Index  ›  world  ›  BBC
world · BBC ↗

Typhoon Bavi: China braced for second major storm in a week

BBC Published Jul 11, 2026 Reviewed Jul 11, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Typhoon Bavi spans 1,000 km at its widest point.
1000 km · Typhoon Bavi
Typhoon Bavi triggered landslides that killed 17 people in the Philippines.
17 people · Typhoon Bavi
The city of Wenzhou has a population of around 10 million people.
10 million people · Wenzhou
Typhoon Bavi had wind speeds of 290 km/h when it battered Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands.
290 km/h · Typhoon Bavi
Typhoon Bavi weakened to 144 km/h winds before striking the Sakishima islands.
144 km/h · Typhoon Bavi
Typhoon Bavi injured at least five people and left thousands without power in the Sakishima islands.
5 people · Typhoon Bavi
Taiwanese authorities warned that Typhoon Bavi could bring up to 1 meter of rainfall.
1 meter · Typhoon Bavi Taiwanese authorities
Typhoon Maysak left at least 39 people dead.
39 people · Typhoon Maysak
Typhoon Maysak spurred two rare tornadoes in central Hubei province.
2 tornadoes · Typhoon Maysak

Hundreds of thousands of people have been evacuated from areas of eastern China as a powerful typhoon - the country's second in a week - barrels towards the coast.

Typhoon Bavi, which spans 1,000km (620 miles) at its widest point - roughly the width of France - is expected to make landfall near the major city of Wenzhou on Sunday morning.

After pummelling a chain of remote Japanese islands, it brought heavy rainfall to Taiwan as it brushed past its northern tip. Earlier landslides triggered by the storm killed 17 people in the Philippines.

Though it has weakened to a Category 1 typhoon, it still presents a risk because of the huge volume of moisture within its rain bands.

Bavi is forecast to bring "exceptionally heavy rains" to eastern Zhejiang province and northeastern Fujian province, the authorities said, adding that evacuations were "undertaken entirely to guard against the [worst-case] scenario".

The city of Wenzhou, home to around 10 million people, is close to the path of the storm.

Bavi began as a super typhoon, battering Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands last Monday with wind speeds of 290km/h (180mph).

As it made its way through the Pacific, weakening to 144 km/h winds, it struck the Sakishima islands, part of Japan's Ryukyu island chain between the country's main islands and Taiwan. At least five people were injured and thousands were without power.

Taiwan itself did not receive a direct hit but thousands of people were forced to leave their homes and there was a danger of landslides after heavy rain. Neither country has reported any deaths.

Taiwanese authorities had warned that Bavi could bring up to 1m (39 inches) of rainfall.

Dozens of flights have been cancelled while schools have suspended classes across the region. Supermarket shelves have been wiped clean as residents stock up on supplies.

Parts of southern China are still reeling from the devastation brought by Typhoon Maysak earlier this week.

Maysak left at least 39 people dead and killed large numbers of livestock, resulting in massive agriculture loss. It also spurred two rare tornadoes in the central Hubei province.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error