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Northern China is on high alert for Mongolian typhoons

Beijing has warned its 22 million residents to avoid non-essential travel. It has also postponed major sporting events and closed parks. Dozens were cancelled.

The state-run Xinhua News Agency reported that a cold vortex coming from Mongolia will sweep through northern Chinese provinces on Friday afternoon and continue into the weekend. It is expected to bring unusually strong winds with gusts up to 150 kph.

Climate change has made extreme weather conditions more common. Strong winds bringing sand and dirt from Mongolia are not unusual at this time of year. Beijing has issued its first orange-colored gale warning in 10 years, which is the second highest of four levels.

Meteorologists warn that the wind speed could surpass or rival April records from 1951.

In the Chinese region Inner Mongolia, as well as in northeast China, heavy snowfall is expected. Meanwhile, southern China may be hit with the strongest hailstorms this year.

The half-marathon in Beijing, scheduled for Sunday and featuring humanoid robotics racing alongside humans in order to demonstrate China's technological advancements has been delayed by one week.

On Friday, 56 train services were cancelled to or from the Capital and 103 on Saturday.

China Southern Airlines cancelled 31 flights on Friday and 17 on Saturday as of noon local time.

To reduce the likelihood of them breaking or falling, more than 4,800 trees in the city have been reinforced or pruned.

According to the Ministry of Emergency Management, natural disasters in China resulted in direct economic losses of $9.3 billion yuan (US$1.27 billion) during the first two months of the year 2025. $1 = 7.3207 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Kate Mayberry, Kevin Liffey and Ethan Wang)

(source: Reuters)