
Tropical storm slams into parts of southern China already reeling from deadly flooding
A tropical depression has made landfall on China 's southern Hainan island, bringing a fresh spell of heavy rain and strong winds to a region already reeling from deadly floods.
The system, which crossed the island's northeastern coast early on Wednesday, is expected to move across Hainan before making a second landfall in Guangdong province.
The latest storm has raised fears of renewed flooding in areas still struggling to recover from the impact of Typhoon Wutip, which killed at least five people and forced hundreds of thousands to evacuate just two weeks ago.
Meteorological officials said rainfall totals could exceed local thresholds for flash flooding, and authorities warned of landslides, swollen rivers and road closures in parts of Hainan, Guangdong and neighbouring Guangxi.
Local emergency teams have been deployed to vulnerable areas, and residents have been urged to stay indoors and avoid travel until conditions improve. Schools were closed in several cities, and ferry services between Hainan and the mainland were temporarily suspended.
Last month's floods had already overwhelmed drainage systems in parts of Guizhou and Hunan, submerging farmlands, damaging infrastructure and prompting some of the country's first red alerts for flooding this season.
On Tuesday, the Rongjiang government raised the flood alert to its highest level. Since last week, heavy rains from an intensified East Asian monsoon have pummeled Guizhou's mountainous region and other southern Chinese areas, shattering rainfall records in some parts.
A video showed a driver trapped in his truck mid-air after a bridge collapsed amid heavy rains in the region.
The early arrival of typhoon systems this year has added pressure to disaster response mechanisms, with experts warning that the combined effects of heavy rainfall and rising temperatures are increasing the frequency and severity of extreme weather events in China.
The central government has ordered inspections of dams and embankments, and relief supplies are being dispatched to provinces facing potential compound weather impacts.
Officials said the current tropical depression was not expected to strengthen into a typhoon but could still bring disruptive rain across densely populated coastal areas in the coming days. The full impact on agriculture and infrastructure will likely become clearer once the storm system passes.
China's National Meteorological Center issued yellow heat alerts this week in the northern parts of the country as the south continued to face floods.
China has been grappling with a rise in both the intensity and unpredictability of its weather patterns, with scientists linking these changes to the growing influence of global heating on the region's monsoon cycle.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
17 minutes ago
- The Independent
Death toll from this month's flooding in South Africa rises to over 100
The death toll from severe floods that inundated parts of South Africa's rural Eastern Cape province two weeks ago has risen to 101, with a 12-month-old baby the youngest fatality, authorities said Thursday. Two children are still missing. Heavy rain on June 9 and 10 caused by a cold front resulted in floods that swept away victims and their houses, trapped others in their homes, damaged roads and other infrastructure and cut electricity supplies. Zolile Williams, an Eastern Cape provincial government official, provided the updated death toll at a press briefing Thursday and said search operations continued for the two missing children. Williams said 94 of the 101 victims had been identified and their bodies had been handed over to their families. The victims included 38 children. More than 4,000 people have been left homeless across the Eastern Cape province. South Africa last week declared a state of national disaster, allowing the government to release funding for relief services. Williams said that an estimated $288 million would be needed to replace damaged infrastructure and the province, one of the poorest in South Africa, needed help from the national government. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa visited the worst affected sites two weeks ago and blamed the heavy rains and catastrophic floods on climate change. Another cold front hit South Africa's Western Cape province this week, bringing days of rain and causing flooding in and around the city of Cape Town. South Africa is vulnerable to strong weather fronts that blow in from the Indian and Southern Oceans. In 2022, more than 400 people died in flooding caused by prolonged heavy rains in the east coast city of Durban and surrounding areas. ___


Sky News
4 hours ago
- Sky News
Six killed in China floods as tropical storm threatens further devastation
At least six people have died after floods overwhelmed China's Guizhou province. The flooding has spread to other southwestern parts of the country, submerging towns and villages, ahead of a tropical depression. Parts of neighbouring Guangxi province are half-submerged, with the township of Meilin worst hit, state media reported on Thursday. Floodwaters peaked at more than 4 metres (13ft) above what was considered safe. Rongjiang and Congjiang in Guizhou province have already seen flooding, but now the wider region is on alert for potential road collapses, landslides and hydro-dam overflows. On Tuesday, at least six people died when Rongjiang - a city of around 300,000 residents where three rivers meet - was hit by a flood on a scale that Chinese meteorologists said could only happen once in 50 years. At one point, the flow rate in the River Liu was more than 80 times the average. Displaced residents were forced to stay at local hotels, which were also hosting rescue personnel and reconstruction workers, according to Reuters. As deluge-hit areas began to remove silt left behind by the flooding and restore power, water and phone lines - a tropical depression was expected to strike Guangxi on Thursday night. The storm risks a new round of flooding. The tropical depression made landfall on China's island province of Hainan early on Thursday, and later again in Guangdong on the mainland. It brought further rain to a region still suffering after Typhoon Wutip two weeks ago. Extreme storms and severe flooding, which meteorologists link to climate change, increasingly pose major challenges for Chinese officials. The storms threaten to overwhelm ageing flood defences, displace millions of people and cause billions of dollars in economic losses. " Climate change is making extreme weather more frequent and unpredictable," said Chen Xiaoguang, a professor at Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu, in Sichuan province.


The Independent
6 hours ago
- The Independent
Tropical storm slams into parts of southern China already reeling from deadly flooding
A tropical depression has made landfall on China 's southern Hainan island, bringing a fresh spell of heavy rain and strong winds to a region already reeling from deadly floods. The system, which crossed the island's northeastern coast early on Wednesday, is expected to move across Hainan before making a second landfall in Guangdong province. The latest storm has raised fears of renewed flooding in areas still struggling to recover from the impact of Typhoon Wutip, which killed at least five people and forced hundreds of thousands to evacuate just two weeks ago. Meteorological officials said rainfall totals could exceed local thresholds for flash flooding, and authorities warned of landslides, swollen rivers and road closures in parts of Hainan, Guangdong and neighbouring Guangxi. Local emergency teams have been deployed to vulnerable areas, and residents have been urged to stay indoors and avoid travel until conditions improve. Schools were closed in several cities, and ferry services between Hainan and the mainland were temporarily suspended. Last month's floods had already overwhelmed drainage systems in parts of Guizhou and Hunan, submerging farmlands, damaging infrastructure and prompting some of the country's first red alerts for flooding this season. On Tuesday, the Rongjiang government raised the flood alert to its highest level. Since last week, heavy rains from an intensified East Asian monsoon have pummeled Guizhou's mountainous region and other southern Chinese areas, shattering rainfall records in some parts. A video showed a driver trapped in his truck mid-air after a bridge collapsed amid heavy rains in the region. The early arrival of typhoon systems this year has added pressure to disaster response mechanisms, with experts warning that the combined effects of heavy rainfall and rising temperatures are increasing the frequency and severity of extreme weather events in China. The central government has ordered inspections of dams and embankments, and relief supplies are being dispatched to provinces facing potential compound weather impacts. Officials said the current tropical depression was not expected to strengthen into a typhoon but could still bring disruptive rain across densely populated coastal areas in the coming days. The full impact on agriculture and infrastructure will likely become clearer once the storm system passes. China's National Meteorological Center issued yellow heat alerts this week in the northern parts of the country as the south continued to face floods. China has been grappling with a rise in both the intensity and unpredictability of its weather patterns, with scientists linking these changes to the growing influence of global heating on the region's monsoon cycle.