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WEATHER

Floods as Swedish cities get two months of rain in 24 hours

Large areas of Sweden saw extreme levels of rain over the weekend, with the city of Linköping receiving more than 100mm of rain in 24 hours, twice as it usually receives in the whole of August. 

Floods as Swedish cities get two months of rain in 24 hours
A car aquaplaning near Landskrona. Photo: Johan Nilsson/ TT

According to Swedish weather forecaster SMHI, the Linköping-Malmslätt area received 96mm between Saturday night at 8am on Sunday morning. The area normally received between 60mm and 70mm in August as a whole. 

“There was such an absurd amount of rain that the data was at first rejected by our system,” Therese Fougman, a meteorologist at the forecaster, told Sweden’s TT newswire. “It is continuing to rain during the day, and it is lying in a band over Östergötland, Sörmland och further up towards Uppland, predicting there would be a further 40mm to 50mm in the next 12 hours. 

The downpours have led to flooding in several areas, and caused traffic problem with cars at risk of aquaplaning on roads such as the E18, which were covered in a thick layer of water. 

Lennart Ågren, who was the duty leader of rescue services in Östra Götaland, told TT on Sunday afternoon that rescuers had been called out to several floods in Linköping and Mantorp. 

“There were streets under water, and water was running into properties so we had to throw all our resources at it for several hours,” he said. 

In Jönköping, rescue services were called out to flooding at a school and in other places, while in Växjö, lightening hit close to the place where a student party was being held at the local university campus. 

In Linköping, rescue services told TT that they had been called out 30 times. “We’ve been stretched but have managed to handle it,” said Pedher Helmer, who was in charge of rescue services in Östergötland over the weekend. 

The heavy rain is expected to move to Blekinge, Skåne, Öland and Gotland over the coming days, with a risk for flooding. 

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WEATHER

What’s the weather going to be like in Sweden this summer?

Sweden is (usually) the perfect country to visit in summer – long, warm days that never really turn into night, but not as suffocatingly hot as southern Europe. Will that be the case this year?

What's the weather going to be like in Sweden this summer?

According to public broadcaster SVT’s forecast for the summer, there are three possible scenarios for the Swedish weather.

Essentially, a low pressure front is expected to move in across the west of Scandinavia, roughly over the UK, while a high pressure front is expected to arrive from the east, over Finland and western Russia, but it’s not entirely clear exactly where these two fronts will meet.

Sweden could end up underneath either one of them, which gives slightly more predictable weather, or between the two, which would give us more unstable and changeable weather during the summer season.

If the high pressure front ends up over Sweden, SVT meteorologist Nitzan Cohen said, then summer could be hot and dry – maybe even very hot in periods, although this won’t necessarily be the case for the entire summer.

If we end up under the low pressure front in the west, then weather would be more rainy and unstable, although there would probably be some periods with hot weather coming in from the east.

In the last scenario, Sweden ends up between the two pressure fronts, with warm weather coming from the east and cold from the west. This is the most unpredictable option, with high temperatures and a lot of rain likely.

You can keep up-to-date with weather forecasts and weather alerts via Sweden’s meteorological office SMHI, whether that’s flood alerts or a risk of wildfire.

You can also keep up to date with any fire bans here.

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