Energy, water, and food supplies are being hit across the country. Rivers are drying up. Dams are emptying. Hydroelectric plants are shutting down.
That means factories are being closed to divert available electricity towards residential use.
In the fields, crops and animals are wilting – as are their human tenders. Hundreds of thousands of acres have already been seared, with serious worldwide repercussions expected on food supplies and prices – especially vegetables and grains.
Signs of things to come
The Sichuan megacity of Chongqing, home to some 30 million people, reached a top of 45C on August 18. On August 20, the city's overnight minimum bottomed out at 34.9C.
These are the highest temperatures China has recorded outside the occupied desert province of Xinjiang.
"There is nothing in world climatic history which is even minimally comparable to what is happening in China," weather historian Maximiliano Herrera told New Scientist. "This combines the most extreme intensity with the most extreme length with an incredibly huge area all at the same time."
Electricity demand for cooling has spiked at the same time production has plummeted.
Not enough water is flowing through hydroelectric power turbines. Nuclear power plants are struggling to keep their reactors cool.
Chinese sources state some 66 rivers have dried up completely. And parts of the critical Yangtze river systems are at a third of their normal levels – the lowest since records began 150 years ago.
This has been a particular problem in Sichuan province. It gets some 80 per cent of its electricity from hydropower. Now thousands of factories have been ordered to close. Offices and shopping centres have been instructed to cut lighting and set airconditioning temperatures higher.
But the effect of low water levels extends far beyond this.
Shipping cargo routes are blocked. Long-lost Buddhist statues are being exposed among the drying mud. And drinking water is being rationed.
Supply chains broken
Among the global corporate players affected by the Sichuan shutdown are car manufacturers Toyota, Volkswagen and Tesla. It's home to major Intel and Apple assembly plants, as well as the world's largest battery maker, Amperex Technology. The region is also a significant producer of the globally critical mineral lithium and polysilicon solar panels.
Toyota has reportedly resumed some production by acquiring a large-scale diesel generator. But, in Shanghai, Tesla has been forced to appeal to local authorities to be exempted from power restrictions to maintain its supply of electric vehicle components.
The trickle-down effects will extend globally.
Lithium prices are soaring: China has long cornered the market.
And many of the technologies needed to combat the climate crisis exacerbating China's woes will now likely become much more expensive and harder to find.
But the most immediate problem will be food.
Global supplies of grains are already far short of requirements because of Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine. That fight has removed some 20 per cent of exported wheat, barley and corn from the market.
Prices are already surging.
Now China is facing severe shortfalls in the autumn harvest of rice and wheat in the Yangtze basin. And analysts say that's likely to be yet another stressor on global food prices.
In Sichuan province alone, 47,000 hectares have reportedly been lost, and another 433,000 hectares seared.
The problem, however, extends far beyond Sichuan.
The empire strikes back
China's Communist Party says it is taking "resolute" action to combat the crisis.
It has ordered water to be released from its Himalayan reservoirs. An intense programme to fire cloud-seeding agents into the sky is under way. And crops are being doused with water-retaining chemicals.
The Ministry of Agriculture said in a notice that the heatwave posed severe challenges.
"Relevant authorities should issue alerts for high temperatures in a timely manner and take targeted measures to mitigate the adverse effects of the hot weather on autumn grain output," a recent public notice ordered. "More efforts should be made to ensure there is adequate irrigation water, open up new water sources, stagger rotation of irrigation and produce artificial rainfall when necessary."
Chinese forecasters are hopeful some relief will arrive this weekend.
Chief forecaster at the National Meteorological Centre Chen Tao said the eastern provinces were expected to get some relief from the heat on Friday. But Sichuan wasn't expected to experience a change until Monday.
"There will be relief from the heatwave in most parts of China by the end of this month," Chen told state-run China News Service.
Heatwaves and drought have hit countries throughout the northern hemisphere this summer, as unseasonally wet conditions lash the global south. The European Drought Observatory reports some 60 per cent of the European Union is officially drought affected. The US weather service has judged 41 per cent of the United States to also be in drought.