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Catastrophic floods leave over 120 dead in Europe, many more still missing.


Catastrophic floods leave over 120 dead in Europe, many more still missing.
Catastrophic floods leave over 120 .
In Germany, the death toll climbed to 103 as of Friday afternoon local time, with many more people still missing.
In Belgium, a national day of mourning has been set for July 20 for the victims of the severe weather in recent days.
Devastating flash floods due to intense rainfalls have swept through several western European countries in the past few days, killing more than one hundred and causing damages.
Some countries in Western Europe received up to two months worth of rainfall in two days, with Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg strongly affected, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) reported on Friday. ....

Rheinland Pfalz , Waals Gewest , Lake Lucerne , Switzerland General , King Willem Alexander , Stefan Rahmstorf , World Meteorological Organization , Potsdam Institute For Climate Impact Research , Germany Ministry Of Defence , European Union Civil Protection Mechanism , Western Europe , North Rhine Westphalia , Earth System Analysis , Potsdam Institute , Climate Impact Research , Lake Thun , Lake Biel , River Aare , European Union , Civil Protection Mechanism , ரைன்லேண்ட் ப்ஃப்யால்ஸ் , ஏரி லூசர்ன் , கிங் வில்லெம் அலெக்சாண்டர் , உலகம் வானிலை ஆர்கநைஸேஶந் , பாட்ஸ்‌ட்யாம் நிறுவனம் க்கு காலநிலை தாக்கம் ஆராய்ச்சி , ஜெர்மனி அமைச்சகம் ஆஃப் பாதுகாப்பு ,

As floods hit western Europe, scientists say climate change hikes heavy rain


Publishing date: Jul 17, 2021  •  9 hours ago  •  3 minute read  • 
Article content
MADRID/BRUSSELS The extreme rainfall causing deadly flooding across western Germany and Belgium has been so alarming, many across Europe are asking if climate change is to blame.
Scientists have long said that climate change will lead to heavier downpours. But determining its role in last week’s relentless downpours will take at least several weeks to research, scientists said on Friday.
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As floods hit western Europe, scientists say climate change hikes heavy rain Back to video ....

City Of , United Kingdom , United States , Eteläuomen Läi , Bruxelles Capitale , Angela Merkel , Richard Chang , Geert Jan Van Oldenborgh , Isla Binnie , Ralf Toumi , Thomas Escritt , Kate Abnett , Stefan Rahmstorf , Katy Daigle , Johannes Quaas , Hayley Fowler , Theoretical Meteorology At Leipzig University , Potsdam Institute For Climate Impact Research , Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute , Newcastle University , Imperial College London Toumi , Imperial College London , Postmedia Network Inc , European Union , Imperial College , Chancellor Angela Merkel ,

As floods hit western Europe, scientists say climate change ...


(Updates death toll)
By Isla Binnie and Kate Abnett
MADRID/BRUSSELS, July 17 (Reuters) - The extreme rainfall causing deadly flooding across western Germany and Belgium has been so alarming, many across Europe are asking if climate change is to blame.
Scientists have long said that climate change will lead to heavier downpours. But determining its role in last week s relentless downpours will take at least several weeks to research, scientists said on Friday.
Floods always happen, and they are like random events, like rolling the dice. But we ve changed the odds on rolling the dice, said Ralf Toumi, a climate scientist at Imperial College London. ....

City Of , United Kingdom , United States , Eteläuomen Läi , Bruxelles Capitale , Angela Merkel , Richard Chang , Geert Jan Van Oldenborgh , Isla Binnie , Ralf Toumi , Thomas Escritt , Kate Abnett , Stefan Rahmstorf , Katy Daigle , Johannes Quaas , Hayley Fowler , Theoretical Meteorology At Leipzig University , Potsdam Institute For Climate Impact Research , Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute , Newcastle University , Imperial College London Toumi , Imperial College London , European Union , Imperial College , Chancellor Angela Merkel , Theoretical Meteorology ,

Starkregen in Zukunft noch extremer


Starkregen in Zukunft noch extremer
Ihre Suche in FAZ.NET
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Eine Frau steht am 16. Juli in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler vor Trümmern
Bild: AFP
Klimaforscher raten, mit Katastrophen wie jetzt in Westdeutschland leben zu lernen. Politiker fordern Anpassungen in der Stadtplanung. Versicherer erwarten eine Verschlimmerung der Lage.
3 Min.
Weitersagen abbrechen
Die Bundesrepublik hat in dieser Woche eine der schlimmsten Unwetterkatastrophen ihrer Geschichte erlebt. Mindestens hundert Menschen starben in Nordrhein-Westfalen und Rheinland-Pfalz, das gab es seit der Sturmflut von Hamburg 1962 mit mehr als 300 Toten nicht mehr. Fachleute und Politiker rechnen allerdings damit, dass derartige Unwetter in den kommenden Jahren noch öfter und noch extremer auftreten werden. ....

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