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Pollution in floodwaters raising health concerns
#1
Posted 03 October 2011 - 08:59 AM
View the full article
#2
Posted 03 October 2011 - 07:08 PM
Edited by artistry, 03 October 2011 - 07:18 PM.
#3
Posted 11 October 2011 - 06:00 AM
#4
Posted 07 March 2012 - 11:36 AM
#5
Posted 07 March 2012 - 04:03 PM
As horrible as that was for the water, it was a double whammy because of the fires they had for weeks
afterward, and all those toxins becoming air borne.
(Not to mention, the pollution from the radiation, which is still leaking into the sea to this day.)
http://www.japantime...20120308a5.html
http://www.washingto...rAmR_story.html
And what of the so-called "historic" floods our own country suffers through, almost yearly now, instead
of once every 40 or 50 years? It trashes the ecosystems off the coast of Louisiana, and the gulf of Mexico.
#6
Posted 10 March 2012 - 02:51 AM
#7
Posted 10 March 2012 - 03:31 AM
tri-n-b-helpful, on 10 March 2012 - 02:51 AM, said:
one) go out to you and your countrymen.

#8
Posted 10 March 2012 - 04:01 PM

I guess I don't need to tell you the "latest"... the Jindabyne dam over there has burst and most of Sydney is under water. Transportation systems - road and rail, plus energy distribution systems, are in chaos for the whole of Sydney. I tried to tell them years ago that they needed to decentralize, but no-one there listened!

The worrying part is that the State of NSW was the most prepared in the country for exactly this kind of disaster. Whole systems of levees and dams had millions spent on them for decades. These helped to give people time to assess and evacuate, but the end results are the same. The waters are starting to go down now, very slowly, and within a month, people will think about rebuilding if the weather holds out. Most people's insurance does not cover this kind of flood damage, so pensioners who own their own homes as their only real asset are the worst off. Flooding hits hardest economically. Our nation's food bowls are in the lower lying areas that were flooded. We still have plenty to go around, but prices are tipped to soar. By far the worst is that all the mines are flooded. These take almost half a year to dry out enough for reconstruction work to even begin. Maybe you know all this already, so sorry to whinge.

#9
Posted 10 March 2012 - 04:26 PM
#10
Posted 11 March 2012 - 12:44 AM
#11
Posted 11 March 2012 - 02:39 AM

I've just seen video footage of what those tornados are doing to you guys. You have twenty seven dead as a result; we have just one. It seems that we have very little to complain about in comparison. Sorry for any of you affected up there. Japan, of course, was much worse than we had - not as widespread, but deadly in terms of lives lost.

Umm... it gets worse. Wild fires are ripping through Perth tonight. Forced evacuations are in place - the whole works - all over again! There goes our best prepared anti-bushfire state - considered world experts in back-burning. If they hadn't done the back-burning it would have been much worse. Have you ever been caught in a fire-storm like they had in Victoria? Those aren't normal bushfires that can be predicted. I don't know the physics behind it, but one minute you hear there's a fire some eighty kilometers away, the very next minute you see an airborne fire swirl and your property is lit up like there was fire called down from heaven.
Sorry... back on topic again... just before the recent floods came, that same region was in drought for over a decade! If you like to live life to the extreme, there's nothing like Down Under! I reckon all that water around must surely have pushed up the water table quite a bit by now. There's no point in us feeling sorry for ourselves; we should be doing what the Americans say, "when life throws lemons at you, make lemonade". That being said, I reckon it's high time I sunk a bore in the backyard and said goodbye to water bills forever!

#12
Posted 11 March 2012 - 05:10 AM
It's the new normal. Droughts in Africa are displacing millions of people.
In my mind, the people that experience these horrors are not in the position to be heard.
Hurricane Katrina and the people that were devastated by tornadoes, in this country, come to mind.
How can citizens (no matter what country) be active in their dissent against climate change, if they
don't have anything? No house, no phone, even no id's in some cases, no voter cards.
And even if they had some of these things, the loss and the grief is what is on their minds-not e-mailing
some congressmen to introduce legislation to stop emissions.
(And it's good to see that Australia has an on-going organization to rescue and rehabilitate Koala bears
from the bush fires over the years. They do great work.
http://dawn-m-smith....stralia-a252767
#13
Posted 11 March 2012 - 08:20 AM
#14
Posted 11 March 2012 - 03:56 PM
Shortpoet-GTD, on 11 March 2012 - 05:10 AM, said:
It's the new normal. Droughts in Africa are displacing millions of people.
In my mind, the people that experience these horrors are not in the position to be heard.
Hurricane Katrina and the people that were devastated by tornadoes, in this country, come to mind.
How can citizens (no matter what country) be active in their dissent against climate change, if they
don't have anything? No house, no phone, even no id's in some cases, no voter cards.
And even if they had some of these things, the loss and the grief is what is on their minds-not e-mailing
some congressmen to introduce legislation to stop emissions.
(And it's good to see that Australia has an on-going organization to rescue and rehabilitate Koala bears
from the bush fires over the years. They do great work.
http://dawn-m-smith....stralia-a252767
Koalas are a touchy subject where I live. Only about a hundred kilometres away from where I am, they kill them every year in large numbers... larger number die than are saved.
http://www.theisland...on/1231676.aspx
They do the same to camels, kangaroos, crocodiles, emus - you name it, if it moves, they shoot it, then try to justify it.

#16
Posted 12 March 2012 - 06:36 PM
#17
Posted 12 March 2012 - 09:35 PM

In South Australia, we're the only state to miss out on all of these disasters. Our main issue was that the Murray River urgently, urgently needs flushing from top to bottom. Salt has killed the environment and industries in the whole lower lakes region. The interstate irrigators upstream, which we've been locked in battle with for centuries, refused to release enough water to us for even environmental essential purposes. I hope they can all get it right up there and send us far more water than we know what to do with! Most of the water from these floods, however, is going straight out to sea.

I hope you guys are all fine up there and nobody you know got hurt or died.


#18
Posted 02 April 2012 - 12:38 PM
#19
Posted 17 March 2013 - 06:08 AM
#20
Posted 17 March 2013 - 07:49 PM
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