TOKYO -- As a fuller picture of the damage from Typhoon Hagibis emerges, Japan faces weeks of delays in restoring some train service, but supply chains weathered the storm relatively well, attesting to the rise of disaster planning.
Better disaster planning staves off supply chain disruption after storm kills 74

Mudcaked bullet trains sit idled at an East Japan Railway train yard that experienced heavy flooding from Typhoon Hagibis. (Photo by Hirofumi Yamamoto)
TOKYO -- As a fuller picture of the damage from Typhoon Hagibis emerges, Japan faces weeks of delays in restoring some train service, but supply chains weathered the storm relatively well, attesting to the rise of disaster planning.