Moscow records heaviest snowfall in over 200 years

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A pedestrian crossing a street that is being used for temporary snow storage in central Moscow on Jan 29.

A pedestrian crossing a street that is being used for temporary snow storage in central Moscow on Jan 29.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • Moscow experienced its highest snowfall in 203 years this January, with almost 92 mm of precipitation recorded by the 29th.
  • Heavy snowfall caused commuter train delays and traffic jams, with snow piles reaching 60 cm in some areas of the capital.
  • The record snowfall resulted from "deep and extensive cyclones", while Russia's Kamchatka region also declared an emergency due to snowstorms.

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MOSCOW - Russia’s capital Moscow has this month seen the largest snowfall in more than 200 years, Moscow State University meteorologists said on Jan 29.

AFP images from the city of around 13 million people showed residents struggling to make their way through heavy piles of snow on the streets in its central district.

Commuter trains in the Moscow area were delayed, AFP reporters witnessed, and cars were stuck in long traffic jams on the evening of Jan 29.

“January was a cold and unusually snowy month in Moscow,” the university said on social media.

“By Jan 29, the Moscow State University Meteorological Observatory had recorded almost 92mm of precipitation, which is already the highest value in the last 203 years,” it added.

Snow piles on the ground reached as high as 60 centimetres in some parts of the capital on Jan 29.

Snow is mostly air, meaning the level of settled snow far surpasses scientific measurements of precipitation – which measures the amount of water that has fallen.

The record snowfall was “caused by deep and extensive cyclones with sharp atmospheric fronts passing over the Moscow region”, the observatory said.

“There was much more (snow) when I was a kid, but now we practically don’t have any snow at all, there used to be much more,” Pavel, a 35-year-old bartender and Moscow resident, told AFP, grumbling about a feeling of “emptiness” in the dark, snowy winter.

Earlier this month, Russia’s far east Kamchatka region declared an emergency situation due to a massive snowstorm that left its major city partially paralysed.

Images, widely circulated online, showed huge snow piles reaching up to the second storey of buildings and people digging their way through roads as snow blanketed cars on either side. AFP

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