Shanghai, China | AFP | Muser NewsDesk

Shanghai has evacuated almost 283,000 people from vulnerable coastal and low-lying areas as Typhoon Co-May approaches, bringing lashing rains and high winds, state media reported Wednesday.

Almost a third of flights from Shanghai’s two international airports have been cancelled, the city’s news service said, totalling around 640.

The Shanghai Central Meteorological Observatory on Wednesday afternoon upgraded an earlier yellow rainstorm alert to orange, the second-highest warning level.

Typhoon Co-May made landfall in eastern Zhejiang Province at about 4:30 am Wednesday (20:30 GMT Tuesday), with winds near its centre of 83 kilometres per hour.

It is expected to make a second landfall in financial hub Shanghai in the evening.

“From last night to 10:00 am today, 282,800 people have been evacuated and relocated, basically achieving the goal of evacuating all those who needed to be evacuated,” state broadcaster CCTV reported.

More than 1,900 temporary shelters have been set up across the city, authorities said.

Sheets of rain inundated the city without pause on Wednesday, with pedestrians bracing their umbrellas against gusts and delivery drivers splashing through huge puddles as they made their way through sodden streets.

Ferry services have been cancelled, additional speed limits are in place on highways, and there has been some disruption to metro and train services in the city.

However, Shanghai’s Legoland and Disneyland remained open on Wednesday morning.

Image: Typhoon Co-May, weather forecast map (s. Shanghai, cyclone)
Credit: Macao Meteorological and Geophysical Bureau | CC BY-NC

Wave warning

As the typhoon tracked northwest after making landfall in the morning, live shots from China’s east coast showed waves overrunning seaside walkways, while broadcasts from the city of Ningbo showed residents sploshing through ankle-deep water.

Separately, China issued a tsunami warning for parts of the eastern seaboard after a magnitude-8.8 earthquake struck off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula.

However, the warning was later lifted, according to CCTV.

Co-May was downgraded to a tropical storm before leaving the Philippines, and then strengthened again over the South China Sea.

Its passage has had an indirect link to extreme weather in China’s north at the moment, Chen Tao, chief forecaster at the National Meteorological Center, told the state-run China Daily.

Heavy rain there has killed more than 30 people and forced authorities to evacuate tens of thousands, state media reported Tuesday.

“Typhoon activity can influence atmospheric circulation… thereby altering the northward transport of moisture,” Chen said.

Natural disasters are common across China, particularly in the summer when some regions experience heavy rain while others bake in searing heat.

China is the world’s biggest emitter of the greenhouse gases that drive climate change and contribute to making extreme weather more frequent and intense.

But it is also a global renewable energy powerhouse that aims to make its massive economy carbon-neutral by 2060.

bur-reb/je/lb

© Agence France-Presse

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by Rebecca Bailey and Jing Xuan Teng | AFP
Featured image credit: TravelScape | Freepik

Image: blue and white bubbles in water
Deep ocean ‘dark oxygen’ find could rewrite Earth’s historyNewsScience

Deep ocean ‘dark oxygen’ find could rewrite Earth’s history

By Juliette Collen | AFP Paris, France - In the total darkness of the depths of the Pacific Ocean, scientists have discovered oxygen being produced…
SourceSourceJuly 22, 2024 Full article
Image: Aerial view of Okinotorishima, Japan (12 June 2007)
Japan says China conducted research near Pacific atollNews

Japan says China conducted research near Pacific atoll

Tokyo, Japan | AFP Japan has accused China of conducting unnotified maritime scientific research within its exclusive economic zone around its southernmost island in the…
SourceSourceMay 27, 2025 Full article
Image: Abstract globe (s. climate news, climate change, heat)
Renewables outpace fossil fuels despite US policy shift: IEANews

Renewables outpace fossil fuels despite US policy shift: IEA

Paris, France | AFP | Muser NewsDesk Renewable energy is still expanding faster than fossil fuels around the world despite policy changes in the United States,…
SourceSourceNovember 12, 2025 Full article