- Region
- Águilas
- Alhama de Murcia
- Jumilla
- Lorca
- Los Alcázares
- Mazarrón
- San Javier
-
ALL AREAS & TOWNS
- AREAS
- SOUTH WEST
- MAR MENOR
- MURCIA CITY & CENTRAL
- NORTH & NORTH WEST
- TOWNS
- Abanilla
- Abarán
- Aguilas
- Alamillo
- Alcantarilla
- Aledo
- Alhama de Murcia
- Archena
- Balsicas
- Blanca
- Bolnuevo
- Bullas
- Cañadas del Romero
- Cabo de Palos
- Calasparra
- Camping Bolnuevo
- Campo De Ricote
- Camposol
- Canada De La Lena
- Caravaca de la Cruz
- Cartagena
- Cehegin
- Ceuti
- Cieza
- Condado de Alhama
- Corvera
- Costa Cálida
- Cuevas De Almanzora
- Cuevas de Reyllo
- El Carmoli
- El Mojon
- El Molino (Puerto Lumbreras)
- El Pareton / Cantareros
- El Raso
- El Valle Golf Resort
- Fortuna
- Fuente Alamo
- Hacienda del Alamo Golf Resort
- Hacienda Riquelme Golf Resort
- Isla Plana
- Islas Menores & Mar de Cristal
- Jumilla
- La Azohia
- La Charca
- La Manga Club
- La Manga del Mar Menor
- La Pinilla
- La Puebla
- La Torre
- La Torre Golf Resort
- La Unión
- Las Palas
- Las Ramblas
- Las Ramblas Golf
- Las Torres de Cotillas
- Leiva
- Librilla
- Lo Pagan
- Lo Santiago
- Lorca
- Lorquí
- Los Alcázares
- Los Balcones
- Los Belones
- Los Canovas
- Los Nietos
- Los Perez (Tallante)
- Los Urrutias
- Los Ventorrillos
- Mar De Cristal
- Mar Menor
- Mar Menor Golf Resort
- Mazarrón
- Mazarrón Country Club
- Molina de Segura
- Moratalla
- Mula
- Murcia City
- Murcia Property
- Pareton
- Peraleja Golf Resort
- Perin
- Pilar de la Horadada
- Pinar de Campoverde
- Pinoso
- Playa Honda
- Playa Honda / Playa Paraíso
- Pliego
- Portmán
- Pozo Estrecho
- Puerto de Mazarrón
- Puerto Lumbreras
- Puntas De Calnegre
- Region of Murcia
- Ricote
- Roda Golf Resort
- Roldan
- Roldan and Lo Ferro
- San Javier
- San Pedro del Pinatar
- Santiago de la Ribera
- Sierra Espuña
- Sucina
- Tallante
- Terrazas de la Torre Golf Resort
- Torre Pacheco
- Totana
- What's On Weekly Bulletin
- Yecla
- EDITIONS: Spanish News Today Alicante Today Andalucia Today
4,000 episodes of flooding on the east coast of Spain in the last 1,000 years
Flooding has been exacerbated by the change in land use over the last millennium
While it is important not to underestimate the intensity of the Gota Fría storm which has caused widespread flooding in Murcia and Alicante over the last few days, or to belittle the suffering of those whose homes and properties have been damaged, information compiled by the Polytechnic University of Catalunya shows that the Mediterranean seaboard of Spain has been affected by 3,980 floods over the last 1,000 years, averaging out at almost exactly 4 per year.
In other words, although the most recent Gota Fría may have been unusually long-lasting and intense, it is not such an unusual meteorological event as some appear to believe!
The purpose of the Physics Department of the university in compiling the information is to increase the ability to predict extreme weather events and to design appropriate responses, and the list along the eastern coast of Spain includes both flash flooding caused by rain and cases of rivers bursting their banks. The data clearly show that storms of this nature are especially common during the autumn – as anyone who has lived in the south-east of Spain for a few years will already know – and also point to far more irregular patterns of rainfall developing as climate change progresses, with more periods of drought and more episodes of torrential rain between them.
Also taking part in the project have been contributors at the universities of Barcelona, Lleida, Murcia and Alicante, and between them they have found that 14,500 cases of flooding occurred in the 3,980 recorded episodes between 3rd November 1035 and 31st July 2019. In the earlier Gotas Frías, of course, accurate measurements of rainfall are not available, but the 300 millimetres or so which fell on Friday in some locations fall a long way short of the record since reliable statistics were first produced: on 3rd November 1987 an incredible 817 millimetres accumulated in Oliva in the province of Valencia.
No figures are available for the truly catastrophic floods in past centuries, for example those of November 1617 along the whole of the Mediterranean coastline, in 1787 in southern Catalunya and in 1853 in the rivers Cinca, Segre and Ebro. However, the different land uses which are prevalent in the 21st century make the effect of heavy rain more dramatic, with built-up areas reducing the amount of water absorbed by the land and leading to faster run-off.
Join the Murcia Weather Watch group on Facebook to keep up to date with all the latest forecasts and weather related stories: https://www.facebook.com/groups/RegionOfMurciaWeatherWatch/.
See full background information related to the Murcia Gota Fria 2019.