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Extreme Weather

Extreme weather is weather that is very different from the normal expected weather of a particular location. Extreme weather includes heat waves, droughts, freezing spells, flash floods, and strong winds.

What is extreme weather?

What is extreme weather?

  • Extreme weather is unexpected, unusual, unpredictable weather.
  • It may be a very short lived event,
    • E.g. a flash flood.
  • Or can last over a longer period of time,
    • E.g. a summer heatwave and drought.
Heat waves

Heat waves

  • Heat waves are periods of abnormally high temperatures.
    • E.g. the summer of 2018 in the UK and Europe.
      • There were more than 1,000 excess deaths in the UK, wildfires, crop failures, and a widespread drought.
Droughts

Droughts

  • Droughts are prolonged periods of abnormally low rainfall.
  • They have to be more than 15 days but can last for years.
  • They cause a shortage of water.
Drought example

Drought example

  • An example of a drought was the summer of 2018 in the UK and Europe when a lack of rainfall severely affected:
    • Agriculture, tourism, sporting events, electricity production and water supply.

Extreme Weather

Extreme weather is weather that is very different from the normal expected weather of a particular location. Extreme weather includes heat waves, droughts, freezing spells, flash floods, and strong winds.

Extreme cold spells

Extreme cold spells

  • Extreme cold spells are periods of unusually low temperatures over widespread areas, possibly with heavy snowfall.
    • E.g. The ‘Beast from the East’ in March 2018 in the UK where record low temperatures and heavy snowfall were recorded.
    • Everyday life was severely disrupted and the economy suffered.
Flash floods

Flash floods

  • Flash floods are excessive rainfall in a short period of time.
    • E.g. Boscastle, Cornwall in August 2004 when approximately three times the average month’s rainfall fell in a single day.
    • The resulting flood caused approximately £15 million of damage.
Strong winds

Strong winds

  • Strong winds include storms and gales, cyclones, typhoons, tropical storms, tornadoes and hurricanes.
  • Exceptionally high winds affect transport, electricity supplies and cause flooding and tremendous damage, including loss of life.
St Jude storm

St Jude storm

  • In the UK, the St Jude storm in 2013 brought torrential rain.
    • The St Jude storm had winds up to 160 km/h.
    • The St Jude storm caused five deaths.
    • The St Jude storm left 600,000 homes without power.
Hurricane Katrina

Hurricane Katrina

  • The extremely destructive Hurricane Katrina is the deadliest United States hurricane.
    • Hurricane Katrina hit the south of the USA in 2005.
    • At least 1,245 people died because of Hurricane Katrina.
    • The damage to property was estimated at US$125 billion.
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