Tag Archives: rains

Collapsing billboard kills 3 and hurts 59 in heavy rains in Mumbai. Scores might be trapped – Yahoo! Voices

  1. Collapsing billboard kills 3 and hurts 59 in heavy rains in Mumbai. Scores might be trapped Yahoo! Voices
  2. 4 Dead, 59 Injured After Huge Billboard Falls During Mumbai Dust Storm NDTV
  3. Monster dust storm in Mumbai: 3 dead, 59 injured after billboard collapses; deputy CM orders probe – The Times of India The Times of India
  4. Mumbai Weather: Massive dust storm in Mumbai; over 100 people likely trapped as billboard falls in Ghatkopar, watch video The Hindu
  5. Mumbai looks like ‘Hollywood movie shot in Mexico’: Netizens on disaster in financial capital of India Hindustan Times

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Burning Man: 1 death reported while festival attendees remain stuck in the Nevada desert from heavy rains – CNN

  1. Burning Man: 1 death reported while festival attendees remain stuck in the Nevada desert from heavy rains CNN
  2. RAW VIDEO | Burning Man Festival: Attendees told to shelter in place and conserve food, water & fuel KHOU 11
  3. Burning Man turns muddy following Friday storms, Palm Springs resident shares experience kuna noticias y kuna radio
  4. Tens of thousands at Burning Man told to conserve water and food after heavy rains leave attendees stranded in Nevada desert CNN
  5. Chris Rock, Diplo escape Burning Man after catching ride with fan ABC7
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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18 dead as heavy rains lash north India; shops, cars washed away in Himachal; waterlogging in several parts of Punjab, Haryana – The Tribune India

  1. 18 dead as heavy rains lash north India; shops, cars washed away in Himachal; waterlogging in several parts of Punjab, Haryana The Tribune India
  2. River Beas Wreaks Havoc In Himachal; Dramatic Footage Captures Devastation | Monsoon Fury Hindustan Times
  3. HP: IMD issues heavy rain ‘Red Alert’ for Chamba, Kangra, Kullu, Mandi districts for next 48 hours Times of India
  4. Heavy rain wreaks havoc in Himachal; 5 killed in landslides, several shops washed away in Mandi, Chandigarh-Manali highway shut The Tribune India
  5. Himachal News | Heavy Rain Lashes In Many Parts Of Himachal Pradesh | English News | News18 CNN-News18
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Remains found in Rains County identified as missing retired firefighter Michael Chambers – FOX 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth

  1. Remains found in Rains County identified as missing retired firefighter Michael Chambers FOX 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth
  2. Remains found in Rains County determined to be retired Dallas firefighter who went missing 6 years a WFAA
  3. Remains ID’d as Retired Dallas Firefighter Who Disappeared in 2017 NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
  4. Remains found in Rains County determined to be retired Dallas firefighter who went missing 6 years ago CBS19.tv KYTX
  5. Remains found in Rains County identified as missing Dallas firefighter, officials say Fort Worth Star-Telegram
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Russia rains missiles down on Ukraine’s capital and other cities in retaliation for Crimea bridge blast

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday that people were killed and injured in multiple missile strikes across Ukraine, including the first bombardment of the capital, Kyiv, in months. CBS News senior foreign correspondent Charlie D’Agata said the strikes, which could signal a major escalation in the eight-month-old war, appeared to be entirely punitive — retaliation meant to terrorize Ukrainian civilians in densely-populated urban neighborhoods, close to government buildings, with one even hitting a children’s playground.

The lethal barrage smashed into civilian areas, knocking out power and water, shattering buildings and killing at least 14 people. The bombardment came two days after Russia suffered a serious blow with the bombing that damaged its sole bridge to Crimea.

Ukraine’s Emergency Service said nearly 100 people were wounded in the morning rush hour attacks that Russia launched from the air, sea and land against at least 14 regions, spanning from Lviv in the west to Kharkiv in the east. Many of the attacks occurred far from the war’s front lines.

Though Russia said missiles targeted military and energy facilities, some struck civilian areas while people were heading to work and school. One hit a playground in downtown Kyiv and another struck a university.

Rescue workers survey the scene of a Russian attack on Kyiv, Ukraine on Oct. 10, 2022. Several explosions rocked the city early in the morning following months of relative calm in the Ukrainian capital.

Adam Schreck / AP


The attacks plunged much of the country into a blackout, depriving hundreds of thousands of people of electricity and creating a shortage so severe Ukrainian authorities announced they would have to stop power exports to Europe starting Tuesday. Power outages also often deprive residents of water, given the system’s reliance on electricity to run pumps and other equipment.

The head of Ukraine’s law enforcement said Monday’s attacks damaged 70 infrastructure sites, of which 29 are critical. Zelenskyy said that of the 84 cruise missiles and 24 drones Russia fired, Ukrainian forces shot down 56.

Andriy Yermak, a senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said the strikes had no “practical military sense” and that Russia’s goal was to cause a “humanitarian catastrophe.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin said his forces used “precision weapons” to target key energy infrastructure and military command facilities in retaliation for Kyiv’s “terrorist” actions — a reference to Ukraine’s attempts to repel Moscow’s invasion forces, including an attack Saturday on a key bridge between Russia and the annexed Crimean Peninsula that Putin called a “terrorist act” masterminded by Ukrainian special services.

Putin vowed a “tough” and “proportionate” response should Ukraine carry out further attacks that threaten Russia’s security. “No one should have any doubts about it,” he told Russia’s Security Council by video.

The explosions in Kyiv and other cities came just a day after Putin blamed Kyiv for the massive explosion on a 12-mile bridge connecting Crimea with Russia. Crimea is a large Ukrainian peninsula that Russia occupied and then unilaterally annexed eight years ago during a previous invasion. The annexation of that territory, like Putin’s recent land grab of four Ukrainian regions that he declared Russian soil last week, have been condemned as illegitimate and illegal by Ukraine, the United Nations, the U.S. and other countries.

The blast that hit the bridge sparked celebrations among Ukrainians and others on social media — but officials in Kyiv have made no direct claim of responsibility.


Crimea bridge, key supply route in Russia’s war in Ukraine, destroyed

02:38

The Russian president has been under intense domestic pressure to take more aggressive action to stop a largely successful Ukrainian counteroffensive and to react forcefully to Saturday’s attack on the Kerch bridge, whose construction he used to cement his 2014 annexation of Crimea.

Putin’s increasingly frequent descriptions of Ukraine’s actions as terrorist could portend even more bold and draconian actions. But in Monday’s speech, Putin — whose partial troop mobilization order last month triggered an exodus of hundreds of thousands of men of fighting age from Russia — stopped short of an expected escalation from what he calls a “special military operation” to a counterterrorism campaign or martial law. Zelenskyy has repeatedly called on world leaders to declare Russia a terrorist state because of its attacks on civilians and alleged war crimes.

Zelenskyy emerged onto a street in Kyiv on Monday to record a selfie video with a message to his people and the world, denouncing Russia for the barrage of missiles which he said had targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, and its civilians.

Zelenskyy’s wife, Olena, posted a video showing people sheltering on the stairs of a Kyiv subway station singing a Ukrainian folk song, “In a Cherry Garden,” whose final lines are: “My dear mother, you are old and I’m happy and young. I want to live, to love.”

Police experts examine destroyed cars in the center of Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv after several Russian missile strikes, October 10, 2022, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

SERGEI CHUZAVKOV/AFP/Getty


“They have specifically chosen such a time and such targets to cause as much damage as possible,” the president said. “But we Ukrainians, we help each other, believe in ourselves, rebuild everything. Now the shortages of electricity may occur, but not the shortage of our defiance and our confidence in our victory.”   

The strikes sent residents of Ukraine’s two largest cities — Kyiv and Kharkiv — into bomb shelters, including subway stations.

While air raid sirens have continued throughout the war in cities across the country, in Kyiv and elsewhere many Ukrainians had begun to ignore their warnings after months of calm.

Just as traffic was picking up Monday morning, a commuter minibus was struck near Kyiv National University. Nearby, at least one strike landed in Shevchenko Park, leaving a large hole near a children’s playground.

Another target was the Klitschko pedestrian bridge — a landmark in central Kyiv with glass panels. Closed-circuit video footage showed a huge explosion under the bridge, with smoke rising, and a man running away after the blast, apparently unhurt. No significant damage to the bridge was immediately apparent.

Air raid sirens sounded in every region of Ukraine except Russia-annexed Crimea for four straight hours. 

Videos posted on social media showed black smoke rising above several areas of the city. Russia’s last strike on the capital was on June 26.


Russia launches deadly strikes in Ukraine after battlefield setbacks

02:40

Associated Press journalists saw multiple bodies at an industrial site on the outskirts of Dnipro. Four people were killed and 19 injured in the city, officials said. Witnesses said one missile landed in front of a bus during the morning rush hour, damaging the vehicle but not killing any passengers.

Kharkiv was hit three times, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said. The strikes knocked out the electricity and water supply. Energy infrastructure was also hit in Lviv, regional Gov. Maksym Kozytskyi said.

Three cruise missiles launched against Ukraine from Russian ships in the Black Sea crossed Moldova’s airspace, said the country’s foreign affairs minister, Nicu Popescu.

As the European Union condemned Russia’s attack and said the targeting of civilians amounted to “a war crime,” Russia’s Defense Ministry confirmed the “massive strike with long-range precision weapons.” It claimed the missiles had targeted “objects of the military command and control, communications and energy systems of Ukraine” and that “all assigned objects were hit.”

CBS News


United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “deeply shocked by today’s large-scale missile attacks” on Ukraine, his spokesman said in a statement, adding that the strike “constitutes another unacceptable escalation of the war and, as always, civilians are paying the highest price.”

Some feared Monday’s attacks may just be the first salvo in a renewed Russian offensive. As a precautionary measure, Ukraine switched all schools to online learning until at least the end of this week.

In an ominous move, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko announced Monday that he and Putin have agreed to create a joint “regional grouping of troops.” He offered no details.

Lukashenko repeated his claims that Ukraine is plotting an attack on Belarus, sparking fears he would take preemptive action. His defense minister, Viktor Khrenin, later issued a video warning Ukraine not to provoke Belarus, but added, “We don’t want to fight.”

CBS News correspondent Pamela Falk contributed to this report.

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Diamond rains could fall through the interior of ice giant planets

An exotic form of precipitation called ‘diamond rain’  —  long thought to occur deep within ice giant planets  —  could be more common than previously thought.

A team of researchers has experimented with material similar to that found within ice giants such as the solar system planets Neptune and Uranus, discovering that the presence of oxygen increases the possibility of diamond formation and that diamonds could form in low temperatures and pressures.

This means that diamonds could grow in a wide range of conditions throughout these frigid worlds. As a result, this would make the chance of diamond showers raining through the interiors of ice giants more likely. 

Related: Yes, there is really ‘diamond rain’ on Uranus and Neptune

The same experiments also discovered the formation of an exotic form of water that could help explain the magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune which have thus far confused astronomers.

The research could change our picture of ice giants, theorized by some scientists to be one of the most common forms of exoplanets  —  planets outside the solar system. 

The team of scientists, including researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory as well as from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) and the University of Rostock, built on previous research into the conditions and materials within ice giants that observed diamond rains as they formed.

The new research predicts that diamonds on Neptune and Uranus could grow to large sizes, potentially up to millions of carats in weight. 

Ice giants lack a solid surface but get denser heading towards the core, meaning that over thousands of years the diamonds could sink through ice layers. They would begin to accumulate around the solid heart of the planets forming a thick diamond layer. 

Hubble Space Telescope images of Uranus (left) and Neptune showing their different blue colors. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center), and M. H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley) and the OPAL team)

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Additionally, the team found that a novel phase of water called superionic water and sometimes referred to as ‘hot black ice’ formed alongside the diamonds. 

Superionic water exists at high temperatures and pressures in which water molecules break up with oxygen constituents forming a crystal lattice throughout which hydrogen nuclei float freely.

The hydrogen nuclei are positively charged meaning that superionic water can conduct electric current which could give rise to magnetic fields. This could explain the unusual magnetic fields seen around Uranus and Neptune.

“Our experiment demonstrates how these elements can change the conditions in which diamonds are forming on ice giants,” SLAC scientist and team member, Silvia Pandolfi, said in a statement. (opens in new tab) “If we want to accurately model planets, then we need to get as close as we can to the actual composition of the planetary interior.”

A more complicated picture of diamond formation 

Siegfried Glenzer, director of the High Energy Density Division at SLAC, explained that the situation inside planets like ice giants is complicated because there are many chemicals to factor into the formation of diamonds.

“The earlier paper was the first time that we directly saw diamond formation from any mixtures,” Glenzer said “Since then, there have been quite a lot of experiments with different pure materials. What we wanted to figure out here was what sort of effect these additional chemicals have.”

Though the team started their experiments using a plastic material composed of a mix of hydrogen and carbon, elements commonly found in ice giants, the most recent iteration saw this replaced with PET plastic. 

Familiar to us on Earth from its uses in packaging, bottles, and containers, PET can be used to more accurately replicate the conditions found within ice giants. 

“PET has a good balance between carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen to simulate the activity in ice planets,” HZDR physicist and the University of Rostock professor Dominik Kraus said.

Creating shockwaves in the PET with a high-powered optical laser  —  part of the Matter in Extreme Conditions (MEC) instrument at SLAC  —  the team was able to probe what was happening in the plastic using X-ray pulses from Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS).

This allowed them to witness atoms within the PET arrange themselves into diamond-shaped regions, measuring the speed at which these regions grew. 

In addition to discovering the diamond-shaped regions grew to scales of around a few nanometers in width, the scientists also found that the presence of oxygen in the PET meant the nanodiamonds grew at lower pressures and lower temperatures than had previously been seen. 

“The effect of the oxygen was to accelerate the splitting of the carbon and hydrogen and thus encourage the formation of nanodiamonds,” Kraus said. “It meant the carbon atoms could combine more easily and form diamonds.”

Nanodiamonds: good things come in small packages 

The research could potentially point the way to a new method of fabricating diamonds with a size below 1 micrometer known as ‘nanodiamonds’ which could be produced when cheap PET plastic is hit with laser-driven shock compression.

“The way nanodiamonds are currently made is by taking a bunch of carbon or diamond and blowing it up with explosives,” SLAC scientist and team collaborator, Benjamin Ofori-Okai, said.” This creates nanodiamonds of various sizes and shapes and is hard to control. What we’re seeing in this experiment is a different reactivity of the same species under high temperature and pressure.”

Ofori-Okai added laser production could offer a cleaner and more easily controlled method to produce nanodiamonds. “If we can design ways to change some things about the reactivity, we can change how quickly they form and therefore how big they get,” he continued. 

Nanodiamonds have a wealth of potential applications in medicine, including in drug delivery, noninvasive surgery, and medical sensors, as well as in the growing field of quantum technology. This means the scientists’ findings could have major implications could closer to home than the ice giants that lurk at the solar system’s outskirts. 

The scientists involved in this research will now attempt experiments using liquid samples containing chemicals such as ethanol, water, and ammonia, some of the main constituents of ice giants to get a better picture of what is occurring beneath the frozen atmospheres of these frigid worlds.

“The fact that we can recreate these extreme conditions to see how these processes play out on very fast, very small scales is exciting,” SLAC scientist and collaborator Nicholas Hartley, said. “Adding oxygen brings us closer than ever to seeing the full picture of these planetary processes, but there’s still more work to be done. 

“It’s a step on the road towards getting the most realistic mixture and seeing how these materials truly behave on other planets.”

The team’s research is published in the latest edition of the journal Science Advances (opens in new tab)

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Arizona photographer evades monsoon rains to capture Saturn in beautiful clarity

An Arizona-based photographer drove to great lengths in search of the perfect weather needed to capture the planet Saturn on Sunday during opposition.

The irony is that astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy would end up capturing Saturn from California, where he had recently moved to Arizona in search of darker skies for his work. 

“The Southwest has been getting a lot of clouds and rain at night,” McCarthy said. “It’s, you know, quite frustrating as this photographer that recently moved to Arizona to escape that. I knew monsoons were coming, but apparently, this year is particularly bad.”

Below is an example of the booming and cloudy conditions McCarthy has been up against.

In search of relief from the ongoing monsoon season, McCarthy left his home in Arizona to capture some celestial events, including the recent August full moon and Saturn opposition. According to NASA, opposition is the point where Saturn lies directly opposite the Sun from our night sky. It also happens during Saturn’s perigee, when the planet is closest to Earth, making it even more prominent and brighter than usual.

After a trip to Sacramento, he started making his way back home, thinking he would find a spot to capture Saturn along the way.

Yuma, Arizona, initially had a promising forecast with calm skies, so that’s where McCarthy was en route when the forecast changed.

“With planetary photography, it’s very different than a lot of other types of celestial photography because the planets themselves are just so small. The air currents will just basically just fold over the image of Saturn and Jupiter or whatever and completely obscure details,” McCarthy explained. “So it’s very important that you get the calmest skies possible, and it goes all the way up to the upper atmosphere.”

Los Angeles is not known for its clear sky, but on Sunday, the forecast called for five out of five clear skies over downtown. Once again, McCarthy changed his route and headed to LA.

“I found a parking garage with a completely empty upper level,” McCarthy said. “I pulled out my telescope and all my stuff and started shooting Saturn.”

After a few hours, McCarthy produced an incredibly detailed image of Saturn and its rings. The bright lights around the planet are some of Saturn’s moons.

Using a telescope and two cameras, McCarthy used an infrared light filter to capture the shape of the planet and the rings. The image above is actually many images layered to capture the stunning detail of Saturn and its rings.

“It narrows the amount of light that’s coming through and passes it down to the infrared, which is going to scatter significantly less than those the shorter wavelengths, like blue. And that allowed me to get really crisp details on the planet, really defined ring edges and, of course, just beautiful, beautiful shape of the planet.”

He then used a color camera to pull it all together.

“By blending these images together, I was able to kind of get the best of both worlds where I had to use the infrared, which really sharpened things up, had the individual color filters, which gave me a lot of color depth, which is why I like the cloud bands on scatter has like distinctly different colors,” McCarthy said.

Now back in Arizona, McCarthy said he is still excited to make it his new home base.

“In Arizona’s defense, the skies have been incredible until that point. So it’s that monsoon season,” he said. “Overall, this is still the right move for me for what I’m doing because, in Sacramento, it would be like fog in the winter and smoke in the summers. There was never a good time.”

Even though the monsoon season has been bad for astrophotography, McCarthy has learned to hone his skills in creating beautiful images of powerful lightning and storms.

McCarthy estimates he seriously began taking an interest in astrophotography ahead of the 2017 Great American Solar Eclipse. During the pandemic, he made the switch and now captures celestial images full time. 

You’ll likely see some of his detailed images of the moon because NASA is using them to promote the upcoming Artemis 1 launch, including a 30-foot-banner that has been hanging in front of the Space Launch System rocket. 

More of McCarthy’s work can be found on his website where he explains his photography processes in detail. 

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Heavy rains flood South Korea’s capital Seoul, killing at least 7

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SEOUL — At least seven people have died in flooding after intense downpours fell over South Korea on Monday and Tuesday, including the capital of Seoul, inundating city streets and subway stations.

Photos and videos from the Seoul metropolitan area, which is home to about 25 million people, showed half-submerged cars, people walking through waist-deep water and subway stations overflowing. Government officials said that the seven reported deaths included a 13-year-old who got stuck in the basement of a building in Seoul with two adults. Six other people are missing.

The record rainfall — which had not ended as of Tuesday morning local time — was the worst in some parts of Seoul since 1904, the year local officials began documenting precipitation. About 381.5 millimeters (15 inches) of rain hit southwestern Seoul on Monday, according to the Korean Meteorological Administration. The next-highest rainfall day was Aug. 2, 1920, when about 354.7 millimeters (14 inches) fell in the capital.

One particular image sparked online worry and intrigue: a man in a suit sitting atop a submerged car in Seoul’s upscale Gangnam district.

“Nothing is more precious than life and safety. The government will thoroughly manage the heavy rain situation with the central disaster safety measures headquarters,” President Yoon Suk-yeol wrote in a Facebook post.

Blackouts hit some parts of the city, and residents living in lower areas were told to evacuate.

The Korea Meteorological Administration issued downpour alerts through Monday night across different central regions, warning that some areas would see 50 to 100 millimeters (1.9 to 3.9 inches) of rain per hour. It also sent out heat advisories across eastern South Korean provinces.

These intense precipitation events around the world are increasing because of human-caused climate change. A warmer atmosphere is able to hold more moisture and produce heavier rainfall.

Joseph Hatfield, 36, a teacher in Seoul who recorded a video of the flooding in the city of Anyang in Gyeonggi province, south of Seoul, told The Post that he saw many people in first-floor units trying to remove water from their homes and businesses.

“The river floods after heavy rainfall, but I’ve never seen it this high before so it was quite alarming,” he said, adding that the levels rose gradually throughout the afternoon as it rained into the night.



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Tens of thousands of Sydney residents told to evacuate as rains flood suburbs

An emergency crew rescues two ponies from a flooded area in Milperra, Sydney metropolitan area, Australia July 3, 2022 in this screen grab obtained from a handout video. NSW State Emergency Service/Handout via REUTERS

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  • Third major flood this year for some Sydney suburbs
  • 30,000 New South Wales residents face evacuations
  • Rescue of ship crew underway, military helping stranded families

SYDNEY, July 4 (Reuters) – Fresh evacuation orders were issued for tens of thousands of Sydney residents on Monday after relentless rains triggered floods for the third time this year in some low-lying suburbs.

An intense low-pressure system off Australia’s east coast is forecast to bring heavy rain through Monday across New South Wales after several places in the state were hit with about a month’s worth over the weekend.

Since Sunday, about 30,000 residents in New South Wales state have been told to either evacuate or warned they might receive evacuation orders.

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Frustration swelled in several suburbs in the west of Australia’s largest city after floods submerged homes, farms and bridges.

“It’s just devastating. We are in disbelief,” Camden Mayor Theresa Fedeli said.

“Most of them have just come out of the last flood, getting their homes back in place, their businesses back in place and unfortunately we are saying it is happening again.”

More than 200mm of rain have fallen over many areas, with some hit by as much as 350mm since Saturday. read more

Some areas could approach or exceed the flood levels seen in March 2021, and in March and April this year, the weather bureau warned. The risk of major flooding remained though the intense weather system may weaken later on Monday, it said.

An operation was underway to rescue 21 crew members from a cargo ship, which lost power south of Sydney and risked being swept ashore, local media reported.

“It has been a very difficult time for many months to have this flood event off the back of others. It makes it more challenging,” New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet said during a televised media briefing.

Paul O’Neill, a resident from flood-hit Wisemans Ferry, said he was taking food supplies by boat to his stranded family after rising waters cut off access.

“The road collapsed and hasn’t been fixed since the last floods, hasn’t been touched. So now they close our road access and then the ferry, the only way to get home now is by boat,” O’Neill told Reuters.

AUSTRALIA ‘UNDER-PREPARED’

Footage on social media showed petrol stations, homes, cars and street signs partially under water while garbage bins floated down flooded roads. Military vehicles were seen going into flooded streets to evacuate stranded families.

About 100 millimetres (4 inches) of rain could fall in the next 24 hours over a swath of more than 300km (186 miles) along the New South Wales coast from Newcastle to the south of Sydney, the Bureau of Meteorology said.

The weather could trigger flash floods and landslides, with river catchments already near full capacity after the La Nina phenomenon, typically associated with increased rainfall, lashed Australia’s east coast over the last two years.

Climate change is widely believed to be a contributing factor to the frequent severe weather events, the Climate Council said, adding Australia is “under-prepared”.

Federal emergency management minister Murray Watt said climate change must be taken “seriously” due to the frequent occurrence of floods.

“The reality is we are living in a changing climate,” Watt told ABC television.

Bad weather has delayed by 24 hours Monday’s scheduled launch of a NASA rocket from the Arnhem Space Centre in north Australia, operator Equatorial Launch Australia said.

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Reporting by Renju Jose and Jill Gralow; Editing by Sam Holmes, Lincoln Feast and Edwina Gibbs

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Thousands told to evacuate Sydney, as heavy rains bring ‘life threatening emergency’

An intense low-pressure system off Australia’s east coast is forecast to bring more heavy rain through Monday across the southern regions of New South Wales even as several places in the state were hit with about a month’s rain over the weekend.

About 100 millimeters (4 inches) of rain could fall in the next 24 hours over a wide swathe of regions in New South Wales, from Newcastle to the south of Sydney, a distance of more than 300 kms (186 miles), the Bureau of Meteorology said.

“If you were safe in 2021, do not assume you will be safe tonight. This is a rapidly evolving situation and we could very well see areas impacted that have never experienced flooding before,” New South Wales emergency services minister Steph Cooke said in a televised media briefing on Sunday evening.

Earlier in the day, she urged people to reconsider holiday travel, with the rough weather having hit at the beginning of school holidays.

“This is a life-threatening emergency situation,” Cooke said.

More than 200 millimeters (8 inches) of rain have fallen over many areas with some hit by as much as 350mm, the Bureau of Meteorology said, warning of flood risks along the Nepean and Hawkesbury Rivers.

Camden in southwest Sydney was underwater, and the weather bureau predicted water levels in the areas of North Richmond and Windsor northwest of Sydney would peak at higher levels than in the past three major flood events since March 2021.

The heavy rains caused Sydney’s main dam to spill early Sunday morning, water authorities said, adding that modeling showed the spill would be comparable to a major spill in March 2021 at the Warragamba Dam.

“There’s no room for the water to remain in the dams. They are starting to spill. The rivers are flowing very fast and very dangerous. And then we have the risk of flash flooding, depending on where the rains are,” State Emergency Service Commissioner Carlene York said.

About 70 evacuation orders are in place in Sydney as authorities urged people to leave their homes before getting stranded without power.

As tens of thousands face evacuation, frustration swelled in North Richmond and Windsor in Sydney’s west after floods submerged homes there for the third time this year.

“We are over it. We are so over it. (This) is a bit much for of us,” a flood-hit Windsor resident told ABC television.

At least 29 people have been rescued from floodwaters, including one who was hanging on to a pole for an hour as workers struggled to reach them.

The body of a man who fell out of a kayak was pulled out of Sydney Harbour, police said, adding that the circumstances were under investigation but appeared to be linked to the windy conditions.

Federal emergency management minister Murray Watt has offered more troops and said on Monday the government has activated the satellite emergency management system to help with the flood relief efforts.

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