Europe | Climate change

Europe’s new-look winter: floods, high sea levels and melting glaciers

People are seeing extreme weather in action, but not voting to stop it

Glaciologists take readings with measuring equipment on the Gries glacier in Switzerland
Photograph: AFP
|The Hague and Riederalp

MARK HARBERS has arguably the most important job in the Netherlands. As minister of infrastructure, he is responsible for making sure the enormous dykes and floodgates meant to protect the country against rising sea levels get built. This winter has made it clear how crucial that job will be. In early January there were high-water alerts all over the country. At Marken, an old fishing village north of Amsterdam, waves lapped just a couple of metres from the top of the dyke—well above the floors of the houses behind it. The Markermeer, part of a bay that splits the northern Netherlands down its middle, reached its highest level ever, 45cm above the national benchmark known as Normal Amsterdam Level.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Floods, droughts and melting glaciers”

From the March 9th 2024 edition

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