Saharan dust covers the Island

Saharan dust on a car in St Saviour on Wednesday morning (16 March). Picture: Richard Heath (32840332)

CARS and buildings across the Island were left coated in a thin layer of orange dust this morning after particles from a Saharan sandstorm reached the Island.

The phenomenon is being experienced across a large swathe of Europe and especially in Spain, where residents of some cities have been told to use facemasks if venturing outside after air quality was downgraded to ‘extremely unfavourable’. In Madrid, visibility has been reduced to 2½ miles and the sky has turned orange.

But further north, despite a layer of dust appearing on buildings and cars, forecasters say the impact is unlikely to be significant.

Richard Miles, of the UK Met Office, said: ‘Storm Celia over Spain is indeed pulling a dust cloud up from the Sahara, which could potentially reach as far as the south of the UK.

A worker cleans the dust from the Sahara desert at Sol square in Madrid, Spain, Tuesday, March 15, 2022. Spain issued extremely poor air quality ratings for a large swathe of Spain Tuesday, after a mass of hot air from the Sahara dumped loads of dust after crossing the Mediterranean. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez). (32833792)

‘However, we don’t expect significant impacts – the most likely would be on the cloudscapes at sunset, but as conditions are likely to be generally overcast and wet for much of the day this is unlikely to amount to much. There are no air quality warnings.

‘People in the south might find a bit of dust left on their cars as the rain washes it out of the skies today.’

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