Advertisement

Red alert: What's the problem with France's weather warning system?

The Local France
The Local France - [email protected]
Red alert: What's the problem with France's weather warning system?
Devastating flooding ravaged the southwestern area of France around Carcassonne on Sunday night and early on Monday morning, killing at least 11. Photo: AFP

After the deadly flooding that claimed at least 11 lives in the south west of France, some are pointing the finger of blame at the country's official weather warning system. But is this really fair or was the tragic situation simply unavoidable?

Advertisement

Devastating flooding ravaged the southwestern area of France around Carcassonne on Sunday night and early on Monday morning, killing at least 11. 
 
But while the extreme weather first hit overnight on Sunday, the country's national weather agency Meteo France only placed the worst hit department of Aude on red alert -- the very highest warning -- at 6 am on Monday, once the heaviest rains had already passed and the rivers had burst their banks. 
 
Red alert indicates that people should practice "absolute vigilance" due to the risk of "dangerous weather of an exceptional intensity".
 
Despite the apparent extremity of the situation throughout Sunday, Aude remained on orange alert -- the second highest warning.
 
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the delay in putting the red alert in place has led to much anger, with questions being raised over the Météo France's weather warning system and if it really does alert people to the coming danger of extreme weather.
 
READ ALSO: 

Floods LATEST: Clean-up begins in south western France as anger risesPhoto: AFP

A "weakness" in the system

"It is clear that there is a weakness," said the spokesman for France's Interior Ministry Frédéric de Lanouvelle in an interview with LCI.

"There is a weakness with the orange warning - we saw it with the snowfall in the (greater Paris region of) Ile-de-France a few months ago - it is used very often and when there is a real problem, people do not pay attention."
 
Lanouvelle also went on to question the timing of the red alert.
 
"And then there is the problem of this red alert. I do not know by heart the process of triggering this warning, but in this case this night, given the testimony of some inhabitants, it was triggered too late," he said. 
 
However the spokesperson went on to say that he did not want to lay the blame on Meteo France. 
 
"The difficulty of this phenomenon, first of all is the difficulty to predict it," said Lanouvelle, adding that as soon as it had been predicted, "the red alert" had been given.
 
"I do not think it's linked to Météo France's incompetence but to a difficulty in evaluating the situation and it was a very powerful phenomenon, and it's clear that the relief was deployed as soon as possible but that conditions were very complicated." 
 
There is also the question of whether the alert being raised earlier would have had the necessary impact. 
 
French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe who visited the area affected by the flooding on Monday night said: "It is true that going from an orange alert to a red one at 3 am is easy enough to say but for the information to reach all those who are asleep, or even those who are not is a lot more complicated."
 
Philippe also said the extreme weather was "unpredictable" and said all the local services were mobilised to deal with the tragedy.
 
"Rare situation"
 
The meterologists at Meteo France have also come out to defend their actions, describing Sunday's events as a "rare situation" and underlining the fact that the interior ministry and civil security department were aware that a worrying episode of weather was on the cards as early as Friday. 
 
Director of research at Meteo France Marc Pontaud said the forecast was "scrambled" for a long time by the displacement of "a group of clouds band linked to a stagnant cyclone" which he described as "a rare situation".
 
"On Friday, civil protection services and the Ministry of the Interior were alerted that something would happen overnight from Sunday to Monday," he said.
 
On Sunday, four departments were first placed on orange alert, Pontaud said, adding that an engineer was on duty overnight which is normal in complicated situations.
 
A flooded street in the city of Trèbes, near Carcassone, southern France. Photo: AFP
 
"In the forecasts we announced a lot of rain, but it was overnight that things were clarified and the situation around Carcassonne only happened at around 5 o'clock in the morning!"
 
Pontaud went on to deny any over-use of the orange alert, explaining that "a French department sees 5 to 10 orange alerts for heavy rainfall each year", with about two or three in the Aude.
 
"It's not that much" he said, adding that what was important was to avoid missing situations. 
 
At the moment "we miss between 2-3 percent of situations every year" and "we have about 15 percent of false alarms", he said. 
 
Villegailhenc, near Carcassonne. Photo: AFP
 
In the government-set targets for Météo France the national weather agency aims towards a non-detection rate of less than 3 percent and a false alarm rate of less than 20 percent, which according to Pontaud's figures, it is hitting.
 
In 2017, there were two red alerts in total, both for high winds in January and February. However in 2018 there have already been several red alerts, including in January for flooding in the Doubs and Jura, and for avalanches in the Alps.
 
Limits of predicting the weather
 
Another spokesperson from Meteo France said the situation simply highlights the limits meteorologist face when it comes to predicting the weather. 
 
"Before 6 am we were not capable of saying whether Aude, Herault or the Pyrenees-Orientales would be affected," said Meteo France engineer Emmanuel Bocrie. 
 
"This is the limit of the art of meteorological predictions."
 
In total, there have been a 28 red alerts triggered by Météo France since the introduction of the colour system at the end of 2001.
 
And French meteorologists have said in the next five to ten years they expect there to be further progress in terms of locating risky weather phenomenons.
 
French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe (C) speaks with residents of Villegailhenc, near Carcassonne. Photo: AFP
 
However, no doubt there will be those caught up in the flooding who disagree with the assessment from meteorologists. 
 
One resident of Trebes, whose house was flooded, showed his anger during a visit by Prime Minister Edouard Philippe on Monday evening asking why weren't people warned in advance.
 
"There was a moment when you have to say 'OK this could be dangerous'," he said.
 
"Can no one keep an eye on the River Aude and send the firefighters into the street to tell people 'Get out of your homes, we are evacuating you'?. Could no one do that?"
 
The mayor Trebes Eric Ménassi responded: "The tragedy that we have been through was impossible to predict and overwhelming."
 
"We were on the ground with my team since midnight. The heavy rain came at around 2am in a way that as sudden and extreme."
 
The storms were triggered when a front of warm and humid air from the Mediterranean Sea slammed into colder air around the Massif Central mountain range, inundating an area from the eastern Pyrenees to Aveyron further north. 
 
This well-known weather pattern occurs three to six times a year in the region and nearly always triggers flash flooding.
 
But the French weather forecasting service, Meteo France, suggested these episodes had recently become more frequent and more severe.

More

Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at [email protected].
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.

Please log in to leave a comment.

See Also