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il pianeta si riscalda
Notizie dal mondo che indicano che la temperatura globale sta salendo.
Siccita' e ondate di caldo in vari paesi.
Saluti
Alessandro Gimona
INDIAN PRISONERS RIOT FOR WATER, SHOUT: 'GIVE US WATER OR KILL US'
Thousands of cattle have perished in India's blistering heat
BHUBANESHWAR, India -- Thirsty prisoners, denied water for two days,
rioted and shouted: "Give us water or kill us." Thousands of people
carrying buckets mobbed a water train. A ticket collector died of the
heat at a train station.
A severe drought has parched South Asia, affecting 50 million people in
India, drying up water wells in southern Afghanistan and killing animals
in southern Pakistan.
In India, the drought has cut a smoldering swath from west to east
across the states of Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Orissa on the
east coast, where a cyclone and floods killed at least 10,000 last fall.
Eleven of India's 31 states are facing a water crisis.
Last week, temperatures reached 118 degrees in Orissa state, dryi ng up
streams, ponds and wells.
The hardest-hit area in Orissa is the western district of Bolangir,
where half the 8,000 wells-the main source of drinking water- dried up
in the past week, officials said Monday. In the trading center of
Titlagarh, all but one of the town's 58 wells have gone dry, said
district information officer Subhas Nial.
When a train carrying 37,500 gallons of drinking water from
Calcutta pulled into the station on Saturday, thousands of men, women
and children mobbed it to carry away water in plastic pails and
pitchers
The 55 inmates at the jail in Titlagarh, some 200 miles west of the
state capital, Bhubaneshwar, left without water for two days in cells
without fans, tried to scale the walls Friday to break free.
They tossed their cooking pots and plates over the jail wall into the
street and shouted, "Give us water or kill us," said jail superintendent
Tarini Charan Behera. . [AP, May 4, 2000]
PAKISTAN FEARS MASS MIGRATION FROM DROUGHT AREA
QUETTA,
-- Pakistani authorities said Saturday that 1 million
people could abandon their homes in search of food and water in the
drought-hit southwestern province of Baluchistan [Reuters, May 7, 2000]
DROUGHT AID COULD REACH $70 MILLION
Most of Md.'s Farmers Still Waiting for Funds
Maryland farmers could receive an estimated $70 million in federal
aid-more than three times the amount paid two years ago-to compensate
for both low market prices and damage done by last year's drought,
Maryland's worst in a century, federal agriculture officials said.
[Washington Post, May 4, 2000]
MARYLAND FARMERS STILL HURTING
BALTIMORE -- While most of Maryland's farmers are recovering from the
severe drought that cut crop production, agriculture officials predict
that 2000 will bring low grain prices and reduced farm income.
High fuel costs, another possible drought and sluggish exports could
also seriously affect the production of Maryland's farmers.
"In a word, the outlook for agriculture this year is terrible," said
Bruce L. Gardner, an agriculture economist with the University of
Maryland and former assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
"Looking at two of the main sectors of farming in the state- grain and
dairy-the prices are low, and I don't see any real, solid event on the
horizon that would give farmers confidence that they will improve,"
Gardner said. [AP, May 9, 2000]
OKLAHOMA FLOODING FORCES EVACUATIONS
TULSA, Okla.-Another night of heavy rain across already saturated
northeastern Oklahoma forced evacuations in two towns today, flooded
roads and bridges and shut down schools in three districts.
Craig County Sheriff George Vaughn said boats and volunteers were being
brought in to rescue people trapped by flood water in Vinita and to
remove elderly residents in anticipation of further flooding as rivers
fed by rain in Kansas continue to rise.
Flooding in Oklahoma and Missouri over the weekend killed at least three
people and damaged hundreds of ho
ating declared seven counties disaster areas, clearing the way
for federal assistance [AP, May 9, 2000]
HUNDREDS FLEE NEW MEXICO WILDFIRES
RUIDOSO, N.M.-Hundreds of people were forced to flee as one of two large
wildfires burning in New Mexico swept within a few feet of their homes
and spread across more than 5,000 acres intensified by drought and high
winds. [AP, May 9, 2000]
THE HEAT IS ON
EAST COAST SIZZLES
It seems too early to be seeking relief from record heat to Ben Parker
of Abilene, Texas. 'It's just miserable," Parker, 77, said as his West
Texas city posted the nation's highest recorded temperature Monday at
102 degrees. Three straight days of heat were making him feel his age.
"I would even like to go fishing, but it is too cotton pickin' hot for
that," he said. "I've been here nearly all my life ... and I don't ever
recall it being like this in May."
Temperatures in Texas first rose on Friday and reached record
highs over the weekend. It was 106 in Abilene on Sunday
A spring heat wave has sizzled from Texas to New England, stressing
utilities as residents cranked up air conditioners. While parts of New
England and Texas were expecting cooler temperatures, highs in the 90s
were forecast again today from South Carolina into Connecticut.
The afternoon high in New York City's Central Park on Monday was 91
degrees, 22 degrees above normal and tying a record set in 1936. The
American Red Cross handed out thousands of bottles of water.
Power companies in the mid-Atlantic region urged customers to conserve
electricity as temperatures peaked above 90, well over usual spring
readings in the 70s, the National Weather Service said.
Authorities in many areas issued heat stroke and air quality warnings,
with few problems reported.
Any relief can't come soon enough for the animals at the Cape May
Country Park & Zoo on the southern New Jersey coast. Zookeepers scurried
from enclosure to enclosure helping out their charges in 90-degree heat
Monday.
The goats hi
den walkway, cowering from the midday sun.
Tosh, a 350-pound Bengal tiger, lolled around in the shade, pausing only
for an occasional dip in his pool.
"They definitely don't like the heat, especially happening this early in
the season," said zookeeper Sheri Hickok. "Most of these animals, you've
got to give them a little help. ... The panda bears hate the heat. They
don't like being hosed or misted, either, so we put ice blocks in their
[AP, May 9, 2000]
GRAINS, SOYBEANS END MIXED
Grain and soybean prices finished mixed Thursday on the Chicago Board of
Trade, with investors divided on whether mildly rainy forecasts will
ease drought conditions in key growing areas. [AP, May 4, 2000]
FARMERS WARY OF DROUGHT
Mulberry, Indiana-Mike Beard's trowel poked through the moist topsoil of
his farm, reaching the parched dirt underneath and uncovering the
painful memories of 1988, a drought that year had sliced corn yields by
a third for Beard and other Clinton County growers. And it's those
memories of 1988 -- which produced this nation's third worst drought of
the 20th century-that haunt farmers as they plant this year's crops.
Dry conditions choke the Midwest again this year, leaving a severe
drought that covers much of the northern two-thirds of Indiana and parts
of Illinois, Iowa and Missouri.
The obvious solution poses its own perils for farmers, though. With
spring planting in full swing, the heavy rains needed to replenish the
parched subsoils might wash away their emerging crops. "You're in a
Catch-22," said Al Shipe, a water expert with the National Weather
Service in Indianapolis. "If you get too much moisture in the soil,
you're going to drown out the crops until they're big enough."
When April ended, 55 percent of Indiana did not have adequate subsoil
moisture, said Ralph Gann, a statistician for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
Data released Saturday by the federal government's Climate Prediction
Center showed five of nine regions in Indiana in a se
forecasts, meanwhile, predict above-normal temperatures and
below-normal rainfall across Indiana. [AP, May 9, 2000]
HIGH HEAT IN PHILADELPHIA
The official Philadelphia temperature reached 90 degrees for the second
day in a row yesterday, falling short of the record of 93, set in 1936,
but still about 20 degrees higher than is usual on May 8. Temperatures
are expected to rise into the 90s again today. If that happens, it would
mark the earliest three-day stretch of 90-plus temperatures since late
April 1990.
The high temperatures drove electric demand to levels not usually seen
until late June and forced the regional PJM Interconnection power grid
to call for a 5 percent voltage reduction by utilities to maintain
power. The grid also issued a call for voluntary cutbacks by major
electric users. [Philadelphia Inquirer, May 9, 2000]
PSE&G WARNS OF POSSIBLE HEAT-RELATED POWER SHORTAGES
[Public Service Electric and Gas Co., New Jersey's largest electric
utility, warned of possible energy conservation actions Tuesday because
of the high cooling demand for power due to hot weather in the area.
[Reuters, May 9, 2000]
HORN OF AFRICA: DROUGHT AND STARVATION
Major drought in the Horn of Africa threatens an estimated 7.7 million
people with severe food shortages.
On Monday, the United States announced its latest shipment of 30,000
tons of food relief to Ethiopia, bringing to 116,000 tons the amount of
U.S. food aid delivered to the country in the last two weeks, Tibor
Nagy, the U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia, said. [CNN, May 9, 2000]
WHY THE HORN OF AFRICA IS FACED WITH ANOTHER DROUGHT
Periodic drought seems to have been Ethiopia's lot for hundreds of
years. Yet droughts are becoming more frequent and severe. A century ago
the country suffered a drought every 10-15 years. Today they come with
alarming regularity every five years or less. Although the
drought-caused famine of 1984-85 remains well known, less serious but
nonetheless significant droughts were suf
1991-92, 1993-94, and 1999.
Global climate change may drive the increasing the frequency and
intensity of drought here,.
Other factors have contributed to making Ethiopians more vulnerable to
erratic or scarce rainfall. A high population growth rate, dwindling
farm size, unjust patterns of land tenure, inefficient farming
techniques, deforestation, and degraded soils all contribute to chronic
disaster.
In the meantime, in many parts of Ethiopia the rains haven't fallen or
didn't fall when they normally do, and that phenomenon remains the most
important factor in explaining the current crisis. [All Africa News
Agency, May 8, 2000]
CHILDREN ARE DYING AS AID TRICKLES INTO ETHIOPIA
Obdi Rahman gathered his wife, his three children and his donkey and
headed out of their village of Farjano late last month, across the
searing Ogaden desert. He undertook the trek despite 110-degree heat. He
had to leave. His stores of water and food were exhausted. The cattle
were dying. The journey was fateful. The first night, Rahman's
1-year-old son died in his arms. The next day, his 3-year-old daughter
collapsed and died. . That night, his 2-year-old son died.
By the time they reached a tiny settlement, only Rahman, his wife and
the donkey were left. They found themselves among thousands of people
clamoring for donated food, handed out by a local official. It appears
that an entire generation of children is battling to stay alive through
one of the worst droughts here in several years. Until last week, it had
not rained, other than a few light drizzles, for three years in much of
eastern Ethiopia, where about 1.3 million people eke out a living. Many
are semi-nomadic, moving with their small herds among sparse grazing
places.
BUT RAIN BRINGS NEW DANGERS Then last week, rain pounded down. Far
from a blessing, though, it brought new dangers. In some stricken areas,
the dirt roads became impassable, halting aid deliveries.
There's concern that the sudden rain could n
of
malaria and cholera
Many animals have already died. Carcasses litter the desert- some frozen
in their last moments, others picked clean by the winds and scavenging
animals.
From the air, rivers appear to be dark smudges on the dry ground.
Up close, the wells are empty.
NO ONE CAN BE SURE OF THE HUMAN DEATH TOLL since the water sources began
to run dry late last year. Estimates run in the low thousands. United
Nations officials say almost 8 million people in Ethiopia might face
death due to food and water shortages. Another 8 million are at risk in
nearby parts of Africa, especially in Burundi, Somalia and northern
Kenya. Thousands, perhaps tens or hundreds of thousands of people could
die, the United Nations says, if the next rains expected in October
fail, or if the world does not quickly move water and food to these
remote regions.
Sulub Abdulahi, 42, made it here after a three-day walk. But thirst and
famine already had claimed three of his children. He lost his 7-year-old
son in early January. Two weeks later, his 3-year-old daughter died. And
10 days later, he buried another daughter, 5. Abdulahi left his wife,
who was six months pregnant, at home with their three remaining
children. "There is nothing for them to eat," he says. "Only the leaves
on the trees. I don't remember such a thing in all our history."
Ethiopia, of course, has been through this before. Droughts have
devastated the country every decade or so for the past 100 years. There
have been five famines since 1970. The desert dwellers long ago
developed their own survival skills: trading a few cattle for food or
walking for weeks to other water sources. As the cattle have withered
and died, however, this drought has pushed the people beyond their
limits, aid experts say.
Ethiopia's droughts are coming more frequently, and perhaps more
intensely.
' 'There is definitely something going on with the climate," says Judith
Lewis of Mississippi, who runs the U.N. World Food Program in Ethi
d a series of
catastrophic earthquakes, hurricanes, droughts and floods the past few
years. This part of Africa isn't the only region affected. Drought is
threatening more than 50 million people in parts of northern India,
Pakistan and Afghanistan.
ONLY A TRICKLE OF AID has arrived. So far, the U.S. and European
governments have pledged about 700,000 tons of food, short of the 1
million tons the U.N. food program estimates will be needed this year.
Ethiopians say help has come far too late. "Our organization was crying
out since June 1999," says Muhammed Abdi, director of the Ogaden Welfare
Society. "People didn't take us seriously. They thought we just wanted
to raise money."
Though some grain and water is arriving, there is almost no medicine.
"Very few people are dying of actual starvation," Lewis says.
"They are dying of diarrhea, measles, bronchial infections: things
which kill because they are so weak and have no water." CHILDREN
ARE FIRST TO FALL [USA Today, May 9, 2000].