<em>Mainichi Shimbun</em>
11 March, 2011
Planes and cars drift together on the runway, as tsunami waters subside at Sendai Airport.
Koichiro Tezuka
Koichiro Tezuka was born in 1977 in Tokyo, Japan. Since 2003, he has worked as a staff photographer of The Mainichi newspapers. From 2006 to 2009, had was based in the Sendai off...
Natori, Miyagi prefecture, Japan
Planes and cars drift together on the runway, as tsunami waters subside at Sendai Airport. On 11 March, at 14.46 local time, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of the Tohoku region of northeastern Japan, setting off a powerful tsunami. Although anti-tsunami seawalls were in place, the waves of the Tohoku tsunami—sometimes more than three times the height of the defenses—washed over the tops of the walls, causing many to collapse in the process. Floodwaters thrust up to 10 kilometers inland, destroying over 45,000 buildings and damaging some 230,000 vehicles. The havoc wreaked on the infrastructure made recovery operations and the search for survivors extremely difficult. Eleven months later, the death toll stood at 15,848, with 3,305 people still reported missing. The tsunami damaged part of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, leading to shutdown and a nuclear alert. The loss of input to the national grid led to countrywide rolling blackouts to conserve electricity. Port closure and disruption to the transport system had a severe impact on Japan’s manufacturing and export-led economy.