“…The southward intrusion of a cold surge often results in strengthening of the nearsurface northerly wind and an abrupt temperature drop in the subtropical region of East Asia, including southern China (Chang et al, 1979;Wu and Chan, 1995). Although the winter climate in southern China is warmer than the northern China, the severe cold air activity occurs in southern China occasionally, such as the persistent icy rain and snowstorms in early 2008 (Ding et al, 2008;Tao and Wei, 2008;Wen et al, 2009;Zhou et al, 2009), the "once-in-the-century" cold surge in late January 2016 (Cheung et al, 2016;Ma and Zhu, 2019;Yamaguchi et al, 2019) and the intense cold surges in late 2020 (Bueh et al, 2022;Dai et al, 2022;Zheng et al, 2022). Under the global warming background, the frequency of cold extremes is projected to substantially decrease [Seneviratne et al, 2021 (Ch.…”