Massive river flooding expected in Guangdong, threatening millions

Massive river flooding expected in Guangdong, threatening millions

The southeastern Chinese province has seen torrid downpours and strong winds since yesterday.

Guangdong officials urged departments in all localities today to begin emergency planning.  (Xinhua/AP pic)
BEIJING:
Major rivers, waterways and reservoirs in China’s Guangdong province are threatening to unleash dangerous floods, forcing the government on Sunday to enact emergency response plans to protect more than 127 million people.

Calling the situation “grim”, local weather officials said sections of rivers and tributaries at the Xijiang and Beijiang river basins are hitting peak water levels that only happen once in 50 years, according to state broadcaster CCTV news today.

Massive flooding is expected at the Beijiang basin, CCTV said quoting China’s water resource ministry, prompting it to raise an emergency advisory.

Guangdong officials urged departments in all localities and municipalities to begin emergency planning to avert natural disasters and promptly disperse disaster relief funds and materials to ensure affected people have food, clothing, water and a place to live.

The province has seen torrid downpours and strong winds since Saturday evening due to severe convective weather which has affected several parts of China over the past few weeks.

A 12-hour stretch of heavy rain, starting from 8pm local time, battered the central and northern parts of the province in Zhaoqing, Shaoguan, Qingyuan and Jiangmen.

Some power facilities in Zhaoqing were damaged, cutting power to some places.

“Please look at Zhaoqing’s Huaiji county, which has become a water town. The elderly and children at the countryside don’t know what to do with power outages and no signal,” said one user on the popular social media site Weibo.

Raging muddy flood waters swept one vehicle down a narrow street in Zhaoqing, showed a video released by Hongxing News.

“It rained like a waterfall for an hour and a half on the highway driving home last night,” said another netizen. “I couldn’t see the road at all.”

Many hydrological stations in the province are exceeding water levels, weather officials warned, and in the provincial capital Guangzhou, a city of 18 million, reservoirs have reached flood limits, city officials announced today.

Data showed 2,609 hydrological stations with daily rainfall greater than 50mm accounting for about 59% of all observation stations. At 8am today, 27 hydrological stations in Guangdong were on alert.

Officials have been reducing water levels at the reservoirs through spillways and culvert discharge to ensure downstream flood control.

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