This
is western Siberia. There have been fires in the Far East for weeks
Wildfires
Continue to Ravage Siberia
Forest
fires continue to rage in Siberia, decimating up to 15,000 hectares
of forest and forcing the closure of the Tomsk regional airport,
Russia's Emergencies Ministry said on Friday.
27
July, 2012
Most
of the fires were fueled by intense heat and strong winds, increasing
the area by 2,000 hectares overnight.
The
worst of the blazes were concentrated in Russia's Siberian regions of
Krasnoyarsk, Tomsk, Tuva, Khakassia and Irkutsk, according to the
ministry.
Firefighters
continue battling to control around 30 wildfireson Friday that have
swept through thousands of hectares of land in the region .
“Forest
services in the Federal Reserve of Siberian Federal District have
eliminated 45 forest fires covering an area of 522 hectares,"
the Department of Forestry said in a statement.
Another
29 forest fires that previously engulfed more than 5,000 hectares
have been localized, the statement said.
The
Emergencies Ministry said 412 pieces of wildland firefighting
equipment and 24 firefighting aircraft were deployed to suppress the
fires. Up to 3,000 firefighters are currently battling fires in the
area.
As
Russia faces high temperatures with raging wildfires and possible
droughts, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev appealed to regional
governors on Friday to pay special attention to the operation of
early warning systems.
"I
appeal to all fellow governors, especially to the heads of federal
executive bodies: please keep the situation under control; do not
relax,” Medvedev told a meeting called to discuss the heat wave. He
warned that the summer is still very much around and it is essential
to protect all populated areas.
Tomsk
Wrapped in Thick Cloud
The
situation remains severe in the Tomsk region, where firefighters
eliminated two forest fires in the past two days and localized
another 12 that raced through large swaths of surrounding area.
There
was no let up on Thursday, however, as three new fire outbreaks
engulfed an estimated 160 hectares, bringing the total number of
reported forest fires to 34 on Friday.
Most
of the fires, which have now claimed 8,500 hectares in the area, are
concentrated in the region’s rugged terrain.
Meanwhile,
Tomsk, the regional capital, remained enveloped in dense smoke on
Friday.
Hundreds
of passengers were stranded at Tomsk airport on Friday morning after
dozens of early morning flights were either canceled or delayed due
to the thick cloud.
A
number of airlines, including UTair, Transaero, S7 and Aeroflot
delayed flights for more than five hours because of the smog.
“There
was no visibility as a result of the forest fires and we cannot allow
aircraft to land. The plane belonging to S7 landed at an airport in
Kemerovo, flights from other airports were simply canceled,” a
spokesman for the airport told RIA Novosti.
City
residents have also reported a high density of carbon monoxide in the
air, twice exceeding the permitted level.
"Our
current standard for carbon monoxide is five milligrams. But on
Friday morning, the figure stood at 10 milligrams, that is, twice as
high," an expert at the regional ministry of natural resources
said.
The
regional health department said Friday that the level of carbon
monoxide in the air in Tomsk is not high enough to cause toxic
poisoning.
Emergency
Situation
A
wildfire raging in the Krasnoyarsk Territory for two weeks with hot,
dry and windy conditions has forced authorities to declare an
emergency situation, according to regional emergencies ministry.
"In
order to prevent forest fires from erupting and spreading to more
populated areas in the Krasnoyarsk Territory, an emergency situation
has been declared," the ministry said in a statement.
Almost
84 forest fires are raging across the territory, affecting some 6,057
hectares of land. There was no immediate threat the fires would
spread to populated centers on Friday, regional emergency officials
said.
Dry
lightning and dry thunderstorms caused 60 of the wildfires in the
region while the causes of another 19 cases have not yet been
determined.
But
despite the unusual weather conditions, authorities have not ruled
out the possibility of arson.
Storms
knock out power to tens of thousands from Plains to Northeast
Hundreds
of thousands lost power due to a potent storm system that extended
eastward from the Plains toward the Northeast on Thursday, bringing
with it high winds and destructive lightning
CNN,
27
July, 2012
.
Severe
thunderstorm watches were in effect at one point Thursday evening for
a continuous stretch from Oklahoma through New Jersey. The danger
could lurk for several hours longer, with the National Weather
Service issuing such warnings in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey,
Kentucky, Virginia, Arkansas and other points in between.
Well
before then, the system had already packed a punch.
In
Pennsylvania, a tree crushed a woman in her car as she sought shelter
at a campsite, killing her, said Glenn Dunn, the emergency management
coordinator for Potter County.
A
61-year-old man in Brooklyn, New York, died after lightning struck a
church sending a scaffold crashing down on him, authorities said.
Witnesses
reported trees in the region buckling under the impact.
"The
trees were bending sideways, (and) the sky just went really dark and
green," said Mark Ventrini, a photographer, of the scene around
7:30 p.m. as he headed toward Belmar, New Jersey. "Some of the
storms were pretty intense."
The
weather service had received reports of possible tornadoes touching
down in Elmira, New York, and Brookville, Pennsylvania.
Emergency
managers in Broome County, New York, reported people trapped inside a
home because of downed trees in the town of Vestal.
Strong
storms also caused damage in Binghamton, New York, but the weather
service said no injuries or fatalities have been reported.
The
residual and more widespread damage came in the form of extensive
power outages. More than 100,000 First Energy customers in
Pennsylvania, for instance, didn't have electricity as of 10 p.m. ET,
with other utilities like PECO and PPL reporting tens of thousands of
others similarly in the dark.
An
hour earlier, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued a press release
stating there were nearly 95,000 customers without power in that
state, mostly NYSEG and Central Hudson customers.
Cuomo
also declared a state of emergency for hard-hit Chemung County in the
southwestern part of the state.
Many
more people took in the impressive lightning storms, with daunting
bolts preceding booming claps of thunder in small towns and big
cities.
"The
brunt of the storm itself was intense but short -- there was very
strong rain and wind for about 15 minutes, at which point the rain
cleared and the lightning show began," said Matthew Burke, a CNN
iReporter who photographed lightning sprawling across the New York
City skyline.
Several
states away, tens of thousands also were in the dark, though power
was being restored at a fairly fast rate. AEP Ohio, for instance,
reported just over 51,000 customers lacking electricity at 6:15 p.m.,
yet more than 20,000 of those had the lights back on by 10 p.m.
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