Archive for Weather

2007 Likely to be Hot

El Niño means 2007 likely to be hottest year on record
James Randerson, science correspondent
Thursday January 4, 2007
The Guardian

Global temperatures will rise to their highest levels ever recorded this year, according to scientists at the Met Office. They believe there is a 60% chance that 2007 temperatures will top the previous hottest year, 1998.The forecast follows news that the UK experienced the warmest year on record in 2006, with an average temperature of 9.7C – 1.1 degrees celsius above average. The duration of sunshine over the country was 13% higher than average.

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British Columbia Storms

bc

Residents in southwestern B.C. will spend their weekend cleaning up in the wake of the third powerful storm to hit the region this week.The latest storm hammered the region Thursday night and Friday morning, leaving more than quarter of a million families in the dark and disrupting the morning commute.

The storm was blamed for at least four deaths in the northwestern U.S., as well as the closure of two major bridges and flooding.

Winds that peaked at 157 kilometres an hour knocked out power to a widespread area, including Vancouver Island, the Gulf Islands, the Lower Mainland and the Fraser Valley. Vancouver, North Vancouver, Burnaby and Victoria were the hardest-hit communities.

B.C. Hydro says crews have restored service to about 87,000 homes since the storm blew through, but there are still 163,000 customers without electricity.

Hydro spokeswoman Elisha Morena told CBC Radio that crews are focusing on the larger outages, calling the situation a “multiple-day event” and saying that some people will be left in the dark for perhaps more than 24 hours.

“A multiple-day event is a situation where we’re going to work as hard as we can to get through things today. But we do believe there will be some customers that will be out multiple days,” she said.

Some of the 163,000 B.C. Hydro customers have already endured days without power, since the first storm blasted B.C.’s South Coast on Monday.

Slow commute for many

There were major disruptions to the morning commute in Greater Vancouver, with the Lions Gate Bridge and the Stanley Park Causeway closed after about three dozen trees fell across the causeway.

Crews worked to clear the area in time for the afternoon commute, but officials say only cars will be allowed through and the rest of Stanley Park will remain closed for the weekend.

SkyTrain service was disrupted Friday morning, but the trains were running again later in the day, with the only problem being a power outage at the VCC/Clark station. As a result, the Millennium line was terminating at Commercial Drive.

SeaBus service from North Vancouver was cut back, with only one berth operational after a barge slammed into the terminal.

There are numerous trees down on roads across the Lower Mainland.

The winds also forced BC Ferries to cancel a couple of early sailings between Tsawwassen and Duke Point on Vancouver Island.

As well, numerous schools had to be closed in the area because of the power outages.

On Vancouver Island, one of the hardest-hit areas is the small community of Sooke, west of Victoria, where the wind tore off part of the roof of an apartment building and some of the walls have fallen over.

Trees have fallen on a number of houses and cars in the area as well.

Storm had widespread impact

In the Interior, the southern half of the Coquihalla Highway was closed Friday, as has Highway 1 through the Fraser Canyon and the Duffey Lake Road between Pemberton and Lillooet.

There were also travel advisories for the Hope-Princeton Highway and the Okanagan Connector.

Farther south in Washington state and Oregon, the same system brought heavy rains and winds of up to 160 kilometres an hour, toppling trees, flooding streets and knocking out power to about 1.5 million homes and businesses.

Downed trees and debris also forced the closure of several highways in Washington and Oregon.

(CBC)

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This story is of interest to me because my daughter was there for work reasons this week. She just beat the storm that hit Whisler on Thursday night. She had a traumatic bumpy airplane ride back to Edmonton. 😐

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Weather 2006 (in Dutch)

 dec

Uitgegeven: 13 december 2006 09:30
Laatst gewijzigd: 13 december 2006 10:00

RIJSWIJK – Nederland heeft een jaar achter de rug waarin zowel hitterecords als regenrecords gevestigd werden. Na een milde winter en een wisselvallige lente werden in de zomer van 2006 de eerste records geschreven.

Warmste maand

Juli 2006 was de warmste julimaand van de afgelopen drie eeuwen. De maand kende twee hittegolven, wat heel bijzonder is. Sinds 1948 is het niet voorgekomen dat er in één jaar twee keer een hittegolf was. Het record staat op 1947, toen in de uiterst warme zomer van dat jaar vier keer zo’n periode van zeer hoge temperaturen werd geregistreerd.

Ook de zware regenval zorgde voor records. In de zomer van 2006 viel op maar liefst dertien dagen meer dan 50 mm neerslag (op een bepaalde plaats in Nederland).

Natste maand

De maand augustus was de natste augustus sinds het begin van de metingen in 1906. Met 184 mm neerslag gemiddeld is de maand zelfs een van de natste maanden aller tijden. Augustus 2006 evenaarde het record uit september 2001.

De warmte hield aan. Het KNMI riep september uit tot de warmste septembermaand in de afgelopen driehonderd jaar.

Herfst

Ook in de herfst steeg het kwik naar hoge waarden. Met gemiddelde temperaturen in de maanden september, oktober en november van 13,6 graden Celsius was sprake van de warmste herfst van de afgelopen drie eeuwen. Volgens het KNMI kunnen we ook de aankomende winter niet op koud weer rekenen.(nu.nl)

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November Warmth

 Nov

The weather in Holland today.. Unseasonably warm… Only bummer is that there was no sun and it was windy… I guess we can’t have it all. Image

Our weather bureau predicts the warmest fall in 300 yrs, beating last years record by one and half degrees. The average temperature for Sept, Oct. and Nov is expected to be 13,5 degrees.

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Weather Today

oct

The KNMI (weather bureua) says today is a record with temps of 21,8 celsius in the city De Bilt. It has never been this warm in the end of October. They expect records to be broken all over the country.

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September Weather

Sept

To continue with our Dutch (summer) weather of 2006. Sept 2006 has been the warmest September-month in 300 years. July was also the hottest month in 300 years. The KNMI (weather bureau) calls this a ‘weird summer’.

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Summer of 2006

summer

July brought us a heatwave in which 1000 more people died than normal for that month. The normal number of deaths in July is 2500 and this year the average was 2730 per week. The Dutch are just not prepared for this long of a heat wave and air conditioning is hard to find here.

This has been the wettest August in Holland in the last 100 years. We got 185 mm of wet stuff, beating the old record of 152mm if Aug of 1969. The average is 62mm.

Seldom has the summer seen such different weather conditions. June and July were sunny, dry and warm. Aug was cool, somber, and wet. The summer ends with average temperatures of 18,4 degrees and in third place as the warmest since 1901. The summers of 1947 (18,7 degrees) and the summer of 2003 (18,6 degrees) were warmer.

Source Rrl news and weather.

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