Archive | September 3, 2020

EARTHQUAKE SWARM OFF E. COAST OF N. ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND 1st – 2nd Sept 2020 #earthquake #QuakeSwarm #NewZealand

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Courtesy of EMSC

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Indian Oil Corp’s oil tanker catches fire off Sri Lanka #Tanker #Oil #India #SriLanka

Boatfire Alert

Naval vessels and aircraft are conducting rescue efforts off Sri Lankan coast after a very large crude carrier (VLCC) chartered by the Indian Oil Corp (IOC) caught fire. The fully loaded vessel, identified as New Diamond, was on its way to Paradip from Mina Al Ahmadi in Kuwait when the incident took place.

According to Srilankan navy officials, the ship is ablaze about 20 nautical miles off the east coast of the country close to Colombo. “The Sri Lanka air force has scrambled an observation aircraft and the navy has sent in two ships to help with rescue efforts,” Commander Ranjith Rajapaksa of the Sri Lankan navy said.

Various reports claimed that Sri Lanka’s Marine Protection Authority assured steps will be taken to prevent any possible oil leak from the tanker which is carrying 270,000 tonnes of oil.

There is yet to be any comments from the part of IOC or Kuwait Petroleum Corp regarding the incident.

Courtesy of cnbctv18.com

https://tinyurl.com/y4rzc23e

Hurricane Nana downgraded to tropical storm after landfall in Belize #Hurricane #Nana #TropicalStorm #Belize

Severe Weather Alert

Hurricane Nana made landfall in southern Belize near 2 a.m. EDT Thursday, September 3, 2020, as a low-end category 1 hurricane with 75 mph winds. By 11 a.m. Thursday, Nana had been downgraded to a tropical storm with 45 mph winds over northern Guatemala, and the storm was expected to dissipate over eastern Mexico by Friday.

Nana was a small hurricane with hurricane-force winds extending out just 10 miles from the center at landfall. Nana’s small size — combined with its having missed Belize City, Belize’s most populous city — means limited wind and storm surge damage. Nana’s main impact will be flooding from heavy rainfall, a swath of up to eight inches of rain along its path into eastern Mexico.

With two weeks to go until the typical mid-point of the Atlantic hurricane season, we’ve already had 15 named storms, five hurricanes, and one intense hurricane. The averages for this point in the season are six named storms, two hurricanes, and one intense hurricane. According to Colorado State University hurricane scientist Phil Klotzbach, only six other Atlantic seasons in the satellite era (since 1966) have had five or more hurricanes by September 2: 1966, 1995, 1996, 2004, 2005, and 2012.

Courtesy of yaleclimateconnections.org

https://tinyurl.com/y693la2t

Cargo ship with 43 crew and nearly 6,000 cattle sank off Japan, survivor says #Ship #Sinking #Cattle #Japan

Emergency Rescue Alert

A cargo ship carrying 43 crew members and nearly 6,000 cattle sank off the coast of Japan after reportedly losing an engine in rough seas caused by Typhoon Maysak, a survivor has said.

The Filipino crew member, named as Eduardo Sareno, a 45-year-old chief officer, was rescued late on Wednesday after Japanese navy P-3C surveillance aircraft spotted him wearing a life vest and waving while bobbing in the water.

Sareno, who was in good health, told rescuers the ship capsized before sinking, according to Yuichiro Higashi, a spokesman for the Japanese coastguard’s regional headquarters which is conducting the search for survivors with 4 patrol boats, two aeroplanes and divers.

The Panamanian-registered vessel, Gulf Livestock 1, sent the distress call early on Wednesday from the East China Sea, to the west of Amami Ōshima island in south-west Japan, the Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported.

According to Sareno, the ship lost an engine before it was hit by a wave and capsized, a coastguard spokeswoman said. Crew were instructed to put on life jackets as the ship capsized, he said, adding that he had jumped into the water and had not seen any other crew members before he was rescued.

He feared not all were able to hear the instruction to put on life jackets, according to the Department of Labor and Employment in Manila. Sareno is currently in hospital in Japan.

The crew comprises 39 Filipinos, two Australians and two New Zealanders, the Kyodo news agency said.

One of the missing Australians is Lukas Orda, 25, of Queensland, who was working on the live export ship as a veterinarian, a job he had only begun in June after leaving a horse veterinary practice on the Gold Coast.

Michael Lowcock, a Catholic priest from the town of Mount Isa in Queensland, said Orda’s family were “very devastated” by news the ship had sunk. He said Orda, with his wife Emma, had recently had their first child – a son named Theo. Orda’s parents are both well known doctors in their community.

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (Dfat) said it was in touch with the families of the two Australians onboard.

“The Australian government is providing consular assistance to the families of two Australian crew members onboard a cargo vessel reported missing in Japanese waters,” Dfat said.

The cause of the distress was not immediately known, but the weather was rough in the area due to Typhoon Maysak. Strong winds and torrential rain from the typhoon had initially hampered the search operation, but the weather has improved, Higashi said.

The vessel, owned by Gulf Navigation Holding based in the United Arab Emirates, departed Napier in New Zealand on 14 August with 5,867 cattle onboard, New Zealand’s foreign ministry told Reuters.

The vessel was en route to the port of Jingtang in Tangshan, China, with an estimated journey of approximately 17 days, it said.

Australian Associated Press reported the shipment was believed to have been put together by Australasian Global Exports, a Melbourne-based exporter that operates across Australia and New Zealand. The company’s executive director of procurement, Graeme Turner, declined to comment.

The exporter is believed to be responsible for employing stockhandlers and vets, with the shipping company employing the crew.

The New Zealand animal rights organisation Safe said the tragedy demonstrated the risks of the live animal export trade. “These cows should never have been at sea,” said Safe’s campaigns manager, Marianne Macdonald. “This is a real crisis, and our thoughts are with the families of the 43 crew who are missing with the ship. But questions remain, including why this trade is allowed to continue.”

Typhoon Maysak had weakened to a tropical storm as it arrived off the east coast of North Korea on Thursday. North Korean state TV showed flooding along the eastern coast but there were no immediate reports of casualties. The country is vulnerable to natural disasters due to its poor infrastructure, with flooding in deforested mountains and hills a particular concern.

Earlier on Thursday, the typhoon had brought down trees and caused flooding in parts of South Korea, knocking out power to more than 270,000 homes and leaving at least one person dead.

Courtesy of theguardian.com

https://tinyurl.com/y2un7wtl

Two young children who were swept away in North Carolina flash flood found dead #Floods #NorthCarolina #USA

Severe Flood Warning

Rescuers in North Carolina found the bodies of a 5-year-old girl and her 4-year-old brother who had been swept away by floodwaters, bringing an end to a dayslong search, authorities said Thursday.

“We were hoping a for a better outcome,” Johnston County Sheriff Steve Bizzell said Thursday. “But at least this morning, we have retrieved them. The family has been notified, and we want to keep the family in our thoughts and our prayers.”

The children, Alexa Castro, and Abraham Martinez, Jr., were with their mother, Vanessa Castro, in a car when flash floods struck Smithfield in Johnston County, about 30 miles south of Raleigh, on Monday night.

First responders were able initially to reach both the mother and Abraham Jr., but the boy slipped away when a rescue boat capsized, officials said.

Alexa’s body was found on Wednesday afternoon and Abraham’s on Thursday morning, according to the sheriff.

“Everybody that I’ve talked to has been in continuous prayer for this family and these kids and their safety — and we have found them,” Bizzell told reporters.

The children’s bodies were discovered in a shallow creek that feeds into the Neuse River, and Bizzell said that if they had been carried away by the river’s fast-moving waters, their bodies might never have been found.

“I’m just thankful that they never got into the Neuse River,” Bizzell said.

“It’s a sad day for for the family, it’s a sad day for law enforcement, it’s a sad day for the first responders, the searchers, the boaters,” he said. “But at least we got those children, and the family can find a sense of closure. Those kids are in a better place than we are today.”

Courtesy of nbcnews.com

https://tinyurl.com/y35lefbb