Weather: Cloudy visibility: Sahara dust is moving over Germany

Weather
Clouded visibility: Sahara dust is moving over Germany

The Sahara dust makes the sun appear milky and cloudy on Holy Saturday, like here in Zwönitz in the Ore Mountains. photo

© Andre März/ErzgebirgsNews/dpa

On Easter days there is desert dust in the air in many places. According to the German Weather Service, the natural phenomenon is currently occurring more intensely than usual.

“The “Saharan dust has already arrived, which you can see in the yellowish cloudiness in the air,” says meteorologist Christian Herol from the German Weather Service (DWD). The phenomenon can be observed in many parts of Germany, but in the highest concentration in the west of the country Desert dust can make the sunshine appear milky and cloudy. The dust should still be visible on Easter Sunday. On Monday, a cold front should cause it to move away, said Herold.

According to the DWD, Sahara dust in the air is not a rare natural phenomenon in Central Europe. The dust particles are carried to Europe around 5 to 15 times a year. “In terms of intensity, this is rather rare,” said DWD meteorologist Herold about the current outbreak.

Desert dust moved north over the Alps

A strong foehn storm swept over the Alps with violent gusts. Storm gusts with top speeds of 190 kilometers per hour were measured above Andermatt in Switzerland late in the evening, as the weather service SRF Meteo reported. In addition, there was reddish Sahara dust, which clouded visibility in large parts of Switzerland.

According to a meteorologist, model calculations indicate that 180,000 tons of Sahara dust are hanging in the air over Switzerland. That’s an unusual amount. Normally the wind brings half as much to Switzerland. The stormy weather is expected to last slightly until Easter Monday.

Due to the squalls, lifts in some Swiss ski areas had to be temporarily switched off. Already on Thursday, chair lifts in the Italian ski resort of Breuil-Cervinia opposite Zermatt began to sway dangerously, as a video from the private Italian weather service Il Meteo showed.

Kachelmann: “Föhn of the decade”

The meteorologist Jörg Kachelmann writes in an article for the Swiss Tamedia newspapers about the “Föhn of the decade”. Foothills could be felt as far away as the Swabian Alb in Baden-Württemberg. “This extreme event was made possible on the one hand by the large difference in air pressure between north and south, and on the other hand by the very high temperatures even outside the foehn, so that no heavy block of cold air had to be cleared away,” wrote Kachelmann.

dpa

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