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Indian Ocean buoys help predict monsoon: scientists

Tropical storm kills 11 in India's West Bengal state
Kolkata (AFP) May 4 - At least 11 people were killed and 25 injured when a tropical storm swept through a large portion of India's West Bengal state, officials said Monday. The 10-minute storm carried winds of over 80 kilometres (50 miles) an hour through the state, destroying thousands of mud huts, uprooting electricity and telephone poles and damaging paddy fields and mango crops. Five people, including three children, were killed after lightning struck their mud hut in Malda, about 360km north of the state capital, Kolkata. "Four others were electrocuted as live wire from uprooted electric poles dropped on them in villages on the outskirts of Kolkata," said West Bengal relief minister Mortaza Hossain. Two people were killed by lightning in Canning, a town 40km south of Kolkata. Twenty-five people were hospitalised with severe injuries after they were hit by uprooted trees, Hossain added.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 4, 2009
Scientists said Monday they had reached the halfway point in a project to set up buoys across the Indian Ocean, helping farmers predict the monsoon in some of the world's poorest areas.

The buoys measure wind, rainfall, temperature and other figures around the Indian Ocean, which has lagged behind the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans in data collection.

The international project, which began in earnest in 2004, has moored 22 buoys so far, with plans to put down all 46 by 2012, said Michael McPhaden of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

McPhaden, who is based at the NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle, said the data would provide a major boost to farmers who rely on monsoon rains.

"If you know it's going to be a year of heavy rain or deficient rain, there are different seeds you can plant, different timings and types of fertilizer," he told AFP. "There are all types of strategies you can implement."

The project involves Australia, China, France, India, Indonesia, Japan and the United States, along with a coalition of eight African nations.

About a third of the world population depends in some way on the Indian Ocean's monsoon rains, which feed agriculture in Asia, Africa and Australia.

The monsoons also routinely wreak havoc, last year killing more than 800 people and displacing two million others in India alone.

Besides helping the region's farmers better predict monsoons, McPhaden said the United States had an interest as the Indian Ocean affected extreme weather in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans.

He said the Indian Ocean project modeled an effort from 1985 to 1994 that lay buoys across the Pacific Ocean, helping scientists monitor the El Nino warming effect and the related La Nina cooling phenomenon.

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Taps off for two million in water-starved Mexico City
Mexico City (AFP) April 9, 2009
Some two million residents of Mexico City on Thursday began 36 hours without water under an emergency plan over Easter vacation to respond to a record drop in water supply and to work on repairs.







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