Typhoon Ragasa Freezes Hong Kong: Hundreds of Flights Grounded, Cargo Diverted

Hong Kong looked like a ghost city on Tuesday. Streets usually packed with commuters were deserted, schools were closed, and public transport stood still. The reason was Typhoon Ragasa, already called the strongest storm of the year.
The airport felt the shock first. In less than 24 hours, over 700 flights were canceled or delayed. Airlines tried to shift operations to Shenzhen and Guangzhou, but conditions were too dangerous. Meteorologists warned that disruption could last another two to three days, keeping thousands of tons of cargo stranded.
For the airfreight business, this is a body blow. Forwarders are talking about a 20 to 25 percent cut in available capacity on Asia–Europe and Asia–U.S. lanes this week. Spot rates are jumping fast, with quotes already 30 percent higher than last week for electronics, pharmaceuticals, and e-commerce products.
The storm’s impact doesn’t stop at the runway. Factories in Guangdong, which supply nearly one-third of the world’s electronic components, have slowed exports. Even short delays here can ripple quickly into production schedules in Europe and North America. As one logistics manager said, “Every hour we lose in the Pearl River Delta is felt days later in Frankfurt or Chicago.”
The next 72 hours will test the region’s resilience. Some forwarders are booking emergency charters, others are rerouting via Seoul or Shanghai. For shippers, the message is clear: pay the premium or risk missing delivery windows.
The post Typhoon Ragasa Freezes Hong Kong: Hundreds of Flights Grounded, Cargo Diverted appeared first on The Logistic News.
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