Storm Kathleen Causes Flooding With Emergency Service Launching Rescue Operations
Storm Kathleen Causes Flooding With Emergency Service Launching Rescue Operations
Storm Kathleen Causes Flooding With Emergency Service Launching Rescue Operations
The announcement was said to have been made at a packed Barry Island
Conditions need to be ideal for the aurora to be viewed in parts of England, which is why it is such a rare occurrence
Thunderstorms and ‘intense downpours’ could lead to disruption across the county, according to the Met Office
Heavy rainfall and storms wreak havoc across northern Italy, France and Germany, whilst southern Italy endures an unseasonal heatwave.View on euronews
Weather forecasters and meteorologists have delivered their verdicts for the summer months ahead of the sixth month of the year, June, arriving next week.
For second consecutive day on Sunday, parts of Delhi met heatwave conditions
Thames Water is clamping down on illegal water connections, with fleet services company, Go Plant Ltd, forced to pay £52,000 in fines and costs for repeatedly connecting unauthorised and unlicenced standpipes over the past five years.
People in northeastern Japan have been warned to stay vigilant after a man was found dead with gash wounds and police officers were left with serious injuries. Two officers were attacked on Saturday in Kazuno city, Akita prefecture, while recovering the missing man's body, Japanese media said. A police helicopter and cars are involved in the search for the bears.
The yellow weather warning is in place until 8pm tonight
A bear fell from a tree onto a tarp after it was tranquilized in Lakewood, Washington, on Wednesday, May 15, footage posted to Facebook shows.The Lakewood Police Department said that the black bear had been spotted “cruising the neighborhoods” in the area. They said that a local elementary school was put on lockdown while the bear roamed the area.This footage by Amy Mayster shows the bear falling from the tree onto a tarp being held open by officers with the Department of Fish and Wildlife. The bear is then seen being carried away in the tarp and placed in a cage to be transported away.The City of Lakewood Municipal Government confirmed that the bear was captured by officers with the Department of Fish and Wildlife.The bear was assumed to have started wandering around Lakewood while it was looking for food after having been “kicked out” by its mother, the Lakewood Municipal Government said, citing wildlife officials. Credit: Amy Mayster via Storyful
This summer has a 35-per cent, 1.8 times the norm, chance of being hot, and a mere five per cent chance of being cool, according to the Met Office meteorologists and forecasters.
Dean Majors left the Yorkshire company in shock with his idea
If you missed them last week the amazing show is back again in time for this weekend
Met Office issue yellow warnings for thunderstorms in parts of UK
Police officers in serious condition but should pull through
The UK faces a staggering 600-mile heatwave as the next blast of hot weather hitting the country is confirmed before the end of May, the fifth month of the year.
German emergency workers on Saturday started a major clean-up after heavy rains triggered massive flooding, while parts of Belgium, the Netherlands and France were also affected.The southwestern German state of Saarland was the worst-hit region after a long downpour on Friday flooded buildings, left streets deep underwater and sparked evacuations, with boats carrying stranded residents to safety.Officials said it was the worst flooding in the area for nearly 30 years. The capital Saarbruecken was badly affected while dykes were breached in several areas, causing power to fail or be shut down as a precaution.No deaths were reported but at least one person was injured.Chancellor Olaf Scholz, visiting a village in the affected area, said that "we can see here what violence nature can cause and how much we have to constantly prepare for such events". He praised the work of emergency services in helping local residents and promised help for those affected by the disaster.Saarland state premier Anke Rehlinger said that authorities still did not have a complete picture of the damage but it was expected to be "considerable". The heavy rains had eased early on Saturday, however, and a severe weather warning for the area was lifted. There was also flooding in the German states of Rheinland-Palatinate, Baden-Wuerttemberg and Hesse.About 850 workers from the federal relief agency were dispatched to Saarland to help tackle the floods, joining several thousand people in the state, many of them volunteers, the interior ministry said. Water rescue teams and extra fire-fighting units were sent in from other states, it said. - Worsening floods -Germany has faced worsening floods in recent years. In 2021, the regions of Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westphalia were hit by catastrophic floods that killed more than 180 people.In Belgium, the province of Liege was hit by severe flooding overnight into Saturday, with authorities receiving hundreds of requests for assistance and 150 firefighters deployed, governor Herve Jamar said.The main help provided by emergency services was pumping water out of flooded buildings, he said. In Les Fourons, northeast Belgium, the water was up to chest height in some houses, according to mayor Joris Gaens, quoted by Belga news agency. "These are the worst floods in the history of Les Fourons," he added. Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo was due to visit on Saturday afternoon.In the Dutch province of Limburg, two campsites were evacuated early on Saturday as they were threatened by rising floodwaters, officials said. Meanwhile the Moselle area in France's northeast, which borders Saarland, was placed on flood alert with officials saying it received the equivalent of a month's rainfall in less than 24 hours.More than 1,000 firefighters were deployed to respond to the emergency but officials on Saturday said the situation was improving. Experts say climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of floods.German climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf said the floods in Saarland highlighted inadequate steps taken so far to fight global warming."People who do not take the warnings of climate researchers seriously for decades, and elect politicians who delay climate protection, should not be surprised about floods," he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.sr/bc
Death toll in southern state of Rio Grande do Sul increasing daily as authorities plan four ‘tent cities’ for 77,000 displaced people
Joanne Audet and Marcel Breton say they have lived an extraordinary life by the sea, but the coastal erosion along the shores of Maria, Que., has become too much for the couple."We were hit by three enormous tides within a year. You can't stay here anymore. At home, it was scary. It was rumbling, it shook. The water hits your windows. You become surrounded by water everywhere," Audet said. "We no longer had a choice. We had to leave."Their residence is among eight homes threatened by imminent co
Jim Dale, a senior meteorologist for British Weather Services, said a 40C are not impossible, but not very likely, and 35C is far more achievable this summer.