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Natural disasters cost China $7.6 billion dollars in H1 2025

Natural disasters cost China $7.6 billion dollars in H1 2025

An official of the Emergency Response Ministry said that natural disasters in China during the first half 2025 caused direct economic losses of 54.11 yuan (7.55 billion dollars) and affected over 23 million people.

The most devastating events were a powerful earthquake in Tibet and deadly landslides that occurred in the provinces of the southwest. Flooding in the south was also widespread.

Shen Zhanli said at a press briefing that 307 people were killed or missing and 620,000 had to be evacuated due to natural disasters.

A total of 29,600 homes were destroyed, an increase of 28.7% from the previous year, and 2.19 million hectares (hectares) of crops suffered damage.

According to a calculation of the economic losses, they were 41.9% lower than in the same period of last year. Flooding, drought, and extreme temperatures caused China 93.16 trillion yuan (the highest half-year figure for 2019).

The ministry reported that floods were the main cause of damage this year, with 51 billion yuan worth of losses.

China's flood control scheme has been expanded to include direct payments from the government as well as payment for livestock losses.

Extreme weather is a growing threat to the world's second largest economy, and meteorologists have linked it to climate change.

In recent weeks, torrential rains have flooded large areas of the country and exposed infrastructure problems such as a lack of air conditioning and outdated flood defences.

Last week, dozens of rivers in southwest China were above safe levels. More than 10,000 people had to be evacuated from the remains of the former typhoon Danas.

The sweltering summer heat and the resulting surge in demand for air conditioners has stretched China's electricity grid to its maximum capacity, pushing it to a new record.

The Ministry of Environment warned that typhoon and flood prevention would be difficult from the second half July to the first half August as rains become more intense and concentrated in the north, and typhoon activities intensify.

(source: Reuters)