Winter Hurricane Atlantic storm brings more flood misery to drenched Britain: heaviest rainfall in 250 years
Feb 14, 2014 | The Extinction Protocol
BRITAIN – Princes
William and Harry rolled up their sleeves Friday to help out with flood
defense efforts as Britain braces for another hammering Friday from a
major storm off the Atlantic. The princes showed up at 6 a.m. local time
in the flood-hit village of Datchet, west of London. The community is
one of several in Berkshire and Surrey to have been hit by flooding in
recent days after the River Thames burst its banks. Nearly 6,000 homes
have been inundated along the Thames Valley and elsewhere following
England’s wettest January in 2½ centuries. A car dealership’s display
model sits on a ramp above floodwaters in Datchet, England, on Monday,
February 10. Britain has been hit by bad weather since early December,
and swaths of southwestern England have been flooded in continuously
stormy weather. Some communities in low-lying areas of Somerset, in
southwest England, have been under water since December. And there’s no
letup in sight just yet. The Environment Agency has warned of more
flooding along the Thames over the weekend as the river reaches its
highest level in 60 years. A powerful Atlantic storm that is blowing in
on Friday will add to people’s woes. It comes only two days after a
storm blasted western Wales and northwest England, as well as parts of
Ireland, with gale-force winds. Some 450,000 properties were affected by
power outages as a result of Wednesday’s storm. Only 16,000, almost all
of them in Wales, were still without power Friday morning, according to
the Energy Networks Association, but high winds could cause new
problems.
The severe weather has affected travel,
with many trains delayed or canceled. A sea wall under one coastal
section on the main rail line to the southwest collapsed after high seas
pummeled it. There were 18 severe flood warnings, meaning a danger to
life, in place Friday, most of them in southeast England. Warnings of
high winds are also in place for parts of southern England. In the past
few days, more than 1,000 homes have been flooded in well-heeled
communities along the Thames Valley, including Maidenhead and Windsor,
where Queen Elizabeth has a castle. The Environment Agency warned the
area could expect “widespread flooding affecting significant numbers of
properties and whole communities and significant disruption to travel”
in the coming days. Central London has been protected from flooding by
the Thames Barrier, which prevents high tides surging up the tidal river
when it is already full. The Met Office, the UK’s national weather
service, said the recent series of winter storms “has been exceptional
in its duration, and has led to the wettest December to January period
in the UK since records began.” But it’s not yet able to say whether
climate change is a factor in the extreme weather, as some observers
have suggested. “As yet, there is no definitive answer on the possible
contribution of climate change to the recent storminess, rainfall
amounts and the consequent flooding. This is in part due to the highly
variable nature of UK weather and climate,” it said. -CNN
No comments:
Post a Comment