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Europe battles weather extremes

Tue Jul 24, 2:28 AM ET

Europe battled weather extremes late Monday as heavy rain sparked the worst

flooding in England in 60 years, while the south and east of the continent was

roasting in a heatwave that claimed several lives.

Large swathes of central and western England were submerged as rivers swelled

and burst their banks during four days of heavy and persistent rain, leaving

thousands without clean water or electricity and facing the prospect of more

rain.

Britain's COBRA government emergency planning committee met Monday evening amid

concerns that an electricity sub-station in Gloucester would be flooded,

leaving half a million homes without electricity.

Fortunately for residents of the area, the Environment Agency said that the

River Severn had reached a peak there, just two inches (5 centimetres) below

the main wall protecting the city centre and the power station.

The Royal Air Force evacuated around 150 people in its biggest ever peacetime

rescue, while over 100 Royal Navy sailors were sent to bolster flood defences

around the electricity sub-station which serves 500,000 homes.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown earlier linked the floods to climate change and

pledged 200 million pounds (298 million euros, 411 million dollars) extra

funding, plus a review to address future issues.

His comments came as a study released in the British science journal Nature

yielded the first confirmation that global warming is already affecting world

rainfall patterns.

Changes in climate were bringing more precipitation to northern Europe, Canada

and northern Russia but less to swathes of sub-Saharan Africa, southern India

and Southeast Asia, according to scientists with Environment Canada.

As Britain grappled with floods, soaring temperatures continued to wreak havoc

across other parts of Europe.

The death toll from a week-long heatwave in Romania rose to 18, the health

minister said, and a red alert was called for several regions Tuesday where

temperatures were set to reach 41 degrees Celsius (106 Fahrenheit) for the

second day in a row.

Bulgaria meanwhile experienced its hottest temperatures since records began

Monday with the thermometer shooting above 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit)

in parts of the country, the meteorological institute said.

One person has died because of the soaring temperatures, which are expected to

keep climbing over the next two days. The heat has also contributed to 1,900

forest fires around the country.

In the north, the mayor of Kozloduy declared a state of emergency because of

the extreme drought, which has destroyed 90 percent of the corn and sunflower

harvest. Water rationing has been imposed in nine towns around Veliko Tarnovo.

Forest fires have also been breaking out across southern Europe, and in Greece

two pilots were killed Monday when their Canadair water-bomber crashed while

fighting a fire on the island of Evia.

The casualties were the fifth suffered in a month that has seen fresh blazes

start almost every day, many suspected to be arson.

Over 300 fires have broken out around Greece since the weekend, fire officials

said, aided by a combination of high temperatures and strong winds.

Greece earlier this month experienced what authorities described as its longest

heat wave in over 100 years, during which 15 people died, and the current hot

spell is set to continue until Thursday.

Another water-bomber plane crashed in central Italy Monday, killing one pilot

and seriously injuring the other.

More than 8,000 firefighters are mobilised against fires across the country,

and according to ANSA news agency, several residential areas have been

evacuated in central Urbino and Sardinia because of blazes.