<Anchor> As

you have heard, the typhoon estuary will disappear in China overnight, but in the form of low pressure, it brings a rainstorm to Korea. Up to 500mm of heavy rain can be poured into the metropolitan area and the west and west by tomorrow (5th), and it is forecast that the rain will spread nationwide.

Reporter Jung Gu-hee reports.

<Reporter>

Typhoon Estuary No. 4, the biggest variable of the rainy season, landed in China.

As the distance between the typhoon and the Korean Peninsula approaches, the water vapor from the typhoon is entering the Korean Peninsula.


This water vapor activates the rainy season front again overnight.

Today, heavy rains have flowed around northern Gyeonggi and northern Gangwon, but it is expected to rain again in the Seoul metropolitan area and Chungcheong until tomorrow morning.

By tomorrow, more than 500mm in Seoul, Gyeonggi, and Yeongseo, and 300mm in the north of Chungcheong, were also forecast.

As a result of analyzing about 600 heavy rain damages by the Environmental Prediction Research Institute, even if the precipitation per hour exceeds 30 mm, the probability of damage is increased to 50%, 50 mm to 75%, and 60 mm to 90%.

From midnight to tomorrow morning, there is a high likelihood of additional damage in the central region, with a local rain forecast of 50 to 100 mm per hour.

Moreo is also a problem.

Typhoons are extinguished in the interior of China overnight, turning into temperate cyclones.

It is not a typhoon class whirlwind, but the low pressure also brings strong wind and rain.

As this low pressure directly flows over the Korean Peninsula, the day after tomorrow the rain and the wind will be stronger.

The Korea Meteorological Administration has issued a preliminary bulletin to strong winds across the country except Gyeongsangdo and Jeju Island as of tomorrow night.

(Video editing: Lee So-young)