Extreme Temperature Diary- Tuesday September 12th, 2023/Main Topic: Libya Ravaged by Extreme Flood Waters Leaving 5000+ Dead

The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to Main Topic: Libya Ravaged by Extreme Flood Waters Leaving 5000+ Dead or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉

Main Topic: Libya Ravaged by Extreme Flood Waters Leaving 5000+ Dead

Dear Diary. The north Africa area has had a historically awful week. A non-climate related earthquake killed nearly 3000 people in Morrocco. What was climate change related was a medicine that spun up in the southern Mediterranean that moved into traditionally arid Libya and killed over 5000 people. It’s interesting that the earthquake is getting U.S. media attention as of this Tuesday without much mention at all of the Libyan flood, at least on air. In any case, here are more derails from Common Dreams:

5,000+ Dead and Thousands More Missing as Libya Ravaged by Extreme Flood Waters (commondreams.org)

Overturned cars lay among other debris caused by flash floods in Derna, eastern Libya, on September 11, 2023. (Photo: AFP via Getty Images)

5,000+ Dead and Thousands More Missing as Libya Ravaged by Extreme Flood Waters

“In places where systems have collapsed through no fault of local people,” said one advocacy group, “climate impacts are being experienced worse than anywhere.”

By JULIA CONLEY

Sep 12, 2023

The Interior Ministry in eastern Libya said Tuesday that the confirmed death toll in flooding from Storm Daniel has risen past 5,200, with at least 10,000 people feared missing and at least a quarter of the Mediterranean port city of Derna destroyed, according to officials.

“Bodies are lying everywhere—in the sea, in the valleys, under the buildings,” Civil Aviation Minister Hichem Chkiouat told Reuters on Tuesday. “I am not exaggerating when I say that 25% of the city has disappeared. Many, many buildings have collapsed.”

Health Minister Othman Abdel Jalil told reporters that ultimately the number of deaths is expected to reach 10,000 following Daniel’s torrential downpour, which caused floodwaters to breach Derna’s two dams over the weekend.

https://x.com/ExtinctionR/status/1701447989221323145?s=20

The water reached as high as 10 feet in some parts of the city, witnesses told Reuters, washing away “entire neighborhoods” into the sea in just the latest of the extreme weather disasters that have devastated cities and killed thousands of people in recent months across the globe, as scientists have warned that extreme rainfall, heatwaves, and wildfires are being driven by the climate crisis and the extraction of fossil fuels.

The United Nations warned in 2020 that low-lying coastal areas of Libya are at an elevated risk for climate-related disasters as water in the warming Mediterranean Sea expands, causing sea levels to rise approximately 2.8 millimeters (0.1 inches) per year.

Storm Daniel also killed 15 people in Greece before making its way south to Libya; according to one expert at Britain’s University of Reading, such Mediterranean hurricanes—or medicanes—could become more deadly as the planet continues to grow hotter due to the emission of heat-trapping gases.

“There is consistent evidence that the frequency of medicanes decreases with climate warming, but the strongest medicanes become stronger,” meteorology professor Suzanne Gray told Reuters.

Christos Zerefos, secretary general of the Academy of Athens and head of the institution’s climatology research center, told the outlet that the rainfall that preceded the flooding was “unprecedented” for the North African country, with more rain dumped on Libya than ever recorded since data-collecting began in the mid-19th century.

“We expect such phenomena to happen more often,” he told Reuters.

The disaster was made worse in Derna by ongoing political turmoil in the country since a 2011 political uprising, with two separate governments overseeing the east and the west.

Hani Shennib, president of the National Council on U.S.-Libya Relations, told Al Jazeera that “the east has been neglected,” with Derna’s dams eroding and few health services to serve the city of 100,000 people.

“I have visited Derna quite frequently. I have been shocked that a city of 100,000 people does not have a single hospital that is functioning,” Shennib told Al Jazeera. “The only hospital that is functioning in Derna today is a rented villa that has five bedrooms providing the services to the population. This is not new. This is going on for 42 years. It has caused the alienation and political turmoil since the days of [late longtime ruler Muammar] Gaddafi.”

Grassroots climate movement Extinction Rebellion Global noted that, as campaigners have long warned, people in cities where public services “have collapsed” are uniquely vulnerable to climate catastrophe.

https://x.com/ExtinctionR/status/1701447989221323145?s=20

The devastating floods came just over a week before world leaders are scheduled to meet in New York for the United Nations Climate Ambition Summit, where U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres has called on them to present updated commitments to reduce fossil fuel emissions and climate action plans, warning last week that recent extreme weather shows “climate breakdown has begun.”

“Governments must act now,” said Greenpeace International, “to end fossil fuels that are plunging us deeper into climate disaster every day.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

JULIA CONLEY

Julia Conley is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

Full Bio >

Here is more climate and weather news from Tuesday:

(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)

*Due to technical difficulties, there are no other added items to today’s post.*

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Guy Walton… “The Climate Guy”

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