
Photos: floods hit west france, hundreds of homes evacuated
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CHARENTE RIVER RISES SIX METRES ABOVE USUAL LEVELS. MANY DEPARTMENTS REMAIN ON ALERT FOR RIVER FLOODING Several areas in west France were hit hard by flooding over the weekend as a major
river burst its banks. More than 200 people were evacuated from their homes. The Charente hit its ‘peak’ water level on Sunday (December 17) after days of steady rainfall. Both the Charente
and Charente-Maritime departments were hit by flooding, including Saintes, one of the area’s major towns where several streets were inundated. Rainfall in the area has now stopped due to the
COLD, DRY WINDS THAT ARE NOW COVERING MUCH OF FRANCE, however the Charente-Maritime department is still facing a tier-three orange alert over river flooding today (December 18). A number of
other departments, including Charente, are facing tier-two yellow alerts for river flooding. You can keep up to date with these using the official _Météo France_ WEBSITE. HISTORIC TOWN
CENTRE HIT HARD This is the second bout of flooding to happen to the area in a week after rivers in the Dordogne and neighbouring departments burst their banks at the end of last week. READ
MORE: PHOTOS: FLOODS ACROSS SOUTH-WEST FRANCE AS RIVERS BURST BANKS The flooding of the Charente river hit one of the largest towns in the area, Saintes, flooding dozens of streets. One of
the bridges crossing the river in the centre was left completely inaccessible. > La passerelle de Saintes est maintenant inaccessible, l'eau monte > dans la rive gauche
pic.twitter.com/sfEBIJSmBG > — meteo_charente_maritime (@charentes_info) December 16, 2023 The images below show the situation both on the evening of December 17 (the first set of images)
and the day before (the bottom set), showing the evolution of flooding in the town over the weekend. This photo shows a private garden affected by the floods. > Pour la 3eme fois en 30
ans, le jardin est inondé > pic.twitter.com/yJ7DMPJq7u > — meteo_charente_maritime (@charentes_info) December 16, 2023 The caption reads: “For the 3rd time in 30 years, the garden is
flooded.” Emergency service workers set up wooden planks to help evacuate residents from homes: > Crues : la maison d'arrêt de Saintes évacuée, en > Charente-Maritime > ➡️
https://t.co/GCvLPf87C7 pic.twitter.com/iWXAdxhNq0 > — ici (@ici_officiel) December 13, 2023 The river reached levels of 6.09 metres above average, slightly lower than what was recorded
in 2021 (6.19m), which was dubbed as a ‘thirty-year flood’ (one only supposed to happen every 30 years or more). The highest the river has ever reached is 6.84 metres above average, in 1982.
The photos below show the impact when the river was 6m above average on Sunday evening. > #Saintes hier soir avec une côte de 6.00m > pic.twitter.com/M4qHym4oJg > —
meteo_charente_maritime (@charentes_info) December 17, 2023 > #Saintes hier soir avec une côte de 6.00m > pic.twitter.com/6AIjNAvD8X > — meteo_charente_maritime (@charentes_info)
December 17, 2023 The prefect of the Charente-Maritime department said the process of asking for a _état de catastrophe naturelle_ (state of natural catastrophe) declaration in the area will
begin “fairly quickly” to help those most affected. READ MORE: FRANCE’S ‘CATASTROPHE NATURELLE’ INSURANCE SYSTEM: HOW TO CLAIM WHAT WILL THE SITUATION BE OVER CHRISTMAS? No further rain is
expected until at least Thursday (December 21), giving rivers some time to reduce their levels - however this will take time as much of the nearby land is saturated. Many Christmas events
taking place close in the area have been cancelled, and most of those evacuated will be unable to celebrate Christmas at home due to flood damage. Weather experts fear that despite the dry
conditions at the beginning of this week, a return of rain over this weekend could lead multiple areas already affected by flooding this month to face further issues. READ MORE: WILL THE
MILD SPELL COME BACK IN FRANCE FOR CHRISTMAS?