Rainy Roundup: Stats, Comments and Photos from Saturday's Storm

If you skipped town this weekend, like me, then you missed Beijing’s biggest rainstorms in decades. Here’s what the storm looks like on this side of the weekend with numbers, reactions, photos and video.

The Numbers

  • The death toll from the storm has climbed to 37, with causes as follows: “25 were drowned, six were killed in house collapses, one by lightening [sic] strike and five were electrocuted.”
  • 70,000 residents have been relocated.
  • 80,000 passengers were stranded at Capital Airport after the cancellation of 500 flights.
  • This is the worst storm since 1951, 61 years ago.
  • The average precipitation for Beijing was 170 mm.
  • A township in Fangshan District received 460 mm of rain.
  • Beijing’s average precipitation for the month of July is 185.2mm, spread out over 13.6 days. (Data from 1971-2000.)

The Wall Street Journal has offered a scathing report of how Beijing is shamefully unable to handle this level of rain. They cite several comments from Weibo to suggest the mood of a citizenry who are angry at the government and city authorities for investing so heavily in development, but failing to offer the basic infrastructure befitting a modern, metropolitan. Additional comments from Weibo users offer the same sentiments:

  • "We can make things fly in the sky ... but can’t make a system several meters’ deep work. Tiananmen and the Forbidden Palace remained undisturbed but buildings built with modern technology can’t take heavy rain. Does this mean we are going backwards?"
  • "The sewer system is the conscience of a city. The outside is pretty but conscience is jammed ... this is how tragedy happens."
  • "Twenty years ago, Shenzhen experienced a similar situation ... but Shenzhen didn’t get flooded again. Hopefully Beijing can learn something this time."
  • "How much of it is natural disaster? How much is human behavior? How can we change?"
  • "Beijing is so weak. Only raining for a day? This shouldn’t have happened."
  • "Beijing's government should have done the following two things a long time ago: 1. Make sure the sewer system works. 2. Collect rain to prepare for a drought. But they don’t – all their thoughts are occupied on how to deal with non-Beijing locals."
  • "Pathetic, a city without sewer system."
  • "A normal heavy rain, common in the south, happens in the capital and paralyzes the whole city. But it was like this last summer. Last year, last decade, what have they done? We see great people in the rain, but what has the government done? Please start an investigation and ask questions. Don’t blame nature, please do some self-examination."

Throughout the deluge, Beijing Cream kept up a steady stream of reports on the lighter side of the storm, including a soaked Guoan game, some wet revelers in Shuangjing and a chance for some swimming.

Photos: blog.wsj.com, BeijingCream.com

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Weather alert for readers in outlying areas …

At 8:40am this morning, the Beijing Meteorological Bureau and the Land and Resources Bureau jointly issued a yellow warning for geological disasters in light of the rainstorm anticipated later this evening. The soil in Beijing’s mountainous suburbs (Fangshan, Mentougou, Miyun, Huairou, Pinggu and areas of Haidian, Shijingshan, Fengtai) is still waterlogged from the weekend’s deluge, increasing the likelihood that the new rainfall will bring flash floods, mudslides and debris flow.

A few hours later, at 11:50am, the Beijing Meteorological Station issued a blue rainstorm warning (>50 mm rainfall over 12 hours) for the city’s outlying districts: Daxing, Tongzhou, Pinggu and Miyun.

The authorities seem to be making an effort to be more proactive. Today’s thunderstorms are predicted to start up in early evening, and expected to last well into the night.

Last Saturday, the Beijing Meteorological Station issued a yellow geological disaster warning around 12 noon. The yellow rainstorm warning (>50 mm rainfall over 6 hours) came at 2pm; it was only upgraded to an orange alert (>50 mm rainfall over 3 hours) at 6.30pm, after it had already been raining torrentially for several hours.

Deputy Managing Web Editor

Recent rumors and chatter on Weibo are suggesting that the death toll from last weekend's storm is much greater than the currently reported 37. At the moment this is solely speculation and there has been no actual confirmation from other sources. We'll continue to keep on top of this story and offer updates as we hear more or numbers are confirmed.

Here are some of the comments:

from Wang Xiaochuan: Tonight I was told the number of deaths ... shocking ... couldn't speak for 10 seconds, it's way beyond my imagination. The government will release data in two days, I don't have the guts to say it now.

from user 888人生无悔: Beijing death number has been fixed at 37 for several days without update. SoHu CTO Wang Xiaochuan says he knows the number ... It is rumored that in Ye San Po Guang Xia zhuang area alone, the number is 4 digits.

user 张小争创业投资: 10 minutes ago, Ye San Po relatives called and the number in their area is over 1000, this is for sure. Other villages are still unknown, but this is a definite number.

Deputy Managing Web Editor

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