Hong Kong hit by heaviest rainstorm in 140 years

HongKong, Rainstorms

According to the weather bureau a downpour, which began on Thursday, is the biggest to hit Hong Kong in nearly 140 years.

With tens of millions of people living in the densely populated coastal areas of southern China. Heavy rain has also swept southern China, with the city of Shenzhen (across the border from Hong Kong) reporting its heaviest showers since records began in 1952. This has caused hundreds of flights to be suspended in the wider Guangdong province. Local authorities have also advised residents in low-lying areas to consider evacuations.

Climate change is increasingly affecting the intensity and frequency of tropical storms. This has led to an increase in flash flooding and damage to the environment and public properties. 

On Thursday, Hong Kong authorities issued a black warning, which is triggered when rainfall exceeds 70mm an hour. The Hong Kong Observatory later that night reported an hourly rainfall of 158.1 mm, the highest since records began in 1884. Photos from the city on Thursday night showed the torrential rain turning streets into raging rivers, and flooding shopping centers and public transport.

Emergency services said more than 100 people had been taken to the hospital and several rescues had taken place.

Videos on social media showed people climbing onto cars and other elevated platforms to escape the waters, which have risen several meters high in some areas, blocking off subway entrances.

The city’s cross harbor tunnel which is a key route that connects the main island to the Kowloon peninsula in its north, was overruned. The rain also triggered landslides in the city’s mountainous areas – blocking some highways.

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