Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

 

Wettest October in 16 years 07.11.11

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

LAST month was the wettest October in 16 years in Inishowen with the Malin Head weather station recording 177 millimetres (7 inches) of rainfall during the month.
That seven inches was 50% above the normal amount of rainfall we can expect here in Inishowen during October and was the most since 1995.
Met Éireann has 13 weather stations around the country, and only Valentia in Kerry and Belmullet in Mayo recorded more rainfall than Malin Head.
The middle of the month was wettest at Malin Head, while Dublin and the east coast suffered heavy rainfall later in the month.
Temperatures were also above average at Malin Head, with a mean temperature of 11.4°C, almost 1°Celsius above the 30 year average for the peninsula.
Malin Head weather station.
Ground temperatures too were around 1°C higher than normal, extending the growing season here into November.
And the extreme weather conditions experienced both here and abroad are set to continue and become ever more common.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will shortly issue a report on changes in the climate around the world and say that freakish weather, from record floods in Thailand to severe winters in Inishowen, are likely to become more common as global warming takes hold.
Experts on extreme storms have focused more closely on the increasing numbers of super-heavy rainstorms and say that this will become more common as the century progresses and global warming becomes more pronounced.
Warmer air holds more water and puts more energy into weather systems, changing the dynamics of storms and where and how they hit.
Freak flooding incidents, like those experienced in Ireland last month, will become more common. By the end of the century, the intense, single-day, heavy rainstorms that now typically happen only once every 20 years are likely to happen about twice a decade, the report says.
Temperatures dropped this weekend with dry, sunny days followed by a plunge in temperatures at night.
Add to Favorites :: Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home