REICHERTSHOFEN: Rescuers battled Monday (June 3) to evacuate people from floods in southern Germany that have claimed four lives, as Chancellor Olaf Scholz called it a “warning” that climate change was getting worse.
Thousands of people in the regions of Bavaria and Baden-Wuerttemberg had to leave their homes since torrential rain on Friday sparked deadly flooding.
More evacuations were called overnight into Monday as the huge volumes of water caused flood defences to fail.
In Bavaria, around 800 people were asked to leave their homes in the area of Ebenhausen-Werk after a dam burst early Monday.
Residents around Manching-Pichl, in the area worst affected by the floods, were told to shelter on the upper floors of their homes.
Speaking on a visit to Reichertshofen, a flood-hit area north of Munich, Scholz said that such floods were no longer a “one-off”.
“This is an indication that something is up here. We must not neglect the task of stopping man-made climate change,” Scholz told journalists.
The floods were “a warning that we must take with us”, he said.
STATE OF EMERGENCY
The Bavarian state premier, Markus Soeder, who accompanied Scholz on his visit, said there was no “full insurance” against climate change.
“Events are happening here that have never happened before,” Soeder said after a state of emergency was declared by districts across his region of Bavaria.
Around 20,000 people in Bavaria alone had been deployed to tackle the consequences of the flood, he said.
Police in Baden-Wuerttemberg on Monday said a man and a woman were found dead in the basement of their house in Schorndorf following the flood.
The same fate befell a 43-year-old woman in Schrobenhausen, Bavaria, whose body was found by rescuers earlier Monday.
The discoveries took the total killed by the floods to at least four, following the death of a volunteer fireman whose body was found on Sunday.
The 42-year-old volunteer died after his vessel turned over during a flood rescue operation.
Another volunteer was still missing after his boat also overturned overnight into Sunday. A search operation to find the missing rescue worker had to be stopped due to the exceptionally high waters and strong currents, local police said.
The German Weather Service on Monday issued new warnings for heavy rain in parts of southern and eastern Germany.
TRAIN LINES UNUSABLE
The widespread flooding and continuous rainfall impacted transport in the region with widespread train cancellations and delays.
Train lines leading from Munich to Stuttgart, Nuremberg and Wuerzburg were unusable, rail operator Deutsche Bahn said.
A landslide near Schwaebisch Gmuend overnight into Sunday caused a high-speed train travelling between Stuttgart and Augsburg to derail, blocking the line. Nobody was hurt in the incident.
Despite Scholz’s pledge to combat climate change, a panel of experts separately said Monday that the government’s emissions forecasts through 2030 were unrealistic.
The government had underestimated future emissions in the transport, building and industry sectors, the climate panel said in a report.
Overall, the experts assumed that the government’s emissions-reduction target for 2030 “will not be met”.
AUTO & ENERGY PRODUCTION AFFECTED
Amid the first signs of the flooding’s economic impact, German utility EnBW EBKG.DE said its hydroelectric plants along the Neckar River and its tributaries were either running at reduced capacity or were out of operation, particularly small stations.
The company, which is based in southern Germany, said this was partly due to the large amount of floating debris.
Uniper UN0k.DE said it took preparatory measures to shut its Irsching power plant if necessary as a dam of the Paar tributary of the Danube threatened to burst.
Earlier on Monday, Audi cancelled some production shifts on Monday at its main Ingolstadt plant as some staff could not come to work, though the factory itself was not affected.
The early and the late shifts assembling the A3 and Q2 vehicle models were cancelled, the Volkswagen-owned VOWG_p.DE luxury carmaker said in an alert to staff on Sunday, which was made available to Reuters on Monday.
Germany’s farmers’ association flagged massive damage to fields and buildings in the sector, saying it was too early for a more precise estimate.
Navigation authorities earlier on Monday warned that parts of the river Rhine in southern Germany, an important route for commodities and fuels, were closed to cargo shipping for lack of overhead space to sail under bridges.