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Typhoon Ragasa Lashes Southern China After Killing 17 in Taiwan

Taiwan appeared to suffer the worst of the most powerful cyclone this year, which was still battering cities in southern China late on Wednesday night.


Damaged cars lie piled up in mud, following flooding brought by Super Typhoon Ragasa in Hualien, Taiwan, September 24, 2025. (Reuters, Ann Wang).

 

Taiwan appeared to have been hit the hardest – in terms of damage and loss of lives – by Typhoon Ragasa, which continued to batter cities along southeastern China’s Guangdong coast late last night.

The world’s most powerful tropical cyclone this year struck the southern city of Yangjiang on Wednesday after killing 17 people in Taiwan, with another dozen or so missing, and lashing Hong Kong with ferocious winds and heavy rains.

The typhoon was tracking towards Maoming, one of China’s biggest oil refining cities, in Guangdong province. Remarkably, despite gusts of up to 240kmh, the southern province had not reported any deaths as of Wednesday afternoon, the South China Morning Post reported.

 

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In Taiwan, 17 people were missing in the eastern Hualien county after a barrier lake overflowed and sent a wall of water into a town, while Ragasa brought Hong Kong to a standstill.

More powerful typhoons are likely to hit southern China due to climate change, said Benjamin Horton, dean of the School of Energy and Environment at the City University of Hong Kong, after a summer of record-breaking rainfall.

“The weather experienced in Hong Kong this summer is only a taste of what is to come,” Horton said.

One resident in Shenzhen, the southern China tech hub, said the sound of the wind “felt like it was roaring.”

 

Tourist town swamped after lake overflows

Officials in Taiwan are used to moving people out of potential danger zones swiftly, as the island is frequently hit by typhoons, but many residents in the tourist town of Guangfu said they were given insufficient warning when a lake overflowed during Tuesday’s torrential rains brought by Ragasa.

A drone view shows a collapsed bridge submerged in flood water, after Super Typhoon Ragasa hit Guangfu in Hualien County, Taiwan, Sept 24, 2025 (video grab, Warthog Air Squadron via Reuters).

In Hong Kong, where huge waves crashed over areas of the Asian financial hub’s eastern and southern shoreline, some roads and residential properties were submerged.

At the Fullerton Hotel on the island’s south, videos on social media showed seawater surging through glass doors. No injury had been reported, the hotel told Reuters.

China’s marine authority issued its highest red wave warning for the first time this year, forecasting storm surges of up to 2.8 metres (9 feet) in parts of Guangdong province, as Ragasa headed towards the densely populated Pearl River Delta.

Ragasa formed over the Western Pacific last week. Fuelled by warm seas and favourable atmospheric conditions, the tropical cyclone rapidly intensified to become a Category 5 super typhoon on Monday with winds exceeding 260 kph (162 mph).

It has since weakened, but was still powerful enough to bring down trees and power lines.

“Authorities have taken lessons from Hato and Mangkhut, which both caused billions of dollars in damage in 2017 and 2018,” said Chim Lee, a senior energy and climate change specialist at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

“The Pearl River Delta is one of the best-prepared regions for typhoons, so we’re not expecting major disruptions. One change this year is that the Hong Kong stock market has stayed open during typhoons – a sign of how resilient the infrastructure has become,” he said.

That said, Zijin Gold International delayed its $3.2 billion IPO in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

2 million evacuated

After passing around 100 km (60 miles) south of Hong Kong, Ragasa made landfall along the south Chinese coast. Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Foshan and Dongguan, the largest cities in the storm’s path, are home to around 50 million people.

More than 2 million people were evacuated across Guangdong and the ministry for emergencies dispatched tens of thousands of tents, folding beds, lighting equipment and other rescue supplies, Chinese state media reported.

Some shops and restaurants in the province parked large rented trucks in front of storefronts in a bid to shield them from the storm, local media reported.

“We live on an upper floor and saw there wasn’t too much danger, so I brought the kids out to experience this heavy rain and wind,” a 40-year-old Shenzhen resident surnamed Liang said. “We walked along the open road to make sure to stay safe.”

A crowd chasing the storm under Shenzhen Bay Bridge was moved on by traffic police.

“The typhoon was really intense, but I’ve not been out long,” said an electric scooter delivery driver who goes by the name of Tim and was using his vehicle to assess the damage.

China’s marine authority warned of a high risk of flooding in Shenzhen, especially in low-lying areas, with a storm surge alert expected to remain in effect until Thursday.

A woman and her five-year-old son were swept into the ocean on Tuesday after watching the typhoon from the Hong Kong waterfront, according to the South China Morning Post, which said they were now in intensive care.

Hong Kong will lower its typhoon signal to 3 from 8 after 1220 GMT on Wednesday, the city’s weather forecast agency said.

The hospital authority said at least 90 people had been injured by the typhoon, while the government had opened 50 temporary shelters, within which 885 sought refuge.

In the gambling hub of Macau, next to Hong Kong, casinos were forced to shutter their gambling areas. One user on China’s Xiaohongshu app showed videos of doors being sealed at a casino resort for protection against gales and debris.

 

  • Reuters with additional input and editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.