Thursday, June 2, 2016

Flash floods continue in France and Germany

Flash floods and overflowing rivers continue to bring misery to parts of Germany and France. The weather pattern that has been sitting over central Europe for a week has spawned daily storms. Slow-moving and large thunderclouds have brought hail, violent wind gusts and torrential rain to both plain and mountain.

The most recent areas to be hit were southern Germany and central France.

The German town of Simbach am Inn, in Bavaria and on the Austrian border, suffered badly as water came rushing through the streets. The torrent carried mud, trees, cars and any other debris picked up en route.

As an example of how much rain actually fell, Ranshofen, just over the border in Austria, recorded 78mm of rain in 24 hours. This amount of rain rapidly fills and overflows normal water channels, creating flash floods.

Braunsbach in southern Germany is now full of rubble, rocks and destroyed vehicles following a similar downpour, upstream, on Monday. The water in Triftern, also in Bavaria, rushed through and left behind a flood deep enough to submerge vehicles.

In France, the River Seine through Paris is at flood level, and has burst its banks in places. Twenty kilometres to the south, the river Yvette burst its banks, flooding Longjumeau to knee depth. In Nemours, further south still, boat rescues were necessary as the River Loing rose well above flood level.

The slow moving nature of these storms, as a result of a stationary and large area of low pressure, means that more flash flooding, river flooding and storm damage are likely. Germany, France and Austria are at immediate risk but the Alps and southeast Europe should also be on alert.
Source: Al Jazeera
 2/6/16
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1 comment :

  1. Louvre to close as Seine rises further...

    The world's most visited museum, the Louvre in Paris, is to close on Friday amid worsening flooding caused by days of torrential rain.

    The move will allow staff to move works at risk of damage to higher parts of the gallery, a statement said.

    The Seine, which runs through Paris past the Louvre, has risen five metres above normal levels.

    Heavy rains across Europe have left at least 10 people dead, most of them in Germany.

    More downpours are forecast right through the weekend across a band of central Europe from France to Ukraine, with as much as 50mm (2in) of rain falling in some parts in just a few hours.....BBC
    2/6/16

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