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Mon, 08 Nov 2021
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Homes damaged and roads closed as rivers overflow in Bulgaria and Romania

Flooding in Bacau county, Romania, 28 June 2018.
© ISU Bacau
Flooding in Bacau county, Romania, 28 June 2018.
Homes have been flooded and several roads and bridges closed after heavy rain caused rivers to overflow in Bulgaria and Romania.

Bulgaria

Officials in Bulgaria reported earlier today that the provinces of Plovdiv, Pazardjik, Sofia, Smolyan, Bourgas have all been affected. Officials added that, between 28 and 29 June, emergency services responded to 146 calls for assistance due to flooding and storm damage.

In Plovdiv Province evacuation orders were issued for residents living along the Chaya River in Sadovo Municipality, after river embankments had been breached in two locations. Over 50 houses have been flooded in the province and the road between Plovdiv and Haskovo is closed.


Attention

Agung volcano eruption in Indonesia forces closure of international airport, hundreds of flight cancellations

Agung volcano eruption on June 28, 2018.

Agung volcano eruption on June 28, 2018.
Nearly 75,000 travelers have been stranded on the popular resort island after Mount Agung erupted. Volcanic ash can threaten aircraft by causing their engines to "flame out."

Thousands of travelers are stranded on the Indonesian resort island of Bali after a volcanic eruption forced authorities to shut down its main international airport in the early hours of Friday.

Nearly 450 flights have been canceled, affecting more than 75,000 passengers, and the airport will remain closed until 7 p.m. local time (1100 UTC), a spokesman for the disaster mitigation agency said. Airlines that have canceled flights include Air Asia, Jet Star, Qantas and Virgin.


Seismograph

Shallow magnitude 6.1 earthquake strikes off the coast of Jalisco, Mexico

A 6.1 magnitude earthquake has struck off the coast of Mexico
© USGS
A 6.1 magnitude earthquake has struck off the coast of Mexico
An earthquake measuring 6.1 magnitude has struck the Pacific coast of Mexico, the United States Geological Survey has reported.

It hit 55 miles south-west offshore from Cihuatlan, in Jalisco state, around 4.55am BST.

The USGS estimated the depth of the tremor at around six miles.

Luis Felipe Puente, head of the country's Civil Protection agency, said on Twitter that the quake had been felt only lightly and that there were no reports of damage so far.

Sun

Severe drought affecting 40% of Inner Mongolia, China - Plague of rats take over 4 million hectares

Mongolian township.
© Reuters
File photo of a Mongolian township.
Persistent drought in the remote northwestern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia has caused a rat plague now affecting more than 4 million hectares of grassland, an area the size of the Netherlands, the official Xinhua news agency said.

Rodents are a common problem throughout Inner Mongolia's huge and sprawling prairies, and adapt relatively well to dry weather.

Comment: This follows extremely harsh winters in Inner Mongolia which have resulted in mass deaths of cattle. And we're seeing similar erratic patterns all over the planet so, while the overall trend is towards global cooling, there's also an increase in droughts, wildfires, heatwaves, and violent storms bringing increased wave heights, microbursts, deadly hail and epic flooding: Also check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made? as well as SOTTs' monthly documentary: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - May 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs


Bizarro Earth

Rare Texas heat burst sends temperatures soaring to 99 degrees overnight

temp gauge
Two North Texas towns experienced a rarity early Sunday morning: a heat burst that sent temperatures soaring to nearly 100 degrees at a time when temperatures are usually in decline.

The heat burst was observed in the Texas towns of Breckenridge and Eastland, according to the National Weather Service. At the Stephens County Airport just outside Breckenridge, temperatures fell to 85 degrees at 12:15 a.m. CDT, but by 1:35 a.m., it was 99 degrees, and the heat burst was to blame.

"A heat burst occurs when precipitation from a dying thunderstorm evaporates and a strong downdraft accelerates toward the ground," said the NWS. "Air warms and dries as it is compressed near the ground."

In addition to the temperature spike, wind gusts to nearly 50 mph were reported and humidity levels plummeted as low as 13 percent. Five hours later, temperatures were down to the daily low of 80 degrees.

Breckenridge, a town of about 6,000, is located 100 miles west of Fort Worth.

Sun

Water shortage warnings and hosepipe ban as UK heatwave intensifies

People fill their bottles from a water fountain
© Yui Mok/PA
People fill their bottles from a water fountain in Green Park, west London, during the hot weather.

Utilities companies struggling to keep up with demand as billions of extra litres are pumped into system


Utilities companies have warned of potential water shortages across the UK and a hosepipe ban has been introduced in Northern Ireland as temperatures were forecast to remain high over the weekend.

Britain saw the record for the hottest temperature of the year broken for the fourth-consecutive day on Thursday, as the mercury reached 33C in Porthmadog, Wales.

Forecasters expect the heatwave to continue on Saturday and Sunday, when northwest England, northeast Wales, western Scotland and possibly Northern Ireland could hit around 30C.

However, the conditions have left water companies concerned, with some warning potential supply problems could be around the corner after "significantly more" usage than normal in recent days.

Comment: A few months ago the UK experienced the hottest April day for nearly 70 years, which was preceded by up to 4in (10cm) of snow in parts of Scotland, northern England and north Wales and Scotland faced its coldest spring for 39 years. Extreme weather is becoming the new norm!

See also: Heatwaves, storms, wildfires and droughts: Experts issue warnings over extreme weather in Europe this summer


Cloud Precipitation

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Summer snow and floods in Europe, noctilucent 'tornado' cloud and waterspouts

Flooding in West Attica, Greece, June 2018.
© Greece Civil Protection / Fire Service
Flooding in West Attica, Greece, June 2018.
As forecast with the unusual "Winter Storm in Summer" to dump floods on Greece and Italy, oh my, Athens is under six feet of water, other cities, nine feet. More snow across Romania, record cold Slovakia, feet deep hail in Serbia and EF-3 waterspouts off Italian beaches. Noctilucent clouds with a strange blue tornado pattern in the upper atmosphere. Major Typhoon directed at North Korea that will alleviate the drought there. Signs in the Skies.


Comment: See also:


Mars

Heatwaves, storms, wildfires and droughts: Experts issue warnings over extreme weather in Europe this summer

Europe's extrem weather

Europe could be struck with heatwaves, thunderstorms and even droughts this summer. This temperature map shows how hot countries could get over the coming months.
The heatwave cooking Ireland could spread into the rest of Europe, sparking wildfires, thunderstorms and even droughts.

Irish people face temperatures exceeding 31C and it could get even hotter on the continent, with the mercury topping a blistering 38C in the coming months.

Experts at AccuWeather say southern France and northern Italy will experience the most intense heat, raising fears this summer could be even worse than the "Lucifer" heatwave last year.

Temperatures are expected to soar well past 32C in Lyon and Toulouse, France, and the Italian city of Florence and Berlin, Germany.

The Spanish capital of Madrid is expected to reach 35C as early as next week while Athens, in Greece, could get as hot as 34C.

Alarmingly, the likes of Germany, France and the Alps could face the same terrifying fate as Saddleworth Moor in the UK which has been devastated by wildfires since Sunday.

Seismograph

Second quake in 2 days strikes Surrey, UK - M2.4 rattles houses

surrey cricket
An earthquake has rocked Surrey for the second time this week with reports of a house shaking as if "a truck had crashed into it".

Researchers from the British Geological Survey (BGS) said the tremor, with a magnitude of 2.4, struck shortly before 7am in Newdigate near Dorking, at a depth of three miles.

The organisation said it hit in the same area as the 2.6 magnitude quake on Wednesday.

There were reports of "a loud bang and the whole house shook like a truck had crashed into it" for about two seconds, the BGS said.

Classic car parts owner Roy McNeill and his wife Judy, from nearby Beare Green, both felt the effects of the tremor.

Comment: The UK is considered relatively seismically quiet and yet it seems no where is being spared from the dramatic increase in earth movement:


Ice Cube

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Global grain production drops, beer shortages in Europe and Arctic gains ice

chart
The Arctic is still nearly 100% covered with ice, most of it 1.5 feet or thicker with thickness over the North Pole at 13 feet thick. Water temperatures follow suit at below freezing.

CO2 shortages in Europe have led to beer and soft drink rationing amid the world cup, and now the USDA 2081-2019 carry over stocks are forecast at a decline of 40 MILLION tons over today's totals, that seems to be conservative as well. This should be front page news, along with no sea level rise and Greenland gaining ice.

But its all about the World Cup.


Sources