Bangkok Post

CHINA WARNS OF ‘SEVERE’ FLOOD RISK

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BEIJING: Severe floods are expected on China’s Yangtze River this year due to a strong El Nino weather pattern, state media said, raising the risk of deaths and damage to property and crops along the country’s longest waterway.

The El Nino conditions are the strongest since records collection began in 1951, and resemble a 1998 weather pattern that flooded the river and killed thousands, the official Xinhua news agency said on Friday, citing vice minister of water resources, Liu Ning.

“Precipitat­ion in the upper, middle and lower reaches of the river is forecast to be as much as 80% more than normal from May to August,” Xinhua said.

Some Yangtze tributarie­s had already begun flooding and the flood control and drought relief situation was “extremely severe”, Mr Liu said, according to the news agency.

Provinces and cities along the river needed to make contingenc­y plans, Xinhua cited Wang Guosheng, the governor of central Hubei province, as saying.

China has frequently been devastated by natural disasters, particular­ly by floods and earthquake­s that have claimed millions of lives over the centuries.

Flooding, an annual problem, has been exacerbate­d by urban sprawl and poor drainage infrastruc­ture in many cities.

Xinhua said 1,320 people died in the 1998 floods, though estimates vary and some put the death toll at more than 4,000.

Floods could be a test of the water management capabiliti­es of the controvers­ial Three Gorges Dam, which was finished in 2012.

Along with power generation and navigation, the huge dam was designed to control the Yangtze’s water levels.

 ??  ?? AT RISK: Chongqing city sits at the junction of the Yangtze and Jialing rivers.
AT RISK: Chongqing city sits at the junction of the Yangtze and Jialing rivers.

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