Facebook Twitter 新浪微博 Instagram YouTube Monday, Jan. 25, 2016
Search
Archive
English
English>>

Strongest Ever Cold Front to Ease Starting from This Week

(CRI Online)    07:42, January 25, 2016
Email|Print
Strongest Ever Cold Front to Ease Starting from This Week
Tourists visit the Tian'anmen Square in cold in Beijing, capital of China, Jan. 23, 2016. The highest temperature in Beijing dropped to under minus 10 degrees Celsius on Friday and will hit a 30-year low of minus 17 degrees Celsius from Saturday through Sunday, the Beijing meteorological station said. [Photo: Xinhua/Ju Huanzong]

China embraced its coldest weather in decades as a cold wave swept across most parts of the country over the weekend.

As the front moves further south, northern China will see a rise in temperatures starting from today, and the system's impact in southern China will ease later this week.

China's national observatory renewed its orange alert for cold wave- the second highest level - on Sunday evening.

Sun jun, chief forecaster of the National Meteorological Center, says the strong cold front is linked with the activity of the polar vortex.

"The cold wave is a severe cold air brought by a polar vortex. The polar vortex always hovers near the North Pole. But this time, influenced by a polar high-pressure system, it was pushed off the polar region."

The forecasts say that northern China will see a rapid rise in temperatures as much as 10 degree Celsius stating from today, and rarely-seen low temperatures in southern China will also fade out later this week.

The cold front over this past week has been labeled the strongest in decades, as it brought a sharp decrease in temperatures and strong precipitation.

In Beijing, the temperature dropped to minus 17 degrees Celsius on Saturday, the lowest recorded temperature in the capital in the last 30 years.

30 monitoring stations in and around the city recorded historical low temperatures.

In southern China, Wong Wai-Kin with the Hong Kong Observatory said the city recorded its lowest temperature of the last six decades.

"We have recorded 3.1 degrees Celsius in the afternoon at around 3:30, which is the lowest since the last low-temperature record in 1957."

Residents in downtown Guangzhou were excited to see sleet, the first in 60 years, on Sunday.

"I am a Cantonese but I have never seen such snow before. I am so excited, but the snowfall did not last very long."

"We could seldom experience such coldness in Guangzhou city. It is very rare to see these ice pellets in the rain, and the last time we saw them was over a decade ago."

With the cold front still lingering in southern China, doctors are warning citizens to take protective measures when going out.

The worst cold snap in years led to at least four deaths across the country. 

(For the latest China news, Please follow People's Daily on Twitter and Facebook)
(Editor:Liang Jun,Bianji)

Add your comment

Most Viewed

Day|Week

Hot News

We Recommend

Photos

prev next