Constantine
Arch in Rome damaged by lightning during violent storm
Residents
tell of ‘apocalyptic scenes’ after more than 60mm of rainfall falls on Italian
capital in less than an hour
Lorenzo
Tondo in Palermo
Wed 4 Sep
2024 08.31 EDT
Lightning
has struck the Constantine Arch near the Colosseum in Rome during a violent
thunderstorm, breaking off fragments from the ancient structure, officials have
said.
The
fragments were immediately gathered and secured by workers at the Colosseum
Archeological Park, authorities in the Italian capital said. The extent of the
damage, which occurred on Tuesday, was being evaluated.
“The
recovery work by technicians was timely. Our workers arrived immediately after
the lightning strike. All of the fragments were recovered and secured,” the
park said in a statement.
Rome was hit
by a sudden and powerful storm that dumped more than 60mm of rain in less than
an hour, equivalent to a month’s rainfall in autumn. The city’s mayor, Roberto
Gualtieri, described it as a “downburst”.
A storm with
powerful downward winds was also reported off Sicily on 19 August, when the
luxury yacht Bayesian sank, killing the British tech magnate Mike Lynch and six
others.
After
Tuesday’s rains, Sabrina Alfonsi, Rome’s councillor with responsibility for the
environment, said: “The power of the storm was sudden and was not predicted by
any weather bulletin.”
Residents
have described “apocalyptic scenes”, with flooded subways, squares and streets.
A part of the scaffolding of a grandstand inside the Circus Maximus also
collapsed.
Meteorologists
say record temperatures in the Mediterranean Sea have contributed to the freak
storms that have hit Italy this summer. Sea temperature have reached 30C, three
degrees higher than average, during two months of consecutive heatwaves.
Extreme
rainfall is more common and more intense because of human-caused climate
breakdown since warmer air can hold more water vapour.
Last week,
during another violent storm, lightning struck a building in the Castelverde
area of Rome, causing a fire.
In 2023,
there were 378 extreme climate events in Italy, an increase of 22% on 2022,
according to a report by the environmental agency Legambiente, published last
December, with experts predicting such events will become more frequent and
more intense.
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