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Rainfall forces northern road closures and detours on the I-85 corridor, particularly on the left side of the highway. This is due to heavy snowfall and severe wind conditions. Snow and ice accumulations have decreased along many of the routes on the I-85 corridor.
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Claim cape coal project will destroy reef region Australia's $11.2 billion coal project to mine and release the world's largest amount of coal onto the Indian Ocean coast has been accused of killing coral reefs, as the company behind the project prepares to begin exploratory operations. A federal department of environment and heritage (DoE) report has alleged scientists and conservationists have found a significant impact on corals, with some threatened species experiencing drastic declines in their populations within 30 years. The report said some corals, which are at the very top of their ecological spectrum, are already in "decimation-caused" decline and others are currently threatened and could be "decimated over time". The project will be built by South Australia-based coal giant Murray Energy, which is operating a large open pit coal mine in the Murray Basin in Western Australia's north-east. It's expected to be completed by 2016 and is among the world's largest coal deposits. The government had sought to dismiss the findings, warning "a significant portion" of the estimated 9 million tonnes of coal dumped into the Murray River system during the 2015 and 2016 mining years had been destroyed or damaged. "The findings are simply wrong," Minister for Local Government and Infrastructure Andrew Constance said in a statement, arguing the Murray Basin and other waterways were a crucial part of the country's water infrastructure and had a "key role to play in the national economy". 'Reach out to Australia' The government said it had "reach out to Australia" about the issue, but said it "could not give any specific figures" as to how much the state has been hit. State Environment Minister Josh Frydenberg said the state was working with its partners to investigate the impact of the project and ensure it continues into the future. But the research findings come weeks after two scientists and the chairman of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds described Murray's coal mines in a confidential report on the impact on reef life as "a catastrophe". "Fisheries were completely destroyed in the Murray River basin of Western Australia," the scientists said, without giving more details. The new research found the fish population was already at risk, with populations such as reef-building algae moving into the river system, which would in turn cause the "harming effects" of coal mining, the scientists warned. It also found that the project "presents the risk of substantial and irreversible loss of the ecosystem resources essential to healthy reef formation". The country's environmental regulator, the Environment Protection Authority (EPA), warned on Monday that the report "has serious implications for our ability to make a fair and well-informed assessment about how to protect the Murray River and the worl
Rainfall forces northern road closures and detours on the I-85 corridor, particularly on the left side of the highway. This is due to heavy snowfall and severe wind conditions. Snow and ice accumulations have decreased along many of the routes on the I-85 corridor.
온카지노
바카라사이트

Claim cape coal project will destroy reef region Australia's $11.2 billion coal project to mine and release the world's largest amount of coal onto the Indian Ocean coast has been accused of killing coral reefs, as the company behind the project prepares to begin exploratory operations. A federal department of environment and heritage (DoE) report has alleged scientists and conservationists have found a significant impact on corals, with some threatened species experiencing drastic declines in their populations within 30 years. The report said some corals, which are at the very top of their ecological spectrum, are already in "decimation-caused" decline and others are currently threatened and could be "decimated over time". The project will be built by South Australia-based coal giant Murray Energy, which is operating a large open pit coal mine in the Murray Basin in Western Australia's north-east. It's expected to be completed by 2016 and is among the world's largest coal deposits. The government had sought to dismiss the findings, warning "a significant portion" of the estimated 9 million tonnes of coal dumped into the Murray River system during the 2015 and 2016 mining years had been destroyed or damaged. "The findings are simply wrong," Minister for Local Government and Infrastructure Andrew Constance said in a statement, arguing the Murray Basin and other waterways were a crucial part of the country's water infrastructure and had a "key role to play in the national economy". 'Reach out to Australia' The government said it had "reach out to Australia" about the issue, but said it "could not give any specific figures" as to how much the state has been hit. State Environment Minister Josh Frydenberg said the state was working with its partners to investigate the impact of the project and ensure it continues into the future. But the research findings come weeks after two scientists and the chairman of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds described Murray's coal mines in a confidential report on the impact on reef life as "a catastrophe". "Fisheries were completely destroyed in the Murray River basin of Western Australia," the scientists said, without giving more details. The new research found the fish population was already at risk, with populations such as reef-building algae moving into the river system, which would in turn cause the "harming effects" of coal mining, the scientists warned. It also found that the project "presents the risk of substantial and irreversible loss of the ecosystem resources essential to healthy reef formation". The country's environmental regulator, the Environment Protection Authority (EPA), warned on Monday that the report "has serious implications for our ability to make a fair and well-informed assessment about how to protect the Murray River and the worl
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