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LANDSLIP WARNING
A landslip warning will be issued by the Hong Kong Observatory
whenever the Geotechnical Engineering Office expects a high chance of many landslips
as a result of persistent heavy rainfall. The Warning is aimed at predicting
the occurrence of numerous landslips, and isolated landslips which cannot be
predicted will occur from time to time in response to less severe rainfall when
the Warning is not in force.
On the issuance of such a warning, a Landslip Special Announcement
will be sent to the local radio and television stations for broadcast to the
public and the announcement will be updated at regular intervals until the likelihood
of landslips has diminished.
The Landslip Warning supplements routine weather forecasts
by drawing attention to risk from landslips due to heavy rain. It is intended
to prompt the public to take precautionary measures to reduce their exposure
to risk posed by landslips, and to assist engineers, contractors and others
who are likely to suffer losses from landslips. The warning also alerts the
relevant government departments and organisations to take appropriate actions,
such as opening of temporary shelters, search and rescue operations, closure
of individual schools and relief work. It is issued irrespective of whether
other severe weather warnings, e.g. tropical cyclone signals or rainstorm warning
signals, are in force.
Like all forecasts, a Landslip Warning represents an assessment
of the weather based on the latest information available at the time. There
will unavoidably be false alarms as well as occasions when heavy rain which
may cause landslips develops suddenly and affects parts of Hong Kong before
a warning can be issued.
> Hong Kong Slope Safety (Civil Engineering and Development Department)
RAINSTORM AND LANDSLIPS
Although heavy rainstorms are not uncommon at any time of the
year in Hong Kong, most of them happen during the summer months. Indeed, close
to 80 per cent of the annual rainfall occurs between May and September. The
highest ever hourly rainfall recorded at the Hong Kong Observatory in Tsimshatsui
is 109.9 millimetres which occurred during the rainstorm on 8 May 1992, but
higher hourly rainfalls have been recorded in some other parts of Hong Kong.
Every year heavy or prolonged rain causes landslips in Hong
Kong. Property owners, engineers, architects, contractors and others concerned
should take all necessary precautions against damage, and the public should
take precautions against risk of personal injury. On average, the Landslip Warning
is issued about three times every year, and on average two or three hundred
landslips occur each year. Most of these are small in scale, but many are large
enough to cause injury to people, damage to property and blockage of roads.
Hong Kong has a bad history of landslips. It has steep hilly
terrain, intense seasonal rainfall and very dense hillslope development. In
particular, many thousands of substandard man-made slopes were constructed in
the past, largely during the years of rapid development which followed World
War II, and many of these slopes are prone to failure at times of heavy rainfall.
In the past 50 years, a total of more than 470 people have been killed by landslips.
On two days alone, during severe rainstorms in July 1966 and June 1972, 86 and
148 lives were lost respectively due to landslips.
Since the introduction of effective geotechnical control in
Hong Kong in 1977, and with concerted government effort over the past 20 years
to reduce the risk from landslips to the community, casualties and disruption
from landslips have been greatly reduced. However, the risk can never be entirely
eliminated, and some tragedies continue to occur. The collapse of an old masonry
wall in an estate in Kennedy Town after torrential rain July 1994 killed five
people and seriously injured three, and caused the evacuation of more than 2,500
people. Heavy rain following the passage of Severe Tropical Storm Helen in August
1995 brought widespread landslips, causing three deaths. 1997 was the wettest
year on record to that time, resulting in 548 landslips being reported, with
the loss of two lives.
METEOROLOGICAL WATCH
In order to issue timely warnings to the public, the Hong Kong
Observatory keeps a continuous watch of the weather in and around Hong Kong.
Readings from a network of more than 70 automatic rain-gauges covering the whole
of the Special Administrative Region are telemetered to the Observatory Headquarters
to provide real-time information essential for assessing the likelihood of landslips.
In addition to conventional meteorological observations, the Observatory's weather
radar system provides a good means to continuously monitor the movement and
development of rain-bearing clouds. Meteorological satellite imagery at high
resolution are received at frequent intervals, providing a bird's eye view of
cloud patterns over Asia and the western Pacific.
POINTS TO NOTE
- Listen to radio or television broadcasts on the latest
warnings. Contact your district office or the nearest police station in emergencies.
- Take appropriate measures to avoid possible damage or loss
of life due to landslips. When the Landslip Warning is in force, you should
cancel non-essential appointments, stay at home or in a safe shelter. Pedestrians
should avoid walking or standing close to steep slopes and retaining walls.
Motorists should avoid driving in hilly areas or on roads with landslip warning
signs.
- If you have received a notice to evacuate because of landslip
danger, or if you believe that your home is endangered by an unstable slope
or retaining wall, or overhanging boulders, you should make immediate arrangements
to move to a safe shelter.
- Once the Landslip Warning is issued, temporary shelters
will be provided by the Home Affairs Department. You may call the HAD emergency
hotline at 2835 1473 to locate the temporary shelter nearest to you.
- For an update on the state of weather warnings members
of the public may call the Observatory's dial-a-weather service at 1878 200
or the Observatory's internet homepage (http://www.weather.gov.hk/wxinfo/currwx/current.htm).
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