The floods that hit parts of Western Europe from killed at least 220 people in Belgium and Germany.PARIS - Climate change made the deadly floods that devastated parts of Germany and Belgium last month up to nine times more likely, according to an international study published Tuesday.
To calculate the role of climate change on the rainfall that led to the floods, scientists analysed weather records and computer simulations to compare the climate today -- which is around 1.2 degrees Celsius warmer due to manmade emissions -- with the climate of the past. They calculated that the floods were between 1.2 and nine times more likely to happen in today's warmed climate, compared to a scenario where no heating had occurred since the pre-industrial era.
Friederike Otto, associate director of the University of Oxford's Environmental Change Institute, said that the floods showed that"even developed countries are not safe from severe impacts of extreme weather that we have seen and known to get worse with climate change." This means several events on the scale of the German and Belgian floods are likely across Western Europe within that timeframe, they said.
Complacency and failure to adhere to natural law is the main cause for such disasters Don't impede nature's path
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