The blog has been neglected

Over the next few weeks the blog will be updated. Keep an eye out for new posts and news.

A link will be also on the school intranet.

Hazards around the world

The news around the world over the last few days has been full of the typhoon in Myanmar (Burma) and the earthquake in China. rather than post new items on this blog here are a few links:

BBC News

 ITN News

Earthquake news

Yahoo News

 

Cyclone in Myanmar

Cyclone MalaYANGON (Reuters) – Hundreds of thousands of people have been left without shelter and drinking water in military-ruled Myanmar after a devastating cyclone tore through the Irrawaddy delta, a United Nations official said on Monday.

Aid agencies scrambled to deliver plastic sheeting, water and cooking equipment from stockpiles in the former Burma. The government says at least 351 died in the cyclone, which slammed into the delta region on Saturday before devastating Yangon.

That death toll is likely to climb as the authorities make contact with hard-hit islands and villages in the delta, the rice bowl of the impoverished Southeast Asian nation of 53 million.

“It’s clear that this is a major disaster,” Richard Horsey, of the United Nations disaster response office in Bangkok, told Reuters after an emergency aid meeting.

“How many people are affected? We know that it’s in the six figures. We know that it’s several hundred thousand needing shelter and clean drinking water, but how many hundred thousand we just don’t know,” he said.

The International Federation of the Red Cross said teams were trying to assess the damage and aid requirements in the five declared disaster zones where 24 million people live.

“We are issuing water purification tablets, clothing, plastic sheeting, cooking utensils and hygiene items. We’re trying to mobilise portable water from local businesses,” Michael Annear, head of Red Cross Southeast Asia disaster management unit.

“We’re preparing to send more stuff into the country. We have not been restricted,” he said.

 

Climate Change

I was really interested to see this article on The Independent’s website…..have a look and see what you think. …….interesting eh?

The great carbon con: Can offsetting really help to save the planet?

 

It all started with Sting, this fad for owning one’s very own patch of tropical rainforest, though it is probably unfair to blame him entirely for creating the boom industry that buying up forests piecemeal has become.

Storms Batter the UK

Storms batter Porthcawl, Wales

Reported in The Guardian today:

The storm that battered large sections of the UK today originated high above Newfoundland late last week, deepening as it moved across the Atlantic.

While the winds that hit the south and east coasts early today saw gusts peaking at just over 80mph, such speeds are not in themselves that exceptional, according to the Met Office.

“We probably get wind speeds that high around the UK about once or twice a year,” Dave Britton, a Met Office meteorologist, said.

“What is more unusual about this is the low pressure, at 940, which we only see about once every five years or so.

“Again, this is not a completely exceptional figure, but it is a very large area of low pressure. It is also the gradient it approaches at which is so important.”

The severe flood warnings in place throughout Devon and Cornwall were caused by a combination of yet more factors, Britton said.

“What is happening is that you have the spring tides, which are particularly high near the equinox.

“Then you have the low pressure, which you could say sucks the water further upwards.

“Then you have the extremely strong winds pushing the water towards the shore. All this is combing to cause the flood risk.”

The flood risk peaked around the morning high tide, between around 6am and 7am – but as winds increase again over the course of the day there is a renewed risk of more flooding with the next tide.

One positive for meteorologists, Britton added, was that they had anticipated the scale of the storm more or less exactly.

Snow in China

_41188444_xinjiang203.jpgMillions of Chinese faced a humanitarian crisis on Friday, as petrol and food reserves dwindled and yet more bad weather was forecast for a country paralyzed by record-breaking cold and snow.

More than 160 counties and cities in central China were suffering blackouts and water shortages, Xinhua news agency said, including Chenzhou, in Hunan province, a city of 4 million that has been without power and water for more than a week.

“Many trees are severed and power lines have collapsed. It’s like we have experienced an air raid or lost a battle,” a Chenzhou hotel worker told Reuters by telephone. “It is a complete mess. We are hungry and cold.”

Happy New Year and Welcome back!

Happy New Year to everyone!

I hope you had a good Christmas and a well earned rest! 

Key Stage 3 students in year 8 and 9 will find that new homeworks are ready for you to follow on your pages.

 A reminder: Homework milestones are due in by the end of this week for all year 8 and 9 students.

Death Toll for Bangladesh Cyclone Rises

Today’s news stated that the number of deaths has risen to 3100.

Bangladesh Cyclone

Local residents look inside a damaged class room at a school in Bangladesh 16/11/07

At least 600 people are reported to have died after a powerful cyclone smashed into Bangladesh’s coast, levelling villages and uprooting trees.Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated or sought safe shelter before the storm hit the coast from the Bay of Bengal, but some were left behind.

The true extent of the devastation remains unclear as the storm has blocked access to the affected areas.

The storm weakened on Friday as it passed through the capital, Dhaka.

As it was downgraded to a tropical storm, attention turned to assessing the devastation and distributing aid.

Crops destroyed

The damage from Cyclone Sidr, which has now moved well inland north-east of Dhaka, was worst on Bangladesh’s southern coastal strip.

The government’s disaster agency estimated the confirmed number of dead at 606 on Friday.

Tens of thousands of homes are thought to have been damaged and the recent crop harvest has also probably been destroyed.