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Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi

Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi

RTHK17 hours ago

Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi
Rongjiang county in Guizhou is left to pick up the pieces in the aftermath of Typhoon Wutip and its floodwaters also hit Guangxi on Thursday, just as a tropical depression makes landfall in the province. Photo: Reuters
Towns and villages by a major river in Guangxi lay half-submerged as floodwaters from a province upstream roared into the mountainous region, with the expected landfall of a tropical cyclone later on Thursday compounding disaster risk.
The massive flooding that overwhelmed the cities of Rongjiang and Congjiang in Guizhou province on Tuesday has spread downstream to other parts of southwest China, including rural settlements in Guangxi by the banks of the Liu river, which originates from Guizhou.
The Guangxi township of Meilin was the worst-hit, state media reported on Thursday, with floodwaters at their peak more than four metres above what was considered safe.
Even as floodwaters passed and dangerous surface run-off began to recede, southwestern China – from Guizhou and Guangxi to Chongqing, Yunnan and Sichuan – remained on high alert for secondary disasters such as road collapses, landslides and hydro-dam overflows.
"Rural areas face significant challenges due to limited infrastructure and resources," said Chen Xiaoguang, professor at Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu.
"Strengthening these systems in rural counties will be key to reducing the long-term impact of increasingly severe weather."
Urban areas typically have a stronger capacity to respond to floods, he said, but not all cities are equally equipped.
Rongjiang, for instance, is a county-level area where resources are more limited.
On Tuesday, the Guizhou city of Rongjiang, located at the confluence of three rivers, was hit by a flood on a scale that Chinese meteorologists said could only happen once in 50 years, and at a speed that shocked its 300,000 residents.
The flow rate of one section of the Liu river in Rongjiang surged to 11,800 cubic metres per second, the equivalent of nearly five Olympic-sized swimming pools. That was more than 80 times the average rate of flow. At least six people were killed.
As deluge-hit areas began to remove silt left behind by the flooding and restore power, telecommunications and water networks, rains from a tropical depression expected to make landfall in Guangxi on Thursday night could affect restoration and cleanup work or even risk a new round of flooding.
The tropical depression made landfall on Hainan early on Thursday and later again in Guangdong, bringing more rain to a region still reeling from Typhoon Wutip two weeks ago.
Extreme storms and severe flooding, which meteorologists link to climate change, increasingly pose major challenges for Chinese officials, as they threaten to overwhelm ageing flood defences, displace millions of people and cause billions of dollars in economic losses. (Reuters)

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Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi
Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi

RTHK

time17 hours ago

  • RTHK

Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi

Storm set to pile on the woes for Guangxi Rongjiang county in Guizhou is left to pick up the pieces in the aftermath of Typhoon Wutip and its floodwaters also hit Guangxi on Thursday, just as a tropical depression makes landfall in the province. Photo: Reuters Towns and villages by a major river in Guangxi lay half-submerged as floodwaters from a province upstream roared into the mountainous region, with the expected landfall of a tropical cyclone later on Thursday compounding disaster risk. The massive flooding that overwhelmed the cities of Rongjiang and Congjiang in Guizhou province on Tuesday has spread downstream to other parts of southwest China, including rural settlements in Guangxi by the banks of the Liu river, which originates from Guizhou. The Guangxi township of Meilin was the worst-hit, state media reported on Thursday, with floodwaters at their peak more than four metres above what was considered safe. Even as floodwaters passed and dangerous surface run-off began to recede, southwestern China – from Guizhou and Guangxi to Chongqing, Yunnan and Sichuan – remained on high alert for secondary disasters such as road collapses, landslides and hydro-dam overflows. "Rural areas face significant challenges due to limited infrastructure and resources," said Chen Xiaoguang, professor at Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. "Strengthening these systems in rural counties will be key to reducing the long-term impact of increasingly severe weather." Urban areas typically have a stronger capacity to respond to floods, he said, but not all cities are equally equipped. Rongjiang, for instance, is a county-level area where resources are more limited. On Tuesday, the Guizhou city of Rongjiang, located at the confluence of three rivers, was hit by a flood on a scale that Chinese meteorologists said could only happen once in 50 years, and at a speed that shocked its 300,000 residents. The flow rate of one section of the Liu river in Rongjiang surged to 11,800 cubic metres per second, the equivalent of nearly five Olympic-sized swimming pools. That was more than 80 times the average rate of flow. At least six people were killed. As deluge-hit areas began to remove silt left behind by the flooding and restore power, telecommunications and water networks, rains from a tropical depression expected to make landfall in Guangxi on Thursday night could affect restoration and cleanup work or even risk a new round of flooding. The tropical depression made landfall on Hainan early on Thursday and later again in Guangdong, bringing more rain to a region still reeling from Typhoon Wutip two weeks ago. Extreme storms and severe flooding, which meteorologists link to climate change, increasingly pose major challenges for Chinese officials, as they threaten to overwhelm ageing flood defences, displace millions of people and cause billions of dollars in economic losses. (Reuters)

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