Off the wire
Tourism drives big retail spending rise in New Zealand  • Walsh Jennings/Ross on road for second win over Chinese pair  • China suffers second straight loss, USA dominates again in Olympic basketball  • Roundup: Myanmar moves peace process step further  • Sun shows temperament of true champion in Rio pool  • American couple die minutes apart after 63 years of marriage  • Roundup: UN chief calls for "shared responsibility" in dealing with refugee crisis  • S.Korea's auto exports post double-digit fall in July  • Australia's ANZ bank profits fall 3 pct in 1st 9 month to June  • Sino-German exhibition highlights Paralympics spirit  
You are here:   Home

Typhoons cause some 300-mln-USD losses in Vietnam

Xinhua, August 9, 2016 Adjust font size:

The first two typhoons that hit Vietnam so far in 2016 have caused damage worth more than 6.7 trillion Vietnamese dong (some 300 million U.S. dollars), according to Vietnam's Ministry of Agricultural and Rural Development (MARD) on Tuesday.

Typhoons Mirinae and Nida hit the country in late July and early August respectively, leaving 20 people dead and missing, injuring 82 others, Vietnam's state-run news agency VNA on Tuesday cited the ministry as saying.

Typhoon Mirinae flooded nearly 256,000 hectares of agricultural land in the affected localities, according to MARD.

More than 31,000 power poles fell across affected localities, causing power disruption. Damages to the electricity sector were estimated at about 384 billion Vietnamese dong (17 million U.S. dollars), according to MARD.

Deputy Prime Minister Trinh Dinh Dung said the main reason for huge losses was shortcomings in weather forecasting.

Vietnam's northern Ninh Binh province was one among localities that were heavily struck by Typhoon Mirinae, but it was not included in an emergency meeting of 12 northern coastal localities where the forecasting center predicted the typhoon would hit, reported the Central Steering Committee on Disaster Prevention's Office.

MARD Minister Nguyen Xuan Cuong said that disaster forecasting needs improvement, both in equipment as well as personnel training. Meanwhile, international cooperation should also be strengthened for more reliable forecasts. Endit