Earth ChangesS


House

Suspected gas leak in Italy completely destroys apartment, 5 killed

Italy explosion
© Luca Zennaro/ANSA via APFirefighters work on the rubbles of a collapsed building after an explosion blamed on a gas leak has killed five people in the apartment building in Arnasco, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 16, 2016.
An explosion blamed on a gas leak has killed five people in the apartment building where they lived in northwest Italy.

Firefighters say they removed the bodies of four men and a woman from the collapsed building in Arnasco, near Savona, after the pre-dawn blast Saturday. A woman who survived was severely burned.

Arnasco Mayor Alfredo Gallizia says the four-story building, where three families lived, was "saturated with gas and everything came down."

The cause of the gas leak is being investigated.

Comment: There seems to have been an increase in the number of massive house explosions around the world in recent months, with investigators still attempting to determine the cause in many cases. Could a 'cosmic' source of ignition be responsible for some of these incidents?


Cloud Precipitation

150,000 affected by flooding in Paraná State, Brazil

 flood damage in Paraná state, Brazil
Flood damage in Paraná state, Brazil
The civil defence authority in the Brazilian state of Paraná, Defesa Civil do Paraná, report that heavy rain between 09 and 12 January, 2016, has caused widespread flooding in 49 municipalities of the state. The heavy rain has also caused several landslides in 5 municipalities.

According to latest figures, the floods have affected over 150,000 people, and forced over 2,000 to evacuate their homes. Five people have been injured and one is missing.

Defesa Civil do Paraná say that 74 homes have been completely destroyed, leaving 198 people homeless. A further 10,057 homes have been damaged.

A landslide in Campo Largo affected 405 people and displaced five. Landslides were also reported in Campina Grande do Sul, Fazenda Rio Grande, Santana do Itararé and Ponta Grossa.



Sun

7,000 cattle dead due to drought in Zimbabwe

Livestock are dying in Zimbabwe
Livestock are dying in Zimbabwe
Severe water shortages are also affecting the Midlands and Matabeleland South.

As South Africa shoulders its own major water crisis, other countries in the region haven't been spared the hardships of the El Niño-induced drought.

In Zimbabwe, reports say around 7,000 cattle have died in its southern provinces.

The worst hit areas are in the south of the country, nearest to South Africa.

The Chronicle says that Masvingo province is the hardest hit, with around 5,000 cattle reported to have died there since temperatures went up in October.

Sun

South Africa suffered its driest year on record in 2015, threatening food security

South Africa drought
© Reuters/Siphiwe Sibeko
South Africa's national weather service has announced that the country is experiencing the lowest rainfall and driest summer in more than 110 years. Adding that the country suffered its driest year on record in 2015, threatening food security.

According to the weather service, average rainfall was 403 mm, about a third less than the 608 mm annual average and the driest since records began in 1904.

The agricultural sector is being hammered by weeks of heat waves that have scorched grazing land, forcing livestock owners to kill or sell animals.

The rural farming town last saw rain on December 15 and has had a severe water shortage for the past three months, with residents having to queue for water. Large parts of the country are facing their worst drought and highest temperatures in decades.

Africa's most advanced economy, a maize exporter, may need to import as much as 5 million tonnes this year, roughly half of its requirements.

A farmer in the maize-producing town of Hoopstad,Chris Skoenwinkle said they are two months late in planting.

Agricultural analysts said the cost of maize imports to make up for lack of crops will be a big burden.

"We've got to import about, in the vicinity of about four million tonnes of maize if it doesn't rain and the rain just stays away. That means we will have to import about 12 billion rands worth of maize," said agricultural economist Ernst Janovsky.

Comment: Warning: Global food crisis early 2016, predicts aid agencies


Fish

Record lows recorded for six California river fish species - corporate plundering of water resources blamed

fish dying california
© California Dept. of Fish and WildlifeFish species ranging from endangered Delta Smelt to Striped Bass continued to plummet to record low population levels in 2015 in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, according to the annual fall survey report released on December 18 by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Only 6 Delta Smelt, an endangered species that once numbered in the millions and was the most abundant fish in the Delta, were collected at the index stations in the estuary this fall. The 2015 index (7), a relative number of abundance, "is the lowest in history," said Sara Finstad, an environmental scientist for the CDFW's Bay Delta Region.

The Delta Smelt, a 2 to 3 inch fish found only in the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary, is an indicator species that demonstrates the health of the Delta, an estuary that has been dramatically impacted by water exports to corporate agribusiness interests and Southern California water agencies during the record drought, along with other factors including increasing water toxicity and invasive species.

The Fall Midwater Trawl Survey, used to index the fall abundance of pelagic (open water) fishes most years since 1967, conducts monthly surveys from September through December. The 2015 sampling season was completed on December 11.

"In September, the only Delta Smelt collected were from index stations in the lower Sacramento River," said Finstad. "In October the only Delta smelt collected came from a non-index station in the Sacramento Deep Water Shipping Channel."

In November, no Delta Smelt were collected - and in December, the only Delta Smelt collected were from index stations in Montezuma Slough and the lower Sacramento River, according to Finstad.

Comment: Once again, corporate greed trumps all other concerns.


Cloud Precipitation

Hailstorms blanket parts of Saudi Arabia white

Snow on the road to Mecca
Snow on the road to Mecca
Al Jazeera confirms snow in Saudi Arabia. January 15, 2016

Video .. snow coats the migration route.

(One part of the Al Jazeera story says snow, a different part says hail. I'm guessing hail, but it still must have been a real shock to the drivers.)


Question

Strange sounds heard in Singapore, Hungary and California

Sky trumpets or the Trumpets of the imminent apocalypse.
Sky trumpets or the Trumpets of the imminent apocalypse.
These three videos of strange sounds from the sky were captured in January 2016 around the world.

The strange sky trumpets were recorded in Singapore, Budapest and California. What's going on?

Strange sounds heard in Singapore at night on January 13, 2016


Strange sound from the sky on January 9, 2016, in Budapest, Hungary


Comment: See also: SOTT Exclusive: Strange sounds are back: 'Sky trumpets' heard in the Netherlands, the UK and Morocco

Eerie unexplained noises emanating from the sky heard in Singapore


Question

Eerie unexplained noises emanating from the sky heard in Singapore

Singapore
Singapore
Yahoo news shared a video posted by Youtuber Muhammad Luqman Mohamad Hakim on 2 January 2016, and captioned it:
"A Singapore resident recently captured footage featuring bizarre unexplained noises coming from the sky on January 2nd, 2016. According to him, the sounds were heard for almost 2 hours. Can you explain it?"

There is another video uploaded in Youtube, 2 days ago by Richard Ong and he titles his video, "Strange Sounds Heard in Singapore Night Sky - 13 Jan 2016". The eerie noise in his video sounds like a trumpet.


Comment: See also: SOTT Exclusive: Strange sounds are back: 'Sky trumpets' heard in the Netherlands, the UK and Morocco


Attention

Dead humpback whale found in northwest Mexico

Juvenile humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) Ensenada,
© EFE/PROFEPAAn official with the Profepa federal environmental protection agency inspects the carcass of a juvenile humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) that washed up on a beach north of Ensenada, a resort city in the northwestern Mexican state of Baja California, on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016.
Inspectors examined the carcass of a whale that washed up on a beach north of Ensenada, a resort city in the northwestern state of Baja California, Mexico's Profepa federal environmental protection agency said.

The dead marine mammal was a juvenile humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae), a protected species in Mexico.

Profepa inspectors examined the whale's carcass and determined that fishing nets and human activities did not cause the whale's death.

The inspectors were unable to obtain tissue samples due to the animal's advanced state of decomposition, making it difficult to determine the reason why the whale beached itself and died.

Attention

Mount Egon volcano rattles Flores Island, Indonesia

Volcano on Flores island
Evacuation ordered as volcano on Flores rumbles to life
Residents living around the base of Indonesia's Mount Egon were ordered to evacuate as the Flores Island volcano began to rumble because of rising magma.

A 2-mile exclusion zone was established around the 4,487-foot volcano, which last erupted in 2008, forcing more than 10,000 people to flee.

Egon is the only one of six volcanoes in Indonesia currently on an alert level of 3 or 4 that is not currently erupting.

The vast archipelago has 127 active volcanoes, more than any other country on the planet.