Earth ChangesS


Cloud Precipitation

Flash floods kill 19 in north and central Vietnam - 13 unaccounted for (Update)

Floods in Ba Che district of northern Quang Ninh province
© VNAFloods in Ba Che district of northern Quang Ninh province
Ten people were killed and 12 listed missing as flash floods hit Vietnam's northern and central provinces.

In the northern province of Yen Bai, as of Friday afternoon floods have killed 8 people while 10 are missing and 6 injured, according to provincial leaders.

Floods have also destroyed hundreds of houses, washed away large areas of agriculture and aquaculture farms and isolated multiple communes in the province.

Speaking to VnExpress, Yen Bai's chairman Do Duc Duy said the ongoing flooding is the largest the province has ever recorded, with 6 out of its 9 districts suffering heavily damages.


Comment: Update: Channel News Asia on July 22nd reports:
Flash floods in Vietnam have now claimed at least 19 lives, the government said on Sunday (Jul 22), as residents in affected areas sought safety in higher ground.

Boasting a long coastline, tropical Vietnam is battered by floods and storms every year, with hundreds of lives lost from the annual monsoon barrage.

The remnants of Typhoon Son Tinh, now a tropical depression, made landfall Wednesday night, the third tropical storm to hit Vietnam since the start of the year.

The latest report from the country's disaster office said 19 people have been killed so far, with an additional 13 people unaccounted for.

Floods and landslide from heavy rains have ranged far and wide and impacted rural and urban areas, including the capital Hanoi.



A village damaged by flash flooding in Vietnam's Yen Bai province
© AFP/Anh TUANA village damaged by flash flooding in Vietnam's Yen Bai province
They are expected to continue in the coming days.

State-controlled VNExpress news site reported Saturday that residents in Chuong My district on the outskirts of Hanoi were asked to leave their homes and get to higher ground for fear of heavy floods.

"We must be active in moving our furniture out of homes. From last year's experience, we did not have time to run," a local resident was quoted as saying.

Published photos showed homeowners in plastic raincosts moving bags of goods and livestock.

"My house is in a very low location so I have to move all the rice to higher places," resident Nguyen Duy Dong told VNExpress. "Since the afternoon, we have moved more than one tonne of rice."

The amount of land under seige has also spiked, with more than 15,000 houses damaged or destroyed and more than 110,000 hectares of crops inundated. Several roads have also disappeared under the water.

Source: AFP



Cloud Lightning

Aircraft severely damaged after flying through thunderstorm in Siberia

polar airline storm plane damage
The airline has praised captain Nikolay Starostin and his crew for ensuring the safety of passengers.
Investigation launched into suspected hailstone damage to An-24 twin turboprop - but all 30 on board were unharmed.

The nose of the Antonov aircraft was holed and severely damaged after the plane flew through 'unfavourable weather conditions' en route from Olenyok to Yakutsk in the Sakha Republic - also known as Yakutia.

All on board were safe despite the rough flight.

The airline has praised captain Nikolay Starostin and his crew for ensuring the safety of passengers.

Comment: This isn't the first time this has happened - it's actually becoming an increasingly common occurrence, and everywhere. Our weather is changing and we are completely unprepared: Also check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?


Cow

Ice Age Farmer Report: Euphrates/Iraqi farms shut down, Irish potato shortage

A drought affecting farmers in prime wheat growing country means that this season’s wheat crop is expected to be smaller than previous seasons
A drought affecting farmers in prime wheat growing country means that this season’s wheat crop is expected to be smaller than previous seasons
In what many are seeing as a fulfillment of Revelation 16:12, Iraq has started cutting off water supplies to farmers as the drought around the Euphrates worsens. "Riots, Pitchfolks, & Selfies" are promised as potato shortages in the UK and Ireland. Such stories are echoed worldwide with crop losses & food/fodder shortages...but the media only mocks the situation. Please spread the word. Spread the truth - these are natural cycles, and it's up to us to build anti-fragile communities in order to thrive in the times ahead.


Sources

Snowflake

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Record cold in Australia with huge snowfall and Japan mega-flood update

Mt Hotham ski resort in Australia has posted a 102cm snowbase as the snowfall of the past few days moves up a notch ahead of what looks certain to be an epic powder weekend down under.
Mt Hotham ski resort in Australia has posted a 102cm snowbase as the snowfall of the past few days moves up a notch ahead of what looks certain to be an epic powder weekend down under.
Australia smashing all time cold records throughout the east coast. While not the coldest winter across the entire country, extreme cold and coldest in 60 years with huge snowfalls that have officially opened all ski resorts in Australia. Forecasters called above temperatures in May, but now this Australian super-freeze 2.0 has left them silent. Japan still in chaos as once in 1000 year floods decimated the lower half of the entire country and now summer temperatures are getting into the normally warmest part of the year Late July / August in the Pacific.


Sources

Ice Cube

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Starving shorebirds and unknown stone spheres in the Arctic

A turnstone on a patch on snow in Zackenberg, Greenland.
© Erik ThomsenA turnstone on a patch on snow in Zackenberg, Greenland.
The saga of starving migratory Arctic shorebirds nesting in Greenland continues as 100% snow cover remains on what should be barren ground. Newest reports tell of one meter / three feet of snow at Zackenberg Station where these birds nest.

Also explainable stone spheres similar to those in Costa Rica are in one of the remotest areas of our world that range from twelve to three feet in height / diameter. Perhaps a lost civilization?


Sources

Comment: Global cooling: Excessive spring snowfall results in non-breeding year for shorebirds in north-east Greenland - 1 meter deep snow


Fire

Sweden requests emergency assistance from EU to fight rapidly spreading, uncontrolled wildfires

forest fire  Ljusdal Sweden
© Maja Suslin / TT / NTB ScanpixA forest fire in Ljusdal in Sweden on Tuesday.
Dozens of forest wildfires raged across Sweden Wednesday, prompting Stockholm to ask for emergency EU help to fight the blazes, which broke out during an extreme heatwave in the Nordic region.

The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) said two Italian firefighting aircraft had been sent to assist in badly hit areas of central Sweden, while Norway had dispatched six helicopters.

Norway has suffered from considerable forest fires of its own over the last week, with wildfires in 100 locations in the south last week, some of which were triggered by lightning.

One Norwegian firefighter lost his life responding to the blazes while the country's Home Guard has also been deployed to relieve strained fire services.

But the many forest fires that raged across southern Norway in recent days, particularly on Saturday and Sunday, are now under control or completely extinguished, news agency NTB reported on Wednesday.

Despite that, the Home Guard is still assisting fire services in some areas, VG reports.

Comment: See also: Evacuations ordered in Sweden as wildfires rage as far north as Arctic Circle


Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes claim 17 lives in a day across Odisha, India

lightning
© PTI
The first incident was reported from Barunagadia where lightning struck two youths who were working in the paddy field.

At least 17 persons died in lightning strikes at different places in five districts of the State on Friday. While seven persons have been reported dead in Balasore and five in Mayurbhanj, one death each was reported from Khurda and Kendrapara districts due to lightning.

In Bargarh district, three persons died after being struck by lightning. The places experienced heavy rainfall soon after the lightning struck.

In most of the cases, the mishap took place when the victims were working in paddy fields. Sources said the death toll is considered to be the highest on a day this year after June 8 when 10 persons were killed and eight injured in six districts in the State.Reports from Balasore district indicated that one elderly woman from Singakhunta village under Soro police limits, one each from Sikharpur and Raibania villages under Jaleswar police limits, two from Barunagadia under Basta police limits and one each from Maheswarpur under Sadar police limits and Narayanpur under Baliapal police limits have died after they were struck by lightning.

Cloud Precipitation

12 killed, dozens injured by flash flood in Gansu, China - 6.5 inches of rain in less than 3 hours

Armed police officers rescue a victim of a flash flood on Thursday in Linxia prefecture in China’s northwestern province of Gansu
© VCGArmed police officers rescue a victim of a flash flood on Thursday in Linxia prefecture in China’s northwestern province of Gansu.
Twelve people are confirmed dead and another four are missing in the northwestern province of Gansu after a flash flood battered the area on Wednesday night.

In addition to the dead and missing, another 39 were hospitalized in the worst-hit area of Dongxiang county, local authorities said. Dongxiang and two neighboring counties comprise the Muslim-populated Linxia prefecture in central Gansu.

In Dongxiang alone, the flood forced more than 2,400 people to relocate after their houses, fields and roads were submerged in rising water. By Thursday night, economic losses were estimated at 320 million yuan ($47 million) in the county, which has a population of 300,000, the Linxia government said.


Cow Skull

'Is that Falkor?' Body of rotting shark found on Maine shore

shark maine beach
A strange and disgusting looking sea creature has washed up on a Maine coastline, leading some people to speculate that beach dwelling aliens or even some sort of fantasy flying dog had landed for a spot of sunbathing.

The bizarre animal was photographed by Amy Cesar during a Thursday morning stroll along Higgins Beach. The image soon sparked great media interest, with people taking to social media to ponder what abnormal sea creature it could be.

"Isn't that the flying creature from the 'Neverending Story'?" one person asked.

Meanwhile, another Twitter user labelled the creature a "sort of ocean alien unicorn sea beach thing."

But experts from Marine Mammals of Maine have stepped in to help identify the 600-pound carcass. According to the agency, the rotting remains were actually once a species of shark.

Comment: The death of this basking shark could be natural, but it could also be more ominous:


Map

'Experts' said Cape Town SA's water crisis was due to climate change, turns out they were wrong

Cape Town water crisis drought
Back on March 1st, 2018 we were told this: Cape Town's water crisis shows the reality for cities on the front line of climate change

Today, a scant few months later, thanks to NASA's Earth Observatory, we hear: Cape Town's Reservoirs Rebound

After nearly running dry six months ago, Cape Town's reservoirs have risen dramatically. Rain has poured down on southern Africa on several occasions in recent months. According to Cape Town's Department of Water Affairs, water levels in the city's main reservoirs stood at 55 percent of capacity on July 16, 2018.

Comment: An alternative reason for the water shortage is the fact that Cape Town's water supply has not kept up with population growth, which has grown from 2.4 million in 1995 to 4.3 million in 2018. As one expert argues, financial restraints and political mismanagement were to blame:
Firstly, South Africa's budget planning is myopically short-term. The country has lurched from election cycle to election cycle as both national and local spheres attempt to plug the deep holes in social expenditure and exclusion. Politically, elected office bearers regard this as providing immediate benefits to the poor and in return, expecting electoral rewards at the polls.

Ultimately, the constant election cycles over the five-year period - punctuated mid-term by local government elections - exacerbate this short-term planning. As a result, holding back funds or the reallocation of budgets is simply put on the back burner. It's all about instant gratification from the limited funding options available. [...]

The underperforming domestic economy which largely failed to recover following the global credit crunch has been further dampened by a deteriorating political environment, in which graft and wasteful expenditure further limited available resources.

Add to this the deep debt malaise for both individual citizens and municipalities and once again, the options for critical longer-term delivery becomes limited.