Guangxi flood: Liulan Reservoir water levels stabilize after Typhoon Maysak breach
Water levels and outflows at the Liulan Reservoir in Nanning, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, have largely stabilized after a breach triggered by heavy rainfall from Typhoon Maysak, local authorities said on Thursday.
The breach is no longer expanding, said Zhai Jianjia, deputy director of Nanning's water resources bureau, at a flood control and disaster relief news conference.
Transportation disruptions remain severe in four townships across Hengzhou and Binyang county, the hardest-hit areas of Nanning. Yunbiao township in Hengzhou remains the most seriously affected. As of 8 am Thursday, multiple rural roads there were still submerged and impassable. In neighboring Zhenlong township, several major roads suffered extensive damage, with repair crews working around the clock to restore access.
Authorities have established a multi-stage logistics network to deliver relief supplies to isolated communities. Emergency materials are transported by road to staging areas on the edge of flooded zones before being transferred by speedboats and drones to temporary resettlement sites, ensuring affected residents have continued access to food, drinking water, and other essential supplies.
- Guangxi flood: Liulan Reservoir water levels stabilize after Typhoon Maysak breach
- Super Typhoon Bavi nears East China as heavy rain, storms trigger alerts
- China, Russia conduct live-force, live-fire drills at sea
- Beijing issues first orange alert of flood season, some districts upgrade to red
- Beijing park traps up to 20,000 mosquitoes daily with smart devices
- China cracks down on illegal bird hunting, wildlife crimes































