Wednesday, January 29, 2014

How locked-in weather spreads woe from Alaska to Alabama







Image: Chicago skyline
Scott Olson / Getty Images
The Chicago skyline rises above the icy edge of Lake Michigan on Monday. The Midwest has been especially hard-hit by winter weather this month.
Why are the Midwest and the Southeast stuck in a deep freeze, while Alaska is suffering a perilous thaw this winter? The woes associated with this month's unseasonably cold and warm temperatures all go back to the same root cause: a high-pressure ridge that's been locked in for weeks over the American West. And if you think this winter's weather is bad, just wait till this summer's droughts kick in.
"A lot of this is connected," said Brian Fuchs, a climatologist at the National Drought Mitigation Center in Lincoln, Neb. "As we're seeing, the warmth and dryness in the West has implications all the way up to Alaska and also in areas to the east."
The long-lasting ridge causes a kink in the jet stream, sending warm marine air from the Pacific up into Alaska and bringing cold Arctic air down into America's heartland.
The effects are brutal: Midwesterners and Easterners already have suffered through a couple of cold waves, and this week's big chill is disrupting air travel and spreading misery across a region stretching from Texas to Minnesota to the Carolinas. Meanwhile, Alaska's thaw has triggered a mammoth avalanche, cutting off road access to the port of Valdez and stoking fears of flash floods.
Worries in the WestThe locked-in ridge is having a more insidious effect on the West. Precipitation has been scarce — so scarce that there's a drought emergency in California and wildfire warnings in Oregon. In January!
Is it possible that this year's drought and fire season will be even worse than last year's? "The current water year, which started in October, is one of the driest on record that we've ever seen," Fuchs told NBC News. "Even if we had near-record moisture from here on out, it would still be tough to make up the deficit."
Image: MODIS photos
NASA via Cliff Mass
Two pictures from NASA's Aqua satellite tell the tale for this year's drought conditions in the western United States. The photo at left is Jan. 20, 2013. The photo at right is from Jan. 20, 2014. "Wow ... what a difference," says Cliff Mass, a weather researcher at the University of Washington.
Last year at this time, drought conditions were in effect for 54 percent of California's land area, Fuchs said. Currently, 94 percent of the state is feeling the drought. "What's happening in the western third of the U.S. is a strong, developing situation," Fuchs said.

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Georgia : People stocked up on ice-melting chemicals, school systems closed and road crews fought against heavy traffic to treat highways to stave off black ice accumulations.

SFGate

Mix of ice, snow pelts Georgia, snarls traffic



Updated 4:25 pm, Tuesday, January 28, 2014

  • Traffic inches along the connector of Interstate's 75 and 85 as snow blankets Metro Atlanta on Tuesday afternoon, Jan. 28, 2014 as seen from the Pryor Street overpass.  Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal is preparing to declare a state of emergency as a winter storm coats the region with snow and ice. State transportation officials said a mass of commuters leaving downtown Atlanta at once created traffic jams on interstates and surface streets. Photo: BEN GRAY, AP / The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    Traffic inches along the connector of Interstate's 75 and 85 as snow blankets Metro Atlanta on Tuesday afternoon, Jan. 28, 2014 as seen from the Pryor Street overpass. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal is preparing to declare a state of emergency as a winter storm coats the region with snow and ice. State transportation officials said a mass of commuters leaving downtown Atlanta at once created traffic jams on interstates and surface streets. Photo: BEN GRAY, AP

ATLANTA (AP) — A winter storm dumped snow on parts of north Georgia and coated the metro Atlanta region. Much of Georgia was under a winter storm watch for Tuesday and Wednesday, with some areas forecast to see as much as 3 inches of snow.
People stocked up on ice-melting chemicals, school systems closed and road crews fought against heavy traffic to treat highways to stave off black ice accumulations.
Gov. Nathan Deal declared a state of emergency. Deal spokesman Brian Robinson said the emergency declaration would free up resources the state can use to address emergency situations as they arise. State government offices were expected to be closed until noon Wednesday, Robinson said.
"I know many people are trying desperately to pick up their children or simply to get home, and I hope they can get to safe, warm stopping point soon," Deal said in a statement. "Once at your destination, if at all possible, please stay off the roads until conditions improve."
The threat of snow and ice prompted the closure of schools districts and government offices throughout the state, and stranded travelers at airports nationwide.
The airport hardest-hit by cancellations Tuesday was also the world's busiest: Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, where more than 806 flights were canceled by 9 a.m. Tuesday, according to the flight tracking service FlightAware.
Nationwide, more than 3,200 flights within, into or out of the U.S. were canceled Tuesday, according to statistics from FlightAware. Only a couple of hundred flights are canceled in the U.S. on a typical day.
In Atlanta, Pam Sullivan, 46, bundled up in a thick pink scarf as she walked to work downtown. She took the impending winter storm in stride.

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WTVY - HomePage - Headlines


ATLANTA (AP) -- Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal will declare a state of emergency as a winter storm coats the region with snow and ice.

Deal's spokesman, Brian Robinson, said Tuesday that the declaration covers all 159 counties in the state and will help free up resources that are needed to address emergency situations as they arise.

A winter storm coated the metro Atlanta region with snow Tuesday afternoon.

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Snowy chaos in the South; 800 kids stuck at schools


Posted on: 8:09 pm, January 28, 2014, by , updated on: 08:26pm, January 28, 2014


Snowed in at School

(CNN) — Cars stuck in ditches. Children stranded at schools that parents can’t reach. Icy roads and snow that shows no sign of stopping.

As a winter storm slammed into a broad swath of the South on Tuesday, authorities warned drivers to stay off the streets.
“This is a very dangerous situation,” Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley said in the afternoon. “People need to stay at home. They need to stay there until conditions improve.”
Motorists in major metropolitan areas including Atlanta sat trapped in gridlock as schools and offices shut down, unleashing hordes of vehicles onto slushy roadways.
While Northerners may laugh at their Southern friends’ panic over a dusting of snow, the threat is real: With relatively few resources to battle snow and ice, public works crews may have a difficult time keeping up with any significant accumulation.
Add to that the fact that millions of Southern drivers aren’t used to driving on snow or ice, and things were getting tricky fast.
Students stuck at schools
In Alabama, where freezing rain made driving perilous, Bentley declared a state of emergency and said he had activated 350 National Guard troops to help respond to the storm. Emergency officials warned drivers to stay off the roads and urged people stuck in their cars to stay inside.
“The weather right now, the temperatures and the wind chill, if you step out of your car, are very dangerous,” said Art Faulkner, the state’s director of emergency management.
In Birmingham, Melanie Wilson tried to drive after she got a message that her children’s school was closing Tuesday morning.

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Winter Horrorland : Hundreds of accidents in several states,dozens of pileups and major traffic jams. Thousands of flights were also canceled.

NBC News

South blows the dust off snowplows for rare winter storm

Police and emergency crews have responded to hundreds of accidents in several states that stranded cars along the road and caused dozens of pileups and major traffic jams. Thousands of flights were also canceled. NBC's Dylan Dreyer reports.
Up north, snowplows are armadas — hundreds of them that fan out over and over to clear the streets during the punishing storms of winter. If they're handled carelessly, as more than one mayor of New York has learned, there's political hell to pay.
Not so for Columbia, S.C., which has a grand total of nine.
"They usually hang in the shed," said Robert Sweatt, the city's superintendent of street maintenance. "When we need them, we pull them out."
On Tuesday, the city was ready to give them a workout for the first time in at least three years. A rare winter storm stretched from Texas to Virginia, grounding thousands of flights and making a snowy, icy mess of roads.

Traffic came to a complete stop in the Atlanta area, where a traffic officer delivered a baby late Tuesday afternoon in the back seat of the car for a couple who were stranded in icy conditions on Interstate 285 in the suburb of Sandy Springs. A spokesman for the Sandy Springs police said mom and baby, who weren't identified, were doing fine.
The Arctic weather system is expected to move north, producing a shift in current weather patterns. NBC's Al Roker reports.
Classes were canceled from Texas to the Carolinas, while some school districts that did open told parents it would be safer to simply let their kids stay at school overnight.
"Students who are at school will remain until our roads are safer," Cherokee County, Ga., school officials told parents Tuesday afternoon, adding that they were "prepared to shelter students as necessary."
Hardware stores across the South, meanwhile, were wiped clean of shovels and rock salt.
"Yesterday was the big grocery panic day," said Andy Smith, who runs the Nickelodeon, a nonprofit theater in Columbia. He decided to cancel showings of "Inside Llewyn Davis" and close his doors Tuesday and Wednesday.
He said his friends were divided evenly between people joking about overreaction and people "actually freaking out a little bit."

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Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Stunning video: Streams of lava pouring from crater as Mount Etna erupts

 

Raw video: Italy's Mount Etna Erupts

Europe's most active volcano erupted over the weekend. Mount Etna, Italy, sent lava streaming down and smoke shooting up. The eruption temporarily closed a local airport. (Jan. 27)
In this photo taken on Nov. 16, 2013, Mount Etna spews lava as smoke billows. This picture was taken from Acireale, near the Sicilian town of Catania.
 
In this photo taken on Nov. 16, 2013, Mount Etna spews lava as smoke billows. This picture was taken from Acireale, near the Sicilian town of Catania.
Photograph by: Carmelo Imbesi, AP

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RT


 



Published on Jan 27, 2014

 
Mount Etna, Europe's most active volcano, erupted again on Sunday, with lava streaming down its sides and smoke rising from the crater. According to local media, the eruption began on Saturday afternoon, closing nearby Catania airport overnight until Sunday morning. The eruption is the first of 2014 after a particularly active year in 2013, a result of a new crater forming on the southeastern side of the volcano.

RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
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Fukushima: "Contaminated Waste-Where is it Going?"

missingsky102 missingsky102


 



Published on Jan 24, 2014
 
In Fukushima, massive amounts of radioactive soil and debris are still piled up in residential areas. The government has asked the head of local authorities to accept intermediate storage facilities. In this episode we look at what is hampering the project.
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“The Myth That Nuclear Power Is Clean And Safe Has Collapsed”. Nuclear Is a “Criminal Act Toward Future Generations”. “Our Nation’s Survival Is At Stake” : Former Japanese PM's

File:Nuclear Fuel Cycle.png

Nuclear Fuel Cycle  (Public Domain)
Image Source  :  Wikipedia.org
Author  Tungsten.
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WashingtonsBlog

Two Former Japanese Prime Ministers Try to Shake Up Japanese Politics to Kill Nuclear Energy

Japan may have enacted a fascist state secrecy law which outlaws independent reporting on Fukushima … but there might be some hope yet.
Specifically, two former Prime Ministers are speaking out on Fukushima and Japan’s energy future.
EneNews gave an excellent roundup last week:
Kyodo, Jan. 14, 2014: Former Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa said Tuesday he will run in the upcoming Tokyo gubernatorial election with an antinuclear agenda after securing the backing of popular former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi [...] The move [...] could have game-changing impact on the race for the helm of the Japanese capital [...] “I have made my decision to run in the Tokyo governor election,” Hosokawa told reporters after meeting Koizumi. “I have a sense of crisis myself that the country’s various problems, especially nuclear power plants, are matters of survival for the country.” [...] Koizumi indicated the main focus of the election will be whether to pursue nuclear power or not, calling the election “a war between the group that says Japan can grow with zero nuclear power plants” and the group that says it cannot. [...]
Asahi Shimbun, Jan. 14, 2014: [...] “I have a sense of crisis that various problems facing Japan today, especially the issue of nuclear power generation, will endanger the existence of our country,” Hosokawa said, explaining the reason for his candidacy. [...] Koizumi said the Tokyo gubernatorial election will be a contest between pro- and anti-nuclear forces. “My belief is that Japan will be able to do without nuclear energy. Hosokawa also has the same belief. That is the biggest reason for my support of him,” he said. [...] Koizumi told reporters, “I expressed my respects to Hosokawa from the heart. I will do my utmost so that Hosokawa wins the election.” Koizumi said the Tokyo gubernatorial election could have “the biggest influence ever on national politics.” “If the Tokyo metropolitan government shows that it can go without nuclear power generation, it will certainly be able to change Japan,” he said. Koizumi also said, “If Hosokawa becomes Tokyo governor, he will have a major influence that could shake national politics on the issues of energy and nuclear power generation.” [...]
Wall St. Journal, Jan. 14, 2014: [Former Prime Ministers Hosokawa and Koizumi] are expected to stir up the gubernatorial race and bring the energy debate back into the national spotlight. That will likely dismay of the administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, which would rather not have the divisive issue become an election focal point. [...] Mr. Hosokawa said [...] “I have a sense of crisis that our nation’s survival is at stake over nuclear power.”


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Protests Grow in Japan: "We Want to Bring Our Message to the World to Stop Nuclear Power Plants"

democracynow democracynow·


Published on Jan 17, 2014
http://www.democracynow.org - Recent moves by the Japanese government to restart the country's nuclear power plant facilities have been met by growing protests "I think this is a problem of the world, not just of Japan," Kato Kaiko told Democracy Now! at a protest outside the Prime Minister's private residence in Tokyo. She describes how there is increasing expectation that voters will decide which candidate to choose in the upcoming election based on their position on nuclear power.
Watch our entire special broadcast from Japan at http://www.democracynow.org/topics/japan......

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