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Shanghai Covid Cases Top 13,000 as Millions Locked Down

Shanghai reported more than 13,000 daily Covid cases for the first time, amongst a sweeping lockdown of its 25 million residents.

Shanghai Covid Cases Top 13,000 as Millions Locked Down
A worker in personal protective equipment (PPE) in a neighborhood placed under lockdown due to Covid-19 in Shanghai, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

Shanghai reported more than 13,000 daily Covid-19 cases for the first time, as a sweeping lockdown of its 25 million residents and mass testing uncovered an extensive spread of the highly infectious omicron variant.

The outbreak in the Chinese financial hub pushed the national total total to 16,412 local infections for Monday, the highest one-day figure recorded in the world’s second-largest economy during the pandemic -- clouding its growth outlook and threatening to disrupt the global supply chain.

China’s current outbreak is surpassing a level not seen since February 2020, when a one-day correction in the way it tracked cases pushed daily infections past 15,000, largely concentrated in Wuhan. The ballooning number in Shanghai, despite a city-wide lockdown, underscores the challenge the nation faces in returning to President Xi Jinping’s Covid Zero goal.

Shanghai Covid Cases Top 13,000 as Millions Locked Down

Shanghai registered 13,354 local cases for Monday, up from 9,006 a day earlier and from near zero at the start of March, according to a local government statement. While a two-phase lockdown of the city officially ends early Tuesday, the widespread infections mean most residential blocks will remain subject to quarantine for days or even weeks. 

More than 38,000 medical staff from around China have arrived in the city to help with testing and treatment, according to state media reports. The People’s Liberation Army has also mobilized more than 2,000 military medics to support Shanghai’s virus control efforts.

Shanghai Covid Cases Top 13,000 as Millions Locked Down

Beijing has sent Vice Premier Sun Chunlan to Shanghai to oversee prevention efforts. Sun, the only woman on the ruling Communist Party’s 25-member Politburo, on Tuesday urged an acceleration of the construction of makeshift hospitals and quarantine facilities. She also ordered local authorities to put all close contacts of Covid-19 patients into quarantine facilities in order to “resolutely win the war against the pandemic,” according to a statement from the municipal government.

As the total number of positive cases in the city has exceeded 73,000, Shanghai has been racing to convert more gymnasiums and exhibition centers around the city into massive quarantine centers. Meanwhile, Shanghai’s rules on barring parents from accompanying their young children in quarantine unless the parents are also infected with the virus have fueled deep concerns among local residents and intense debate in social media this week.

Shanghai Covid Cases Top 13,000 as Millions Locked Down

Earlier this week, Sun ordered local officials to curtail the outbreak “as soon as possible,” indicating China remains wedded to its rigid Covid Zero stance despite the escalating crisis. For much of the pandemic the nation has sought to eliminate the virus, something that’s become more challenging as the pathogen has mutated to become more transmissible, evading even the toughest border curbs and quarantine regimes. 

China is the last country in the world to still be taking such a hard line with the virus, after other places that pursued elimination, including Singapore, Australia and New Zealand, started to open up once vaccination reached key levels. 

While Xi has vowed to reduce the economic and social impact of his Covid-fighting measures, Shanghai’s outbreak has caused a surge in local food prices as residents race to stock up on supplies, and made it difficult for people with chronic medical conditions to get much-needed treatment.

Sun on Tuesday also urged Shanghai -- home to the world’s largest container port and country headquarters of many domestic and overseas companies -- to ensure normal port and shipping operations. Supply chains and businesses must be kept stable and smooth, she said.

Yet businesses and some factories remain shuttered, with Tesla Inc.’s Shanghai plant -- its first Gigafactory outside of the U.S. -- entering a second week of disrupted operation.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg