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Hello,
Days of torrential rain have brought floods and landslides in Indonesia’s province of West Sumatra, killing at least 26 people and forcing the evacuation of more than 70,000, authorities said.
Bridges, schools, 113 hectares (280 acres) of farmland and nearly 700 homes have been damaged by torrential rains that have pounded down since Thursday, according to the country’s disaster mitigation agency (BNPB).
Footage from the affected region showed homes and stores damaged by the inundation, and sections of muddy road that had collapsed into an adjacent river, or strewn with fallen trees.
Also on my radar today:
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BPBD officers help to evacuate locals at a residential area affected by floods due to heavy rains, in Padang, West Sumatra province, Indonesia. Antara Foto/Iggoy el Fitra/ via REUTERS
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Rescue and search efforts
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Indonesia’s rescue agency is hunting for those missing, officials said, with 150 rescuers drafted into the effort, hampered by blocked roads following the landslides.
The BNPB’s chief arrived in the provincial capital of Padang on Monday to lead coordination and evaluation efforts as well as distribute emergency relief funds.
“Today’s search involves 150 personnel from various disaster agencies,” Abdul Malik, the chief of the provincial rescue team, said in a statement.
Those evacuated gathered in the nearest mosques, said Abdul Muhari, the spokesperson of Indonesia’s disaster agency BNPB, but no temporary shelters were set up. They received food, water and medicines, while others returned home as waters subsided.
Five hundred packages of aid including tents, blankets, water purifiers, food and hygiene kits were also being distributed, he said. With more rain expected, the agency has warned of possible further damage from floods and landslides.
Indonesia’s rainy season began in January with the BMKG meteorological agency forecasting a first-quarter peak, particularly on the islands of Java and Sumatra.
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Meanwhile, heavy rain in Bolivia’s capital, La Paz, prompted authorities to declare a state of emergency, a government document showed, after overflowing rivers destroyed many houses over the weekend.
Bolivian President Luis Arce pledged to send heavy machinery and 3,000 troops to prevent further damage, according to the document.
Heavy rains caused flooding in several neighborhoods and isolated parts of the city by cutting water, electricity and roads.
One person died over the weekend in La Paz because of the heavy rains, while nearly 50 people have died in deluges across the country since the rainy season began in January, according to official data.
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Winter storms kill hundreds of seabirds
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Elsewhere, hundreds of guillemot seabirds have been found dead on French Atlantic beaches, exhausted by unusually heavy winter storms that prevent them from feeding, environmentalists said.
Over 500 common guillemots – seabirds related to penguins and puffins – have been found dead along the French Atlantic coast since the year began, the French League for Birds has estimated.
“Climate change is an indirect cause, as it increases the frequency and intensity of storms, particularly winter storms, which are the main reason for massive strandings of seabirds,” CNRS research institute scientist Jerome Fort said.
Antoine Prevel, a volunteer for the nonprofit Sea Shepherd France, said guillemot beachings happen regularly in winter, but not to the scale of the past weeks.
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Greta Thunberg and other climate activists blocks the entrance of the Swedish Parliament during a protest in Stockholm, Sweden. Christine Olsson/ TT News Agency/via REUTERS
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- Swedish police on Tuesday forcibly removed Greta Thunberg and other climate activists who were blocking the entrance to parliament for a second day, driving them away in a police van.
- Gig workers: EU countries backed watered-down draft rules giving workers at Uber, Deliveroo and other online platforms more social and labor rights.
- Cost of living Nigeria: Millions in Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, are grappling with the worst cost of living crisis in decades, which has deepened since President Bola Tinubu introduced bold but unpopular economic reforms after he assumed office last May. Click here for the full Reuters story.
- Britain’s energy regulator Ofgem launched a call for input to help protect consumers amid high energy costs and find ways to address a record 3.1 billion pound ($3.98 billion) pile of unpaid bills.
- Countries across Europe should prepare for “catastrophic” risks, ranging from floods to deadly heatwaves, as worsening climate change hits every part of their economies and societies this century, the EU Environment Agency said.
- LGBT rights: Florida and LGBTQ advocates settled a lawsuit over a state law on classroom instruction that grants teachers freedom to discuss sexual orientation and gender identity while also shielding the youngest students from those topics.
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Vanina Laurent-Ledru, director general at Foundation S, the philanthropic organization of global healthcare company Sanofi, shares her thoughts on the health effects of high temperatures and heavy rains said:
“The recent rise in dengue cases in Peru and across South America is alarming as there is no question that climate change is the catalyst.
“Coping with extreme weather events such as the deadly floods this week, this crisis compounds the strain on the region’s already fragile healthcare systems.
“For countries like Peru, and many others, climate change is not an anticipated crisis of the future, it is happening now – threating livelihoods, public health, and for many, their lives.
“Urgent global cooperation is needed to ensure the rapid availability of financial assistance to help countries like Peru predict and adapt to the immediate and foreseeable health impacts of climate change. It is vital we take decisive, collective action now to help those on the frontlines and most at risk.”
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Large swaths of Australia sweated through severe heatwave conditions that lifted bushfire risk in the country’s southeast during the weekend.
The nation’s weather forecaster on Saturday had heatwave alerts in place for South Australia, New South Wales, Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and Victoria, warning temperatures in some regions went above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
In Victoria’s capital Melbourne, temperatures hit a maximum of 39 C (102.2 F) on Saturday, more than 15 degrees above the March mean, forecaster data showed.
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- 13 March, Brussels, Belgium: Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) are set to adopt the Artificial Intelligence Act, which aims to ensure that AI is trustworthy, safe and respects EU fundamental rights, while supporting innovation and making Europe a leader in the field.
- 13 March, Brussels, Belgium: A plenary will vote on its position on new waste reduction targets to better prevent and reduce waste from food and textiles across the EU. MEPs also want producers to cover costs for collecting, sorting and recycling waste textiles.
- 16 March, Dubrovnik, Croatia: Fishermen in Croatia have found a species of fish normally native to the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans that has spread to the Adriatic via the Western Mediterranean. Scientists say sea temperatures rising due to climate change are responsible for the appearance of the fish.
- 17 March, Montreal, Canada: Workers at Airbus’s Montreal-area A220 jet plant are expected to vote on a new contract described by their union as “hostile” and “totally unacceptable.” The labor talks come as Airbus tries to lower costs on the money-losing program.
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Today’s Sustainable Switch was edited by Christina Fincher
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