Europe Had Most Widespread Floods for More Than a Decade in 2024, Scientists Say 

A person cycles along a flooded road after the overtopping of the River Thames on a spring tide, in west London, Britain, March 31, 2025. (Reuters)
A person cycles along a flooded road after the overtopping of the River Thames on a spring tide, in west London, Britain, March 31, 2025. (Reuters)
TT
20

Europe Had Most Widespread Floods for More Than a Decade in 2024, Scientists Say 

A person cycles along a flooded road after the overtopping of the River Thames on a spring tide, in west London, Britain, March 31, 2025. (Reuters)
A person cycles along a flooded road after the overtopping of the River Thames on a spring tide, in west London, Britain, March 31, 2025. (Reuters)

Europe faced its most widespread flooding last year since 2013, with 30% of the continent's river network hit by significant floods, scientists said on Tuesday, as fossil fuel-driven climate change continued to prompt torrential rain and other extreme weather.

Flooding killed at least 335 people in Europe in 2024 and affected more than 410,000, the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service and the World Meteorological Organization said in a joint report on Europe's climate.

Western Europe was hit hardest, with 2024 ranking among the region's ten wettest years in records going back to 1950. Storms and flooding are Europe's costliest weather extremes, last year causing damage exceeding 18 billion euros.

Globally, 2024 was the world's warmest year since records began, as well as the warmest for Europe - the planet's fastest-warming continent. The planet is now around 1.3 degrees Celsius warmer than in pre-industrial times, mainly due to human-caused climate change.

"Every additional fraction of a degree of temperature rise matters because it accentuates the risks to our lives, to economies and to the planet," said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo.

The report noted bright spots, including that renewable energy sources produced a record-high 45% of Europe's energy in 2024, while most European cities have plans in place to better adapt to climate change.

But weather extremes were recorded across the continent. Southeastern Europe had its longest heat wave on record, totaling 13 days, while Scandinavia's glaciers shrank at the highest rates on record, and heat stress increased across the continent.

Much of Eastern Europe was hit by lack of rain and drought, while floods ravaged western Europe.

Nearly a third of Europe's overall river network exceeded a "high" flood threshold, while 12% breached "severe" flood levels in 2024.

Devastating floods in Valencia in late October accounted for most of the lives lost and economic damage caused in Europe by floods, with 232 people killed in the disaster. Storm Boris in September dumped the heaviest rain ever recorded in Central Europe onto countries, including Austria, Czechia, Germany and Slovakia.

Scientists have confirmed climate change has made such downpours more likely, because a hotter atmosphere can hold more water, leading to intense rain. Atmospheric water vapor reached a record high in 2024.

Other factors that influence flooding include river management and urban planning that determine whether homes and infrastructure are built in flood-prone areas.



A Chilean Cyclist and His Dog Get Caught up in the Israel-Iran War

Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)
Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)
TT
20

A Chilean Cyclist and His Dog Get Caught up in the Israel-Iran War

Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)
Damage inside a building after a recent Israeli airstrike, in Tehran, Iran, 25 June 2025, during a US-mediated ceasefire between Iran and Israel that started on 24 June. (EPA)

Diego Haro, a Chilean traveler from one of the world's southernmost towns, never thought biking across Iran with his dog Mirlo would be easy.

For all the World Heritage sites, street skewers and breathtaking scenery, there were plenty of downsides to expect if recent years were any guide, including Iranian security forces' increasingly frequent arrests of foreigner tourists and dual nationals on suspicion of espionage and other offenses.

Haro, 31, from Chile's remote Punta Arenas, had already biked across 20 countries from Bolivia to Armenia in the last two years. But he said he never imagined that his journey would involve sheltering from Israeli airstrikes that plunged the regional foes into 12 days of open warfare this month.

A shaky ceasefire has held since Tuesday.

"Traveling is generally a constant source of uncertainty," he told The Associated Press in a video call from Yüksekova, in eastern Türkiye.

He fled across the border to Türkiye last Sunday with Mirlo, his 3-year-old mixed breed, seeking safety as Israeli attacks ground on.

"There are things that you don't think will happen, but they do," he said.

Haro had been traveling in the northern Kurdistan province for around six weeks, sleeping in tents in the countryside or depending on the hospitality of strangers, when, on June 13, Israeli warplanes crossed into Iranian airspace and suddenly struck the country's military and nuclear sites.

Having never experienced war, the Chilean recalled his fear as explosions lit up the night sky. "Every night there were explosions," he said. "Mirlo was super scared too."

Iran on Tuesday put the death toll in Iran at 606, with 5,332 people wounded, though their casualty figures in the past have downplayed losses. The Washington-based Human Rights Activists group released figures Wednesday suggesting Israeli strikes on Iran had killed at least 1,054 and wounded 4,476. In Israel, at least 28 people were killed and more than 1,000 wounded in the war.

Tehran emptied out as the Israeli military issued evacuation orders and Haro scrambled to revise his original plan of reaching the Iranian capital.

"The only goal I had in mind was to try to get out of Iran as soon as possible," he said.

Since June 13, flights into and out of Iran have been suspended. In hopes of crossing the border on foot, he turned back and headed for Türkiye, cycling over 400 kilometers (250 miles) to reach Urmia, in Iran's northeast.

As Iranian authorities began to grasp the extent of the war's damage to their security and military apparatus, paranoia grew over apparent Israeli infiltration. Over 50 people were arrested on suspicion of ties to Israel and charged with "operating drones to film public and strategic sites," the semiofficial Fars and Tasnim news agencies reported.

Haro said he felt he was being watched. One night last week, six gunmen pulled up in an unlicensed vehicle next to him, forced him to get inside and blindfolded him as they took his passport and drove around asking him questions until dawn about why he was in the country, he said. They did not identify themselves, he added.

He struggled to explain his worldwide bike tour with his dog as none of them understood English, let alone Spanish. The next afternoon, he got his passport back and was granted permission to leave.

Iran's mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Haro's brief detention.

The first thing he did after crossing to Türkiye with Mirlo was buy a SIM card and call his mother, he recalled.

Iran’s government imposed a nationwide internet shutdown and he hadn't spoken with any friends or family in over five days.

"My mom couldn’t stop crying," he said.