Ionian Sea photograph

Ionian Sea

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Area169000
Locations Europe
Coordinates38°N 19°E / 38°N 19°E Coordinates: 38°N 19°E / 38°N 19°E
Islands Corfu Island
Zakynthos Island
Lefkada
Ithaca
Kythira
Cephalonia
Omfori
Paxos
Settlements Igoumenitsa
Parga
Preveza
Astakos
Patras
Did you knowThere are ferry routes between Patras, Greece and Brindisi and Ancona, Italy, that cross the east and north of the Ionian Sea, and from Piraeus westward.
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1003347
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About Ionian Sea


The Ionian Sea is an elongated bay of the Mediterranean Sea. It is connected to the Adriatic Sea to the north, and is bounded by Southern Italy, including Calabria, Sicily, and the Salento peninsula to the west, southern Albania to the north, and the west coast of Greece, including the peninsula of The Peleponnese.

Climate change played major role in Libya floods

Feb 18,2022 12:42 pm

By Justin Rowlatt Climate editor, BBC News

Climate Change made The Storm that devastated the Libyan city of Derna, killing thousands of people, up to 50 times more likely, experts say.

Up to 50% More Rain had fallen as a result of human-caused greenhouse-gas emissions, climate scientists at found.

Years of conflict in the region compounded the vulnerability of people to flooding, the WWA report says.

And it turned the Extreme Weather into a full-scale humanitarian disaster.

The Scientists used computer simulations to assess how much more likely such a storm was now compared with before the 1. 1C of warming Climate Change has already brought.

But they cautioned a lack of data, particularly in Libya, meant considerable uncertainties in their findings.

Storm Daniel , which brought the deadly rains, had already dumped, killing 28 people.

And the study found Climate Change had made this up to 10 times more likely, bringing up to 40% More Rain .

Storms of this intensity are now reasonably common for this region and can be expected once every 10 Years , it warns.

But The Weather event in northern Libya was much more exceptional, bringing a storm of an intensity such as would be expected to hit northern Libya once every 300-600 years.

As Storm Daniel travelled slowly over The Mediterranean , it drew additional energy from sea temperatures two to three degrees above the September average.

" Storm Daniel was [a] Low Pressure [weather system], as we usually have in The Mediterranean , " Kostas Lagouvardos, from The National Observatory of Athens, says. " It was not very Deep - But it was very early in the season and it was stagnant and stayed over The South Ionian Sea for four, Five Days . "

That extra warmth fuelled stronger winds and meant the air could hold more moisture.

And when it hit the northern coast of Libya, it dumped an estimated 400mm of rain on Derna in just 24 hours.

The average for September in The City is just 1. 5mm, according to Nasa's Earth Observatory.

The huge impact shows how intense weather can combine with a vulnerable population with Disastrous Consequences , The Scientists say.

In Libya, the ousting of Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi , in 2011, was followed by political instability and Civil War .

Two dams in The River above Derna were old and poorly maintained. Many houses had been built on the flood-plain. And when they burst, tens of millions of cubic metres of water poured into The City , sweeping away entire neighbourhoods.

The Scientists warned their findings had large mathematical uncertainties, as:

" After a summer of devastating heatwaves and wildfires with a very clear climate-change fingerprint, quantifying the contribution of Global Warming to these floods proved more challenging, " one of the study's authors, Friederike Otto , of Imperial College London, said.

" While we have some weather station data over Greece, we don't have any weather station data over Libya. "

Instead, The Scientists had to rely on data based on satellite readings.

But they are confident Climate Change played a significant role, because there is very strong evidence higher temperatures lead to heavier rainfall and other studies have shown Climate Change increases the intensity of Weather Systems such as Storm Daniel .



Source of news: bbc.com

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