Business Day

Second big freeze brings Beijing to a standstill

- Ryan Woo and Liz Lee

Snow, blizzards and plunging temperatur­es swept northern China in what could be one of its most severe cold snaps in December, spurring authoritie­s in the capital to halt train services, shut schools and tell people to stay home.

A mass of cold air drifted into Beijing from the west, the second cold wave this week. City officials have issued the secondhigh­est alert for blizzards through Thursday, the only such warning yet in the country.

To avert chaos threatened by what was expected to be a “long-lasting” round of snowfall, the city of nearly 22-million shut all schools from Wednesday and moved classes online. Businesses were told to offer employees flexible working conditions and staggered commutes.

“We’ll try not to travel,” said a 36-year-old Beijing resident surnamed Liu, whose child’s school had closed as snow fell for the second time since Monday. “It’s cold, and the roads are definitely bad.”

Scenic spots in the mountainou­s north and west have been temporaril­y shut.

Some railway services with key cities, such as the commercial hub of Shanghai, Hangzhou and Wuhan, were suspended. Trains that still ran went at slower speed, causing delays. But Beijing’s Capital Airport continued to operate.

Beijing could face temperatur­es as low as minus 18°C this weekend, compared to the mid-December average of about minus 8°C. Even Shanghai in the south, now experienci­ng balmy weather of 20°C, is forecast to be buffeted by weather as frigid as minus 4°C on Saturday and Sunday.

More than 6,000 rescuers have been put on call for road emergency rescues and more than 5,800 sets of snowremova­l equipment and machinery are on standby.

About 32,000 tonnes of snow-thawing agent has been readied for use on icy roads and motorways.

City officials canvassed volunteers to clear snow and shovel ice, in addition to 73,000 people on duty to tackle these tasks, and ordered indoor heating stepped up.

Beijing last experience­d such cold weather on January 7 2021, when the temperatur­e fell to minus 19.6°C. The city’s all-time low of minus 27.4°C was recorded on February 22 1966.

This week’s cold snap, compared with the autumn-like conditions of a week ago, reflects recent sharp temperatur­e swings. October was one of Beijing’s warmest in decades, in a year of weather extremes.

While northern China grappled with chillier-than-normal conditions, Hangzhou will officially begin winter only on December 16, two weeks behind schedule and the latest since records began in 1951.

The city, near Shanghai, had to record five straight days of minus 10°C temperatur­es to declare the arrival of winter.

Temperatur­es could drop more than 14°C, across swathes of northern, northweste­rn and southern China, along with parts of Inner Mongolia, Guizhou province and even regions south of the Yangtze River, weather officials have said.

Issuing its first alert since 2013 against freezing temperatur­es, the National Meteorolog­ical Centre (NMC) urged local government­s to take precaution­s, along with measures to protect tropical crops and aquatic produce. It has forecast wide rain and snowfall in central and eastern regions until Friday, with as much as 30mm of precipitat­ion in snowstorms in parts of Shaanxi, Henan and Shandong provinces.

The cumulative snowfall could be the highest in the correspond­ing period in a decade, it added. Many rivers have frozen over in the vast northeaste­rn province of Heilongjia­ng bordering Russia.

Since December 10, daily precipitat­ion has exceeded December “extremes” at nearly 130 weather stations in provinces such as Shanxi, Henan, Shaanxi and Hebei, the NMC said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Winter wonderland: People play amid snowfall in Beijing as officials issued a second-highest alert for blizzards.
/Reuters Winter wonderland: People play amid snowfall in Beijing as officials issued a second-highest alert for blizzards.

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