Heaviest rains in 140 years bring floods to Hong Kong and cities across southern China
Two people died and more than 100 were injured when the remnants of Typhoon Haikui brought flooding to Hong Kong in early September 2023. The storm continued its path into southern China, where the city of Shenzhen experienced nearly 500mm of rainfall in a single day (Guardian, 2023). Transport services across the region were affected, with Hong Kong’s cross-harbour tunnel inundated, subway stations closed, and landslides blocking highways (BBC, 2023).
Event Overview
Authorities in Hong Kong issued a ‘black rainstorm warning’ for the first time in two years on 7 September 2023 as heavy rain associated with Typhoon Haikui swept across the Pearl River delta (Sky News, 2023). Areas of Hong Kong received over twice their average September rainfall in 24 hours, with 600mm being recorded at the Hong Kong Observatory and 800mm over the Eastern and Southern districts, compared to the mean monthly September average of 321.4mm (Floodlist, 2023).
Two people are known to have been killed by the floods, with 132 more receiving hospital treatment (South China Morning Post, 2023). Schools and clinics were closed across Hong Kong, whilst shopping malls and train stations were also inundated; the city’s stock exchange was suspended on Friday 8 September (Guardian, 2023).
The next wave of flooding was reported in the neighbouring Guangdong province, where heavy rain brought devastation to cities including Shenzhen and Meizhou. A record 24-hour rainfall total of 469mm was recorded in Shenzhen, whilst 11,000 people were evacuated in Meizhou (Floodlist, 2023). Transport links and businesses were particularly badly affected in Shenzhen, a city of over 17 million inhabitants known for being a technology hub (Guardian, 2023).
Although the heavy showers had begun to ease by the end of 8 September, the black warning lasted for over 12 hours; as a comparison, the previous record length of a black rainstorm warning, set back in 1999, was less than six hours in duration (South China Morning Post, 2023).
As the region began to count the cost of the event, further heavy rain falling at a rate of at least 50mm an hour on 14 September led to a red warning and school closures across the city (Reuters, 2023).