Earth ChangesS


Evil Rays

England: Bad weather to blame for dead starfish washed up in Cleethorpes area

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Thousands of starfish have been washed up on the beach following the recent bad weather.

About 4,000 of them laid strewn for miles at the Humberston Fitties yesterday, turning the beach into a marine life graveyard.

It is thought they were swept onto the sands following storms out in the North Sea and the sub-zero temperatures.

Rachael Shaw, of the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust, said: "It's possible that bad weather or storms out at sea, perhaps associated with high tides, have caused the mass stranding of these starfish."


Cloud Precipitation

Storms whip up ocean foam on Australia coast

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Ocean foam whipped up by wild seas has blanketed beaches on the Gold and Sunshine coasts.

Gold Coast holiday-maker Lionel Armitstead says the white froth has come up the foreshore at Burleigh Heads and is covering pedestrian paths and picnic areas.

In some places the suds are up to one metre high.

'It's like a snowstorm,' he told AAP.

'The kids are up to their shoulders basically ... I've never seen anything like it.'


Bizarro Earth

Earthquake Magnitude 6.0 - SE of Kegen, Kazakhstan

Kazak Quake_280113
© USGS
Event Time
2013-01-28 16:38:53 UTC
2013-01-28 22:38:53 UTC+06:00 at epicenter

Location
42.604°N 79.696°E depth=10.9km (6.8mi)

Nearby Cities
60km (37mi) SE of Kegen, Kazakhstan
107km (66mi) E of Karakol, Kyrgyzstan
109km (68mi) E of Tyup, Kyrgyzstan
142km (88mi) ENE of Kyzyl-Suu, Kyrgyzstan
419km (260mi) E of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

Technical Details

Arrow Up

Author of climate change report: 'I got it wrong on climate change - it's far, far worse'

Lord Stern speaks out in Davos on danger to economies as planet absorbs less carbon and is 'on track' for 4C rise

Lord Stern, author of the government-commissioned review on climate change that became the reference work for politicians and green campaigners, now says he underestimated the risks, and should have been more "blunt" about the threat posed to the economy by rising temperatures.

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© Flickr CC
In an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Stern, who is now a crossbench peer, said: "Looking back, I underestimated the risks. The planet and the atmosphere seem to be absorbing less carbon than we expected, and emissions are rising pretty strongly. Some of the effects are coming through more quickly than we thought then."

The Stern review, published in 2006, pointed to a 75% chance that global temperatures would rise by between two and three degrees above the long-term average; he now believes we are "on track for something like four ". Had he known the way the situation would evolve, he says, "I think I would have been a bit more blunt. I would have been much more strong about the risks of a four- or five-degree rise."

He said some countries, including China, had now started to grasp the seriousness of the risks, but governments should now act forcefully to shift their economies towards less energy-intensive, more environmentally sustainable technologies.

Attention

UK on flood alert as heavy rain mixes with melting snow

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© Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty ImagesSnow at Westonbirt Arboretum, Gloucestershire. The cold spell is giving way to heavy rain
Wales, central England and south-west expected to be worst hit by downpours.

More than 200 flood alerts are in place across the UK as heavy rain has mixed with melting snow.

There have been more reports of flooding in south Wales overnight as the downpours replace almost two weeks of snow. Norfolk police have reported flooding caused by melting snow and ice, which has closed a number of roads in the area.

Wales, central England, and the south-west will be the worst-hit areas, with at least 2.5cm (1in) of rain expected by mid-morning on Sunday, while the rest of the UK can expect around 1.3cm.

Windsock

Australian Army on stand-by amid Queensland tornado warnings

Bargara tornado
© Darren Curtis / Channel 9Devastation caused by a twister that tore through the Queensland town Bargara.
A sixth tornado has hit Queensland's Bundaberg region and forecasters say more could develop, including over Brisbane, as the day wears on.

The army has been put on standby and dam releases sped up in southeast Queensland as ex-cyclone Oswald moves south unleashing floods and the threat of more tornadoes.

Six tornadoes have hit Queensland's Bundaberg region in the past 24 hours and forecasters say more could develop later today, including on the Sunshine Coast, Brisbane, and on the Gold Coast.

Hundreds of homes are at risk of flooding in the central Queensland cities of Gladstone and Bundaberg.

Cloud Precipitation

Worst flood in a century set for Bundaberg, Queensland, Australia

Bundaberg flood
© Jono SearleResidents watch floodwaters spill over a bridge in Bundaberg.
The battered city of Bundaberg is bracing for one of its worst floods in history as it bears the brunt of ex-tropical cyclone Oswald.

One man is confirmed dead and hundreds of homes and businesses are expected to be inundated on Sunday night as the Burnett River rises towards a peak not seen in the central Queensland town in over a century.

Premier Campbell Newman says at least 300 homes and 100 businesses in Bundaberg will be inundated if the flood peak on Sunday night eclipses the 2010/11 level, as it's expected to do.

Bizarro Earth

U.S. Beekeepers expect 2013 to be "worst year for bees"

beekeeper
© Unknown

"We're facing the extinction of a species." That's what one Midwest-based large-scale commercial beekeeper told me last week at the annual gathering of the American Honey Producers Association (AHPA). And he meant it.

Bee losses have been dramatic, especially in recent years. And beekeepers are feeling the sting. According to many who manage hives, commercial beekeeping won't pencil out in the future unless things change, and soon.

Beekeepers from across the country gathered in San Diego to swap stories and share best practices in the trade, as well as to learn more about the latest research on declines in bee populations (often referred to as Colony Collapse Disorder). Independent science continues to point to pesticides as one of the critical co-factors in bee losses - alongside nutrition and disease - and beekeepers continue to see major declines. And these losses parallel the ongoing increase in pesticide products used on seeds and in fields across the country.

Cloud Precipitation

16 Dead, 9 Missing in Indonesian landslides

Indonesia landslide
© AFP
Rescuers found four more bodies Sunday, bringing the death toll to 16 in two separate landslides triggered by torrential rain in western Indonesia, including five geothermal workers, officials said.

The worst landslides happened in Tanjung Sani of Agam district in West Sumatra province, where 20 houses were buried when mud and rocks fell from surrounding hills at dawn on Sunday, killing 11 villagers, said disaster official Ade Edward.

Cloud Precipitation

Mozambique flooding displaces thousands

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© AFP PhotoThe south and centre of the country have been placed on red alert after experiencing very heavy rainfall [
At least 36 people have been killed and about 70,000 displaced by flooding in Mozambique, according to figures released by the UN, as the African nation braces for renewed storms.

"A total of 26 persons have died in [the worst affected southern province of] Gaza alone, with the nationwide death toll at 36," the UN in Mozambique said in a statement on Saturday.

The number of displaced people now stands at 67,995 while nearly 85,000 have been affected by the raging waters in recent days, the UN said.

The UN urged donors to urgently make more funds available "to help deal with this emergency" in the impoverished nation.