Tropical Storm Bavi Disrupts Eastern China
Tropical Storm Bavi has impacted eastern China, bringing significant disruption despite its weakening from typhoon status. The storm, reported as the most potent to strike China this year, reached the coastal city of Yuhuan in Zhejiang province, later moving onto the densely populated Yueqing in Wenzhou. Authorities had preemptively evacuated nearly two million residents as Bavi approached.
The storm wreaked havoc, uprooting over 1,300 trees in Yueqing. Floodwaters rose to significant levels, complicating emergency response efforts as teams worked tirelessly to clear debris and inundated roads. Wind speeds were recorded at 101 kilometers per hour, and sustained rain is forecasted to persist across eastern and northern China, exacerbating the risk of further flooding and infrastructural disruption.
Bavi's impact extended to China's eastern transportation networks, causing the suspension of train services in Hangzhou and the cancellation of hundreds of flights in both Hangzhou and Shanghai. By Sunday afternoon, the storm had entered Anhui province, with a trajectory aimed towards the Yellow Sea. As Bavi progresses, authorities remain vigilant, anticipating further challenges in the affected regions.