Heavy rainfall and powerful winds from Super Typhoon Yagi slammed southern China on Friday, as super typhoon Yagi made landfall along the coast of Hainan province.
Packing maximum sustained winds of 245 kilometers per hour (152 miles per hour) near its eye, Yagi is the world’s second-most powerful tropical cyclone in 2024 so far.
The most powerful was the Category 5 Atlantic hurricane Beryl which swept through the Carribean islands, Mexico, parts of US and eastern Canada. Yagi is also considered the strongest storm to hit the region in a decade.
Yagi gains strength
Yagi’s strength has more than doubled since it devastated the Philippines last week with landslides and flooding triggered by heavy rainfall. At least 13 people died.
After China, the storm is likely to head for Vietnam on Saturday.
Tropical cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons are the same phenomenon where a storm gathers strength from warm water at the ocean’s surface to feed horizontal rotating winds.
They are called hurricanes over the Atlantic and East Pacific, typhoons in the West Pacific and cyclones in the Indian Ocean and near Australia, according to the website of the US space agency NASA.
These storms are becoming stronger and less predictable across the world, fueled by warmer oceans due to climate change, scientists have warned. Preparing for the super typhoon
Authorities in Hong Kong, Vietnamand southern Chinese provinces suspended flights, trains and boats, and closed schools and offices, in preparation for the storm.
Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority said four airports in the country’s north, including Hanoi’s Noi Ban International, would remain closed on Saturday.
The country urged around 2,200 tourists on coastal islands to return to the mainland on Thursday and mobilized more than 2,700 military personnel to help with typhoon preparation.
Several flights were canceled in China’s Hainan, Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau regions, with other transport links shut down as well. China’s government sent task forces to Guangdong and Hainan to guide flood prevention, official news agency Xinhua reported.
Over 400,000 residents from Hainan were relocated, while others built sandbag barriers outside buildings to guard against possible floods and reinforced their windows with tape, Xinhua said.