The situation in Germany's #Saarland region right now is giving me a strong deja vu from three years ago, when another hilly area experienced unusually heavy rainfall that lead to devastating floods. I really hope we don't see the same kind of disaster happen as we did in the Ahrtal 2021. At least residents and emergency services should be sensitized to what could happen.
Some streams in southwestern Germany are already seeing water levels that occur once in a hundred years. Downstream things are getting really dicey along the Saar and Mosel.
"A partnership between #NASA and the French space agency, the satellite is poised to help improve forecasts of where and when #flooding will occur in Earth’s rivers, lakes, and reservoirs."
"The city of 1.3 million inhabitants has been almost totally cut off by the floods.
An estimated 80% of its population do not have access to running water after five of the city's six water treatment plants ceased working." #Brazil#disaster#PortoAlegre#flooding
People living in Nairobi’s Mathare slum fear that if catastrophic flooding does not bring down their homes, the government will. Jane Kalekye trudges through the narrow muddy alley to her tin-roof house in Mathare, one of Kenya’s largest slums. Ever since the devastating floods that forced her out of her home last month, she...
"In most cases, local officials’ initial instinct has been to protect property and persist without changing where people live. However, that might only buy time for some areas before people will have little option but to move.
When they examine their vulnerabilities, many of these communities have started to recognize the interconnectedness of zoning, storm drains and parks that can absorb runoff, for example."
Deaths: 84
[83 Rio Grande do Sul + 1 Santa Catarina]
Injuries: 276
Missing: 111
Rescued: 1,011
Displaced: 122,000
Sheltered: 15,000
Power outages 420,000
Water outages: 854,500
‘I’ve only the clothes on my back’: lives swept away by floods in Kenya (www.theguardian.com)
People living in Nairobi’s Mathare slum fear that if catastrophic flooding does not bring down their homes, the government will. Jane Kalekye trudges through the narrow muddy alley to her tin-roof house in Mathare, one of Kenya’s largest slums. Ever since the devastating floods that forced her out of her home last month, she...