SET Index seen upper bound this week #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/business/30379984?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

SET Index seen upper bound this week

Dec 30. 2019
Set Index in 2019 :
The Stock of Thailand (SET) Index ended Friday (December 27) at 1,578.22, up 0.92 per cent from 2018’s closing of 1,563.88.

Source: Kasikorn Securities 

Set Index in 2019 : The Stock of Thailand (SET) Index ended Friday (December 27) at 1,578.22, up 0.92 per cent from 2018’s closing of 1,563.88. Source: Kasikorn Securities
By The Nation

Kasikorn Securities has predicted the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) Index to be upper bound this week (December 30 to January 3) in the range of 1,590 and 1,600 after it increased last week. They also forecast a lower bound SET index in the range of 1,565 and 1,555.

The index closed at 1,578.22 on Friday (December 27), up 0.34 per cent from the previous week. However, the daily trade value went down 39.4 per cent from the previous week to average a daily turnover of Bt34.4 billion. Fund flows from long-term equity funds and retirement mutual funds supported the market last week.

During 2019, as of December 27, the index moved in the range of 1,543.22 and 1,748.15. It peaked in the middle of the year and went down later due to the impact of the US-China trade war, uncertainty over Brexit, violence in Hong Kong and slower recovery of the Thai economy. External factors improved in the later months of the year and helped the Thai bourse recover some of the losses.

The SET Index ended the week on Friday at 1,578.22, up 0.92 per cent from last year’s closing of 1,563.88.

This week, the market awaits Bank of Thailand’s November economic report. Among key US economic data due this week is the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) in December, and PMIs of China and euro-zone, also to be released this week.

All eyes on BOT data as baht hits highest level in six years #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/business/30379983?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

All eyes on BOT data as baht hits highest level in six years

Dec 30. 2019
Rising baht:  
The baht rose to 30.15 per against the US dollar on Friday (December 27), up 8 per cent from last year’s closing price of Bt32.55/dollar.
Source : Kasikornbank

Rising baht:   The baht rose to 30.15 per against the US dollar on Friday (December 27), up 8 per cent from last year’s closing price of Bt32.55/dollar. Source : Kasikornbank
The baht appreciated to Bt30.15 against the US dollar last week, its highest level in six years on Friday, Kasikornbank said.

Kasikornbank has forecast that the baht could move in a range of Bt30-30.30 to the dollar this week (December 30 to January 3). Investors sold dollars after US economic data showed signs of disappointments such as weaker-than-expected orders for durable goods and lower new-home sales.

The baht was up 8 per cent in 2019 from the 2018 closing price of Bt32.55, according to Kasikornbank.

The baht’s appreciation has been driven by the country’s current account surplus and investor perception of the baht being a safe-haven currency.

As of December 27, the baht moved in a range of Bt30.15 to Bt32.43 in 2019. Thai exporters have complained about the baht’s appreciation hurting exports and recently Japanese carmaker Mazda said it might move a part of its car manufacturing facility in Thailand back to Japan due to the impact of the strong baht.

The market will be closely watching the Bank of Thailand’s economic report for November, which is due to be released on Monday, as well as December’s inflation rate. Among key external events, investors are waiting for the signing of a trade deal between the United States and China and release of the Fed’s meeting minutes. Key US economic data due this week include the United States purchasing managers index, consumer confidence index in December, number of home-purchase contracts, the home price index and jobless benefits claims.

Revised Securities Law to take effect March 1, disclosure requirements stricter #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/business/30379982?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Revised Securities Law to take effect March 1, disclosure requirements stricter

Dec 29. 2019
An investor checks share prices at a securities brokerage in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province. [Photo provided to China Daily]

An investor checks share prices at a securities brokerage in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province. [Photo provided to China Daily]
By China Daily/ANN

China’s revised Securities Law will take effect on March 1, setting the legal basis for a phase-in registration-based reform across the whole capital market, according to the top legislature on Saturday.

The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress voted to adopt the revision of the Securities Law — the fundamental law governing the capital market — on Saturday, after the fourth review of the draft revision during a six-day session.

Based on the experience of the sci-tech innovation board, the revised law made new arrangements of initial pubic offerings to gradually implement the registration-based system across the whole market, said Cheng Hehong, director of the Department of Legal Affairs of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the top securities regulator.

Specifically, the revision abolished the system of public offering review committee, whereby the CSRC reviews public offering applications, and authorized stock exchanges to review the applications. The CSRC will instead be responsible for securities registration, Cheng said.

The revision also authorized the State Council, China’s Cabinet, to decide the scope and steps of registration-based reform, Cheng said, adding that the country will phase-in implementing the registration-based system and ensure a smooth transition.

“The CSRC will fully consider the actual situation of the market, and especially coordinate securities issuances, securities registrations and the market capacity to digest (the reforms),” Cheng said at a briefing on Saturday.

The CSRC is ramping up efforts to push ahead the registration-based reform on the ChiNext, Shenzhen’s innovative enterprise-heavy board, he added.

The revised law made information disclosure requirements stricter and streamlined requirements of issuing securities, in compliance with the registration-based reform.

The revision also focused on improving the mechanism of investor protection, and set a separate section of investor protection, according to Gong Fanrong, an official with the NPC’s Financial and Economic Affairs Committee.

It distinguished ordinary investors with professional investors and made different investor protection arrangements accordingly, and established a system of securities civil action that fits characteristics of the domestic market, Gong said.

Moreover, illegal behaviors in capital markets will face much higher punishments under the revised law.

For instance, if a firm indulges in fraudulent public offerings and has yet to issue the securities, it will face fines of between 2 million yuan ($285,000) and 20 million yuan, according to the revision.This contrasts with the current effective standard between 300,000 yuan and 600,000 yuan.

Under the new law, the CSRC could also forbid securities trading by individuals engaging in serious securities legal breaches for a period and even lifetime, on top of the current ban on being hired as senior officials in listed firms and carrying out securities business.

Ivanka Trump declines to say whether she would remain in Washington if her father wins re-election #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379990?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Ivanka Trump declines to say whether she would remain in Washington if her father wins re-election

Dec 30. 2019
File Photo: The President And First Lady Attend Hanukkah Reception At The White House

WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 11: White House senior advisor Ivanka Trump attends a Hanukkah Reception in the East Room of the White House on December 11, 2019 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

File Photo: The President And First Lady Attend Hanukkah Reception At The White House WASHINGTON, DC – DECEMBER 11: White House senior advisor Ivanka Trump attends a Hanukkah Reception in the East Room of the White House on December 11, 2019 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
By The Washington Post · Felicia Sonmez 

White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump declined to say whether she would remain in Washington if her father wins re-election in 2020, describing the decision as one that will depend on what’s in the best interests of her children.

Trump, the eldest daughter of President Donald Trump, made the remarks in an interview with CBS News’ “Face the Nation” that was taped Dec. 19 and aired Sunday. She and her husband, White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, have three children: Arabella, Joseph and Theodore.

“I am driven first and foremost by my kids and their happiness,” Ivanka Trump said when asked by host Margaret Brennan whether she plans to remain in Washington should her father win a second term. “So, that’s always going to be my top priority. And my decisions will also be flexible enough to ensure that their needs are being considered, first and foremost. So they will really drive that answer for me.”

During her time in Washington, Ivanka Trump has sought to be the face of the Trump administration’s more centrist and bipartisan policy initiatives, even as she has faced criticism over her role as an aide to her father and her use of a private email account to conduct government business.

In the interview, she emphasized her work on agenda items such as workplace development. She declined to say, however, whether she might one day consider a political bid of her own.

“Oh, gosh. You know, for me, the politics is truthfully less interesting,” Ivanka Trump told Brennan. “The policy and the impact of lifting communities and changing people’s lives and the stories I’ve … heard from the people I’ve met across this nation are just amazing.”

President Trump’s campaign manager, Brad Parscale, earlier this year described the Trump family as “a dynasty that will last for decades,” prompting speculation that the president’s children may one day run for office.

Ivanka Trump also told CBS that “the day I walk into the West Wing and I don’t feel a shiver up my spine is the day I’ve been here too long.”

“And I still, every day, feel a tremendous humbling and sense of privilege that I’m able to do the work that I came to Washington to do, that the president’s empowered me,” she said. “And I feel just incredibly grateful to be able to give back to a country that’s given me so much.”

‘No blondes allowed’: 50 years after a junior high experiment, students say it had ‘a big impact’ #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379987?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

‘No blondes allowed’: 50 years after a junior high experiment, students say it had ‘a big impact’

Dec 30. 2019
The Washington Post interviewed students and the principal at Cabin John Junior High School throughout the National Brotherhood Week experiment. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Matthew Lewis

The Washington Post interviewed students and the principal at Cabin John Junior High School throughout the National Brotherhood Week experiment. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Matthew Lewis
By The Washington Post · Diane Bernard |BROTHERHOODWEEK-HISTORY|

Blond eighth-grader Jan Shipe Brown remembers getting off the school bus at her junior high school in Potomac, Maryland, on Feb. 17, 1969 – the start of National Brotherhood Week.

As she walked to the building in her matching turquoise sweater and skirt, she saw the first of many signs of bias. “Blondes use the side door,” read a sign hung over the main entrance. Dark-haired student guards blocked those doors to make sure blond students didn’t use them. After entering through the side entrance, she saw a giant “No Blondes Allowed,” banner strung across the staircase leading to her home room. Hall monitors jeered at her, directing her to the blonds-only stairwell. In class, her teachers didn’t call on her. At lunch, she was forced to sit at a separate table from her brunette friends, segregated based on the color of her hair.

“I have never forgotten that week, it was a seminal event in my life,” Brown said recently in a phone interview.

Brown and her fellow students at Cabin John Junior High were participating in an experiment with prejudice, a program so controversial that parents protested against it and national news media covered it. From Philadelphia to San Mateo, California, newspapers reported on the exercise – even Walter Cronkite devoted a segment to it on the “CBS Evening News.”

Tom Warren, Cabin John’s principal, conceived of the idea of turning Brotherhood Week, an official nationwide observance of tolerance that started in the 1930s, into a lesson on the development and spread of prejudice. But instead of discriminating against the handful of black children in the school, they would make a point by targeting blond students.

By creating a reproduction of the national struggle on race relations, the experiment illustrated contentious issues of the day: Is prejudice just a Southern problem? Can you teach children to be prejudiced or to resist prejudice? Issues that, 50 years after the experiment, are still part of the national dialogue on race today.

The Thursday before Brotherhood Week, Warren sent a notice to parents saying the blond students will experience some of the inconveniences and denial of privileges that many Americans encounter every day, according to a story about the experiment in The Washington Post.

Then, on Monday, “the message that blondes are inferior, undesirable persons was broadcast over the school’s public address system and circulated in a one-sheet newspaper,” The Post story said.

The blond students were forced to use separate restrooms, doors and drinking fountains, relegated to separate tables in the lunchroom and library and shunned by teachers and brunettes, even their friends, as Brown and others in the junior high at the time described it.

At first, some students, blond and brunette alike, thought it was a joke. Ann Shipe Cooper, Brown’s cousin, was also a blond eighth-grader at the school. The first day, the treatment by students and teachers seemed like a passing inconvenience. But by the second day, the abuse began to feel never-ending, she said.

“Imagine if you had to go through all your life like this,” Cooper said. “It had a big impact on me. There’s no way somebody can make you feel what it’s like with just words.”

Cooper, Brown and others who attended school that Monday and Tuesday say that some brunette hall monitors were overzealous about enforcing the rules, many times crossing the line into bullying.

“I remember some kids getting beaten up and pushed around because some kids took it as an opportunity to just act out,” said Cindy Minter, a brunette ninth-grader. “It was just bringing out what African Americans were going through all of the time.”

“It seemed like the tough guys had free rein to harass people,” agreed Chuck Sullivan, who was also in ninth grade. “I was grateful I wasn’t a blond – we were all kind of scared of some of the enforcers.”

Mark Walston, another ninth-grader, also remembers that “the hall monitors became like neo-Nazis, they took their job just way too far and got physical with the kids.” He says as a result, some blond girls cried and went home early during the first two days of the exercise.

Most of the former students interviewed identified students who went overboard. However, when contacted, none of those enforcers responded to repeated requests for interviews.

Sullivan says it wasn’t until years later that he realized what Warren was trying to do: make the students realize that prejudice harms all involved – the perpetrators and the victims.

Even though he was a brunette, Charlie Bermant, an eighth-grader, could relate to the blond experience. He had moved to conservative Potomac the year before from liberal Woodstock, New York, and wore his hair longer than other boys at Cabin John Junior High.

“I was bullied constantly for my hair and for being a hippie,” he said in a phone interview from Washington state, where he is a retired journalist.

“Just the week before, these same people were pushing me around for having long hair and now they’re just turning the same energy onto these blond kids,” he said.

By Tuesday, news media had descended on the school. Local and national TV crews crowded the hallways. The Post photographed and interviewed several students, including Bermant. Below his photo, in the story on the front page of the Metro section, his quote said, “Blonds are just sitting there and acting like Uncle Toms.”

“My quote was taken out of context,” Bermant, who was 14 at the time, said. He said he was at first disappointed that the blond students weren’t more radicalized. “I mean, two kids dyed their hair brown to fit in,” he said. “I was furious at them.”

Peter Mellem was one of those kids. He recently confessed that he had just moved to Cabin John Junior High and didn’t want to stick out for any reason.

“I was just a scared 14-year-old kid,” he said. “I didn’t want to get beat up. Besides, I had no real-life experience with prejudice.”

But by the second day, blond students did start to fight back. Some students wore signs that said, “Blond Power” or “Blondes Are Humans Too.” One brunette girl even dyed her hair bright blond, which earned a “tremendous amount of respect” from Bermant, he said.

Brown said she had an easier time facing the frenetic discrimination when she was with a group of blond students, “because we were in it together.” She had a much harder time being in a classroom and not getting called on, she said. “That felt much more personal and directed at me.”

Eric Notham, a blond who was also quoted in The Post, says he had the “mistaken impression that segregation was something that had happened in the South” and not in Potomac where he lived.

In The Post article, his photo appeared along with his statement, “I don’t think discrimination is really a problem in this school.” Looking back, Notham “deeply regrets” that comment, which he eventually learned was inaccurate.

Unworldly at such a young age, other students hadn’t been exposed to racism in their suburb. Yet in 1969, Montgomery County still had vestiges of its Southern past, according to Walston, who is now a historian and author living in Olney, Maryland.

The county’s schools had only integrated in 1961, just eight years before the experiment, Walston said. A Confederate statue still stood in front of the county courthouse. The Baronet Theater in nearby Bethesda was segregated until 1961, and “then only after the owner, who refused to integrate it, sold the theater instead,” he said.

In 1969, only 15 of the 800 students at Cabin John Junior High were African American, according to The Post. All of them lived in the all-black Potomac neighborhood of Scotland. Houses there didn’t have running water or indoor plumbing until the mid-1960s, according to Joyce Siegel, who helped run a campaign to build modern housing in the neighborhood at the time.

The junior high school students were surrounded by signs of discrimination in their county, but now the Brotherhood Week experiment forced them to confront the idea head on.

With blond students leaving school and the media disruption, by Wednesday of that February week, principal Warren had received numerous complaints from parents, including Rep. Dan Kuykendall, R-Tenn., who had two sons at the school.

“I resent the fact that they are planting the idea of prejudice in the minds of our children,” Kuykendall said in The Post. “A Negro woman who works for my family eats at my table and is accepted as a member of the family,” he added.

But Warren said he also received many compliments on the program, according to the CBS News report. Even so, on Wednesday he called off the experiment, saying the important lesson had been learned.

Reflecting back, the students today have mixed feelings about the week, but most said it was worthwhile.

Brown said the three days enhanced her thinking and made her feel more open to other groups of people. Although not directly related to the experiment, she says she ended up marrying an African American – D.C.-area jazz pianist Reuben Brown.

“My mind was opened up by the blond experiment. I started seeking out other kinds of friends and I wanted to learn more about them and where they came from,” she said.

The experiment spawned a deep feeling for what it’s like to be discriminated against, even for those who just watched, Walston said.

“A decade after the first black man was elected president, we still see the same deeply ingrained racism in America,” he said. “We’ve had the rise of white nationalists and social media postings of African Americans harassed by whites,” he added.

“We could use something like this now because anyone who says we’re in a post-racial society, just open your eyes and take a look.”

Suspect in custody after 5 stabbed at rabbi’s home in New York, officials say #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379985?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Suspect in custody after 5 stabbed at rabbi’s home in New York, officials say

Dec 29. 2019
By The Washington Post · Hannah Knowles, Katie Mettler

Authorities say a suspect is in custody after five people were stabbed Saturday night in New York in an attack that Jewish leaders say shattered Hanukkah celebrations at the home of a rabbi.

Officials have yet to announce a motive in Saturday’s violence in the town of Monsey, but the incident comes in the wake of other attacks decried as anti-Semitic. Police in the nearby town of Ramapo said just after midnight that a man who fled the scene was in custody as investigations continue.

The victims, all Hasidic Jews, were taken to local hospitals, according to the Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council in Hudson Valley, which said the stabbings occurred at the home of Orthodox Rabbi Chaim Rottenberg just before 10 p.m. Yossi Gestetner, the Council’s co-founder, said Rottenberg’s son was among the victims.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he was “horrified” by the “latest in a string of attacks against members of the Jewish community in New York this week.” New York City leaders said Friday that police would increase their patrols in several neighborhoods in light of anti-Semitic violence, and earlier this month, New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said suspects in a shooting at a kosher deli in Jersey City “held views that reflected hatred of the Jewish people, as well as the hatred of law enforcement.”

Cuomo said he is directing the state police’s hate crimes task force to investigate the stabbing.

“Let me be clear: Anti-Semitism and bigotry of any kind are repugnant to our values of inclusion and diversity and we have absolutely zero tolerance for such acts of hate,” he said in a statement.

Rockland County Executive Ed Day said law enforcement response was “immediate and effective.” He called the attack a “heinous crime.”

“Getting such a horrific call in the midst of a local holiday celebration is a stark reminder that even in a community as good and serene as ours, evil can visit us,” Day said in a statement. “Violence of any kind will not be tolerated here in Rockland.”

Bangkok turns quiet after New Year exodus #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379975?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Bangkok turns quiet after New Year exodus

Dec 29. 2019
By The Nation

Bangkok fell under a quiet spell as thousands of Thais and foreigners left the capital to other provinces to usher in the New Year.

Most streets wore a deserted look, in stark contrast to the heavy traffic since Sunday morning on outbound roads.

Govt lauds its efforts since taking office #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379995?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Govt lauds its efforts since taking office

Dec 30. 2019
By THE NATION

Government spokeswoman Narumon Pinyosinwat on Monday (December 30) announced the government’s achievements in the first five months of its term.

“The top priority is to improve people’s livelihood across three main dimensions: Transportation, agricultural income, and assistance to low income earners,” she said, offering the following details.

1. Transportation

The government has continued work started during the previous administration on expanding the transportation network with a focus on reducing pollution and traffic congestion, In Bangkok, the electric rail system has been expanded in several areas. These are: 14 km of the MRT Blue Line (Hua Lampong-Bang Khae, Bang Sue-Tha Pra), 19 km of the MRT Green Line (Mo Chit-Saphan Mai-Kukot), 22 km of the MRT Orange Line (Cultural Centre-Min Buri), 15 km of the MRT Light Red Line (Bang Sue-Taling Chan), 26.3 km of the MRT Red Line (Bangsue-Rangsit), 34.5 km. of the MRT Pink Line (Khaerai-Min Buri) and 30 km of the MRT Yellow Line (Lad Phrao-Samrong). When all the networks are connected, the system will help reduce commuting times in the metropolitan area, as well as reduce the use of personal cars and polluting emissions.

Furthermore, the government has opened additional passenger terminals at U-tapao, Rayong and Pattaya international airports, which will help accommodate additional 3-5 million passengers from both domestic and foreign destinations. Another notable transportation-related project initiated by the government is the high-speed train project connecting Don Mueang – Suvarnabhumi – U-tapao airports that will help promote the tourism and industries in eastern economic corridor areas (EEC), resulting in improvement of infrastructure and additional employment in surrounding communities.

2. Agricultural income

The government has initiated price guarantee schemes for several economic crops as well as implemented parallel measures to stabilize the prices of agricultural products, such as providing a subsidy for production and harvesting costs to rice farmers at Bt500 per rai (maximum 20 rai per household) and giving loans to farmers to slow down the release of the produce to market to prevent oversupply. Most importantly, the government has announced that biodiesel B10 will be the standard diesel for domestic consumption, which helped stabilize the price of palm oil and helped farmers sell their supplies at reasonable prices without the need for additional subsidy.

3. Assistance to low income earners

The government has implemented several measures specifically tailored for low income earners, such as extending the utility bill subsidy programme for households that use less than 50 units of electricity and less than Bt100 of water until September 2020, providing a travel allowance at Bt500 per month and a consumer products allowance at Bt200/300 per month, refunding 5 per cent of VAT when spending via state welfare card and depositing 1 per cent of spending to the National Saving Fund in the cardholder’s name. Moreover, the government also helps low income earners by providing occupational training and fixing debt problems in hope that they can eventually improve their economic status and sustainably eradicate poverty from Thai society.

“The government’s policies focus mainly on the need of people while at the same time aim to drive the country forward in the modern world. There are several more projects that the government is working on which it will communicate with the people in later occasions. Please stay tuned for more updates,” added Narumon.

Tourists camp out on Doi Inthanon despite thundershowers and hails #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379992?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Tourists camp out on Doi Inthanon despite thundershowers and hails

Dec 30. 2019
By THE NATION
Kitsiam Khongsatri, chief of Doi Inthanon National Park said this week that the thundershowers and hail storms that have hit Doi Inthanon since Saturday (December 28) have not stopped visitors determined to set up camp on the highest mountain in Chiang Mai province to witness the beautiful panoramic view as the sun rises.

 

“We have dispatched staff to check out tourists’ tents on Doi Inthanon for any damage from the hail stones,” he said. “Furthermore, we have opened a large conference room at National Park Office in case it gets too wet and campers need a place to spend the night.”

Kitsiam said that currently there are approximately 300 tents set up on Doi Inthanon and around 700 tourists who have preferred to sleep under canvas with only two opting to use the conference room.

Meanwhile, Wutthichai Somwiphat, chief of Doi Suthep-Pui National Park said that there were thundershowers in many areas of Chiang Mai plus hail in some areas, but the camping area of Doi Suthep-Pui had only seen a little rain. “However, we have prepared emergency rain shelters for tourists,” he said. “Most importantly, motorists should use extra caution when driving up and down the mountains, since the rains have caused the road to become slippery.”

Upper Thailand gets colder by 1-3 °C, isolated thundershowers and hails forecast #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30379991?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Upper Thailand gets colder by 1-3 °C, isolated thundershowers and hails forecast

Dec 30. 2019
By THE NATION

The strong high-pressure system covering the Northeast of Thailand and the South China Sea will bring cooler temperatures to the Northeast with drops of 1-3° Celsius while the westerly trough over the upper North and the upper Northeast of Thailand could lead to isolated thundershowers and hail in the North, the Thailand Meteorological Department forecast on Monday (December 30).

The East and the Central regions will see isolated light rain with chilly temperatures in the morning, mostly in the upper part. Easterly winds will prevail over the South and the Gulf with isolated thundershowers.

The weather forecast for the next 24 hours is as follows:

Northern region: Cool in the morning with isolated thundershowers and hails in 10 per cent of the area; t lows of 16-21 degrees and highs of 26-33 degrees Celsius. Temperature likely to drop to 5-12 degrees on hilltops.

Northeastern region: Cool to cold with isolated thundershowers in 10 per cent of the area; lows 15-19 degrees, highs 31-33 degrees Celsius. Temperature likely to drop to 7-11 degrees on hilltops.

Central region: Cool in the morning and isolated rain; lows 20-22 degrees, highs 33-34 degrees Celsius.

Eastern region: Cool in the morning and isolated rain; lows 20-22 degrees, highs 32-35 degree Celsius; wave height 1 metre.

Southern region (east coast): Partly cloudy with thundershowers in 20 per cent of the area; lows 21-23 degrees, high 31-33 degrees Celsius; wave height 1 metre, increasing to 1-2 metres during storms.

Southern region (west coast): Partly cloudy with thundershowers in 20 per cent of the area; lows 21-24 degrees, highs 32-34 degree Celsius; wave height 1 metre, increasing to 1-2 metres during storms.

Bangkok and surrounding area: Partly cloudy with isolated rain, lows 22-23 degrees, highs 33-35 degrees Celsius.