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Premium member Presentation Transcript Unusual European Weather of 2006: Unusual European Weather of 2006 By Roger Brugge Data Assimilation Research Centre University of Reading, UK r.brugge@reading.ac.uk A cold start in E Europe: A cold start in E Europe Unusually cold in W Russia from mid-January to mid-February Monthly mean temperature anomalies in Moscow: January -1.5C, February -5.6C The lowest temperatures (-30C) in Moscow since 1978/79 winter (-38C). Moscow daily temperature and anomaly of the daily mean (C), Jan. and Feb. Many anecdotal stories One animal trainer fed his elephant a bucket of vodka to warm it up - the drunken beast then set about wrecking the central heating system. The cold depleted mobile phone batteries, played havoc with lifts and jammed public cash dispensers. The cold air then spread S and W across Europe.Slide3: The canals of Amsterdam froze briefly. Widespread deaths from exposure to the cold. More than 400 villages and towns were cut off after 36 hours of continuous snowfall. A Cambodia-flagged cargo ship sank. -35C in mountains in the northeast. Bulgaria's two main ports of Varna and Bourgas on the Black Sea closed. Heavy snow early on 25 Jan. Much of Turkey was covered in snow; shipping halted on the Bosphorus. 8.7C on the 8 Feb: lowest max. temp. in Feb. on Malta since 1962. End of Jan.: first snow for parts of central and southern parts of Portugal since 1954.Late winter snowfall in the Alps: Late winter snowfall in the Alps Snow in the Alpine resorts tended to arrive late in the season (mid-February onwards) – see the green line. 4th-6th March: At least 17 people died as heavy snowfall and strong winds affected central Europe. In the German state of Hessen it was the heaviest snowfall for 15 years, and nearly a metre of snow fell at higher levels in the Bavarian Alps. Heavy snowfall in parts of Romania left several villages without power and blocked major roads.Snowfall consequences (1): Snowfall consequences (1) Heavy snowfalls led to roof collapses: 15 Jan: Ice rink in Bad Reichenhall (Germany) – 15 died 7 Feb: A supermarket in Toeging-am-Inn (S Germany) - many injured 23 Feb: A covered market in Moscow – 65 died. ‘Late-season‘ snow led to avalanches Initial falls of snow early in the season were poor and became consolidated. Later (heavy) falls did not combine with the early falls and were free to slide -> ideal for avalanches, especially when it started to warm up. The season’s final avalanche death total in France of 65 deaths was the highest since 1970.Snowfall consequences (2): Snowfall consequences (2) Floods The causes Long periods of cold weather Large amounts of snow (1m) Sudden warming (20C/3 days) Rapid snowmelt Large runoff.Slide7: Initially, early April Flooding reported in Germany, Poland, Austria, Czech Republic and Slovakia. The Elbe swelled towards a new peak in Germany. Heavy rain caused widespread chaos across Switzerland, with road and rail closures as well as flooding. Late February - A minor warming after heavy snow in Central Europe, and some heavy rain in SE Europe, led to significant flooding in Serbia. Temperatures then fell in March with more heavy snowfalls in SE Europe. April Heavy rainfall and snowmelt produced extensive flooding along the River Danube in April. The Danube reached its highest level in more than a century in places. Areas of Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Serbia were among the hardest hit Tens of thousands of people affected.Summer starts early – in May : Summer starts early – in May During May Europe started to warm up and dry out Temperatures in parts of central Spain set record highs for May in the third week. All-time high temperature records for May were logged in nine places on 17 May, including Toledo, which reached 38.4C and Cordoba, 39.5C. On 13 June, the French Government declared a state of drought in 15 departments— mainly in the south or central areas near Paris. Groundwater levels in the Paris region were at their lowest level in 20 years and water restrictions were in place for nearly half of France by the end of July. Dry conditions had been affecting parts of W Europe since November 2004, and Iberia/France in particular during 2005. Early summer drought orders issued in the UK.A record-breaking July: A record-breaking July Warmest month on record in Belgium, UK (record starts in 1659) and Germany (also the sunniest). Warmest July on record in Denmark (also the sunniest) and Holland. Anomalies for July >5C in Holland, France, Germany and Poland Warsaw had its hottest July in a 227-year record, anomaly +5C. 36.5C at Wisley, the highest UK July temperature on record. On 18 July the "Nijmeegse Vierdaagse" - an annual 4-day long distance walk held around Nijmegen in the Netherlands - was called off. 44,000 walkers started out, 300 became ill, 30 taken to hospital, 2 died. Forest fires, water restrictions, damaged farmland across the continent. The level of the river Elbe dropped below 90cm at Dresden, making navigation almost impossible. Normally the level is some 2.2m – in contrast to April floods.Slide10: The July European-average land-surface air temperature was the warmest on record at 2.7C above the climatological normal (10W-30E, 35N-75N) The fifty warmest Julys. The inset shows the whole series. Coloured bars indicates the 95% confidence interval.The warmth continues into late Summer…: The warmth continues into late Summer… In August there was a hot spell during 19th-20th in SE Europe. In Greece temperatures reached 40C in places. In Italy, Trapani (Sicily) topped 40C – a new August record high temperature. The heatwave originated in North Africa; scores of people were hospitalized. Marine biologists blamed the weather for the plagues of jellyfish which forced the closure of some Spanish beaches. An estimated 30 000 people were stung by the jellyfish throughout the Mediterranean during the summer. Forest fires continued to burn during the month in Greece, Spain and Portugal – Portugal continued to suffer it’s worst drought in 60 years. …and Autumn…: …and Autumn… UK: record warm September in the UK Central England Temperature series. The daily mean of 16.8C was 3.1C above the long-term average. In the UK the CET series value for April to October was the highest on record at 14.6C. It was also the warmest autumn on record in the UK (1659), Belgium, the Netherlands (1706), Denmark (1768), Germany and Switzerland (1864) (3-4C above average). most of Austria, S Sweden, S Norway and parts of Ireland. Slide13: Autumn 2006 mean air temperature return periods, based on an unchanging climate Autumn 2006 mean air temperature anomaly (C)…while into December there was a lack of winter snow: …while into December there was a lack of winter snow In Moscow, several days early in the month were the warmest ever recorded for December; instead of the temperature dropping to a daily average of -5C, it was still hovering at around 5C until mid-month. Daily mean Moscow temperature, Dec. 2006 Only 30% of the Alpine seasonal average of snow had fallen by mid-month. Alpine sports events in Austria, Czech Republic, France, Slovakia and Switzerland were cancelled because of the warm weather. In much of Finland and Sweden it was the warmest December on record. Monthly temperature anomalies > +5C across Scandinavia and NW Russia W’ly winds very dominant in W and N Europe.Annual statistics: Annual statistics UK warmest year by 0.2C. De Bilt (NL) Warmest year by 0.3C France 1.2C above average (2003 warmer) Switzerland Fifth warmest Map shows mean temperature anomalies w.r.t. 1961-1990 Annual MSL pressure anomalies w.r.t. 1961-1990 Contour interval 1hPa.Further information about weather events: Further information about weather events Acknowledgements Numerous met agencies, institutions, and individuals, in particular KNMI, Met Office (UK), NCDC, WMO, NASA Philip Eden, CRU-UEA, ECA&D Yahoo, BoM, Météo France, MeteoSwiss, DWD, GPCC See www.met.rdg.ac.uk/~brugge/world.html for a regularly updated page of worldwide information – and for more information on the stories presented in this talk. You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
AMS meeting european weather Malden Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 43 Category: News & Reports.. License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: September 27, 2007 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Unusual European Weather of 2006: Unusual European Weather of 2006 By Roger Brugge Data Assimilation Research Centre University of Reading, UK r.brugge@reading.ac.uk A cold start in E Europe: A cold start in E Europe Unusually cold in W Russia from mid-January to mid-February Monthly mean temperature anomalies in Moscow: January -1.5C, February -5.6C The lowest temperatures (-30C) in Moscow since 1978/79 winter (-38C). Moscow daily temperature and anomaly of the daily mean (C), Jan. and Feb. Many anecdotal stories One animal trainer fed his elephant a bucket of vodka to warm it up - the drunken beast then set about wrecking the central heating system. The cold depleted mobile phone batteries, played havoc with lifts and jammed public cash dispensers. The cold air then spread S and W across Europe.Slide3: The canals of Amsterdam froze briefly. Widespread deaths from exposure to the cold. More than 400 villages and towns were cut off after 36 hours of continuous snowfall. A Cambodia-flagged cargo ship sank. -35C in mountains in the northeast. Bulgaria's two main ports of Varna and Bourgas on the Black Sea closed. Heavy snow early on 25 Jan. Much of Turkey was covered in snow; shipping halted on the Bosphorus. 8.7C on the 8 Feb: lowest max. temp. in Feb. on Malta since 1962. End of Jan.: first snow for parts of central and southern parts of Portugal since 1954.Late winter snowfall in the Alps: Late winter snowfall in the Alps Snow in the Alpine resorts tended to arrive late in the season (mid-February onwards) – see the green line. 4th-6th March: At least 17 people died as heavy snowfall and strong winds affected central Europe. In the German state of Hessen it was the heaviest snowfall for 15 years, and nearly a metre of snow fell at higher levels in the Bavarian Alps. Heavy snowfall in parts of Romania left several villages without power and blocked major roads.Snowfall consequences (1): Snowfall consequences (1) Heavy snowfalls led to roof collapses: 15 Jan: Ice rink in Bad Reichenhall (Germany) – 15 died 7 Feb: A supermarket in Toeging-am-Inn (S Germany) - many injured 23 Feb: A covered market in Moscow – 65 died. ‘Late-season‘ snow led to avalanches Initial falls of snow early in the season were poor and became consolidated. Later (heavy) falls did not combine with the early falls and were free to slide -> ideal for avalanches, especially when it started to warm up. The season’s final avalanche death total in France of 65 deaths was the highest since 1970.Snowfall consequences (2): Snowfall consequences (2) Floods The causes Long periods of cold weather Large amounts of snow (1m) Sudden warming (20C/3 days) Rapid snowmelt Large runoff.Slide7: Initially, early April Flooding reported in Germany, Poland, Austria, Czech Republic and Slovakia. The Elbe swelled towards a new peak in Germany. Heavy rain caused widespread chaos across Switzerland, with road and rail closures as well as flooding. Late February - A minor warming after heavy snow in Central Europe, and some heavy rain in SE Europe, led to significant flooding in Serbia. Temperatures then fell in March with more heavy snowfalls in SE Europe. April Heavy rainfall and snowmelt produced extensive flooding along the River Danube in April. The Danube reached its highest level in more than a century in places. Areas of Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Serbia were among the hardest hit Tens of thousands of people affected.Summer starts early – in May : Summer starts early – in May During May Europe started to warm up and dry out Temperatures in parts of central Spain set record highs for May in the third week. All-time high temperature records for May were logged in nine places on 17 May, including Toledo, which reached 38.4C and Cordoba, 39.5C. On 13 June, the French Government declared a state of drought in 15 departments— mainly in the south or central areas near Paris. Groundwater levels in the Paris region were at their lowest level in 20 years and water restrictions were in place for nearly half of France by the end of July. Dry conditions had been affecting parts of W Europe since November 2004, and Iberia/France in particular during 2005. Early summer drought orders issued in the UK.A record-breaking July: A record-breaking July Warmest month on record in Belgium, UK (record starts in 1659) and Germany (also the sunniest). Warmest July on record in Denmark (also the sunniest) and Holland. Anomalies for July >5C in Holland, France, Germany and Poland Warsaw had its hottest July in a 227-year record, anomaly +5C. 36.5C at Wisley, the highest UK July temperature on record. On 18 July the "Nijmeegse Vierdaagse" - an annual 4-day long distance walk held around Nijmegen in the Netherlands - was called off. 44,000 walkers started out, 300 became ill, 30 taken to hospital, 2 died. Forest fires, water restrictions, damaged farmland across the continent. The level of the river Elbe dropped below 90cm at Dresden, making navigation almost impossible. Normally the level is some 2.2m – in contrast to April floods.Slide10: The July European-average land-surface air temperature was the warmest on record at 2.7C above the climatological normal (10W-30E, 35N-75N) The fifty warmest Julys. The inset shows the whole series. Coloured bars indicates the 95% confidence interval.The warmth continues into late Summer…: The warmth continues into late Summer… In August there was a hot spell during 19th-20th in SE Europe. In Greece temperatures reached 40C in places. In Italy, Trapani (Sicily) topped 40C – a new August record high temperature. The heatwave originated in North Africa; scores of people were hospitalized. Marine biologists blamed the weather for the plagues of jellyfish which forced the closure of some Spanish beaches. An estimated 30 000 people were stung by the jellyfish throughout the Mediterranean during the summer. Forest fires continued to burn during the month in Greece, Spain and Portugal – Portugal continued to suffer it’s worst drought in 60 years. …and Autumn…: …and Autumn… UK: record warm September in the UK Central England Temperature series. The daily mean of 16.8C was 3.1C above the long-term average. In the UK the CET series value for April to October was the highest on record at 14.6C. It was also the warmest autumn on record in the UK (1659), Belgium, the Netherlands (1706), Denmark (1768), Germany and Switzerland (1864) (3-4C above average). most of Austria, S Sweden, S Norway and parts of Ireland. Slide13: Autumn 2006 mean air temperature return periods, based on an unchanging climate Autumn 2006 mean air temperature anomaly (C)…while into December there was a lack of winter snow: …while into December there was a lack of winter snow In Moscow, several days early in the month were the warmest ever recorded for December; instead of the temperature dropping to a daily average of -5C, it was still hovering at around 5C until mid-month. Daily mean Moscow temperature, Dec. 2006 Only 30% of the Alpine seasonal average of snow had fallen by mid-month. Alpine sports events in Austria, Czech Republic, France, Slovakia and Switzerland were cancelled because of the warm weather. In much of Finland and Sweden it was the warmest December on record. Monthly temperature anomalies > +5C across Scandinavia and NW Russia W’ly winds very dominant in W and N Europe.Annual statistics: Annual statistics UK warmest year by 0.2C. De Bilt (NL) Warmest year by 0.3C France 1.2C above average (2003 warmer) Switzerland Fifth warmest Map shows mean temperature anomalies w.r.t. 1961-1990 Annual MSL pressure anomalies w.r.t. 1961-1990 Contour interval 1hPa.Further information about weather events: Further information about weather events Acknowledgements Numerous met agencies, institutions, and individuals, in particular KNMI, Met Office (UK), NCDC, WMO, NASA Philip Eden, CRU-UEA, ECA&D Yahoo, BoM, Météo France, MeteoSwiss, DWD, GPCC See www.met.rdg.ac.uk/~brugge/world.html for a regularly updated page of worldwide information – and for more information on the stories presented in this talk.