Northern China is bracing itself for a cold snap heading in from
western Siberia and the Mongolian Plateau that will cause
temperatures to plummet by as much as 16 C.
Northwest winds of Force 5 to 6 are expected to sweep over most
parts in northwest China, the central and western parts of north
China over the next three days, bringing snow with it, with
temperatures expected to drop by about 8 C.
"Upon the heels of the cold front which is predicted to push
deeply into the country this week, more snowfalls can be expected
in the north with rains or snow flurries possibly in the south,"
Yang Guiming, a senior expert of the Central Meteorological Office,
said at the weekend.
Northwest China, the central and western parts of north China
will be most affected by the cold snap.
Following the light snow on Saturday, the last day of 2005,
Beijing and Tianjin in north China will see temperatures plummet by
as much as 10 C from tonight.
Beijing had been enjoying a relatively warm start to the new
year, with temperatures of about 3 C.
By next Monday, temperatures in parts of northwest China and
north China's autonomous regions and provinces including Xinjiang,
Inner Mongolian and Gansu will fall by as much as 16 C from
today.
On Tuesday, heavy snowfalls are likely to blanket areas in the
Tibet Autonomous Region in souhtwest China and the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region in northwest China .
The cold wave will pass through most of central China and east
China as it moves southwards.
"The cold front, one of the strongest ones of this winter, will
not fade out throughout the country until Thursday. By then,
temperatures will sink in many areas, even in parts of southwest
China like the Sichuan Basin, which does not normally see very cold
winter days," Yang said.
"In the rest of this month, the coldest period of winter, at
least three winter freezes will grip more areas across the country
in succession," warned Wang Bangzhong, deputy director of the
forecasting service and disaster mitigation department under the
China Meteorological Administration.
"China is experiencing the coldest winter in 20 years as the
national average temperature in December 1.5 C below the monthly
average, and was the coldest recorded since 1986," he said.
Reviewing the weather changes over the past year, he said: "The
country experienced the hottest summer since 1951, with eight
typhoons or tropical cyclones, the most of its type since 1949,
along with many other disasters like regional floods and
heatwaves.
"In 2005, we had only nine sandstorms over the skies of north
China and northwest China, which was the least of its type in about
50 years for the drought-prone northern provinces."
(China Daily January 2, 2006)