Friday, July 16, 2021

Two major factors may explain why European flooding turned so deadly so fast

 

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As entire communities lie in ruins after swollen rivers swept through towns and villages in Western Europe, experts said the ferocity of the rainfall and failure to heed warnings about its arrival were likely responsible for the high number of deaths.

a person walking down the street© Provided by NBC News

At least 120 people have been killed in the flash flooding and thousands more are missing in Germany and Belgium. Cellphone networks have collapsed in some regions, leaving people unable to track down their loved ones. Luxembourg and the Netherlands were also hit with heavy downpours.

“Very sadly, we see by the death toll and we see by the somewhat slow response that it took many people by surprise,” Ilan Kelman, a professor of disasters and health at University College London in the U.K., told NBC News on Friday.

This despite there being “several days' warning beforehand that there could be major danger to life from flooding,” he added.

Houses collapse after deadly flooding in Belgium, residents forced to evacuate

Claire Nullis, a spokesperson for the World Meteorological Organization, said reports were coming in that some people had not heeded the warnings. “Others were surprised by the sheer scale of the rainfall,” she said.

Some parts of Western Europe received up to two months’ worth of rainfall across Wednesday and Thursday on ground that was already saturated, the WMO said. The German national meteorological service, DWD, reported about 4 to 6 inches of rainfall in that 24-hour period.

“It’s something that we are not accustomed to in Europe,” Nullis said. “Rainfall like that is something you see in tropical countries.”

Had the rainfall been spread over the course of weeks, the affected areas would probably have been able to cope, according to Kathryn Prociv, a meteorologist for NBC News.

a group of people that are standing in the dirt: Image: Two residents speak with each other as they clean up after flooding in Ensival, Verviers, Belgium, on July 16, 2021. (Francisco Seco / AP)© Francisco Seco Image: Two residents speak with each other as they clean up after flooding in Ensival, Verviers, Belgium, on July 16, 2021. (Francisco Seco / AP)

Instead, she said they had been hit by what meteorologists have been calling a “1 in 100-year event.”

“That much rain coming in such a short period of time just overwhelmed the rivers and the area that had already had a really rainy season,” she said. “So soils were saturated, and that made the area much more susceptible to flooding because the ground couldn’t take this water.”

Prociv added that the storm system that created the rain “was a stalled area of low pressure,” known as a “traffic jam” or a “blocking pattern.”

Whether the affected regions and the people living in them had the “resources or opportunities” to act before the deluge was questionable, Kelman said.

“Some people want to avoid being in close contact with others because of the pandemic,” he said. This would raise questions for people about where they would go and whether they could afford to leave, he added.

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Other people, particularly those with disabilities, might not have had the support systems in place to help them leave, he said. Some might not have been aware they were living on flood plains, he added.

Kelman, Prociv and the WMO all linked the storms to climate change.

“A warming atmosphere can hold more water,” Prociv said. “So with climate change, there is more water up there to get rained out.”

After the heat wave in the U.S. earlier this month, it took scientists several days to conclude that it was likely the result of “human-caused climate change,” Kelman said.

a group of people riding on the back of a boat: Image: Austrian firefighters steer a boat in a flooded street in Pepinster, Belgium on July 16, 2021, where the situation remains critical after the heavy rainfall of the previous days. (Francois Walschaerts / AFP - Getty Images)© Francois Walschaerts Image: Austrian firefighters steer a boat in a flooded street in Pepinster, Belgium on July 16, 2021, where the situation remains critical after the heavy rainfall of the previous days. (Francois Walschaerts / AFP - Getty Images)

“Whether or not climate change contributed to the flood is less relevant than the fact that we had warnings earlier in the week and the fact that some people were not even aware that they were in a place that was at risk of flooding,” he said.

The cause of flooding is often found to have been generations in the making, be it corruption, lack of funding or poor planning that was responsible, he added.

“We have to prepare for floods. It is unacceptable that over 100 people have died in rich countries by something which we know was expected to happen,” he said.

“We cannot let this go,” he added. “We have to find out what went wrong.”

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