Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Snowfall disrupts transport in central, eastern China amid travel rush !

Snowfall disrupts transport in central, eastern China amid travel rush

Time:2024-05-21 08:30:48 source:International Issue news portal

Heavy snowfall has enveloped some areas of central and eastern China since Wednesday, leading to transport disruption in Hubei, Hunan and Anhui provinces amid the ongoing Spring Festival travel rush.

In east China's Anhui Province, over 95 highway toll stations have refused entry to vehicles as of Sunday morning, due to snowy and freezing conditions, causing inconvenience for many travelers during the travel surge, also known as "chunyun," which started on Jan. 26 and will end on March 5.

According to the Hubei Airports Group Company, both runways at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport were closed from Saturday evening due to adverse weather conditions. The airport initiated an emergency response for snow and ice removal early on Saturday morning, with the runways expected to resume operations on Sunday. Additionally, the airport in the province's city of Jingzhou has also been closed since Saturday.

China Railway Wuhan Bureau Group Co., Ltd. said on Sunday that it plans to suspend the operation of 141 round trips due to the widespread snowfall and freezing weather.

Meanwhile, the railway authority has organized nearly 3,000 employees to conduct snow removal at nearly 4,000 sets of railroad switches to ensure the smooth functioning of railway tracks.

In the neighboring Hunan Province, the railway authority imposed speed restrictions on the Chongqing-Xiamen and Zhangjiajie-Jishou-Huaihua high-speed railways, leading to delays for some trains. From Sunday to Monday, China Railway Guangzhou Group Co., Ltd. suspended 20 high-speed train services passing through the province. 

Related information
  • Shohei Ohtani's first walk
  • CPC Leadership Hears Work Reports
  • UN: Sudan conflict claims thousands of civilian lives, displaces millions in one year
  • Hungarian parliament approves Finland's accession to NATO
  • The government wants to buy their flood
  • UN chief calls for restraint after Iran's retaliatory attacks on Israel
  • Ecuador embroiled in diplomatic backlash after police break into Mexican embassy
  • (W.E. Talk) Tamara Prosic: How China and the World Benefit from Collectivism
Recommended content
  • Four people killed in a house explosion in southwestern Missouri
  • Global trade to rebound by 2.6 pct in 2024: WTO report
  • Comicomment: 'Summit for Democracy' not  about democracy
  • (W.E. Talk) Tamara Prosic: How China and the World Benefit from Collectivism
  • Tom Brady and Jay
  • China's gross marine product exceeds 9 trillion yuan in 2023