Severe thunderstorms swept across the Balkans last week bringing widespread destruction to many areas. The storms developed as unstable hot air sat over the Adriatic Sea while a cold front plunged south-eastward. This was reported by Qazaqyia.kz citing The Guardian.
The cold front began its journey southwards on 10 June in Slovenia where the Slovenian Environment Agency recorded wind gusts of 65mph at Ljubljana airport. Heavy rain also fell widely across the region with 23mm reported in Kranj.
Alongside heavy rain, hail the size of golf balls plummeted from the sky as the front edged south-eastwards towards Croatia. One of the worst affected areas was the Komenda municipality where the local fire department reported more than 100 buildings had sustained damage, with some homes losing their roofs to the violent gusts of wind. In the early hours of 11 June, the storm edged south-eastwards into parts of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and later into Greece on 12 June.
Conditions have been similar on the opposite side of Eurasia as the Hong Kong observatory issued a black rainstorm warning on Thursday. When a black warning is issued, outdoor workers are expected to take shelter until it is safe and schools are closed. Hourly rainfall totals exceeded 70mm, only 10 days after the first black warning was issued on 8 June, bringing widespread flooding to the area. Rain is not the only hazard that struck the region as wind speeds of 50mph were recorded in the district of Tai O.
France has experienced heatwave conditions recently with temperatures in the mid-to-high 30s degrees celsius, affecting a large swathe of the country. The heat will not relent as temperatures reaching 41C are expected in the coming days. This heatwave has been particularly unusual, and will continue to be so, as the bulk of the heat has been concentrated in northern and western France, areas that are climatologically cooler than those such as the Rhone valley which typically records the highest temperatures in heatwaves.
