Evacuation at Fukushima plant after smoke seen at reactor
WORKERS were evacuated today after smoke was seen billowing from the No. 3 reactor at the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant, its operator said.
No other information is yet available.
Earlier today, food contaminated with radiation was found for the first time outside Japan – where milk and spinach have already been tainted by a plume from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant – as Taiwan detected radioactivity in a batch of imported Japanese fava beans.
The discovery of traces of radioactive iodine in Tokyo tap water, well to the south-west of the crippled atomic power plant on the Pacific coast, compounded public anxiety, but authorities said there was no danger to health.
Cooling systems meant to protect the Fukushima plant’s six reactors from a potentially disastrous meltdown were knocked out by the massive tsunami, and engineers have since been battling to control rising temperatures.
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Radiation-suited crews have been striving to restore electricity to the ageing facility 250km north-east of Tokyo, after extending a high-voltage cable into the site from the national grid.
“Our desperate efforts to prevent the situation worsening are making certain progress,” said chief government spokesman Yukio Edano.
“But we must not underestimate this situation, and we are not being optimistic that things will suddenly improve,” he said.
Defence Minister Toshimi Kitazawa said the temperature in all spent fuel-rod pools at the facility had dropped below 100 degrees Celsius – suggesting water-cooling operations were having some effect.
Authorities said reactors five and six at the Fukushima complex meanwhile were in “stable condition”, Kyodo News reported.
Six workers at the plant have been exposed to high levels of radiation but are continuing to work and have suffered no health problems, TEPCO said.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan was to visit a staging ground for the Fukushima relief efforts today, as well as the city of Ishinomaki, where the two survivors were found.
Two found alive
“An 80-year-old woman and a 16-year-old boy were found under debris,” said a police spokesman in the devastated city of Ishinomaki in Miyagi prefecture.
“Their temperatures were quite low but they were conscious. Details of their condition are not immediately known. They have been already rescued and sent to hospital.”
Sumi Abe and her grandson Jin Abe were in the kitchen when the quake struck on March 11, public broadcaster NHK reported. The house collapsed with them inside but the grandson was able to reach food from the refrigerator, helping them to survive.
There have been few such miracle rescues, with almost 21,000 people confirmed as dead or listed as missing following the 9.0-magnitude earthquake and giant tsunami which flattened Japan’s northeast coast on March 11.
Freezing temperatures and snow have hampered rescue operations.
With half a million tsunami survivors huddled in threadbare, chilly shelters and the threat of disaster at the Fukushima No.1 nuclear plant stretching frayed nerves, the mood in the world’s third-biggest economy remains grim.
Aftershocks fuel terror
According to the charity Save the Children, about 100,000 children were displaced by the quake and tsunami, and signs of trauma are evident among young survivors as the nuclear crisis and countless aftershocks fuel their terror.
“We found children in desperate conditions, huddling around kerosene lamps and wrapped in blankets,” Save the Children spokesman Ian Woolverton said after visiting a number of evacuation centres.
“They told me about their anxieties, especially their fears about radiation,” Mr Woolverton said, adding that several youngsters had mentioned the US atom bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which they know from school.
The government has insisted that there is no widespread threat of radiation. But the discovery of the tainted fava beans by Taiwanese customs officers will do nothing to calm public anxiety that has already spread far beyond Japan.
Several governments in Asia have begun systematic radiation checks on made-in-Japan goods, as well as of passengers arriving on flights from the country.
But Tsai Shu-chen of Taiwan’s Food and Drug Administration stressed the radioactive iodine and caesium-137 found on the fava beans were well below legal safety levels.
In the disaster epicentre, authorities have been battling to get more fuel and food to survivors enduring freezing temperatures.
At shelters, some grandparents are telling children stories of how they overcame hardships in their childhood during and after World War II, which left Japan in ruins.
“We have to live at whatever cost,” said Shigenori Kikuta, 72.
“We have to tell our young people to remember this and pass on our story to future generations, for when they become parents themselves.”
There was better news for residents in Rikuzentakata, where construction teams began erecting 36 prefabricated units, the first of many more temporary houses being built for the tsunami homeless.
“They won’t be very big, but whatever they are, it will be better than being in here,” said great-grandmother Tokiko Kanno, who has been sleeping on a school stage.
Live updates: 8.9 earthquake rocks Japan – Pacific on tsunami alert
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1.43pm A strong 6.8-magnitude aftershock has struck off the east coast of Japan, US seismologists said, less than 24 hours after a massive earthquake created a powerful and destructive tsunami. AFP reports the aftershock, which the US Geological Survey said hit at a depth of just 24 kilometres, was centred 174km east-southeast of the city of Sendai, the scene of huge devastation when a 10-metre tsunami struck on Friday.
1.40pm As reports emerge of people calling for help, trapped under rubble, search-and-rescue expert Gillian Dacey assesses their chances of survivor. She tells the BBC: “In the right conditions they can survive at least four, and up to seven days. In some earthquakes, if the person who’s trapped has some water or food, they can maybe survive 10 days, and we have heard of some extreme cases of up to 14 days, but the conditions have to be right.
1.35pm Hundreds of Australians live in one of the areas potentially worst hit by the tsunami in Japan. Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd today said there were 54 Australians registered as living in the city of Sendai but that there were probably hundreds of Australians living in the area. “The reason being is that it is a place where Australian language teachers have gone to work,” he said.
1.32pm Australian search and rescue teams stand ready to travel to Japan, as early as Saturday night to help, Mr Rudd said.
Australia is ready to throw anything as is required (to help in this emergency) … We will throw everything at it.
Koriyama
Smoke billows from a residential area in Sendai, northern Japan, one of the hardest hit regions. Picture: AP
Sendai
A tsunami-drifted ship sits on a pier in Sendai, northern Japan. Picture: AP
Sendai
12.20pm Japan’s quake caused the day to become a bit shorter. NASA geophysicist Richard Gross calculated that Earth’s rotation sped up by 1.6 microseconds, according to an Al Jazeera report, which cited AP.
12.04pm The Japanese Government is currently holding an emergency meeting on the subject of the Fukushima nuclear plants, according to the Guardian.co.uk.
12.03pm AFP reports that Japanese naval and coastguard helicopters have found a ship that was swept out to sea by a massive tsunami and airlifted all 81 people aboard to safety.
Environmental group Greenpeace has told AFP:
Japan is in the middle of a nuclear crisis with potentially devastating consequences
11.44am Japan’s trade ministry has announced that Fukushima’s plant operator Tepco is “considering releasing pressure” at the Fukushima No 2 (Daini) nuclear plant, according to the Guardian.co.uk. The Government has also just ordered the evacuation of a three kilometre radius around the plant.
American Jesse Johnson, who lives in Chiba, north of Tokyo, told Sky News he was at a sushi restaurant with his wife when the quake hit.
I’ve lived in Japan for 10 years and I’ve never felt anything like this before,” he said. “It got to the point where I don’t know whether it’s me shaking or an earthquake.
11.22am According to Al Jazeera, there are now five reactors under a state of emergency – two at Fukushima No 1 (Daiichi) plant, and three at the nearby Fukushima No 2 (Daini) plant.
Residents look over destroyed buildings half submerged in water after a tsunami hit the city of Kesennuma, in northeast Japan, March 12, 2011. Picture: AP
Kesennuma, Japan
11.05am The death toll from the catastrophic earthquake in Japan has reached 202 in nine prefectures, including Tokyo, with the toll likely to rise to well over 1000, Kyodo News is reporting, citing the country’s National Police Agency and the Defense Ministry.
10.54am Japan’s military has reportedly mobilised thousands of troops, hundreds of planes and dozens of ships, as the country kicks off a mammoth relief mission. According to the BBC, Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan also plans to hold an emergency cabinet meeting early on Saturday local time, before visiting the disaster zones by helicopter.
10.51am Japan’s nuclear safety agency is reportedly set to issue an unprecedented order for Tepco to open a valve at the damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant to release pressure, according to the Guardian.co.uk.
10.40am Grim updates indicating appalling loss of life are emerging from along the hard-hit east coast of northern Honshu island, where the monster waves destroyed more than 3000 homes on Friday, AFP reports.
Sayaka Umezawa, a 22-year-old college student, was visiting the port town of Hakodate, in northeast Japan, when the 8.9-magnitude quake hit. She told AFP about her terrifying experience:
It was the biggest earthquake I have ever felt. I thought I would die.
10.15am DFAT has said it remains concerned for 54 Aussies in earthquake-hit areas, but added there were no reports of Australian casualties or injuries.
10.12am The death toll from the 8.9-magnitude earthquake in Japan has reached 185, according to Kyodo News agency.
10.09am Unconfirmed reports the Fukushima nuclear plant has recovered power.
10.05am Watch this Ustream for live images from Japan.
10am This New York Times report provides a good explanation of what’s going on at the Fukushima plant.
9.46am Japan’s nuclear safety agency has confirmed the damaged Fukushima No 1 has been leaking radiation outside the plant, the Guardian.co.uk reports. According to the Guardian, there are now also reports from nuclear plant operator Tepco that the Fukushima No 2 plant has lost cooling to three of its reactors.
9.44am Japan’s public broadcaster NHK, quoting nuclear safety officials, said there was “no immediate health hazard” to nearby residents from a possible minute leakage at the Fukushima No1 nuclear power plant.
Buildings burn in the town of Yamada, in northeast Japan, after the country’s biggest recorded earthquake hit, March 11, 2011. Picture: AP
Yamada town
9.27am Japan says radiation levels have surged outside nuclear plant, expands area subject to evacuation, The Guardian reports.
9.20am A tsunami has swept at least five people watching the waves out to sea and ripped docks out of harbours in California, spreading the destruction of a devastating Japanese earthquake to the shores of the United States.
9.08am The Kyodo news agency is now citing a safety panel as saying that the radiation level inside one of the reactors at the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant is 1000 times higher than normal, according to BBC News.
9am A strong 6.7-magnitude earthquake which hit Japan’s mountainous Niigata prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, at 4am on Saturday (6am AEDT) caused landslides and avalanches and destroyed some wooden houses. Kyodo News said there were no immediate reports of casualties and no fresh tsunami alert was issued. It was followed by an almost equally strong quake in the same area half an hour later.
The earthquake-triggered tsunami washes away a warehouse and vehicles in Kesennuma, Japan. Picture: AP
Kesennuma, Miyagi
8:48am Radiation levels at the damaged Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant are continuing to rise. The Jiji Press news agency says the levels are eight times above normal, BBC reports.
8:41am Final death toll in Japan likely to be in the thousands, according to numerous news agencies.
8:39am Around 11,000 Australians are believed to be in Japan, with 41 registered in affected areas, according to Sky News.
8:35am John Large, independent nuclear safety analyst, has told Al Jazeera that Japanese officials will have to manage a balancing act at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. He says there is a risk of exposing the public if they try to contain radioactive steam. Read more here.
8:26am Kyodo news agency is reporting that radiation may have already been released at a nuclear plant and that four commuter trains are still unaccounted for in the Miyagi and Iwate prefectures.
8:16am DFAT advisory – If you are in Japan and require assistance, you can contact the Australian Embassy in Tokyo on 03 5232 4111 and you will be transferred to the Crisis Centre.
If you are concerned about Australians in Japan you should in the first instance try to contact them directly. If this is unsuccessful, you can contact the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade 24-hour Consular Emergency Centre on +61 2 6261 3305 (from overseas) or 1300 555 135 (within Australia).
8:10am If you’re trying to contact someone in Japan or have information that could help those looking for loved ones, Google’s People Finder may help.
8:05am A California man has been swept out to sea after travelling into dangerous waters to take photos of incoming tsunami waves.
7:58am The towering wall of water generated by Japan’s 8.9-magnitude earthquake – the seventh biggest in history – pulverised the country’s northeastern city of Sendai, where police reportedly said that 200-300 bodies had been found on the coast. Japan’s National Police Agency said 137 people had been confirmed dead and 531 missing, with 627 others injured in the tremor, not including the bodies reportedly found on the Sendai coast.
The damage is so enormous that it will take us much time to gather data – local official in Japan
7:43am An “energy map” created by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows the power of the tsunami that hit Japan following the 8.9 magnitude earthquake, Japan’s biggest on record.
7:36am The final death toll from the devastating earthquake and tsunami is likely to pass 1000, according to Japan’s news agency Kyodo News.
7:25am Fox News is reporting that tsunami waves have hit Hawaii beaches and the US western coast. No reports of major damage, but scientists have warned that the first tsunami waves are not always the strongest.
7:15am New Zealand has upgraded its tsunami warning, saying waves of more than one metre are now expected following the massive 8.9-magnitude earthquake in Japan.
Japan Nuclear Power Stations
6:50am The Japanese government has declared an atomic emergency and told thousands of residents living near a nuclear plant in Fukushima to evacuate, warning a small amount of radiation could be released, AFP reports.
6:29am Tsunami waves have hit Mexico, according to AFP. Initial waves were half-a-metre high but subsequent waves could be as high as two metres, the Scientific Research Centre in the town of Enseada said.
6:18am A magnitude 6.6 quake has now struck in central Japan, causing Tokyo buildings to sway, BBC reports. This new earthquake was reportedly on a different faultline from the first 8.9 magnitude earthquake. No reports of damage so far and no new tsunami alerts have been issued.
6.02am The situation at the nuclear power plant appears to be worsening, The Associated Press has quoted an anonymous official as saying if the outage in the cooling system persists, eventually radiation could leak out into the environment, and, in the worst case, could cause a reactor meltdown. However the Guardian mentions a nuclear expert speaking to CNN has said this was only a remote possibility.
Buildings are destroyed by a wall of water in Iwaki, Fukushima. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
5.44am BBC quotes nuclear physicist Dr Walt Patterson as saying the situation at the Fukushima-Daiichi plant is “the sort of thing that nuclear engineers have nightmares about … if it is not resolved in the next few hours it will get serious”. Read their analysis of the nuclear emergency.
5.25am The tsunami has hit Santa Cruz on the US west coast, CBS5 is streaming live coverage of the effects. CBS2 reporter Joe Vazquez tweets:
Boats adrift in Santa Cruz; loose from damaged piers. Chopper 5 shows boats floating under overpasses, crashing into other boats on dock.
CBS5 reporting a dozen or so sunken boats. County spokesman says at least $2M damage.
5.23am The BBC have created this interactive map with video for selected regions showing the horrific impact of the quake and tsunami.
5.16am Despite earlier appearing to have been contained authorities are again concerned with the nuclear reactor at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant. The Associated Press reports pressure inside the reactor has risen to 1.5 times the level considered normal.
5.14am Scientists said the earthquake was nearly 8,000 times stronger than one that devastated the city of Christchurch in New Zealand last month.
A tsunami tidal wave washes away houses in Kesennuma, Miyagi. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
5.04am There are still fears for the occupants of two trains and a ship with over 100 passengers that were swept away by the tsunami.
4.47am There is amazing footage on Youtube of buildings swaying. View videos here and here.
4.30am US President Barack Obama has offered Japan his “deepest condolences, especially to the victims and their families. I offered our Japanese friends whatever help is needed”. He said that the US already had an aircraft carrier stationed in Japan and that another was on its way. “We also have a ship en route to the Marianas Islands to assist as needed. The defence department is working to account for all our military personnel in Japan. US embassy personnel in Japan have moved to an off-site location, and the state department is working to account for and assist any and all American citizens who are in the country.”
4.18am Kyodo news agency now puts the estimate of number killed at more than 1000.
4.03am The tsunami is expected to hit Ocean Beach in San Francisco shortly, resident Mathew Honan has set up a webcam you can access here.
The waves have started to hit the US West Coast now. Mike Murphy, emergencies chief in Port Orford, Oregon said:
The tsunami has arrived now and the ocean is surging as though it were between high tide and low tide every 30 minutes instead of the usual six hours.
4.02am Japanese defence ministry officials have said 1800 homes in Fukushima prefecture have been destroyed, the BBC reported.
3.59am The Herald Sun has this account from Australian Luke Norris who was in his high-rise apartment in central Tokyo when the quake hit.
I crouched next to the bed. All the lights went out. The whole building started swaying. I’m pretty high up. It was a very scary experience.
3.50am Governments around the world have pledged their support and offered aid to Japan in the wake of the largest quake to ever hit the country.
A house sinks into the ground at Sukagawa city, Fukushima. Picture: AFP
JAPAN-QUAKE
Pedestrians clamber over a piece of collapsed road in Urayasu city, Chiba. Picture: AFP
JAPAN-QUAKE
3.40am Reports indicate the situation at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is “under control”. The World Nuclear Association has said it understands that water is now being pumped into its cooling system. Reuters has also reported the US has transported emergency coolant to the plant. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said:
We just had our Air Force assets in Japan transport some really important coolant to one of the nuclear plants. You know Japan is very reliant on nuclear power and they have very high engineering standards, but one of their plants came under a lot of stress with the earthquake and didn’t have enough coolant.
3.18am Hawaii appears to have dodged the worst of the tsunami with the wave passing seemingly without major impact. White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley said:
I think the enormous fears that that were there hours ago, for some of us hours ago, has diminished greatly, which is quite a relief for all of us.
Houses continue to burn into the night at Natori, Miyagi. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
3.08am Five Australians MPs have arrived safely in Tokyo after spending hours trapped on a bullet train that ground to a halt following the 8.9 magnitude earthquake in Japan. Labor MPs Stephen Jones said the atmosphere on the crowded train was surprisingly calm.
You have got to hand it to the Japanese people. They are really taking this in their stride.
3.06am Embassy officials in Japan are trying to contact at least 45 Australians known to be in the region hardest hit by the 8.9 magnitude earthquake and tsunami.
2.58am The Courier-Mail has amazing eye-witness reports from Aussies in the heart of the quake.
I could’ve sworn I didn’t set my alarm to earthquake last night – Joel Porter, based in Sendai, about 130km west of a quake epicentre.
Things were falling off the shelves . . . the microwave was centimetres away from toppling off. The TV stand, holding a 32-inch TV, wheeled itself a couple of metres across the floor – Maki Miyaguchi, an Australian copy editor with Kyodo News, Tokyo
Waves wash away a warehouse and vehicles in Kesennuma, Miyagi. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
2.47am A large section of Kesennuma, a town of 70,000 people in Miyagi, is burning furiously with no apparent hope of the flames being extinguished, public broadcaster NHK said. A witness told the broadcaster that the fire began after the tsunami knocked over several cars, causing them to leak oil and gas. The fire started hours later and rescuers have yet to arrive.
2.45am The death toll hasrisen to at least 310 people. The National Police Agency said 110 people had been confirmed dead and 350 missing, with 544 others injured in the tremor.
The death toll has yet to include the 200-300 dead bodies which were (reportedly) found on the beach of Sendai.
2.42am A Japanese news agency has reported a dam has burst in north-eastern Japan, washing away homes.
2.25am Residents in coastal parts of northern California have evacuated their homes in anticipation of an expected tsunami. Authorities warned waves could reach as high as two metres.
2.23am Queen Elizabeth II has sent a message to the Emperor of Japan.
I was saddened to hear of the tragic loss of life caused by the earthquake which has struck north east Japan today. Prince Philip joins me in extending our heartfelt sympathy to your majesty and the people of Japan. Our prayers and thoughts are with everyone who has been affected by the dreadful disaster.
2.02am The official Kyodo news agency is reporting that about 88,000 people are missing. The pictures below show the awful scale of the earthquake’s impact.
A man walks past burning rubble in Iwaki city, Fukushima. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
A worker inspects a caved-in section of the Joban Motorway near Mito, Ibaraki. Picture: AP / Nexco East Japan
Japan Earthquake
1.46am UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has expressed his condolences to the Japanese people. He said the UN will do “all it can to mobilise humanitarian assistance”.
The world is shocked and saddened by the images which we saw this morning. On behalf of the United Nations, I want to express my deepest sympathies and heartfelt condolences to the Japanese people and government, and most especially to those who have lost family or friends in the earthquake or subsequent tsunami.
1.41am The first waves to hit Hawaii have been thankfully small. Waves were measured at 48cm at Nawiliwili on the island of Kauai, according to officials at an emergency centre in Honolulu. “It’s not going to be a major damaging event,” said Gerard Fryer with the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre as the surge began to hit, although he added there might be scattered damage.
1.17am Millions of people in greater Tokyo are stranded after the earthquake shut down the capital’s massive subway system. Countless workers have found themselves stuck far from their families, and unable to speak to them because the overloaded mobile phone system could not carry most calls.
1.00am Japanese police have found 200 to 300 bodies on a beach at Sendai. NHK television said the victims appeared to have drowned. Police are now putting the death toll at 88 with 349 missing, not including the bodies found at Sendai.
This dramatic picture shows the tsunami as it hits Natori, Miyagi. Picture: AP / Kyodo News
japan earthquake tsunami
12.53am The east coast of Japan continue to be rocked by aftershocks – The US Geological Survey reports seven more over the past half hour.
12.49am Prime Minister Julia Gillard has expressed her condolences to the people of Japan.
On behalf of the people of Australia I want to express our very sincere condolences to the people of Japan and the government of Japan on the death and devastation we are seeing following the earthquake and tsunami. Like people around the world I’ve been watching the images on our TV screens – they are truly shocking.
12.37am Japanese police have reported a major explosion at a petrochemical complex in Sendai.
12.36am The first tsunami waves have hit Hawaii. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre says Kauai was the first island hit. Officials predicted Hawaii would experience waves up to two metres.
12.31am Tokyo’s Narita airport has partially resumed flights. Officials from the airport said some departing flights were now taking off from the airport, but that it was not accepting arrivals. Around 10,000 people were stranded at Narita, and 1100 at Sendai airport, which saw its runways submerged by sweeping black floodwaters.
The picture below shows the tsumani sweeping its way into Sendai airport. Picture: AP / Kyodo News
japan earthquake tsunami
Vehicles are crushed by a collapsed road at a carpark in Yabuki. Picture: AFP
Japan Earthquake
Vehicles ready for shipping being carried by a tsunami tidal wave at Hitachinaka city in Ibaraki. Picture: AFP
Japan Earthquake
12.15am The whereabouts of a ship carrying 100 people which was swept away by the tsunami are still unknown, the Kyodo news agency has reported.
12.03am The northern coast of Indonesia has been struck by a small tsunami. There are no reports of how much damage has been caused and people are still on alert for future waves. Small tsunami waves have also hit the Philippines, but there were no reports of local damage or casualties. Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology director Renato Solidum told a news conference the waves ranged from 30cm to one metre.
The graphic below shows the quake as a star and the estimated time the tsunami will take to hit surrounding Pacific regions. Full image available from NOAA.
Graph
Parts of houses already swallowed by the tsunami burn in Sendai. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
11.42pm Latin America’s Pacific coast is on tsunami alert. Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa has declared a state of emergency and ordered people on the Galapagos Islands and the coast of the mainland to seek higher ground. Meanwhile, the tsunami is expected to reach Mexico’s coastline within three to four hours.
11.31pm Some 2,000 residents living near Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant have been urged to evacuate.
11.25pm Japanese police have stated the death toll has reached 60 with 56 people still missing.
Japan Nuclear Power Stations
11.22pm More detail from The Associated Press on the state of emergency issued at a nuclear plant after its cooling system failed:
Chief cabinet secretary Yukio Edano says the nuclear power plant in Fukushima developed a mechanical failure in the system needed to cool the reactor after it was shut down in Friday’s earthquake.
He said the measure was a precaution and there was no radiation leak at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant. He said the facility was not in immediate danger.
11.15pm Tsunami sirens have sounded on coastal areas in Hawaii, where the first waves are expected to hit about 1.00am (AEDT). Waves about half a metre high hit Wake Island in the Northern Pacific, meaning the biggest waves to hit Hawaii could reach near 2 metres, said Gerard Fryer, a geophysicist for the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre. Residents in coastal areas across the Pacific from Hawaii to Guam were ordered to evacuate to shelters and higher ground. In Hawaii’s tourist district of Waikiki, visitors were being moved to higher floors of their hotels.
We’re preparing for the worst and we’re praying for the best.
The graphic below shows the earthquake to hit Japan was one of the biggest since 1900.
Giant quakes
The image below is a monitor for activity in the Pacific region.
Seismic monitor
Houses are in flame while the Natori river is flooded over the surrounding area in Natori city. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
This picture shows the refinery plant at Ichihara in Chiba engulfed by flames. Picture: AFP
JAPAN-QUAKE
10.56pm Reports indicate New Zealand has downgraded the tsunami threat to a marine threat only.
10.50pm Hawaii has ordered the evacuation of all coastal areas as the threat of a tsunami nears. Main airports have been shut down as a precaution and the US Navy has ordered warships in Pearl Harbor to remain in port to support rescue missions.
10.36pm New Zealand has now issued its own tsunami warning and warns people to stay clear of beaches.
10.30pm US President Barack Obama has offered his condolences to the people of Japan and said his country stood ready to help them after the massive earthquake and tsunami.
(First Lady) Michelle (Obama) and I send our deepest condolences to the people of Japan, particularly those who have lost loved ones in the earthquake and tsunamis. The United States stands ready to help the Japanese people in this time of great trial.
The friendship and alliance between our two nations is unshakeable, and only strengthens our resolve to stand with the people of Japan as they overcome this tragedy.
Cars and other Debris swept away by tsunami tidal waves are seen in Kesennuma in Miyagi. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
10.23pm Japan has declared a state of emergency because of the failure of the cooling system at one nuclear plant, according to the Associated Press. Officials say there has been no leak of radiation.
10.03pm BBC online has an account of the quake from Shola Fawehimni, who was at Hokkaido’s airport in northern Japan when it hit:
It was a bit surreal. The chairs and the floor started moving and swaying. I wasn’t really sure what was going on. Then the building started swaying and I realised it was an earthquake. Some ceiling panels fell down.
10.01pm UK Prime Minister David Cameron has offered Britain’s condolences to Japan.
We send our sympathies and condolences to the Japanese people. We’ve had a terrible reminder of the destructive power of nature and everyone should be thinking of that country and its people and I’ve asked immediately that our government should look at what we can do to help.
9.50pm Authorities have said the death toll from the quake has risen to at least 32 people. The magnitude 8.9 offshore quake was followed by at least 19 aftershocks, most of them of more than magnitude 6.0.
A truck remains stranded on a road damaged by a powerful earthquake in Iwaki city. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
9.48pm AAP is reporting thatfive Australian MPs are trapped on a bullet train that ground to a halt following the quake.
The federal Liberal member for Fadden, Stuart Robert said he and four other MPs were on the train when the earthquake hit. Mr Robert said he was with Labor MPs Stephen Jones and Amanda Rishworth, Liberal Senator Michaelia Cash and Victorian Labor MP Natalie Hutchins.
All five are reported to be unharmed.
Residents walk through the rubles of residents collapsed by a powerful earthquake in Iwaki. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
9.22pm The Guardian website has the following live report from Tristan Mathers in Tokyo reporting life is going on as normal.
It’s kind of crazy because restaurants and convenience stores have remained open despite there being no power. In the background you can hear sirens. People are still going to restaurants and getting food at convenience stores…
The city seems to be in pretty good shape. There’s no damage, no buildings crumbling that I’ve seen. As I said some people are still eating in restaurants, even though it’s pitch black. There’s no power so I expect people are just trying to get back to normal.
The picture below shows flames rising from homes and debris half submerged in Sendai. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
9.21pm The tsunami moving across the Pacific is currently so large it could pass right over whole islands in the region, experts are warning. From London’s Independent:
The tsunami set off by Japan’s major earthquake is currently higher than some Pacific islands which it could wash over, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said today.
“Our biggest concern is the Asia and Pacific region, where developing countries are far more vulnerable to this type of unfolding disaster. The tsunami is a major threat,” Paul Conneally, spokesman for the Federation, the world’s biggest disaster relief network, told Reuters in Geneva.
“At the moment, it is higher than some islands and could go right over them,” he said.
Also, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii widened its warning to include most of the Pacific Ocean region.
9.12pm The Bureau of Meteorology says there is no tsunami threat for Australia. The latest Bureau of Meteorology update says Australia’s mainland, islands and territories are safe.
Forecaster Chris Ryan from the National Meteorological and Oceanographic Centre said there was a chance that could change if the quake’s magnitude is found to be higher.
But we’re a fair while past the event now, it seems to have settled to that level. We’re relatively sheltered.
8.50pm The USGS has a summary of the key seismological facts about the quake. It also provides some of the tectonic background to the earthquakes that hit the area.
At the latitude of this earthquake, the Pacific plate moves approximately westwards with respect to the North America plate at a velocity of 83 mm/yr. The Pacific plate thrusts underneath Japan at the Japan Trench, and dips to the west beneath Eurasia. The location, depth, and focal mechanism of the March 11 earthquake are consistent with the event having occurred as thrust faulting associated with subduction along this plate boundary.
8.44pm Reuters explains why, even in earthquake-prone Japan, this event is of frightening proportions. Excerpt:
Roiling water swept away homes, highways and the cars driving on them as waves 10 metres high hit the country’s northeastern Pacific coast after the magnitude 8.9 quake, the biggest in nearly a century and a half.
The tsunami, black with soil and thick with debris, some of it ablaze, submerged farmland near the coastal city of Sendai, and television images showed upended cars bobbing up and down in the water. Boats were floating in an inland sea.
The quake rattled skyscrapers in Tokyo further south, where the streets around the main train station were packed with commuters stranded after buses and trains were halted.
8.43pm Acting Prime Minister Wayne Swan says Australia stands ready to assist Japan.
8.38pm The pictures below show the scale of the damage to stricken cities following the earthquake and tsunami.
A man shelters beneath a desk in Sendai, Miyagi Prefect. Picture: AFP
People amid quake in Japan
Black smoke emerged from a building in Tokyo’s Koto Ward. Picture: AP
Quake strikes Japan
Vehicles are crushed by a collapsed wall at a carpark in Mito city in Ibaraki prefecture. Picture: AP
JAPAN-QUAKE
8.35pm The US Geological Survey reports the monster 8.9-magnitude earthquake which hit Japan was the country’s biggest ever and the seventh largest on record.
Ships and boats are washed ashore in Hachinohe, Aomori Prefectur. Picture: AP
Japan Earthquake
8.27pm National Police Agency said it would be quite some time until the actual toll from the disaster would be known.
“The damage is so enormous that it will take us much time to gather data.”
8.13pm Philippine officials are ordering an evacuation of coastal communities along the country’s eastern seaboard in expectation of a tsunami. The Philippine Volcanology and Seismology Institute director Renato Solidum says the first 1-metre high waves are expected to hit the northernmost Batanes islands by 5pm local time today.
The picture below shows Iwaki in Fukushima Prefecture as it is struck by the tsunami. Picture: AP
JAPAN-QUAKE
8.12pm Google launches its person finder application for the tradgedy.
7.46pm AFP are reporting at least eight people have been killed with three being crushed to death when their houses collapsed in Ibaraki prefecture northeast of Tokyo.
7.41pm The West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center said that any tsunami generated by the earthquake would hit Hawaii at around 2:45am (1245 GMT) and the West Coast at 7:45am (1545 GMT).
7.39pm Tsunami warnings have been issued for Russia, the Philippines and the Mariana Islands, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
They have also been extended to Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii, Guam, the Philippines, the Marshall Islands, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Nauru and Micronesia.
The United States later placed the West Coast and Hawaii on tsunami “watch,” urging residents to stay tuned for more information, AFP reported.
The picture below shows a power plant on fire in Ishihara. Picture: AFP / HO / NHK
JAPAN-QUAKE
7.33pm Three people have now been confirmed dead included a 67-year-old man crushed by a wall and an elderly woman killed by a fallen roof, both in the wider Tokyo area.
6.45pm Agence France Presse reports that No radiation leaks have been detected from Japan’s nuclear power stations after the quake.
6.35pm First quake death reported
6.11pm See pictures of quake impact here.
6.07pm In this picture reporters at the Associated Press Tokyo Bureau in Tokyo take shelter under a table as the earthquake strikes. Picture: AP.
Japan Earthquake
5.23pm US Geological survey updates magnitude to 8.8.
5:13pm Russia, Taiwan, Phillipines and Hawaii on tsunami watch after a reported 7.9-magnitude earthquake strikes off Japan’s northeastern coast.
Japan Nuclear Power Stations
Who is the St Kilda Schoolgirl?
KIM DUTHIE… QUEEN OF THE TROLLS! DICKI-LEAKS!!!
Posted: December 23, 2010 by leroydragon in In The News
Tags: 17 year old school girl, AFL, DICKILEAKS, football, KIM DUTHIE, nick dal santo, NICK DEL SANTO, NICK REIWOLDT, nudes, SMALL DICKS, ST KILDA
*Edit. 21/2 – Queen Duthie is at it again!!! Seriously – best TROLL EVER!!!!! We commend you Queen Duthie with your efforts against the St Kilda Football Club and staff! Not happy with the Epic Lulz from Del Santo and Nicky Pin Dick, she has now turned the rage on St Kilda Manager Ricky Nixon!!!!! Who is next??? I cannot wait to post the nude pics of Ricky, that perm or whatever the fuck he is sporting is too good, bring on the n0000dz.

Everyone loves a good troll. And everyone I know hates football. So when someone trolls an AFL club, or players, or the WHOLE FUCKEN TEAM well here @ http://www.theangryfijian.com we call that shit LEGENDARY.
So Kim Duthie ( pictured below ) has scored all these pictures of St Kilda players playing with their willies and being generally gay. Not that this is a surprise, given that Molly Meldrum is the number 1 ticket holder, but anyway, its fucking LULZ all round for people like me, who like to see football players squirming their sleazy little arises off on the front page of the paper.
Being the super snoop that I am.. I managed to track downs Kim twitter account, and Im going to be following the circus, and of course, posting the pictures that nobody will post. Here is a couple:
You would hate to be these too small dicked wonders right now wouldn’t you!! Im sure there misses are beating their balls blue, and Im pretty sure, next year the St Kilda’s opposition is going to have plenty of ammo to sledge these motherfuckers into morbid depression that (fingers crossed) leads to a drug addicted career suicide.
St Kilda AFL captain Nick Riewoldt, Zac Dawson and Nick Dal Santo.. suck fucken shit. Hope your little fuck ups get you one step closer to a real job.
To follow Kim on twitter head to : http://twitter.com/its_k_isabella or to check the Ustream vids go here: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/kimi-s-thoughts
Crank some fucking Double Dragon while you are here:
-
deseee says:
The drummer from Rose Funeral want’s in on these shenanigans too http://www.thegauntlet.com/article/3915/20739/Rose-Funeral-drummer-wants-you-to-see-his-penis-(NSFW).html
-
corym says:
As does Mike Patton.
http://theblemish.com/2010/02/mike-patton-flashes-his-penis/mike-patton-penis-01/
-
-
Michelle says:
When I started reading, I thought I was going to not like this – but I do, oh I do!!!
You are so right. Let them get a bloody real job.
-
Anon says:
She used to be so pretty and seemed like she had such great potential when she was younger. This girl was actually a mountain runner and went to the world championships… how did she end up where she is now?
-
curious says:
hiya angry, I’m doing some research on this, and just wondering re: the kim duthie photo- is she the one on the right or the left? thanx from a curious skeptic
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pacelegal says:
All this voyeuristic prurient interest in the girl’s looks detracts from the central issue of why the AFL tolerates the breach of it’s own Child Protection Policy 2009, which along with the AFL Code of Conduct, enshrined the AFL Membership Policy, tells us that the more things change under Demetrious’ watch, the more they stay the same.
-
St Kunt fucker says:
Well Fuck Me, What a small Penis, that is what you get from taking roids…..lol
-
hahaha says:
is that Chopper Reid in the background Re: pic of kim and her mate??
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Tom says:
True, I have seen the nude pic of this attention whore!
-
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Ross Lyon says:
leave Ricky alone. He was at the end of the line, it was his turn after all
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john says:
the reason there was so much legal action is because one of the suppressed photos showed one of the players performing oral sex on another.supposedly one of those photos is the first of a series leading up to the climax.if you know anyone who works at a tv station or newspaper,ask them as they are being shared privately.the girl apparently sent all the photos to all the media outlets,thats why the original story of the miami hotel room quietly went away
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leroydragon says:
well well well. lets find these photos and ill happily post them here
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fuck you says:
you people are fucked if you think this is right or ar suppporting her sure i hate afl and think its gay but this isnt right oh and as for the comments about them getting a job fuck you lets see you run around and do there job. also how how is rugby any different just seems to be more touching in it and less physical fittness seriously you people should be ashamed of yourselves
HAHA HAVE YOU SEEN THIS PICTURE? http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:xppPCk3icPi1iM:http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitpic/photos/full/215732297.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=0ZRYP5X5F6FSMBCCSE82&Expires=1293596947&Signature=8smEdCHBymZJCH6%2BBt6mfqZbti4%3D&t=1
LOL, hadn’t but.. ew, haha
Playboy when you’re legal?
Eh, we’ll see what happens.
Hi Kim, just wondering if you have an email address for media inquiries?
Is there an email I can contact you in regards to some work?
What brand of cigarettes do you smoke & how many a day? Thanks
WINFIELD RED’S 25′s, was about a 35 a day… now maybe 15 a day.
“Dude, she just called you Asian!” “Oh hell no, hold my eyes open!” LMFAO!
HAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHHAAHAHAHHA
im a 28 year old cop. can we fuck?
haha. *rolls eyes*
you gave so many women hope, now you are just as bad as the players you wanted to expose. shame on you for pretending you would change things. now you’ve just proven exactly what you wanted to stop, the afl having complete power… so sad.
I’m sorry…
I just really needed a place to stay..
Do you know what it’s like to stay on the streets?
Do you know what it’s like to not be able to eat for a few days because you have no money?
if you like older men you should like me as am a bit more than twice your age…if you looking at spending time in adelaide let me know, at least still counts me as one of the 1 out of 10 people who like you and comment lol !!
LOL.
why did you settle
i feel like you let down a whole bunch of women who wanted you to carry the torch of train!
I’m Sorry.. I feel sort of the same way
hahah NO WAY. this is the same chick that gave me a blowie at a party wen i was 16.
Considering I’ve been to about 3 parties in my life?
I’ve been going out clubbing since I was about 14/15.. So tell me when – Inbetween running 7 days a week and clubbing I managed to fit a party in?
footballers are all cock heads that treat women like shit…more people like you should try to show the world what they are really like….you are very sexy
Naww
Bubble Gum Ice Cream Or Rainbow? ^-^ ♥
rainbow!!
like for seasons in one day (;
All the things I can’t explain…
come on baby we aint gonna live forever let me show you all the things that we could do (;
I know you wanna be together, and I wanna spend the night with you.. yeah yeah… with you-oo yeah yeahh, so come with me tonight we can make the night last foreveeerrrr
oh, oh… Let’s pretend you’re mine… We could just pretend, we could just pretend.. yeah yeah… you got what I like, you got what I like, I got whatcha like.. oh cmon… just one taste and you’ll want more… SO TELL ME WHAT YOU’RE WAITING FOR!!!!
*Guitar Solo……* comeeee babyyy we aint gonna live foreveeerrrrr, let me show you all the things that we could dooooo.
yeah CBF writing anymore. ahah.
If you had sex with the footballers on march 27 that would mean the baby wouldn’t be due until about January 27 meaning they could not be the father of the child. correct
Um…. that was my duedate…
Kim Kim Kim……run away with me and we’ll leave Australia behind and we’ll travel the world and have a drink in every bar
that sounds amazing haha
How old is the oldest guy u have slept with ?? I\’m in my 20s is that to old??
im not going to answer that…
Do you like Jersey Shore?
noooooo
vagina
pusssy
New MacBook Pros Likely to Launch on Thursday, February 24th

Apple last updated the MacBook Pros almost one year ago with Intel’s Core i5 and i7 processors. Apple has been due to refresh the MacBook Pros with the latest Intel Sandy Bridge processors which are said to be a significant improvement over last year’s processors.
MacBook Pro stock has been dwindling internationally and this morning two Italian sites listed give new MacBook Pro part numbers (MC720, MC721, MC723, MC724, and MC725) that are said to represent the new updates. The new machines are said to be making their way to Italian resellers towards the end of the month with a released date of Thursday or Friday.
We’ve since heard reliable confirmation that this information is accurate and that the expected release date is next Thursday, February 24th. The move would be a bit unusual for Apple to launch new machines on a Thursday. So, if you are about to buy a new MacBook Pro, wait until next week.
daily finance news and tidbits
PBOC lifts interest rates
The People’s Bank of China has lifted
interest rates for the second time in just
over a month. The 1-year deposit rate will
be lifted 25 basis points to 3.00pct while
the 1-year lending rate is up 25bps to
6.06pct.
US chain store sales rose by 2.7pct last
week compared with a year earlier according
to Redbook Research.
European shares were mixed on Tuesday in
response to China’s decision to lift
interest rates. The FTSEurofirst index fell
by 0.1pct, but the UK FTSE rose 0.7pct with
the German Dax up 0.5pct. In London trade,
mining shares were higher with Xstrata up by
1.7pct with Rio Tinto up 1.9pct and BHP
Billiton up 0.8pct.
US sharemarkets rose again on Tuesday with
investors shrugging off China’s decision to
lift interest rates. Shares in McDonalds
rose by 2.9pct after the fast-food giant
announced that January same store sales beat
market expectations. Of interest, a small
start up company, Gateway Industries, was up
20,000pct today. With an hour of trade to
go, the Dow Jones index was up 48pts or
0.4pct with the S&P 500 up 0.2pct and the
Nasdaq was higher by 6pts or 0.2pct.
US treasuries fell again on Tuesday (yields
higher). Investors fretted about global
inflationary pressures following China’s
decision to raise rates for the third time
since October. US 2yr yields rose by 8pts to
0.84pct and US 10yr yields lifted by 8pts to
3.72pct.
Major currencies again largely tracked
sideways against the greenback during
European and US trade on Tuesday. The Euro
held between US$1.3590 and US$1.3690 and was
near US$1.3625 in late US trade. The Aussie
dollar traded between US101.10c and
US101.90c, and was near US$101.45c in late
US trade. And the Japanese yen traded from
81.80 yen per US dollar to around JPY82.30,
and was near JPY82.35 in late US trade.
US crude oil prices fell again on Tuesday.
While strike activity has occurred in the
Suez Canal region, a senior canal officer
told Reuters that they wouldn’t affect canal
operations. The Nymex crude oil contract
fell by US54c (0.6pct) to US$86.94 a barrel.
But London Brent crude rose by US78c to US
$100.03 a barrel.
Base metal prices were again little changed
on the London Metal Exchange on Monday. All
metals rose between 0.1-0.5pct except lead
which lost 1.1pct. And the gold price rose
to three-week highs on Tuesday on global
inflation concerns with the Comex gold
futures price up US$15.90 an ounce to US
$1,364.10.
Ahead: In Australia, consumer sentiment
data is released. Commonwealth Bank, Boral
and Stockland are amongst those releasing
half-year results. In the US, Federal
Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke delivers
testimony.
ICAP daily finance alert
Check out also this link to information about Andre Di Cioccio Lawyer Jail
It was pretty boring in terms of the data and news flow last night.
Equities did well around ze globe, on a run of positive earnings and the
strengthening view that global growth is strong. Bonds in contrast did
little – ditto FX – while commodities for their part were mixed.
The domestic news flow has been more interesting of late and we get another
decent release today with NAB’s January business survey (1130). It was only
a week ago that we got the December figures showing a drop in confidence
but a pick up in actual conditions. January’s numbers are likely to show
another drop in confidence given the floods, but as history has shown,
confidence figures tend to bounce back when things settle down, so we
shouldn’t be too concerned about any deterioration today and instead we
need to focus on the underlying momentum. I can appreciate that this is
hard to do though. The papers are relentless in telling us how bad things
are and so it is completely normal for confidence figures to be distorted
by extreme news events.
Underlying momentum nevertheless remains robust – and we saw this in
yesterdays retail results. Consumer spending ex food was strong for the 2nd
month running and has been pretty solid on average for the bulk of this
year. Yet what do we read in the press today? It’s about how the sector is
struggling – what rot. We’ve been hearing this since day one of the
recovery by the way, even when all the data was unanimous in showing
strength. Look, I’m sure some retailers aren’t finding things as easy as
they once were, but that doesn’t mean things are truly tough. Some of the
larger players who may be finding things harder may instead need to look at
their business model – spending patterns, the shop font – all of this is
changing and it’s not as easy as it once was. That’s what competition is
all about. That doesn’t mean, as the data proved yesterday, that consumers
have put their wallets away.
Things are not booming, no one is suggesting this, but the data is
unequivocal in showing decent underlying momentum. If consumers had really
put their wallets away, would household goods spending be up 1.5% in
December, after 2 months of strong growth? Would clothing and soft goods
retailing be up 2.7% in the month? Would spending in cafes and restaurants
have increased by 0.8% in December? If people weren’t spending, and noting
that I’m not very good at math (or spelling), I just don’t think they would
be – the numbers don’t add up. And remember that most of these goods are
subject to deflation, prices are falling, so if values are rising that can
only mean volumes growth is even stronger. The debate has become
ridiculous in Australia and we have several wags talking as if we were in a
downturn – really ludicrous stuff. I shouldn’t complain too much though,
because just like most the ‘debates’ we had last year, it does provide a
good opportunity to profit.
As to last night’s price action though, and with about half an hour to go,
US equities are up 0.5% on the S&P500 (1317) with financials, industrials
and tech stocks leading the charge. Energy stocks weren’t too far behind,
despite a 1.7% fall in crude ($87.45 on WTI or -0.6% to $99.26 for Brent).
The Dow for its part was up 63pts (12156), the Nasdaq was 0.5% higher
(2782) while the SPI was also 0.5% higher (4870). Finally stocks in Europe
were all up about 0.9%-1% on the major indices.
As mentioned, debt markets were subdued and US Treasuries are little
changed from yesterday afternoon. The 2yr yield is up 1bp to 0.76%, the 5yr
yield is unchanged at 2.28% while the 10yr is also unchanged at 3.64%.
Aussie futures did nothing on a tight range – 3s at 94.64, and 10s at
94.26.
No real changes on FX either, AUD is at 1.0142 (down 6pips on a 50pip
range), EUR is at 1.3593 (down 16pips on a big figure range), GBP is 1.6124
(big figure + range) while Yen is virtually unchanged at 82.28. Gold is up
smalls ($1350) while copper is down 0.4% in NY.
Dataflow was reasonably minor. German factory orders fell 3.4% in December
after a 5% increase and are about 20% higher annually. Canadian building
permits rose 2.4% in December after a 10.5% drop in the month prior.
Finally, US consumer credit was a lot stronger than expected, rising $6.1bn
compared to expectations of $2.4bn. ON the News Front, the head of research
and the San Fran Fed said that the US economy had reached escape velocity.
Apparently the Germans are trying to end wage indexation, raise retirement
ages and lock in debt limits into EU constitutions – in a competitiveness
pact. All sensible stuff, although some of the troubled states have voiced
opposition to it.
Very little out tonight, German industrial production and a bunch of Fed
speak.
That’s it, have a great day.
Daily finance tidbits news
n US non-farm payrolls
(employment) rose by just 36,000 in
January. While the report was well short
of expectations of job gains near
148,000, weakness was attributed to harsh
snow storms in the month. But the
jobless rate plunged from 9.4pct to
9.0pct – the lowest level since April
2009. Hourly earnings jumped by 0.4pct.
n European shares rose slightly on
Friday as investors debated a mixed US
payrolls report. Construction and
utility stocks were most in demand. The
FTSEurofirst index rose by 0.1pct, with
the UK FTSE up 0.2pct and German Dax
higher by 0.3pct.
n US sharemarkets rose on Friday
as investors shrugged off tepid jobs
growth, preferring to focus on positive
forward indicators released earlier in
the week. At the close of trade, the Dow
Jones index was up 29.9pts or 0.3pct with
the S&P 500 up 0.3pct and the Nasdaq was
higher by 15pts or 0.6pct. Over the week
the Dow Jones rose by 2.3pct with the S&P
up 2.7pct and Nasdaq lifted by 3.1pct.
n US treasuries fell on Friday
(yields higher) as investors fretted that
inflation could prove
stronger-than-expected over 2011. US 2yr
yields rose by 3pts to 0.75pct and US
10yr yields lifted by 9pts to 3.64pct.
Over the week US 2yr yields rose by 20pts
– the most since June 7 2009. And US 10yr
yields rose by 31pts.
n Major currencies eased against
the US dollar during US trade on Friday.
The Euro fell from highs near US$1.3645
to US$1.3545 before ending US trade near
US$1.3580. The Euro has softened to US
$1.3550 this morning. The Aussie dollar
fell from highs around US101.95c to
US101.10c, but lifted to near US101.40c
in late US trade. The Aussie has softened
to near US101.10c this morning. And the
Japanese yen fell from 81.50 yen per US
dollar to around JPY82.45, and closed US
trade near JPY82.20.
n US crude oil prices fell by
almost 2pct on Friday in response to
unfounded speculation that Egypt’s
President Mubarak could step down over
the week-end. Investors also chose to
take profits as the US dollar rose. The
Nymex crude oil contract fell by US$1.51
(1.7pct) to US$89.04 a barrel. And London
Brent crude fell by US$1.93 to US$99.83 a
barrel. Over the week Nymex crude fell by
US30c while Brent rose by US41c.
n Base metal prices rose on the
London Metal Exchange on Friday. Metals
rose 0.4-1.5pct with nickel doing best.
Over the week metals generally rose
between 5.3-6.7pct but aluminium lagged
with a 2.5pct gain. But the gold price
eased on Friday in line with oil in
response to a stronger greenback. The
Comex gold futures price fell by US$4.00
an ounce to US$1,349.00. Gold rose by US
$8.30 an ounce over the week.
n Ahead: In Australia, job
advertisements data is released together
with retail trade. In the US, consumer
credit data is released.
Queensland Cyclone News Report
Cyclone Yasi is the largest and most powerful cyclone to hit Queensland in living memory. The latest developments will be posted below as they come to hand.
Cyclone Yasi made landfall in North Queensland around midnight local time and continues to make its way inland. The key developments:
- Premier Anna Bligh says thousands will be homeless after Yasi made landfall at about midnight local time (1am AEDT) at Mission Beach, but was felt from Cairns to Townsville.
- The storm was downgraded from a category five to a category four as it crossed land but was still the strongest tropical storm to ever hit Australia. The storm has weakened as it travels over land, the last update at around 6am local time downgrading Yasi to a category two cyclone.
- The communities of Mission Beach, Tully and Innisfail, 50km north of ground zero, are the worst hit, with residents reporting areas of trees are “shredded”. Queensland Police have received widespread reports of widespread damage and destruction but no reported injuries or deaths so far.
- Electricity is out in many communities, with power lines brought down by winds. It will stay off at least until the storm has passed and it is safe for workers to go out and inspect the damage.
TIMES ARE IN AEDT | REFRESH THIS PAGE FOR UPDATES
- Email your pics: news@news.com.au
- BOM: Current Yasi track projections
- Local coverage from cairns.com.au
- Q&A: Preparing for a cyclone
- Evacuation and info hotline 1300 993 191
- Register as evacuee at Red Cross
10.20am The Bureau of Meteorology have released flood warnings for coastal rivers and streams between Cairns and Townsville and adjacent inland catchments, and between Townsville and Sarina and adjacent inland catchments.
There are also flood warnings for several rivers in the area.
9.50am Daylight has revealed a devastated landscape at Innisfail, which was devastated by Cyclone Larry in 2006.
“It’s just like the place has been sprayed with napalm,” said Cassowary councillor Bill Horsford.
“There’s hardly a green leaf around, all of the beautiful mountains are now brown.”
9.34am LIVE FROM 9.50 AEDT - Live streaming video from Cairns with the latest updates from the scene. Click the video above to watch.
9.25am Castaway Resort, an oceanfront hotel on Mission Beach, has copped a hammering from the cyclone. Paul Toogood has posted photos of the damage on Yfrog.
Castaway Resort Mission Beach Yasi

Picture credit: Yfrog user @CastawayResort
9.17am Queensland Police are urging people in Cairns and Townsville to be patient and stay indoors as conditions are still unsafe.
Technical experts are performing damage assessments so the all clear can be given for residents to safely return home and travel on roads.
9.11am Palm Island – which was not evacuated – is “a mess” with ”some structural damage to residences” according to reports from other users of the Queensland Police Facebook page. Thankfully there have been no reported casualties.
9.01am Callers to ABC radio describe their experiences in the cyclone, saying Larry was “nothing compared to this”.
One woman tearfully pleads for people to think of those on farms as she tells of writing her phone number on her horses – which are now lost – in the hope they would be found again. Another resident describes “100 foot coconut trees” planted in 1918 bent in half by the winds.
8.54am As daylight breaks, pictures are coming in of the cyclone damage in Tully. This photograph was taken on Black Street. Pic: John Wilson
Black street Tully Yasi

And this is Butler Street where awnings have been torn from shopfronts. Pic: John Wilson
Tully Butler St Yasi

8.51am Good news comes in threes and for Queensland that means babies who couldn’t wait to be born during Cyclone Yasi.
Premier Anna Bligh says two came into the world at Innisfail hospital right in the midst of the monster storm along with the little girl born in a Cairns evacuation centre this morning.
She’s guessing they’ll be some of the most sought-after baby photos globally.
8.39am David Brook, general manager of the Mission Beach Elandra Resort said the area now looked like “Vietnam (in the war movie) Apocalypse Now”.
Trees are down, cars have been swept away, roofs have been torn away and the sand on the beach has disappeared, Mr Brook said.
“Nothing’s been spared.
“The devastation is phenomenal, like nothing I’ve ever experienced,” he said, noting that he’s seen at least five cyclones hit the area over the past 20 years.
8.29am There is “virtually nothing standing” in Tully, says Tully Times reporter Linda Timms about the surrounding rainforest.
From her home at the base of Mount Tyson, Ms Timms said on ABC Radio she had no view of the mountain through the trees before the cyclone, but now it is a clear view.
8.18am The scene at Cyclone Yasi’s ground zero is one of devastation, but even police who bunkered down at Mission Beach don’t know just how bad it is.
Police say trees had been reduced to sticks, streets were littered with debris, and some buildings had been damaged, but conditions are still too dangerous to allow even a cursory assessment of the damage.
“Around 10pm (AEST) there was this massive roar and we could hear vegetation being shredded to pieces,” said officer in charge Sergeant Dan Gallagher.
8.06am The Bureau of Meteorology has downgraded Yasi to a category two cyclone and released an updated tracking map.
They said “Yasi continues to weaken, but it is producing heavy rain and dangerous wind gusts as it moves across the tropical interior.
“Yasi is SE of Georgetown and will be near Mt Isa tonight as a tropical Low.”
BOM tracking Yasi 0700
7.41am 90 per cent of the streets of Tully are expected to be extensively damaged.
“We do expect to see Tully experiencing some very very high levels of damage to buildings, to vegetation and potentially to other infrastructure,” Anna Bligh told Sky News.
7.36am Ms Bligh said six people, aged in their 60s, who were trapped in a unit at Port Hinchinbrook overnight were safe and well on Thursday morning.
“I’m very pleased to advise they’re safe,” she said.
“I’m sure they had tough night.”
7.31am A baby has girl has been born in a Cairns evacuation centre. She arrived at 6.09am (AEST) after her mother Akiko Pruss went into labour three hours ago in the first aid room of Redlynch State College.
Mrs Pruss has made it clear her second child will not be called Yasi.
Premier Anna Bligh said on Channel 9: “in the midst of all of this devastation, new life in some very touching circumstances.”
“I’m sure it will bring a lot of smiles to faces in that centre today after such a difficult and distressing night.”
7.24am Ms Bligh said while Cairns had been spared the worst of the monster storm, it was too early to have even basic assessments of the damage in some of the hardest hit communities such as Cardwell, to the south of Mission Beach.
“It’s far too early yet to start talking about dodging bullets,” she said.
“Potentially there’s quite a lot of structural damage to essential services.”
7.18am There have been no reports of any deaths or serious injuries as a result of Cyclone Yasi, Premier Anna Bligh, which is “a great relief” she told the Nine Network.
She said Cairns had been spared the worst of the monster storm, with the smaller communities of Mission Beach, Tully, Tully Heads, and Cardwell bearing Yasi’s full force.
6.52am Joseph from Lowry, 25km south of Innisfail, told ABC Radio the view from his house is “total devastation,” and said his neighbour across the road has lost his roof.
Sonya, from Tully, stayed with relatives, and said they went through a “very frightening night”. A neighbour in the apartment above bunkered down with them after the roof above him was ripped off. The roof of the senior citizens’ hall nearby is also gone.
Sonya said she is “dreading going around the corner” to see what her own house looks like.
6.43am El-Arish resident Paul Osbourne said the winds were the most extreme he’s ever experienced, and described the walls of his brick home vibrating around him.
“It was just full on spray, you couldn’t tell in what direction the wind was coming from,” he told AAP.
He said trees were going down everywhere and branches were cleanly ripped off by gusts the bureau has put as high as 290km/h.
“It was unbelievable, trees were coming down and hitting the roof, there was this incredible noise,” he said.
6.36am Cairns appears to have been spared the worst of Cyclone Yasi’s fury, but thousands of residents have spent a scary night in evacuation centres that lost power.
Police who conducted limited patrols during the tempest say damage appears to be minimal. They saw no major structural damage, but a spokesman for Cairns Regional Council Mayor Val Schier said they expect to find more in the morning.
6.28am Dozens of powerlines have been brought down by cyclonic winds. More than 170,000 homes are without power, including 40,000 in Cairns, and 70,000 in Townsville.
6.18am Amid the chaos and devastation of Cyclone Yasi a baby is being born at a Cairns evacuation centre. Akiko Pruss went into labour at the evacuation centre at Redlynch State College at 2.45am (AEST).
“She’s been in labour for a few hours,” Cairns councillor Linda Cooper told AAP. “She’s doing really well…Today’s actually her due date.”
6.03am Cyclone Yasi has been downgraded to a category three storm, but remains dangerous. The “very destructive” core, with gusts up to 205 km/h, is continuing to move inland west of Cardwell towards the Georgetown area.
“Yasi is moving inland and weakening slowly, but remains a dangerous cyclone,” the Bureau of Meteorology said.
BOM track Yasi 0605

5.47am Funnily enough the US Weather Channel has gone nuts for the storm in the US, but makes no mention of cyclone Yasi. Their outlook for Cairns is for scattered thunderstorms and a 60% chance of rain.
5.36am The Daily Telegraph has broken down what the cyclone will mean for some Queensland industries. Up to $500 million worth of sugar cane and banana crops are at risk, doubling the losses already suffered from the recent floods.
It’s also another huge blow to tourism after thousands of staff and guests were evacuated from hotels.
4:25am Queensland Police have received widespread reports of widespread damage and destruction but no reported injuries or deaths so far.
4:10am Cyclone Yasi has been downgraded to category 4 and is expected to weaken, according to the latest Bureau of Meteorology report.
Cyclone

Meanwhile northern Queenslanders were bracing for devastating scenes at first light. Early reports suggest the communities of Mission Beach, where the category five monster made landfall about midnight (AEST), nearby Tully, and Innisfail, 50km north of ground zero, are the worst hit. Yasi’s fury was felt hundreds of kilometres away, in Cairns to the north, and Townsville to the south, and all the places in between.
4:00am The eye of the storm is passing over Tully as the predicted storm surge into Townsville appears to be staying well below the worst forecast, thanks to a receding tide. Meanwhile the Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre said there are unconfirmed reports of rainfall of up to 200 mm in some areas.
3:20am Cyclone Yasi is crossing the north Queensland coast near Mission Beach and is starting to unleash the upper range of its violent 290km/h winds. Mission Beach is now sitting in the eye of the cyclone, with families converging on the streets to inspect the damage. Resident Nicky Smith was bracing for a second round of devastation, after the first wave had done minimal damage to her home.
“It’s all gone a bit pear-shaped now.There have been a lot of bangs up there. We don’t know what’s going on. Water is coming through the windows. It’s coming under the door and through the windows. It’s not flooding, there’s just too much rain.”
2.45am Residents in Tully have already reported massive devastation with roofs torn from houses and power poles knocked over. Cassowary Coast councillor Ross Sorbello said the roof had been torn from his mother’s house, where he was waiting out the storm, and local properties had suffered similar damage.
“It is just a scene of mass devastation. (Cyclone) Larry was a boy compared to this.”
2.10am Townsville authorities say there is no way of knowing how many homes will be inundated as a result of an expected record storm surge as cyclone Yasi belts the north Queensland coast. A wave height of 9.5 metres had been recorded at the city, almost three metres above the expected level, but authorities will not be able to determine the effects of the storm surge until after the cyclone has passed.
Residents have reported sheets of roof iron have been ripped from a Townsville shopping centre and seeing metal awnings fly down the street. Castle Hill resident Wil Kemp described the conditions as “scary”.
“It’s dark outside so we can’t see a lot but there a whole trees, big ones, which just aren’t there anymore.The rain doesn’t fall, it just comes in horizontally as the wind goes roaring past.”
1.40am Boyd “Scotty” Scott, of Scotty’s Beach House at Yasi “ground zero” Mission Beach, has told Sky News after the cyclone crossed: “I’m looking at stars above me, that’s how calm it is … At the moment, I don’t feel it’s been that much different to Larry.”
1.06am The weather bureau’s latest update states: The large destructive core of Cyclone Yasi is starting to cross the coast between Innisfail and Cardwell, with a dangerous storm tide and battering waves to the south of the cyclone centre.
satellite map yasi 12.30am qld time

VERY DESTRUCTIVE winds with gusts up to 290 km/h between Cairns and Ingham and the adjacent ranges will extend inland and gradually weaken.
The VERY DESTRUCTIVE CORE of the cyclone will take up to 4 hours to pass.
DESTRUCTIVE winds with gusts in excess of 125 km/h between Cape Tribulation and Ayr will spread inland overnight.
12.56am Recapping the grave warning from state disaster coordinator Ian Stewart at the latest media conference: “This is a very very deadly and destructive cyclone. Unfortunately we are going to see significant destruction of buildings … and it is very likely that we will see deaths occur.”
12.50am More than 100 employees on Dunk Island, just a few kilometres off the coast of Mission Beach, are bunkered down in a concrete wing of a staff accommodation block waiting for Cyclone Yasi to pass. They had lost mobile phone communication but the resort was equipped with satellite phones and generators.
12.43am Cassowary Coast councillor Ross Sorbello said his house was shaking under the force of winds of up to 290km/h. “We’re already at a stage where it’s worse than it was during Larry. I don’t remember the house shaking like that last time,” he told AAP. “The wind and rain outside are howling, it’s a horrible sound.”
12.34am The major evacuation centre in Cairns has lost power. The power went out about just over an hour ago, throwing blackness over the 2500 evacuees holed up in the Stockland Shopping Centre in Earlville (pictured below) after early morning evacuations.
Earlville Shopping Centre

12.19am A report of roofs coming off on The Strand in Townsville, and in Cairns there’s are report of wind picking up, “whipping through the city with a shriek”. Gulliver resident Carly Lubicz says: “The rain is pelting and, while we can’t go outside, trees are leaning over as they’re whipped by the wind.’
12.04am The weather bureau’s latest update says Cyclone Yasi is expected to cross the coast near Mission Beach, south of Innisfail, close to midnight (Queensland time).
11.41pm Premier Anna Bligh says people in affected areas may need to be self sufficient for a couple of days. She said she wouldn’t “sugar coat” the difficulties ahead for far north Queenslanders. “We will do everything in our power to minimise that time but that’s not in our control, it will depend on conditions, if we can get helicopters up and how badly damaged roads are.” Her warning comes as 89,000 homes have had power cut. At her last media update for the evening she said: ”We are waiting anxiously with you … we hope that you can feel our thoughts. We hope to see you safe and well tomorrow morning.”
11.39pm More on the call to police for evacuation assistance: Six people in their 60s at Port Hinchinbrook in a storm surge area made the call, and have been given telephone support.
11.34pm Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says reports of an 18m wave at Townsville are false. Waves breaking over a buoy have turned it upside down, causing it to give inaccurate measurements.
11.04pm The latest projection from the weather bureau shows how Yasi is expected to remain a Category 1 cyclone as far inland as Mt Isa.
cyclone yasi map 10pm february 2

10.52pm The mayor of Palm Island, Alf Lacey, has rejected claims his people had been forgotten and said residents were bunkered down in homes and four evacuation centres. “We’ve been planning for these events for many years,” Mr Lacey, who is also chairman of the Local Disaster Management Group, said. “Palm certainly is in safe hands and everything is in order.”
10.50pm Police report a person at Innisfail has called them, asking to evacuate. Emergency workers cannot respond, other than give advice on sheltering, police say. “These are not conditions in which we can send out emergency workers,” Premier Anna Bligh said this evening. “These are not conditions where you can put up a helicopter to do a winch rescue. All of that is now beyond the realm of possibility.”
10.39pm Across North Queensland, more than 61,000 homes are without power.
10.30pm Reader Andrew Walker from London said he was concerned for his British sister in Cairns.
My sister has been traveling in Australia for about a year now, and she is living in Cairns, like a lot of others she has decided to stay. There is nothing we can do apart from watch this site for updates of what is happening, and hope that she is ok. My thoughts are with her and the rest of Queensland. Stay safe everyone.
10.16pm There’s been record wave height - 9.5m – this afternoon off Townsville. “This is the highest that has ever been recorded since measurements began in 1975,” Premier Anna Bligh said. Similarly in Cardwell we are planing for a storm surge of over 7m over the high tide mark, Lucinda Beach 4m and at Cairns 2.6m.”
10.04pm Emergency services say they will not risk the lives of their personnel during the height of the cyclone. They warn that people should now be bunkered down in homes or among the thousands who have moved into one of 20 evacuation centres across the region.
9.52pm An email from reader Chris Beston: “I live in Cairns and I am an ex Adelaide person, its starting to get really windy now and the lights are starting to flicker on and off, just wish it would hurry up and hit so we can deal with it…”.
Our thoughts are with you and others in North Queensland tonight, Chris.
9.39pm Powerlines are under threat and Anna Bligh has warned of “a catastrophic failure of essential services”. An inland “spine” of transmission towers which has never been through a Category 5 cyclone will be tested; Bligh says if it fails there could be a total failure of power to parts of North Queensland.
There is also a warning of a second storm surge tomorrow morning about 9.30am local time when the tide rises again. Winds will still be strong and authorities are warning that lives could be put at risk if people venture out in the early morning to inspect damage when the tide is due to surge.
It was a sombre press conference – authorities are asking people to brace for scenes of total devastation tomorrow morning after the storm passes.
9.34pm Queensland Premier Anna Bligh is holding a media conference. She’s warned that although the eye of the cyclone isn’t expected to cross the coast until midnight (Queensland time), its destructive core will cross the coast much earlier – starting now - and continue for about four or five hours.
9.26pm The power is out on Magnetic Island, off Townsville. Resident Gisela Edwards said: “It is very squally, but the wind is not constant.”
9.17pm From the second floor of the Sebel Cairns, Gavin King reports: “Looking at the window we can see vast tracts of blackness as entire suburbs lose power.” Read more updates from The Cairns Post and Townsville Bulletin reporters in the Cover It Live blog at the bottom of this page.
8.57pm Authorities fear some tourists in Cairns may underestimate Yasi’s deadly threat – with backpackers crowding on to balconies at city resorts, posing for photos and chanting ”Yasi, Yasi, Yasi – Oi, Oi, Oi”.
8.49pm The Cairns Post‘s Simon Crerar reports: “The cyclone siren is sounding in Cairns CBD and it is a horrible noise.”
8.41pm At least one roof has been torn off, trees have been torn down and lights are flickering in the Innisfail region. Cassowary Coast Mayor Bill Shannon says he’s seen the roof a building torn off near the council chambers where 500 residents are sheltering. “The eye is five hours away and it’s already causing damage so it’s pretty worrying,” he told AAP. Tom Lee took this picture in Rankin Street, Innisfail, below:
cyclone yasi

8.23pm One person many will be following tonight is Cairns resident Carl Butcher, on Twitter as @cycloneupdate. He is an amateur weather enthusiast who plans to tweet updates through the night from his home. The Australian has spoken to him and you can read the report here.
8.03pm The latest estimate is that Cyclone Yasi will cross the coast at midnight Queensland time (1am AEDT), Sky News reports. It has slowed down somewhat, but a forecaster has told Sky News that cyclones are “notoriously fickle” and it could pick up its pace again. Destructive winds are expected from now. An hour ago, Yasi was estimated to be 150km east-northeast of Innisfail and 175km east of Cairns and moving west-southwest at 29km/h. Latest weather bureau update.
8.01pm “We are as prepared as we can be,” Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says. “Until we see this storm come across, we won’t know until the early hours of the morning just how bad it has been. That unknown is causing as much anxiety as the storm itself.”
7.47pm As Yasi trends on Twitter, celebrity tweets are offering their support. English comedian Stephen Fry tweeted: “All our thoughts with Queensland as they brace themselves for Cyclone Yasi. Good luck QL x.” Aussie supermodel Miranda Kerr wrote: “Hi guys, our hearts go out to everyone in Australia as they prepare for Cyclone Yasi to hit the Qld coast. Our prayers are with you. Lv Rand.”
7.43pm This Ustream webcam showing the scene in Innisfail has been getting progressively darker as the winds have risen. A couple of thousand people are watching it.
7.34pm The weather bureau’s latest tracking map shows Cyclone Yasi crossing near Innisfail.
cyclone yasi map 6pm february 2

7.28pm Organisers fear Friday night’s Indigenous All-Stars v Richmond exhibition AFL game in Alice Springs could be a washout, with heavy rains expected to affect the area as Cyclone Yasi moves west.
7.21pm Some historical context from one of the Bureau’s forecasters, Alan Sharp, speaking to Reuters. If Yasi maintains its current intensity when it crosses the coast, it will be the strongest cyclone to hit Queensland since 1899.
The March 1899 cyclone struck a pearling fleet in Bathurst Bay on Cape York Peninsula, killing more than 300 people in Australia’s deadliest storm.
“Yasi is not enormously unusual but it is at the top-end of the scale as far size goes as well as intensity,” Sharp told Reuters from Melbourne on Wednesday.
Sharp said the current La Nina was helping drive the record ocean temperatures around Australia that were helping fuel Yasi by providing abundant heat and moisture.
More here.
7.16pm The Bureau of Meteorology’s latest update says damaging winds of 90km/h are currently affecting the coast.
DURING THE EVENING, THE VERY DESTRUCTIVE CORE OF CYCLONE YASI WILL CROSS THE COAST BETWEEN INNISFAIL AND CARDWELL, ACCOMPANIED BY A DANGEROUS STORM TIDE SOUTH OF THE CYCLONE CENTRE.
Coastal residents between Cairns and Ayr are specifically warned of an EXTREMELY DANGEROUS SEA LEVEL RISE [i.e. storm tide] as the cyclone approaches, crosses the coast and moves inland.
7.11pm Ergon Energy says 11,000 of its customers have lost power, from Atherton to Sarina, as a result of Cyclone Yasi.
7.04pm Elders at the Aboriginal community Yarrabah, south of Cairns, have been comparing Cyclone Yasi to the huge cyclone that struck the region during 1918 which included a storm surge. “We’ve been told stories about that, how many people got killed, about 12 luggers washed inland,” Yarrabah’s mayor Percy Neal says.
6.45pm The damage to Cairns and subsequent flooding may not be as bad as initially feared. Wind gusts of up to 125km/h are already being felt, but Yasi is now expected to cross between Innisfail and Cardwell, further south than originally thought, making authorities in Cairns reassess the impact slightly.
6.42pm It sounds almost like a shopaholic’s dream-come-true, but for the 2500 people crammed into Cairns’ Stockland shopping centre at Earlville, being stuck in a mall overnight is scary stuff as they face food shortages and a power black out. Two fast-food restaurants in the food court are open and lines are stretching more than 40 people deep.
6.39pm A photo taken by Adam Head in Townsville today that captures what much of the country is thinking tonight.
Good luck North Queensland Yasi

6.27pm Google has updated its Yasi disaster map with cloud and wind data. You can also see Google’s crisis response page, containing relevant Google Earth files, news, real-time updates and other resources.
6.05pm Cyclone Yasi has slowed slightly as it bears down on the north Queensland coast, with the weather bureau now predicting it will now hit land about 11pm local time, or midnight AEDT. At 4pm the bureau estimated the cyclone to be 250km off Cairns and 275km north northeast of Townsville. Yasi was still moving west southwest towards the coast at 35 km/h.
map cyclone yasi

5.56pm At Sunland Caravan Park in 4km west of the Cairns CBD, George Piggott says there is hardly a breath of wind and only light rain. About 70 people are staying at the park overnight and all caravans are tied down. “To be honest, we’ve got no wind, a little bit of rain but no wind,” he said.
5.53pm This report from news.com.au’s Political Editor, Malcolm Farr:
PRIME Minister Julia Gillard today spoke to MPs in the path of Yasi, and then joined the vigil as far north Queensland waited for the cyclone’s terrible arrival.
“What I want to say to the people of far north Queensland is: In the hours of destruction that are coming to them, all of Australia is thinking of them. Our thoughts are with you,” she told reporters in Canberra.
“At this time as you face these frightening hours, we are with you in spirit. And in the days and hours beyond this cyclone, we will be with you on the ground making a difference.”
5.44pm More than 50 Energex field staff have volunteered to fly into areas damaged by Cyclone Yasi to restore power supplies.
5.39pm Opposition leader Tony Abbott has echoed Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s concerns for the people of North Queensland: ”On behalf of the Coalition I extend my best wishes to everyone bracing themselves against what looks to be one of the biggest storm systems ever to hit our country. The Coalition stands ready to support the Government in the disaster relief effort.”
5.07pm The former mayor of Queensland’s Palm Island, which lies off Queensland’s coast, north of Townsville, says there had been no warnings to evacuate issued to the island, despite it being right in the path of the category five cyclone. Rob Blackley told the Seven Network: “It’s just a continuation of the ‘out of sight out of mind’ mentality … that exists with Aboriginal communities.”
4.58pm No pets at Cairns evacuation centres.
4.35pm North Queensland is getting set for the night from hell. The effects of Yasi are now being felt from Cairns to Townsville, where streets are deserted and the winds are rising. The message from authorities to people in affected areas is now to stay put.
It is the largest cyclone to cross the Queensland coast since 1918. The state’s premier, Anna Bligh, acknowledged that North Queenslanders faced a terrifying ordeal in the hours ahead.
“I know this is an incredibly frightening time,” she said.
Yasi has veered very slightly south and is now tracking to cross the coast between Innisfail and Cardwell. It is expected to be a full-strength Category 5 storm when it comes ashore. It is still expected to be at cyclone strength when it reaches Mount Isa.
3.58pm Prime Minister Julia Gillard say 4000 soldiers based in Townsville plus defence ships and aircraft are available to help once the cyclone passed. She said the defence force had already played a significant role in evacuating hospital patients and assisting in the preparation.
3.55pm A live stream starts at 4pm (AEDT) above with Gavin King from The Cairns Post.
3.43pm news.com.au Facebook fan Sami Storey reports: “I’m in Bowen (550km south of Cairns), and we are getting absolutely hammered by wind n rain!! I think it’s almost as bad as when TC Anthony hit!”
3.40pm The Prime Minister has warned there is a dreadful and frightening night ahead.
3.34pm This just in elsewhere on news.com.au:
IF you’re struggling to grasp the magnitude of Tropical Cyclone Yasi, consider this: it is so large it would almost cover the United States, most of Asia and large parts of Europe.
And the map of Yasi over the continental United States…
TC Yasi

There are more maps in the story here.
3.28pm The force of Cyclone Yasi’s winds are already being felt, with a number of large trees in Ayr, south of Townsville, being knocked over by gale-force gusts. And at Airlie Beach, 600km south of Cairns, 3000 homes have lost power. Outages are also affecting the Atherton Tableland, inland from Cairns. Premier Anna Bligh warns this could be just the beginning, with 200,000 homes likely to lose power.
3.19pm Reader Marcello Avolio has sent us this link to his website which has three webcams – currently showing gathering stormclouds – and other live storm info.
3.15pm Some extracts from the latest warning from the Bureau of Meteorology:
SEVERE TROPICAL CYCLONE YASI IS A LARGE AND VERY POWERFUL TROPICAL CYCLONE AND POSES AN EXTREMELY SERIOUS THREAT TO LIFE AND PROPERTY WITHIN THE WARNING AREA, ESPECIALLY BETWEEN CAIRNS AND TOWNSVILLE.
DURING THE EVENING, THE VERY DESTRUCTIVE CORE OF CYCLONE YASI WILL CROSS THE COAST BETWEEN CAIRNS AND INGHAM, ACCOMPANIED BY A DANGEROUS STORM TIDE SOUTH OF THE CYCLONE CENTRE.
…
Between Port Douglas and Ayr these winds will become DESTRUCTIVE with gusts in excess of 125 km/hr developing during this afternoon and early evening, spreading into the tropical interior overnight. VERY DESTRUCTIVE winds with gusts up to 290 km/hr are expected to develop between Cairns and Ingham during the evening as the cyclone approaches and crosses the coast.
cyclone yasi map 2pm february 2

2.53pm Parents in cyclone-affected areas are being urged to explain to their children what the storm is expected to do over the next 24 hours, the AMA says. Children should be warned to expect the loud noise of cyclonic winds. Their favourite music – listened to via headphones – as well as board games, puzzles and crosswords could help to provide a comforting and familiar distraction.
Morning Australian Share Report Andre DiCioccio
The Australian share market looks to open steady today, having received mixed overseas leads. Wall Street’s key indices closed with little changed as investors considered the political unrest in Egypt against generally encouraging earnings reports, ahead of Friday’s key US jobs data. At home Australians will be waking up to assess the damage caused by Cyclone Yasi, that tore through Queensland overnight.
On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, closed 2 points up to 12,042, S&P500 eased 4 points to close 1,304 and the NASDAQ lost 1 point to close 2,750.
European stocks were mixed: London’s FTSE up 42 points, Paris down 6 and Frankfurt closed steady.
To Asian markets, stocks were higher: Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was up 426 points, Tokyo was up 183 points and China’s Shanghai Composite was closed.
The Australian share market finished higher on Wednesday. The S&P/ASX 200 Index lifted 44 points to close at 4,797 and on the futures market the SPI is up 2 points.
Turning to currencies and the Australian Dollar at 8:50AM was buying $US1.0092, 62.36 Pence Sterling, 82.31 Yen and 73.08 Euro cents.
Economic news: Due out today, the Australian Industry Group/Commonwealth Bank Australian Performance of Services Index for January. The Australian Bureau of Statistics building approvals and international trade in goods and services both for December. And also, the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries monthly car sales for January 2011.
Company news: On Wednesday shares in Telstra Corporation Ltd (ASX:TLS) rose 0.72 per cent to close at $2.79. Telstra’s turnaround plan looks set to cost over the projected $1 billion in the current financial year but is expected to result in more customer numbers, according to the Australian Financial Review. The AFR says Telstra’s mobile phone business has benefited from Vodafone Hutchison Australia’s network problems and that the telco plans to make further gains by injecting over $450 million that it had budgeted for promotions and larger handset subsidies. According to the report Telstra is also gearing up to spend $150 million on regaining fixed-line market share, $250 million on redundancies and $100 million on other expenses. In the 2010 financial year, Telstra booked a net profit of $3.9 billion.
Yesterday shares in News Corporation (ASX:NWS) closed 1.69 per cent up at $16.86. News Corporation has reported a 153 per cent jump in second quarter net profit to $637.6 million for the three months to 31 December 2010. In the same period the media company posted EBIT of $1.28 billion, up 81.2 per cent from the same quarter the year before. News Corp chairman and chief executive Rupert Murdoch says the growth reflects mounting vigour of the company’s global channels business. In the year ended 30 June 2010, News Corp generated a net profit of $3.1 billion.
To ex-dividends: No companies are going ex-dividend today, but coming up tomorrow is Australian Foundation Investment Company with an $0.08 cent fully franked dividend.
To commodities: Gold is down $8.20 to $US1,332 an ounce for the April contract on Comex, silver is down $0.23 to $28.29 for March and copper is steady at $4.54 a pound. Oil is up $0.09 at $90.86 a barrel for March light crude in New York.
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