The storm Lothar, named by European meteorologists, is a winter synoptic storm with an explosive character that hit Western Europe, the first of two storms at the end of December 1999 in Europe. Its average winds reached up to 115 km/h inland (Orly), but with gusts exceeding 150 km/h, almost equivalent to a Category 2 hurricane, devastated northern France, Switzerland, and Germany on December 26, 1999.[1] It caused significant damage, especially to forests, with gusts reaching 180 km/h in the plains at Saint-Sylvain and up to 259 km/h (on Mount Wendelstein in the Bavarian Prealps)[2] and 272 km/h (on Mount Hohentwiel north of Lake Constance in Baden-Württemberg)[3] at altitude according to sources.

Storm Lothar

Lothar moved at 100 km/h along a Brittany (around 4 a.m.) - Lorraine (around 9 a.m.) - Alsace (11 a.m.) axis with a front measuring 150 km wide.[1]

This explosive system was not a hurricane (tropical cyclone), although some call it by that name, but an exceptionally intense explosive mid-latitude cyclone for Europe.[4][5] It was followed the next day by a second storm named Martin, which severely affected southern France, Spain, and northern Italy.

Meteorological situation

edit

From December 26 to 28, 1999, the extra-tropical cyclones Lothar and Martin affected Western Europe. From December 20, 1999, the Iceland depression strengthened and created a strong temperature contrast along a polar front across the Atlantic. Meanwhile, a high-pressure system covered Central and Eastern Europe. On December 24, 1999, the high-pressure system shifted eastward, allowing the frontal zone to move into Europe. Along this front, a first depression, named Kurt, affected Western Europe.[6]

Late on December 24, a wave in the circulation developed in the lower troposphere south of Nova Scotia along the same frontal zone. It quickly moved eastward while strengthening, aided by a favorable environment where a sustained supply of polar cold air and warm, humid subtropical air met. On December 25, the wave became a depression with a central pressure of 995 hPa.[6] According to European tradition, the Meteorological Institute of the Free University of Berlin gave a name to the winter depressions, and in this case, it was "Lothar".[citation needed]

Lothar moved rapidly, pushed by a strong jet stream on the morning of December 26, at a speed close to 130 km/h.[5] It reached a central pressure of 985 hPa about 300 km south of Ireland. As it approached the northwest coast of France, the storm slowed to 97 km/h before beginning a rapid intensification phase. The central pressure dropped by 32 hPa in 8 hours, falling to 960 hPa during the storm's passage over Paris, which corresponds to the definition of a meteorological bomb.[7][6] Its deepening intensified on land due to strong interaction with the high-altitude jet stream, which was close to 400 km/h at 9,000 m altitude.[5][7]

Lothar was extremely intense and only 300 km in diameter, much smaller than the typical diameter for a mid-latitude depression.[5] Its rapid intensification generated an internal pressure gradient comparable to what is observed in Category 2 hurricanes. Exceptionally strong winds were recorded in an area 150 km south of the depression's center.[5]

Before Lothar dissipated, a new disturbance formed near where Lothar had formed. This storm, called Martin, followed a path 200 km south of Lothar and reached its recorded minimum pressure of 964 hPa. Its winds were at maximum intensity as it approached the French coast on the evening of December 27, comparable to those of Lothar: 190 km/h on the coasts and 158 km/h inland.[5]

Forecast

edit

After the problems of the great storm of 1987, European meteorological services greatly improved their numerical weather prediction models, and Météo-France predicted Lothar. The numerical prediction guides for Lothar were mediocre due to the extreme atmospheric instability. Some forecasts predicted the front passing over the UK, while others did not even signal a possible intensification of the depression and associated winds.[5]

However, the intensity of the jet stream had been predicted nine days earlier by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), and French meteorologists, using models as well as exceptional temperature and pressure variations, were able to issue a weather alert with 24 hours notice and worked closely with civil defense services.[5] Nevertheless, wind speed forecasts were only 90 to 130 km/h instead of the observed speeds between 125 and 175 km/h. After the storm, forecasters wondered if additional coastal data could have improved predictions or if the dramatic development of this storm exceeded the capabilities of operational numerical weather prediction models.[5]

Gaps in the dissemination of this alert, and that for Martin less than two days later, led to the establishment of Météo-France's meteorological vigilance program on October 1, 2001, to better reach the public.

On the other hand, the German meteorological services were criticized for not issuing warnings for Lothar.[citation needed]

Recorded gusts

edit

According to the meteorological services of the countries mentioned:

Records of the winds during the Lothar storm in France in descending order.[8][9][10][11]
Country Location Speed
France Saint-Sylvain 180 km/h
France Orly, Saint-Brieuc, Solenzara 173 km/h
France Paris (Montsouris), Nangis, Toussus-le-Noble 169 km/h
France Alençon, Melun 166 km/h
France Île de Groix, Magnanville (Yvelines) 162 km/h
France Brétigny-sur-Orge, Dinard, Saint-Dizier 158 km/h
France Colmar (Meyenheim), Nancy-Ochey 155 km/h
France Caen, Orléans, Reims, Villacoublay 151 km/h
France Le Bourget, Ploumanach, Troyes 148 km/h
France Chartres, Nancy (Essey), Roissy, Strasbourg 144 km/h
France Évreux, Rouen, Langres 140 km/h
France Beauvais 137 km/h
France Auxerre, Épinal, Laval, Metz (Frescaty), Trappes 133 km/h
France Bâle-Mulhouse, Blois, Lons-le-Saunier, Lorient, Tours 130 km/h
France Châteauroux, Dijon, Le Mans, Luxeuil-les-Bains, Nantes, Rennes 126 km/h
France Avord, Bourges, Brest, Quimper 122 km/h
France Angers, Niort, Poitiers, Saint-Quentin, Vannes 119 km/h
France Avallon, Nevers 115 km/h
France Clermont-Ferrand, Dieppe, La Roche-sur-Yon 112 km/h
France Besançon, Mâcon 108 km/h
France Amiens, La Rochelle 104 km/h
France Bordeaux, Cognac, Lyon-Bron, Romorantin 101 km/h
Records of the winds during the Lothar storm in Germany in descending order.[2]
Country Location Speed Comments
Germany Hohentwiel 272 km/h
Germany Wendelstein 259 km/h
Germany Feldberg 212 km/h At an altitude of 1,493 meters
Germany Zugspitze 198 km/h At an altitude of 2,962 meters
Germany Weinbiet 184 km/h
Germany Fichtelberg, Hohenpeißenberg 173 km/h
Germany Großer Arber 162 km/h At an altitude of 1,456 meters
Germany Klippeneck 155 km/h
Germany Karlsruhe 151 km/h
Germany Lahr, Stuttgart 144 km/h
Germany Fribourg-en-Brisgau, Sarrebruck, Augsbourg 130 km/h
Germany Straubing 126 km/h
Germany Freudenstadt, Hambourg-Harbourg, Öhringen 122 km/h
Germany Zinnwald-Georgenfeld, Fürstenzell, Weißenburg 119 km/h
Germany Chemnitz, Wurtzbourg 115 km/h
Germany Deuselbach 112 km/h
Germany Trèves 108 km/h
Germany Gelbelsee, Schleiz 104 km/h
Germany Nuremberg 101 km/h
Records of the wings during the Lothar storm in Switzerland in descending order.[12]
Country Location Speed Comments
Switzerland Säntis 229 km/h
Switzerland Hörnli 208,1 km/h
Switzerland Gornergrat 203,4 km/h
Switzerland La Dôle 201,2 km/h
Switzerland Jungfraujoch 199,4 km/h
Switzerland Le Moléson 193,7 km/h
Switzerland Titlis 185,8 km/h
Switzerland Gütsch (Andermatt) 185,8 km/h
Switzerland Les Diablerets 184 km/h At an altitude of 2,996 meters.
Switzerland Chasseral 177,5 km/h
Switzerland Schaffhouse 162 km/h
Switzerland Zurich / Fluntern 157,7 km/h
Switzerland La Brévine 157 km/h
Switzerland Bâle / Binningen 147,2 km/h
Switzerland Lucerne 141,5 km/h
Switzerland Berne 135 km/h
Switzerland La Chaux-de-Fonds 134,6 km/h
Switzerland Neuchâtel 115,2 km/h
Switzerland Genève 103,7 km/h

Damage

edit
According to insurers and authorities of the countries, 110 victims were counted, including[7]
Nationality Deaths
France[13] 53
Switzerland 29
Germany[13] 17
  • Economic losses were estimated at 5.9 billion euros (1999).[7]
  • Trees knocked down:[14][15]
    • Baden-Württemberg in Germany: 25 million cubic meters.
    • France: There is no separation of damage between the Martin and Lothar storms that occurred in late December 1999. Reports indicate 115 to 140 million cubic meters of wood knocked down in total for both systems, equivalent to an uninterrupted train convoy from Oslo to Gibraltar.
    • Switzerland: 13 million cubic meters of wood.

This storm is the strongest ever recorded in Europe since reliable meteorological records exist.[16] Prior to this, the first apparently comparable event would be the Great Storm of 1703, which occurred on December 7 and 8, 1703, in Brittany and southern England (with over 8,500 victims).[17]

Post-Lothar

edit

The Schliffkopf region in the Black Forest is located in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is known for its forests and groundwater reservoirs and has been a protected nature reserve since 1938.

At the end of June 2003, a 800 m long observation trail called the "Lotharpfad" was opened on the site. The Lothar storm, with hurricane-force winds reaching 272 km/h on Mount Hohentwiel north of Lake Constance, heavily impacted the region in 1999, and visitors to this observation trail can discover nearly 10 hectares (100,000 m2) devastated by the storm.[citation needed]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Une situation météorologique exceptionnelle". Tempêtes de décembre 1999. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Bewertung der Orkanwetterlage am 26.12.1999 aus klimatologischer Sicht" (PDF). Deutscher Wetterdienst (in German). Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  3. ^ "Wetterextreme". unwetterzentrale.de (in German). Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  4. ^ "Three extreme storms over Europe in December 1999". Université de Cologne. 2001. Archived from the original on 2012-03-02.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Les tempêtes Lothar et Martin" (PDF). Risk management Solutions (RMS). Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  6. ^ a b c "Lothar - 10 ans après". MétéoSuisse. 2009. Archived from the original on 2014-12-15. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d "Looking Back, Looking Forward: Anatol, Lothar and Martin Ten Years Later". Air-Worldwide. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  8. ^ Baleste, Marie-Claire; Brunet, Hubert; Mougel, Alain. "Les tempêtes exceptionnelles de Noël 1999". Météo-France/ Direction de la Production. Bulletin climatique annuel. ISSN 1159-1056.
  9. ^ "Bulletin climatique" (PDF). Météo-France. 1999. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
  10. ^ "Aspects méthodologiques et historiques des tempêtes et des chablis".
  11. ^ "Lothar le 26 décembre 1999". Météo-France. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  12. ^ "Tempête d'ouest et températures record" (PDF).
  13. ^ a b "Tempête du 26 décembre 1999".
  14. ^ Spicher, Michel (2004). "L'ouragan Lothar, un cataclysme dans le monde forestier". Site officiel du Canton de Fribourg. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  15. ^ Denis, Michel (2004). "Expertise collective suite aux dégâts en forêt lors des tempêtes de décembre 1999". Archived from the original on 2006-02-19.
  16. ^ Hontarrède, M. (2000). "Les tempêtes jumelles de Noël 1999". Revue Met-Mar (187).
  17. ^ Chaboud, R. (1994). La météo, questions de temps (in French). Éditions Nathan. ISBN 9782092605400.