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Thursday, 16 February 2017

Tropical Cyclone Dineo hits Mozambique


Tropical Cyclone Dineo has hit the Inhambane province of Mozambique, with high winds, torrential rain and dangerous storm surge.
Dineo, the equivalent of a category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale, made landfall in the town of Inhambane at around 1630 GMT on Wednesday 15 February.
 It is the first cyclone to hit the province of Inhambane since Favio caused destruction in February 2007 and the first to hit the town itself for more than 30 years. In 2008, intense tropical cyclone Jokwe made landfall higher up the coast of Mozambique.
According to World Metrological Office in La Reunion (Meteo-France), wind gusts may reach up to 180 km/h in affected coastal areas.
Rainfall may exceed 150mm in 24 hours, both in coastal areas, but also well inland. Storm surge will be 2-3 meters in the Bay of Inhambane, which is a popular tourist destination. But it will coincide with high tide to produce very hazardous waves and storm surge.
After landfall, Dineo will weaken but still has the potential to bring heavy rainfall to parts of Zimbabwe and South Africa.


NIGERIA DECLARES AIR POLLUTION IN PORT HARCOURT AN EMERGENCY

Nigeria has declared an air pollution emergency in a major southern city on Tuesday and closed an asphalt plant there after residents complained about the fumes from its furnaces.
Residents also staged a protest in Port Harcourt, a harbour city in the oil-producing Niger Delta region, waving their hands in the air to show the soot stains from touching cars.
"The Federal Ministry of Environment has declared the air pollution in Port Harcourt an emergency situation and has subsequently issued a notice to temporarily shut down an asphalt processing plant...belching out thick smoke," the government said in a statement.
The Rivers State government had earlier announced the sealing off of Chinese Government Company, CGC, in Aluu, over “aggravated air pollution, and breach of environmental laws” in the state.
Two other companies – H & H Engineering Company and AUC Asphalt Company – located in Aluu have also been sealed off.
One of the residents, Charles Adolor narrated his experience, "If I am having my bath, the colour of the water, the stains on the sink are always black,Before we can use already-washed plates we have to rewash them again."
Adolor and his family have been wearing face masks inside their apartment to protect themselves from the soot that covers everything from the windows to the bathroom.
In other parts of the state, residents also complained about crude spills from broken or blown-up pipelines and acid rain from gas flaring, the burning of natural gas at oil wells.

Thursday, 2 February 2017

World Wetlands Day: How wetlands minimise damage from disasters

World Wetlands Day: How wetlands minimise damage from disasters



Wetlands helped avoid more than $625 million in damages from Hurricane Sandy in 2012
Defined as land areas that are flooded with water, either seasonally or permanently, wetlands are said to be a natural buffer against disasters.
Along the coastline, wetlands act as a natural protective buffer. For example, they helped avoid more than $625 million in damages from Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
Inland, wetlands act as a natural sponge, absorbing and storing excess rainfall and reducing flooding. During the dry season, they release the stored water, delaying the onset of droughts and reducing water shortages.
When well managed, wetlands can make communities resilient enough to prepare for, cope with and bounce back from disasters even stronger than before.

Preparing/Preventing To minimise impact ahead of time, flood- and storm-prone areas can be designated as protected wetlands to strengthen nature’s own buffer. The Biosphere Reserve of the
Saloum Delta in Senegal, for example, is an area of estuaries, lakes and marshes. It controls flooding and makes sure that humans, animals and plants have access to fresh water over the entire year. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), it was gathered, is working with local communities in Senegal to restore degraded wetlands and to encourage sustainable agriculture, tourism and fishing practices.
Coping When an extreme event hits, healthy wetlands can absorb some of the shock, cushioning the damage in local communities. In Hikkaduwa, Sri Lanka where offshore coral reefs are protected through a marine park, the damage from the 2004 tsunami extended just 50m inland. In nearby Peraliya, where coral mining had degraded the reefs, the damage extended 1.5 km inland.
Bouncing Back Wetlands can also speed up the recovery and help to “build back better” after a disaster, acting as natural water filters and nutrient restorers. After a 1999 cyclone that hit Odisha in eastern India, rice paddies that were protected by mangroves recovered their food production much more quickly than croplands without the buffer.
Maintaining healthy wetlands and restoring degraded ones means that a community can deal with a disaster even better next time.

Source :Environews

Wednesday, 1 February 2017

NIGERIAN GOVERNMENT LAUNCHES SOLAR ENERGY PROJECT FOR RURAL COMMUNITIES

Nigerian Government Launches Solar Energy Project for Rural Communities

The Nigeria Government has launched a new presidential initiative, a solar project, in association with the Niger Delta Power Holding Company Limited, to address the shortage and in some cases, total absence of electricity in the country.
Nigeria’s Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, said that the initiative is expected to be replicated all over the country.
“We expect that this would be replicated all over Nigeria. We are starting with 20,000 but I am sure that we would ramp up very quickly. We have been talking to the private sector about involving themselves also in this project. We think that as solar power becomes cheaper, and it is becoming cheaper really practically day by day, we would be able to afford to do even more, to deploy more across the country, especially to those places that are not at the moment served by our grid” he said.

“We cannot take all our power from the grid” he said, adding that in the next few years, it would not be absolutely important for people to be connected to the grid “because we would be deploying every type of off grid solution that we can deploy. And we want to do that in the industrial areas. It is also a job creation opportunity. We are going to be putting a lot of pressure on Azuri technologies to begin local assembly of all of the solar equipment right here” he said, adding that radiation here is excellent for solar power.

The Presidential initiative for Solar Home Systems is an initiative that is supporting the deployment of 20, 000 small-scale household solar systems to rural communities in Nigeria, in a bid to provide access to sustainable and alternative power solutions to address the immediate power requirements of the people.
The systems are designed for the needs of small rural households that are completely unconnected to the grid. These systems have the capacity to power four light bulbs, a radio, a torch and come with a USB port with charging cables for mobile phones. They provide up to 8 hours of lighting, home phone charging and clean, reliable, off-grid power.

The Managing Director, Niger Delta Power Holding Company, Chiedu Ugbo, who was also at the launch of the project held at Wuna Village, Gwagwalada, Abuja, said that millions of Nigerians still rely on rudimentary lighting systems as they are not connected to the grid.
“There are many Nigerians, estimated at 70 million, like the inhabitants of Wuna village, without any connection to the grid, who still rely on rudimentary lighting systems characterized mainly by use of kerosene lamps, candles and petrol generators with attendant health and safety risks and indeed financial challenges” he said, at the event tagged ‘Beyond the Grid’.
The Power Holding Company and the Nigerian Government worked in collaboration with Azuri Technologies to plan and develop the solar power program, which is focused on providing clean and reliable energy for Nigerians.
The Chief Executive Officer, Azuri Technology, Simon Bransfield – Garth explained the importance of electricity to the people. “It is the thing that makes the World progress. It brings the Sun out at night. It allows us to talk to people wherever they are and benefit from entertainment, information and education. But historically, electricity has been for people in the cities.
Bransfield – Garth said further that, “with the development of solar power, it is possible to get energy anywhere. It doesn’t need to be fed with fuel every day. It just depends on the Sun, and that is something we can truly rely on”.
He reiterated that solar power in rural communities will have great and immediate impact on the communities. He said on average, students spend two hours extra per night, on their studies; hence, it is quite normal for students to go from mid place to top of their class in just a few months simply because they are doing that much extra work.

Bransfield – Garth highlighted that families also often use this extra time in the evenings to increase their income. Shop keepers are able to keep their shop open for longer. Farmers can process crops in the evening and be first to market in the morning. Everyone can keep their phones on all the time without having to worry about the cost of charging and can listen to radio all day without having to buy batteries.

Solar homes system is expected to provide energy during the day and to charge batteries to provide light and other services at night.
A small but very efficient solar panel is installed on the roof of the house and connected to a yellow box in the household containing a battery which drives devices such as light.
The system is unlocked each week with a small payment on the mobile phone and after three years, the system unlocks completely and no more payments are needed.


Friday, 30 December 2016


Floods drive thousands from wrecked homes along rain-swelled Congo River


 At least 50 people have been killed and thousands more left homeless in southwestern Congo, after heavy rain falls leading to floods and a river bursting its banks.


Kalamu River, which flows through the city of Boma into the Congo River, overflowed for two hours before the waters receded, washing some victims across the border into Angola.

The waters left parts of the city, Democratic Republic of Congo’s sole Atlantic port, covered in up to a metre of mud. Searchers are dig out bodies.

"The rains on the night of Monday to Tuesday in Boma have caused at least 50 deaths," said Jacques Mbadu, governor of Kongo Central province. "We buried 31 bodies on Wednesday and expect about 20 more bodies back today that ended up across the border in Angola."

Mbadu said the waters hit a peak of 2m above their usual level, wrecking at least 500 homes and leaving several thousand people homeless.

Boma, which lies near the mouth of the Congo River about 470km southwest of Kinshasa, is home to 150,000-200,000 people. "This is a cyclical phenomenon which (usually) happens every 10 years. It last happened in January 2015, but with climate change it’s now happened again in December 2016," Mbadu said.

Locals said two of the city’s three districts were still covered in mud up to a metre deep in places, and described tragic scenes with waters rushing into their houses.

"I lost my two children, carried off by the waters, which rose up to 3m like a tsunami. I could only watch them as they were washed away," said government worker Faustin Lutete.

Fisherman Jean-Marie Kola said he just had time to run far away when his house began shaking. "It collapsed later." Provincial governor Mbadu said the authorities were encouraging homeless people to seek shelter with relatives rather than reception centres.

He said he had been working with a Dutch company to reduce the risk of the Kalumu flooding.

Congolese towns and cities are typically built up in a haphazard fashion. Government services to deal with natural disasters are practically nonexistent.

Floods in Kinshasa in December 2015 left more than 30 people dead and 20,000 families homeless, most of them in the capital’s slums, where residents were left to battle with their bare hands through smelly mud, slime and faecal matter.

Despite its vast mineral wealth, Congo is classed among the world’s poorest countries. Two-thirds of its 70-million live on less than $1.25 a day.

Source: AFP

   



Friday, 23 December 2016

Shanghai water supply hit by 100-tonne wave of garbage: effects of environmental waste

 Shanghai water supply hit by 100-tonne wave of garbage: effects of environmental waste.


Medical waste, broken bottles and household trash are some of the items found in more than 100 tonnes of garbage salvaged near a drinking water reservoir in Shanghai.

The suspected culprits are two ships that have been dumping waste upstream in the Yangtze River. 
The river, then flowed downstream to the reservoir on Shanghai’s Chongming Island, which is also home to about 700,000 people.

The reservoir at the mouth of the river is one of the four main sources of drinking water for the country’s largest city.

China has struggled with air, soil and water pollution for years during its economic boom, with officials often protecting industry and silencing citizens that complain.

China’s cities are often blanketed in toxic smog, while earlier this year more than 80% of water wells used by farms, factories and rural households were found to be unsafe for drinking because of pollution.

Source: The Guardian

World's first solar panel road opens in France


World's first solar panel road opens in France

The world’s first solar panel road has been inaugurated in a Normandy village in France.
A One kilometre route in the small village of Tourouvre-au-Perche covered with 2,800 square metres of electricity-generating panels was inaugurated on Thursday.
According to the Ecology minister, Ségolène Royal, who commissioned the road, it cost more than four million pounds to construct.
Royal explained that the road will be used by about 2,000 motorists a day during a two-year test period to establish if it can generate enough energy to power street lighting in the village of 3,400 residents.
The Minister said that the panels were tested at four car parks across France, before the solar-powered road was opened on the RD5 road.
The road, which was named Wattway was constructed by Colas, part of giant telecoms group Bouygues, and financed by the state.
Colas said the panels have been covered with a resin containing fine sheets of silicon, making them tough enough to withstand all traffic, including heavy goods vehicles.
In 2014, a solar-powered cycle path opened in Krommenie in the Netherlands has generated 3,000kWh of energy, which is enough to power an average family home for a year.
However, critics have said that the solar-road is not a cost-effective use of public money.
Marc Jedliczka, who is the Vice-president of Network for Energetic Transition said, “It’s without doubt a technical advance, but in order to develop renewables there are other priorities than a gadget of which we are more certain that it’s very expensive than the fact it works.”