On June 3, the “Inner Mongolia Emergency · 2026” Flood Control and Emergency Rescue Field Exercise was held in Baotou City. The Exercise comprehensively reviewed the entire process of responding to the 2025 flood disaster in the Hasu Lake area, consisting of three phases and 21 drill scenarios. The China Harzone Comprehensive Rescue Team rushed to the scene with various types of equipment, including motorized pontoon bridges and emergency mechanized bridges, to participate in four exercise scenarios and efficiently complete their tasks.




The emergency scenarios at the drill site were intricately linked, with each exercise seamlessly flowing into the next. When road damage and blockages occurred, the emergency mechanized bridge unit was the first to spring into action, quickly restoring the “lifeline for rescue operations.”
During the airlift rescue support exercise, participating teams, comprising groups of 8 to 16 members working in pairs, rapidly assembled modular helipads, thereby providing a secure landing area for helicopters and other aerial rescue platforms and establishing a critical link in the air-ground rescue coordination.
In response to issues such as muddy, silted-up roads and difficult vehicle passage in the disaster-stricken areas, emergency mobile pavement was rapidly deployed, transforming the soft, muddy terrain into a solid, passable route and ensuring the smooth passage of all types of wheeled rescue equipment.
Finally, the motorized pontoon bridge formation, making its debut in this exercise, took center stage. With ground rescue routes completely cut off, the pontoon bridges were rapidly assembled to form a waterway, overcoming the bottleneck in the waterborne transport of heavy rescue equipment and addressing the shortage of manpower for on-site operations in the disaster area. After completing the equipment transport mission, the pontoon bridge formation immediately began assisting stranded residents in wading across the water, successfully carrying out the search, rescue, and evacuation of people stranded on isolated islands.
The entire exercise closely simulated real-life flood rescue scenarios. The China Harzone Comprehensive Rescue Team and its equipment withstood the test of complex disaster conditions and successfully completed the designated exercise tasks to a high standard. The motorized pontoon bridge made its debut in a brand-new configuration, drawing unanimous praise from on-site observers. Moving forward, China Harzone will continue to deepen its commitment to the R&D of emergency equipment and the development of rescue teams. Leveraging its technological advantages in equipment, the company will strengthen disaster prevention and mitigation efforts, uphold its social responsibility in emergency rescue, and provide robust support for flood control, disaster relief, and emergency response operations across the country.