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Kebakaran gas Putra Heights: Dua tahun untuk bina semula, baik pulih rumah terjejas

KUALA LUMPUR: Kementerian Perumahan dan Kerajaan Tempatan (KPKT) menjangkakan kediaman yang terjejas akibat insiden kebakaran saluran paip gas di Putra Heights, Subang Jaya pada awal bulan lepas dapat dibina dan dibaik pulih sepenuhnya dalam tempoh dua tahun.
 
Menteri berkenaan Nga Kor Ming berkata setakat ini, kerja-kerja membina dan membaik pulih 219 kediaman penduduk yang terjejas mengikut pelan dan jangka masa ditetapkan.
 
"Kontraktor kini giat menjalankan kerja-kerja membaik pulih dan membina kediaman yang musnah, saya harap dalam tempoh kurang dua tahun kita dapat siapkan rumah baharu untuk mangsa terlibat ... yang musnah sepenuhnya kita bina rumah baharu untuk mereka manakala rumah boleh dibaiki, kita baik pulih," katanya.
 
Beliau ditemui Bernama sebelum menjadi tetamu dalam rakaman program Ruang Bicara terbitan Bernama TV yang membincangkan tajuk "UN-HABITAT: Malaysia Sedia Terajui Pembangunan Mampan Global" di Wisma Bernama di sini hari ini.
 
Nga berkata kerajaan menerusi KPKT memperuntukkan RM46 juta bagi proses membaik pulih rumah dan infrastruktur awam yang terjejas dalam insiden letupan terbabit.
 
Insiden kebakaran saluran paip gas pada 1 April lepas menyebabkan api menjulang setinggi lebih 30 meter dengan suhu mencecah lebih 1,000 darjah Celsius dan mengambil masa hampir lapan jam untuk dipadamkan sepenuhnya.
 
Insiden itu mengakibatkan 81 rumah musnah sepenuhnya dengan kerosakan struktur melebihi 40 peratus, 81 separa musnah, 57 terkesan tetapi tidak terbakar manakala 21 rumah tidak terjejas.
 
-- BERNAMA

13 rumah, 4 kedai rosak di Hulu Langat dilanda ribut

Hulu Langat: Sekurang-kurangnya 13 rumah dan empat kedai membabitkan beberapa kampung di daerah ini mengalami kerosakan akibat ribut petang tadi.

Ketua Kampung Kampung Batu 16, Dusun Tua, Md Gadapi Ahmad Harmain berkata, kejadian berlaku sekitar jam 6 petang selepas hujan lebat melanda kawasan terbabit.

 

Menurutnya, enam rumah rosak membabitkan Kampung Batu 16, Dusun Tua dan Kampung Kenanga.

"Di Taman Desa Sentosa pula dua rumah terbabit, disusuli tiga rumah di Kampung Bukit Kundang, manakala di Kampung Tengah membabitkan dua rumah dan empat kedai mengalami kerosakan.

"Sementara itu, kira-kira 10 pokok tumbang dalam kejadian ribut petang tadi," katanya ketika dihubungi. Beliau berkata, mangsa yang mengalami kerosakan rumah ada yang menumpang di rumah jiran sementara waktu.

"Kita sedang membuat bancian bagi mengetahui jumlah sebenar mangsa yang terjejas," katanya.

 

With floods on the rise, one English city is turning to beavers’ wisdom and wooden barriers

LEICESTER, May 12 — In a stream near Leicester in central England, six volunteers in waterproof overalls and boots busily reinforced mini wooden structures designed to combat the rising flooding threat.

The city, like many others in the UK, has experienced several intense rainfall events in recent years, which have caused significant damage.

 

 

Alert to climate change, which intensifies these events, authorities are strengthening their defences and turning to solutions more sympathetic with the environment.

With their feet firmly planted on the bed of the Saffron Brook, a tributary of the River Soar that runs through Leicester, the volunteers ensured the structures’ wooden bundles were securely anchored.

These structures create bends that “change the behaviour of the river” and slow down water in stretches where it currently flows “straight and very fast,” said Dan Scott, who leads the programme at the Trent Rivers Trust, a local group working to protect rivers.

 

He regularly oversees the installation of new facilities.

A few months ago, the trust dug a pond on a river near the town of Loughborough and installed dozens of leaky wooden barriers to better protect downstream houses that flooded in the past.

These techniques are “complementary to traditional flood defences” such as retention basins and canals that are increasingly under strain, Scott said.

They “help to store some of that water upstream so that those traditional flood defences don’t get overwhelmed, and if they do, it’s not as quickly as if these features weren’t in place,” he added. They also help to maintain biodiversity.

‘Urgent problem’

More than 6.3 million properties are at risk of flooding in the UK, and this figure will rise to more than eight million by 2050, according to a recent government report.

“Flooding is a really urgent societal problem,” said Steven Forest, director of the Flood Risk Management Program at the University of Hull.

Climate events resulted in UK insurance payouts of more than £400 million (RM2.27 billion) in 2022 and more than £570 million in 2023 and 2024, half of which was related to flooding, according to the Association of British Insurers.

Beyond traditional defences, “we need to think about living with water, and we need to think about integrating water within our urban spaces,” Forest added.

He cited the Netherlands, which allocates space for rivers to drain during heavy rainfall, and the United States, where vegetation “buffer zones” were created after Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

“Straight-jacketing” waterways with various infrastructure is no longer sufficient, Forest said, especially since seven percent of such structures were assessed to be in “poor” or “very poor” condition by the UK Environment Agency in 2022.

Overcoming scepticism

But convincing residents and authorities is not always an easy task as it often needs explaining that “just because we’ve not built a concrete solution, that it isn’t going to be as effective,” Scott said.

“It’s also about re-educating people in government because it’s easier for them to sell something (to voters) that’s physical and much more prominent within the landscape,” he added.

Traditional developments attracted the lion’s share of the £2.6 billion announced by the government in March to fund new flood defence systems over the next two years.

But Scott noted a greater interest in natural flood management over the past five years, with the previous government launching a £25 million programme last year.

As a result, Leicester will be able to develop several waterways southeast of the city, and 35 other projects have been selected in England.

“It is encouraging that our successful approach to natural flood management measures is continuing to be supported,” Geoff Whittle, a local councillor responsible for the environment, told AFP.

Contemplating the fruits of her labour in Saffron, 50-year-old volunteer Lis Gibbs told AFP that “it feels like you can make a difference,” in contrast to climate change in general, which “can feel really overwhelming”. — AFP

 

 

 

 

 

 

Earth nears 1.5°C threshold as global heatwave persists through April 2025

PARIS, May 8 — Global temperatures were stuck at near-record highs in April, the EU’s climate monitor said on Thursday, extending an unprecedented heat streak and raising questions about how quickly the world might be warming.

The extraordinary heat spell was expected to subside as warmer El Niño conditions faded last year, but temperatures have stubbornly remained at record or near-record levels well into this year.

 

 

“And then comes 2025, when we should be settling back, and instead we are remaining at this accelerated step-change in warming,” said Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

“And we seem to be stuck there. What this is caused by — what is explaining it — is not entirely resolved, but it’s a very worrying sign,” he told AFP.

In its latest bulletin, the Copernicus Climate Change Service said that April was the second-hottest in its dataset, which draws on billions of measurements from satellites, ships, aircraft and weather stations.

 

All but one of the last 22 months exceeded 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the warming limit enshrined in the Paris Agreement, beyond which major and lasting climate and environmental changes become more likely.

Missed target

Many scientists believe this target is no longer attainable and will be crossed in a matter of years.

A large study by dozens of pre-eminent climate scientists, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, recently concluded that global warming reached 1.36°C in 2024.

Copernicus puts the current figure at 1.39°C and projects 1.5°C could be reached by mid-2029 or sooner, based on the warming trend over the last 30 years.

“Now it’s in four years’ time. The reality is we will exceed 1.5 degrees,” said Samantha Burgess of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, which runs Copernicus.

“The critical thing is to then not latch onto two degrees, but to focus on 1.51,” the climate scientist told AFP.

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