Energy News  
South Asia Floods Toll Passes 2000 Mark

The floods caused total or partial destruction of close to 75,000 homes in Bihar, where road and bridge repairs were expected to cost some 40 million dollars, a state relief coordinator said. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Pratap Chakravarty
Patna, India (AFP) Aug 09, 2007
The death toll from the worst monsoon floods to hit South Asia in decades passed 2,000 Thursday even as torrents of muddy water receded from millions of acres of farmland and rains shifted west. Thousands of villages remained under water and threatened by disease, while millions were still displaced, mainly in India and Bangladesh, where the severe floods also destroyed valuable crops.

The Indian government is in the process of releasing money budgeted for "calamity" relief from a disaster fund of 800 million dollars, a Press Trust of India news agency report said Thursday.

The cost of the monsoon to India so far stands at about 320 million dollars since June 1 though the figures are expected to rise.

Bihar, where 1.1 million hectares (2.7 million acres) of farmland have been inundated and 14 million people affected, will be getting 37 million dollars in the coming days, PTI said.

Rains appeared to be returning to western states, which were hit hard in early July, and heavy downpours in Gujarat since Monday have killed nine people, a state disaster management official there told AFP Thursday.

"In two districts shifting operations are going on to take people out," said Aval Kumar Baria.

The coastal district of Jamnagar reported 269 millimetres (10 inches) of rain, Baria said.

India's home ministry disaster management division reported 1,521 deaths across the country from this year's monsoon up to Wednesday afternoon alone.

The figures do not include scores of people still missing from numerous boating accidents, including one in Bihar which police said killed 65 people on Monday night.

Health fears remained high and a UNICEF emergency officer told AFP the agency was working with state officials to conduct medical surveillance and inoculate children against diseases, particularly measles.

In Bangladesh the toll has reached 346 after at least 18 more deaths were reported, said Shafiqul Islam, spokesman for the food and disaster management ministry.

Kathmandu has seen 95 fatalities since the monsoon started, with 330,000 people displaced.

The monsoon floods are part of what the World Meteorological Organisation said Tuesday was a global pattern of record extreme weather conditions since the start of the year.

As well as these floods, the UN weather agency's extreme weather list also includes a summer heatwave in Europe, heavy rain that ravaged part of southern China and the first documented tropical cyclone in the Arabian Sea.

The devastation in India threatens an entire season's crops in some areas, raising fears of food shortages.

The floods caused total or partial destruction of close to 75,000 homes in Bihar, where road and bridge repairs were expected to cost some 40 million dollars, a state relief coordinator said.

Another 1.4 million hectares of farmland were flooded in northern Uttar Pradesh and in northeastern Assam.

In neighbouring Bangladesh, which saw 40 percent of its land inundated in the annual flooding, one scientist said the rice-growing nation might see its GDP growth rate hit.

Crops on 1.6 million acres of farmland have been completely or partially damaged, officials say.

"There is dim hope that this crop, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, could be recovered," said Hamid Mia, a scientist working in Bangladesh for the Manila-based International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).

Source: Agence France-Presse

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


India Flood Survivors Struggle To Burn Or Bury Dead
Darbhanga, India (AFP) Aug 08, 2007
Sribhagwan Manjhi has taken to counting the dead bodies that float down the river since raging waters swollen by the monsoon swallowed his bamboo home in India's Bihar state. This week, he said he had counted 10 corpses. "Often I miss some," Manjhi admitted from his observation point in Begusarai district, one of the 19 of impoverished Bihar's 38 districts submerged by the worst flooding in 30 years.







  • Division Of The Caspian
  • Japan Looks To Turn Straw Into Biofuel Amid Price Crunch
  • Nanoparticle Technique Could Lead To Improved Semiconductors
  • New World Record For A Superconducting Magnet Set At National High Magnetic Field Laboratory

  • Indian PM's Communist Allies Reject Landmark US Nuke Deal
  • Russia To Commission Second Unit Of China Tianwan NPP In Sept
  • Europe Gives Ukraine 460 Million Euros To Build Chernobyl Sarcophagus
  • The Iran Nuke Industry Row

  • Invisible Gases Form Most Organic Haze In Both Urban And Rural Areas
  • BAE Systems Completes Major New Facility For Ionospheric Physics Research
  • NASA Satellite Captures First View Of Night-Shining Clouds
  • Main Component For World Latest Satellite To Measure Greenhouse Gases Delivered

  • Indian State Plants 10 Million Trees In One Day
  • East Africa Battles Deforestation With Butterfly Nets
  • Peru Launches Drive To Regrow Lost Forests And Jungles
  • Increase In Creeping Vines Signals Major Shift In Southern US Forests

  • Conventional Plowing Is Skinning Our Agricultural Fields
  • Chinese Prosperity Will Set Off Global Food Inflation
  • Risk Of Contamination Rises As Global Food System Expands
  • Rivers Recede But Millions Go Hungry In Flooded South Asia

  • Driving Changes For The Car Of The Future
  • Toyota To Delay Launch Of New Hybrids
  • US Should Consider Gas Tax Says Ford Chief
  • GM Sales In China To Hit One Million Vehicles

  • Boeing Flies Blended Wing Body Research Aircraft
  • Steering Aircraft Clear Of Choppy Air
  • EAA AirVenture 2007
  • Sensors May Monitor Aircraft For Defects Continuously

  • Could NASA Get To Pluto Faster? Space Expert Says Yes - By Thinking Nuclear
  • NASA plans to send new robot to Jupiter
  • Los Alamos Hopes To Lead New Era Of Nuclear Space Tranportion With Jovian Mission
  • Boeing Selects Leader for Nuclear Space Systems Program

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement