1. Newsletter

    Bild der Verwüstung, die ein Tornado angerichtet hat. Tornados gab es auch auf der anderen Seite des Pazifik, in den US-Staaten Oklahoma, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri und Texas. Gleich 20 Wirbelstürme zerstörten die Stadt Holdenville in Oklahoma und töteten vier Menschen , darunter ein vier Monate altes Baby. In Nebraska wurden »ganze Stadtviertel dem Erdboden gleichgemacht«, berichtet CNN....

  2. Newsletter XVII 2024 - April 21st to 27th - News+ Reform of the Climate Protection Act: One step forward, two steps back

    Wellenbrecher und schützen damit Küstengebiete vor Stürmen... * Vereinigte Staaten | Unwetter | Tornados Unwetterwarnung für Millionen Menschen Tornados verwüsten Orte in den USA Mindestens 60 Wirbelstürme haben in den USA schwere Schäden angerichtet. Die meisten Bewohner der betroffenen Gebiete kamen aber überwiegend glimpflich davon. Laut Experten könnten weitere Unwetter folgen. Mehrere...

  3. Newsletter VI 2024 - February 4th to 10th - News+ Nuclear power is a dead horse - why isn't Merz getting down?

    Education and science, on the other hand, enjoy the highest regard among young people: around three quarters of those surveyed said they trust these areas... * Climate research | Hurricanes Does the hurricane scale need to be expanded? New category 6 is intended to reflect the increasingly frequent "super" cyclones. No longer enough: climate researchers suggest that the previous five-level...

  4. Newsletter XLIX 2023 - December 3rd to 9th - News+ The language of autocracy

    There had certainly been floods in his childhood, “but what we have experienced in recent years is completely new.” In the past, very strong cyclones raced towards the coast from the Indian Ocean and flooded the country. More than half a million people died in the great flood on the Bay of Bengal in 1970. When the Bangladesh cyclone...

  5. Newsletter I - January 01st to 07.01.2021th, 04 - News+ January XNUMXth - Radiation exposure in Fukushima: between lies and self-deception

    At the Institute for Climate and Environmental Sciences (LSCE) in Paris, the radioactive substances released during the Fukushima disaster were widely spread by typhoons. "The hurricanes would erode soils in the Fukushima region where radioactive material such as cesium 134 and cesium 137 have been deposited." The substances ended up in rivers and the Pacific...

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