Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Central European countries brace for severe flooding

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The weather change arrived following a hot start to September in the region. Scientists recorded Earth’s hottest summer on record, breaking a record set just one year ago.

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Central European countries are bracing for severe flooding forecast to hit the Czech Republic, Poland, Austria, Germany, Slovakia and Hungary over the weekend.

Czech authorities erected metal barriers or protective walls from sandbags, while water was released from dams to make space in reservoirs.

Residents have been warned to get ready for possible evacuations.

“We are currently making preparations for a possible rise in the water level of the local river, so this is a precautionary measure. As in most places,” said Aleš Chovanec, Deputy Commander of the Holasice Volunteer Fire Brigade.

Some public events planned for the weekend have been cancelled at the request of authorities, including football matches in the top two leagues.

“We have to be ready for the worst case scenarios,: Prime Minister Petr Fiala said after a meeting of his government’s central crisis committee. “A tough weekend is ahead of us.”

Meteorologists say a low pressure system from northern Italy was predicted to dump much rainfall in most parts of the Czech Republic including the capital and border regions with Austria and Germany in the south, and Poland in the north.

Central Europeans are especially wary because some experts have compared the weekend forecast to devastating floods in 1997 in the region, referred to by some as the flood of the century.

Over 100 people were killed in the floods 27 years ago, including 50 in the eastern Czech Republic where large sections of land was inundated.

The biggest rainfall was predicted in the eastern half of the country, particularly in the Jeseniky mountains. The second largest city of Brno, located in eastern Czech Republic, is among places that have not had flooding protection work completed, unlike Prague.

Czechs were asked not to go to parks and woods as high winds of up to 100 kilometers per hour were forecast.

In Poland, Prime Minister Donald Tusk travelled to the southwestern city of Wrocław where floods are forecast.

Authorities there have appealed to residents to stock up on food and to prepare for power outages by charging power banks.

Tusk, meeting with firefighters and other emergency officials, said the forecasts were “not excessively alarming.”

“There is no reason to panic, but there is a reason to be fully mobilised,” he stressed.

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The German Weather Service warned of heavy precipitation across swaths of the country, including the Alps, where heavy snowfall and strong winds are expected at higher altitudes.

The Alpine nation of Austria is also getting ready for heavy rains, and a massive cold front that is expected to bring snow to higher elevations.

“I think that we have learnt a lot from the floods of 2002 and 2013. We have of course also made all the necessary investments. I’m thinking of flood protection, where numerous projects have been implemented and of course also in the whole area of data analysis,” said Johanna Mikl-Leitner, the regional governor of Lower Austria.

The change in weather has come following a hot start to September in the region.

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Scientists recorded Earth’s hottest summer on record, breaking a record set just one year ago.

And a hotter atmosphere, driven by climate change, can lead to more intense rainfall.

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