Tag: hailstorms

  • Romania in the grip of severe weather

    Romania in the grip of severe weather

     

    Extreme weather has been reported in the past few days in Romania, with code red, orange and yellow alerts issued in various parts of the country.

     

    Heavy rainfalls, storms and hail caused serious damages on Thursday night in several counties in the south and west of the country. An immediate severe weather alert was also in place for the capital city Bucharest and the adjacent Ilfov County.

     

    Bucharest saw medium-size hail and strong wind, with speeds reaching 90 km/h. Heavy rainfalls and thunderstorms were also reported, and the locals were warned by the RO-Alert system not to leave their homes. Emergency Inspectorate teams were called to remove the water and the trees fallen in the streets.

     

    The severe weather also disrupted traffic at the Otopeni International Airport, with some flights diverted to other airports.

     

    In several counties, national roads were obstructed by the trees taken down by the wind. In Craiova (southern Romania), parks were evacuated and underpasses were closed down. Streets were flooded and tram traffic was suspended.

     

    In Mehedinți County, in the south-west, an extremely violent storms, with gusts of wind reaching 70-80 km/h and hailstones the size of pigeon eggs, destroyed roofs and tore scores of trees, which fell on vehicles. The roofs of two school buildings were ruined.

     

    In rural areas, hailstorms destroyed hundreds of hectares under wheat and barley crops just before harvest time, as well as maize, sunflower and vegetable crops, vineyards and orchards.

     

    Several areas in the south of the country were under code yellow and orange alerts for heat, and the heat stress index was around the critical 80 units.

     

    It is an atypical summer, with extreme weather occurrences, including hailstorms, heavy rainfalls and heat waves, according to experts, who expect such phenomena to be even more frequent in the forthcoming period. Specialists estimate that 2024 will be the toughest year since 2016 in terms of weather conditions. They also say that, at least this year, extreme weather occurrences are going to be much more frequent, with hailstones, for instance, much larger than in previous years.

     

    Since April 15, as many as 94 hail cannons have been used to fight this phenomenon. The system has been fiercely opposed by some farmers, who argue that the use of hail cannons leads to reducing or preventing rainfall, although so far there is no scientific evidence in this respect. (AMP)

  • The effects of rain showers and storms

    The effects of rain showers and storms

    Antarctica is heading for disaster at high speed. This is the conclusion of an international expert team that has conducted a study whose worrying results have been made public recently. The document is launching an alarm signal as to the future of planet Earth. According to the scientists, the white continent situated at the South Pole has lost some three trillions tons of ice since 1992, which is enough to raise the level of oceans by some eight millimetres, and this tendency has increased dramatically over the past five years. Furthermore, if the phenomenon is not contained in due time, hundreds of millions of people leaving in low coastal areas are in danger. This is not the only effect produced by global warming, unfortunately considered to be a futile issue even by some top-level decision-makers.



    To the Romanians, Antarctica is geographically situated at the far end of the globe, and alarming information coming from there fades away, in keeping with the distance which separates the two areas. However, when the Romanians are facing extreme weather phenomena, atypical for Romania’s temperature continental climate, they become increasingly aware of the situation and start asking questions on the dangers looming ahead. For some time now, spring and autumn are almost non-existent, summers are unusually hot, in winter snow has almost vanished in some regions of the country and tornadoes have also been spotted in Romania.



    Right now, against the backdrop of temperatures exceeding normal values for this time of the year, Romania is facing extreme weather phenomena, such as rainfalls, thunderstorms, gusty wind and hailstorms. Heavy rainfalls and gusty wind have severely affected several regions of the country. Basements, cellars, streets and parking lots in several towns have been submerged. Tens of trees have fallen on cars and electricity lines, roofs have been swept away by the wind and many fires have been started by lightning strikes. Many households in the countryside have been flooded. Electricity has also been disrupted in places. In the field, hailstorms have destroyed maize, wheat and sunflower cultures on hectares. Egg-sized hail has produced extensive damage in several towns and communes in the west of the territory, where roofs and cars have been severely affected. Heavy railroad traffic was reported in places.



    Code red, orange and yellow alerts have been issued for hydrographical basins in almost three quarters of the country. The Interior Ministry has announced that over 3,300 firelighters have been mobilised to intervene in the affected areas. In brief, the weather picture is not one of the best at the moment, with fickle weather still gripping the whole country until Saturday.


  • June 19, 2016

    June 19, 2016

    WEATHER — The heavy rainfalls and thunderstorms caused problems last night in eastern and southern Romania. Houses were flooded, trees fell on the roads blocking traffic, and hailstorms destroyed crops and homes. Tens of people have been evacuated. After the extreme heat of the past few days, a code-yellow warning against heavy rains and hailstorms was issued for the west, south-west and centre of the country. Code-orange flood alerts are also in place for rivers in 11 counties, most of them in eastern Romania.




    VISIT — The President of Germany, Joachim Gauck, with be on an official three-day visit to Romania as of Monday. In Bucharest, he will have a meeting with President Klaus Iohannis and PM Dacian Cioloş and will give an address at the National Library. On Tuesday, the two presidents will travel to Sibiu, in central Romania, a city founded by Saxon colonists in the 14th Century. Sibiu is also the home town of President Klaus Iohannis, a German ethnic himself, who was the mayor there for 14 years. On Wednesday the Romanian and German heads of state will attend a meeting with Romanian and German business people.




    HOLIDAYS — More than 22,000 Interior Ministry employees are to ensure public order in Romania during the Pentecost holiday which ends on Monday night. Some 40,000 tourists are already in Romanian seaside resorts, where most accommodation facilities are fully booked. A growing number of hotels have added spa and treatment facilities to their offers. Other Romanians took advantage of the three-day holiday to go to mountain resorts.



    DIASPORA — The Minister Delegate for relations with the Romanian diaspora, Dan Stoenescu, had a meeting yesterday with members of the Romanian community in the Netherlands. According to the Foreign Ministry, the Romanian official encouraged the involvement of Romanian associations, jointly with the Dutch and Romanian authorities, in awareness raising campaigns focusing on the rights and obligations of the Romanian citizens residing in the Netherlands. Stoenescu also emphasised the importance of the Romanian-Dutch cooperation in organising joint events to promote inter-cultural dialogue. Minister Dan Stoenescu had previously had a meeting with members of the Romanian community in Brussels.




    LA BLOUSE ROUMAINE — The Mayor of the US capital city, Washington, Ms Muriel Bowser, proclaimed June 24th as the Universal Day of the Romanian Blouse in Washington, in response to an initiative of the Romanian Embassy in the USA. The Romanian blouse has been acknowledged as an international symbol of Romanian culture and a source of inspiration for major designers. Initiated and coordinated by the online community called “La Blouse Roumaine,” the International Day of the Romanian Blouse is aimed at promoting a Romanian tradition and at creating a country brand recognised around the world. The Romanian blouse is a white shirt, part of the traditional folk costume of Romanian women, and is richly embroidered with folk motifs.




    PENTECOST – Orthodox and Greek-Catholic Christians in Romania and across the world continue to celebrate the three-day feast of the Pentecost, marking 50 days from Easter and the foundation of the Christian Church. This feast day refers to the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the 12 Apostles of Jesus Christ, who could thus spread the gospels in languages they could not speak before. On the same day, with St. Peter’s fervent proclamation, some 3,000 people converted to Christianity, making up the first Christian community in Jerusalem, the core of the future Christian Church.



    NAMASTE INDIA — The Romanian Peasant Museum in Bucharest hosted, between June 17 and 19, the NAMASTE INDIA Festival, celebrating Indian culture in Romania. the Festival included a variety of events, from introductory language courses to henna painting workshops, and from yoga classes to documentary film screenings. On Sunday, the closing day, a sari parade was followed by traditional music and dance performances.




    FOOTBALL — Romania plays tonight in Lyon against Albania, in its last match in Group A of the European football championship in France, concurrently with the match between the host country’s team and Switzerland. The two matches will decide the teams that qualify into the eighth-finals of the competition. With 6 points in 2 games, France is the group leader and has already secured its qualification. Switzerland has 4 points, Romania 1, and Albania none. This is the first time in the European championship when 24 teams take part, and qualifying in the next rounds are not only the first two teams in each group, but also four teams ranking third in their respective groups.




    RUGBY — Romania’s national rugby team defeated Argentina B, 20-8, in Bucharest on Saturday night, in the final match of the last stage of the World Rugby Nations Cup. In the previous games, the Romanians had outplayed Namibia, 20-8, and Uruguay, 40-0. Romania thus won the trophy of this competition for the fourth time. Ten of the 11 editions of World Rugby Nations Cup have been held in Romania so far.


    (translated by: Ana Maria Popescu)