
The water level hit the 805-centimetre mark in Khabarovsk by 9 am and 820 cm in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, he said.
'This will make the additional evacuation of 36,000 people necessary', said Trutnev, as reported by Interfax.
Already tens of thousands across eastern Russia have been evacuated due to flooding which some experts blame on global warming.
The crisis had been expected in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, with the water forecast to rise by another 160cm from what is already the highest since records began. Such a rise will swamp residential areas with 600 apartment blocks and private houses - homes to 50,000 people - requiring evacuation along with major industrial facilities.

He told residents: 'You have to be sure that we shall not stop to provide aid until all the problems of each person are solved. You should know and be sure - no one will be left alone with the elements! Help will reach every home, every family, every man, I promise you that!'
Officials have warned that the Amur may only reach its peak in flooding by 11 to 15 September, later than expected.
'This water level has never been reported in the history of Komsomolsk,' RusHydro official Vyacheslav Parshin told Itar-Tass.
Water levels near Komsomolsk-on-Amur, the second largest city in the Far Eastern Khabarovsk Territory, rose by 19 cm 24 hours after weeks of heavy downpours. Elsewhere, in Siberia forest fires are raging because of marched conditions, with the worst flashpoint currently in the Republic of Buryatia.
The Siberian Times thanks photographer Alexander Kolbin for pictures from Khabarovsk. See more on his blog http://kolbasin.livejournal.com







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