TAIPEI -- A typhoon packing winds up to 162 kph (100 mph) injured more than 100 people as it crossed Taiwan on Monday and headed toward Chinese mainland, but it caused little of the disruption officials had feared after a deadly storm last year.
Typhoon Fanapi, most severe storm so far in Taiwan this year, shattered glass, knocked over motorists on scooters and flooded swathes of land, the island's disaster response centre said.
Some remained closed on Monday.
Shipments from Taiwan's Formosa Petrochemical Corp were disrupted by the closure of a seaport near its 540,000-barrel-per-day Mailiao refinery complex, a company spokesman said.
In August 2009, slow-moving Typhoon Morakot dumped rain for days and set off mudslides that killed about 700 people.
Fanapi, initially a category 3 typhoon on a 1-5 scale, was expected to reach Chinese mainland's Guangdong province late on Monday as a lower-level tropical storm, according to forecasting website Tropical Storm Risk.
Typhoons regularly hit China, the Philippines and Japan in the second half of the year, gathering strength from the warm waters of the Pacific Ocean or South China Sea before weakening over land.
A man reacts as his umbrella snaps against strong winds as Typhoon Fanapi hits Taipei September 19, 2010. [Agencies] |