Schools, offices shut as heavy rain returns to desert UAE

15 days ago
Heavy rain

Updated

May 02, 2024, 07:04 PM

Published

May 02, 2024, 06:22 PM

DUBAI – Schools and many offices were closed across the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on May 2 as heavy rain returned to the desert country, just two weeks after record downpours that experts have linked to climate change.

A lightning storm with high winds swept across the oil-rich monarchy overnight, with more than 50mm of rain falling before 8am in some areas, the National Centre of Meteorology said.

Flooding was seen in some parts of financial hub Dubai, and the city’s airport – the world’s busiest by international passenger traffic – cancelled 13 flights and diverted five, a spokesperson said.

State-owned, Dubai-based Emirates and sister airline flydubai both warned passengers of delays, as schools switched to remote learning and public-sector offices closed.

But the rain was not on the scale of April 16, when a record 259.5mm of rain left four people dead, blocked major roads for days and forced the cancellation of more than 2,000 flights.

On May 2, little traffic was seen on Dubai’s normally heaving, six-lane highways, and cars were abandoned on flooded roads near the sprawling Ibn Battuta mall.

Lorries pumping water were stationed in several flooded areas, as Dubai’s drainage is often unable to cope with large-scale rainfall.

April’s downpour, which also killed 21 people in neighbouring Oman, was the heaviest in the UAE, a majority-expatriate federation of seven sheikhdoms, since records began in 1949.

World Weather Attribution, a network of scientists that assesses the role of climate change in extreme weather events, found the deluge was “most likely” exacerbated by global warming caused by burning fossil fuels. AFP

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