July 17, 2023
Authorities evacuated people from Southern China and Vietnam Monday as a powerful typhoon approached the countries leaving daily life activities at a standstill and cancelling all air traffic.
China Meteorological Administration said that "powerful winds and storm surges and lashing rains were predicted to hammer the southern coastline from Guangdong to Hainan provinces when typhoon Talim hits the ground Monday night."
The agency issued an orange alert — the second-highest warning in a four-tier colour-coded system — saying the storm "was expected to increase in intensity to become a severe typhoon."
According to Vietnamese authorities, they were preparing to evacuate about 30,000 people from the areas forecast to be hardest hit in Quang Ninh and Hai Phong provinces from Monday afternoon.
The storm "might be one of the biggest to hit the Gulf of Tonkin in recent years", Vietnam's disaster response committee said in a statement.
Tourists have been advised to leave outlying islands and airlines have rescheduled services to avoid the storm.
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh directed disaster response teams to prepare for "immediate rescue and relief works" late Sunday, warning of possible floods.
At least 1,000 people were evacuated from Yunfu City in South China’s Guangdong province, the Southern Daily reported.
Around 2:00pm (0600 GMT), Typhoon Talim was 280 kilometres southwest of Hong Kong, the city’s weather agency said.
Trading on Hong Kong's US$5.2 trillion stock market was cancelled Monday as the Asian financial hub came to a standstill.
The Hong Kong Observatory has warned of possible flooding in low-lying areas due to a storm surge and ferries and most bus services in the city were suspended.
"More than 1,000 travellers were affected by flight cancellations and delays," the Hong Kong Airport Authority said.
Authorities in south China's Hainan island asked ships in nearby waters to return to port after the local marine forecasting station warned of waves of up to six metres (20 feet), news agency Xinhua reported.
Ferry services between Hainan and neighbouring Guangdong province were suspended early Sunday.
Meilan International Airport and Qionghai Boao Airport, both on Hainan island, have cancelled all flights, state media reported.
Zhuhai Jinwan Airport in Guangdong near Macau cancelled more than 80 flights, local media said.
Scientists warned that typhoons are becoming more powerful as the world gets warmer with climate change.