting for that nice monsoon rain though... see lots of lightning every night but hardly any rain.

It's a cumin, it's a cumin Man thankGog, hope it reaches Isan very soon.

Posted

Had a water shortage here in Paklok for about 30minutes... nothing to cry home about... yet... still waiting for that nice monsoon rain though... see lots of lightning every night but hardly any rain.

It's a cumin, it's a cumin Man thankGog, hope it reaches Isan very soon.

It will, unfortunately according to US scientists, with 80% certainty we will have a very severe El Nino in the last quarter of this year bringing very high temperatures and drought. So much for the buffalo's predictions.

Posted

It will, unfortunately according to US scientists, with 80% certainty we will have a very severe El Nino in the last quarter of this year bringing very high temperatures and drought. So much for the buffalo's predictions.

US science might be a bit more biased towards politics and money, compared to the rest of the world. The worst are the climate scientists.

I used to enjoy for example NPR science friday podcasts, but for the past years it's been talk about budgets instead of real new science news.

Posted

90% chance of rain yesterday, good they left open the 10%.

Why it TMD, located here in Thailand with people and everything required here on the ground in Phuket, so much worse in its forecasts than others without those resources, like Windguru? And why do news outlets keep publishing their information, even though TMD is really never right?

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