06 December 2023,byJan de Boer
It’s the hope ofthe child in all of us to see the snow start to fall onChristmas Day. Now, an expert from MeteoNews has made his prediction as to whether Switzerland and its cities will get a white Christmas this year or have to keep on dreaming. Here’s what he had to say:
Switzerland blanketed in snow over thelast week
In the last week, people across Swiss cities and cantons have been treated to frigid temperatures and heavy snowfall. While Swiss public transport, airports and roads have not been as badly affected as neighbouring Germany - bara few delayed and cancelled flightsat Zurich Airport - low altitude areas of the country likeZurich have seen26 centimetres of snowfall and temperatures of minus 12,9 degrees celsius.
The bumper crop of snow has also been a boon for ski resorts, with thousands reported to have hit the slopes in recent days. Withthe Advent season starting with a blanket of snow, hopes have now turned to whether the weather in Switzerland will offer a dusting of snow to make Christmas Day all the more special.
Will Swiss cities get snow on Christmas Day?
Speaking to Blick, MeteoNews’ Roger Perret said that while there is still hope for snow on Christmas Day in Switzerland, it will not be a certainty. “From tomorrow there will be a continuous thaw, that is, maximum temperatures above zerodegrees. From around Sunday, it will probably be quite mild again…The snow is starting to become rare. The start of next week should be largely snow-free on the lowlands, and it will probably rain often,” he forecast.
He explained that the weather is extremely changeable at the moment, which means it remains achallenge to give a concrete “yes” or “no” to snow on or aroundChristmas Day. While it is fairly certain that ski resorts and areas of the mountains will have a white Christmas, the jury will be out on Swiss cities until much closer to the day. “Just because it snowed at the beginning of December doesn’t mean it won’t snow at Christmas,” Perret assured.
White Christmases are unlikely but not impossible, says expert
However, themeteorologist explainedthat a white Christmas has become increasingly rarein the lowlands of Switzerland in recent years. Indeed, the last full white Christmas - defined as when Christmas Eve, Day and Boxing Day areall snowy -in Zurich was in 2003. It has also been quite a whileinBern (2008), Lucerne (2010), and St. Gallen(2017), whileBasel and Geneva haven’t had a full white Christmas since 1986!
“Winters are getting milder and there is less and less snow. Global warming is pushing the snowfall limit upwards, so many regions in the lowlands remain snowless in the same weather situation, where there was snow before,”Perret explained. However, in a nugget of hope for snow-lovers, he concluded that “a white Christmas is unlikely, but not impossible.”
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