China Daily

Typhoon In-Fa lands in Zhejiang, moves northward

- By MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou and ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai

Typhoon In-Fa, the sixth this year, made landfall in Zhoushan, Zhejiang province, at around 12:30 pm on Sunday, with maximum wind speed reaching 136.8 kilometers per hour.

Moving northwest with gusting winds and heavy downpours, it was expected to make a second landfall between Jiaxing in northern Zhejiang and Shanghai between Sunday evening and early Monday morning, according to the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion.

Zhejiang had upgraded its emergency response to Level I, the highest level, starting at noon on Saturday, the provincial emergency management department said.

The Zhejiang emergency management department called for immediate flood prevention measures, saying that school classes, production work, markets and road traffic were to be suspended when necessary.

Hangzhou Xiaoshan Internatio­nal Airport canceled all flights in and out of Hangzhou on Sunday, with more expected to be canceled on Monday. Local traffic authoritie­s also closed off or imposed traffic flow restrictio­ns on all expressway­s in Zhejiang.

Over 1.1 million residents in the province had been relocated to safer places by Saturday night, according to Zhejiang Daily.

“I’ve never seen such heavy rains in my life,” 70-year-old villager Qiu Achun said on Sunday afternoon as she was being relocated to higher land by local firefighte­rs in Keqiao district of Shaoxing, Zhejiang. Shaoxing, in the northern part of the province, was forecast to receive the heaviest rain in Zhejiang, with torrential rains forecast for the next several days.

The typhoon had previously been forecast to make landfall in Taizhou, to the south of Zhoushan.

In explaining why Typhoon In-Fa had swirled farther north than expected, Zhang Yan, deputy director of the Zhejiang Meteorolog­ical Station, said the storm was unbalanced and, due to the mutual rotational effect of it and Typhoon Nepartak, which was forming on its tail, the two typhoons were “comparativ­ely weak”.

“All these factors have contribute­d to the northward adjustment­s to the actual route of In-Fa,” she said.

In neighborin­g Shanghai, the municipal railway authority announced on Sunday that all trains bound for Shanghai from Beijing South Railway Station were suspended starting at 1:30 pm. All high-speed trains bound for Shanghai from all directions had been suspended beginning at 7 pm on Sunday.

All passenger flights at Shanghai’s two airports were canceled on Sunday, a rare move in typhoon control, according to the Shanghai Airport Authority.

In addition, the municipali­ty’s subway operator announced that all sections of line running above ground and on elevated tracks had been suspended since Sunday afternoon to ensure safety.

Also since Sunday afternoon, service of all buses crossing bridges over the Huangpu River had been suspended. Large passenger buses and large trucks had been banned from taking the Shanghai Yangtze River Bridge connecting Chongming Island with downtown Shanghai.

Shanghai continued its secondhigh­est level of typhoon warning and third-highest level of rainstorm warning on Sunday night.

The city’s meteorolog­ical authority said that the core convection zone, the area surroundin­g the eye of the storm, was expected to reach Shanghai on Sunday night, with rainstorms and high winds possibly continuing until Tuesday.

 ?? LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? More than 20,000 migrant workers and their family members working for the Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games have been relocated to the Hangzhou Internatio­nal Expo Center in Zhejiang province on Sunday. Typhoon In-Fa made landfall in Zhejiang at noon on Sunday.
LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY More than 20,000 migrant workers and their family members working for the Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games have been relocated to the Hangzhou Internatio­nal Expo Center in Zhejiang province on Sunday. Typhoon In-Fa made landfall in Zhejiang at noon on Sunday.

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