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Storms cause record amounts of damage to crops in Austria

Weekly hailstone, cold weather, and storms in regions of Austria has caused record amount of damages to crops with the total so far amounting to around €250 million this year.

Storms cause record amounts of damage to crops in Austria
FF Ludersdorf/Facebook

Despite being just half way through the year, the figure for 2015 is already higher than the previous year, which saw a total of €200 million damages from weather.

Much of the costs relate to damaged crops that, after already being hit by late frosts earlier this year, have been pummelled by hailstones and strong winds in recent weeks.

The latest storms hit last weekend when around 12,500 hectares of farmland was damaged by hail with damage to the agriculture thought to amount to around €2.3 million.


Photos: FF Ludersdorf/Facebook

Regions most affected by the latest storms included areas around Styria, Lower Austria, and Carinthia, with corn, pumpkin and vineyard crops among the crops most in danger.

General Secretary of the Chamber of Agriculture, Josef Plank, told Wiener Zeitung that this year was a particularly special year when it came to the weather.

Aside from the late frost, the storms are more energy intensive than “we’ve seen for a long time”, he said. It is starkly different from last year, when crops were badly affected by droughts.

Although the government does provide some compensation to farmers who lost crops due to weather, Plank has warned that some may end up losing their businesses.

Normally the number of operations drops around two percent a year. “It would almost be a miracle if it’s not higher this year,” he said.

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WEATHER

IN PICTURES: ‘Exceptional’ Sahara dust cloud hits Europe

An "exceptional" dust cloud from the Sahara is choking parts of Europe, the continent's climate monitor said on Monday, causing poor air quality and coating windows and cars in grime.

IN PICTURES: 'Exceptional' Sahara dust cloud hits Europe

Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service said the latest plume, the third of its kind in recent weeks, was bringing hazy conditions to southern Europe and would sweep northward as far as Scandinavia.

Mark Parrington, senior scientist at Copernicus, said the latest event was related to a weather pattern that has brought warmer weather to parts of Europe in recent days.

“While it is not unusual for Saharan dust plumes to reach Europe, there has been an increase in the intensity and frequency of such episodes in recent years, which could be potentially attributed to changes in atmospheric circulation patterns,” he said.

This latest episode has caused air quality to deteriorate in several countries, Copernicus said.

The European Union’s safe threshold for concentrations of PM10 — coarser particles like sand and dust that that can irritate the nose and throat — has already been exceeded in some locations.

A picture taken on April 8, 2024 shows a rapeseed field under thick sand dust blown in from the Sahara, giving the sky a yellowish appearance near Daillens, western Switzerland. – An “exceptional” dust cloud from the Sahara is choking parts of Europe, the continent’s climate monitor said, causing poor air quality and coating windows and cars in grime. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)

The worst affected was the Iberian Peninsula in Spain but lesser air pollution spikes were also recorded in parts of Switzerland, France and Germany.

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Local authorities in southeastern and southern France announced that the air pollution threshold was breached on Saturday.

They advised residents to avoid intense physical activity, particularly those with heart or respiratory problems.

The dust outbreak was expected to reach Sweden, Finland and northwest Russia before ending on Tuesday with a shift in weather patterns, Copernicus said.

The Sahara emits between 60 and 200 million tonnes of fine dust every year, which can travel thousands of kilometres (miles), carried by winds and certain meteorological conditions.

The Spanish Canary Islands off the coast of northwest Africa saw just 12 days within a 90-day period from December to February where skies were free of Saharan dust, the local weather agency Aemet had reported.

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