Clifden flooding a severe warning of extremes to come in Ireland



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The floods that inundated Clifden in Co Galway within hours is a clear sign that Ireland’s weather extremes will continue to worsen, warned one of the country’s leading climate change experts.

Professor Peter Thorne said that a “very large” number of cities and towns across the country are equally susceptible to “truly catastrophic” flash floods due to their catchment around a river.

Dismissing speculation that drainage at Sitka spruce plantations outside of Clifden were to blame for Wednesday morning’s flooding, Professor Thorne said it was due to the “end of Hurricane Laura” crashing into the surrounding mountains. from the seaside town of Conneamara.

“When you’ve got all that deep, humid tropical atmosphere, traveling across a silky smooth Atlantic, the first thing it does is hit the mountains and hills of Clifden, and it’s like squeezing a sponge,” he said.

The Maynooth University academic, who was the lead author of the fifth assessment report of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said the soil was also “unusually saturated” as each of the past three months was more humid than normal.

Small rivers like the Owenglin in Clifden are also “very sensitive to heavy rain,” he said.

Noting the devastating impact of small rivers flooding parts of Inishowen, Co Donegal in August 2017, Professor Thorne said that many towns and villages face a similar fate, historically occurring every few years.

“The climate is one degree warmer than it was in the 19th century due to man-made emissions, and for every degree of temperature rise, the atmosphere contains seven percent more water,” he said.

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