During the period between June 10 and 12, 2021, the State of Kuwait witnessed a severe sandstorm wave, which caused a significant deterioration in horizontal visibility, amid widespread effects on roads, vehicles and a number of landmarks, as a result of large quantities of dust being pushed by active northwesterly winds, where wind gusts were recorded reaching about 110 km/h in some areas.
During the peak of the situation, the atmosphere turned into a visually almost closed scene, with a sharp decrease in visibility, and the effects of the storm extended to various aspects of daily life and movement in the country.
Roads leading to Sabah Al-Ahmad City have become buried in sand due to the #dust_storm
A citizen: "I'm in a Jeep and I can't go any further... the sand is more than a meter high." #KuwaitDust pic.twitter.com/V8tRZI7VS7
— The Platform (@mnsah_kw) June 13, 2021
The storm began as a result of strong activity of dry northwesterly winds (Al-Bawarih winds), which contributed to stirring up large amounts of dust from southern Iraq along the Tigris and Euphrates basin, before the dust mass moved rapidly towards Kuwait during June 10 and 11, 2021.
As the dry winds continued, the dust clouds expanded to cover large parts of the northern Arabian Gulf, as shown by satellite images that monitored the storm's spread over a wide regional area.
Kuwait pic.twitter.com/FBvZWWr7Rc
— ArabiaWeather - Saudi Arabia (@ArabiaWeatherSA) June 13, 2021
Watch #KuwaitDust today
For the fourth day in a row
May God have mercy on the Muslims. pic.twitter.com/CN4vqH3pk6— Hatem bin Abdulaziz Al-Shubaili (@hatem696) June 14, 2021
The storm led to:
At the height of the storm, the sky turned a brownish-gray color, with a significant decrease in visibility, in a scene described by residents as being more like “daylight gradually disappearing under dust,” as a result of the density of particles suspended in the atmosphere.
Weather experts attribute the strength of this wave to a combination of factors, most notably:
Satellite data showed the storm extended to include Iraq, Kuwait and the northern Gulf, reflecting the strength of the weather system that caused the lifting and transporting of huge amounts of dust in a short period of time.
The June 2021 storm is one of the most prominent dust storms that affected Kuwait, not only because of the density of the dust, but also because of the wind speed that reached about 110 km/h, and the accompanying significant deterioration in visibility and widespread effects on daily life.
Currently, the Kabd road is experiencing a sandstorm. #KuwaitDust
#Bandira pic.twitter.com/Wv7g4h5099— Bendeira Q8 (@BendeiraNewsQ8) June 13, 2021
#Kuwait #KuwaitDust pic.twitter.com/OjulgSlGbd
— Anza Official Snapchat (@ANZH_NEWS) June 13, 2021
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