Heat,
Flood or Icy Cold, Extreme Weather Rages Worldwide
Britons
may remember 2012 as the year the weather spun off its rails in a
chaotic concoction of drought, deluge and flooding, but the
unpredictability of it all turns out to have been all too
predictable: Around the world, extreme has become the new
commonplace.
10
January, 2013
Especially
lately. China is enduring its coldest winter in nearly 30 years.
Brazil is in the grip of a dreadful heat spell. Eastern Russia is so
freezing — minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit, and counting — that the
traffic lights recently stopped working in the city of Yakutsk.
Bush
fires are raging across Australia, fueled by a record-shattering heat
wave. Pakistan was inundated by unexpected flooding in September. A
vicious storm bringing rain, snow and floods just struck the Middle
East. And in the United States, scientists confirmed this week what
people could have figured out simply by going outside: last year was
the hottest since records began.
“Each
year we have extreme weather, but it’s unusual to have so many
extreme events around the world at once,” said Omar Baddour, chief
of the data management applications division at the World
Meteorological Organization, in Geneva. “The heat wave in
Australia; the flooding in the U.K., and most recently the flooding
and extensive snowstorm in the Middle East — it’s already a big
year in terms of extreme weather calamity.”
Such
events are increasing in intensity as well as frequency, Mr. Baddour
said, a sign that climate change is not just about rising
temperatures, but also about intense, unpleasant, anomalous weather
of all kinds.
Here
in Britain, people are used to thinking of rain as the wallpaper on
life’s computer screen — an omnipresent, almost comforting
background presence. But even the hardiest citizen was rattled by the
near-biblical fierceness of the rains that bucketed down, and the
floods that followed, three different times in 2012.
Rescuers
plucked people by boat from their swamped homes in St. Asaph, North
Wales. Whole areas of the country were cut off when roads and train
tracks were inundated at Christmas. In Mevagissey, Cornwall, a pub
owner closed his business for good after it flooded 11 times in two
months.
It
was no anomaly: the floods of 2012 followed the floods of 2007 and
also the floods of 2009, which all told have resulted in nearly $6.5
billion in insurance payouts. The Met Office, Britain’s weather
service, declared 2012 the wettest year in England, and the
second-wettest in Britain as a whole, since records began more than
100 years ago. Four of the five wettest years in the last century
have come in the past decade (the fifth was in 1954).
The
biggest change, said Charles Powell, a spokesman for the Met Office,
is the frequency in Britain of “extreme weather events” —
defined as rainfall reaching the top 1 percent of the average amount
for that time of year. Fifty years ago, such episodes used to happen
every 100 days; now they happen every 70 days, he said.
The
same thing is true in Australia, where bush fires are raging across
Tasmania and the current heat wave has come after two of the
country’s wettest years ever. On Tuesday, Sydney experienced its
fifth-hottest day since records began in 1910, with the temperature
climbing to 108.1 degrees. The first eight days of 2013 were among
the 20 hottest on record.
Every
decade since the 1950s has been hotter in Australia than the one
before, said Mark Stafford Smith, science director of the Climate
Adaptation Flagship at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organization.
To
the north, the extremes have swung the other way, with a band of cold
settling across Russia and Northern Europe, bringing thick snow and
howling winds to Stockholm, Helsinki and Moscow. (Incongruously,
there were also severe snowstorms in Sicily and southern Italy for
the first time since World War II; in December, tornadoes and
waterspouts struck the Italian coast.)
In
Siberia, thousands of people were left without heat when natural gas
liquefied in its pipes and water mains burst. Officials canceled bus
transportation between cities for fear that roadside breakdowns could
lead to deaths from exposure, and motorists were advised not to
venture far afield except in columns of two or three cars. In Altai,
to the east, traffic officials warned drivers not to use poor-quality
diesel, saying that it could become viscous in the cold and clog fuel
lines.
Meanwhile,
China is enduring its worst winter in recent memory, with frigid
temperatures recorded in Harbin, in the northeast. In the western
region of Xinjiang, more than 1,000 houses collapsed under a
relentless onslaught of snow, while in Inner Mongolia, 180,000
livestock froze to death. The cold has wreaked havoc with crops,
sending the price of vegetables soaring.
Way
down in South America, energy analysts say that Brazil may face
electricity rationing for the first time since 2002, as a heat wave
and a lack of rain deplete the reservoirs for hydroelectric plants.
The summer has been punishingly hot. The temperature in Rio de
Janeiro climbed to 109.8 degrees on Dec. 26, the city’s highest
temperature since official records began in 1915.
At
the same time, in the Middle East, Jordan is battling a storm packing
torrential rain, snow, hail and floods that are cascading through
tunnels, sweeping away cars and spreading misery in Syrian refugee
camps. Amman has been virtually paralyzed, with cars abandoned, roads
impassable and government offices closed.
Israel
and the Palestinian territories are grappling with similar
conditions, after a week of intense rain and cold winds ushered in a
snowstorm that dumped eight inches in Jerusalem alone.
Amir
Givati, head of the surface water department at the Israel
Hydrological Service, said the storm was truly unusual because of its
duration, its intensity and its breadth. Snow and hail fell not just
in the north, but as far south as the desert city of Dimona, best
known for its nuclear reactor.
In
Beirut on Wednesday night, towering waves crashed against the
Corniche, the seaside promenade downtown, flinging water and foam
dozens of feet in the air as lightning flickered across the dark sea
at multiple points along the horizon. Many roads were flooded as hail
pounded the city.
Several
people died, including a baby boy in a family of shepherds who was
swept out of his mother’s arms by floodwaters. The greatest concern
was for the 160,000 Syrian refugees who have fled to Lebanon, taking
shelter in schools, sheds and, where possible, with local families.
Some refugees are living in farm outbuildings, which are particularly
vulnerable to cold and rain.
Barry
Lynn, who runs a forecasting business and is a lecturer at the Hebrew
University’s department of earth science, said a striking aspect of
the whole thing was the severe and prolonged cold in the upper
atmosphere, a big-picture shift that indicated the Atlantic Ocean was
no longer having the moderating effect on weather in the Middle East
and Europe that it has historically.
“The
intensity of the cold is unusual,” Mr. Lynn said. “It seems the
weather is going to become more intense; there’s going to be more
extremes.”
In
Britain, where changes to the positioning of the jet stream — a
ribbon of air high up in the atmosphere that helps steer weather
systems — may be contributing to the topsy-turvy weather, people
are still recovering from the December floods. In Worcester last
week, the river Severn remained flooded after three weeks, with
playing fields buried under water.
In
the shop at the Worcester Cathedral, Julie Smith, 54, was struggling,
she said, to adjust to the new uncertainty.
“For
the past seven or eight years, there’s been a serious incident in a
different part of the country,” Mrs. Smith said. “We don’t
expect extremes. We don’t expect it to be like this.”
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