Floods
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Cloud Lightning

It's getting stronger: Hurricane Irene upgraded to Category 2 as it leaves Dominican Republic and nears U.S. south-east mainland

A rapidly strengthening Hurricane Irene was roaring off the Dominican Republic's northern coast last night, whipping up high waves and torrential downpours on a track that could see it reach the U.S. south-east as a major storm by the end of the week.

Irene grew into a Category 2 hurricane late yesterday and the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said it could reach Category 3 today and possibly become a monster Category 4 storm within 72 hours.

'We didn't anticipate it gaining this much strength this early,' said center meteorologist Chris Landsea, adding that the ocean's warm temperatures and the current atmosphere is 'very conducive' to energising storms.

Forecasters said it could still be that strong when it slams into the U.S., possibly landing in Florida, Georgia, or South Carolina. Irene is expected to rake the Turks and Caicos and the Bahamas today and tomorrow.

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© Getty ImagesPanic buying: Residents in West Palm Beach, Florida, are preparing for the arrival of Hurricane Irene as it sweeps through the Caribbean

Cloud Lightning

Heavy Rain Kills Seven, Wrecks Property in Niger

Niger flood
© AFP/File, Boureima HamaPeople protect their houses from flood water in 2010 in Niger
Heavy rain has killed seven people and done considerable damage to property in Niger, the government and radio stations said Friday.

"The toll is two dead in the Maradi region and two others in Tillaberi," according to an official statement read on national radio, while the private radio Anfani announced the further deaths of three children aged between eight and ten when their house collapsed in a village in Maradi.

In the southern Maradi province, floodwaters destroyed almost 600 homes, a mosque and three business establishments, the communique added.

Bizarro Earth

Pennsylvania, US: Rain, Traffic, Land Contribute to Deadly Flood

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© Tribune Review, Chris LangerRomy Connolly is lifted from a rescue boat by Pittsburgh emergency responders after being caught in a flash flood, Friday, Aug. 19, 2011, in Pittsburgh.
The flash flooding that killed four people and forced others to swim to safety or climb onto car roofs was a freak accident caused by heavy rainfall that overwhelmed the sewer system just as rush-hour traffic clogged low-lying city streets, officials said Saturday.

A mother and her two daughters died in Friday's flood after becoming trapped in their vehicle and rising water pinned it to a tree. Another woman's body was washed into the Allegheny River, where she was found Saturday morning.

Back-to-back storms pounded the city with 3 to 4 inches of rain. The water drained rapidly onto Washington Boulevard, a main street near the Allegheny River on the city's east side, with a force too great for a pair of sewer pipes 9 feet in diameter. The torrent blew off 60-pound manhole covers.

"We had geysers here," said Raymond DeMichiei, deputy director of the city Office of Emergency Management.

"There's only so much any drainage system can handle," said Jim Struzzi, a spokesman for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. PennDOT maintains the roadway, but the city is responsible for the pipes underneath, part of aging sewer system.

Dollar

Best of the Web: US: 2008 Record for billion-dollar weather disasters tied - frequency and cost of extreme weather are rising

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© Nati Harnik / Associated PressA tractor sits in floodwater from the Missouri River in Plattsmouth, Neb., on Aug. 10.
With four months still to go in 2011, the United States has already tied its yearly record for the number of weather disasters with an economic loss of $1 billion or more, the U.S. government reported Wednesday.

With the bulk of the hurricane season ahead and winter storms after that, National Weather Service Director Jack Hayes said 2011 could surpass the record, first set in 2008.

"I don't think it takes a wizard to predict 2011 is likely to go down as one of the more extreme years for weather in history," he told journalists on a conference call.

The "new reality" is that both the frequency and the cost of extreme weather are rising, making the nation more economically vulnerable and putting more lives and livelihoods at risk, Hayes said.

Attention

US: 3 dead, 1 missing in Pittsburgh flash flooding

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© The Associated Press / Tribune Review, Chris Langer Pittsburgh emergency responders throw a life vest to Robert Bailey, 80, who climbed onto the roof of his car after being caught in a flash flood, Friday, Aug. 19, 2011, in Pittsburgh. Three people died in a flash flood on Friday after heavy rains submerged cars in the area around Washington Boulevard, which runs parallel to the Allegheny River in the city's Highland Park neighborhood, after thunderstorms dropped up to 3 inches of rain in an hour.
A pair of storms that pounded Pittsburgh on Friday cut electricity to hospitals and universities and submerged more than a dozen vehicles in a flash flood that killed a woman and two children and left another person missing and presumed dead.

Officials said drivers were overwhelmed as water rose up to 9 feet in some places along Washington Boulevard, a main road that parallels the Allegheny River in the city's Highland Park section.

Rescue crews used inflatable boats to reach marooned drivers, though some swam to safety on their own. Rhodearland "Bob" Bailey of Penn Hills, who is about 80, was rescued from the roof of his car.

"I can swim a little bit and was looking at a tree branch," Bailey told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. "I heard one woman yelling for help, but the water was coming down so fast, I couldn't see. ... I've never seen nothing like this in my life. Lord have mercy."

The area received 2.1 inches of rain in an hour, said Rihaan Gangat, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service. But an earlier storm meant the region was drenched by 3 to 4 inches of rain overall on Friday.

The three victims, whose names were not released, were unable to escape their vehicle, which was completely submerged and pinned to a tree, Pittsburgh public safety director Michael Huss said at a news conference.

Rescuers floated over the car without knowing it was below.

Cloud Lightning

Flash-flooding across southern Britain as the coast is deluged by a fortnight's rain in 30 MINUTES

A mid-summer monsoon-style downpour caused flash flooding across the South today as a fortnight's worth of rain fell in just 30 minutes leaving homes, shops and roads underwater.

The force of the rainwater caused huge cracks to open up along main roads and lifted manhole covers clean off, leading to fountains of water gushing out.

At a beach in Bournemouth - which is normally crowded with holidaymakers at this time of the year - water was flooding off the road, along the beach and into the sea.

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© BNPS.CO.UKI don't like to be beside the seaside: A torrent of water swept onto the beach causing lifeguards to run for cover. If you have any pictures of the downpour, please send them to mailonlinepictures@dailymail.co.uk

Umbrella

UK: Floods hit Bournemouth

Torrential rain brings flash floods to Dorset resort, with water reaching level of car bonnets in some areas


Torrential rain has drenched residents and holidaymakers in the south coast resort of Bournemouth, causing flash floods and traffic chaos.

Dorset police have reported floodwater up to the level of car bonnets in some areas, with manhole covers lifting and, in one case, a "fountain" of water gushing upwards as a road split under the pressure. The fire brigade dealt with more than 100 incidents in the area over a two-hour period.

Bournemouth's Central Gardens and Boscombe Gardens were both underwater after heavy storms accompanied by thunder and lightning. Parts of Poole and Christchurch were also affected.

The storms hit on the first day of the Bournemouth Air Festival, with emergency calls starting to come in between 10.30am and 11am on Thursday.

Dorset police said the flooding was predominantly in central Bournemouth. Roads had to be closed and several vehicles broke down.

Cloud Lightning

Pakistan PM Declares Disaster Areas Following Monsoon Rains

Monsoon rains have resulted in serious flooding in Pakistan's southern Sindh Province. A drain breach in Badin District left residents marooned on dry spots separated by high water.

The flooding in southern Pakistan affected 100 villages and more than 200,000 people, according to news reports. Pakistan's prime minister declared parts of the region disaster areas and pledged thousands of tents to provide temporary shelter.

Pakistan typically receives most of its moisture between July and September. Despite some cloud cover, these images, acquired one month apart, show significant changes to the landscape. In mid-August, flood water sits on areas that had been dry a month earlier. Although conditions remain relatively dry around the city of Hyderabad, flooding is obvious around the city of Badin.

The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Terra satellite captured these images on August 16, 2011 (top), and July 17, 2011 (bottom). The images show southern Pakistan, near the coast and near the border with India.
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© NASA images courtesy MODIS Rapid Response Team, Goddard Space Flight Center.Both images use a combination of visible and infrared light to increase contrast between water and land. Water ranges in color from electric blue to navy. Vegetation is green, and bare ground is pink-beige. Clouds are pale blue-green.
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© NASA images courtesy MODIS Rapid Response Team, Goddard Space Flight Center.

Cloud Lightning

US: New York Breaks City's Rainfall Record with Nearly Eight Inches Soaking City

New York broke an all-time record for a one-day rainfall Sunday as up to 8 inches of water soaked the city, snarling trains and flooding roadways.


By 9 p.m., 7.7 inches of rain had fallen at Kennedy Airport.

It was the most recorded there in a single day since the National Weather Service began keeping records 116 years ago.

Bizarro Earth

Australia: Victoria - Floods Inundate Gippsland Farms, Close Roads

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© Wayne TaylorFollowing heavy rainfall the Thomson Dam is 46.3 per cent full, it's highest level in almost six years.

Extremely heavy rainfall this week in eastern Victoria has caused widespread flooding of Gippsland farms, closed local roads and threatens to affect townships in low-lying areas as rivers swell.

But the rainfall has been a boon for the Thomson Dam where 85 millimetres fell in 24 hours, pushing the dam to 46.3 per cent full, its highest level in almost six years.

Seven locations in Gippsland and East Gippsland received more than 100 millimetres of rain in the 24 hours to 9am yesterday, with Reeves Knob recording the highest total, a massive 137 millimetres.

Late yesterday major flood warnings were in place for the Mitchell and Thomson rivers and moderate warnings for the Avon, Latrobe and Macalister rivers. Widespread flooding has occurred on farmland at Cowwarr, Denison, Nambrok and Lindenow, but no homes have been inundated.