Flood-hit China expands social security net as extreme rain takes toll
A drone view shows buildings and roads are half submerged in floodwaters after heavy rainfalls, in Rongjiang county, Guizhou province, China June 24, 2025. China Daily via REUTERS/File Photo
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China has expanded the economic safeguards for segments of
its population affected by flood control schemes in times of extreme rainfall,
including pledges of direct compensation from the central government and
payments for livestock losses.
In China, diverting floodwaters to areas next to rivers is
a major step in managing downstream flooding. As extreme rainfall grows in
frequency, China is increasingly utilising such areas, some of which have been
unused until now and have been populated by farms, croplands and even
residential buildings, stoking social tensions.
According to revised rules on compensation related to flood
diversions released late on Friday, the central government will now bear 70% of
all compensation funds, with local governments responsible for the rest.
Previously, the ratio was to be decided based on actual economic losses and the
fiscal situation of local governments.
Livestock and poultry that cannot be relocated in time
before the arrival of diverted floodwaters will also be included in the
compensation scheme for the first time. Previously, only the loss of working
animals could be claimed for compensation.
In the summer of 2023, almost 1 million people in Hebei, a
province on the doorstep of Beijing, were relocated after record rain forced
authorities to divert water from swollen rivers to some populated areas for
storage, triggering anger over the homes and farms sacrificed to save the
Chinese capital.
China currently has 98 designated flood diversion areas spanning
major river basins including the Yangtze River basin, home to a third of the
country's population. During the 2023 Hebei floods, eight flood storage areas
were used.
Since the start of the East Asia monsoon in early June,
precipitation in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze has been up to two
times higher than usual, officials from the China Meteorological Administration
told reporters on Friday.
In other parts of China, daily rainfall measured by 30
meteorological stations in provinces such as Hubei and Guizhou broke records
for the month of June, they said.
Guizhou was the focal point of China's flood
alleviation efforts this week, with one of its cities hit by flooding on
a scale that meteorologists said could only happen once in 50 years,
and at a speed that shocked its 300,000 residents.
That prompted Beijing to issue pledges on Thursday to move
vulnerable populations and industries to low-flood areas and allocate more
space for flood diversion.


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