Record September rainfall for Moscow, emergency declared after floods in Sochi
Bears starve after flooding in Russian Far East, ‘aggressive’ bears to be shot
Bears starve after flooding in Russian Far East, ‘aggressive’ bears to be shot
September
has been the wettest such on record for Moscow and flooding has
swamped Sochi, the venue for the Winter Olympics next February,
complicating preparations for the event.
A
persistent upper level low over eastern Russia has brought record
precipitation to the city of Moscow this month. So far 174 mm (6.85”)
has been measured (including a bit of melted snow) breaking the
previous record of 171 mm (6.73”) set in 1885 (precipitation
records began in 1879). Normal September precipitation for Moscow is
65 mm (2.56”).
Sochi,
located on the northeast coast of the Black Sea, received 196 mm
(7.72”) of rain between September 23-25 resulting in flash floods
and disrupting preparations for the Winter Olympics. A state of
emergency has been declared by local authorities to deal with
mudslides and flooding. A highway leading from the city to the site
of the Alpine events was under 2.5 meters (8.2’) of water and badly
damaged. However, on a positive note, the storm has brought heavy
snowfall to the mountains north of town where many of the Olympic
events will take place.
http://www.wunderground.com/blog/weatherhistorian/comment.html?entrynum=199
Russian Far East: Bears
Go Hungry After Russia’s Record Floods, Some Will Be Shot
Record
rains in July and August have swelled rivers in Russia’s Far East
and caused flooding not seen in a century. Yakutia, a vast region in
the northeast of tundra and forests, has been the hardest hit. More
than 100,000 people have been affected and damages (10,000 homes have
been ruined) expected to total 30 billion rubles (about $91 million).
Wildlife
have certainly suffered. Bears have been left hungry as the floods
have destroyed the blueberries, cranberries and lingonberries that
they usually eat their fill of in the summer. After six cases of
famished bears breaking into homes and emptying refrigerators,
authorities in the Yakutia region are responding to the pleas of
residents by saying they will shoot “aggressive” bears.
It
is unusual for bears to attack humans and, according to the head of
the region’s hunting department, Nikolai Smetanin, bears are rarely
hunted. The “dispiriting cataclysm” of the flooding and the loss
of the berries has led to authorities saying that people can contact
them in a “threatening situation.”
Russia’s
Amur region (home to endangered species including the Amur or
Siberian tiger) has been the most affected by the floods, says The
Moscow Times. While the floods are moving downstream to the Jewish
Autonomous Area and Khabarovsk, the waters are not expected to recede
from the Amur region for weeks. Cattle have drowned in droves or been
killed to prevent disease. The Russian army has joined rescue workers
and volunteers to build dams and pump out water; soldiers have been
sent to guard abandoned houses from looters.
Ecologists
are linking the floods to global warming and also cautioning that
more parts of Russia could face severe weather conditions. President
Vladimir Putin has been skeptical about global warming in the past,
at one time joking that this would mean that Russians would have to
buy fewer fur coats and have longer growing seasons. Widespread
forest fires in 2010 reportedly led Putin to say that Russians were
being more “open-minded” about the possibility of human activity
influencing the climate.
Putin
toured the flooded Khabarovsk region Thursday and thereby came
“face-to-face” with the realities of climate change. But
ecologists are not expecting any change in the government’s
policies which have consistently put business and industry ahead of
environmental concerns, The Moscow Times says.
Bears
have been a symbol of Russia since at the 17th century and frequently
appear in folk tales, proverbs, literature and more. Saying that “we
respect the bear, we treat it like it’s another hunter,”
Smetanin, the hunting director in the Yakutia region, adds that the
decision to shoot bears who are “aggressive” will not mean
“extermination of all bears.”
Indeed,
two adult bears were flown via helicopter to high ground from the
Zelyonaya resort in Sochi — in, that is, the very region where the
2014 Winter Olympics are to be held.
Given
the global criticism towards Russia due to its anti-LGBT crackdown
and anti-gay propaganda law, the government is, perhaps, a bit more
inclined to save bears there. But starving bears in the Yakutia
region are instead more likely to be killed as they struggle to
survive in a flood-infested region unlike anything they have ever
known before.
Floods in Sochi Cast Doubt on Olympic Infrastructure
26
September, 2013
A
state of emergency has been declared in Sochi as water and mudslides
have blocked the Olympic resort's newly built main roads, just as
International Olympic Committee inspectors arrived for their final
assessment ahead of the upcoming Winter Olympic Games.
Many
local residents could not travel to work Wednesday morning, with the
city, clamped between the Black Sea and the Caucasus mountains,
offering very few alternative routes to take.
Firefighters
installed pumps to remove water, but given the uneven terrain, the
water quickly flowed right back to the lowlands.
And
while the local branch of the Emergency Situations Ministry said in a
statement Wednesday that the situation was “stabilizing,” with
water levels in local rivers returning to normal, photos of cars
almost completely submerged in water made the rounds on the Internet.
The
flooding coincided with the arrival of IOC inspectors Tuesday, and
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev is set to address entrepreneurs at the
Sochi International Investment Forum on Friday at the Bolshoi Ice
Dome.
A flooded highway in Sochi on Wednesday
The
incident may serve as the perfect test for whether Sochi
infrastructure can handle critical situations, but it is unclear just
what grade the new facilities would get — and whether or not they
would pass at all.
Alexander
Valov, editor of the local news website Blogsochi.ru, confirmed the
situation in the area had improved but said the roads would be
blocked again if the area got the same amount of rainfall.
“The
Olympic infrastructure is not ready to handle these weather
conditions,” he said. “This kind of rain is typical for Sochi and
happens almost every fall, but this year it was different because of
all the new infrastructure, which did not have sufficient drainage
for the flood.”
It
took some local residents five hours to get to their homes Tuesday
evening because of roads being blocked to let senior government
officials through, Valov said.
Building
additional roads along the coast and a highway to the area's alpine
venues were among the most costly projects for Olympic
infrastructure. The total cost of hosting the games has skyrocketed
over the years to $50 billion, hitting the games' first record.
Alexander
Zhukov, the head of the Russian Olympic Committee and one of the top
officials in charge of preparations for the games, told state-run
television channel Rossia 24 that he had no doubt the infrastructure
would be ready and in good condition.
Former
Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov agreed that everything would be
done in time but was skeptical about the overall quality of the
infrastructure.
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