Typhoon Bavi hits China: more than a million people evacuated before landfall
Typhoon Bavi made landfall on China's coast on July 11 after more than one million people were moved out of high-risk areas.
Typhoon Bavi reached the Chinese coast on Saturday, and the scale of the response says everything about how seriously it was taken: more than one million people were moved out of their homes before the cyclone made landfall.
What do we know about Bavi’s landfall in China?
The cyclone came ashore on July 11 after days of warnings and mass evacuations across coastal provinces. Authorities suspended ferry links and kept alerts in place for torrential rain, destructive wind and coastal flooding, with official updates coming from the China Meteorological Administration.
This is not Bavi’s first stop. Earlier this week the same system tore through the Northern Mariana Islands as a super typhoon, leaving the archipelago assessing the damage from the worst cyclone in its history before tracking west across the Pacific.
Why does the scale of the evacuation matter?
Because it is a snapshot of the typhoon season the Pacific is having: systems that intensify fast and force quick decisions in densely populated areas. Moving a million people in a few days is an enormous logistical operation — and, generally, it is what separates a scare from a tragedy. A clear picture of the damage in China should emerge over the coming days, and we will return to the story if the bill turns out to be heavy.
Image: Zeng Liansong / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)