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#extremeweather

34 posts25 participants1 post today

2 dead in #NewJersey after #floodwaters carry away vehicle during #HeavyRains that hit #NortheasternUS

By SUSAN HAIGH, JENNIFER PELTZ and JENNIFER PELITZ
Updated 2:56 PM EDT, July 15, 2025

NEW YORK (AP) — "Two people in New Jersey were killed after their vehicle was swept up in floodwaters during a storm that moved across the U.S. Northeast overnight, authorities said Tuesday.

"Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, noted the deaths occurred in the northern New Jersey city of Plainfield, where there were two storm-related deaths July 3. A third person was killed in North Plainfield during that previous storm.

" 'We’re not unique, but we’re in one of these sort of high humidity, high temperature, high storm intensity patterns right now,' Murphy told reporters after touring storm damage in Berkeley Heights. 'Everybody needs to stay alert.'

"The names of the two latest victims were not immediately released Tuesday. Local officials said the vehicle they were riding in was swept into a brook during the height of the storm.

" 'Emergency personnel responded quickly, but tragically, both individuals were pronounced dead at the scene,' according to a statement the city posted online.

"The heavy rains also caused #FlashFloods in #NewYork and south-central #Pennsylvania on Monday night into early Tuesday, prompting road closures and snarling some service on the #NewYorkCitySubway.

"It was the second-highest one-hour rainfall ever recorded in #CentralPark at more than 2 inches (5 centimeters), surpassed only by the remnants of Hurricane Ida in 2021, according to local officials.

Flooding in the New York City subway

"Viral videos posted online showed water flooding down into one Manhattan subway station, submerging the platform while passengers inside a train watched on.

"Janno Lieber, chair and CEO of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, told ABC 7 in New York the city’s sewer system got overwhelmed by the rain and backed up into the subway tunnels and to the stations. In several cases, he said, the backup 'popped a manhole,' creating the dramatic 'geyser' seen in some videos.

" 'What happened last night is something that is, you know, a reality in our system,' he told the TV station, noting the backup happens when more than 1 3/4 inches of rain falls in an hour. 'We’ve been working with the city of New York to try to get them to increase the capacity of the system at these key locations.'

"City officials said their venerable sewer system worked as well as it could, but it simply was not built to handle that much rain.

" 'Imagine putting a two-liter bottle of water into a one-liter bottle. Some of it’s going to spill,' Environmental Protection Commissioner Rohit Aggarwala said at a virtual news briefing Tuesday.

"Lieber said full service was restored to the subway, as well as commuter rails, after hundreds of people worked overnight to restore operations.

"#Flooding has proven to be a stubborn problem for New York’s subway system, despite years and billions of dollars’ worth of efforts to waterproof them.

"#SuperstormSandy in 2012 prompted years of subway repairs and flood-fighting ideas, and some have been put into practice. In some places, transit officials have installed or are installing storm barriers at subway station entrances, seals beneath subway air vents and curbs to raise the vents and entrances above sidewalk level.

"Meanwhile, summer thunderstorms and the remains of hurricanes have repeatedly flooded parts of the subway system anew. In 2021, the remnants of #HurricaneIda killed more than a dozen New York City residents, largely in basement apartments, and sent water cascading again into subways, renewing attention to #resiliency proposals.

The storm’s effects in New Jersey and #Pennsylvania

"The storm prompted multiple water rescues in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where streets and basements flooded after roughly 7 inches (18 centimeters) of rain fell. Some roads remained closed in parts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey on Tuesday. Murphy said the pavement buckled in some locations and state and local officials were assessing the level of damage in several counties, noting the White House had reached out to his office.

"A major east-to-west highway in New Jersey was closed to make emergency repairs while dozens of flights were delayed or canceled at area airports Tuesday.

"Most flash flood watches and warnings had expired in parts of New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania as the rain moved on.

"In one flooded North Plainfield neighborhood, a house caught on fire and collapsed amid the storm. Murphy said there was an explosion at the house but the family was not home and there were no injuries. The cause was under investigation."

Source:
apnews.com/article/new-york-ci

#ExtremeWeather is the #UK's new normal, says Met Office

Justin Rowlatt, July 13, 2025

"The UK is breaking #heat and #rainfall records increasingly frequently as its climate continues to warm, the Met Office has warned.

"The country's changing weather patterns mean the UK now experiences a 'notably different' climate to what it was just a few decades ago, its State of the UK Climate report says.

"We now have many more very hot days and many fewer extremely cold nights, according to this latest assessment.

"It shows just how much #GlobalWarming caused by the vast emissions of #GreenhouseGases our civilisation creates is reshaping the country's climate.

"Climate change is bringing more #SevereWeather events like #storms and #flooding - and inevitably the country's changing climate is having an impact on the #NaturalWorld, with some species suffering.

"The report focuses on 2024, when the UK experienced its second-warmest February, warmest May, warmest spring, fifth-warmest December, and fifth-warmest winter since records began in 1884.

"The Met Office highlights that some of these records have already been surpassed in 2025 - more evidence of this trend towards more extreme weather.

"This summer many parts of the country are in the throes of their third heatwave with very warm weather reaching into #Wales, #NorthernIreland and #Scotland as well as southern #England."

Read more:
bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c74w1g

Two people walk under an umbrella on a hot summers day with Parliament in the background, on Westminster Bridge on 1 July
BBC NewsMet Office: Extreme weather the UK's new normalThe UK has a notably different climate compared with just a few decades ago, the Met Office says.

Heatwaves, floods and sea level rise: UK weather extremes are increasing.

Published this morning, the UK's Met Office’s annual climate stocktake report confirms it: baselines are shifting, records are broken more frequently, and extreme heat and rainfall are “becoming the norm”.

“Observations show that our climate in the UK is now notably different to what it was just a few decades ago.”

mediafaro.org/article/20250714

A couple walk through a cooling water feature as the third heatwave of the summer hits the UK, in Dover, 11 July 2025. | Copyright Gareth Fuller/PA via AP
Euronews · Heatwaves, floods and sea level rise: UK weather extremes are increasing.By Euronews

Utqiaġvik, northernmost community in Alaska, 32 years ago today reached 79F (26.1C). This still stands as the highest temperature of record. Here's the teletype report from the day, send out by the late Chuck Evans, long-time Official-in-Charge of the Barrow Weather Service Office. Chuck said the offshore wind that brought the extreme temperatures also brought in hoards of mosquitoes. @Climatologist49 @cinderbdt