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BEIJING, Sept. 6 (Xinhuanet) -- This summer brought unprecedented extreme weather to Beijing. The worst storm in 20 years hit the capital on July 10. A dust whirlwind, the most severe of its kind seen in 55 years, devastated the construction site for the National Swimming Center on August 27. It left 44 workers injured and two dead. In
addition, many other short-lived storms have also visited the capital this
summer.
According to the meteorologists, there is a
connection between the extreme weather and city planning considerations. This
summer's extreme weather has been notable for four characteristics. All
represent unprecedented phenomena:
กค When extreme weather came, it did not last long.
The storm of July 10 lasted less than 3 hours. The whirlwind on August 27 was
over in 20 minutes.
กค It would come and leave, both suddenly and
unexpectedly. Its unpredictability made it impossible for people to take steps
to prepare for it.
กค The extreme effects have been localized. Beijing
has a built-up area of some 1,600 square kilometers, but the storm of July 10
focused itself on an area of less than 100 square kilometers. Some 100mm of rain
fell in the northwest while the rain barely made the ground wet in the south of
city. On August 27, the whirlwind only affected an area of several hundred
square meters.
กค The weather has brought unprecedented losses and
disruption. The freak whirlwind brought death and injury to the city on August
27. The storm of July 10 only lasted three hours but it brought the capital to a
standstill with a serious traffic jam.
Although the extreme weather is the result of quite a
number of different factors such as cold air and convection currents, city
planning and construction do exert an important influence on the local weather.
Meteorological observations reveal that heavy storms
and high winds are closely related to the city's "micro-climate". Large areas of
concrete or asphalt road surface produce localized "heat islands" within the
urban environment. This summer, temperatures of some 80 Celsius were being
recorded on concrete and asphalt road surfaces. Meanwhile neighboring areas of
greenery were only about 40 Celsius.
Such large temperature variations in close proximity
make localized extreme weather conditions more likely. Meteorologists have
pointed out that when the temperature of concrete and asphalt roads reaches 80
Celsius, it can have a significant impact on rainfall. This is why Beijing
residents could find flooding to one side of a road but just a little rain on
the other.
In addition, there is what is known as the "valley
effect". This is becoming an increasingly apparent feature of Beijing's
townscape. When the city as a whole encounters winds of say force 6 or 7, they
are concentrated in the "valleys" between high buildings. Here the wind can
briefly touch force 12. This is Typhoon level! It is hardly surprising that so
many billboards have been blown down this summer.
Meteorologists suggest that greater consideration
should be given to avoiding localized extreme weather during the planning phase.
It would be helpful to increase large-scale tree-planting and grassed areas and
reduce the area of road surface. High buildings should be carefully laid out in
relation to each other and built further apart. City planning should allow for
the provision of "urban wind paths" to proactively control how the wind will
move through a built-up area. Not only can these improve air quality by quickly
removing pollutants, but they can also benefit the urban "micro-climate"
reducing the chances of extreme weather.
(China.org)
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