China braces for more floods, extremely heavy downpours
Updated: July 13, 2020 21:08 Xinhua

BEIJING — China is stepping up disaster relief efforts as the country continues to see more floods and unusually heavy downpours this summer, officials said on July 13.

Floods that triggered alerts have been observed in 433 rivers nationwide since June. Of these rivers, 33 beat previous water level records, Ye Jianchun, vice-minister of Water Resources, told a press conference.

The number of rivers in spate has seen a dramatic rise from 271 that saw floods above warning levels by the end of June.

Zheng Guoguang, vice-minister of Emergency Management, attributed the severe flooding to the extra rainfall in the season mostly in the southern parts of the country.

The average rainfall in regions along the Yangtze River this year has been the highest since 1961, 51 percent more than the amount in other years, according to Zheng.

Due to the disastrous flooding, the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters raised the emergency response to Level II on July 12, following its last upgrade from Level IV to Level III on July 7, with efforts at flood control, rescue and disaster relief.

As of 7 am of July 12, floods in 27 provincial regions had affected a population of 38.73 million, leaving 141 people dead or missing, and more than 2.24 million emergency relocations. Around 29,000 homes were destroyed, and direct economic losses reached 86.16 billion yuan (about $12.31 billion).

Zheng noted that as China's capability in flood control and disaster relief improves, despite the severity of the flooding, the loss of lives and property has significantly decreased compared to the same period in the past five years.

Ye warned that while waters levels are likely to remain high in the Yangtze River and Taihu Lake, as the rain belt is expected to move northward, areas along the Yellow River and the Haihe River should brace for possible floods.

Zheng said apart from further efforts at flood defense in the south, measures should be taken to guard against downpour-triggered disasters such as heavy floods and landslides, as well as possible typhoons, and high tides that could worsen the damage.

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