A week after severe flooding hit western Europe, devastating Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands, German officials said Thursday they fear the 158 people still missing there may not be found.
The death toll from the floods has risen to at least 205 across the continent, while a total of at least 176 people remain accounted for. Belgium accounts for 32 deaths and 18 missing, according to its national crisis center.
In Germany, the hardest-hit country, entire towns were inundated by water, while train lines and roads were swept away by the flash floods, claiming at least 173 lives.
Germany’s federal disaster relief organization said it was very unlikely that any more survivors would be found. Rescue services have continued to comb through towns ravaged by the floods in search for potential survivors.
The vice president of Germany’s federal agency for technical relief, Sabine Lackner, also told CNN Thursday that she did not expect emergency workers to find anymore survivors.
Photos: Deadly flooding in western Europe
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Two brothers embrace Monday, July 19, in front of their parents’ home, which was destroyed by flooding in Altenahr, Germany.
A damaged road buckles after flooding in Euskirchen, Germany.
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This aerial photo shows a bridge collapsed over the Ahr River in Germany’s Ahrweiler district on Sunday.
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Damage is seen Sunday in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany.
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Homes are damaged in Pepinster, Belgium, on Saturday.
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A resident stands in floodwaters in Rochefort, Belgium, on Saturday.
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Members of the German armed forces search for flood victims in Erftstadt, Germany, on Saturday.
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A resident of Arcen, Netherlands, looks at the rising water of the Meuse River on Saturday.
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Water flows over a square in front of a house in Bischofswiesen, Germany.
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A man stands in front of a destroyed house in Schuld, Germany.
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A water level gauge shows rising waters in Arcen, Netherlands, on Saturday. Dutch officials ordered the evacuation of 10,000 people in the municipality of Venlo, as the Meuse was rising there faster than expected.
Photos: Deadly flooding in western Europe
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This aerial photo shows flooding in Erftstadt, Germany, on Friday.
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A man brushes water and mud out of his flooded house in Ensival, Belgium, on Friday.
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People collect debris in Bad Muenstereifel, Germany.
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The Steinbach dam is seen after flooding near Euskirchen, Germany.
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Firefighters walk past a car that was damaged by flooding in Schuld, Germany.
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People lay sandbags in Roermond, Netherlands, on Friday.
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A woman sorts through clothing at a shelter in Liege, Belgium, on Friday.
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A woman walks up the stairs of her damaged house in Ensival, Belgium.
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A man walks through a flooded part of Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany, on Thursday.
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A regional train sits in floodwaters at the local station in Kordel, Germany.
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People use rafts to evacuate after the Meuse River broke its banks during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium.
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People look at a railway crossing that was destroyed by the flooding in Priorei, Germany.
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Men walk by damaged homes in Schuld, Germany.
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A man surveys what remains of his house in Schuld.
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Water from the Ahr River flows past a damaged bridge in Schuld.
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Evacuees ride a bus in Valkenburg aan de Geul, Netherlands.
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A car floats in the Meuse River during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.
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People walk on a damaged road in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany.
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A resident uses a bucket to remove water from a house cellar in Hagen, Germany.
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A man and woman stand on the stoop of their home as they look at floodwaters in Geulle, Netherlands.
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Houses are damaged by flooding in Insul, Germany, on Thursday.
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A man steps down a ladder in an attempt to cut his boat loose in the Meuse River in Liege, Belgium.
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Caravans and campers are partially submerged in Roermond, Netherlands.
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A destroyed building is seen in a flood-affected area of Schuld, Germany.
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People walk over floodwaters in Stansstad, Switzerland.
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Cars are covered by debris in Hagen, Germany.
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A flood-affected area of Schuld, Germany.
“The search for missing people continues to move forward, but due to the damage scenario and the time that has now passed, there is little hope that missing people will be found at this time,” Lackner said in a statement.
In the city of Koblenz, in the badly hit western German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, police said at least 125 people were now confirmed to have died. ”There are still 155 people unaccounted for,” police spokeswoman Verena Scheurer told CNN Thursday, adding that “therefore, we presume at this stage that the number of deaths could still rise.”
On a visit to the state on Sunday, German chancellor Angela Merkel said the devastation was “surreal,” adding: “I can almost say that the German language doesn’t have words for the devastation.”
At least 47 people have died in Germany’s most populous state of North Rhine-Westphalia, according to a statement by the Interior Ministry. The ministry revised the number down from previously 48 deaths to 47 deaths on Thursday.
The state premier, Armin Laschet, who is also the Conservatives’ candidate to succeed Merkel in the upcoming federal election, said the floods were “a catastrophe of historic proportion” for the state, and called on the world to speed up its efforts to both fight and adapt to climate change.
Max Wilmes, police spokesman in Cologne told CNN Thursday that at least three people in the district of Euskirchen remain unaccounted for. Authorities in Upper Bavaria told CNN Monday that at least one person died following torrential rainfalls over the weekend.
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A man stands in front of a destroyed house after floods caused major damage in Schuld near Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, western Germany, on July 17, 2021.
Experts say freak weather events like the floods and the recent heatwave and wildfires across Canada and the US are a sign of the impacts of climate change.
“We’re at a point where everyone on the planet now has felt the impacts of climate change itself, or at least someone they love or know has. It’s circling in closer and closer,” director at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research Merritt Turetsky told CNN.
In the Netherlands, which has recorded no fatalities, an excellent water management system and better preparation by officials meant the country was able to deal with the floods much better than its German and Belgian neighbors. However, tens of thousands of people still had to be evacuated.
German weather service spokesman Andreas Friedrich, who told CNN a week ago that Germany had “not seen this much rainfall in 100 years” in parts of western Germany, warned that more rain is forecast in some of the flood-ridden areas this weekend.
“Some heavy rains and thunderstorms are expected to hit western Germany over the weekend, particularly on Saturday. However, under no circumstances should we see flash floods we have seen and experienced a week ago,” Friedrich told CNN on Thursday.
“The severe weather will be local and short term, like a normal summer thunderstorm. There could be storms, hailstones or heavy rain for a short time, but we won’t see two days of continuous rain.”
Nadine Schmidt and Frederik Pleitgen reported from Berlin; Barbara Wojazer reported from Paris; Jeevan Ravindran wrote in London.