Spain’s
‘monster’ floods expose Europe’s unpreparedness for climate change
National
government blamed local authorities after at least 92 people died as heavy
rainfall swept through homes, shops and roadways.
October 30,
2024 7:12 pm CET
By Karl
Mathiesen, Aitor Hernández-Morales and Zia Weise
https://www.politico.eu/article/spain-floods-valencia-europe-climate-change-preparation/
The warnings
arrived after the waters had already begun to rise.
Spain’s
deadliest floods in decades are another harrowing reminder that Europe is
unprepared for the consequences of a superheated atmosphere, said European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday.
“This is the
dramatic reality of climate change. And we must prepare to deal with it,” she
said.
But the
intensity of the rainfall that hit areas around Spain's third-largest city,
Valencia — in some places, roughly a year’s worth of rain in a single day —
exposed the country's unreadiness and led the Socialist-led national government
to slam the center-right regional authorities for failing to pass on early
warnings to people in danger.
Valencia’s
regional government, which is responsible for coordinating emergency services
in the affected areas, admitted that it had only sent out a text message
warning residents of the impending catastrophe at 8:12 PM, eight hours after
the first floods were reported, and 10 hours after Spain’s National State
Meteorological Agency (AEMET) issued an alert highlighting “extreme danger”
across the Valencia region.
By the time
the Valencian authorities acted "the situation had already escalated
significantly," said an official from the national Ministry for the
Ecological Transition.
"It is
the regional governments in Spain who handle the warning systems and hold the
authority to send alerts to citizens’ mobile phones to restrict mobility when
necessary ... Why this considerable delay in sending alert messages to mobile
phones, advising against traveling or going to workplaces? We don’t know,"
said the official, who was granted anonymity to speak about the politically
explosive matter.
The regional
government’s brief message, which warned of heavy rainfall and advised locals
to stay indoors, came too late for many who found themselves trapped in
low-lying homes, shops and roadways that were quickly overwhelmed by rapidly
moving floodwaters.
By Wednesday
afternoon, at least 92 people were confirmed dead, said the government
official. Spain’s Territorial Policy Minister Ángel Victor Torres said that the
scale of the material damages is "incalculable," before adding: “We
cannot yet give official figures on missing persons, which underscores the
tremendous magnitude of this tragedy."
Flood
experts lamented the failure to adequately warn those in harm’s way.
“We can see
that something’s gone wrong because so many people have died,” said Hannah
Cloke, a professor of hydrology at the University of Reading.
“It was a
giant monster of a storm … we knew beforehand that there was going to be heavy
rainfall, but these warnings did not reach the people on the ground [in a
timely manner],” Cloke added. She also lamented the lack of specific
instructions for those at risk of their lives.
Scientists
said Wednesday that climate change was a key factor. |
In recent
weeks, several European countries have been hit by deadly and damaging floods.
And floods in Greece, Belgium and Germany in the past few years served as
further warnings about the increasing danger of extreme weather.
The
fingerprint of climate change on the storm that hit Spain this week has not yet
been measured. But scientists said Wednesday that warming was a key factor. The
Mediterranean Sea broke all-time temperature records in August. That would, in
turn, have led to more water being carried up into clouds.
“No doubt
about it, these explosive downpours were intensified by climate change,” said
Friederike Otto, who leads a team of researchers who study the impacts of
climate change on extreme weather at Imperial College London.
Emergency
services overwhelmed
On Tuesday
evening, María Crespo, a civil servant based in Madrid, called her family in
Alfafar, a town outside Valencia to check on them. They had received a text
warning them of danger barely an hour before floodwaters began to pour into
their home.
Crespo said
that when she spoke to her sister and father-in-law around 09:30 PM, they
assured her there was no rain and everything was fine. But half-an-hour later
they called back in panic. Water overflowing from the usually bone-dry Turia
river basin had rushed through the single-story house and was already waist
deep.
“Before the
battery ran out on their cellphones, around 4 a.m., they told me that they were
spending the night on the roof because the house itself was completely
flooded,” Crespo said. “They’ve been up there, exposed to the elements and
freezing, but it could have been worse.”
Residents
seeking help quickly discovered that they were on their own. Telephone networks
crashed early in the evening, and the regional emergency services were
overwhelmed by calls that led the 112 telephone line to effectively collapse.
Sandra
Gómez, a Spanish Socialist MEP from Valencia, said that her husband, a teacher,
was called into work on Tuesday evening because the local authorities had not
issued an alert or suspended classes at that point. Before the emergency
message reached her phone, her husband called to say he was trapped on a
flooding motorway, with water reaching his hips.
“He was very
lucky” to escape before the waters rose further, she said.
Trade unions
have called for investigations into companies that asked their employees to
come into work despite the forecast.
'Political
responsibilities'
In Madrid,
left-wing politicians in the Spanish parliament accused Carlos Mazón, the
center-right president of the Valencia region, of not telling workers to stay
home earlier in the day in a bid to keep local businesses operating. Mazón’s
government was similarly blasted for having eliminated the Valencian Emergency
Unit, an elite rapid response force tasked with addressing the impact of
natural disasters, as a cost-cutting measure last year.
Spanish
newspapers reported that the Valencian emergency coordination center convened
only around 5 p.m. Tuesday.
“There are
political responsibilities behind this tragedy,” said Republican Left of
Catalonia lawmaker Gabriel Rufian. “The storm may have been inevitable, but
there are people who have died because they were forced to go to work and
others who perished, it seems because there weren’t well-equipped units to
rescue them.”
Residents
seeking help quickly discovered that they were on their own. |
Experts also
cited the uncontrolled urban development of the Valencia region — one of
Spain’s fastest-growing regions — as a key factor in the tragedy. Asphalt
roadways acted as channels for rainwater that quickly overwhelmed communities
built beside ravines or on the basins of diverted rivers.
“Climate
change is decisive in the magnitude of this natural disaster,” geologist Joan
Escuer said on Spanish radio. “But its consequences wouldn't have been as great
if we hadn't built infrastructure and allowed people to settle in high-risk
places.”
The news of
the dramatic death toll came just before von der Leyen presented a report on
how to step up the EU’s capacity to cope with all kinds of crises, from wars to
weather extremes.
“Preparedness
must become part of the underlying logic of all our actions,” she declared,
after beginning her speech with a promise to help Spain with the floods.
Von der
Leyen has asked the Commission to write a comprehensive plan to better protect
Europeans from climate extremes.
That will
come too late for the residents of Spain’s devastated regions. On Wednesday
afternoon, the storm turned south and AEMET issued a red warning for the region
of Cádiz.
“We can’t
led our guard down,” AEMET spokesperson Rubén del Campo said. “The situation in
Cádiz province is exceptional.”
This article
has been updated to reflect the rising death toll.
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