water underneath, and the aeroplanes, and the ships going up through the sea to do the evacuations. qt through the sea to do the evacuations. through the sea to do the evacuations. . ., , , ., , evacuations. of course, the people who live there, evacuations. of course, the people who live there, seeing evacuations. of course, the people who live there, seeing their - who live there, seeing their livelihoods are being affected like this, what is that like? this, what is that like? well, the tteole this, what is that like? well, the people here this, what is that like? well, the people here have this, what is that like? well, the people here have been this, what is that like? well, the| people here have been amazingly supportive and they have been great with us and told us, if the fire spread any further south, they will tell us if we are going to be evacuated. but the guy who rents us the appointment, he has friends that noisier were taken in the evacuation on the ferries an
concrete could have a catastrophic reaction. they re moving very slowly, very methodically for the safety of everyone involved. they re also working on top of the rubble, a method called delayering. they are peeling through some of those layers to try to find signs of life but there have been a lot of challenges. first of all, there is that fire. fire crews say that they can t get to the fire. it is so deep rooted in this building that it s very, very difficult. all they can do right now is put water on it, but that also complicates the search even more. that adds to the weight. there has been torrential rain and that adds weight to the situation, puts more water underneath in the parking garages where we know that some of these firefighters have been searching. by the way, in those areas where there is water, where there is other hazards like gas
everyone out. shepard: we ve been looking at this last loop in the southeastern quadrant of that storm. it looks as if it s misshapen at the moment. i suppose that data changes as it continues to circulate and move forward. yeah, that s what we re keeping an eye on. you know, we saw that a little bit this isn t the first time we ve seen that with this storm. we know how quickly they can get into a better atmosphere to develop, have a little warmer water underneath. right now it s struggling on that side with what we call the outflow. so anything that is working against this storm is a good thing. aga again, it s a category four. not a lot of good news even when we find that information. the storms are at their strength, they generate the most energy when they have similar pressures all the way around, right? and the outflow of air and the intake of air is happening and sort of like a symphony. what you re saying is at the
topic. this is an issue because when a bridge collapses and there are, as you said, not just water underneath, but there are people and businesses, the rescue is complicated by the fact that there s still a bridge span up there that we don t know why the first one fell in the first place. this is uniquely difficult and dangerous because it s not like it s just aftermath and you re trying to find survivors. that s right. i mean, you re seeing these images, snarled rebar, lots of big chunks of concrete. this is tons of infrastructure that fell on to the heads of the people working underneath. these rescue workers, they re going through some death defying, daring stuff to get these guys out. we re seeing images of rescue workers trying to extract people, trying to take victims in rubble in stretchers attached to cables that are suspended from cranes. firefighterses climbing over these jagged pieces of concrete. so in many ways i think the rescue looks almost as terrifying as the bridg
month over there you can see a well from the to lie a co-operative farm it s dried up because there s no water underneath. it s completely dry. santa says that the huge agricultural export is a literally sucking the land dry. and i think you have got asparagus up there for a few more hector. over there ought to water towers which provide water for this district the water in there is salty the asperger s is irrigated using fresh water while the people have to drink salt water. he says that heavy irrigation by the industry means the underground reserves of fresh water are running out. i mean it was around one thousand nine hundred six when the companies came and started to buy up all the wells. that s why we re suffering now with this water shortage. the people here have to drink salt water as they call it meanwhile