Floods
S


Tsunami

Flash flood hits Ruidoso, New Mexico again: roads closed, people rescued on July 24

MMMMM
Heavy rains caused a flash flood in the mountain village of Ruidoso, New Mexico, leading to road closures and the rescue of at least five people. This is not the first flood this summer, caused by wildfires that left the slopes without vegetation.

Another strong rain caused a flash flood in the mountain village of Ruidoso in the American state of New Mexico on Thursday, leading to road closures and the rescue of at least five people trapped by raging water, writes UNN with reference to AP.


Comment: Details of the first episode: At least 3 dead in New Mexico flash flooding - Rio Ruidoso rose to record-breaking 20 feet


Tsunami

Philippines flash flooding and landslides kill 25, displaces 300,000 after fierce tropical storms (UPDATE)

A boy helping to push a vehicle through a flooded street in Philippine capital Manila on July 22, after heavy rains caused floods.
© AFPA boy helping to push a vehicle through a flooded street in Philippine capital Manila on July 22, after heavy rains caused floods.
Heavy flooding inundated the Philippines' capital on July 22, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee, and schools and government offices to shut, while a fresh storm brewed off the coast.

At least six people have died, and another six remain missing after Tropical Storm Wipha skirted the country on July 18, according to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.

Many neighbourhoods in Manila woke to find calf-deep pools of flood waters on July 22 after an overnight downpour swelled the Marikina River.

More than 23,000 people living along the riverbank were evacuated from their homes overnight, and moved to schools, village halls and covered courtyards.

About 47,000 more were evacuated from across the capital's Quezon, Pasig and Caloocan areas, as well as from the main government district.

"Usually, these people are from low-lying areas like beside creeks," said Mr Wilmer Tan, of the Marikina rescue office, who said the river reached 18m in height.


Comment: Update July 26

The Sun (UK) reports:
AT least 25 people have been killed and nearly 300,000 evacuated as storms batter the Philippines.

A new tropical storm struck on Thursday night, unleashing winds up to 74 miles per hour and triggering devastating floods and landslides.



An aerial view shows flooded villages in Calumpit, Bulacan province, north of Manila on July 25, 2025, after a river over-flowed due to heavy rains brought about by Typhoon Co-May.
© TED ALJIBE/AFPAn aerial view shows flooded villages in Calumpit, Bulacan province, north of Manila on July 25, 2025, after a river over-flowed due to heavy rains brought about by Typhoon Co-May.
Typhoon Co-may struck the mountainous northern town of Agno, in Pangasinan province, as it swept through the Philippines on Thursday night.

At least 25 people have died from flash floods, landslides and electrocution since last weekend, officials say, with eight more reported missing.

Seasonal monsoon rains have pounded a vast stretch of the country for over a week.

And more than a dozen tropical storms are forecast to hit the Southeast Asian country before the end of the year.

Schools in the capital, Manila, were closed on Friday for the third day in a row.

Classes were also suspended in 35 provinces across Luzon - the northern part of the country - where most of the 80 towns and cities that have declared a state of calamity are located.

278,000 people have been forced to seek refuge in emergency shelters or with relatives.

Nearly 3,000 homes have been damaged, according to the government's disaster response agency.



Tsunami

Severe floods triggered by storm Wipha kill at least 3 in Vietnam's Nghe An

This aerial photo shows a flooded village in Vietnam's north-central Nghe An province on Jul 23, 2025, following heavy rains brought by tropical storm Wipha.
© STR/AFPThis aerial photo shows a flooded village in Vietnam's north-central Nghe An province on Jul 23, 2025, following heavy rains brought by tropical storm Wipha.
Heavy rain triggered by tropical storm Wipha has caused severe flooding in the central Vietnamese province of Nghe An, killing at least three people and leaving one more missing.

With a long coastline facing the South China Sea, Vietnam is prone to typhoons that often cause deadly floods and mudslides. Wipha is the first major storm to hit the country in 2025.

Wipha made landfall in Vietnam on July 22, after battering Hong Kong and China and worsening monsoon rain and flooding in the Philippines.

One of the victims was buried by a landslide while another was washed away by a strong current, reported the Kinh Te Moi Truong newspaper, citing information from the People's Committee of Nghe An.


Tornado1

Western Australia: Tornado tears through Perth's western suburbs, damaging homes and uprooting trees

A large tree lies across a road in Floreat.
A large tree lies across a road in Floreat.
Residents say a freak tornado that ripped through Perth's coastal suburbs sounded "like a jet engine" as it felled trees and tore up the roofs of homes.

Multi-million-dollar properties were damaged and debris covered the roads in the affluent suburb of City Beach after the Wednesday-night storm the Bureau of Meteorology has now confirmed was a tornado.

The storm, which came with little warning, was detected intensifying around 5:20pm.

"[The storm] became significant as it immediately approached the coastline, so very limited scope for warning," meteorologist Jessica Lingard told ABC Radio Perth.

"[There's] a lot of damage that we've seen overnight and it does look like it was a tornado that caused the damage in City Beach."

Images and videos of a waterspout forming over the ocean were circulated in community social media pages.


Arrow Down

Terrifying video shows landslide after hours of heavy rain in Mumbai, India

Mumbai rain: A landslide in the Mumbai Bhandup area has raised serious safety concerns.(
© @VarshaEGaikwad/XMumbai rain: A landslide in the Mumbai Bhandup area has raised serious safety concerns.
A landslide hit a residential area in Mumbai's Bhandup after hours of heavy rain, raising serious safety concerns across the city. The incident was caught on camera, and the video quickly went viral online, with users expressing shock and concern.

In the viral video, houses are seen collapsing as a powerful landslide crashes down the slope.

The landslide hit quickly, surprising everyone. A few people escaped just in time.

Some of the homes from that area had already been evacuated, and no injuries were reported. However, X users said the situation could have been far worse if people had still been inside.

"This mudslide in Bhandup should act as a warning sign. Thankfully, some of the houses here have already been evacuated," Congress MP Varsha Gaikwad said on X.

As Mumbai and other parts of Maharashtra continue to face heavy rain, the risk of landslides and flooding remains high. With an orange alert and more rain expected in the coming days, residents are advised to stay cautious.


Tsunami

Two dead, 10 missing after flash floods in eastern China - 14 inches of rain in just 5 hours

This screengrab from a viral video shows the floods in Shandong.
This screengrab from a viral video shows the floods in Shandong.
Flash floods in eastern China's Shandong province killed two people and left 10 missing on Tuesday, state media said.

Up to 364 millimeters (14 inches) of rain lashed parts of the provincial capital Jinan between midnight and 5 am, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

The downpours triggered flash floods in two villages in the town of Dawangzhuang, "destroying or damaging" 19 homes, CCTV said.

"At present, all-out efforts are being made to search for and recover the missing persons," the broadcaster said.

It added that authorities would "carry out post-disaster rescue and follow-up work in an orderly manner."

Natural disasters are common in China, particularly in summer when some regions experience heavy rainfall while others bake in searing heat waves.


AFP

Tsunami

Flash floods in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan kill 4 tourists, 15 missing after cloudburst on July 21

The screengrab taken from a video shows a bus being hit by a flash flood on Babusar Road in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region on July 21, 2025.
The screengrab taken from a video shows a bus being hit by a flash flood on Babusar Road in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region on July 21, 2025.
At least four tourists have died, 15 are missing, and hundreds have been rescued after flash floods swept through Pakistan's scenic Gilgit-Baltistan region on Monday (July 21), following a devastating cloudburst in the Babusar area of Diamer district.

Eight tourist vehicles were washed away, a portion of the Karakoram Highway (KKH) was damaged, and key infrastructure—including roads, electricity lines, and irrigation channels—was destroyed. Authorities confirmed extensive damage to homes, schools, crops, and orchards across Diamer, Ghizer, and Skardu.

The region has faced record temperatures and humidity this summer, which experts say have triggered an increase in cloudbursts and flash floods.


Comment: Related report from 4 days prior: Pakistan warns of urban flooding, river surges - 63 die in 24 hours - cloudburst dumps 16.6 inches of rain


Tsunami

Moscow hit by torrential rainfall, half a month's worth of rain in a few hours - 2nd such event in a week

bbbbbb
In a shocking turn of events, half a month's worth of rain poured down on Moscow in just a few hours, flooding streets, subways, and homes. The capital of Russia witnessed torrential rainfall and flash floods, causing severe disruption, stranded vehicles, and dramatic scenes captured on camera.


Comment: Details of the earlier episode on July 15: Heavy rain triggers flash floods across Moscow - month's worth of rainfall in under 2 hours


Tsunami

Washington DC, Maryland and Virginia flooded after 5 inches of torrential rain in just hours - roads turn into muddy rivers

Washington D.C. and its suburbs were slammed by torrential rain, dumping over five inches of water in just hours.

A vehicle and fire truck are flooded in Silver Spring, Maryland
© WTOP/Dave DildineA vehicle and fire truck are flooded in Silver Spring, Maryland.
Streets in Maryland and Virginia turned into rivers, leaving cars floating and roads impassable.

Emergency crews rescued dozens trapped in submerged vehicles, while major counties like Montgomery, Fairfax, and Prince George's faced severe flooding.

Officials issued urgent flood warnings, though no immediate injuries were reported.

The sudden storm has left communities on edge, with more rain threatening to worsen conditions.


Tsunami

Second major flood this month hits Negros Occidental, Philippines - thousands displaced

Flood-hit residents of Barangay Aguisan in Himamaylan City, Negros Occidental, were rescued by personnel of the Philippine Coast Guard yesterday, July 18, 2025.
© Coast Guard District-Southern VisayasFlood-hit residents of Barangay Aguisan in Himamaylan City, Negros Occidental, were rescued by personnel of the Philippine Coast Guard yesterday, July 18, 2025.
Widespread flooding swept through southern Negros Occidental on Thursday, July 17, affecting more than 2,000 families in three cities and seven towns, local disaster officials said, marking the second major flood event in the province in a month's time.

The Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Office (PENRO) said heavy rain from the southwest monsoon, enhanced by Tropical Storm Crising (Wipha) as it approached Northern Luzon on Friday, July 18, inundated low-lying areas in Negros Occidental's 5th and 6th districts. The rain submerged roads, triggered landslides, and prompted class suspensions in at least 18 localities.

Crising was categorized as a tropical depression on Thursday, but it intensified into a tropical storm at 2 am on Friday.