Chinese authorities have issued a series of urgent warnings as heavy downpours threaten several regions with flood over the next three days. Officials are calling for heightened precautions against flash floods, landslides, rising river levels, and severe urban flooding.
To map out a defense strategy, the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters alongside the Ministry of Emergency Management (MEM) held a massive joint meeting on Sunday. They synchronized plans with weather, water, housing, and transport ministries to coordinate flood control in high-risk zones.
Here is a breakdown of the current situation and the response strategy.
The Rising Threat
The rainy season is hitting a critical peak. Forecasters expect heavy to torrential rain with localized extreme downpours to hammer southwestern and southern China through next Friday. The storm system will heavily impact areas south of the Yangtze River, the Jianghan Plain, and regions between the Yangtze and Huai rivers.
Notably, the Liujiang River in the Pearl River basin has officially registered its first major numbered flood of the year.
Key Priorities for Local Officials
Top officials have instructed local teams to focus heavily on the following frontline defenses:
Early Warnings: Step up real-time weather monitoring and update emergency alerts instantly.
Geological Dangers: Closely track mountain torrents and potential landslides.
Water Management: Watch smaller rivers prone to sudden overflow, and clear city drainage to prevent urban waterlogging.
Evacuations: Move people out of high-risk areas and protect farmland from getting completely submerged.
Flood control Response
China operates on a four-tier emergency response system, where Level I represents the most severe threat. Currently, the headquarters has maintained a Level-IV flood-control emergency response for eight key regions: Jiangsu, Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan, Guangxi, Chongqing, Guizhou.
Meanwhile, flood risks have lowered enough in Zhejiang, Guangdong, and Yunnan for officials to officially deactivate their Level-IV emergency status.
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