Status: 01/29/2022 8:13 p.m
The people in the north are faced with stormy hours at night due to the “Nadia” low. The German Weather Service (DWD) warns of storms up to hurricane gusts. A severe storm surge is imminent.
Due to the storm, long-distance Deutsche Bahn services in Schleswig-Holstein, Lower Saxony, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Hamburg and Bremen have been temporarily suspended. That shared the Bahn on Saturday evening via Twitter With. The Hamburg storm surge warning service also warned of a severe storm surge on Sunday night. For Hamburg, the high water peak on Sunday night at the St. Pauli level is expected to be five meters above sea level, which corresponds to 2.85 meters above the mean high water. According to the Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency, there is also a risk of a severe storm surge for the German North Sea coast. Accordingly, the flood on the East Frisian coast should be 1.50 to 2 meters higher, on the North Frisian coast and in the Weser and Elbe area 2 to 2.50 meters higher than the average flood. There are also storm surge warnings on the Baltic Sea in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Several ferries between Rostock and Gedser on the Danish island of Falster are cancelled.
200 deployments for fire brigades in Kiel and Neumünster
The storm has kept the fire brigades in suspense since Saturday afternoon. In the Aurich district alone, the fire brigade has been called out 16 times because trees or construction fences have fallen, according to a spokesman. In Schleswig-Holstein, too, the emergency services were in demand because of fallen trees, loose roof tiles and overturned construction site barriers – especially in the Kiel, Neumünster and Rendsburg areas. So far, the Hamburg fire brigade has had to move out, among other things, to clear away fallen trees. The Hamburger Verkehrsverbund tweeted that the subways in the outer areas are running at reduced speeds. There were also problems with a fallen tree on line S3.
“Highlight on Sunday night”
“The peak of the storm is expected on Sunday night,” said a DWD meteorologist in Offenbach. As the DWD announced, the winds in many places in Lower Saxony intensify during the evening and can reach speeds of up to 110 kilometers per hour on the coasts. Occasionally in Schleswig-Holstein and on exposed sections of the Baltic Sea coast in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, hurricane gusts of wind force twelve with speeds of up to 120 kilometers per hour cannot be ruled out.
National Park Administration: Do not enter the Harz Mountains
The DWD is also expecting severe gusts of wind on the Brocken in the Harz Mountains – hurricane gusts are also possible on the 1,141 high summit by Sunday afternoon. The national park administration therefore advises against forest visits beyond the weekend. The hurricane-like gusts pose an acute danger to life, it said. Trees could be uprooted and entire treetops and branches could fall. Efforts will be made to eliminate the damage in the Harz forests in a timely manner, said a spokesman. However, it could be that individual paths are temporarily not accessible after the storm.
Sunday it will be quieter – Monday storm again
According to the DWD, the wind will decrease over the course of the day on Sunday, and the day will then be mostly quite friendly – with maximum temperatures between four and eight degrees. “In the night to Monday and on Monday there is a risk of new adversity,” said the meteorologist. A low ensures rain and snow above 200 to 400 meters across the country. In addition, stormy winds are blowing, especially in the west and south-west. The changeable and very windy weather will not change in the coming days.
Further information