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France braces for ice storm amid severe travel warnings

Cars drive on the snow-covered A43 French highway on January 8, 2010, near Lyon, central eastern France. Europe was blasted by more snow and ice since the eve amid a brutal winter that has caused travel chaos across the continent. Photo courtesy AFP

Extreme cold sparks blackout concerns in S.Korea
Seoul (AFP) Jan 12, 2010 - South Koreans were urged Tuesday to save energy after unusually icy weather caused a surge in power demand, sparking concern about possible blackouts. Knowledge Economy Minister Choi Kyung-Hwan said the country used a record amount of electricity over the past four days, peaking at 68.56 million kilowatts last Friday morning. This is 5.35 million kilowatts more than recorded during last summer's peak, when air conditioners are widely used. Unless people reduce usage the nation's power reserve capacity will fall below four million kilowatts, which would be considered an emergency situation, Choi said.

Power companies say a reserve of 6 million kilowatts is needed to ensure emergency backup in case of an unexpected generating problem. "If a large power plant is knocked out in this situation, there would be blackouts over wide areas," Choi said. He urged banks, department stores, malls and hotels to help save energy and called on homes and offices to reduce the use of heaters. He also asked people to walk instead of using elevators. The temperature in Seoul fell as low as minus 13.6 degrees Celsius (7.5 Fahrenheit) last week. On Tuesday the low was forecast at minus 11 Celsius with a high of minus 7.

France faces flight chaos in snow
Paris Jan 12, 2010 - Airlines may have to cancel up to half of their flights from Paris's main airport on Wednesday when heavy snow and sleet are expected, with disruption compounded by a strike, aviation authorities warned. The state civil aviation safety authority DGAC recommended flights be cancelled and warned that strike action would disrupt services further. Final decisions on cancellations will depend on conditions on Wednesday morning. It was not clear on Tuesday evening to what extent airlines would cancel flights, but a forecast for snow and sleet threatened a day of severe disruption for Charles de Gaulle airport, a major international hub.

The DGAC "has asked airlines to cancel from tomorrow morning at least 30 percent of their flights from Roissy (Charles de Gaulle airport), which could rise to 50 percent if necessary," it said in a statement on Tuesday. At Orly airport, Paris's other main hub south of the capital, "traffic will be reduced by 50 percent," it added. Further disruption was likely on Thursday, it said, with up to 15 percent of flights cancelled at Charles de Gaulle. The DGAC said that a two-day airport strike in several cities against reforms of the air transport sector was likely to disrupt air traffic further. It advised travellers due to fly on Wednesday to contact their airlines. Last weekend snow shut down the airports in the major French cities of Lyon and Toulouse.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Jan 12, 2010
The French capital hunkered down Tuesday for a snow and sleet storm, banning lorries from motorways and warning of massive flight cancellations as icy conditions made for treacherous travel around north Europe.

French road authorities issued a ban against heavy commercial road traffic starting after midnight Wednesday until noon on motorways in eight departments around Paris due to a new winter storm brewing Tuesday night.

Conditions were expected to be especially hazardous because of icy sleet. Some 58 departments in northern and central France have been placed under an orange alert by Meteo France.

At Paris's main airport, aviation authorities warned that the storm may force airlines to cancel up to half of their flights, with disruption compounded by a strike.

The state civil aviation safety authority DGAC "has asked airlines to cancel from tomorrow morning at least 30 percent of their flights from Roissy (Charles de Gaulle airport), which could rise to 50 percent if necessary," it said in a statement on Tuesday.

At Orly airport, the other main Paris international air hub, "traffic will be reduced by 50 percent," it said. Final decisions on cancellations will depend on conditions on Wednesday morning.

The DGAC said that a two-day airport strike in several cities against reforms of the air transport sector was likely to disrupt air traffic even further.

Another strike in France could literally affect the weather.

Some 60 workers of Meteo France went off the job Tuesday to protest proposed reorganisation plans, forcing the closing of several departmental centres in the west of the country, union sources said.

In Germany, falling temperatures created dangerous, icy roadways, causing numerous accidents, some fatal, and motorway closures and delays around the country.

An elderly woman and her passenger died after their car skidded into the path of oncoming vehicles on an ice-covered bridge in the Black Forest in southeast Germany. One person in another vehicle died.

A 22-year-old man died in the west of the country after his car spun out of control on ice, reportedly smashing into a tractor trailer.

The German Automobile Association (ADAC) warned motorists to expect long delays and to be extremely careful.

"Roads can turn into ice rinks in seconds or in minutes," it said.

Countries trying to make ice- and snow-covered roads passable cannot count on Switzerland for the much needed salt to clear the way.

Switzerland's main publicly owned salt works said Tuesday that it had turned down new orders from the snowbound Netherlands and Germany in order to cater for booming domestic needs in the cold snap.

"The situation is so fragile that were can't take the risk of delivering abroad," said Armin Roos, sales manager at Schweizer Rheinsalinen, a monopoly owned by Swiss regional governments. "We're running round the clock."

Over the past 10 days alone the salt works have distributed about 40,000 tonnes of salt and have about 58,000 tonnes left in storage.

The Alpine nation normally consumes about 100,000 tonnes of salt over a whole year to clear public highways, according to the firm's website.

Further south in Spain, temperatures rose several degrees Tuesday, improving road, rail and air traffic conditions disrupted by heavy snowfall.

However, much of the country remained on alert, with strong winds of up to 80 kilometres per hour and heavy rains forecast in many areas, notably in northern regions and around Madrid.

The national electricity grid reported its highest power surge of the winter due to the freezing temperatures late on Monday.

Heavy rains in Portugal have raised the water of the Alqueva dam, which forms the largest artificial lake in Europe, to its maximum capacity for the first time since it was inaugurated in 2003.

Flooding from heavy rains in the Balkan states Tuesday drove not only man, but also beast, from home.

In Montenegro, a hippo was found wandering in village of Plavnica on Lake Skadar after flooding at a private zoo led him to escape from his pen.

"He sometimes escapes his habitat when the water levels rise and this is not unusual," Nikola Pejovic, one of the owners of the complex, told AFP.

Pejovic said that the hippo, named Nikica, weighing about two tonnes, "usually walks along already known path, about one kilometer (0.6 miles) long, towards neighbouring houses."

But not to worry. "Nikica is their regular guest and locals are completely used to him," Pejovic added.

burs-boc/ach



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North China braces for more icy weather
Beijing (AFP) Jan 11, 2010
Northern China braced for another blast of frigid air Monday, as coal shortages neared "alarming" levels due to surging power use amid a prolonged cold snap, the government and state media reported. The new cold front is expected to send temperatures plummeting -- to as low as minus 35 degrees Celsius (-31 degrees Fahrenheit) in northern Heilongjiang province -- for much of the week, the ... read more







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