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China's Cold Snap Reaches Shanghai With Chilliest Year-end in Four Decades


Residents are covered in frost while exercising outdoors in Shenyang, in China’'s northeast Liaoning province, Dec. 20, 2023. It's not as frosty well to the south, but even Shanghai is experiencing an unusual cold spell.
Residents are covered in frost while exercising outdoors in Shenyang, in China’'s northeast Liaoning province, Dec. 20, 2023. It's not as frosty well to the south, but even Shanghai is experiencing an unusual cold spell.

Shanghai was set to record its chilliest period in December in four decades with weather warnings for low temperatures and wind issued Thursday, as the Chinese financial capital entered a cold snap of several days.

The city's lowest temperatures on Thursday will be minus 4 to minus 6 degrees Celsius in Shanghai's suburbs, and temperatures will remain below zero all day throughout the city, the Shanghai Meteorological Bureau said in a post on its Weibo social media account.

Wang Kaiyun, 59, who works as a cleaner in downtown Shanghai and commutes from the city's suburbs on an electric scooter, said the temperature was minus 5 degrees on her one-hour ride in on Thursday.

"Even though I was wearing gloves, I quickly lost feeling in my hands and they are still painful now," Wang said.

While the city's temperatures remain far warmer than those in northern China, where many provinces have recorded historically low temperatures in recent weeks, the run of cold weather was unusual for Shanghai.

The city's weather bureau said it expected the minimum temperature at one downtown reading station to remain below zero until December 25, a run of cold in the month of December that hasn't occurred in 40 years.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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