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2015–16 Great Britain and Ireland floods

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This article'slead sectionmay be too short to adequatelysummarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead toprovide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article.(February 2016)

2015–2016 Great Britain and Ireland floods
Generic flood image
Property damage£1.5bn[1]

The2015–2016 Great Britain and Ireland floods were a series of heavy rainfall events which led to flooding during the winter of late 2015 and early 2016. 11 named storms produced record level rainfall from November 2015 - March 2016 in both monthly and seasonal accumulation records.[2]

Antecedent conditions

[edit]

Western Europe saw a series of extratropical cyclones forming in a westerly flow over the Atlantic, directing warm and moist air to the region.A situation developed in a similar manner to that seen during theAutumn 2000 western Europe floods, which saw catchments and soils becoming increasingly saturated. During November high rainfalls associated with the passage ofStorm Abigail and the remains of Ex-hurricane Kate brought increasingly high river flows.[3] Many parts of north-west Britain saw almost double the average monthly rainfall for November fall, with the month becoming the second-wettest to affect north-west England and North Wales (behind November 2009) since records began in 1910.[4][5][6]

Storm Desmond (5 December)

[edit]
Satellite image of the plume of moist air, known as anatmospheric river, brought to Western Europe by Desmond
Main article:Storm Desmond

Storm Desmond broke the United Kingdom's 24-hour rainfall record, with 341.4 mm of rain falling atHonister Pass,Cumbria, on 5 December 2015.[7] The previous record was setin 2009, also in Cumbria, when 316.4 mm of rain fell inSeathwaite.[7] The highest standard 0900 GMT – 0900 GMT rain day record, however, remains 279 mm atMartinstown, Dorset set on 18 July 1955. Much of the historical data is recorded in this way.[8] The 48‑hour rainfall record was also beaten, withThirlmere reporting 405 mm of rain falling up to 0800 GMT on 6 December 2015, compared to the previous record of 395.6 mm on 18–19 November 2009 at Seathwaite.[8] Desmond created anatmospheric river in its wake, bringing in moist air from the Caribbean to the British Isles. As a result, rainfall from Desmond was unusually heavy, with theNorwegian Meteorological Institute designating Desmond an extreme weather event as a result of the amount of rain that fell.

The heavy rainfall caused awaterfall to appear atMalham Cove for a short period of time; this had not previously happened in living memory.[9]

Cumbria and Lancashire floods

[edit]
Carlisle Civic Centre in the floodwater, December 2015

Heavy rainfall from Desmond caused severe disruption.Appleby,Keswick andKendal in the English county ofCumbria suffered blocked roads, collapsed bridges and some homes were evacuated;Cumbria Police declared the situation a "major incident".[10] Many houses inCarlisle were flooded, and tens of thousands of properties inLancaster lost power when a sub-station was flooded.[11]

As a result of this event 3,500 properties were flooded in the UK, mostly in NW England, 2,000 of these in Carlisle.[12] The village ofGlenridding flooded for a second time on 9 December.[13]

In the county three bridges were washed away, Coledale High Bridge inBraithwaite, the Fitz Footbridge inKeswick, and that atPooley Bridge in the Eden District.[14] Part of theA591 road an important north–south artery between Grasmere and Keswick in the Lake District, was washed away at Dunmail Raise with a landslip occurring adjacent to Thirlmere.[15][16]

Ireland

[edit]

In theRepublic of Ireland, the worst affected areas were the province of Connacht and counties Donegal,Westmeath,Tipperary,Limerick, Clare,Cork and Kerry. Several, particularly local, roads were closed as a result of rivers breaching their banks and excess rainfall. In Connacht, the damage was worst inAthleague,Ballinasloe,Carrick-on-Shannon,Claregalway,Crossmolina,Foxford andGalway City. Millions of euros worth of damage was caused inBandon,Fermoy,Kenmare andTralee, while theBlackpool area ofCork City was severely affected by a high level of water flow in theRiver Lee. Heavy rain has also resulted in severe flooding in communities along theRiver Shannon, namelyAthlone,Portumna,Shannon Harbour,Montpelier,Castleconnell,Clonlara,Parteen,Annacotty andLimerick City. The river breached its banks in Athlone on 9 December.[17] Other areas affected due to heavy rainfall includedBray,Clonmel andEnnis. InGlaslough,County Monaghan, the dead body of a 70-year-old man was found when his car was believed to have become trapped in a dipped part of a flooded road.[18]

Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales and the Isle of Man

[edit]

Approximately 1,000 people were evacuated from their homes in the town ofHawick in theScottish Borders as a result of theRiver Teviot flooding. TheRiver Nith burst its banks inDumfries, flooding part of the town,[19] with a major emergency being declared inDumfries & Galloway as a result.[20] Landslides and flooding closed some main roads inScotland. CountiesDown andTyrone inNorthern Ireland suffered road closures from fallen trees.[10]

Further heavy rainfall exacerbated existing problems on theIsle of Man, which had been struck by localised flash flooding on 3 December,[21] with warnings that Desmond could bring more flooding and more damage to the island.[22]

InWales, heavy rainfall led to flooding close toLlandygai, nearBangor inGwynedd, withRNLI coastguard helicopters rescuing one person from their car.[23] Flooding was also reported onAnglesey, in parts ofPowys and in and around the South Wales city ofSwansea.[23] Wind damage was reported inLlandudno and winds gusted to 83 mph within theSnowdonia National Park.

Storm Eva (24 December)

[edit]
Main article:Storm Eva

Eva was the fifth storm to be officially named byMet Éireann on 22 December 2015, with an orange wind warning being issued for counties Clare, Galway, Mayo, Sligo and Donegal. Gales were also expected in the northwest of the UK, with storm force winds over parts of the Outer Hebrides.[24]

Rain associated with the passage of Eva caused further disruption when rivers burst their banks in the Cumbrian towns ofAppleby,Keswick andKendal on 22 December, with Appleby receiving three to four feet of flood water.[25][26] The village ofGlenridding was badly flooded for the third time in the month.[27] 6000 houses in Ireland were left without power.[28]Liz Truss convened aCOBRA meeting to decide on emergency measures, which included the deployment of soldiers from the 2nd Battalion, Duke of Lancaster's Regiment[29] to the affected areas.[30][31] On 24 December, flood defence gates were closed in Carlisle, Keswick and Cockermouth to limit the damage of rainfall and 20 water pumps and two kilometres of temporary flood barriers were transported to northern England.[32] Ferries operating between Dublin and Holyhead were cancelled due to bad weather on the Irish Sea.[33]

Christmas and Boxing Day rain

[edit]

TheEnvironment Agency issued seven severe flood warnings acrossLancashire and 21 severe flood warnings acrossYorkshire on 26 December.[34]

The Waterside, a public house inSummerseat that partially collapsed into theRiver Irwell on Boxing Day, photographed in the aftermath of the collapse

Northern England flooding

[edit]

The worst of the flooding occurred on the night ofChristmas Day and throughoutBoxing Day acrossLancashire andYorkshire. On 26 December, homes were evacuated inCalder Valley,West Yorkshire, and inRibchester andWhalley, Lancashire; according to theEnvironment Agency, every river inLancashire peaked at their highest levels since records began.[34]

TheRiver Wharfe risen to the height ofthe bridge atWetherby, West Yorkshire.
Partially collapsedTadcaster Bridge (30 December 2015)

Flooding caused at least two explosions inRadcliffe, Greater Manchester, as gas mains were ruptured. One explosion and subsequent fire occurred as a result of a footbridge being swept away by theRiver Irwell, with footage of the incident being widely shared on social media.[35] Floodwater also entered an electricity sub station inHebden Bridge producing a fire.

InSummerseat, Greater Manchester, a historic 200-year-old pub on a bridge over the River Irwell close to theEast Lancashire Railway partially collapsed into the river as it burst its banks on 26 December.[34] The Irwell also burst its banks downstream inManchester city centre.

Around 3,000 homes were left without power inNorth andWest Yorkshire on 26 December as a result of an electricity substation being flooded.[36] Most of the power outages occurred in theCalder Valley and aroundBingley andSkipton, with substation ownersNorthern Powergrid stating that their engineers cannot safely reach the substations to assess the damage due to rising floodwaters.[36]

Many parts ofMirfield flooded affecting local businesses The Ship Inn, Mill Carpets andFurniture And Choice who lost 10% of their stock to flood damage.[37]

The River Aire atFarsley on 27 December.

In Leeds theRiver Aire flooded over its banks causing flooding in the Kirkstall Road area of the city, blocking a main route into the city.[38]

A total of 7,574 homes across the north of England were without power by 08:00 on 27 December. Around 5,500 of these homes without power were located in the town ofRochdale in Greater Manchester, where a major electricity substation was flooded.[39] As a result of power outages in Rochdale, electricity customers were told to limit their electricity usage to prevent further blackouts, for example by switching off theirChristmas lights.[40] Electricity providerElectricity North West warned that some homes may be without power until 28 December.[39]

InYork, the Environment Agency were forced to open the Foss Barrier which has protected the city centre since 1987, as the control room had become flooded and the pumps were in danger of failing. To prevent theRiver Foss backing up and causing flooding, the Agency raised the barrier, allowing the flood waters from theRiver Ouse to move up the Foss.[41] The action caused some 600 households in the city to flood whereas the Environment agency estimated 1800 homes would have flooded were the barrier not lifted.[42] The BT telephone exchange flooded, cutting landline and wi-fi broadband services for thousands of York customers[43] and the loss of emergency-call service forHull for around four hours.KCOM was later fined£900,000 by regulatorOfcom.[44][45]

On 29 December part ofTadcaster Bridge in North Yorkshire collapsed due to flooding,[46] having been closed since 27 December due to fears it had been structurally compromised.[47]

Sport

[edit]

Heavy rainfall overnight on 25 and 26 December led to the cancellation of dozens of Boxing Day football fixtures. In theScottish Premiership, waterlogged pitches led to the postponement of fixtures betweenDundee United andMotherwell and betweenPartick Thistle andSt Johnstone. In addition, oneScottish Championship fixture, oneScottish League One fixture and oneScottish League Two fixture were also postponed due to Eva.[48]

Additionally, in England, theChampionship fixture betweenBlackburn Rovers andMiddlesbrough was postponed, as were five fixtures inLeague One, three fixtures inLeague Two and three fixtures in theNational League.[48] In horseracing, the meeting due to be held on 26 December atWetherby Racecourse was cancelled owing to flooding.[49]

Transport

[edit]
Road
[edit]

TheLancashire Fire and Rescue Service andNorth Wales Police warned motorists not to travel unless absolutely necessary, with heavy rainfall and high winds leading to widespread road closures.[34] TheM62 motorway was closed westbound between junctions 20 (forRochdale) and 19 (forMiddleton) after heavy rainfall caused a largesinkhole to appear across the carriageway.[34] TheTadcaster Bridge over theRiver Wharfe atTadcaster,North Yorkshire collapsed on 29 December.[50]The bridge over the Wharfe betweenCollingham andLinton was also closed after a partial collapse.[51]

Rail
[edit]

First TransPennine Express andNorthern Rail both warned passengers not to travel on 27 December. Flooding on railway lines acrossWest Yorkshire, particularly aroundLeeds, resulted in the suspension of all services between Leeds andBradford Forster Square,Carlisle,Harrogate,Ilkley,Manchester Victoria,Morecambe,Skipton andYork. A landslide atChorley resulted in the suspension of services between Manchester,Bolton andPreston, while another landslide atHaydon Bridge resulted in the suspension ofNewcastle to Carlisle services. Disruption was also reported on services betweenWigan Wallgate and Bolton and between Carlisle andWhitehaven as a result of flooding on 27 December.[52]

Response

[edit]
Domestic
[edit]
Floodwater is pumped back into the retreatingRiver Derwent atMalton on 27 December.

Prime MinisterDavid Cameron issued a statement on 27 December after chairing an emergencyCOBRA crisis meeting on Storm Eva, describing the floods as "unprecedented" and "incredibly serious" and pledging help to those affected by sending out more troops to help with the defence and clearup of the floods.[53]The Times reported that senior politicians regarded the floods as being the result of extreme weather caused byclimate change.[54]

LabourShadow Environment SecretaryKerry McCarthy criticised the government for cutting spending on flood defences, stating that as "unprecedented" weather events become more common, spending on flood defences should be increased.[23]

British astronautTim Peake tweeted an image from theISS expressing concern for flood victims.[55][56]

International
[edit]

Storm Frank (29 December)

[edit]

The Met Office announced the trailing weather front of the storm namedFrank would likely cause further disruption.

Amber 'be prepared' rainfall warnings were in force, resulting in severe flood warnings in England and Scotland, meaning "danger to life".[58][59]

Service disruption noticeGlasgow Central railway station 31 December 2015

Frank caused severe flooding in Scotland with the towns ofDumfries,Peebles andBallater flooded by the riversNith,Tweed andDee.[60]Abergeldie Castle was left on the brink of serious damage after flooding eroded the banks of the Dee within feet of the foundations.[61] On 4 January, Network Rail announced theWest Coast Main Line between Carlisle and Glasgow would be closed until 1 February, with passengers either diverted throughDumfries or transferred to coaches due to significant damage to the Lamington Viaduct.[62]

Part ofBirnbeck Pier atWeston-super-Mare,North Somerset, collapsed during storms on 30 December 2015.[63]Elland bridge in Calderdale West Yorkshire partially collapsed on 29 December.[64]

January 2016

[edit]

In early January heavy rain was primarily affecting eastern Scotland and north east England. The Met Office issued amber warnings for Moray, Aberdeenshire, Angus, Perthshire and Stirlingshire on 4 January.[65] Flooding was reported to have almost cut off the town ofWhitby on 4 January.[66]

On the night of 7 January,Aberdeenshire Council reported an escalating emergency response due to flooding. At first, this was confined to riversDee andYthan, but later, on 8 January, had focused around flooding aroundCoulter, South Lanarkshire. Up to 70 properties were evacuated in total and the impacts of the storm caused disruption to rail, road, air travel, power cuts and school closures. Flooding, freezing temperature and snow reduced the ability for services to rescue and safely contain people. TheRiver Don reached its highest water levels for 45 years. TheRiver Ythan broke its all-time record level in one location. Scotland's first ministerNicola Sturgeon described the impacts as "devastating" and Richard Brown, head of hydrology for Sepa, described the Don's water levels as "pretty exceptional".[67]

Aftermath

[edit]

In response to the flooding, there has been criticism of the way in which flood risk is communicated to the public, asreturn periods of a 1 in 100 year flooding could be misleading, as a 1 in 100 year event means a 1% chance of one occurring in any given year, not that it is expected to happen once every hundred years. The dynamic nature of the underlying climate conditions behind such assumptions has also been questioned,[68] with theEnvironment Agency stating that a "complete rethink" of the UK's flood defences is needed.[69]

In popular culture

[edit]

The floods are the topic ofClare Shaw's poetry collectionFlood (2018).[70]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"UK floods: Cost of Storms Eva and Desmond could top £1.5bn".BBC News. 28 December 2015. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  2. ^Séamus Walsh (6 November 2016)."06 – The Rainfall of Winter 2015/16 in Ireland"(Conference paper).Hydrology Ireland. Retrieved30 December 2022.
  3. ^Ugrin, Elena (16 November 2015)."Storm "Abigail" and remnants of Ex-hurricane "Kate" flood parts of UK and Ireland". The Watchers. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  4. ^"Flooding in Cumbria December 2015". Met Office. 17 December 2015. Retrieved11 January 2016.
  5. ^Prichard, Bob (January 2016)."November 2015 Very mild and dull. Very wet in central regions. Often windy".Weather.71 (1):i–iv.doi:10.1002/wea.2592.
  6. ^"UK seasonal weather summary Autumn 2015".Weather.71 (1): 13. January 2016.Bibcode:2016Wthr...71...13..doi:10.1002/wea.2676.
  7. ^ab"UK climate extremes".Met Office.
  8. ^ab"Storm Desmond breaks UK rainfall record". ITV. 7 December 2015. Retrieved10 December 2015.
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  10. ^ab"Storm Desmond brings flooding and disruption to parts of UK".BBC News. 5 December 2015. Retrieved5 December 2015.
  11. ^"Storm Desmond: Thousands of people flooded out of homes".BBC. 8 December 2015. Retrieved8 December 2015.
  12. ^"Northwest UK Floods December 4–6, 2015". Air Worldwide. 12 December 2015. Retrieved27 December 2015.
  13. ^Quinn, Ben (10 December 2015)."Cumbrian village deals with more devastation as river bursts banks again".The Guardian. Retrieved26 December 2015.
  14. ^"Government announces £50m fund for flood victims". ITV News. 6 December 2015. Retrieved29 December 2015.
  15. ^"Road between Grasmere and Keswick destroyed".ITN News. 6 December 2015. Retrieved7 December 2015.
  16. ^"Police release statement on A591".Westmorland Gazette. 7 December 2015. Retrieved7 December 2015.
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  18. ^"Singer Ivan Vaughan dies in floods in Co Monaghan".The Irish Times. Retrieved11 December 2015.
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  20. ^"Major emergency declared in Dumfries & Galloway".ITV News. 5 December 2015. Retrieved6 December 2015.
  21. ^"Bridge collapse bus to be recovered after IoM flooding".BBC News. 4 December 2015. Retrieved6 December 2015.
  22. ^"Storm Desmond expected to wreak more havoc".Manx Radio. Retrieved6 December 2015.
  23. ^abc"700 homes without power as 83mph winds batter north Wales".BBC News. 5 December 2015. Retrieved6 December 2015.
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  25. ^Perring, Rebecca (24 December 2015)."Army on standby for flooding crisis as shock FIVE INCHES of rain to come with Storm Eva".Express.co.uk. Retrieved10 January 2016.
  26. ^"Storm Eva brings fresh flooding fears for Cumbria".BBC News. 23 December 2015. Retrieved24 December 2015.
  27. ^Glover, Mike (22 December 2015)."Further flooding worsens troubles for Cumbrian towns hit by Storm Desmond".The Guardian. Retrieved24 December 2015.
  28. ^"Over 6,000 without power as Storm Eva hits".RTÉ.ie. 24 December 2015. Retrieved10 January 2016.
  29. ^"Flood warnings as Britain is braced for torrential Boxing Day rain".Isle of Man Today. 29 December 2015. Retrieved10 January 2016.[permanent dead link]
  30. ^"Storm Eva brings fresh flooding fears for Cumbria".BBC News. 23 December 2015. Retrieved10 January 2016.
  31. ^"Flooded Cumbrian families are facing further misery on Christmas Day".The Independent. 23 December 2015.Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved10 January 2016.
  32. ^"Storm poses Christmas Day flooding threat for thousands of homes".Bradford Telegraph and Argus. Retrieved10 January 2016.
  33. ^"Homes and businesses to get electricity back after storm damage".belfasttelegraph. Retrieved28 July 2020.
  34. ^abcde"UK floods: Homes evacuated amid heavy rain".BBC News. 26 December 2015.
  35. ^"Flooding Causes Gas Blast As Bridge Washed Away".Sky News.
  36. ^ab"Floods latest: Boxing Day power cuts for thousands in Yorkshire".ITV News.
  37. ^Gildea, Samantha (15 February 2016)."Furniture Choice considering warehouse relocation after 600 sofas ruined in Boxing Day floods".
  38. ^"Leeds floods video: Kirkstall Road 'like a river – people can't believe what they're seeing'". Yorkshire Evening Post. 27 December 2015. Retrieved14 January 2016.
  39. ^ab"PM Deploys More Troops To Help Flood Victims".Sky News.
  40. ^"North of England flooding".BBC News. 28 December 2015. Retrieved30 December 2022.
  41. ^Krol, Charlotte (28 December 2015)."UK floods: Army helicopter airlifts spare parts for damaged Foss barrier". Telegraph. Archived fromthe original on 28 December 2015. Retrieved29 December 2015.
  42. ^Bean, Dan (4 January 2016)."Flooding envoy visits York". York Press. Retrieved6 January 2016.
  43. ^"York 2015: Anatomy of a Flood Disaster".Future Climate Info. 20 February 2019. Archived fromthe original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved12 June 2024.
  44. ^"KCOM fined £900,000 for emergency-call failure".Ofcom. 8 August 2017. Archived fromthe original on 24 January 2021. Retrieved12 June 2024.
  45. ^Hall, Kat."KCOM whacked with £900k Ofcom fine over 999 call handling".www.theregister.com. Archived fromthe original on 26 May 2023. Retrieved12 June 2024.
  46. ^"Statement on Tadcaster Bridge". North Yorkshire County Council. 30 December 2015.
  47. ^"Storm Frank: More heavy rain expected in flood-hit areas". ITV News. 29 December 2015. Retrieved29 December 2015.
  48. ^abErdman, Jon (6 December 2015)."Storm Desmond Lashes U.K., Ireland With Flooding, Winds Over 100 MPH; Taps Caribbean Moisture". Weather.com. Retrieved6 December 2015.
  49. ^"26/12/15 The 188BET Yorkshire Christmas Meeting – ABANDONED". Wetherby Racecourse. 26 December 2015. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  50. ^"UK floods: Storm Frank threatens more misery".BBC News. 29 December 2015. Retrieved29 December 2015.
  51. ^"People warned to avoid Linton Bridge due to flood damage". Leeds City Council. Retrieved4 January 2015.
  52. ^"National Rail Enquiries - Latest Travel".www.nationalrail.co.uk.
  53. ^"UK floods: Homes evacuated after 'unprecedented' flooding".BBC News. 27 December 2015.
  54. ^Savage, Michael; Mostrous, Alexi; Moody, Oliver (28 December 2015). "Flood crisis grips cities with more rain forecast".The Times. London. p. 4.
  55. ^"Astronaut Tim Peake's concern for UK floods".BBC News. 28 December 2015. Retrieved29 December 2015.
  56. ^Tim Peake [@astro_timpeake] (27 December 2015)."Passed over UK today – thoughts are with all those affected by flooding in northern England" (Tweet). Retrieved10 January 2016 – viaTwitter.
  57. ^"President expresses solidarity with flood victims in UK".Times of Malta. 28 December 2015. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  58. ^"Storm Frank to bring another spell of wet and windy weather". Met Office. 28 December 2015. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  59. ^"Widespread flood warnings as UK braces for Storm Frank".The Guardian. 29 December 2015. Retrieved31 December 2015.
  60. ^"After Storm Frank, Scotland rallies to fix itself amid the chaos".The Guardian. 1 January 2016. Retrieved2 January 2016.
  61. ^McPherson, Lynn (3 January 2016)."Historic castle on brink of disaster as new storm sparks fresh flood fears across Scotland". Daily Record. Retrieved3 January 2016.
  62. ^"West Coast Main Line closed between Glasgow and Carlisle until February". STV. 4 January 2016. Retrieved6 January 2016.
  63. ^"Section of Birnbeck Pier collapses into sea".BBC News. 30 December 2015. Retrieved30 December 2015.
  64. ^"Elland Bridge flood damage: Government awards £5m towards rebuilding".BBC News. 17 January 2016. Retrieved17 January 2016.
  65. ^"Homes flooded in Scotland as heavy rain hits".BBC News. 4 January 2016. Retrieved6 January 2016.
  66. ^"Whitby cut off by 'unprecedented' levels of flooding". ITV News. 4 January 2016. Retrieved6 January 2016.
  67. ^"Scotland flooding: Record high for river levels".BBC News. 8 January 2016. Retrieved4 February 2016.
  68. ^Alexander, Ruth (7 December 2015)."Flood risk: what is a 'one in a 100 year' event?". BBC Radio 4. Retrieved9 December 2015.
  69. ^"UK floods: 'Complete rethink needed' on flood defences".BBC News. 28 December 2015. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  70. ^Editorial (10 November 2024)."The Guardian view on the rise of eco-poetry: writing cannot ignore global heating".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved7 June 2025.

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