Cape Town experienced its wettest July on record, with 317.6 millimeters of rain, more than double the monthly average, as a series of winter storms lashed the city. The intense rainfall, which also affected nearby areas like Franschhoek, comes after a notably dry start to the season. Thousands were displaced from shantytowns, highlighting the escalating impact of climate change. The South African government is now focusing on bolstering infrastructure against such extreme weather.
Sign up for your early morning brew of the BizNews Insider to keep you up to speed with the content that matters. The newsletter will land in your inbox at 5:30am weekdays. Register here.
By Antony Sguazzin
Cape Town had the most most rainfall on record in July as a series of winter storms battered South Africaâs second-biggest city.
The Oranjezicht station, near the city center, recorded 317.6 millimeters (12.5 inches) of rain in the month, the highest since records began in 1960 and two-and-a-half times the July average, the South African Weather Service said. The cityâs Kirstenbosch Gardens on the slopes of Table Mountain received more than 500 millimeters, while 619.2 millimeters fell on the nearby town of Franschhoek.
âBeginning in June 2024, rainfall accumulation was notably below normal, consistent with seasonal forecasts that predicted a drier winter period,â the weather service said in a statement on Monday. âHowever, the landscape changed drastically in July, as a series of cold fronts swept through the region, some of which brought severe weather conditions and substantial rainfall.â
Thousands of shantytown residents in Cape Town were driven from their homes by last monthâs storms. They were the latest in of a series of adverse weather events to have hit South Africa, and which scientists say may be attributed to climate change.
Earlier this year, storms wrecked roads and disrupted traffic to the port in the Eastern Cape city of Gqeberha and in 2022 floods in the southeastern city of Durban killed at least 435 people.
South Africaâs government is in the process of setting up a climate response fund to pay for the strengthening of infrastructure against extreme weather and restore damaged bridges and roads.
Read also:
- Urgent need for resilient urban planning to combat frequently devastating floods in South Africa
- South Africa declares National State of Disaster over floods
- How science connects extreme weather events to climate change
© 2024 Bloomberg L.P.