13 Nov, 2024 @ 21:01
1 min read

School is cancelled across Spain’s Andalucia tomorrow due to severe weather – these are the affected areas

SCHOOLS will close across the majority of Andalucia tomorrow due to the severe weather forecast.

It comes as Malaga saw its red alert along the Costa del Sol, Guadlhorce and Axarquia regions extended until at least 8am on Thursday.

Meanwhile, the majority of of Cadiz and Sevilla and the entirety of Huelva are on an orange-level warning for strong rain tomorrow (Thursday’s warnings from Aemet pictured above).

The Junta de Andalucia announced tonight that ‘all towns on an orange alert in Cadiz, Sevilla and Huelva’ will see classes suspended.

Meanwhile, ALL schools in Malaga province will remain closed tomorrow, continuing the measure that came into force on Wednesday.

In Granada, all schools that were closed today will remain closed on Thursday.

The red alert currently in place across Malaga and the Costa del Sol was tonight extended into Thursday.

According to state weather agency Aemet, the episode of ‘extreme rain’ will last until at least 8am tomorrow.

The areas remaining on the most severe alert are the Costa del Sol, including Malaga city, Guadalhorce and Axarquia areas.

Aemet has warned that more than 200mm of rain could fall per square metre during the red-level alert.

It comes after Director of Aemet’s Malaga branch Jesus Riesco said ‘there is still a lot of water to reach the province’.

He told SUR earlier today: “The heavy rains will continue in the same areas where the red warnings are active.”

The expert said that during the night the risk will move towards the western end of the Costa del Sol and Guadalhorce – although other areas may remain at risk.

They said the evolution of the weather front remained uncertain and could not be predicted with pinpoint accuracy.

The heavy rain will continue to affect the region until at least midday tomorrow, when it is expected to move towards Huelva, Sevilla and Cadiz.

Riesco added: “The dynamics of the DANA has created a surface storm (BFA); as the east wind has accelerated, it has been feeding the rains with humidity from the sea.”

Laurence Dollimore

Laurence Dollimore is a Spanish-speaking, NCTJ-trained journalist with almost a decade’s worth of experience.
The London native has a BA in International Relations from the University of Leeds and and an MA in the same subject from Queen Mary University London.
He earned his gold star diploma in multimedia journalism at the prestigious News Associates in London in 2016, before immediately joining the Olive Press at their offices on the Costa del Sol.
After a five-year stint, Laurence returned to the UK to work as a senior reporter at the Mail Online, where he remained for two years before coming back to the Olive Press as Digital Editor in 2023.
He continues to work for the biggest newspapers in the UK, who hire him to investigate and report on stories in Spain.
These include the Daily Mail, Telegraph, Mail Online, Mail on Sunday and The Sun and Sun Online.
He has broken world exclusives on everything from the Madeleine McCann case to the anti-tourism movement in Tenerife.

GOT A STORY? Contact newsdesk@theolivepress.es or call +34 951 273 575 Twitter: @olivepress

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