Print

China’s Nanning on top alert as Typhoon Maysak triggers catastrophic flooding

A ship returns to port to avoid Typhoon Maysak in Hadian River, Haikou City, Hainan Province, China, on July 3, 2026.

Nanning, capital of China’s southwestern Guangxi region, raised its flood control response to the highest level as rivers and reservoirs swelled with the passage of Typhoon Maysak, Chinese state media said on Monday.

Now a slower-moving tropical storm, Maysak no longer has the winds of more than 50 miles per hour (80.5 kph) that lashed Vietnam and China’s southern island province of Hainan over the weekend. But as the storm heads inland and weakens, it will dump the water it sucked up on its way across the South China Sea, triggering catastrophic flooding, Chinese meteorologists say.

Authorities in Nanning, a city of nearly 9 million people, raised the flood control emergency response level to I from III due to “extremely heavy rain”, China Central Television (CCTV) reported.

So far, one breach has been reported at a medium-sized reservoir in Nanning’s Hengzhou, and people in the area were being evacuated, state-run Xinhua news agency reported, citing local authorities.

Some 170 miles (273.6 km) away in the city of Guigang, floodwaters turned a wide road into a lake, submerging cars and cascading in brown torrents down a hill into a building site, a video posted on the Chinese social media platform Douyin and verified by Reuters showed.

The water level at Guigang Hydrological Station had risen to 42 metres by 12:30 p.m. (04:30 GMT), the Ministry of Water Resources said in a statement.

Further south in Fangchenggang, another verified video showed a small car being washed down a street. In the same footage, the water rose to the level of another car’s steering wheel, and a man could be seen struggling to keep his electric scooter from being swept away.

EXTREME WEATHER RISKS

China, the world’s second-largest economy, faces growing threats from extreme weather, which meteorologists link to climate change. Analysts say weather-related risks each year stand to wipe out tens of billions of dollars worth of commercial activity, as cities flood, industrial activity stalls, and crops are submerged or washed away.

Maysak made landfall in the southern island province of Hainan on Friday, the first tropical cyclone to reach the Chinese mainland this year. The storm made its second landfall on Sunday in Vietnam, which shares a border with Guangxi.

In the Vietnamese border town of Mong Cai, the storm brought down trees and ripped metal roofs from buildings, state media reported, as it made its way into China.

Heavy rainfall is expected across Guangxi, Guizhou, Hunan and other areas in the coming days, according to Chinese meteorologists. The three provinces alone are home to over 150 million people – more than the population of Russia.

The region is also on alert for Super Typhoon Bavi, which is making its way across the Pacific Ocean towards Taiwan. The U.S. National Weather Service said it was packing winds of up to 180 miles per hour as it made its way across Guam, Tinian, Saipan and Rota on Monday.

(Reuters)

RELATED ARTICLES

51 mins ago | digital commerce

11 years of Digital India: How eSaras is transforming rural livelihoods through digital commerce

As the Digital India programme completes 11 years, one of its most significant success stories is unfolding far from India's metropolitan centres - in villages, small towns and rural communities where millions of women entrepreneurs are using digital...

1 hour ago | Bar Council of India

Centre, Bar Council of India begin work on 10-year plan to expand legal education in regional languages

The Department of Legal Affairs under the Ministry of Law and Justice, in collaboration with the Bar Council of India (BCI), on Saturday held a national conference to formulate a long-term roadmap for integrating Hindi and other Indian languages into...

1 hour ago | Droupadi Murmu

President Murmu, PM Modi condole deaths of Indian tourists in Vietnam boat tragedy; Embassy sets up helpline

President Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday expressed grief over the deaths of Indian tourists in a tragic boat accident near Vietnam's Phu Quoc Island, as Indian diplomatic missions set up emergency helplines to assist affe...