The city of Beijing will spend 20 million yuan (2.41 million US dollars) to
construct 20 new weather towers.
The new weather towers will be the most advanced of the kind in the country
and will be able to monitor and forecast temperature, rainfall and wind
direction and speed around the clock, said Guo Hu, head of Beijing Municipal
Meteorological Observatory.
According to Guo, the new facilities will be able to monitor destructive
storms such as hailstorms, thunderstorms, downpours and sandstorms and offer up
to the minute weather forecasting.
Currently there are only two weather towers in the capital.
Wu Zhenghua, a fellow researcher with the municipal meteorological bureau and
also a member of the Beijing Disaster Reduction Society, believed the completion
of the new weather facilities would make weather forecasting more accurate. The
new equipment will help Beijing residents become informed of sudden storms, such
as the July 10th downpour.
A sudden strong rainstorm hit China's capital city last Saturday afternoon
and paralyzed the traffic in downtown areas forabout three hours. The shower
started at 4:00 p.m. and continued for two or three hours. Within an hour, the
storm brought more than 42 mm of rainfall downtown and more than 25 mm to the
westernpart of the city.