Tropical storm hits tourism in Thailand

Bloomberg

Thailand’s most powerful tropical storm in decades has weakened after strong wind and flash floods disrupted oil production and flights, leaving thousands of tourists stranded near the nation’s southern beaches.
Wind from tropical storm Pabuk slowed to 55 kilometres per hour (34 mph) from
65 kph on Saturday before crossing the peninsula to the Andaman Sea at 9 am Bangkok time, the Meteorological Department said in its latest update. Bangkok Airways Pcl resumed flying on Saturday between Bangkok and Koh Samui to pick up stranded passengers after suspending flights, according to an airline statement.
The storm disrupted the peak period for the Thai tourism industry, which makes up for about a quarter of the country’s economy.
Overseas visitor numbers had only just recovered after a slump following a tour boat accident off Phuket in July that killed dozens of Chinese holidaymakers.
The economic loss from the tropical storm may reach 5 billion baht ($156 million), the Bangkok Post reported, citing local authorities. One fisherman was killed, while another is still missing, according to the newspaper.

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