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6 of the Most Impressive Airports in the World
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Concerns rising over hasty legislation of special law for new airport in Busan
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Singapore s Changi Airport Pics: Inside World s Best Airport With Largest Indoor Waterfall
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Experts urge caution as coronavirus variants spread in Japan
February 11, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)
Doctor Anil Mehta and Apprentice Nursing Associate Ellie Bull prepare syringes with doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine at the Welcome Centre in Ilford, east London, on Friday, Feb. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein) TOKYO The number of people found infected with new strains of the coronavirus in Japan has topped 100, with community infections reported and major clusters seen in Saitama Prefecture, north of Tokyo. The World Health Organization (WHO) said that one variant was up to 70% more transmissible than the original, and experts in Japan are calling for people to be careful.
February 3rd, 2021, by Tim Radford
One of those most at risk from sea level rise: Shanghai’s Pudong International airport.
Image: By ChinaUli2010, via Wikimedia Commons
High flyers could soon have a problem with high water. Rising sea levels could one day shut down airports.
LONDON, 3 February, 2021 − Passengers, prepare for splashdown. Take-off may have to wait for low tide. By 2100, thanks to rising sea levels, around 100 of the world’s airports could be below mean sea level and at least 364 will be vulnerable to flooding.
And that’s assuming the world’s nations keep a promise made in 2015 and confine global heating to no more than 2°C above the average maintained for most of human history. If humans go on burning fossil fuels and clearing forests at the present rate, then at least 572 of the world’s airports could be at risk of flooding from extreme tides, according to a new study in the journal Climate Risk Management.