Flash
Floods in Spain Leave More Than 70 Dead
About 1,000
soldiers from emergency response units deployed to the affected areas, and the
death toll was expected to rise after one of the worst natural disasters to hit
the country in recent years.
By José Bautista and Isabella Kwai
José Bautista reported from Madrid.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/30/world/europe/spain-floods-valencia.html
Oct. 30, 2024
Updated 12:58 p.m. ET
At least 72 people have died and others were missing after
devastating flash floods hit eastern Spain, according to the local authorities,
in one of the worst natural disasters to hit the country in recent years.
The catastrophic floods, fueled by an unrelenting deluge
that began on Monday, washed away cars, inundated homes and knocked out power
across eastern Spain. Rescuers waded through neck-high waters to reach some
residents.
In the town of Chiva in the eastern Valencia region,
practically a year’s worth of rain fell over eight hours, Spain’s
meteorological agency said on Wednesday, illustrating the ferocity of the
storm. Other areas across the south and east saw more than a month’s worth of
rain in less than 24 hours.
The severity of the disaster became more apparent on
Wednesday as the regional authorities confirmed that 70 people had died in the
Valencia region, where the storm battered cities, villages and towns along the
mountainous coastline. Two other people died in the neighboring province of
Castile-La Mancha, where at least five other people were missing in the
municipality of Albacete, local officials said. It was the deadliest flooding
disaster in Spain since 1996, when floodwaters in the Pyrenees swept away a
campground, killing more than 80 people.
More remain missing, but the authorities in Valencia said
that they could not give an exact figure. A phone line was set up to report
missing people, they added, and residents were urged not to travel in the area.
The death toll, officials said, was expected to rise.
Flooding also swept the region of Andalusia in southern
Spain, which includes the cities of Seville and Málaga. The region received
four times the amount of rain typical for October in a single day, Spain’s
weather agency said.
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More than 1,000 soldiers from an emergency response team
were sent to respond to the disaster, officials said, sharing videos of some
people being airlifted from flooded areas into helicopters or waiting on
rooftops.
“It’s been a disaster,” said Enrique Platero, a resident of
Utiel, near Valencia, to the Spanish broadcaster RTVE. He said there had been
no warning about the storm’s dangers. “It took us by surprise,” he said,
turning away during the interview as tears came to his eyes.
Widespread areas appeared almost entirely submerged, and
dozens of cars piled up in the flooding’s aftermath, according to footage
released by the Civil Guard. Some buildings were reduced to sodden rubble.
The damage to roads and bridges left rescuers struggling to
reach some areas, officials said on Wednesday. Some towns were still cut off by
the storm, with local officials describing grim scenes as the death toll
climbed. Fears were also rising for the condition of people missing.
“At the moment, we have a very negative outlook for those
that remain missing, although of course we retain hope,” said Emiliano
García-Page, head of the Castile-La Mancha region, to reporters on Wednesday.
“The town of Paiporta is cut off; nothing works,” said
Maribel Albalat, Paiporta’s mayor, where dozens of people died, to the
Actualidad Valencia, a local newspaper. “People are organizing themselves but
there is no communication.”
The overflowing ravines and strong winds also damaged
infrastructure supplying telecommunications and power in the region. About
155,000 customers were left without power, according to Iberdrola, an energy
provider in Valencia, adding that workers were encountering difficulties in
restoring service.
“It has been something out of the ordinary,” said Ricardo
Gabaldón, the mayor of Utiel to RTVE, adding that helicopters and boats had
been reaching stranded residents all afternoon. “The material damage is
incalculable, but what worries us is the personal damage.”
Highways leading to the region’s capital, also named
Valencia, were littered with debris and covered with mud, according to footage
from local media, and the subway was flooded. Regional trains on Wednesday were
halted, and schools were closed in several places.
The Spanish Parliament on Wednesday held a minute of silence
to mourn the victims. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez vowed in an address to help
the flood-struck regions recover. “Together we are going to rebuild your
streets, your squares, your bridges,” he said from Madrid. “All Spain cries
with you,” he added.
The deluge is not yet over: More rain was expected on
Wednesday, with Spain’s meteorological agency raising an emergency alert for
the Valencia region to the highest level. A popular tourist destination,
Valencia is also known for being a key agricultural producer, and grows citrus
and other fruits and vegetables.
One union representing young farmers in the region, the
Valencia branch of ASAJA, said that while it was too early to assess the
floods’ economic impact on agriculture and livestock, it predicted that
thousands of hectares of citrus, persimmons, vegetables, vines and other crops
would lose their harvest this season.
Some areas recorded “historic accumulations of water,” the
union said, and the force of the water in inland areas uprooted thousands of
vines and other crops that had just gone through one of the driest years in
history. Other farms nearer to the coast were also flooded, the union said.
Though storms are typical during the fall in Spain, local
residents were shocked at the sheer amount of rain: more than 70 gallons per
square yard in some villages. In the village of Chiva, more than 100 gallons
per square yard of rain fell in eight hours, practically a year’s worth,
Spain’s meteorological agency said.
The agency added that it expected some 40 gallons per square
yard of rain before 6 p.m. local time on Wednesday over parts of Valencia,
Andalusia and Murcia. The storm was moving toward the north and northwest of
Spain, with rain expected to continue until at least Thursday.
Flooding is a complex phenomenon and while linking climate
change to a single flood event requires extensive scientific analysis,
scientists have said that climate change is causing heavier rainfall in many
storms. Warmer atmosphere holds, and releases, more water.
Meteorologists have said that the rainfall in Spain is most
likely the result of a sudden “cold drop,” known in Spanish as a “gota fría.”
That happens when cold air moves over the warm waters of the Mediterranean Sea,
allowing the hotter, moist air at the surface to rise quickly and producing
giant rain clouds. Then, the storm system pushes these moisture-rich clouds
over land.
The Mediterranean is also getting hotter, which is making
such rainfalls more violent and more frequent. In August, the sea hit its
highest recorded temperature.
The record rainfall that led to devastating floods in
Belgium and Germany in the summer of 2021 was made much more likely by global
warming, scientists have determined.
Isabella Kwai is a Times reporter based in London, covering
breaking news and other trends. More about Isabella Kwai
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