Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Tehran sandstorm kills four people

Dozens also injured as freak weather damages property and leaves 50,000 homes without electricity in Iranian capital
Tehran sandstorm
A picture taken with a smartphone shows the sandstorm engulfing Tehran. Photograph: Str/AFP/Getty Images
A huge sandstorm and record winds has killed at least four people in Tehran, plunging Iran's capital into darkness during rush hour and forcing thousands to run for cover.
The freak weather struck at 5.10pm local time, knocking down trees and sweeping debris across streets and into the windscreens of cars.
State media reported 70-mile per hour winds at the peak of the disruption.
Power supplies were knocked out in at least 50,000 homes, an electricity official said, and the weather smashed windows and caused telecommunication towers to topple and masonry to fall off buildings.
Forecasters initially warned Tehranis to stay indoors, shortly before the ISNA news agency said the fatalities had been caused by falling trees.
Amin Saberinia, Iran's chief emergency official, announced the deaths and said at least 27 people were injured, 10 of them in a road accident when the gloom suddenly descended.
State television later reported that two of those injured in the storm were in critical condition.
"This is like an apocalyptic Hollywood movie," a woman running into a shop in the capital's central business district to escape the gales told a reporter seconds after the storm hit.
A man inside the same building said: "I've never seen anything like this. I was afraid it was an omen of things to come."
Almost 7,000 emergency workers were deployed within the hour, city officials said, and Ahad Vazifeh, in charge of government weather forecasts, cautioned of more bad weather lasting into Wednesday.
After a 15-minute blackout caused by the initial force of the sandstorm hit, rains arrived with winds remaining strong.
Pictures posted on social media showed a gigantic sand cloud filling the city's skyline, before it turned dark and outside temperatures plunged from 33C

China pledges to limit carbon emissions for first time

Absolute cap to come into effect from 2016, climate adviser says on the day after US announces ambitious carbon plan
The sun is seen behind smoke billowing from a chimney of a heating plant in Taiyuan, Shanxi province
The sun is seen behind smoke billowing from a chimney of a heating plant in Taiyuan, Shanxi province Photograph: JON WOO/REUTERS
China, the world's biggest greenhouse gas emitter, will limit its total emissions for the first time by the end of this decade, according to a top government advisor.
He Jiankun, chairman of China's Advisory Committee on Climate Change, told a conference in Beijing on Tuesday that an absolute cap on carbon emissions will be introduced.
"The government will use two ways to control CO2 emissions in the next five-year plan, by intensity and an absolute cap," Reuters reported He as saying. Though not a government official, He is a high level advisor.
While environmentalists broadly welcomed the remarks, they cautioned that it was far from clear at what level the cap would be set and said it needed to be enforceable.
China's emissions have risen dramatically in the last two decades,overtaking those from the US – the previous biggest producer – in 2006. Although the average Chinese person's carbon footprint is still much lower than the average American's, it is catching up, and is now on a par with the average European's.
“The timing is very auspicious,” said Frank Jotzo, an expert on the economics and policy of climate change at Australian National University and a lead author on the fifth assessment report from the IPCC, the UN’s climate science panel.
Jotzo, who is attending the conference in Beijing, added: “Globally I think we are in a much better situation than we were leading into the [major UN climate change talks] Copenhagen summit in 2009. One and a half years out from the Paris climate conference, where a new agreement is to be struck, we very likely have some coordination behind the scenes and some competition for leadership on the issue.”
But he cautioned: “The announcement of intent of an absolute target doesn’t tell us anything substantive....[On the US side] we have a policy for the electricity sector but not an overall national number.”
China set its first ever carbon targets in 2009, in the run-up to the Copenhagen summit, which was attended by Obama, Gordon Brown, Angela Merkel and other world leaders but ended in a weak deal with non-binding targets. The previous target was for a cut of emissions relative to its economic growth, by 40-45% by 2020, compared to 2005 levels, meaning absolute carbon emissions could still increase as China's economy grew.
But the new cap will be the first time that the country, which has been plagued by pollution problems in large part due to the burning of carbon-intensive coal, has promised to limit absolute emissions. Officials have not yet put a figure on what level the cap will be.
He told Reuters that the country's emissions were likely to peak at around 11bn tonnes CO2 equivalent – up from 7-9.5bn tonnes CO2e now – by 2030.
The move is likely to be welcomed by Christiana Figueres, the executive secretary of the UN climate secretariat, who oversees long-running efforts to reach an international deal on climate change. The Copenhagen meeting, but countries have agreed to reach a new deal next year at a blockbuster summit in Paris. The UN climate negotiationsresume on Wednesday in Bonn.
Doug Parr, Greenpeace UK's chief scientist, said that the move by China, so shortly after the US announcement, showed "momentum" in the climate talks process.
“In the last 24 hours we’ve had two major announcements from China and the US which send a powerful signal to other world leaders ahead of crucial climate talks later this year. The Chinese government has already set out ambitious plans to cut the country’s reliance on coal – an additional cap on CO2 suggests the country’s leaders are serious about tackling their emission problem," he said.
Li Shuo, climate and energy campaigner for Greenpeace in China, said a carbon cap was a “positive and natural step forward” following the adoption of a cap on energy use, announced in 2011.
“The signal He Jiankun delivered, if it does represent the government view, is a positive note. But we need to see a number and we need some clarification,” he said. “The key battle we lost with the energy cap is that it’s aspirational and not attached to administrative consequences. That makes the seriousness of the target questionable.”
The overall figure needed to be broken down into regional targets, with officials evaluated on their success in meeting them, to be effective, he argued. He also warned that it would be a “climate disaster” if China’s emissions did not peak until 2030.
Wu Changhua, greater China director of the Climate Group, said the comments should be seen in the context of China’s pilot carbon trading schemes. Many people were keen to see a swift move to the establishment of a national mechanism, he said, while others thought that in the meantime there should be an expansion and linking up of existing regional platforms. 

Glass fronted house from Ferris Bueller's Day Off sold for $1.06m

Location for the scene in which a red Ferrari is sent crashing through a glass wall finds a buyer after five years
Glass house used in Ferris Bueller's Day Off
The house used in Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
The glass fronted house so memorably destroyed in a moment of teenage rebellion in the cult 1986 comedy Ferris Bueller's Day Off has been sold for $1.06m (£632,000), according to Variety.
  1. Ferris Bueller's Day Off
  2. Production year: 1986
  3. Countries: Rest of the world, USA
  4. Cert (UK): 15
  5. Runtime: 103 mins
  6. Directors: John Hughes
  7. Cast: Alan Ruck, Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara
  8. More on this film
Located in Highland Park, Illinois, not far from Chicago, the property was used for the famous scene in which Bueller's timid best friend Cameron Fry trashes his authoritarian father's expensive red Ferrari by sending it careering through glass into the yard below. The pavilion was attached to the original 1953 building in 1974 and features adjustable walls.
Despite its status as a pop-culture landmark the property had been on the market for five years and was reduced from an original asking price of $2.3m in 2009. It was designed by A James Speyer in the style of German modernist architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, who settled in Chicago in 1937 after experiencing difficulties working in his homeland due to the rise of the Nazi regime.

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