China’s ‘Hawaii’ under water as tropical storm dumps record rainfall

The southern Chinese province of Hainan has been half-submerged in a year of record-breaking wet weather. Residents ride fallen trees after Super Typhoon Yagi hit Haikou in Hainan on Sept. 7, 2024. (AFP file photo)
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  • Cities in Hainan including Sanya, famed for its palm trees, seafront hotels and sandy beaches, remained waterlogged due to Tropical Storm Trami
  • China’s entire eastern coastline has been tested by extreme weather events this year, scientists warn more intense weather is in the offing

BEIJING: For a third day, extreme rainfall pounded the southern Chinese province of Hainan, known as China’s “Hawaii,” amid the transit of yet another tropical cyclone, leaving the island half-submerged in a year of record-breaking wet weather.
Cities in Hainan including Sanya, famed for its palm trees, seafront hotels and sandy beaches, remained waterlogged on Tuesday due to Tropical Storm Trami to the south. On Monday, Sanya logged 294.9mm (11.6 inches) of rainfall over a 24-hour window, the most for any day in October since 2000.
Trami made landfall in central Vietnam on Sunday after a slow trek across the South China Sea from the Philippines, where it left at least 125 people dead and 28 missing. While Hainan did not take a direct hit from Trami, Chinese authorities took no chances, recalling all fishing vessels and evacuating over 50,000 people.
China’s entire eastern coastline has been tested by extreme weather events this year — from the violent passage of Super Typhoon Yagi across Hainan in September to the strongest tropical cyclone to strike Shanghai since 1949. Scientists warn more intense weather is in the offing, spurred by climate change.
“In October, the national average precipitation was 6.3 percent higher than the same period in previous years,” Jia Xiaolong, a senior official at the National Climate Center, said at a news conference on Tuesday.
Last week, the water along China’s Bohai Sea inexplicably rose up to 160 cm (5.2 feet) in a matter of hours despite the absence of any wind, leading to a tidal surge that flooded the streets of Tianjin and many cities in the northern provinces of Hebei and Liaoning.
“It’s hard to imagine how much power was needed to push such a large area of sea water to one place,” Fu Cifu, an official at the National Marine Environmental Forecasting Center, told state-run Xinhua news agency at the time.
China is historically no stranger to floods, but its prevention infrastructure and emergency response planning are coming under increasing pressure as record rains flood populous cities, ravage crops and disrupt local economies.
Amid disaster recovery efforts this summer, authorities had to provide billions of dollars in additional funding to support reconstruction in multiple regions from the south to the northeast of China.
In July, the country suffered 76.9 billion yuan ($10.8 billion) in economic losses from natural disasters, with 88 percent of those losses caused by heavy rains and floods from Typhoon Gaemi, the most for the month of July since 2021.