Italian
Island Hit By ‘Apocalyptic’ Storm As 17 Inches Of Rain Fall In 90
Minutes
Half a year’s worth of rain fell in an hour and a half Monday night in the Italian island of Sardinia, flooding streets and killing at least 16 people.
20
November,, 2013
Sardinia
was pummeled by 17.3
inches of rain Monday
by Cyclone Cleopatra, a drenching that Franco Gabrielli, head of
Italy’s Civil Protection Agency, called
“an exceptional event.” According to Italy’s Civil Protection
Agency, so far 2,500
people
have been displaced by the storm and more than 10,000 have lost
electricity. The Italian government has declared a state of emergency
on the island and has allocated about $27 million in rescue and
relief aid.
Marco
Vargiu, councilor for tourism in Olbia, a Sardinian city, told
CNN
that the city had been among the hardest hit — in some places in
the city, water levels reached 10
feet.
“The
worst conditions are here in Olbia,” he said. “There are rivers
of water in the town. In lots of houses the ground floors are full of
water, one or two meters of water, and a lot of families have lost
everything — their house, their car, their clothes, the furniture.”
Gianni
Giovannelli, Olbia’s mayor, said the rain was so intense that it
was like a “water
bomb”
and described the storm as “apocalyptic.”
Sardinia
wasn’t the only region hit hard by flooding this week. Over the
weekend, four
people were killed
when 0.79 inches of rain fell over 12 hours in the Saudi Arabian
capital of Riyadh. The rainfall tally may not seem like much, but
it’s double the average November rainfall for the city. And since
Riyadh has a desert climate, seemingly small amounts of rain can be
cause for major concern.
“Typically,
desert cities do not invest the same resources in drainage as do
cities in wetter climates – much as warm-weather cities do not
invest much in snowplows or road salt,” weather.com meteorologist
Nick Wiltgen said.
“As a result, rainfall amounts that might seem numerically
insignificant in a place like Miami or New York can lead to major
impacts in a desert metropolis.”
Climate
change has been linked to extreme precipitation events — periods of
short, intense rainfall that can cause major damage, like this year’s
floods
in Colorado did.
As air heats up, it’s able to hold more and more water vapor — in
general, every degree C of warming causes an atmospheric water vapor
increase of 7
percent.
Since warm air holds more water vapor, it takes longer for the water
to condense and fall to the earth as rain — and when it does,
there’s more of it available to fall.
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