Current:Home > NewsDubai airport operations ramp back up as flooding from UAE's heaviest rains ever recorded lingers on roads -Zenith Investment School
Dubai airport operations ramp back up as flooding from UAE's heaviest rains ever recorded lingers on roads
View
Date:2025-04-15 04:45:46
Dubai, United Arab Emirates — The United Arab Emirates struggled Thursday to recover from the heaviest recorded rainfall ever to hit the desert nation, as its main airport worked to restore normal operations even as floodwater still covered portions of major highways and roads.
Dubai International Airport, the world's busiest for international travel, allowed global carriers on Thursday morning to again fly into Terminal 1 at the airfield. Later Thursday, the facility said in a message posted on social media that its Terminal 3 was also reopening for flight check-in, but it warned passengers to come only if their pending departure was confirmed due to "a high volume of guests in the check-in area."
"Flights continue to be delayed and disrupted, so we urge you to only come to Terminal 1 if you have a confirmed booking," the airport said in its series of tweets.
Later Thursday, a message shared by the Dubai government's media office quoted the Dubai International Airport's Chief Operating Officer Majed Al Joker as saying the facility would "return to its full operational capacity within 24 hours."
The long-haul carrier Emirates, whose operations had been struggling since the storm Tuesday, had stopped travelers flying out of the UAE from checking into their flights as they tried to move out connecting passengers. Pilots and flight crews had been struggling to reach the airport given the water on roadways. But on Thursday, they lifted that order to allow customers into the airport.
Others who arrived at the airport described hourslong waits to get their baggage, with some just giving up to head home or to whatever hotel would have them.
The UAE, a hereditarily ruled, autocratic nation on the Arabian Peninsula, typically sees little rainfall in its arid desert climate. However, a massive storm forecasters had been warning about for days blew through the country's seven sheikhdoms. By the end of Tuesday, more than 5.59 inches of rainfall had soaked Dubai over 24 hours. An average year sees 3.73 inches of rain at Dubai International Airport. Other areas of the country saw even more precipitation.
The UAE's drainage systems quickly became overwhelmed, flooding out neighborhoods, business districts and even portions of the 12-lane Sheikh Zayed Road highway running through Dubai.
The state-run WAM news agency called the rain "a historic weather event" that surpassed "anything documented since the start of data collection in 1949."
In a message to the nation late Wednesday, Emirati leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the ruler of Abu Dhabi, said authorities would "quickly work on studying the condition of infrastructure throughout the UAE and to limit the damage caused."
On Thursday, people waded through oil-slicked floodwater to reach cars earlier abandoned, checking to see if their engines still ran. Tanker trucks with vacuums began reaching some areas outside of Dubai's downtown core for the first time as well. Schools remain closed until next week.
Authorities have offered no overall damage or injury information from the floods, which killed at least one person.
"Crises reveal the strength of countries and societies," Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, wrote on X. "The natural climate crisis that we experienced showed the great care, awareness, cohesion and love for every corner of the country from all its citizens and residents."
The flooding sparked speculation that the UAE's aggressive campaign of cloud seeding — flying small planes through clouds dispersing chemicals aimed at getting rain to fall — may have contributed to the deluge. But experts said the storm systems that produced the rain were forecast well in advance and that cloud seeding alone would not have caused such flooding.
Jeff Masters, a meteorologist for Yale Climate Connections, said the flooding in Dubai was caused by an unusually strong low pressure system that drove many rounds of heavy thunderstorms.
Climatologists have warned for years that human-driven climate change is fueling more extreme and less predictable weather events across the globe.
Parts of southern Russia and Central Asia have also been dealing for days with unusually damaging amounts of rainfall and snowmelt, forcing tens of thousands of people to evacuate to higher ground and killing more than 120 people in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Dubai hosted the United Nations' COP28 climate talks just last year.
Abu Dhabi's state-linked newspaper The National, in an editorial Thursday, described the heavy rains as a warning to countries in the wider Persian Gulf region to "climate-proof their futures."
"The scale of this task is more daunting that it appears even at first glance, because such changes involve changing the urban environment of a region that for as long as it has been inhabited, has experienced little but heat and sand," the newspaper said.
- In:
- United Arab Emirates
- Climate Change
- Dubai International Airport
- Severe Weather
- Persian Gulf
- Flooding
- Flash Flooding
- Dubai
veryGood! (14)
Related
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Turkey’s central bank hikes key interest rate again to 45% to battle inflation
- HP Enterprise discloses hack by suspected state-backed Russian hackers
- United Auto Workers endorses Biden's reelection bid
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Freed Israeli hostage says she met a Hamas leader in a tunnel, where she was kept in dire conditions
- Police identify relationships between suspect and family members slain in Chicago suburb
- Biden revisits decaying Wisconsin bridge to announce $5B for infrastructure in election year pitch
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Michael Mann’s Defamation Case Against Deniers Finally Reaches Trial
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Transgender veterans sue to have gender-affirming surgery covered by Department of Veteran Affairs
- The Olympic Winter Games began a century ago. See photos of the 'revolutionary' 1924 event
- Iran disqualifies former moderate president from running for reelection to influential assembly
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- A man is charged with 76 counts of murder in a deadly South African building fire last year
- Twin brothers named valedictorian and salutatorian at Long Island high school
- Rauw Alejandro, Peso Pluma, Maluma headline Sueños 2024, Chicago's Latino music festival
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Who replaces Jim Harbaugh at Michigan? Sherrone Moore and other candidates
Do Stanley cups contain lead? What you should know about claims, safety of the tumblers
Nepal asks Russia to send back Nepalis recruited to fight in Ukraine and the bodies of those killed
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Zimbabwe’s main opposition leader quits, claiming his party was hijacked by president’s ruling party
14 states are cutting individual income taxes in 2024. Here are where taxpayers are getting a break.
Ohio restricts health care for transgender kids, bans transgender girls from school sports