Godlike Productions - Discussion Forum
Users Online Now: 1,747 (Who's On?)Visitors Today: 545,473
Pageviews Today: 907,983Threads Today: 327Posts Today: 5,922
10:40 AM


Back to Forum
Back to Forum
Back to Thread
Back to Thread
REPORT ABUSIVE REPLY
Message Subject Warm Weather Triggers Avalanche, Kills B.C. Guide; Flood Warnings in N.B.
Poster Handle Anonymous Coward
Post Content
Moscow cuts power in record cold
MOSCOW, Jan. 17 (UPI) -- As record cold temperatures moved into Moscow from Siberia, electricity suppliers have ordered power cuts at factories in order to prevent a blackout.

Related Headlines
Siberians shiver in record cold (January 16, 2006) -- Record low temperatures were felt in western Siberia over the weekend, with temperatures in the Tomsk region reported at minus 58 degrees Fahrenheit ... > full story

172 dead in 2-week cold-wave in India (January 11, 2006) -- A cold wave in India is letting up slightly but has been blamed for at least 172 deaths. The Press Trust of India reports the 2-week-long cold snap ... > full story

Severe cold kills dozens in India (January 9, 2006) -- Regions in north India continued to shiver under a freezing cold wave that has claimed dozens of lives in several cities. In the state of Uttar ... > full story

Pipe rupture leaves Siberians without heat (January 9, 2006) -- Several thousand people in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk were left without heat or hot water for a whole day with temperatures well below ... > full story

Delhi shivers through cold snap (January 8, 2006) -- India is struggling with a cold snap that has claimed more than 100 lives. Temperatures in Delhi, India's capital, plummeted to 32 degrees ... > full story



A number of factories were expected to be without power for several hours Tuesday, in order to make up for the expected 10 percent to 15 percent rise in electricity consumption resulting from the cold snap, The Moscow Times reported.

However, residential houses, hospitals, schools, nuclear sites, the police and the subway would continue to be supplied with electricity, officials said.

The temperature in Moscow Tuesday morning was minus 26 Celsius -- nearly minus 15 Fahrenheit.

The country's top health official, Gennady Onishchenko, said Monday that Moscow schools would likely close if temperatures were at minus 25 Celsius or colder for any length of time.

It was not clear Monday whether the city government had ordered any measures to help the homeless survive the cold. Even before temperatures plummeted Monday, five people froze to death in Moscow over the weekend.

Staff at the Moscow Zoo were also preparing for the extreme cold Monday. All of the zoo's approximately 6,000 animals would stay indoors in heated shelters, a spokeswoman said
 
Please verify you're human:




Reason for reporting:







GLP