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Violent weather expected amid climate change

Germany can expect significantly more violent weather in the coming years due to climate change, according to a new study from the Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) in Potsdam.

Violent weather expected amid climate change
Photo: DPA

According to the report seen by the Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper, severe storms will hit the country every ten years on average, instead of the current average of 50 years.

Storm damage will increase by more than 50 percent by 2100 and heat waves and floods will also increase in severity, according to the study, which was produced in cooperation with universities in Berlin and Cologne.

The report is especially alarming to the insurance industry because of high payouts they may have to make as severe weather increases. That means premiums are likely to rise for insurance customers.

“For a long time, Germans have seen the consequences of climate change only in foreign countries,” the head of the Association of German Insurers (GDV), Rolf-Peter Hoenen told Rundschau. “Those days are over.”

Of particular concern, said PIK researcher Friedrich-Wilhelm Gerstengarbe, are the big floods that will hit the country about two to three times more often in the coming years, he told Frankfurter Rundschau.

“It is no longer acceptable that development is still taking place in flood planes,” he said.

Europe has been hit by repeated bouts of severe weather over the last few years amid fears that global warming was stoking violent storms around the world.

Among the most severe was Kyrill, a 2007 winter storm that killed 47 people across Germany and Europe.

But much of Germany also sweltered under atypically hot temperatures of about 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) for several days last summer.

The Local/mdm

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Climate activists cause disruption at German airport

German activists glued themselves to a runway at Munich airport Saturday and caused dozens of flights to be cancelled, in their latest action aimed at pushing authorities to tackle climate change.

Climate activists cause disruption at German airport

The activists from the Last Generation environmental protest group forced their way into Germany’s second-busiest airport by cutting through a fence in the early hours, an airport spokesman said.

Flights were suspended, leading to the cancellation of 61 take-offs and landings, he said.

The action came to an end with the arrest of eight climate activists, police told the local public broadcaster.

Both airport runways have been open again since 7:20 am (0520 GMT) but disruptions are expected to continue throughout the day. It came at the start of a long weekend in Germany, which is a busy day for travel.

Last Generation are known for mounting eye-catching protests — from gluing themselves to busy roads, to flinging mashed potato at a Claude Monet painting — which have sharply divided public opinion and brought increasingly tough responses from authorities.

Transport Minister Volker Wissing condemned the action, saying it was “not a legitimate protest, but a targeted intervention in air traffic.”

“If air traffic is not safe, people are put at risk, major economic damage is threatened and thousands of travellers are stranded.”

But in a post on X, formerly Twitter, Last Generation accused the government of not doing enough to discourage people from flying, a major source of climate-damaging emissions.

“It is absurd that people are more likely to be able to afford flights than train journeys,” the group said. “The responsibility for this lies with the government: it subsidises flights while the railways are being cut to the bone.”

In December 2022, activists from the group had also glued themselves to a runway at Munich airport but caused only minor delays.

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