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Super Typhoon Yagi kills up to 30 in China and Vietnam

Yagi was the strongest autumn typhoon to strike China since 1949



Damaged buildings and debris on a street after Super Typhoon Yagi hit Ha Long, in Quang Ninh province.
Image Credit: AFP

Super Typhoon Yagi's trail of devastation across southern China and northern Vietnam included up to 30 deaths, a major impact on agriculture and fishing, as well as some damage to energy infrastructure.

Yagi was the strongest autumn typhoon to strike China since 1949, according to a Xinhua News Agency report citing the China Meteorological Administration. It's the 11th of the season so far.

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In northern Vietnam, 26 people were dead or missing in the wake of the typhoon, according to a statement from the government. At least four people died in China's southern province of Hainan, CCTV reported. Nearly a million residents had been evacuated on the island and the nearby province of Guangdong as the typhoon approached.

Yagi made landfall in China twice on Friday, first hitting Hainan and then Guangdong. The system was equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane when it struck Hainan, which is considered a major storm capable of inflicting catastrophic damage. Yagi was downgraded on Sunday to a tropical depression, but the National Meteorological Center said heavy rains still threaten parts of Guangxi and Yunnan, Xinhua reported.

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The typhoon has caused 11.9 billion yuan ($1.67 billion) of damage to Hainan's agriculture, with more than half of that in the fishing sector, the provincial government said at a briefing on Sunday, the People's Daily reported.

Flood Damage

In northern Vietnam, flooding destroyed over 120,000 hectares of rice and other crops, the VnExpress news website reported, and heavy rains remain a risk. Some 5,000 fruit trees in the provinces of Thai Binh, Hung Yen and the port city of Haiphong were also destroyed, it said. About 17,000 trees in Hanoi alone were uprooted or damaged.

Vegetable prices surged by as much as 30% in Hanoi and other places in northern Vietnam after Yagi devastated farms and disrupted transport, VnExpress said.

A number of boats sank in the provinces of Quang Ninh, Thai Binh and Hai Duong, as well as the port city of Haiphong, according to the government. Some provinces and cities experienced power losses and widespread communication outages. Northern Power Corp. said more than 5.7 million customers were affected by the storm, although power supplies have since been restored to 4.2 million of them.

In Thai Binh alone, initial damage was estimated at about 2 trillion dong ($81 million), according to the Lao Dong news website.

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China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. said on WeChat that its refineries in Hainan had been damaged by the typhoon, although it didn't mention any impact on production.

Yagi also broke a handful of wind turbines on the island in Wenchang, where the typhoon made landfall. The equipment was supplied by Windey Energy Technology Group Co. as part of a project being developed by Huaneng Power International Inc, according to local news outlet Jiemian. A spokesperson for Windey said the turbines met national standards, but wind speeds exceeded the maximum they were designed for.

Hainan's vacation hot spot of Sanya has reopened its tourist venues, Xinhua said, citing local authorities.

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