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Harris-Mann Climatology Article Archive

Title: Record Snows in Tokyo Wtih Floods in the UK

Author: Climatologist Cliff Harris
Published: 2/14/2014


This past week, Tokyo, Japan measured 27cm (10.6 inches) of snow, the most snow in 45 years in the nation’s capital, more than double the normal snow of just 4.3 inches for an entire winter season.

At least a dozen people died and nearly a thousand were injured. Tens of thousands lost power. In northern Japan, the blizzard produced the heaviest snowfall in 78 years, more than three feet in places. Train and air travel conditions were ‘paralyzed.’ Hundreds of roads were closed. Traffic accidents killed 11 people.

Record snows have likewise crippled parts of eastern Europe since mid December. As much as ten feet of snow in the Dolornites of northern Italy and the Balkans has repeatedly trapped many residents in the smaller villages. People have been feverishly shoveling their roofs in order to keep them from collapsing, much like during similar heavy snowfalls I saw in North Idaho back in the 2007-2009 harsh winters affected by a chilly ‘La Nina’ sea-surface temperature event in the waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean. The winter of 2007-08 was the snowiest ever in Coeur d’Alene with an incredible 172.9 inches.

Record snows have likewise fallen in Scotland, northern Ireland and parts of Scandinavia this stormy winter of 2013-14. A crippling icestorm was playing havoc earlier this week in the northern United Kingdom.

Britain’s west coast was being battered by wind gusts in excess of 100 miles per hour on Thursday, February 13. The Meteorological Office in London issued its highest ever ‘red flag warnings’ on Wednesday for damaging hurricane-force winds across western England and Wales. Widespread structural damage and loss of power has affected thousands of homes and businesses.

England, as a whole, observed its wettest January since weather records were first kept on a daily basis almost 250 years ago. December was the third wettest on record in the U.K. The first half of February was the second wettest ever.

Resulting floods have washed away winter grain crops. The low-lying Somerset Levels and the Thames River Valley have seen waters 18 to 20 feet above flood stage in recent days. More heavy rains are predicted for at least the next 10 days, probably longer.

It wasn’t just the U.K., Japan and eastern Europe that battled winter storms this week of historic proportions. A second powerful winter storm in less than two weeks clobbered the Deep South of the U.S. encrusting highways, trees and power lines on Wednesday before pushing up the I-95 corridor with upwards of a foot or more of snow in an already-sick of winter Mid-Atlantic region and the Northeast on Thursday.

In Atlanta, which was caught almost totally unprepared by the late January icestorm, when thousands of children were stranded all night in schools by less than 3 inches of snow, the schools this time around were closed for two days. Many Atlanta businesses shut down as well leaving the city almost devoid of traffic.

This time around, commutes that normally take minutes lasted several hours as the winter storm pushed northward through the Carolinas. Hundreds of motorists abandoned their vehicles. South Carolina reported 245,000 power outages. North Carolina had around 100,000 people lose electricity. Hundreds of flights were canceled throughout the Southeast. Approximately 3,300 flights were canceled nationwide.

For the Mid-Atlantic states and the Northeast this harsh winter of 2013-14 has depleted most city budgets for snow removal and salt supplies. School systems have run out of snow days. As of this Thursday writing, parts of Vermont expected another 16 inches of snow. Boston and New York City were predicting between 8 and 10 inches of the white stuff, the same crippling totals seen earlier in Charlotte, North Carolina, Baltimore, Maryland and Washington D.C.

Elsewhere across the country, northeastern North Dakota, northwestern Minnesota and Upper Michigan will finally see an end to an all-time record 75-day span of subzero temperatures by early this Presidents’ Day week. This winter ranks with 1935-36 and 1978-79 overall as one of the coldest seasons, and in many cases, one of the snowiest winters in U.S. history all the way south to the Gulf Coastal states.

Since last May, according to researchers at Cambridge University, the planet has cooled by at least 2.5 degrees, one of the sharpest drops in temperatures since the 1600s. Personally, I don’t like global cooling. Bring back the warmer than normal weather.