The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

The worst rain in a century leaves dozens dead and hundreds missing in Germany

2021-07-16T13:19:30.622Z


Catastrophic floods in Germany have killed at least 93 people and hundreds more missing, authorities said.


Floods cause deaths in Germany and Belgium 0:43

Berlin (CNN) -

Catastrophic floods in Germany have killed at least 103 people and hundreds more missing, authorities said Friday, as large-scale rescue efforts continue amid rising water levels. landslides and power outages.

Shocking images of the devastation show entire towns underwater, with cars wedged between collapsed buildings and rubble.

In the hardest-hit Ahrweiler district in the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate, the death toll could rise further, authorities told CNN on Friday.

An aerial view of the avalanche in Erftstadt, in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, on Friday.

"There is no end in sight yet," Ulrich Sopart, a police spokesman in the city of Koblenz, told CNN.

There are currently 1,300 people missing in Ahrweiler, he said, adding that authorities hope to reduce that number as the rescue operation continues and telephone lines are restored.

"We hope that some people have been registered as missing two or even three times, if, for example, a family member, a work colleague or a friend has registered a person as missing," Sopart said.

'' Also, [in] some places the phone lines still don't work and reception is difficult.

We hope that people will contact a family member, work colleague or friend to let them know that they are doing well, "he said.

advertising

At least 165,000 people are currently without power in Rhineland-Palatinate and the neighboring state of North Rhine-Westphalia, authorities told CNN.

1 of 20

|

Homes were damaged by flooding in Insul, Germany, on Thursday, July 15.

The Ahr river overflowed the night before.

2 of 20

|

A man walks through water in a flood-affected area after heavy rains in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany.

Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters

3 of 20

|

A regional train stopped at the local station in Kordel, Germany, after it was flooded by rising waters from the river Kyll.

Sebastian Schmitt / AP

4 of 20

|

Residents use rafts to evacuate after the Meuse river overflowed during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium.

Valentin Bianchi / AP

5 of 20

|

People look at a railroad crossing that was destroyed by floods in Priorei, Germany.

Sascha Schuermann / AFP / Getty Images

6 of 20

|

Men walk past damaged houses in Schuld, Germany.

Michael Probst / AP

7 of 20

|

A man inspects what remains of his home in Schuld.

Thomas Frey / dpa / AP

8 of 20

|

Water from the Ahr River runs over a damaged bridge in Schuld.

Michael Probst / AP

9 of 20

|

Evacuees travel by bus in Valkenburg aan de Geul, the Netherlands.

Sem van der Wal / EPA-EFE / Shutterstock

10 of 20

|

A car floats on the Meuse river during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.

Valentin Bianchi / AP

11 of 20

|

People walk along a damaged road in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany.

Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters

12 of 20

|

A resident uses a bucket to draw water from the basement of a house in Hagen, Germany.

Roberto Pfeil / dpa / AP

13 of 20

|

A man and a woman stand on the steps of their house as they look at the floodwaters in Geulle, the Netherlands.

Sem van der Wal / ANP / Getty Images

14 of 20

|

The river Volme overflows in Priorei, Germany, on Thursday.

Sascha Schuermann / AFP / Getty Images

15 of 20

|

A man descends a ladder in an attempt to drop his boat on the Meuse River in Liege, Belgium.

Valentin Bianchi / AP

16 of 20

|

Motorhomes were partially submerged in Roermond, the Netherlands.

Rob Engelaar / ANP / Getty Images

17 of 20

|

A building was destroyed in a flood-affected area of ​​Schuld, Germany.

Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters

18 of 20

|

People walk over a flooded area in Stansstad, Switzerland.

Urs Flueerler / EPA-EFE-Shutterstock

19 of 20

|

Cars were covered in debris in Hagen, Germany.

Martin Meissner / AP

20 of 20

|

An area affected by floods in Schuld, Germany.

Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters

The death toll in the two states is currently 50 and 43 respectively.

In North Rhine-Westphalia, the spokeswoman for the state Interior Ministry, Katja Heins, told CNN: "The situation is still very dynamic; we do not know how many people are missing."

Extreme rainfall totals were seen between Wednesday and Thursday morning around western Germany, as well as in Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.

The German states of North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland have been hit hardest by what authorities have called the heaviest rains in a century.

"In some areas we had not seen so much rain in 100 years," said a spokesman for the German DWD Meteorological Service, adding that in those regions, they have "seen more than double the amount of rain," causing flooding and collapse of structures. .

  • Shocking images of the damage caused by the rains in a town in Belgium

Large swaths of western Germany recorded a total 24-hour rainfall of between 100 and 150 millimeters, representing more than a month of rain in this region, according to CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller.

Cologne, in North Rhine-Westphalia, recorded 154 millimeters of rain in the 24 hours, as of Thursday morning, which is almost double its monthly average for July.

The strongest localized downpours resulted in extreme flash flooding.

At Reifferscheid in the Ahrweiler district, an incredible 207 millimeters of rain fell in just nine hours, according to the European Severe Weather Database.

The intense floods were the result of a slow-moving low-pressure area, which allowed a conveyor belt of warm, humid air to feed powerful thunderstorms and heavy, long-lasting rain, according to the German Weather Service.

Extreme rains are becoming more common in hot weather, as warmer air can hold more water vapor than is available to fall as rain.

  • Climate change is producing deadly heat waves.

    Why don't we see it as a crisis?

"Climate change has come to Germany," Environment Minister Svenja Schulze tweeted on Thursday.

Speaking to German radio channel Inforadio, Schulze added that "the events show how strongly the consequences of climate change can affect us all, and how important it is for us to adapt to extreme weather events in the future."

Hannah Cloke, Professor of Hydrology at the UK's University of Reading, told CNN that "these kinds of sudden, high-energy summer rain torrents are exactly what we expect in our rapidly warming climate."

On Thursday, the DWD predicted that "the worst of the torrential rains has passed", although more heavy rains are expected in southwestern Germany this Friday.

Residents use rubber rafts to evacuate after the Meuse river left its channel during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.

In neighboring Belgium, 12 people have died, authorities said on Friday, and another five people in the southern region of Wallonia are still missing.

Some 21,000 people are also without electricity in Wallonia, according to energy provider Ores, which said the situation on the electricity grid remains "extremely complicated".

Some 300 distribution points are flooded and it is impossible to reach them, he said.

Nadine Schmidt reported from Berlin;

Barbara Wojazer, from Paris, and Sharon Braithwaite and Vasco Cotovio reported in London.

Kara Fox, James Frater, and Melissa Gray contributed to this report.

Rain

Source: cnnespanol

All news articles on 2021-07-16

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.