China
blames global warming for extreme weather
(Xinhua)
BEIJING
-- China's top meteorological official has blamed global warming for extreme weather
in China this year, urging concerned departments to improve emergency responses
to reduce possible losses.
"Extreme
weather has incurred frequent natural disasters such as rainstorms, floods and
droughts across the country this year," said Zheng Guoguang, chief of the
China Meteorological Administration (CMA).
Fierce
rainstorms swept China this summer, triggering floods, landslides and mud-rock
flows. Sichuan Province and Chongqing Municipality in the southwest recorded the
heaviest rainfall in record while a year ago they were ravaged by all time high
temperatures and severe droughts.
Almost
half a million people have been evacuated from the projected path of floodwaters
from the Huaihe River, which is expected to see its worst flooding since 1954.
Lightning
strikes have killed 282 Chinese so far this year, according to the CMA. The administration
reported 193 deaths between January 1 and June 25 which means nearly 100 people
have died in less than four weeks.
Chen
Yu, a senior engineer with the CMA's National Climate Center, said the death toll
caused by lightning in the first half of the year was 252, 109 more than last
year's same period.
China's
death toll from natural disasters stood at a staggering 715 with 129 people missing
by July 16, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
Widespread
and prolonged drought, which hit the country's north, northwest and southwest
in the first half, left more than 12 million people and 11 million head of livestock
short of drinking water and also affected 14 million hectares of arable land,
among which 3.1 million hectares are sown to crops.
Meteorologists
estimated that the heat wave lingering in the southern and southeastern regions
are not likely to be relieved in the short term.