Author: admin

  • The season storm nuts chase bolts of lightning

    This is very extreme weather and cannot be regarded as natural.

    The season storm nuts chase bolts of lightning

    0
    Lightning

    Show of nature … lightning strikes over the Tacking Point lighthouse at Port Macquarie / Pic: Nathan Edwards Source: The Daily Telegraph

    SYDNEY’S storm season is about to strike, with a ferocious four months of intense lightning activity predicted.

    During Sydney‘s lightning season peak last year, about 7500 strikes were recorded in November and December.
    “The season starts in October and goes through to February,” said Michael Tang, a data analyst with Global Position and Tracking Systems.
    Satellite imagery and GPATS data pinpoints the Hills District in northwest Sydney as the city’s lightning hotspot.
    Check out the Australian Lightning Monitor at GPATS website.

    Lightning victim Alex Hall knows what it’s like to be hit by a bolt from the blue after he was struck while rock climbing in the Blue Mountains earlier this year.

    “It was sort of like putting your hand in a power socket … it took a day and a half before I could get back to doing things normally,” the Lindfield 18-year-old said. His advice? “Don’t risk it if there’s any chance of lightning or a storm.”

    Lightning Strike stories:

  • Winter death toll rises as even Africa shivers

    Winter death toll rises as even Africa shivers

    February 8-2.2012

    SOFIA: The toll from Europe’s winter freeze has pushed past 360 after snow- and rain-swollen rivers burst a Bulgarian dam and killed at least eight, while more homeless people perished on frigid city streets.
    Four elderly people drowned in their homes in the south-eastern Bulgarian village of Biser after a nearby dam wall broke, submerging the whole village under 2½ metres of icy water, the interior ministry said.
    Another four people died when their cars were swept from bridges into raging rivers in the same region.

    Advertisement: Story continues below
    Pedestrians stop on a bridge to watch skaters on Prinsengracht canal in Amsterdam, Netherlands.Snap to it … people skate on the Keizersgracht canal in Amsterdam. Cold weather means the Dutch might be able to hold a race on frozen canals for the first time in 15 years. Photo: AP

    ”People are in panic,” the region’s mayor, Mihail Liskov, said as a massive rescue effort was under way. ”Ninety per cent of the village is under water.”
    Two other dams were brimming with water and heavy rains triggered a landslide that derailed a train near the Turkish border.
    Temperatures touched new lows in parts of Europe, including Switzerland, which reported the mercury dipping to minus 35.1 in the eastern Graubuenden canton, and the Czech Republic, where the town of Kvilda recorded a winter low of minus 39.4.
    As has been the case throughout the 10-day cold snap, the homeless have suffered most. Frozen victims have been found in abandoned and unheated homes, fire escapes or makeshift shelters on streets.
    In a bid to save lives, Poland’s homeless shelters have dropped a ban on accepting drunks.
    Across the continent, authorities have reported at least 368 weather-related deaths. In Lithuania, where the temperature has dipped to minus 31, the deaths of 12 more people at the weekend brought the toll to 23.
    In Italy, schools were closed until yesterday in Rome as authorities battled to clean up the city after a rare snowstorm. And Venice’s canals were frozen over in parts. Other regions including Tuscany and Umbria were bracing for fresh snow. Crews were also struggling to restore power to about 60,000 homes across Italy.
    In France, electricity consumption hit a record amid the cold.
    In Bosnia, residents of dozens of hamlets were trapped by continued heavy snowfall, mostly in the eastern region around Srebrenica and Sokolac.
    ”The snow has reached over 1.5 metres, it is still snowing and we have already been blocked for over a month,” said Dzevad Muminovic, who lives in the tiny village of Krusev Do.
    The bitter cold has even crossed into north Africa, where as many as 19 people were killed on Algeria’s snow-slicked roads or in other weather-related accidents. Snow also fell in southern Tunisia for the first time in about 40 years.
    Agence France-Presse

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/weather/winter-death-toll-rises-as-even-africa-shivers-20120207-1r5ld.html#ixzz1ljqjHJrt

  • Perceptions of climate Change (Hansen)

    Perceptions of Climate Change

    by James Hansen et al.

    The greatest barrier to public recognition of human-made climate change is the natural variability of climate. How can a person discern long-term climate change, given the notorious variability of local weather and climate from day to day and year to year?

    This question assumes great practical importance, because of the need for the public to appreciate the significance of human-made global warming. Actions to stem emissions of the gases that cause global warming are unlikely to approach what is needed until the public perceives that human-made climate change is underway and will have unacceptable consequences if effective actions are not taken to slow the climate change. Early recognition of climate change is critical. Stabilizing climate with conditions resembling those of the Holocene, the world in which civilization developed, can only be achieved if rapid reduction of fossil fuel emissions begins soon.

    For whole report 

    NB This is  part of a 13 page report which is why it will not download.

  • US Navy accuses Iram of preparing ‘suicide boats’

    US Navy accuses Iran of preparing ‘suicide boats’

    Updated February 13, 2012 12:44:12

    The commander of United States naval forces in the Gulf says Iran has built up its naval forces in the region and prepared boats that could be used in suicide attacks.

    Iran has made a series of threats in recent weeks to disrupt shipping in the Gulf or strike US forces in retaliation if its oil trade is shut down by sanctions, or if its disputed nuclear program comes under attack.

    At a briefing in Bahrain, Vice Admiral Mark Fox told reporters the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet can prevent Iran from blocking the Strait of Hormuz.

    He says Iran now has 10 small submarines.

    “They have increased the number of submarines… they increased the number of fast attack craft,” said Vice Admiral Fox, who heads the fleet.

    “Some of the small boats have been outfitted with a large warhead that could be used as a suicide explosive device. The Iranians have a large mine inventory.

    “We have watched with interest their development of long-range rockets and short, medium and long-range ballistic missiles and of course … the development of their nuclear program.”

    Military experts say the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet patrolling the Gulf – which always has at least one giant supercarrier accompanied by scores of jets and a fleet of frigates and destroyers – is overwhelmingly more powerful than Iran’s navy.

    But ever since Al Qaeda suicide bombers in a small boat killed 17 sailors on board the destroyer USS Cole in a port in Yemen in 1996, Washington has been wary of the vulnerability of its huge battleships to bomb attacks by small enemy craft.

    Asked whether the US Navy was prepared for an attack or other trouble in the Gulf, Vice Admiral Fox said: “We are very vigilant, we have built a wide range of options to give the president and we are ready… What if it happened tonight? We are ready today.”

    Iranian officials have threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz, the outlet to the Gulf through which nearly all of the Middle East’s oil sails.

    Asked if he took Iran’s threats seriously, Vice Admiral Fox said: “Could they make life extremely difficult for us? Yes they could. If we did nothing and they were able to operate without being inhibited, yeah, they could close it, but I can’t see that we would ever be in that position.”

    He added that diplomacy should be given priority in resolving the tension.

    “So when you hear discussion about all this overheated rhetoric from Iran we really believe that the best way to handle this is with diplomacy… I am absolutely convinced that is the way to go. It is our job to be prepared. We are vigilant.”

    Contacts between the US Navy and Iranian craft in the Gulf region were routine, Vice Admiral Fox said, referring to cases where his sailors helped Iranian ships that were in distress or threatened by pirates.

    Reuters

    Topics:world-politics, iran-islamic-republic-of, united-states

  • Google Oil news

    IEA: Future Sanctions Already Severely Effect Iranian Oil Exports

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 02:37 PM PST

    In the IEA’s monthly Oil Market Report they have said that the European and US trade sanctions designed to impede Iran’s nuclear program could affect far more than the 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) that the EU normally imports.

    The sanctions are not set to come into effect for another 5 months, but already European customers are avoiding Iranian oil and many other countries such as China and India have been sourcing their oil imports from other nations such as Russia, Saudi Arabia and Africa. “Although there are five months…

    Read more…

    You are subscribed to email updates from OilPrice.com Daily News Update
    To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
    Email delivery powered by Google
    Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610
    Reply
    Forward
  • Danger to Nuclear Plants

    News 3 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    Study: Nuclear plant threatens drinking water
    Republican Eagle
    A small tritium leak of 27 gallons from the Prairie Island nuclear plant Feb. 3 resulted in opportune timing for two study groups already scheduled to discuss the effects of tritium on drinking water at a press conference Wednesday.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Japan’s Fukushima reactor may be reheating, operator says
    Herald Sun
    TEMPERATURE readings at one of the crippled Fukushima nuclear reactors rose above Japan’s stringent new safety standard but there was no immediate danger, its operator said today. Tokyo Electric Power said one of three thermometers on the No.2 reactor
    See all stories on this topic »
    America’s Green Enemies – OpEd
    Eurasia Review
    It was good news that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the nation’s first nuclear power plants on February 9th, clearing the way for the construction of two reactors by Southern Company at its Plant Vogtle site near Atlanta, Georgia.
    See all stories on this topic »

     


    Tip: Use quotes (“like this”) around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

    Delete this alert.
    Create another alert.