Clean up begins after heavy UAE rain, floods


Dubai, Apr 18: Authorities and communities across the United Arab Emirates were clearing debris on Wednesday after at least one person died and homes and businesses were damaged in a rare torrential storm.

The extent of the damage was not immediately clear as emergency workers sought to drain flooded roads across the country hours after heavy rain subsided late on Tuesday.

The UAE saw record rainfall with 254 mm (10 inches) falling in less than 24 hours in Al Ain, a city on the UAE-Oman border, according to the national meteorology centre. That was the most since records began in 1949, before the UAE was formed in 1971.

The UAE lacks much of the needed drainage infrastructure to handle heavy rain. It is not uncommon for roads to become partially submerged underwater during extended periods of rainfall. It typically only ever rains a few times a year.

The UAE also frequently conducts cloud seeding operations to increase rainfall. A forecaster from the national meteorology centre denied any cloud seeding operations had taken place recently.

Bloomberg earlier quoted the agency as saying seven cloud seeding operations had occurred in the days before the storm.

Climate scientists say that rising global temperatures, driven by man-made climate change, is leading to more extreme weather events, including intense rainfall like the UAE storm.

The impact of the heavy rain continued to be felt on Wednesday, with roads blocked and flights severely disrupted.

Emirates, one of the world’s biggest international airlines, stopped checking-in passengers departing Dubai until midnight. Flydubai, which partially resumed flights in the morning, said operations would not return to normal until after midnight. Meanwhile, budget carrier Air Arabia, opens new tab suspended check-in to flights to and from Sharjah until 2 a.m. on Thursday.

Kanish Kumar Deb Barman, 39, said he had been stuck at Dubai airport with his wife since around 4 a.m., when his flight landed late from Paris, missing his next flight to Calcutta, in India.

“People are just lying around in the airport. There is not enough seats and chairs to, you know, let them sit. They are sitting on the floor,” he told Reuters on Wednesday afternoon, waiting to board the next available flight.

Dubai International Airport, one of the world’s busiest, said after the storm subsided that the heavy rain had caused significant disruptions, with flights delayed and diverted, and advised passengers in Dubai against travelling to the airport.

“We are working hard to recover operations as quickly as possible in very challenging conditions,” the airport wrote on X.