Beijing has seen its heaviest rainfall in at least 140 years

The Chinese capital Beijing, hit by deadly floods, has experienced in recent days its heaviest rainfall in at least 140 years, when the records began, announced Wednesday, August 2, the meteorological services.

“The Maximum Value” precipitation recorded between Saturday evening and Wednesday morning at a station in the city was 744.8 millimeters and these are the “heaviest rainfall in 140 years”according to the Beijing Meteorological Service.

Read also: Floods in China: after intense rains in Beijing, dozens dead and missing

Accurate surveys began in 1883. “The previous record (…) before the current rainy episode » had been established in 1891 with 609 millimeters, he pointed out.

The torrential rains that hit Beijing and the neighboring province of Hebei (North) left at least twenty dead and nineteen missing in total, according to official media, the floods having submerged roads and cut communication routes.

Forty hours of flood

Typhoon Doksuri, downgraded to a storm, has been sweeping across China from southeast to north since Friday, when it hit eastern Fujian Province after hitting neighboring Philippines.

Torrential rains had begun to hit the greater Beijing area on Saturday. In just forty hours, the Chinese capital had seen the equivalent of the average rainfall for an entire month of July fall.

In the Mentougou district in western Beijing on August 1, 2023.

Heavy rains in the capital itself killed at least 11 people, including a firefighter who was taking part in rescue operations, state television CCTV reported.

In neighboring Hebei, bad weather left at least nine dead and six missing, according to the same source. China is experiencing extreme weather and record high temperatures this summer, events that scientists say are exacerbated by climate change.

The World with AFP

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