
Leaf Rapids wildfires top 30,000 hectares as firefighters, essential workers forced to flee
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
All firefighters and essential workers have been ordered to evacuate Leaf Rapids, Manitoba, after a wildfire burning northwest of the town entered the community on Wednesday, July 23 night.In a Facebook post at 8:15 p.m. CDT, the town's administration said the fire jumped the Churchill River and began spreading through Leaf Rapids' industrial area.Due to the fire's advance and thick smoke, officials said all personnel were evacuating and may not return for some time.As of Tuesday, the fire northwest of Leaf Rapids had grown to over 2,500 hectares. It is the smallest of the three major fires near the town. A second fire southwest of Leaf Rapids measured more than 30,300 hectares. A third to the east had reached 15,500 hectares.The province confirmed that all three wildfires remain out of control.Leaf Rapids, located about 155 kilometres northwest of Thompson, declared a state of emergency on July 7. Around 300 residents were told to evacuate within 24 hours.Ervin Bighetty, a former mayor of Leaf Rapids, has been staying with his family in a Winnipeg hotel since the evacuation two weeks ago. He told CBC News that he was saddened to hear that firefighters were leaving the community."I don't know when we're going to go home, if we're going to have a home to go to," he said. "But what matters to me is that my family is safe. I know where they are, I can go down the hallway and go see them."In its statement, the town urged residents to 'hope for the best,' adding, 'be thankful everyone got out safely.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
a day ago
- Time of India
Strong monsoon flow, cyclonic circulation to bring heavy rain in some Bengal districts: IMD
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel The IMD on Thursday forecast heavy rainfall in some districts of West Bengal till August 6, owing to a cyclonic circulation over north Bay of Bengal and strong monsoon flow Heavy rain is likely at one or two places in the south Bengal districts of North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas, Nadia, Hooghly, Purba and Paschim Bardhaman, Birbhum, Purulia and Bankura till Sunday, it said in a is expected to receive heavy rainfall on Saturday, the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) said in its with lightning and gusty wind speeds reaching 30-40 kmph is very likely to occur at one or two places over all the districts of south Bengal, it to very heavy rainfall is likely in the sub-Himalayan districts of Darjeeling, Kalimpong, Alipurduar, Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar from August 2 to August 4, it in south Bengal and Kalimpong in north Bengal received the state's highest rainfall in the past 24 hours till 8.30 am on Thursday at 110 mm, the IMD data in Kolkata received 37-mm rainfall during the period, while neighbouring Salt Lake recorded 72-mm rain during the period, it places in the state that received significant amount of rainfall were Bankura (72 mm), Bardhaman (61 mm) and Darjeeling (45 mm), the bulletin added.


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Shanghai evacuates 283,000 people as typhoon nears
Live Events Wave warning (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Shanghai has evacuated almost 283,000 people from vulnerable coastal and low-lying areas as Typhoon Co-May approaches, bringing lashing rains and high winds, state media reported a third of flights from Shanghai's two international airports have been cancelled, the city's news service said, totalling around Shanghai Central Meteorological Observatory on Wednesday afternoon upgraded an earlier yellow rainstorm alert to orange, the second-highest warning Co-May made landfall in eastern Zhejiang Province at about 4:30 am Wednesday (2030 GMT Tuesday), with winds near its centre of 83 kilometres per is expected to make a second landfall in financial hub Shanghai in the evening."From last night to 10:00 am today, 282,800 people have been evacuated and relocated, basically achieving the goal of evacuating all those who needed to be evacuated," state broadcaster CCTV than 1,900 temporary shelters have been set up across the city, authorities of rain inundated the city without pause on Wednesday, with pedestrians bracing their umbrellas against gusts and delivery drivers splashing through huge puddles as they made their way through sodden services have been cancelled, additional speed limits are in place on highways, and there has been some disruption to metro and train services in the Shanghai's Legoland and Disneyland remained open on Wednesday the typhoon tracked northwest after making landfall in the morning, live shots from China's east coast showed waves overrunning seaside walkways, while broadcasts from the city of Ningbo showed residents sploshing through ankle-deep China issued a tsunami warning for parts of the eastern seaboard after a magnitude-8.8 earthquake struck off Russia's Kamchatka the warning was later lifted, according to was downgraded to a tropical storm before leaving the Philippines, and then strengthened again over the South China passage has had an indirect link to extreme weather in China's north at the moment, Chen Tao, chief forecaster at the National Meteorological Center, told the state-run China rain there has killed more than 30 people and forced authorities to evacuate tens of thousands, state media reported Tuesday."Typhoon activity can influence atmospheric circulation... thereby altering the northward transport of moisture," Chen disasters are common across China, particularly in the summer when some regions experience heavy rain while others bake in searing is the world's biggest emitter of the greenhouse gases that drive climate change and contribute to making extreme weather more frequent and it is also a global renewable energy powerhouse that aims to make its massive economy carbon-neutral by 2060.


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Earthquake off Russia rattles US, Japan coasts — a 2010 tragedy of similar scale had displaced 1.5 million
Live Events Echoes of 2010: Chile's deadly earthquake and tsunami One of the most powerful earthquakes on record Valdivia, Chile, 1960 — magnitude 9.5 Alaska, United States, 1964 — magnitude 9.2 Sumatra, Indonesia, 2004 — magnitude 9.1 Tōhoku, Japan, 2011 — magnitude 9.1 Kamchatka, Russia, 1952 — magnitude 9.0 (With inputs from NYT, AP) (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel A massive undersea earthquake struck off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula early Wednesday, generating tsunami warnings and advisories across a vast stretch of the Pacific — from Japan and Alaska to Hawaii, California and down to quake, registering 8.8 in magnitude, was centered in the Sea of Okhotsk near the remote eastern coast of Kamchatka, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Though the quake occurred Wednesday local time, it was still Tuesday in the United National Tsunami Warning Center in Alaska issued tsunami alerts for Alaska and the U.S. West Coast, while the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Honolulu warned of potentially damaging waves across all Hawaiian islands. Mexico's navy also issued an alert for coastal states, expecting waves of up to 3.3 Japan, tsunami waves as high as 1.3 meters (4.3 feet) were recorded at Kuji Port in Iwate Prefecture, with the Japan Meteorological Agency warning that waves could intensify. Additional footage from NHK, Japan's public broadcaster, showed waves arriving at the coasts of Hokkaido, Ibaraki and the U.S., tsunami sirens were activated in parts of Northern California, including Crescent City, where waves up to 5.7 feet were forecast. Oregon's emergency authorities urged residents to stay away from beaches and marinas, saying the tsunami was not expected to be catastrophic but could generate dangerous currents. The tsunami was also expected to reach Hawaii after 7 p.m. local time, and advisories were issued as far south as calamity is a grim reminder the 2010 Chile earthquake and tsunami, which caused widespread devastation across central Chile. That quake, registering magnitude 8.8, struck in the early hours of February 27, 2010, near Concepción — Chile's second-largest city — and sent tsunami waves racing across the Pacific, prompting mass evacuations in Hawaii, Japan, and the to reporting by The New York Times at the time, the Chilean quake killed hundreds and displaced more than 1.5 million people. Cities like Talca and Concepción were especially hard-hit, with widespread structural collapse. In Concepción, a new 14-storey apartment building crumbled, and fires broke out at the University of Concepción's laboratories. In the coastal port of Talcahuano, tsunami waves washed boats into city streets and flooded the town Michelle Bachelet called it 'one of the worst tragedies in the last 50 years' and declared a national 'state of catastrophe.' Despite the quake's size — tied for the fifth largest in the world since 1900 — experts noted the damage was far less catastrophic than the Haiti earthquake six weeks earlier, owing to Chile's strict building codes introduced after past seismic than two dozen powerful aftershocks rattled Chile over the following days. Residents in Santiago, nearly 200 miles from the epicenter, described terrifying scenes of swaying buildings, screaming residents, and car alarms ringing for minutes. In Talca, most homes were severely damaged and people camped outside near fires built from collapsed 2010 quake also disrupted major infrastructure: highways buckled, bridges collapsed, and the airport in Santiago temporarily shut down due to ceiling damage. In the town of Chillán, the collapse of a prison wall allowed 300 inmates to escape amid the Chilean Red Cross initially declined international aid, but the United States, through President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, offered support and stood by for potential relief 1960 Valdivia earthquake — the most powerful ever recorded at magnitude 9.5 — also struck Chile near Concepción. It killed nearly 2,000 people and left over two million homeless, searing into national memory the importance of preparedness for Pacific seismic events. Experts like Andre Filiatrault of the University at Buffalo later credited Chile's reinforced concrete structures and engineering practices for mitigating the scale of the 2010 8.8-magnitude earthquake that struck off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula on Wednesday is among the most powerful ever recorded, according to a New York Times report citing the U.S. Geological Survey. If its magnitude holds after further review, the quake will rank as the sixth-strongest globally since modern measurements is the most powerful earthquake since the 9.1-magnitude Tōhoku quake that devastated Japan in 2011, killing over 15,000 people and displacing 130,000. That disaster produced a towering 50-foot tsunami and triggered the Fukushima nuclear crisis after inundating more than 200 miles of Japan's eastern comparison, Wednesday's Kamchatka quake released massive seismic energy—though still about 2.8 times less than the 2011 event. The U.S. Geological Survey explains that each whole-number increase on the magnitude scale represents roughly 31.6 times more energy USGS estimates that the latest quake could cause economic losses running into tens of billions of dollars for Russia. 'Extensive damage is probable and the disaster is likely widespread,' it said. The agency also noted that disasters of this magnitude typically require national or international-level to USGS records cited by the Times, the five strongest earthquakes on record are: