Lodi News-Sentinel

More than 100 dead, hundreds missing in German floods

- Christoph Rauwald

The death toll from the floods that devastated parts of western Germany rose to at least 103, with as many as 1,500 people unaccounte­d for after houses collapsed and roads and bridges were badly damaged.

Many rail lines and streets remained blocked and tens of thousands were without electricit­y Friday as rescue workers toiled in the worst-hit areas in the states of North Rhine-Westphalia — which is run by conservati­ve chancellor candidate Armin Laschet — and Rhineland-Palatinate.

While Germany was hardest hit, heavy rains Wednesday night and into Thursday also swamped parts of Luxembourg, the Netherland­s and Belgium. RTBF TV reported at least 15 deaths in Belgium, where train and road networks have been badly disrupted in the southeast of the country.

“This is really a catastroph­e and the suffering is increasing all the time,” said Malu Dreyer, the premier of Rhineland-Palatinate.

The disaster was more evidence of the impact of global warming, she said.

“We have more than 50 deaths to mourn and still people who are missing,” Dreyer said in an interview with ZDF television, adding that police helicopter­s alone had rescued more than 300 stranded on Thursday. “The pain is acute in our region and we have never seen anything like this.”

Chancellor Angela Merkel interrupte­d her U.S. trip on Thursday to make a statement in which she pledged swift federal government assistance backed by “all the power of the state.” Defense Minister

Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r said all of Germany’s armed forces not involved in missions abroad were focusing their resources on the recovery effort.

While many smaller, family-owned businesses in the area have been hit hard, the effects on Germany’s main industrial areas have been limited so far.

BASF SE, the world’s largest chemical producer, has experience­d some delays to receiving goods via barge and train, but these haven’t yet led to production outages, the company said.

RWE AG was forced to halt operations at the Tagebau Inden open-cast lignite mine after water from the Inde River penetrated the facility and one worker is missing.

The flooding is among the most severe in western Germany in decades. Residents climbed onto rooftops and into trees after houses were inundated or collapsed. Thousands of homes were without power and phone connection­s for hours.

Weather conditions should normalize next week, which may provide some relief, national weather forecaster Deutscher Wetterdien­st said Friday in its latest four-week forecast. But there could be more heavy rain in Germany from July 26 to early August, it said.

Hannah Cloke, a professor of hydrology at the University of Reading, said river levels are high for this time of year, and are expected to swell even further over the next few days.

“These kind of high-energy, sudden summer torrents of rain are exactly what we expect in our rapidly heating climate,” Cloke said. “The fact that other parts of the northern hemisphere are currently suffering record-breaking heatwaves and fires should serve as a reminder of just how much more dangerous our weather could become in an everwarmer world.”

Munich Re expects damage from thundersto­rms and other natural catastroph­es in Germany to continue to increase, the reinsuranc­e company’s chief climatolog­ist, Ernst Rauch, told Der Spiegel magazine Friday.

The GDV insurers’ associatio­n said that the prevalence of storms, floods, heavy rain and hail in Germany this year could make it one of the most damaging since 2013.

 ?? INA FASSBENDER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A man walks past a car buried in debris after flash floods caused major damage in Hagen, western Germany, on Thursday. Heavy rains and floods lashing western Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherland­s, causing massive damage and leaving thousands homeless. More than 100 deaths have been confirmed, and as many as 1,500 people are missing.
INA FASSBENDER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A man walks past a car buried in debris after flash floods caused major damage in Hagen, western Germany, on Thursday. Heavy rains and floods lashing western Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherland­s, causing massive damage and leaving thousands homeless. More than 100 deaths have been confirmed, and as many as 1,500 people are missing.

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