Chinese provinces warn of thick fog, dozens of Shanghai flights delayed

China: On January 4, a number of Chinese provinces experienced exceptionally heavy fog, which caused dangerously low visibility, closed highways, delayed flights out of Shanghai, and prompted weather forecasters to issue numerous warnings and advisories.

According to China’s National Meteorological Centre, some areas of southern Jiangsu and southeastern Anhui had awareness below 50 meters, while thick fog affected the provinces of Shandong and Hubei, Hunan, Jinxi, and Fujian.

Up until 7.45 a.m., the Central Meteorological Observatory issued yellow and orange instructions for big clouds. Going into Friday, cloud is anticipated in some areas, according to Chinese climate experts.

According to state media journalist Camera news, some areas of Anhui issued red warnings for large fog&nbsp, the most significant expert, and some highways were temporarily closed.

According to CCTV, some areas in Nanjing, the capital of China’s southeast Jiangsu state, were hit by intense cloud, which led to varying degrees of snarls in public transportation.

China has a three-tier method of color-coded warnings for dense fog, with red being the most severe, followed by peach, and bright.

According to the flight tracking app FlightView.com, the clouds likewise caused dozens of planned departures from Shanghai Pudong International Airport to be postponed or diverted over the past three hours.

Her aircraft was delayed for hours, according to a Reuters witness who was traveling from Shanghai to Harbin.

The irritated traveler remarked,” We just returned to the wall, so it seems like forever,” revealing a picture of the raindrop-covered plane window’s exterior wall of thick gray mist.