By Derek Cai and Joel Guinto, BBC News
Scattered debris litters a downtown street as high winds brought by Typhoon Khanun hit the city of Naha, in Japan's Okinawa prefecture.
A typhoon has lashed southern Japan, forcing evacuations and cutting off power to one-third of homes on the Okinawa islands.
Slow-moving Khanun - the third typhoon to hit East Asia in as many weeks - threatens to worsen the heaviest rains in Beijing in more than a century.
The deluge has killed at least 34 people in China so far.
Experts say that extreme weather events like this will become more frequent because of global warming.
Khanun follows two other typhoons, Talim and Doksuri, a super storm, which also drenched the Philippines and Taiwan, killing more than 30 people, in the last few weeks. It was expected to make landfall on China's northeast coast on Wednesday but forecasts now say it is more likely to turn towards the Japanese mainland without hitting China.
Japan's tropical Okinawa islands are expected to face the brunt of Khanun's 252kmh gusts on Wednesday. About 20,000 people have been advised to evacuate and nearly 900 flights have been cancelled at Okinawa's Naha airport. This is peak tourist season for the island. Such strong storms are rare at this time of the year in Japan.
But climate scientists have long warned that global warming would increase the intensity and frequency of storms and heatwaves, both of which have hit parts of Asia in the past month.
Winston Chow, a professor in urban climate at Singapore Management University, likens the extreme weather to a game of roulette, where people place bets on red and black squares. He says the chances of an extreme weather event occurring - that is, a ball landing on a red square - have increased because of climate change.
"The more emissions we put out, the more black squares turn red, so the odds are we will land more frequently on the red every year," he said.
The combined effect of three storms has drenched the Chinese capital Beijing and northern regions such as Tianjin and Hebei province since late last week. In the hard-hit foothill villages of Beijing's Mentougou district, images published on state media showed residents shovelling mud out of their homes while authorities cleared roads and bridges of rocks and uprooted trees.
Beijing alone has experienced the "heaviest rainfall in 140 years" over the past few days, officials said, who have warned of more "significant rainfall".
In the Philippines, large suburbs in the capital of Manila are still submerged, displacing about 300,000 people as rivers swell and dams threaten to spill over.
Last week, 26 people died after a ferry capsized in rough seas south of Manila as Doksuri drifted away from the country's west coast and Khanun gathered strength in the east.
The storms have also destroyed infrastructure and sparked fires and floods across the region, forcing intermittent closures of schools and businesses.
Before the typhoons, large parts of Asia were hit by sweltering heatwaves.
More than 9000 people across Japan were hospitalised for heatstroke in the middle of July, while parts of China recorded record-high temperatures.
A study published in 2021 by the Frontiers in Earth Science, which investigated the impact of typhoons between 1979 and 2016, projected that typhoons could double in destructive power over land by the end of the 21st century.
* This story was first published by the BBC