The National - News

There’s only so much saving we can do for a rainy day

▶ Disruptive as the weather has been, there is a limit to what authoritie­s can do in response

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Recent weather changes have been the talk of town. Last weekend, hailstorms and torrential downpours lashed the coastline over three days and more than 600 people affected by the heavy rainfall in Al Ain and Fujairah had to be evacuated from their homes and given emergency accommodat­ion. Similar storms in Oman led to 120 being left homeless, while flash floods claimed three lives. Houses, roads and wadis in the northern emirates were flooded, putting drivers’ lives at risk as the coast was whipped by high speed winds.

While rare, this is not the first time heavy rains have left emergency services scrambling to cope with floodwater. The great storm of March 2016 brought Sheikh Zayed Road to a standstill for four hours when the motorway flooded after a failure in the irrigation system.

More than 3,000 calls lit up Dubai police’s switchboar­d that time, among them reports of nearly 500 accidents and residents in private communitie­s like Green Community West and Discovery Gardens in Dubai were still facing challenges a week after the worst of the weather had hit. Then there were the storms of April 2013, when rainfall was blamed for nearly 700 road accidents. They might not happen often but when they do, storms can cause chaos in this region with potentiall­y serious consequenc­es.

There is a question mark over how much authoritie­s can prepare for the worst eventualit­y. In the past, they have lowered water levels in pump stations, but it has not always been enough to absorb all storm water. Do they spend money on equipping existing roads and neighbourh­oods with better drainage for the few days a year when it rains? Certainly new structures should be built factoring in the ability to weather the worst of the UAE’s winds and rains. Private developers also have a responsibi­lity to keep infrastruc­ture maintained and not to leave residents languishin­g in potentiall­y hazardous conditions if the worst does happen. Beyond that, it is difficult to see how much authoritie­s can do other than laying on extra staff and hoping the storm passes as quickly as it arrives.

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