Hong Kong’s leader has tasked the government’s steering committee on handling extreme weather with improving works and facilities in typhoon-vulnerable areas after the city was brought to a standstill by Super Typhoon Ragasa last week.
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Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said on Tuesday that the government had managed to minimise and swiftly recover from the damage of Ragasa, allowing business activities to resume last Wednesday night and society to largely return to normal the next day.
Lee said he had requested the steering committee, led by Chief Secretary Eric Chan Kwok-ki, to evaluate experiences from the storm and make improvements.
“It will systematise and institutionalise our successful experiences to continuously enhance the ability of the government and society to respond,” he said before meeting the Executive Council, the city’s top decision-making body.
“We will also study areas to refine our prevention and response, including optimising the basic works, facilities and equipment in areas frequently threatened by typhoons, to better cope with various extreme weather events in the future and protect Hong Kong.”
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Ragasa triggered the highest-level No 10 typhoon signal for nearly 11 hours last Wednesday. Coastal locations, including restaurants along a Tseung Kwan O promenade and the Fullerton Ocean Park Hotel in Aberdeen, were among those hit by flooding.
Secretary for Development Bernadette Linn Hon-ho said on Saturday that the government would learn from the experience and review coastal facilities, adding that the planned flood wall and breakwater barrier in the two areas could improve the situation.