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Blizzards and freezing rain have brought massive disruption to China’s peak Lunar New Year travel rush, leaving drivers stuck in cars on icy highways and passengers struggling to rebook canceled trains and flights.
The severe winter weather comes as Chinese?travelers make an estimated record 9 billion trips?during the notoriously busy 40-day “chunyun” period, when?millions of urban workers brave crowded stations and?huge traffic jams to return to their hometowns for the celebrations, also known in the country as Spring Festival.
Sections of 90 major highways impacted by snow and ice were closed across China as of Tuesday morning, according to state-affiliated Beijing News. In hard-hit Hubei and neighboring Anhui provinces, where temperatures have dropped below freezing in recent days, thousands of workers were deployed to restore train operations and clear roads, state media reported.
Numerous videos and images circulating online show stretches of snowbound cars stalled on highways. Others show crowds of stranded passengers in train stations, in one case with an announcement blaring: “No trains are leaving today. Please go ahead and get your refund.”
In central China, traffic ground to a halt as dozens of highways were closed?across Hubei and hundreds of flights were canceled in transit hub Wuhan over the weekend – with more bad weather expected in the greater region over the coming days.
This holiday season marks the first time in several years that many across China have been able to travel freely to celebrate with friends and family, following the end of tough Covid-19 controls that had severely restricted movement?since 2020. Last year’s holiday took place just weeks after those measures were lifted, only to coincide with a wave of infections across the country that complicated travel.
Aerial view of folk artists performing dragon dance on February 11, in Huaian, China.
VCG/Getty Images
People celebrate Lunar New Year in Manila, Philippines, on February 10.
Ezra Acayan/Getty Images
Dancers pose for a photo during the Lunar New Year celebration in the Chinatown of Buenos Aires, Argentina, on February 10.
Dallas Mavericks celebrate the Lunar New Year with performers during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder at American Airlines Center on February 10, in Dallas, Texas.
Kevin Jairaj/USA Today Sports/Reuters
Fireworks explode over Tengwang Pavilion to celebrate the Lunar New Year on February 10, in Nanchang, China.
Liu Siwei/China News Service/VCG/Getty Images
People take selfies as they celebrate the Lunar New Year in St. Petersburg, Russia, on February 10.
Andrei Bok/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images
Traditional stilt walkers, or gaoqiao, wait to take part in a performance at a local temple fair in Beijing on February 10.
Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
People attend Lunar New Year festivities in New York City's Chinatown on February 10.
Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images
Members of a dragon dance team take part in a parade to celebrate the Lunar New Year on February 10, in Hongcun Village, China.
Shi Yalei/VCG/Getty Images
A performer breathes fire during Lunar New Year celebrations at Binondo district, considered the world's oldest Chinatown, on February 10, in Manila, Philippines.
Ezra Acayan/Getty Images
People place offerings on a wishing tree in Hong Kong on February 10.
Lam Yik/Reuters
3,000 drones form a giant dragon pattern over Tianfu International Convention Centre to ring in the Year of the Dragon on February 10, in Chengdu, China.
VCG/Getty Images
People attend prayers for Lunar New Year at Satya Dharma Temple in Bali, Indonesia, on February 10.
Johanes P. Christo/NurPhoto/Getty Images
People try to catch red envelopes next to a lion figurine during celebrations in Chinatown in Manila, Philippines. on February 10.
Ted Aljide/AFP/Getty Images
Diners at a restaurant watch a lion dance in the Chinatown area of Yokohama, Japan, on February 10.
Philip Fong/AFP/Getty Images
People light candles and pray for good fortune to mark the eve of the Lunar New Year at Leng Noei Yi Temple, or Dragon Lotus Temple, in Bangkok, Thailand, on February 9.
Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Barongsai Lion Dance entertains students at Widiatmika School in Jimbaran, Indonesia on February 7.
A woman walks past dragon-themed lanterns in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China on February 7.
Liu Xin/China News Service/VCG/Getty Images
A man takes photos of blooming plum blossoms at the Summer Palace in Beijing, China on February 5.
Zhang Yu/China News Service/VCG/AP
Performers dance in the Grebeg Sudiro festival as part of the Lunar New Year celebrations in Solo City, Indonesia on February 4.
Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images
Lanterns set up for celebrations at Dharmayana Temple in Bali, Indonesia on February 3.
Johanes P. Christo/NurPhoto/AP
Crowds flock to the Spring Festival Light Show in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province, China on February 3.
Zhang Cheng/VCG/Getty Images
A lantern fair illuminates Guangzhou in China's southern Guangdong Province on February 3.
Wu Wenjun/VCG/Getty Images
Dragon dance performers take a quick break during the Lunar New Year Parade in Barcelona, Spain on February 3.
Axel Miranda/SOPA Images/Sipa/Reuters
Lanterns and light installations illuminate the City Walls in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province, China on February 1.
Stringer/VCG/Getty Images
Workers assemble dragon lanterns at a production workshop in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province, China on January 24.
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Getty Images
In pictures: Lunar New Year celebrations
Tortuous journey, but high spirits
This year, severe weather warnings from authorities have not deterred many?from setting off for their hometowns to ring in the Year of the Dragon, which begins February 10.
Among those determined to celebrate with loved ones was?Tang Zitao, a used car dealer in Hubei, who was trapped in his vehicle overnight while driving home.
Speaking to CNN Monday as he waited for snowbound traffic to start moving, Tang said what was usually a six-hour journey had already taken 24 hours.
“This journey has been too long, and it is indeed torture,” said Tang, who was bundled in a down jacket and, unlike some around him, had come well-prepared with food and water.
Tang flipped through his camera, where images showed piles of snow on both sides of the road and a long traffic jam. “The snow has been falling since the day before yesterday. It melted a little, but it then turned into ice. So the road is very wet and slippery,” he said.
But Tang?remained upbeat. “No matter what, we’d always head home for the Spring Festival. It’s a Chinese tradition,” he said.
Tang?finally reached his destination at 2 a.m. Tuesday, he told CNN in an update.
Along the icy roads, multiple videos circulating on social media show people walking car to car or setting up roadside stations offering provisions to stranded motorists, with some passing bottles of warm water over highway fences.
“These are not for sale – they’re free,” said one woman handing out porridge to stranded travelers alongside one highway.
Travelers pull luggage through snow at Luohe Railway Station in Henan province on February 2.
Yang Guang/Visual China Group/Getty Images
Though railway services in Wuhan gradually resumed Monday, 100 highway toll stations in surrounding Hubei?were still implementing traffic control measures due to icy roads, state media reported.
And the weather shows little sign of respite. Another wave of precipitation is forecast through midweek slightly further south than the snow?over the weekend,?according to CNN Weather.
China’s meteorological authorities on Tuesday issued a warning for further heavy snow in parts of Hubei and areas in central and southern China, lasting into Wednesday afternoon.