
Tropical depression hits southern China two weeks after Typhoon Wutip
BEIJING, June 26 (Reuters) - A tropical depression made landfall on China's island province of Hainan early on Thursday, the country's National Meteorological Centre said, bringing more rain to a region still reeling from Typhoon Wutip two weeks ago.
The tropical depression is expected to move from the city of Wenchang across the island's northeast tip, before heading back out into the South China Sea and making a second landfall in China's southern Guangdong province, state broadcaster CCTV said, gradually weakening along the way.
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.
The storm will again test the flood defences of the densely populated Guangdong province, as well as Guangxi and Hunan further inland.
Five people died and hundreds of thousands of people had to be evacuated when Wutip roared through the region from June 13 to 15, dumping record rains and damaging roads and cropland.
Hashtags

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

TimesLIVE
4 days ago
- TimesLIVE
Tibetan glacial lake drainage triggered deadly flood in Nepal, climate body says
The deadly flood in Nepal's Bhote Koshi River that killed at least nine people and left more than two dozen missing this week was triggered by the draining of a supraglacial lake in the Tibet region of China, a regional climate monitoring body said on Wednesday. At least 19 people, including six Chinese workers at the Beijing-aided Inland Container Depot, remain missing in Nepal after Tuesday's floods that also washed away the "Friendship Bridge" that links Nepal and China. China's official Xinhua news agency said 11 people were unaccounted for on the Chinese side of the mountainous border region. The Kathmandu-based International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (Icimod) said satellite imagery showed the flood originated from the draining of the lake north of Nepal's Langtang Himal range.

TimesLIVE
7 days ago
- TimesLIVE
Dozens missing after floods on Nepal-China border
More than two dozen people are missing after heavy rainfall in the Tibet region of China triggered a deluge in the Bhote Koshi River, which flows through Nepal and China, and washed away the 'Friendship Bridge' that connects them, officials said on Tuesday. At least 18 people are missing in Nepal while China's Xinhua news agency said 11 people were missing on the Chinese side. In Nepal, the missing include six Chinese workers and three policemen, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority said on X, adding that eight electric cars were also washed away and a small hydroelectric plant damaged in the flood. The missing Chinese were working at the inland container depot being constructed with Chinese assistance about 80km north of the capital Kathmandu, said Arjun Paudel, a senior administrative official of Rasuwa district. 'The river also swept away some containers with goods imported from China. There is a big loss [of property] and we are collecting details,' he told Reuters. The Nepal army has rescued 11 people and search and rescue operations are still under way, spokesperson Raja Ram Basnet said. China has been increasing its investment in Nepal in recent years in domains including roads, power plants and hospitals. The Asian giant has been battered by heavy rain and flash floods over the past few days, which have left a trail of destruction, and is bracing for a tropical storm this week. In Pakistan at least 79 people, including 38 children, have died in floods and rain-related incidents, including landslides and house collapses, since June 26, its National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said on Tuesday. The authority has issued fresh alerts for flash flooding and glacial lake outbursts in the northern and northwestern provinces of Gilgit-Baltistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, citing 'a significant rise in temperatures and an upcoming weather system'. Gilgit-Baltistan's northern Chilas district recorded the highest temperature in Pakistan on Saturday at 48.5°C, breaking its earlier record of 47.7°C reported in July 1997, said NDMA spokesperson Sophia Siddiqui.

TimesLIVE
06-07-2025
- TimesLIVE
Texas flood witness recalls furniture, trees and RVs swept down river
Tonia Fucci, a Pennsylvania resident visiting her grandmother for the Independence Day weekend, woke early on Friday to the sound of heavy rain 'coming down in buckets'. Along with the rain, she heard something else — loud, startling cracking noises. 'It's indescribable, the sounds, of how loud they were, which turned out to be ... the massive cypress trees that came down along the river,' she told a Reuters reporter in an interview the next day. Flash floods in central Texas have killed at least 43 people, including 15 children, authorities said on Saturday as rescuers continued a frantic search for dozens more campers, vacationers and residents who were still missing. Hardest hit was Camp Mystic, a nearly century-old girls camp, where dozens of young girls were swept away in the flood waters, leaving many dead and many more still missing. Fucci, who was staying in Comfort on the banks of the overflowing Guadalupe River, filmed on her phone a torrent of muddy water flooding the road to her grandmother's house and two recreational vehicles in a parking lot, with their wheels submerged in water. Reuters verified the location of the video by matching buildings and vehicles to satellite imagery and confirmed the date by checking the metadata. 'I'm still in shock today,' Fucci told Reuters. She said she had little hope anyone would be found alive. 'There's so many missing children and missing people. You just want them to be found for the sake of the families. But, you know, it's not going to be a good ending ... There's no way people could have survived the swiftness of the water.' Fucci said she had received National Weather alerts on her phone hours after the flood had already hit. The residents of the town had to rely on one another, as they ran to their neighbours to see who needed help before rescue teams arrived. 'Something I've never seen before. You knew it was tragedy,' Fucci said, recalling how quickly the river flooded the town. 'It wasn't slowing, it wasn't slowing. And debris and furniture and RVs (camper vans) were coming down the river.'