![]() Satellite imagery showing the storm front as it hit the Western Cape from before the storm hit on 5 June to the day the storm made landfall on the 7th to the day after on 8 June. The small red dots between Knysna and Port Elizabeth represent fires and thermal anomalies that spread in the wake of the storm. | |
Type | Extratropical cyclone, Winter storm |
---|---|
Formed | June 3 2017 |
Dissipated | June 8 2017 |
Highest winds |
|
Highest gust | 75 mph (120 km/h) |
Lowest pressure | 997 mb (29.44 inHg) |
Fatalities | 8 (storm) 7 (Knysna fires) 15 total deaths |
Damage | R4-5 billion(in 2017 money) |
Areas affected | Western Cape, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape |
An unusually large south Atlantic storm struck the southern coast of South Africa on 7 June 2017 with wind speeds as high as 120 km/h. [1] Wave heights of 9–12 metres were recorded between Cape Columbine and Cape Agulhas. [2] The storm directly caused eight deaths and damaged 135 schools across the Western Cape. Around 800 homes were flooded across the city of Cape Town due to the storm. [3]
Despite dropping up to 50 mm of rain, the storm did not break the Cape Town water crisis affecting the region. [4]
High winds of 50 km/h caused by the storm fueled around 20 to 30 significant fires that swept through the town of Knysna and surrounding areas in the days after the storm. [5] The fires killed seven people [6] and displaced around 10,000 [7] [8] with around 600 structures in Knysna and Plettenberg Bay being destroyed. [6]
The fires were notable for involving the largest deployment of firefighters in South Africa to that date. A total of 985 firefighters along with 78 vehicles, ten helicopters, and two fixed winged aircraft were used in combating the fire between 6 June and 10 June 2017. [6] It is estimated that the fires caused between R4 billion and R5 billion (around US$297 million to US$372 million) in damages to private property with an additional R136 million worth of damage done to public infrastructure. [6]
Unofficial preliminary conjecture suggested that some of the fires might have been lit by arsonists. [9]
However, it was later found that the fires started as a result of lightning. Forensic scientist Dr David Klatzow ruled out arson as the cause of the Knysna fires which killed seven people and left many homeless. [10]
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