
Heavy rain around Beijing and across northern China killed two people and forced thousands to relocate as authorities warned of further widespread rain and the risk of disasters including landslides and flooding.
Two people were dead and two missing in Hebei province, state broadcaster CCTV reported on Sunday morning. Overnight rain dumped a record 145mm per hour on Fuping county in the industrial city of Baoding.
China’s water ministry issued targeted flood warnings to 11 provinces and regions, including Beijing and neighbouring Hebei, for floods from small and midsize rivers and mountain torrents.
Floods and landslides affected many villages in the Miyun district of the capital, with the rural town of Fengjiayu the most severely affected and electricity and communications cut in some villages, CCTV said. More than 3,000 people were transferred out of the area, Beijing News Radio reported on Sunday.
Beijing issued a warning on Saturday for geological disasters including landslides and mudslides after intense rainfall unleashed, for a second time, a year’s worth of rain on nearby Baoding.
Northern China has experienced record rain in recent years, exposing densely populated cities including Beijing to flood risks. Some scientists link the increased rainfall in China’s usually arid north to global warming.
The storms are part of the broader pattern of extreme weather across China due to the east Asian monsoon, which has caused disruptions in the world’s second-largest economy.
Baoding’s Xizhuang station recorded 540mm in eight hours, exceeding Baoding’s average annual rainfall of about 500mm. The deluge affected more than 46,000 people, forcing 4,655 to evacuate, CCTV reported.
Chinese authorities closely monitor extreme rainfall and severe flooding are, as they challenge the country’s ageing flood defences, threaten to displace millions and wreak havoc on an agricultural sector worth trillions of dollars.