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'''Extreme weather''' includes ] phenomena that are at the extremes of historical patterns, especially ] . | '''Extreme weather''' includes ] phenomena that are at the extremes of historical patterns, especially ] . | ||
Increasing dramatic weather catastrophes are |
Increasing dramatic weather catastrophes are due to high ] densities which increase the number of people affected and damage caused by an event of given severity, and to an increase in the numbers of severe events. There is controversy about the frequency of severe events: the ] and the ] linked increasing extreme weather events to global warming; a short paper by 14 meteorologists published by the ] disputes this. Further ] changes and the ] are expected to continue this trend. | ||
==2006== | ==2006== |
Revision as of 18:41, 11 April 2006
Extreme weather includes weather phenomena that are at the extremes of historical patterns, especially severe or unseasonal weather .
Increasing dramatic weather catastrophes are due to high population densities which increase the number of people affected and damage caused by an event of given severity, and to an increase in the numbers of severe events. There is controversy about the frequency of severe events: the World Meteorological Organization and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency linked increasing extreme weather events to global warming; a short paper by 14 meteorologists published by the American Meteorological Society disputes this. Further demographic changes and the effects of global warming are expected to continue this trend.
2006
Flooding
- In January, a mudslide and accompanying rainfall killed at least 207 people on the north shore of the island of Java, in Indonesia.
- In February, a massive mudslide buried the town of Guinsaugon on Leyte island in the Philippines. The entire town of 1,400 people was buried by the mudslide, and in total about 1,800 people were reported dead or missing.
- In February, heavy rain and mudslides in eastern Indonesia killed at least 33 people in the city of Manado.
Winter weather
- Record-setting snowfall throughout northern Japan that began in December continued through mid-January, dropping 13 feet of snow on some areas. By the end of the heavy snowfall, 87 people had been killed.
- Cold weather that began in December spread throughout Bangladesh and northern India, leading to the first freeze in New Delhi in 70 years and killing at least 180 people throughout the region.
- In January, the coldest weather in decades, accompanied by heavy snowfall and high winds in areas, occurred throughout Russia, Eastern Europe, and Scandinavia, leaving hundreds of people dead. BBC Snow fell throughout Europe, even as far south as the Greek Isles or the Portuguese sea resorts, with record-setting snowfall and near-record cold in many areas.
Tornadoes result in force-scale recalibration
- Forty-four tornadoes touched down across Missouri on March 11-12, resulting in 10 fatalities and 107 injuries, according to updated information from ground and aerial surveys done by the National Weather Service’s Missouri offices. (Austin, K. (March 31, 2006) "Tornado force scale adjusted," Missourian News, columbiamissourian.com/news.)
- March 31, 2006 - more tornadoes in the U.S. midwest Weather Channel reported 30-60. Flood watch on Gulf Coast near New Orleans, and on southern Atlantic coast.
- April 2, 2006 - Tornadoes and hail as big as softballs ripped through eight Midwestern states, killing at least 27 people, injuring scores and destroying hundreds of homes. In Tennessee, tornadoes killed 23 people, including an infant and a family of four. Severe thunderstorms, many producing tornadoes, also struck parts of Iowa, Kentucky, Arkansas, Missouri, Ohio, Illinois and Indiana. Strong wind was blamed or at least three deaths in Missouri. The weather service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., said it had preliminary reports of 63 tornadoes.
- April 7-8, 2005 - Dozens of tornatoes in the U.S. Mid-central through Eastern states both days, dozens killed. According to The Weather Channel, the number of U.S. tornadoes in the first seven days of April has come within 15% of the average number of tornadoes for April.
2005
Flooding
- In February, widespread flooding and heavy snowfall in Pakistan and northern India killed at least 486 people throughout the country. Thousands were also left homeless after several dams burst due to heavy rainfall.
- In February, at least 86 people were killed by heavy flooding in Colombia and Venezuela.
- In March, heavy rainfall and snowmelt left 54 people dead in southern Pakistan and Afghanistan.
- In March, flooding killed 25 people across Madagascar.
- In April, extensive flooding caused by heavy rainfall in the Somali Region of eastern Ethiopia killed 134 people and left 50,000 homeless.
- In May, extensive flooding in the city of Dire Dawa in Ethiopia killed 32 people.
- In June, flooding caused by severe storms in Afghanistan killed 48 people.
- In June, 117 people were killed when a primary school was washed away by a flash flood in far northeastern China.
- In June, extensive flooding caused by heavy rainfall in Central America killed 82 people in Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.
- In June, heavy rain in the state of Gujarat in India killed at least 130 people and left 175,000 homeless.
- From May-July, widespread flooding in southeastern China killed at least 365 people. In Taiwan, 4 people were also killed.
- In July, widespread, devastating flooding in Maharashtra and Mumbai, India killed at least 1,000 people and caused approximately $3.5 billion US in damage.
- From July-August, widespread flooding across Eastern and Central Europe killed a total of 79 people in Bulgaria, Romania, Germany, Austria, Slovenia and Switzerland.
- In August, flooding in northeastern Iran killed 43 people.
- In August, flooding in the central China province of Hubei killed 32 people.
- In September, extensive flooding in the state of Andhra Pradesh in India killed 66 people.
- In September, flooding in southern Myanmar killed 27 people.
- In October, 10 people were killed from widespread and record-setting rainfall throughout the Northeastern United States.
- In October, devastating flooding throughout central Vietnam killed at least 67 people.
- In November, flooding in the southern India state of Tamil Nadu killed 162 people.
- In December, heavy monsoon rains caused extensive flooding throughout Southeast Asia that killed 130 people in Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia.
Heatwaves
- From May-June, a heatwave occurred across Pakistan, Bangladesh, and northern India and killed at least 400 people.
- In descending order, the five years with the highest global average annual temperatures were 2005, 1998, 2002, 2003 and 2004, said Drew Shindell of the NASA institute in New York City on January 24, 2006. "I think it's even fair to say that the warmest ... temperatures the world has experienced probably in the last million years."
Severe weather
- In January, storm winds swept across northern Europe. It killed at least 13 people and left millions without electricity. (CNN) (BBC)
- In March, severe storms accompanied by a tornado in Bangladesh killed at least 56 people and left thousands homeless.
- In August, 27 people were killed when thunderstorms brought down a passenger plane in Peru.
- In November, a tornado in northern Kentucky and Evansville, Indiana, U.S. killed 26 people.
Tropical cyclones
- In January, Tropical Cyclone Ernest killed at least 17 people in Madagascar.
- In July, Hurricane Dennis killed 82 people in Haiti, Cuba, and the United States and destroyed at least 16,000 homes. Total damages amounted to $3-5 billion US.
- In August, Hurricane Katrina caused catastrophic damage along the Gulf Coast of the United States, forcing the effective abandonment of southeastern Louisiana (including New Orleans) for up to 2 months and damaging oil wells that sent gas prices in the U.S. to an all-time record high. Katrina killed at least 1,604 people and caused at least $75 billion US in damages, making it one of the costliest natural disasters of all time.
- In September, Hurricane Rita left 119 people dead along the U.S. Gulf Coast and caused $9.4 billion US in damage.
- In September, Typhoon Talim caused extensive flooding and killed at least 145 people in Taiwan and southern China.
- In September, Typhoon Damrey caused extensive flooding throughout Southeast Asia, killing 94 people in Vietnam, the Philippines, southern China, and Thailand, with its remnants killing an additional 51 from heavy flooding in Nepal.
- In October, extensive flooding exacerbated by Hurricane Stan affected nearly the entirety of Central America and southern Mexico. The storm, combined with Stan, killed between 1,080 and 2,100 people in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Villages along the shores of Lake Atitlan in Guatemala and other areas throughout the country were completely destroyed
- In October, Hurricane Wilma killed 62 people in Jamaica, Haiti, Mexico, Cuba, and the United States and at one point became the most intense Atlantic Basin hurricane on record and the fastest-intesifying tropical cyclone on record.
- In October, Tropical Storm Alpha killed 42 people in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and the Bahamas. It also broke the record for the most active Atlantic hurricane season on record.
- In October, Tropical Storm 04B killed at least 100 people in eastern India from extensive flooding.
- In November, Tropical Storm Gamma caused widespread flooding that killed 37 people in Honduras, Belize, and Saint Vincent.
Winter weather
- In January, heavy snowfall in northern Algeria left 21 people dead.
- In February, very heavy snowfall left at least 230 people dead in northern India.
- In May, heavy snow in southern Chile killed at least 45 people.
- In December, an ice storm that accumulated more than 3/4 of an inch of ice left almost 700,000 people without power in the states of Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia in the United States. The storm left 4 people dead.
- In December, record snowfall in Japan killed at least 6 people and knocked out power to about 600,000 people.
2004
- February: A severe blizzard hits Nova Scotia with winds of 80 km/h+, leaving at least 9 people dead and the entire province without power for about 16 hours.
- August: Hurricane Charley makes landfall in southwest Florida, killing 13.
- September: Hurricane Frances makes landfall in Florida. Hurricane Ivan landed near Gulf Shores, Alabama, near the Florida Panhandle. Hurricane Jeanne makes landfall in central Florida and kills 3,000 in Haiti.
- December: Another major blizzard hits Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Southern New Brunswick, leaving over 1.5 million people without electricity for an estimated 19 hours, and killing over 100 people.
2003
- August: A heat wave with temperatures as high as 42 degrees Celsius (108 degrees Fahrenheit) struck Europe. Because summer temperatures in much of northern Europe rarely exceed 30 °C (86 °F), the area was unprepared for the disaster. The death toll of the heat wave has been estimated to exceed 10,000. In relation with the heat wave, wildfires killed 18 people in Portugal. See: European Heat Wave of 2003
- September: Hurricane Isabel makes landfall on the United States, killing at least 40 people.
2002
- August:
- At least 109 are killed by floods caused by torrential rains in Europe, including the Malse, Blanice, and Vltava rivers of the Czech Republic, the Black Sea resort village of Shirokaya Balka near Novorossiisk in Russia (58 deaths), Germany (the Elbe and Pleisse), and Romania. The downpours have also caused extensive damage in Austria (the Rodl and Danube), Bulgaria, Croatia, Italy, and Spain. Prime Minister Vladimir Spidla declared a state of emergency in Prague, Bohemia, Plzen and Karlovy Vary. The Elbe reached record heights in Dresden, flooding much of the city. All shipping on the Danube had to be halted. Premier Silvio Berlusconi approved $50 million in emergency aid in response to the $300 million in damage of northern Italy's crops.
- About 2000 people are killed by floods and landslides in Asia during its monsoon season.
- September:
- On the night of September 8 a flash flood struck the Scottish city of Inverness, flooding parts of the city to a depth of 2 metres.
- On September 19, about one-third of the Maili glacier broke off from the Caucasus Mountains and buried Karmadon, Russia under up to 500 feet (150 m) of ice and debris, killing 125, including the young Russian movie star Sergei Bodrov Jr.
2001
2000
- January:
- February:
- The worst avalanches in decades prompted the governor of Alaska to declare a state of emergency througout regions of the state
- Floods killed 11 and left 20,000 homeless in the Philippines
- A month of floods in Southern Africa, particularly Mozambique, killed 400 and displaced 250,000
- October/November: England experienced the country's worst flooding in decades after a prolonged period of heavy rain. The historic city of York and the towns of Shrewsbury, Lewes and Uckfield were among the worst hit areas. Up to 10,000 homes and businesses were affected.
1999
- Record drought in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states led to declarations of emergency in six states.
- The first $1 billion tornado devastates the Oklahoma City area on May 3. It also produces the highest wind speed ever recorded at 318 mph.
- Summer: a prolonged heat wave killed 271 people in the Midwest and Northeast.
- Fall: Hurricane Floyd caused billions of dollars of damages in North Carolina
- November: a super-cyclone in Orissa, India, killed 10,000 people
- December:
- Torrential rains and mudslides in Venezuela killed 15,000 people
- Hurricane-force windstorms in Northern Europe caused over $10 billion in damages and killed 91 people in France alone
1998
- January: an ice storm in northern New England and Quebec left 4 million people without power, some for up to a month
- Spring: fires in Brazil, Mexico rainforests, and Florida
- Summer:
- Extreme heat waves in Texas, Florida, the Middle East, and India killed more than 4,000 people
- The worst drought in 70 years was followed by extreme floods in September in Mexico
- September: floods left 14 million people homeless in China
- October: floods left 30 million people homeless in Bangladesh
- October-November: Hurricane Mitch killed more than 18,000 people in Central America
1936
- February-March: Record cold followed by rapid warming causes flooding across several northeastern states, killing 171 and leaving 430,000 homeless
- April: The Tupelo-Gainesville_Outbreak of tornadoes kills 436
- July-August: A heat wave across the Midwest and Northeast U.S. claims 5,000 lives. Record temperatures from this event still stand across fifteen states
1927
1900
- September 8: The Galveston Hurricane claims in excess of 8,000 lives
See also
- List of disasters
- List of tornadoes and tornado outbreaks
- List of wars and disasters by death toll
- Climate change
- Global warming
- Storm
- U.S. state temperature extremes
- Weather-related fatalities in the United States
- Effect of sun angle on climate