BEIJING — Chinese authorities on July 21 raised the emergency response for flood control to Level II, the second-highest level in the response system, as heavy downpours continued to lash the Central China's Henan province.
Extremely heavy rainfall hit Henan on July 20, with precipitation in Zhengzhou, the provincial capital, exceeding the highest level on local weather records, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management (MEM).
The rainstorm has caused the water level in a reservoir to rise rapidly, said the ministry, adding that all local residents downstream have been relocated in advance.
From 8 am on July 17 to 8 am on July 21, the average rainfall in Zhengzhou was 458.2 mm, with accumulated precipitation in some areas even surpassing the city's total average yearly rainfall, according to the China Meteorological Administration.
A total of 12 people have been killed in the torrential rains in the downtown area of Zhengzhou, according to local authorities. About 100,000 people have been relocated to safe places.
China has a four-tier flood-control emergency response system, with Level I being the most severe.
The MEM has dispatched a working team to the affected areas in Henan to help local authorities with disaster relief work.
A rescue team of 1,800 firefighters has been deployed to the flood-hit region from seven neighboring provinces, together with boats, pumping vehicles and flood rescue kits.
Traffic has been disrupted in up to 30 sections of national and provincial highways in Henan due to flooding and collapsed roads, according to the Ministry of Transport.
As of 7 am on July 21, 26 expressways in the region have reported partial closures, but there are not currently high numbers of vehicles and travelers stranded, said the transport ministry.
Floods and downpours have also affected flight and train services. With a red alert for flight delays in place from 8 pm on July 20 to noon on July 21, all flights intending to land at the airport in Zhengzhou were canceled.
Parts of the Zhengzhou-Xi'an high-speed railway and the Lianyungang-Lanzhou railway saw tracks and equipment flooded, as well as trackbed collapses, said the China State Railway Group.
To restore the storm-damaged communication networks in Zhengzhou, local telecommunication companies have rushed to repair at least 6,300 base stations and 275 kilometers of optical fiber cables as of 10 am on July 21, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
China's national observatory on July 21 renewed an orange alert for rainstorms, the second-highest alert in its color-coded weather warning system, in many parts of the country including Henan.
From the morning on July 21 to the morning on July 22, heavy rains and rainstorms will continue in Henan and its neighboring provinces, the observatory said. Parts of Henan and Hebei will see rainstorms with up to 280 mm of daily precipitation.
The observatory warned that some areas are likely to see over 70 mm of hourly rainfall, accompanied by thunderstorms and gales.