Camera IconGales battered central Chinese cities including Huanggang for hours, leaving widespread damage. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

Two tornadoes have wrought devastation in central China's Hubei province, state media says, killing at least 11 people as winds of up to 149km/h overturned cars and ripped roofs from buildings, leaving trails of mangled metal in their wake.

Over four hours on Monday evening, gales measuring level 13 on the extended Beaufort wind force scale swept over the cities of Huangshi, Huanggang, Ezhou and Xianning, Xinhua reported, citing Hubei's emergency management authorities.

At least one person was still missing, the report said.

Tornadoes are extremely rare in Hubei, a major industrial, automotive manufacturing, and technology hub, Wang Xiaoling, an expert at the provincial meteorological bureau, told Hubei Daily.

The last tornado in the province was in May 2021.

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China is becoming increasingly exposed to extreme weather events that experts attribute to climate change.

Torrential rain, scorching summer heat and gale-force winds cause tens of billions of dollars in economic losses annually, disrupting industry and destroying crops.

Footage from state broadcaster CCTV showed rescue workers in Huanggang looking at a badly damaged truck cab that appeared to have been shredded by bits of corrugated steel torn from the roof of a nearby building.

Another clip showed a wrecked white car that had been blown into a lamp post that was also surrounded by sheets of twisted steel.

The National Meteorological Centre said northeastern Hubei should brace for further heavy to torrential rain on Tuesday, as well as parts of the southwestern Guangxi region, the southern provinces of Guangdong and Hainan, and the more northerly Jilin, Shandong and Liaoning provinces, among other areas.

Guangxi region, still reeling from Typhoon Maysak, which killed at least four people in its capital city Nanning in the past few days, should prepare for extremely heavy rain of up to 260mm over the next 24 hours, which could trigger landslides.

Sixteen people remained missing after a landslide in a mountainous county in western China's Gansu province, state media reported.

A total of 33 people were swept away in the early hours of the morning.

Chinese President Xi Jinping called for "all-out efforts" to rescue those affected by the floods, CCTV reported on Tuesday.

China also faces Super Typhoon Bavi, which is tracking across the Pacific towards Taiwan and forecast to make landfall along China's eastern coast later this week.

The storm packed winds of up to 289km/h as it swept across Guam, Tinian, Saipan and Rota on Monday.

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