Northern China is bracing for typhoon-like gales this weekend, with the Chinese capital of Beijing postponing major sporting events, closing parks, suspending train services and warning its 22 million residents against nonessential travel.

Beijing in lockdown mode: Flights delayed, parks closed amid wild windstorm.(REUTERS/Xihao Jiang/File Photo)

A powerful current of cold air is forecast to sweep across northern provinces from Friday afternoon through the weekend, bringing unusually powerful winds, China Central Television (CCTV) reported, with gusts in some areas potentially reaching 150 kilometres per hour (93 miles per hour).

Strong winds carrying sand and dust from Mongolia are normal at this time of the year. But climate change has made weather conditions more extreme. Beijing has issued its first orange alert in 10 years, the second-highest in a four-tier colour-coded system for gales.

Temperatures in the Chinese capital could plummet by as many as 12 degrees Celsius on Saturday compared to Friday, CCTV said, with meteorologists warning that wind speeds recorded at some stations may rival or exceed April records dating back to 1951.

Heavy snow is expected to blanket parts of the Chinese region of Inner Mongolia as well as northeast China, while southern China could be hit by the most intense hailstorms so far this year, the state broadcaster added.

A half marathon in Beijing originally scheduled for Sunday in which humanoid robots will race alongside human runners in a showcase of China’s advances in frontier technologies has been postponed by a week to April 19.

Several passenger train routes operating in Beijing and surrounding areas were suspended, CCTV said.

Flights could also be delayed or cancelled, and authorities announced closure to a number of parks and tourist attractions.

More than 4,800 trees across the city had been reinforced or pruned to reduce the risk of them falling, CCTV reported.

Natural disasters in China caused direct economic losses of 9.3 billion yuan ($1.27 billion) in the first two months of 2025, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management. ($1 = 7.3207 Chinese yuan renminbi).



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