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Article Body Text<p>Roads and neighborhoods in Shanghai flooded on Friday as the Chinese megacity was battered by a second typhoon days after it was hit by its strongest storm in 75 years.</p> <p>Typhoon Pulasan made landfall Thursday night in the city's Fengxian district, with a maximum wind speed of 83 kph, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.</p> <p>The storm "is forecast to gradually weaken as it moves inland," Xinhua said, though downpours continued in the city Friday morning.</p> <p>Video posted on social media Friday showed Shanghai residents wading through calf-deep water in some neighborhoods, though no severe damage or casualties have been reported.</p> <p>Parts of Shanghai upgraded their typhoon alert levels as the storm approached the city Thursday.</p> <p>Pulasan comes days after Typhoon Bebinca wreaked havoc Monday as the strongest storm to hit the city since 1949.</p> <p>Bebinca felled more than 1,800 trees and left 30,000 households without electricity, with authorities evacuating more than 400,000 people across Shanghai ahead of the storm.</p> <p>Scientists say climate change driven by greenhouse gas emissions is making extreme weather more frequent and intense.</p> <p>China is the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, though its per capita emissions pale in comparison to rival economic power the United States. </p>
Content TypeText
LanguageEnglish
NewsML Media TopicsArts, Culture, Entertainment and Media
Subtitles / Dubbing AvailableNo
NetworkVOA
Embargo DateSeptember 20, 2024 01:27 EDT
BylineAgence France-Presse
Brand / Language ServiceVoice of America - English