Video thumbnail for China: Drones aid flood rescue operations in south China's Guangxi.

China: Drones aid flood rescue operations in south China's Guangxi.

Jul 9, 2026

StringersHub

Shotlist Hengzhou City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, south China - July 8, 2026 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland) 1. Various of rescuers, inflatable boats, supplies 2. Rescuers on boats in floodwater 3. Rescuers strapping supplies 4. Drone taking off with supplies 5. SOUNDBITE (Chinese, dubbed in English) Tu Junjie, drone technician, Ramunion Rescue (ending with shot 6): "Each drone can carry 80 kilograms of supplies, fly for about 20 minutes on a full load, and drop goods to areas up to five kilometers away." 6. Rescuers, drone landing 7. SOUNDBITE (Chinese, dubbed in English) Xiao Qin, staff member, Guangxi Beigu Smart Agriculture Company (ending with shot 8): "Within five kilometers, a drone flight takes just three to four minutes. With continuous operation, the efficiency is extremely high. Given conditions on the ground, cargo drones would be ideal, and we need skilled pilots to run them." 8. Various of drone taking off with supplies 9. Various of drone in air, landing 10. Technician checking drone 11. Various of drone on ground 12. SOUNDBITE (Chinese, dubbed in English) Liu Tie, technician, China Mobile (partially overlaid with shot 13/ending with shot 14): "The drone is equipped with a satellite base station. It flies over areas where power, phone networks are all down. Once it's overhead, it beams down mobile signals so people on the ground can make calls and get help." ++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++ 13. Drone on ground ++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++ 14. Drone on ground 15. Locals walking in mud 16. SOUNDBITE (Chinese, dubbed in English) Lin Qingqing, local resident (ending with shots 17-18): "Floodwaters have receded in the village, but my supermarket remains flooded inside. It hasn't drained out yet. I'm so grateful, thanks to our country. Everyone has shown such kindness." 17. Locals walking in mud 18. Various of rescuers handing out supplies to locals 19. SOUNDBITE (Chinese, dubbed in English) Wang Yufeng, local resident: "The floodwater has receded. All we see is mud now." 20. Various of rescuers using drones to deliver supplies Storyline Rescuers are deploying high-tech tools such as drones to aid relief efforts in Yunbiao Town, one of the areas hardest hit by flooding in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. On Wednesday morning, vehicles were coming and going, and rescuers were busy loading supplies onto inflatable boats destined for submerged villages. In villages cut off by flooding where inflatable boats cannot reach, authorities and volunteer groups have deployed large numbers of drones to deliver food, drinking water and medical supplies. "Each drone can carry 80 kilograms of supplies, fly for about 20 minutes on a full load, and drop goods to areas up to five kilometers away," said Tu Junjie, a drone technician of Ramunion Rescue, a Chinese non-governmental and humanitarian relief organization. "Within five kilometers, a drone flight takes just three to four minutes. With continuous operation, the efficiency is extremely high. Given conditions on the ground, cargo drones would be ideal, and we need skilled pilots to run them," said Xiao Qin, a staff member of Guangxi Beigu Smart Agriculture Company. China Mobile, a major Chinese telecom company, is using a drone to provide mobile communication signal coverage within a two-kilometer radius above the town, helping residents who lost network access to call for help. "The drone is equipped with a satellite base station. It flies over areas where power, phone networks are all down. Once it's overhead, it beams down mobile signals so people on the ground can make calls and get help," said Liu Tie, a technician of China Mobile. By Wednesday afternoon, things in Yunbiao started to turn for the better. "Floodwaters have receded in the village, but my supermarket remains flooded inside. It hasn't drained out yet. I'm so grateful, thanks to our country. Everyone has shown such kindness," said Lin Qingqing, a local resident. "The floodwater has receded. All we see is mud now," said Wang Yufeng, another local. The forecast calls for continued rain across Guangxi over the next couple of days, though it is expected to gradually ease.
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