Moss summarizes Rwandan weather.

Date
May 18, 2021
Type
News (traditional)
Source
Stephen Moss
Non-LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Journalism
Reference

Stephen Moss, "Weatherwatch: how Rwanda’s climate differs from rest of east Africa," The Guardian, May 18, 2021, accessed July 13, 2021

Scribe/Publisher
The Guardian
People
Stephen Moss
Audience
Reading Public
Transcription

Like other parts of equatorial Africa, its climate alters very little month-to-month and season-to-season, with average minimum temperatures in the capital, Kigali, varying by little more than a degree (between 15C and 16.2C), while average daily maxima differ only a little more, from 25.9C to 28.2C.

Rainfall does vary – the winter months (June to August) having just 2-3mm (roughly one-tenth of an inch) of rain, while the period from spring to late autumn (October to April or May) is quite wet. In Kigali, it rains on average between 14 and 18 days a month.

But where Rwanda’s climate does differ from other countries in east Africa is due to its height above sea level. The whole country lies at a higher altitude than virtually anywhere in England: the lowest point, the Rusizi River, is at 950 metres (3,120ft); while the highest, Mount Karisimbi, reaches over 4,500 metres (almost 14,800 ft). This keeps temperatures roughly three to five degrees lower than lowland parts of neighbouring Tanzania.

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