<Anchor> On the

morning of the 6th, a flood advisory was issued on the Han River Bridge. I will connect to reporters.

Reporter Kim Sang-min, first of all, how about the current level of diving bridge?

<Reporter> During the

night, the river was blowing fast.

The water level of the diving bridge, which is under control for the fifth day, has been maintained around 11.5m from 1 o'clock today.

Considering that today 1m has risen from 0am to 7h, and it has risen just that much after 3h from 7am, the rise in water level has diminished.

However, it still exceeds the pedestrian limit of 5.5m.

At 11:00 am today, a flood advisory was issued on the Han River Bridge, about 3.5 km from here.

It has been 9 years since July 2011 that the flood advisory has been issued on the main stream of the Han River.

<Anchor>

What will the Han River level be in the future?

<Reporter>

Han River Flood Control is saying that the water level will not be maintained when judged conservatively.

Fortunately, heavy rains in Seoul, Gyeonggi, Chungcheong, and northern Gangwon were lifted in five days.

The key is the amount of discharge from the Paldang Dam, which directly affects the water level downstream of the Han River. Soyang River Dam, the top stream of the North Korean River, was opened in three years, and the Chungju Dam in the Namhan River continues to discharge.

The Paldang Dam, where water flows from the Namhan and Bukhan Rivers, has no flood control function, so it still has 12 out of 15 water gates open and flows 16,000 tons of water per second downstream.

The amount of discharge has been reduced by 2,000 tons more than two hours ago, and rain has not arrived in the upper reaches of the Bukhan River yesterday.

When the discharged water is 16,000 tons, the time to reach the downstream of the Han River is about 4 hours, so we need to watch the situation a little more.