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WEATHER REPORT
Huge storm hits US West Coast, two dead
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (AFP) Dec 12, 2014


Heavy snow feared to cast chill over Japan election
Tokyo (AFP) Dec 13, 2014 - Heavy snow hit large swathes of Japan on Saturday, the eve of a general election, fuelling speculation the ruling coalition is on course to an easy victory on low voter turnout.

It was already snowing heavily in large areas of the country along the coast of the Sea of Japan (East Sea) on Saturday, though Tokyo remained clear and sunny.

The weather agency warned of snowfall of as much as 80 centimetres (30 inches) in central and northern regions by the Sunday morning, when polls open.

The poor conditions could put off already unenthusiastic voters and push turnout to a record low for the elections, which were called two years ahead of schedule.

Early opinion polls have shown Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's coalition is likely to secure more than 300 of the 475 contested seats, giving them the super-majority they need in the powerful lower house to force through legislation.

The ruling coalition is made of Abe's conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), supported by businesses and a network of campaign groups nationwide, as well as its junior partner Komeito which is backed by a big lay Buddhist group.

Their predicted victory is largely thanks to an unprepared and underwhelming opposition, political pundits have said.

A recent survey has found just two-thirds of voters expressed any interest in the vote, down from 80 percent ahead of the December 2012 election when Abe rose to power.

"Abe's expected victory is the result of the self-destruction of the opposition," Shinichi Nishikawa, professor of politics at Meiji University in Tokyo, told AFP earlier this week.

"For many voters, there is no alternative but the LDP," Nishikawa said.

Abe has billed Sunday's election as a referendum on his pro-spending growth policy.

His two years in power have been characterised by his bid to reinvigorate Japan's sagging economy with what he has called the "three arrows" of Abenomics -- monetary easing, fiscal stimulus and structural changes.

The first two arrows have largely hit their target -- the once-painfully high yen has plunged, sending stocks higher.

But the reform arrow remains in the quiver; critics say Abe has not been bold enough to take on the vested interests that are the real key to reversing nearly two decades of economic underperformance.

A new mandate from the electorate would give Abe a straight four years' run at some of the more difficult reforms.

The US West Coast's most ferocious storm in years triggered rockslides, power outages and hurricane force winds on Friday in southern California, a day after claiming two lives in the Northwest.

At least 450,000 customers have been hit by power outages since the storm hit Wednesday in northern California, Washington state and Oregon, according to the PG & E utility, although by Friday morning, power had been restored to most homes.

The storm swept south into usually sunny southern California overnight, bringing commuter chaos with five times as many accidents on Los Angeles freeways, as motorists not used to rain struggled to control their cars.

In Ventura County, northwest of Los Angeles, a rockslide engulfed several homes in Camarillo Springs, where over 100 homes were forcibly evacuated in the early hours as the storm arrived.

Two people had to be rescued from a swollen river just north of downtown LA, emergency officials said.

Further inland in the mountains, up to six inches (15 centimeters) of snow was forecast, bringing chaos but also relief to local ski areas that have suffered from lack of precipitation in a historic three-year drought.

The storm was felt as far north as Canada, where it knocked out power to 70,000 homes and businesses on the Pacific coast after dumping nearly five inches of rain on the region.

News reports said a homeless man and a young boy were killed by falling trees in the state of Oregon on Thursday.

Severe flooding, mudslides and high winds -- some gusting up to 140 miles (225 kilometers) per hour -- wreaked havoc as the unusually powerful storm buffeted Los Angeles and San Diego even further south.

- Rockslides after wildfires -

Among southern California's hardest hit areas were foothills stripped of vegetation after being scorched by wildfires over the past few years, and which now are particularly prone to mudslides.

"Flash flooding and debris flows will be a particular threat in and below the recently burned areas," the National Weather Service said in a bulletin.

The NWS predicted heavy rainfall throughout the day in southern California, with "hourly rainfall rates between one-half and one-and-one-half inches."

The inclement weather sweeping into the region was being carried on a current with the unlikely name "Pineapple Express" -- an intense stream of moisture stretching from Hawaii to the US West Coast.

Hundreds of flights were canceled Thursday at San Francisco International Airport, but Los Angeles International Airport on Friday reported no increase in major delays.

The American Red Cross, working with local officials, opened emergency shelters across the region, providing warm meals and lodging to those who lost power in the storm.

US weather experts said the last time the region was hit by such heavy rainfall was in October 2009.

Experts said that while rain was welcome to compensate for California's historic drought, it would take a lot more to have a real impact.

"The current storms will not alleviate the drought, unfortunately," Stephanie Pincetl, an environmental studies professor at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), told AFP.

"We will need several years of unusually high rainfall," she said.


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WEATHER REPORT
Thousands without power as storm batters California
San Francisco (AFP) Dec 11, 2014
About 150,000 people were left without power Thursday as a powerful storm slammed into drought-stricken California, bringing snow, heavy rain and ferocious winds to the western US state. Winds gusting up to 230 kilometers (140 miles) per hour and the biggest snowfalls for six years were reported, although it was expected to do little to compensate for a drought now in its third year. The ... read more


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