Typhoon Ragasa Grounds Hong Kong: More Than 700 Flights Canceled as Cargo Networks Brace for Disruption
Hong Kong is facing its toughest weather challenge of the year. On Tuesday, the city was brought to a standstill as Typhoon Ragasa, already labeled the most powerful storm of 2025, swept into the Pearl River Delta. Authorities raised the Signal 8 warning, a measure rarely taken, which meant schools closed, offices shuttered, and public transport largely suspended.
The immediate fallout was felt at Hong Kong International Airport, where more than 700 flights were either canceled or heavily delayed within a single day. Neighboring airports in Shenzhen and Guangzhou tried to absorb some of the overflow, but the skies remained unsafe. Meteorologists warn that the storm’s intensity could keep operations disrupted for another two to three days.
For the air cargo industry, the timing could hardly be worse. Forwarders are already reporting a 20–25% cut in available capacity on key Asia–Europe and Asia–US lanes this week. Spot rates are expected to climb by as much as 30%, hitting shippers of high-tech products, pharmaceuticals, and fast-moving e-commerce items the hardest.
Guangdong’s manufacturing heartland, which produces nearly one-third of the world’s electronic components, is also bracing for delays. Even a short pause in exports risks slowing assembly lines in Europe and North America. As one logistics manager put it, “Every hour of lost production here ripples through supply chains thousands of miles away.”
The next 72 hours will be a stress test for regional logistics. Freight forwarders are racing to reroute urgent cargo through Seoul, Shanghai, or even chartered flights, while shippers weigh the cost of disruption against the risk of missing critical delivery windows.
The post Typhoon Ragasa Grounds Hong Kong: More Than 700 Flights Canceled as Cargo Networks Brace for Disruption appeared first on The Logistic News.
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