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Wed, 27 Oct 2021
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Sinkhole closes Wellington street

Sinkhole, NZ
© CHRIS SKELTON/Fairfax NZ
THE HOLE PICTURE: Workers making the scene of a sinkhole in Wellington safe by covering it and installing fences.

Part of a street in central Wellington has been closed off after a sinkhole opened in the road.

A section of Hobson St in Thorndon is expected to remain cordoned off until at least Monday, after the three-metre square sinkhole was discovered.

Wellington City Council did not believe it was caused by the earthquake but said the collapse of a stormwater drain was the likely explanation.

"It might be the result of a broken stormwater pipe, that's basically collapsed by the sounds of it," council spokesman Richard MacLean said.

"It looks like we're going to close the street to through traffic until Monday."

It was likely the stormwater pipe had eroded over time, and the road had collapsed after the pipe below gave way.

It would not cause water problems for local residents even if it rained, because council would drain water away using other methods.

A Wellington Free spokesnab said the road closure would not affect callouts. Ambulances could still get in and out via Davis St.

Cloud Lightning

Tornado hits Guangzhou, storms leave thousands homeless

At least 22 people were killed in Guangdong Province and 7 are missing due to the floods that struck the province in the aftermath of Typhoon Utor, BBC News reports.

At least 105 have been killed nationwide after Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang were also hit with floods.

According to GD Chinanews, at least 4.9 billion yuan worth of damage has been done in the province, over 51,000 people have been forced to evacuate their homes, and 19,000 homes have been destroyed.

Tornado in China
© Sina Weibo
This image was snapped in Meizhou on Aug. 17

Arrow Down

Spot the error. The IPCC can't

Leaked reports of the Fifth IPCC Report, due next month, say the IPCC experts are now 95% sure that human activities and emissions are the main cause of global warming since the 1950s.[1]

The same IPCC experts remain 100% sure that the Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas are homes to tropical forests, and that they have been since 1995.

But given a doubling of global CO2, they expect the central US tropical forest belt to shift eastwards to Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois, even stretching east to Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
World Map
© tthomas061.wordpress.com
Looking at my own part of the world, I see that the IPCC has Papua-New Guinea, Indonesia and the Philippines currently covered in savannas, dry forests and woodlands. But with global CO2 doubling, the prairies of south-east Asia will surge northwards to Malaysia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, even southern China.

India, as in the map below, acquires tropical forests through about 70% of its area. For some reason, the IPCC's tropical forest belt of northern Australia (most Aussies believe it is gum-tree land) advances south by about 1000km, such that tourists towns like Cairns and Townsville become surrounded by Congo-like vegetation, suitable for imported bonobos and, maybe, okapi.

Bizarro Earth

Japanese volcano produces largest eruption in nearly a century

Sakurajima Volcano
© Thinkstock
One of the world's most active volcanoes showed its ugly side this weekend, erupting and producing an ash cloud that spread out across one southern Japanese city.

Sakurajima, a volcano that sits in the background of the southern Japanese city of Kagoshima and is known for producing hundreds of small explosions per year, erupted Sunday in one of the volcano's largest explosions in decades and perhaps the largest since an eruption in 1914, burying village homes in feet of ash.

The plume from Sunday's eruption reached 16,500 feet (more than 3 miles) before settling down over homes and businesses in Kagoshima and surrounding areas. The ash caused poor visibility and train delays in the city that sits just 5 miles east of the summit of Sakurajima. Residents who ventured outside were forced to wear dust masks to keep from inhaling deadly volcanic glass shards produced from explosive expansion of bubbles in erupting magma.

Some evidence from a YouTube video of the eruption shows what might be small pyroclastic flows generated from the explosion as well.

Cloud Lightning

2013 is a record low year for U.S. tornadoes

While many climate alarmists still try to tell us that global warming will increase tornadoes, we are in the middle of a tornado drought, and well below normal. Normally we'd see 1221 tornadoes in the USA, so far for 2013, only 716 have been reported.

US tornadoes 2013
© NOAA

Snowflake Cold

Greenland Ice Sheet melt season coming to an end

Greenland melt season
© polarportal.dk
Map of the surface mass balance on Saturday (in mm water equivalent per day).
The surface mass balance was positive Wednesday last week for the first time since melting took off in early June. On Saturday, a big snowfall gave solid push in the positive direction.

On August 14, the surface contribution to the mass balance on the Greenland Ice Sheet was +0.6 gigatons per day. One gigaton (Gt) corresponds to one cubic kilometer of water and the 0.6 Gt on Wednesday is a rather modest contribution in this context. But the surface mass contributions have remained positive since then and on Saturday, a big snowfall over West Greenland gave a positive contribution of 4 Gt. These days mark the beginning of the end of the melt season: The Sun is no longer as high in the sky and climatologically, it is typically in these weeks that the surface budget of the ice sheet changes sign. During the summer, more mass is lost to melting than is gained from snowfall. In winter, it is the other way around, and the transition typically occurs in August.

Comment: Though it sounds as business as usual, the end of the melting season is rather early this year compared to the last decade or two. Check out the sea ice page


Dollar

Military contractors see extreme weather civil unrest as good for business

Tank
© Khlil Mazraawi/ Getty
Of all the business opportunities presented by global warming, Raytheon Company may have found one of the most alarming. The Massachusetts-based defense contractor - which makes everything from communications systems to Tomahawk missiles - thinks that future "security concerns" caused by climate change could mean expanded sales of its military products.

Raytheon, it should be noted, isn't exactly gunning for catastrophic global warming. Quite the opposite, in fact: In February, the company received a "Climate Leadership Award" from the Environmental Protection Agency for publicly reporting and aggressively reducing its greenhouse gas emissions. It's working on renewable energy technologies. And it has publicly warned of significant climate-change-related risks to its business - from things like hurricanes, floods, droughts, and forest fires.

Raytheon anticipates "demand for its military products and services as security concerns may arise...as a result of climate change."

Comment: It is actually global cooling, not warming that is an increasingly likely scenario. See: Global Cooling is Here! Evidence for Predicting Global Cooling for the Next Three Decades. But irrespective of the political agenda surronding the labelling of extreme weather, it is sadly predictable that military contractors are looking at ways they can profit from suffering.


Evil Rays

5.1 Magnitude strikes off Indonesia's North Maluku Province

A 5.1-magnitude quake was registered early on Sunday off Indonesia's North Maluku province, the US Geological Service reported.

According to the service, the quake's epicenter was located 130 kilometers (81 miles) to the northeast from the town of Tobelo in the North Maluku province at the depth of 225 kilometers (140 miles).

There were no reports on casualties or any damages to the infrastructure. Meteorologists did not issue a tsunami warning to the world's sixth largest island.

Indonesia is notorious for its high volcanic and seismic activity, as it sits on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire", where tectonic plates meet.

Cloud Precipitation

Russia's Far East hit by the worst floods in 120 years

Up to 100,000 people may be evacuated from flood-hit regions in Russia's Far East. Water levels at local reservoirs have already reached historic highs, and officials say the floods raging in the area are expected to continue rising even further. Floods are currently affecting over 32,500 locals living in over 5,000 homes. Over 17,000 residents have already left the area over the disaster. Viktor Ishayev, Russia's Minister for the Far East, said that "in the worst-case scenario up to 100,000 people could be evacuated" from the Amur, Khabarovsk and Jewish Autonomous Regions. The water level in the Amur River near Khabarovsk has risen 17 centimeters in one day and now stands at 657 centimeters, the regional office of the Emergency Ministry reported. Authorities fear that by August 25, the water level will reach the seven-meter mark. Dozens of bridges have been swamped by the waters, complicating the evacuation.


Stop

Bears as well as people are evacuated from the worst floods in 120 years in Eastern Russia

More than 20,000 residents were moved as rivers burst their banks with forecasts of worsening flooding later this week.
Image
© NTV
The most serious situation is near Arkhangelovka Village on Tunguska River where water level may rise to ten metres. Work is under way in Khabarovsk on Monday in preparation for a possible flooding of homes and economic facilities, Itar Tass reported.
Two caged bears from the Zelyonaya tourist resort near Blagoveshchensk, in Amur Region, were airlifted to safety they were threatened with drowning. Two weeks after their cage was first flooded, they were moved to high ground 800 metres from the resort with a keeper to care for them, reported RIA Novosti.

However, the main focus was on people's safety after dramatic floods caused by heavy rain which has devastated Amur, Khabarovsk and Jewish Autonomous regions. More than 6000 homes have been hit across these regions. More than 20,000 have been evacuated. Some 140 settlements have suffered from flooding. Other sources said that more than 33,000 live in homes touched by partial flooding. 60 bridges and 200 sections of road are underwater.

'Over the past 24 hours, water level in the Amur River in the area of Khabarovsk rose by 17 cm, reaching a historical maximum of 657 cm on Monday morning,' reported Itar-Tass.