Special Report: China's war on snow havoc
BEIJING, Feb. 4 (Xinhua) -- During the upcoming Lunar
New Year China will get a much-needed respite from the arctic weather that has
blasted much of the country for the past three weeks, the China Meteorological
Administration (CMA) said Monday.
CMA spokesman Yu Xinwen told a press conference here
on Monday that during the weeklong holiday, which will start on Wednesday, most
of the southern parts of the country would have fine weather. The northern parts
would see no evident snow.
On Monday and Tuesday, light snow and sleet would
fall on some parts of the country's northwest and in the areas south to the
Yangtze River. Icy rain is forecast for some mountainous areas of Guizhou.
Yu said since Jan. 10, snow, sleet and low
temperatures have swept China's southern regions, a rarity for the area. The
worst winter weather in five decades has been more extreme in the central
provinces of Hubei and Hunan. A lingering blizzard, which has lasted more than
two weeks, was the longest in the past 100 years. In Hunan, ice sticking to
electricity transmission cables was between 30 and 60 millimeters thick.
According to Yu, Anhui Province had experienced
continuous snow for 24 days, the longest in more than 50 years, while Zhejiang
Province had its worst snowstorm in the past 84 years.
Henan, Sichuan, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai and Ningxia
also recorded their highest precipitation since 1951.
Yu said China was not unique in the extreme winter
weather. The Iraqi capital Baghdad was hit with a rare snowfall last month,
while Iran and Afghanistan suffered snow disasters.
Between Jan. 19 and Jan. 31, some Middle East
nations, including Syria, recorded heavy snow, while flights in Israel were
cancelled. Over the past couple days, the eastern and western parts of the
United States were also ravaged by blizzards.
Experts held the rudimentary reason for the
disastrous weather was the abnormal atmosphere circumfluence. Owing to lingering
stability of the circumfluence, cold air met warm air in the lower and middle
reaches of the Yangtze River and areas to the south of the river. Wet air
closure in the southern part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau contributed to the
unstable troposphere.
A phenomenon called La Nina aggravated the freak
weather, experts noted.
In an article carried by Sunday's People's Daily,
Zheng Guoguang, CMA head, said La Nina is a large pool of unusually coldwater in
the equatorial Pacific that develops every few years and influences global
weather. It is the climatic opposite of El Nino, a warming of the Pacific.
Zheng said the La Nina conditions developed in August
throughout the tropical Pacific and strengthened at the fastest pace in 56
years. The average sea-surface temperature during the past six months was half a
degree Celsius lower than normal years.
Earlier reports said the snow had been falling since
mid-January, leading to human deaths, structural collapse, blackouts, accidents,
transport problems and livestock and crop destruction.