evacuate entire neighborhoods when roads disappear
In July 2021, Zhengzhou floods they left a scene that went around the world: excavators advancing between streets turned into rivers to remove residents trapped because there were no longer roads. Five years later, China is facing the same problem again, although this time the answer seems straight out of a science fiction movie. 2026 tests China. Torrential rains have been going on for months hitting the center and south of the countrywith dozens of deaths, hundreds of thousands of people affected and massive evacuations. Reuters described Roads blocked, cities partially flooded and rescue teams forced to use boats, swimmers and improvised means to reach isolated areas. In fact, the emergency reached a new dimension when Typhoon Maysak hit Guangxi, forcing the evacuation of more than 130,000 people and leaving thousands of students trapped by water. Traditional rescue does not work. The floods left a repeated image again and again: entire neighborhoods where it was not possible to circulate overland. That problem has led China to deploy a ever-growing fan of solutions, one where we have seen from drones capable of maintaining communications or transporting cargo to heavy machinery adapted to move through water. It is not an improvised strategy, but an evolution of the lessons learned after previous catastrophes such as those in Zhengzhou. A gigantic floating “creature”. And among all the means deployed there was one that caught special attention. Several local media have shown a huge self-propelled pontoon used to evacuate thousands of people when the roads had completely disappeared. The Chinese media baptized as a kind of “rescue aircraft carrier”, a huge floating platform capable of transporting hundreds of people at a time to places where conventional vehicles can no longer reach. The new thing is the strategy. As of this writing, there are no independent sources indicating that this platform is a newly introduced development. Everything indicates that it derives from the self-propelled pontoons that for decades have employed military engineers to build bridges floating and crossing rivers with heavy vehicles. Rather, what is novel here seems to be its adaptation for large-scale civilian evacuations, turning a military technology into a kind of gigantic emergency ferry. The great teaching. The Guangxi floods have revealed something more important than a floating platform, which too. While much of the world continues to rely almost exclusively on ships and helicopters to respond to these types of disasters, China is incorporating dronesamphibious platforms and large floating systems to keep a city operational even when it no longer has streets. Maybe that marine “creature” It may be the most spectacular image, but it probably only represents one more piece in a much broader strategy to respond to increasingly frequent extreme phenomena. Image | CCTV In Xataka | In China, the drone that brings you your order and the drone that evacuates you from a flood are sometimes the same drone In Xataka | The mega transfer: China is executing the largest hydraulic engineering project in history before our eyes