SHARE
COPY LINK

WEATHER

Denmark’s weather forecasters hint at ‘local’ white Christmas

Small margins could decide whether Denmark gets a white Christmas in 2021 – or a grey or wet one.

A snowy Christmas scene in Denmark back in 2001. Forecasters predict some parts of the country could get snow at Christmas in 2021.
A snowy Christmas scene in Denmark back in 2001. Forecasters predict some parts of the country could get snow at Christmas in 2021. Photo: Henning Bagger/Ritzau Scanpix

National meteorological agency DMI says that prognoses for Christmas Eve weather are “ambiguous” and that small margins could decide whether the country awakes to a white layer of fresh snow on December 24th, the day on which most Danes traditionally celebrate the Christmas holiday.

But there is good reason for snow lovers to hold out hope for Christmas weather in keeping with the iconic imagery of the season, meteorologist Jens Lindskjold said via the agency’s website.

“The latest prognoses suggest that there will be snow or sleet in almost all of the country. That will begin as soon as the 23rd with snow, sleet and rain in large parts of the country, but margins will determine whether the snow will melt in a couple of degrees above zero around Christmas,” Lindskjold said.

Uncertainty around the forecast is related to whether a cold front moves north or south around the Christmas period, according to the meteorologist.

“In short – the forecast in uncertain and right now there’s just a hair’s breadth between wet and white,” he said.

A weather front passing over Denmark on the 23rd and 24th is likely to bring snow to central and southern parts of the country, while snowfall coming in from the north also increases the chance of a white Christmas in northern and eastern Jutland on Christmas Eve, according to DMI.

This means that “local” white Christmases are possible while a “national” white Christmas, in which over 90 percent of the country is under a snowy blanket, is less likely.

The latter is a relatively rare occurrence and has only happened on nine occasions since 1900, DMI’s climatologist Mikael Scharling said on the agency’s website.

That happened most recently in 2009 and 2010, with the previous occasion before that as long ago as 1995.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

WEATHER

Why Saharan sand could dampen Danish weather this weekend

A rainy week has been forecast to give way to a dry, warm weekend in Denmark, but an unexpected weather arrival could mean things don’t quite live up to expectations.

Why Saharan sand could dampen Danish weather this weekend

The beginning of this week saw record rain levels for April, but Denmark residents hoping for pleasant spring weather could take comfort from the weekend forecast: an almost dry Saturday and Sunday with temperatures up to 18 degrees Celsius and even 20 degrees locally.

But the unexpected arrival of fine sand from the Sahara desert in air blowing across Denmark could mean the temperatures disappoint, according to a weather report from broadcaster DR.

That is because the fine sand can act similarly to dust clouds in the air and block some of the sunshine.

READ ALSO: Denmark gets rainiest April day for ‘over a century’

The dust can form condensation cores, enabling water in the atmosphere to gather and form clouds, DR writes.

High concentrations of dust – which could occur in Denmark this weekend if the Saharan sand reaches the country’s skies in large enough quantities – could therefore result in clouds and lower temperatures.

Because the warm front expected to reach the country on Saturday originated in Africa, it could contain dust from the Sahara, which was reportedly picked up on Thursday.

The warm temperatures forecast in Denmark this weekend depend on both clear, sunny skies and the warm front currently moving north towards the country.

SHOW COMMENTS