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Mass evacuations as southern China braces for strongest storm of the year

Gavin Butler,

Laura BickerGuangdong and

Martin YipHong Kong

China has evacuated hundreds of thousands of people and ordered at least 10 cities to close schools and some businesses as the strongest storm of the year bears down on its southern coast.

Hong Kong has upgraded its typhoon warning to eight – just two levels below the maximum – ahead of the arrival of Super Typhoon Ragasa.

Satellite image showing typhoon Ragasa over Asia. The eye of the hurricane is marked with a red label. We can see clouds over Taiwan, the Philippines, Vietnam, China and the South China sea, as well as Hong Kong.

The storm is expected to make landfall in China’s Guangdong province on Wednesday, where some 370,000 people have been evacuated so far, as authorities warn of a “catastrophic” situation.

Ragasa has been dubbed the “King of Storms” by China’s meteorological agency and is expected to move towards northern Vietnam in the coming days, potentially affecting millions.

Getty Images A shirtless man wearing a headband and a backpack walks in front of a barricade made of sandbags in the streetGetty Images

On Tuesday, supermarket shelves in Hong Kong were wiped empty of fresh bread, vegetables, meat and instant noodles as residents prepared to hunker down.

Hong Kong International Airport said it expected “significant disruption to flight operations” from 18:00 local time (10:00 GMT) on Tuesday until the next day.

Map showing the expected path for typhoon Ragasa in Asia in the next few days. It is expected to pass through Hong Kong as a typhoon between Tuesday 18:00 GMT and Wednesday 06:00 GMT. It will keep moving west and turn into a tropical storm by the end of Wednesday, as it reaches Vietnam. By Friday at 06:00 GMT it will reach Laos as a tropical depression. Data from the Join Typhoon Warning Center on 23 September.

More than 500 Cathay Pacific flights are expected to be cancelled, while Hong Kong Airlines said it would stop all departures from the city.

In cities across southern China, shop owners piled sandbags in front of their stores in preparation for the storm’s arrival, with residents in low-lying areas next to the sea front particularly worried about tidal surges.

Many have also taped up the windows of their homes and businesses, hoping to prevent their destruction.

Getty Images A woman stands with a bag of onions in front of a bare supermarket shelfGetty Images

It’s not yet clear exactly how much climate change has affected Ragasa specifically. But a warming world is expected to make tropical storms like typhoons and hurricanes more intense on average, according to UN scientists.

That means higher wind speeds, heavier rainfall and a higher risk of coastal flooding, although the number of typhoons across East and Southeast Asia may decrease in future.

On the island of Taiwan, at least six people were injured and more than 100 international flights were cancelled as Ragasa passed through overnight.

Ragasa also lashed through a remote island in the north of the Philippines on Monday, killing at least one person as thousands of families were evacuated before the storm made landfall.

Schools and government offices were shut in large parts of the country, including in the capital Manila.

Getty Images A man in a blue raincoat stands amid rubble and debris on a sea shore that is being buffeted by wind, rain and waves. In the background are windswept palm trees.Getty Images

Super typhoon Ragasa – equivalent to a Category 5 hurricane – packed wind gusts of up to 285km/h (177mph) at its highest point on Monday, and has triggered warnings of floods, storm surges and landslides across the region this week.

Ragasa would “pose a serious threat” to Hong Kong, said Eric Chan, the city’s Chief Secretary for Administration, comparing it to two other typhoons which left behind trails of severe destruction.

Super typhoon Mangkhut in 2018 – to date the most intense typhoon to strike the city – injured 200 people, sank ships and wrecked infrastructure, with the weather agency estimating economic losses of HK$4.6bn ($592m: £438m).

In 2017, typhoon Hato unleashed serious flooding and injured more than 100 people in the city.

With additional reporting by Kelly Ng in Singapore and Mark Poynting, climate reporter

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