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Snowy Europe cold snap brings transport chaos

Major snowstorm advances on northeastern US
Washington (AFP) Dec 18, 2009 - Northeastern United States from North Carolina to Connecticut was under a winter storm warning Friday, as a major storm system threatens to dump up to 20 inches (half a meter) of snow in the region, weather forecasters said. The storm "track gives a stripe of heavy snowfall from western North Carolina to New York City, impacting major cities including Washington, Baltimore, and Philadelphia with potentially a foot or more of snow," the National Weather Service said. "Winter storm warning remains in effect from midnight Friday (0500 GMT, Saturday) to 6:00 am Sunday (1100 GMT)... heavy snow with accumulations of 10 to 20 inches (25-50 centimeters) through Saturday night," it added. The storm system originated over the Gulf of Mexico putting much of southeastern US under a flood advisory. The rain is turning to snow as the storm tracks northeastward into sub-freezing temperatures.

In Washington and New York City, municipal authorities are under a state of alert and have requested additional snow-removing equipment and salt to cope with the weekend snowstorm. There are no delays at present at major airports in the northeast, but the situation is likely to change late Friday, when the first snowflakes are expected to hit the Washington area, and on Saturday when the storm reaches New York, forecasters said. United Airlines announced the preventive cancellation of several flights from airports along the eastern seaboard on Saturday, and most airports in the northeast are advising passengers to check their flight times well ahead of schedule. Major landing delays are expected at most airports over the weekend. And traffic snarls are predicted on major thoroughfares as the snowstorm coincides with the last shopping weekend before the Christmas holiday.
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Dec 18, 2009
Europe shivered under a snowy pre-Christmas cold snap on Friday that closed airports, caused chaos on the roads and gave some school kids an early start to their holidays.

The Swiss canton of Grisons recorded a record low temperature of minus 32 degrees Celsius (minus 25 degrees Fahrenheit) overnight, and early snow was seen across the continent from the white cliffs of Dover to the Black Sea.

Two of London's airports were closed overnight after heavy snow fell across south and east England, with a score of incoming flights being diverted to other British destinations.

Gatwick and Luton airports were later able to reopen after workers cleared snow from their runways, but forecasters warned of a repeat of the bad weather over the weekend.

More than 1,500 British schools closed early on the last day of term, giving some 500,000 pupils an early start to their Christmas holidays, as between five and 15 centimetres of snow fell in some areas.

Meanwhile, some 3,000 homes in northwest England were left without power.

Queen Elizabeth II's Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, eastern England, where she arrived on Wednesday for the annual Christmas celebrations with the rest of the royal family, was also hit by heavy snowfall.

Hundreds of drivers had to spend the night in their cars in Kent in southeast England, while police in neighbouring Essex reported 180 accidents.

Romania was also hit by a thick blanket of snow that caused major transport problems and led to power blackouts in some areas of the southeastern European country.

Most flights from Bucharest airport were delayed, some by as much as two and a half hours, and many train services from the capital were cancelled.

The winter snows also caused major disruption in Paris, with officials asking airlines to cancel 20 percent of their flights into and out of the main Charles de Gaulle airport until Friday evening.

Flight delays because of the bad weather were up to three hours in Charles de Gaulle and Orly airport, airline officials said.

Nine hundred passengers had to spend the night in the airport after their flights were cancelled on Thursday. Officials said there was no available room in nearby hotels. Travellers were given mattresses, bedclothes and food.

Officials said they expected flights schedules to get back to normal later Friday. Road traffic in Paris was largely unaffected by the snow, but cities and motorways elsewhere faced major disruption.

Transport in the southwestern city of Toulouse ground to a halt for a couple of hours after early morning snow and ice.

Public transport was disrupted in towns in the northern Normandy and Britanny regions, and officials banned trucks from snow-clogged motorways.

French meteorologists warned of more snow and ice over the weekend for most of northern France, the French Alps and the Mediterreanean island of Corsica.

Police in Chateauroux, central France said a homeless man was found dead "probably from the cold" in a local garage on Friday morning. An inquiry has been opened to establish the exact cause of death.

Authorities also said a homeless man died from hypothermia in Val-de-Marne, close to Paris.

The inclement weather also forced France's high-speed TGV trains to travel at slower speeds, causing delays.

In Belgium, dozens of flights were cancelled at Brussels international airport after snow falls and ice on runways. Around 30 outbound flights and 70 incoming flights were cancelled, while dozens more were flagged with delays.

Road traffic, after hundreds of kilometres of jams overnight, had returned to near normal early Friday.

Train services were barely affected by the snowfalls, although rail operator Infrabel warned passengers to take particular care of ice on platforms.

In London, bookmakers William Hill lowered the odds on the capital being covered in snow on Christmas Day next Friday to 9/4, from 8/1 ten days ago.

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Early snow as cold snap hits northwestern Europe
Paris (AFP) Dec 17, 2009
Early winter snows forced French authorities to close the Eiffel Tower on Thursday and disrupted transport as northwest Europe shuddered under a pre-Christmas cold snap. The French capital and much of the north of the country awoke to find a seven-centimetre (three inch) blanket of snow, which delayed flights from Charles de Gaulle airport by up to two hours. The iconic Eiffel Tower was ... read more







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