Kamis, 02 Juni 2011

Warga Dieng Akan Segera Dievakuasi Paksa

Kamis, 02/06/2011 19:48 WIB
Warga Dieng Akan Segera Dievakuasi Paksa
Arbi Anugrah - detikNews
Warga Dieng Akan Segera Dievakuasi Paksa
Banjarnegara - Warga Dusun Simbar dan Serang, Desa Simbarejo, Kecamatan Batur, Banjarnegara, Jawa Tengah akan dievakuasi paksa mengingat masih banyaknya warga di kedua dusun tersebut yang masih melakukan aktivitas bertani dan tinggal di tempat pemungkiman di sekitar semburan gas beracun tersebut. Padahal sudah diperingatkan oleh petugas Pusat Vulkanologi dan Metigasi bencana Geologi (PVMBG) tentang meningkatnya aktivitas kegempaan dan kadar CO2.

"Kita sedang mencoba membujuk, karena warga di sana agamis, kita memakai tokoh agama. Saya sudah bilang pada petugas di situ untuk memaksa mereka mengungsi daripada nyawa melayang jadi harus dipaksa. Masalahnya mereka tidak mau mengungsi hanya karena menjaga harta bendanya dan lahan pertaniannya," kata Ketua Komisi VIII DPR RI Abdul Kadir Karding saat dihubungi detikcom usai meninjau Posko Penanggulangan Bencana Alam Kecamatan Batur, Banjarnegara, Kamis (2/6/2011).

Dia menjelaskan, bagi sebagian pengungsi yang sudah menempati tempat-tempat pengungsian ke depannya akan disiapkan terapi psikologi agar mereka tidak lagi trauma dengan apa yang terjadi saat ini.

"Yang paling penting kondisi psikologi bagi warga di pengungsian untuk melakukan terapi psikologi. Karena pengungsi itu kan stres," ungkapnya

Terkait masalah relokasi bagi para warga di kedua dusun tersebut, Karding menjelaskan jika diperlukan nantinya pemerintah akan mendukung, tapi menunggu hasil kajiannya terlebih dahulu.

"Kita akan kaji kemungkinan-kemungkinan yang baik kalau memang harus ada relokasi pemerintah nanti akan dukung. Tapi tergantung kajiannya dan kita lihat wilayah yang tidak boleh ditempati sama sekali semua tergantung kajiannya," jelasanya.

Menurut dia, nanti kita akan bicarakan dengan Badan Penanggulangan Bencana Nasional (BPBN), bagaimana ke depannya agar tidak ada korban jiwa.

Sementara data di Pos Pengamatan Gunung Api Dieng mencatat masih terjadi gempa pada pukul 00.00 hingga 06.00 WIB, Kamis (2/6) tercatat dua kali gempa hembusan dengan amplituda maksimum 3-3,5 milimeter dan lama gempa 17 detik. Alat seismograf juga mencatat dua kali gempa vulkanik dalam (VA) dengan amplituda maksimum 12-27 milimeter dengan lama gempa 5-6 detik.

Petugas juga mencatat masing-masing terjadi satu kali gempa tektonik lokal (TL) dan gempa tektonik jauh (TJ) dengan lama 62 detik dan 57 detik.

(anw/anw)

VIDEO: Meteor Masuki Atmosfir Bumi

VIDEO: Meteor Masuki Atmosfir Bumi
Diperkirakan meteor itu berjalan dengan kecepatan sekitar 138 ribu kilometer per jam.
RABU, 1 JUNI 2011, 11:55 WIB
Muhammad Firman
Diperkirakan meteor itu berjalan dengan kecepatan sekitar 138 ribu kilometer per jam. Jika ia sampai bertubrukan dengan bumi, efeknya sama dengan ledakan 500 sampai 1.000 ton bom TNT. (fullerton.edu)

VIVAnews - Pada 20 Mei 2011 lalu, sebuah meteor sebesar manusia yakni berukuran 6 kaki atau sekitar 1,8 meter nyaris menabrak Bumi. Meteor itu menembus atmosfir Bumi sampai akhirnya ia habis terbakar. Tepatnya di kawasan Georgia, Amerika Serikat.

Meteor itu sempat meninggalkan empat kobaran api saat ia terpecah berkeping-keping dalam beberapa kali ledakan.

Menurut catatan, meteor ini merupakan meteor terbesar yang pernah terpantau sejak Marshall Space Flight Center NASA beroperasi sejak tiga tahun lalu. Diperkirakan, ia merupakan seriphan dari sebuah komet yang belum diketahui yang masuk ke atmosfir pada ketinggian sekitar 100 kilometer di atas kota Macon, Georgia, Amerika Serikat.

Dari rekaman yang ditangkap oleh dua kamera NASA, diketahui bahwa meteor itu bergerak ke arah barat laut dengan kecepatan sekitar 38 kilometer per detik atau sekitar 138 ribu kilometer per jam.

Dengan kecepatan ini, benda asing itu memiliki energi serupa dengan 500 sampai 1.000 ton bom TNT jika menabrak Bumi. Berikut ini Video: Meteor Masuki Atmosfir Bumi. (Sumber: NASA/Space.com)

• VIVAnews

Dieng: Gas Mematikan, dan Faktor 'Ngeyel'

Dieng: Gas Mematikan, dan Faktor 'Ngeyel'
Gas beracun tak hanya ke luar dari kawah Gunung, tapi juga rekahan-rekahan tanah.
KAMIS, 2 JUNI 2011, 06:56 WIB
Elin Yunita Kristanti

VIVAnews -- Tercatat dalam sejarah bencana Indonesia: Tragedi Sinila 20 Februari 1979. Kala itu Gunung Dieng erupsi, mengeluarkan gas beracun, setidaknya 149 warga tewas.

"Saat tragedi Sinila, penduduk yang tewas justru karena tercegat gas yang ke luar dari rekahan tanah," kata Kepala Pusat Vulkanologi dan Mitigasi Bencana Geologi (PVMBG), Surono kepada VIVAnews.com, Rabu 1 Juni 2011 malam.

Dijelaskan Surono, meski kali bukan Sinila, melainkan Kawah Timbang yang aktif, potensi bahaya tetap ada. Tak hanya gas yang ke luar dari kawah, banyak kantong gas beracun yang belum diketahui keberadaannya. "Rekahan itu sudah ada sejak lama, mengeluarkan gas. Saat ini gempa-gempa yang terjadi menambah tekanan gas dalam rekahan sehingga ke luar lebih banyak."

Lalu, apa yang bisa dilakukan, apalagi gas CO2 dan karbonmonoksida tak bisa dideteksi rupa dan baunya? Beda dengan sulfur yang masih bisa diketahui dari bau. "Pengungsian, itu satu-satunya cara antisipasi, karena barangnya (gas) tidak kelihatan," tambah Surono.

Namun, tak semua masyarakat mematuhi imbauan untuk menjauh dari kawasan 1.000 meter dari Kawah Timbang. "Kalau diminta mengungsi jangan nantang. Masih banyak juga yang ngeyel," kata Surono.

Untuk diketahui, sebagian warga Desa Sumberejo, misalnya, masih menolak meninggalkan rumahnya. Mereka bersikeras bahwa wilayahnya cukup jauh dari mulut kawah Timbang atau berjarak sekitar 2 kilometer.

Tak hanya itu, berpegang pada masa lalu, warga meyakini Kawah Timbang cenderung bergerak ke utara atau selatan dari mulut kawah. Kalaupun ada pelepasan gas beracun, biasanya terjadi pada sore hingga dini hari. Gas beracun akan hilang dengan sendirinya jika permukaan tanah menghangat karena sinar matahari.

Menurut Surono, itu keyakinan yang salah. "Jangan percaya masa lalu, nyawa jadi taruhannya," kata dia. "Kalau meninggal bisa ngubur sendiri tidak apa-apa, ini ngajak temannya. Ngeyelnya itu yang keterlaluan, pokoke karep," kata Surono.

Persoalan ini yang dirasa Surono paling berat. "Lebih berat dari mengurus gunung."

Bagaimana jika dilakukan evakuasi paksa? "Ini kan sifatnya antisipasi, kalau dilakukan evakuasi paksa, terus tidak terjadi apa-apa malah dituduh melanggar HAM," jelas dia.

Status Gunung Dieng naik menjadi Siaga pada Minggu 29 Mei 2011 pukul 20.45 WIB. Status Dieng sebelumnya telah dinaikan dari Normal menjadi Waspada pada 23 Mei 2011 pukul 14.00 WIB. (sj)

• VIVAnews

Smoking gun elusive in deadly E. coli outbreak

Smoking gun elusive in deadly E. coli outbreak


Spain angry over German cucumber slurPlay VideoReuters – Spain angry over German cucumber slur
Employees of Czech center of national reference laboratories prepare samples of vegetables for molecular testing on EHEC bacteria in BrnoReuters – Employees of Czech center of national reference laboratories prepare samples of vegetables for molecular …

BERLIN – European health officials tracking one of the worst E. coli outbreaks on record might never know where it came from. It's a sad fact of life in food poisoning cases: There often is no smoking gun.

The germ has sickened more than 1,500 people, mostly in Germany. Most patients who have been interviewed said they ate lettuce, tomatoes or cucumbers, but officials testing produce across the continent have yet to find any vegetables with the particular strain involved.

Illnesses can occur days after tainted food is eaten and leftovers thrown out, so "the trail gets cold pretty quick," said Bill Marler, a Seattle attorney who specializes in food poisoning cases.

"They might never find the cause of the outbreak," said Paul Hunter, professor of health protection at England's University of East Anglia. "In most foodborne outbreaks, we don't know definitively where the contaminated food came from."

Germany's national health agency said Wednesday that more than 1,530 people there had been sickened by a dangerous E. coli germ, including 17 dead and 470 suffering from a kidney failure complication that was previously considered rare.

The outbreak has hit at least nine European countries, but virtually all the sick people either live in Germany or recently traveled there. Two people who were sickened are now in the U.S., and both had recently traveled to Hamburg, Germany, where many of the infections occurred.

The outbreak is already considered the third-largest involving E. coli in recent world history, and it may be the deadliest. Twelve people died in a 1996 Japanese outbreak that reportedly sickened more than 12,000, and seven died in a 2000 Canadian outbreak that also made thousands ill.

Nearly all cases are linked to northern Germany, "so it seems to be a common exposure there. But we don't yet know what was this exposure," said Dr. Hilde Kruse, the World Health Organization's food safety program manager for Europe.

"It's like a puzzle. But unfortunately the puzzle is not complete."

Where the dangerous germ came from is just one of the questions health officials have. Another is why patients are suffering from life-threatening kidney complications in an unusually high percentage of cases. It might mean the strain is particularly virulent, but it's also possible that thousands of less serious cases of food poisoning have gone unreported.

People with less severe symptoms may contact health authorities later, or not at all, Kruse said.

Kruse also said the outbreak is "different in that it mainly affects adults and predominantly women." Some experts say that likely has to do with diet — women tend to eat more fresh produce.

Experts are cautious about trying to explain what's happening at the moment. "An epidemic is like a battle — it's not clear where everything is coming from and what is going on," said Dr. Phillip Tarr, an E. coli expert at the Washington University School of Medicine.

The bacteria being investigated is one of the few dangerous types among the hundreds of different E. coli bugs. People and animals carry various E. coli in their intestines. But only a very small percentage are deadly. One of the most notorious was a strain that killed four U.S. children in 1993 and was linked to contaminated hamburgers at a fast-food chain.

Some experts said the sheer scope of the German outbreak may help eventually solve it. With more cases, there are better odds that the source can be found. That helped in the Japanese outbreak in 1996, which was blamed on radish sprouts, and the 2000 Canadian outbreak, which was traced to drinking water.

"Public health investigations are not always successful. But a big one with a lot of investigation around it is usually successful," said Dr. Robert Tauxe, a foodborne disease expert at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

To nail down the source, scientists will have to match the strain found in patients to one in vegetables or other sources by using DNA sequencing, said Brendan Wren, professor of pathogen molecular biology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

But it can be difficult to find the strain in vegetables, and Wren doubts cucumbers are responsible. "As in many foodborne disease outbreaks, the culprit may never be identified and the epidemic just fades away," he said.

Meanwhile, investigators will increase efforts to find the food distributors and producers where the vegetables originated.

That can take weeks or even months, and can be complicated by the fact that different vegetables are often eaten together, as in salads, Tauxe said.

In the U.S., the government said it would step up testing of any imports of cucumbers or other possibly implicated produce from affected countries — but the nation gets very little fresh produce from Europe, especially this time of year. There was just one shipment of cucumbers from Spain in May, for instance, and no cucumbers, tomatoes or lettuce from Germany since January.

Another challenge for health officials: Catching and preventing future outbreaks of this strain.

According to an expert panel of the European Food Safety Authority, there is limited data on the presence of dangerous E. coli strains across Europe.

Current surveillance systems aren't well coordinated across Europe, the group said. It recommends monitoring a number of dangerous E. coli strains — but not the one that is responsible for the current outbreak.

In Germany, there are no spot checks of imported food coming from the 25 countries that are part of a zone that lacks internal border controls.

In the United States, labs regularly test for a dangerous E. coli type in stool samples from people with food-poisoning symptoms, but only a small percentage of the labs test for other forms of E. coli that make people sick. In recent years, investigators have found that a wider variety of E. coli bugs are also causing illness.

___

Stobbe reported from Atlanta. Medical Writer Maria Cheng in London and Karl Ritter in Stockholm contributed to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/eu_contaminated_vegetables_europe

Rabu, 01 Juni 2011

IAEA: Japan underestimated tsunami risk to plants

IAEA: Japan underestimated tsunami risk to plants


Cars which belong to evacuees, are screened for leaked radiation from the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, after they returned to NaAP – Cars which belong to evacuees, are screened for leaked radiation from the tsunami-crippled Fukushima …
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TOKYO – U.N. inspectors faulted Japan on Wednesday for underestimating the threat of a devastating tsunami on its crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant but praised its overall response to the crisis as exemplary.

The preliminary report by a team from the International Atomic Energy Agency also said the tsunami hazard was underestimated at several other nuclear facilities in Japan, and called for experts worldwide to learn from the disaster to avert future accidents.

The IAEA team of international experts from 12 countries, which spent a week in Japan conferring with officials and inspecting the plant, will submit its full report at a high-level IAEA conference in Vienna from June 20-24.

"Japan's response to the nuclear accident has been exemplary, particularly (as) illustrated by the dedicated, determined and expert staff working under exceptional conditions," the report said. It also praised the evacuation of those living near the plant as "impressive and well-organized."

The Fukushima Dai-ichi facility was crippled when a huge tsunami generated by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake hit Japan on March 11. It suffered explosions, fires and meltdowns in the days after the tsunami.

More than 80,000 people have been evacuated from its vicinity.

The report said the earthquake and tsunami were the direct cause of the power outages and communications blackouts that ensued. It said the potential size of the tsunami that hit the plant, estimated at as high as 49 feet (15 meters), was not sufficiently planned for and "overwhelmed" the plant's defenses.

"The tsunami hazard for several sites was underestimated," it said. "Nuclear plant designers and operators should appropriately evaluate and protect against the risks of all natural hazards, and should periodically update those assessments and assessment methodologies."

It did not go into further detail.

The report said Japan's crisis underscored the value of disaster-proof emergency centers onsite to protect workers and provide a safe command headquarters for the management of the response.

A crisis center was built at Fukushima Dai-ichi after an earthquake hit a different part of Japan in 2007. The center still serves as the crisis headquarters at the plant, and the IAEA report suggested it has functioned well.

Further, the report suggested that long-term efforts to monitor the health and exposure levels of workers and the public "would be beneficial."

Mike Weightman, the IAEA team leader and the United Kingdom's chief inspector of nuclear installations, said the IAEA team focused on finding lessons from the crisis that can be applied around the world.

"You can make nuclear plants safe against natural events, but you have to understand those events," Weightman said.

The team examined the technical processes more closely than political or managerial issues, which he said would likely be a topic raised at the IAEA meeting in Vienna.

He said Japanese officials offered their full cooperation, and his team was provided access to the plant and officials and answers to their questions.

"I think there are many constructive suggestions in this report," said Goshi Hosono, director of the government's nuclear crisis taskforce. "We will read it thoroughly."

TEPCO spokesman Junichi Matsumoto said the utility, which operates the facility, provided all available information to the IAEA team, including details on how it coordinated its efforts between Tokyo headquarters and workers onsite at the plant.

"We hope that the results of the IAEA investigation of what happened at the plant will be shared as a common international asset and used in a way that will contribute to nuclear safety around the world," he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110601/ap_on_bi_ge/as_japan_earthquake_iaea

Greenland cold snap linked to Viking disappearance

Greenland cold snap linked to Viking disappearance


An iceberg floats in the sea ice near the town of Uummannaq in western GreenlandReuters – An iceberg floats in the sea ice near the town of Uummannaq in western Greenland March 18, 2010. REUTERS/Svebor …

OSLO (Reuters) – A cold snap in Greenland in the 12th century may help explain why Viking settlers vanished from the island, scientists said on Monday.

The report, reconstructing temperatures by examining lake sediment cores in west Greenland dating back 5,600 years, also indicated that earlier, pre-historic settlers also had to contend with vicious swings in climate on icy Greenland.

"Climate played (a) big role in Vikings' disappearance from Greenland," Brown University in the United States said in a statement of a finding that average temperatures plunged 4 degrees Celsius (7F) in 80 years from about 1100.

Such a shift is roughly the equivalent of the current average temperatures in Edinburgh, Scotland, tumbling to match those in Reykjavik, Iceland. It would be a huge setback to crop and livestock production.

"There is a definite cooling trend in the region right before the Norse disappear," said William D'Andrea of Brown University, the lead author of the study in the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Researchers have scant written or archaeological records to figure out why Viking settlers abandoned colonies on the western side of the island in the mid-1300s and the eastern side in the early 1400s.

Conflicts with indigenous Inuit, a search for better hunting grounds, economic stresses and natural swings in climate, perhaps caused by shifts in the sun's output or volcanic eruptions, could all be factors.

LITTLE ICE AGE

Scientists have previously suspected that a cooling toward a "Little Ice Age" from the 1400s gradually shortened growing seasons and added to sea ice that hampered sailing links with Iceland or the Nordic nations.

The study, by scientists in the United States and Britain, added the previously unknown 12th century temperature plunge as a possible trigger for the colonies' demise. Vikings arrived in Greenland in the 980s, during a warm period like the present.

"You have an interval when the summers are long and balmy and you build up the size of your farm, and then suddenly year after year, you go into this cooling trend, and the summers are getting shorter and colder and you can't make as much hay," D'Andrea said.

The study also traced even earlier swings in the climate to the rise and fall of pre-historic peoples on Greenland starting with the Saqqaq culture, which thrived from about 4,500 years ago to 2,800 years ago.

Scientists fear that the 21st century warming is caused by climate change, stoked by a build-up of greenhouse gases from human activities. An acceleration of warming could cause a meltdown of the Greenland ice sheet, raising world sea levels.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110530/sc_nm/us_climate_greenland