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China Braces For More Disasters As Tropical Storms Approach

A ferry sails past the skyline in Hong Kong, 08 August 2007 as rains hit the territory. The Hong Kong Observatory earlier in the day issued a tropical cyclone warning at 10:00 am (0200 GMT), saying that tropical storm Pabuk was 450 kilometres (280 miles) east of the city and moving west at a speed of 30 kilometres an hour, expecting to hit the terrritory early the next morning. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Verna Yu
Beijing (AFP) Aug 08, 2007
China braced for more killer weather on Wednesday as two tropical storms approached, continuing a devastating spell of natural disasters that last month left nearly 900 people dead or missing. More than 20,000 people were evacuated from their homes and 50,000 vessels ordered to return to shore in southeastern China's Fujian province as tropical storm Pabuk neared after lashing Taiwan, the official Xinhua news agency said. Pabuk was expected to make landfall late on Wednesday between Fujian and Guangdong provinces, with tropical storm Wutip not far behind, the China Meteorological Agency said.

The administration warned residents in the densely populated provinces of the possibility of landslides and flooding, and advised them to stay indoors.

Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces also issued circulars urging officials to prepare for Pabuk, which is expected to sweep those areas from late Wednesday through to Thursday afternoon, the agency said.

In the southern territory of Hong Kong, a cyclone warning was issued due to Pabuk, with fishermen urged to quickly seek shelter.

Pabuk had already pounded southern Taiwan with strong winds and downpours on Wednesday, disrupting traffic and power supply, but not causing any deaths.

Packing winds of 65 kiometres (40 miles) an hour, Wutip was fast approaching Taiwan on Wednesday and was then expected to follow a similar path to Pabuk.

Wutip was expected to strike China's southern coastline by Friday afternoon, Xinhua said.

Meanwhile, other parts of China were also enduring brutal weather.

Recent flooding in northwest Shaanxi province claimed 17 lives and left 33 others missing, Xinhua reported.

The rainstorms caused landslides, mud-rock flows and flooding in seven rivers, affecting 175,000 people, it said.

The latest deaths continue a devastating run of weather for China, with the Ministry of Civil Affairs reporting that natural disasters had left 712 people dead and 163 missing in July.

In a statement posted on its website, the ministry said the tumultuous floods, landslides and drought across China in July were "far worse than last year".

The death toll from natural disasters in the vast country in the first seven months of this year was 1,279, with another 239 missing, according to the ministry.

Disasters of various kinds have affected 280 million people -- or more than one in every five Chinese -- and made 6.15 million homeless, it said, adding that material damage was estimated at 110 billion yuan (14.5 billion dollars).

Source: Agence France-Presse

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China Capable Of Using Space Technology For Weather Forecasting And Pollution Control
Xian, China (XNA) Aug 06, 2007
China's development of space technology may not only be a means to fulfill the government's space dreams - it can be used for precision weather forecasting and pollution control, according to a meteorological expert who works for China's manned space program. "The space program demands an extraordinarily high level of precision and accuracy in weather forecasting. The information we need to get, like wind speed, intensity, direction and cloud formation, is very specific," Li Yonghui, director of the meteorological station of the spaceship monitoring and recovery unit at the Xi'an Satellite Control Center.

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