Menu

International

Japan's Late Autumn Leaves Continuously...The city center is around 25 degrees Celsius and 'early summer' is on fire.

2024.11.13 PM 08:56
글자 크기 설정 Share
[Anchor]
Due to abnormal high temperatures in many parts of Japan, autumn leaves are late, and Mt. Fuji has the latest snow in 130 years.

Mid-day temperatures soared to 27 degrees Celsius in the city center, and Okinawa received record-breaking downpours.

Correspondent Kim Se-ho reported from Tokyo.

[Reporter]
Famous maple spots in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan.

Fall foliage is only starting to show little by little, but it's two weeks later than usual.

Other maple spots, including Nagano Prefecture, were also delayed by more than a week.

[Tourist: Yellow, green, and red contrast well, not red as always, so there is a beauty that I have never felt before.]

Temperatures have risen throughout the city to the point where it is hard to believe that it is late autumn weather.It is easy to find citizens wearing short sleeves on the

street.

[Tokyo citizen: It's warmer than I thought. The temperature difference is so big that my body can't keep up.]

Tokyo recorded more than 20 degrees for two consecutive days, and Miyazaki City reached nearly 27 degrees, with more than 25 degrees.

One of the main reasons for raising the temperature of the Japanese archipelago is the four typhoons that occurred at the same time in southern Japan.

Among them, typhoons around Philippine waters are expected to affect Okinawa, which has already been hit by torrential rains, by the weekend.

[Okinawa residents: They can't even live where they sleep, and everyone is joining forces, but there are not enough workers, and I don't know when it will be organized]

The first snow of Mt. Fuji, which has been seen in early October so far, was also observed only on the 8th.

It's the latest time in 130 years of observation.

The Japanese archipelago is paying keen attention to what unexpected conditions different from previous years, such as abnormal high temperatures and late typhoons, will bring.

I'm Kim Se-ho from YTN in Tokyo.




※ 'Your report becomes news'
[Kakao Talk] YTN Search and Add Channel
[Phone] 02-398-8585
[Mail] social@ytn.co.kr