Earth ChangesS


Boat

Deadly flash floods after 300mm of rain in Cuba

Flood rescue in Cuba, June 2022.
© Government of CubaFlood rescue in Cuba, June 2022.
At least 3 people have died and thousands have been displaced after heavy rainfall caused flash flooding and damage in Cuba.

Cuba Civil Defence reported two fatalities in the province of Havana, as of 03 June 2022. Another fatality was reported in the province of Pinar del Río, where one person was also missing.

Cuba's Institute of Meteorology (INSMET) said that in a 30 hour period from 02 June to 03 June, Paso Real de San Diego in Pinar del Río province recorded 301 mm of rain. San Juan y Martinez, Pinar del Río Province recorded 279 mm; Playa Giron in Matanzas 193 mm; and Santiago de las Vegas in Havana 171 mm during the same period. Heavy rain will continue in the west and centre of the country on 04 June, INSMET said.


Seismograph

Magnitude 6.3 earthquake off Rat Islands, Alaska - 3rd major quake within 11 hours

MAPP
A magnitude 6.3 earthquake was recorded at 3:38 p.m. Saturday about nine miles south of Davidof Island in the western Aleutians. Since that first quake, there have been five additional earthquakes in the area measuring a magnitude 2.9 and higher as of 7 p.m. Saturday.

Stephen Holtkamp, duty seismologist with the Alaska Earthquake Information Center, says this is a pretty typical sequence for this region.

"We can expect the aftershock sequence to continue for a few days," said Holtkamp. He also said there is a low chance, about 3 to 5 percent, of a larger earthquake happening in the same area.

There has been no tsunami risk with these earthquakes. Holtkamp says these earthquakes are too deep to create a tsunami. "In order for a tsunami to be generated, it (an earthquake) needs to move the sea floor up and down," said Holtkamp. "There's 65 miles of rock between where the earthquake happened and the water," Holtkamp said.

Davidof Island is in the Rat Islands. The first quake was recorded 36 miles southeast of Kiska Volcano and 55 miles west of Semisopochnoi Island.

Comment: Details of the other two:


Seismograph

Magnitude 6.2 earthquake - South Pacific Ocean off Tonga

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Strong magnitude 6.2 earthquake at 238 km depth

A magnitude 6.0 earthquake near Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga, was reported only 14 minutes ago by the German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ), considered one of the key international agencies that monitor seismic activity worldwide. The earthquake occurred at an intermediate to considerable depth of 237 km beneath the epicenter early morning on Sunday, June 5th, 2022, at 2:07 am local time. The exact magnitude, epicenter, and depth of the quake might be revised within the next few hours or minutes as seismologists review data and refine their calculations, or as other agencies issue their report.

Seismograph

Shallow magnitude 6.4 earthquake recorded west of Macquarie Island

Magnitude 6.4 earthquake recorded west of Australia’s Macquarie Island  (Getty Images)
© Getty ImagesMagnitude 6.4 earthquake recorded west of Australia’s Macquarie Island
Island was also hit with 6.9 magnitude quake two weeks ago
A magnitude 6.4 earthquake has struck the west of Australia's Macquarie Island.

The island, about 1,600km southeast of Tasmania, felt the earthquake late on Saturday night.

No damage has been reported so far.

The earthquake had a depth of 10km and is believed to have been felt shortly after 11pm.

A 6.9 magnitude earthquake also hit the island two weeks ago, briefly placing Australia on tsunami watch.

Cloud Precipitation

Sri Lanka - 1 dead, hundreds displaced after rain triggers floods and landslides - 7 inches of rainfall in 24 hours

flood
Severe weather including strong winds, lightning and heavy rain has affected parts of Sri Lanka since 29 May 2022. As of 02 June, one person had died, over 600 were evacuated and 20,000 affected.

Sri Lanka's Disaster Management Center (DMC) reported one person died as a result of the severe weather in Rathnapura district, where a total of 3,426 people have been affected, 57 displaced and 74 homes damaged.

Other affected districts included Kegalle, Kandy, Kalutara, Gampaha (11,425 people affected), Colombo (7,023 people affected and 633 displaced) and Matara. A total of 22,338 people were affected, 690 displaced and 174 homes damaged.

In response to flooding in Ratnapura and Kalutara districts, the Sri Lanka Navy deployed 13 relief teams in flood-risk areas in from 01 June 2022, to provide relief to the flood victims and help with evacuations. More recently areas of Galle District have seen flooding, with Navy teams deplayed to Thawalama, Hiniduma, Nagoda and Mapalagama.


Cloud Precipitation

Vineyards destroyed and vehicles stuck on roads due to layer of hail up to 70 cms deep in Croatia

vehicles stuck on the road due to hail
Vehicles stuck on the road due to hail
A strong storm with hail and wind also devastated the Croatian Zagorje on Thursday. The worst was in the villages along the border with Slovenia, where hail the size of a walnut fell. The mayor of Kumrovec described the stormy weather as a catastrophe and explained that huge amounts of hail on the roads in some places completely stopped traffic.

According to locals, the storm in the area of ​​the villages of Kumrovec, Zagorska Sela and Klanjec was so severe that hail completely covered the yards of houses, streets and meadows in just a few minutes. It looked like it was snowing, they add.

Due to the huge amount of hail on the roads, traffic was completely stopped in some places. Mayor of Kumrovec Robert Šplajt he doesn't remember anything like that. "Disaster, disaster! Cars are stuck on the roads. I would go check the situation on the ground, but I can't go anywhere by car," he told the portal yesterday Zagorje international. In some areas, it also caused up to 70 centimeters of hail, which completely whitewashed the place.


Boat

Homes destroyed, 106 killed by floods in north-eastern Brazil after 6 days of consecutive rain (UPDATES)

Floods in Penedo, Alagoas, Brazil, May 2022
© Municipality of PenedoFloods in Penedo, Alagoas, Brazil, May 2022
Heavy rain in north-eastern Brazil over the last few days has caused flooding and landslides in the states of Pernambuco, Alagoas and Paraíba. At least one person has died, several injured and hundreds displaced.

Pernambuco

Stormy weather caused flooding and wind damage in parts of Pernambuco state, Brazil on 23 May 2022. Flooding was reported in Olinda and Recife, where the Tejipió river broke its banks. One person was injured as a result of strong winds.

Heavy rain has continued since then in particular in Greater Recife areas. The coastal town of Olinda recorded 199 mm of rain in 24 hours to 25 May, and the city of Recife recorded 196 mm.

As of 25 May Civil Defence reported Pernambuco damage in 8 municipalities, 1 fatality, 1 injured and 447 displaced, mostly in the Greater Recife area.


Comment: Update May 30

Floodlist reports:
Authorities in Brazil report that at least 80 people have now died following severe flooding and landslides in the north east of the country.

Flooded roads in Jaboatão dos Guararapes,
© PRF 191 PEFlooded roads in Jaboatão dos Guararapes, south of Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil, May 2022.
As reported on 26 May, days of heavy rain triggered flooding and landslides in the states of Pernambuco, Alagoas and Paraíba. Since then and the situation has deteriorated, in particular in Pernambuco.

As of 29 May 2022, National Civil Defence reported 79 fatalities and at least 3,957 people displaced across the state of Pernambuco. A total of 14 cities or municipalities have declared a state of emergency: Recife, Olinda, Jaboatão dos Guararapes, São José da Coroa Grande, Moreno, Nazaré da Mata, Macaparana, Cabo de Santo Agostinho, São Vicente Férrer, Paudalho, Paulista, Goiana, Timbaúba and Camaragibe.

Many more people are thought to be still missing and search and rescue operations are continuing, including in 12 points in the Recife Metropolitan Region. Pernambuco Governor Paulo Câmara announced the allocation of funds for the search and rescue work and also for urgent and infrastructure works in the municipalities affected by the rains. In addition, with the publication of the state decree of emergency, the affected municipalities will also be able to access resources from the National Civil Defence System.

"Our determination to the Social Defense Secretary and the Fire Brigade is that the teams remain on the scene until the last victim is rescued," said Governor Camara.

According to Pernambuco Water and Climate Agency (APAC), as of 27 May 2022, some areas of the state including Ipojuca, São Benedito do Sul, Belém de Maria and Maraial had already seen twice the monthly average rainfall totals. Ipojuca, situated to the south of Recife, recorded 570.5 mm from 01 to 27 May 2022.

Meanwhile in the neighbouring state of Alagoas, Civil Defence reported 2,102 people had evacuated their homes and moved to relief camps, while a further 8,017 were staying with relatives or friends. One person has died in São Miguel dos Campos.
Update May 31

Reuters reports:
Death toll in Brazilian floods rises to 106, 10 still missing

At least 106 people have died and 10 are still missing in Brazil, the government said on Tuesday, as heavy rains tore through urban towns in the northeastern part of the country for a sixth consecutive day.

The governor of the northeastern state of Pernambuco, Paulo Camara, in an interview with local media, said the government's priority was to find those still missing amid mudslides and major flooding.

"We will not stop until we find all those missing. This is a fundamental point at the moment," Camara said.

The National Civil Defense said on Twitter that an alert was in place for the "very high" possibility of more flooding in Pernambuco, including its capital, Recife.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro visited the state on Tuesday and flew over the affected areas. He promised to send help and resources to families who had been impacted.

It is the fourth major flooding event in five months, underlining a lack of urban planning in low-income neighborhoods throughout much of Brazil, where shantytowns are often built on hillsides prone to collapse.

In late December and early January, dozens were killed and tens of thousands were displaced when rains hammered Bahia state, also located in northeastern Brazil. At least another 18 died during floods in the southeastern state of Sao Paulo later in January, while torrential downpours in Rio de Janeiro state killed over 230 the following month.
View also: Flash floods hit Recife in Brazil, streets turn to rivers


Snowflake Cold

Hundreds of animals dead due to late spring blizzard in Kyrgyzstan - snow cover over a meter deep

SNOW
Cattle breeders from mountain pastures of Issyk-Kul region are calculating the number of animals that died because of the blizzard.

As of the morning of June 3, 378 sheep and goats, 142 cattle, and 22 horses were killed, according to the Ministry of Emergency Situations. Counting the number of dead cattle continues.

Weather conditions in the mountain pastures of Issyk-Kul worsened May 30. Blizzard and avalanches hit the Karakol-Enilchek motor road, the height of snow cover in some sections reached over 1 meter. Volume of the avalanche was 80,000 cubic meters.

12 cattlemen with thousand of animals were trapped in pastures of Sary-Jaz valley due to heavy snow. Dozens of villagers tried to deliver the fodder to the animals, but they could not get there due to complicated traffic.

Locals are blaming governor of Issyk-Kul region Altynbek Sulaimanov for not cleaning up the roads.


Snowflake

Heavy snow falls on ski resorts in Australia - up to 40cms

Snow covered vehicles at Perisher Resort in the NSW Snowy Mountains yesterday.
© Perisher ResortSnow covered vehicles at Perisher Resort in the NSW Snowy Mountains yesterday.
Reggae Elliss is back with the first snow report for 2022 Australian season and it's looking good after 40cms of snow this week and some set to open for the season this Sat, June 4. Presented by XTM


Ice Cube

Arctic sea ice extent at 30-year highs

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Despite ever-increasing CO2 emissions, Arctic sea ice is actually expanding, not melting, proving once and for all that the drawn correlations between the two are political, not scientific.

The World Economic Forum (WEF) recently convened its annual conference in Davos, Switzerland, to discuss the "climate crisis" and how the "existential catastrophe" could be used to roll-out additional tyrannical powers over the purblind masses.

However, and according to data from the intergovernmental European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites, Arctic sea ice is currently standing at a 30-year high — ice loss in May was the lowest in over three decades.

EUMETSAT, as the organization is known, was created through an international convention signed by 30 European nations.