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WEATHER

INTERVIEW: Truck driver freed from Sweden’s snow gridlock after 20 hours

The self-employed truck driver Niclas Nordström was trapped by snow on Sweden's E22 motorway for a full 20 hours on Wednesday and Thursday, in what he told The Local were the worst weather conditions of his 30-year career.

INTERVIEW: Truck driver freed from Sweden's snow gridlock after 20 hours
Traffic trapped at Linderöd, Skåne, on Thursday morning. Photo: Johan Nilsson/ TT

Nordström, who has run his own road freight business since the 1990s, said he had wrongly expected the blocked traffic to have been cleared when he took the E22 on Wednesday, discovering his mistake along with around 1,000 other drivers when he ground to a halt around Linderöd at about 1.45pm. 

“The reason for the jam had happened a long time earlier, so I just assumed the police would have already stopped the traffic and diverted them onto other roads,” the 58-year-old told The Local. “But I didn’t really do much thinking at all. If there had been a bit more quick-thinking going on, this would never have happened. There wouldn’t have been such long queues.”  

Up to 1,000 vehicles were left stranded on the E22 road between Hörby and Kristianstad as a blizzard battered the country, with the Armed Forces dispatched to help people evacuate their cars and deliver food and water to those who were still stuck.

Nordström’s truck only has a so-called day cab, meaning there’s no bed, and he had to sleep sitting upright at the wheel, but he was still in a better situation than those in passenger cars. 

Even so, as he was on his way to Lund in Skåne and then home to Olofström in neighbouring Blekinge county when he got stuck, he had no food or medicine in the truck, and had to rely on the help of others. 

“There were all sorts of people there. I got friendly with a couple from Holland who helped me the next day. I told them I was extremely hungry so they invited me in for coffee and a sandwich.” 

He says he spent the night looking at the website of the Swedish Transport Administration to find out when the road would be opened again.

“And it just kept being pushed forward the whole time. First it was 8 o’clock in the evening, then it was midnight, then it was 2am, and then 2pm the next day.”  

In the end, at about 10am, the Dutchman got help from a local farmer, who cleared a three-metre-wide passageway in the snow, through which they both left the motorway. The two of them then drove down the opposite lane in the wrong direction, flashing their warning lights, until they made it onto a passable road. 

“We both drove out through the opening, both the Dutchman and me. We drove against the traffic so-to-speak, but there was no traffic there so it wasn’t dangerous. It was only because we took our own initiative that we got out. Otherwise we’d still be there.” 

As Nordström mainly drives in the southern counties of Skåne and Blekinge, he has never encountered anything like the snow conditions he came across on Wednesday. 

“I’ve never, ever, ever been in anything like this and I’ve been driving for 30 years. There hasn’t been such bad weather in Skåne since 1979 or whatever it was, when the whole of Skåne was snowed under.” 

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WEATHER

Sweden’s far north just had one of its hottest summers on record

New stats from state weather agency SMHI have revealed that, despite rain, wind and low temperatures in some areas, the far north of Sweden saw record-breaking heat this summer.

Sweden's far north just had one of its hottest summers on record

In Götaland and Svealand – central and southern Sweden, temperatures were roughly the same this summer as they were between 1991 and 2020. 

However, the average summer temperature was hotter further north. In northern Norrland, temperatures were “very warm, or even extreme,” the weather agency said in a statement.

Karesuando, Abisko and Katterjåkk/Riksgränsen weather stations, which have all carried out temperature measurements for over 110 years, all either broke or neared their previous temperature records, set in 1937.

Records were also broken at weather stations which started recording temperatures after 1937, like Nikkaluokta, Naimakka, Tarfala, all in Lappland, and Överkalix-Svartbyn in Norrbotten.

Kiruna saw the second hottest summer since 1937, and Pajala and Luleå, which both started recording temperatures in 1944, saw their hottest summers since 2002.

Despite this, the hottest temperature this summer was reported in Uppsala, where the mercury hit 32 degrees C on June 28th. Ljusnedal in Jämtland saw the coldest summer temperature: just -2.4C on June 7th.

That may sound low, but according to the agency it’s a “very high minimum temperature” for the summer season. The last time a similarly high temperature was measured during the summer was in 2022, when temperatures dropped to -2.2 degrees in Latnivaara in Lappland.

The only tropical days in the country – days where temperatures didn’t drop below 20C – were also recorded in Norrland, on June 24th and 25th.

In other areas of the country, like Norrköping and Gällivare, the summer months were wetter than usual, with the former breaking a record set in 2011. Gällivare saw the third rainiest summer since records began, just behind the summers of 1954 and 1961.

Gladhammar, in eastern Småland, saw the rainiest single summer day, with 88.8mm of rain falling on July 13th.

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