During the September floods, the 127-year-old Czech record for the amount of precipitation per day in one place fell. In Loučná nad Desnou in the Šumpers region, 386 millimeters of water rained on September 14, i.e. 386 liters per square meter. The previous record from 1897 was surpassed by this year’s rain by about 40 millimeters. This was announced today by the Czech Hydrometeorological Institute (ČHMÚ).
In September, it rained profusely for several days and rivers rose all over the Czech Republic. The floods caused tens of billions of crowns in damage. They have five confirmed victims and more people are missing.
“The daily rainfall total of 386 millimeters can be considered the new highest measured daily total in our territory,” the meteorologists said. The data was captured by the station Loučná nad Desnou, Švýcárna, which is located in the Jeseníky Mountains at an altitude of 1306 meters. “We always transfer data to the national database after the end of the month, which is why we discovered this record only now,” added the institute’s employees. The highest amount of precipitation in one day in the Czech Republic so far was 345.1 millimeters measured on July 29, 1897 at the station Bedřichov, Nová Louka in Jabloneck.
The precipitation was really extreme this year on Saturday, September 14, according to the ČHMÚ. In Jeseníky alone, apart from the mentioned station, meteorologists measured around 300 millimeters of precipitation per day in several places. In Adolfovice it was 337 millimeters, in Lázní Lipová 305 millimeters at one station and 284 millimeters at another, and in Heřmanovice 283 millimeters.
The Olomouc Region and the Moravian-Silesian Region were among the regions most affected by this year’s floods. Cities and towns are still struggling with the consequences of floods. For example, the residents of Jeseník only started drinking water from their taps again today, and part of the town is still without gas. In Ostrava, the Central Wastewater Treatment Plant in Přívoz is non-functional, and in Holčovice in the Bruntál Region, for example, landslides occur after floods.
Source: www.tyden.cz