Temperatures
in China, coldest in nearly 3 decades
Temperatures in China have plunged to their lowest in almost three decades, cold enough to freeze coastal waters and trap 1,000 ships in ice, official media said at the weekend.
6
January, 2013
Since
late November the country has shivered at an average of minus 3.8
degrees Celsius (25 degrees Fahrenheit), 1.3 degrees colder than the
previous average, and the chilliest in 28 years, state news agency
Xinhua said on Saturday, citing the China Meteorological
Administration.
Bitter
cold has even frozen the sea in Laizhou Bay on the coast of Shandong
province in the east, stranding nearly 1,000 ships, the China Daily
newspaper reported.
Zheng
Dong, chief meteorologist at the Yantai Marine Environment Monitoring
Center under the State Oceanic Administration, told the paper that
the area under ice in Laizhou Bay was 291 square km this week.
Transport
around the country has been severely disrupted.
More
than 140 flights from the state capital airport in central Hunan
province were delayed, while heavy snowfall forced the closure of
some sections of the Beijing-Hong Kong-Macau Expressway, the China
Daily said.
Temperatures
in the northeast fell even further, reaching a 43-year low of minus
15.3 degrees Celsius (4 degrees Fahrenheit), about 3.7 degrees below
the previous recorded average.
One
truck driver in southeastern Jiangxi province, caught in a 5 km (3.1
miles) queue caused by a pileup that happened after heavy snowfall,
told China Daily the snow and extreme cold had caught him unawares.
"I
didn't expect such a situation, so I've brought no warm coats or
food. All I can do now is wait," trucker Yao Xuefeng told the
paper.
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