stormfloder
Stormfloder, or storm floods, are coastal inundations caused by a combination of strong winds, low atmospheric pressure, storm surge, high tides, and heavy rainfall that push seawater inland along coastlines and estuaries. They primarily threaten low-lying coastal regions and can extend farther inland where land is flat or urbanized.
Stormfloder form when a cyclone-strength low-pressure system moves over or near the coast, driving onshore winds
Impacts include inundation of streets and buildings, damage to infrastructure such as roads, railways, and power
Monitoring relies on tide gauges, buoys, weather radar, and numerical models forecasting surge height and arrival
Historical events illustrate the danger. The North Sea flood of 1953 is among the most severe storm