China’s State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters activated a Level-IV emergency response on Thursday for three southern provinces. The alert covers Hainan Province, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, and Guangdong Province simultaneously. Furthermore, authorities dispatched working groups directly to frontline areas in Hainan to guide local response operations. Consequently, emergency preparations across southern China have intensified significantly ahead of the approaching storm system.
Meteorological forecasts indicate a tropical depression currently over the South China Sea will develop into a full typhoon Thursday. The storm track shows it making initial landfall on Hainan Island’s eastern coast between Friday afternoon and evening. Furthermore, forecasters expect a second landfall along the coastal belt stretching from Guangxi into northern Vietnam on Saturday afternoon or evening. As a result, multiple provinces face direct typhoon impact across a two-day window.
Heavy rainfall warnings cover large portions of Hainan Island, Guangdong, and Guangxi from Friday through Sunday. Additionally, meteorologists forecast some areas will experience downpours escalating to extremely heavy rainfall during that period. These conditions raise serious risks of flash flooding, landslides, and coastal storm surge across densely populated areas. The Ministry of Emergency Management confirmed that working groups are already coordinating with local authorities at the frontline.
China operates a four-tier emergency response system, with Level I representing the most severe classification. Therefore, Thursday’s Level-IV activation indicates a significant but manageable threat requiring organized preventive action. Historically, typhoons making landfall in Hainan and Guangdong have caused substantial agricultural damage and displaced large coastal populations. Furthermore, the Guangxi-Vietnam coastal corridor faces elevated risk from the storm’s expected secondary landfall trajectory.
Going forward, authorities will monitor the storm’s development closely and may escalate the emergency response level if conditions worsen. Local governments in affected provinces are coordinating evacuations and flood prevention measures ahead of Friday’s landfall. Additionally, residents in coastal and low-lying areas are receiving warnings to prepare for potentially dangerous conditions. Ultimately, the speed and intensity of the typhoon’s development will determine the full scale of the emergency response required.

