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Posts Tagged ‘disaster’

“Cyberattack on Iran could have sparked nuclear disaster”

A Russian official says a recent cyberattack on Iran’s atomic-energy program could have triggered a nuclear catastrophe on the scale of the Chornobyl disaster. Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s ambassador to NATO, said the virus that hit the computer system at Iran’s Bushehr reactor had caused centrifuges to spin out of control.

Businesses Lack Disaster Preparedness: Symantec Survey

A Symantec survey finds small businesses are at risk of data loss and many are unprepared for such an event. – Security specialist Symantec Corp. announced the findings of its 2011 SMB Disaster Preparedness Survey, which measured the attitudes and practices of small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and their customers toward disaster preparedness. The survey findings suggested that though SMBs are at risk, …


Virtualization Imperatives Focus on Consolidation and Disaster Recovery: Survey

Respondents also stated that cost savings is the key benefit of implementing a storage virtualization initiative. – Cost savings is the key benefit of implementing a storage virtualization
initiative, said 59 percent of respondents to Promise Technology’s recent Storage
Virtualization Survey. Only 18 percent ranked improvements in storage utilization
as the No. 1 benefit.
The survey was conducted over the pas…


Compellent, VMware Team for Automated Cloud System Disaster Recovery

The new package automates the process of moving, protecting and recovering data involved in virtually any type of disaster, Compellent Vice President Bruce Kornfeld said. – Automated storage provider Compellent Technologies and virtualization
kingpin VMware on Nov. 30 announced an extension of their partnership that
creates a new disaster
recovery option for cloud systems using Compellent’s storage capabilities
with vCenter Site Recovery Manager.
The new package a…


Paris Hilton shows full moon in sheer leggings disaster

Paris Hilton has done it again- the socialite accidentally mooned photogs when she bent over while wearing sheer leggings. The heiress has shown off the goods – accidentally or not – several times in recent years but apparently decided this week to put a new twist on the unflattering look. Rather than wearing a too-short [...]

Imation Partners with Nine Technology on Cloud Disaster Recovery System

The "Powered by Nine" cloud-based backup and file restore platform will incorporate Imation’s RDX removable hard disk drive cartridges to seed backups. – Imation will partner with online backup and data recovery vendor Nine
Technology to offer a data backup and disaster recovery system for the cloud,
said Imation on Oct. 12.
quot;We’ve known for a long time that we’ve got the best online backup and
recovery software available, and with Imation R…


BP and the Gulf disaster: The case for the defence

BP casts the blame for the Gulf oil spill widely

THE dramatic case study in corporate crisis-management acquired another chapter on September 8th. BP’s report on the causes of the accident that led to the loss of the Deepwater Horizon rig and the biggest oil spill in American history describes a litany of mistakes. Had this sequence of errors been halted, catastrophe might have been averted. Some of those mistakes, the report concludes, were BP’s. But its finger also points at Halliburton, which worked on the cement seal at the bottom of the well, and Transocean, which owned and ran the rig and maintained the “blowout preventer” which so signally failed to live up to its name.

The stakes are high. If BP is found to have been grossly negligent in its role as operator the fines it faces would increase by billions of dollars and its chances of recouping money from its junior partners in the project, Anadarko and Mitsui, would be reduced. BP’s report implies such a finding is unlikely. But it makes a protracted, reputation-damaging series of suits and countersuits between the companies involved seem almost inevitable. …

Continuity Disaster Recovery Software Gets Private Cloud Advisor

Continuity Software upgrades its RecoverGuard product to include a Private Cloud Advisor. Continuity services EMC, IBM and HP XP storage systems. – Disaster recovery provider Continuity Software Aug. 16 upgraded its RecoverGuard
product to include a Private Cloud Advisor.
RecoverGuard Version 5.2′s Private Cloud Advisor provides full availability
and recoverability in the private cloud, or pool of shared data storage.
Private cloud computi…


i365 Expands EVault Remote Disaster Recovery Service

i365, a Seagate company, expands its EVault Remote Disaster Recovery (RDR) Service to operating systems including IBM i, IBM AIX and Linux, in addition to Windows and VMware. – Seagate subsidiary i365 announced the expansion of its EVault Remote
Disaster Recovery Service to further extend i365s cloud-based storage
solutions across multiplatform environments. The company noted the
EVault RDR solution integrates i365s range of EVault cloud-connected
storage management of…


Floods wreak havoc


PESHAWAR – The catastrophic floods sweeping the 95 percent area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa claimed more lives on Sunday as the death toll reached 1,100.
A large number of casualties have been reported from Malakand division, wherein about 385 people so far have lost their lives in various incidents of drowning and building collapses. Confirming the official reports emanating from Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) about the increasing losses of lives in the region, the District Administrative Officers of Swat, Malakand and Dir said that the rescue work was underway to help the calamity-hit people of their respective areas.
With the recovery of 16 more dead bodies in Shangla, it is feared that the land sliding at Oalundar area may result in more casualties. In Upper Dir 66 dead bodies have been recovered so far while several people still are missing amid the huge flooding of the area. Subsequently, several thunderstorms have also added to the miseries of the people in Dir with a large number of people lost their lives as a result of those storms.
According to official figures, 471 people have died in the floods of unprecedented nature, however the unofficial data suggests that the death casualties are well over 1100 people. The intensity of the disaster could be judged from the fact that almost 95 percent area of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province comprising 22 districts out of the total 24 districts.
In district Swat, the administration has announced the closure of educational institutions for fifteen more days. Thirty-five more dead bodies were also recovered on Sunday from Mohib Banda and Nowshera Kalan from under the debris of the damaged buildings. In the rescue operations carried out so far in Nowshera district, more than 26000 stranded people have been shifted to safer places with the help of Army helicopters.
Villages of Malak Ziarat Khan Korona and Zahi Bala have been fully evacuated to prevent human losses whereas the floodwater has gushed into residential areas.
The Peshawar-Islamabad motorway has not been opened yet, while the sources from the National Highways Authority have revealed that the Grand Trunk Road would remain closed until the completion of repairing work.
Agencies add: The rescue effort was aided by a slackening of the monsoon rains. But as floodwaters started to recede, authorities began to understand the full scale of the disaster.
“Aerial monitoring is being conducted, and it has shown that whole villages have washed away, animals have drowned and grain storages have washed away,” said Latifur Rehman, spokesman for the Provincial Disaster Management Authority. “The destruction is massive.”
The 1,100 death toll from the flooding could go even higher since rescue workers have been unable to access certain areas, said Adnan Khan, a disaster management official. At least another 47 have died in Azad Kashmir, officials said.
Authorities have deployed 43 military helicopters and more than 100 boats to try to rescue some 27,300 people still trapped by the floods, said Rehman, the disaster management spokesman.
“All efforts are being used to rescue people stuck in inaccessible areas and all possible help is being provided to affected people,” said Rehman.
Up to one million people have been affected, according to the United Nations, with thousands of homes and vast swathes of farmland destroyed in a region reeling from years of extremist bloodshed.
“This is the worst flood in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in the country’s history,” said provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain.
Hussain told AFP that “more than 1,000 people have been killed by floods in different parts of the province.
“At least 713 people died in Peshawar, Nowshera and Charsadda while the death toll in Shangla and Swat districts is over 300,” he added.
A senior official at the provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) confirmed the toll.
Hundreds of survivors sought shelter in schools in Peshawar and in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Azad Kashmir, after escaping the floods with children on their backs.
“The level of devastation is so widespread, so large, it is quite possible that in many areas there are damages, there are deaths which may not have been reported,” army spokesman Major-General Athar Abbas told reporters late on Saturday.
More than 30,000 army troops have rescued over 19,000 people from the marooned areas, but officials conceded some might still be trapped and awaiting help in remote areas including Kohistan, Nowshera, Dir and in the Swat valley.
“Virtually no bridge has been left in Swat. All major and minor bridges have gone, destroyed completely,” Abbas said of the famous tourist valley which has borne the brunt of the floods.
A Reuters photographer in Nowshera on Sunday saw two bodies lying on the ground and animals corpses in several places, as groups of people waded through submerged areas to reach dry land.
“There is now a real danger of the spread of water-borne diseases like diarrhoea, asthma, skin allergies and perhaps cholera in these areas,” Shaharyar Bangash, World Vision Pakistan’s Programmes Manager, said in a statement.
Television footage and photographs taken from helicopters showed people clinging to the walls and rooftops of damaged houses as water rushed through villages.
Muqaddir Khan, 25, who fled the floods with nine relatives, told AFP in Peshawar that he had lost everything.
“I laboured hard in Saudi Arabia for three years and set up a small shop which was swept away by flooding in minutes,” Khan said.
The metrological office said an “unprecedented” 312 millimetres of rain had fallen in 36 hours in the northwest but forecast only scattered showers would fall during coming days.
More than 300 people hit by floods rallied in Peshawar on Sunday, chanting slogans against the provincial government for not providing them adequate shelter, an AFP reporter witnessed.
“I had built a two-room house on the outskirts of Peshawar with my hard-earned money but I lost it in the floods,” said 53-year-old labourer Ejaz Khan, who joined the rally.
“The government is not helping us… the school building where I sheltered is packed with people, with no adequate arrangement for food and medicine,” Khan told AFP.
Waseyullah, 33, said his two brothers had worked as labourers in Saudi Arabia for the money with which he had built the small furniture factory he lost in the floods.
“I expect the provincial government to help me financially to rebuild this factory,” he added.
More than 3,700 houses have been swept away by the floods in Pakistan and the number of people made homeless is rising, said Iftikhar Hussain, Khyber PakhtunkhwaÂ’s information minister.
“Our rescue teams are also trying to extricate some 1,500 tourists who are stranded in the Kalam and Behrain towns of Swat district,” he said, referring to a region where the military last year waged a major anti-Taliban offensive.
“We are also getting confirmation of reports about an outbreak of cholera in some areas of Swat,” Hussain added.
The army said it had sent boats and helicopters to rescue stranded people and its engineers were trying to open more roads and divert swollen rivers.
In Azad Kashmir, officials said army helicopters had been urgently requested in the worst-hit Neelam valley.
“It has been cut off from the rest of Kashmir and we still don’t know how many people are killed, injured and displaced there,” Disaster Management Authority chief Farooq Niaz said.
The United Nations said one million people had been affected, with whole towns cut off after days of torrential monsoon rains triggered flash floods and landslides.
“We still do not have the full picture because of the breakdown in communications, we have still difficulties to reach out to our offices in Nowshera, in Swat, in Charsadda,” Manuel Bessler, head of the UN’s Office for the Coordination for Humanitarian Assistance (UNOCHA) in Pakistan, told the BBC.
“We have a planning figure of one million people affected directly by the floods.”
However, authorities said they had repaired a damaged portion of the Islamabad-Peshawar motorway to restore the northwest regionÂ’s road links with the rest of Pakistan.
Downstream, floods have already struck areas in the central Punjab, and emergency crews aided by soldiers airlifted people from hundreds of submerged villages on Sunday in the Taunsa area, a town on the Indus River about 388 km southwest of Islamabad.
Troops rescued more than 1,400 people trapped by rising water in central Punjab, said Brig Ahmad Waqas. “We have lost everything: our houses, our crops, cattle,” said Ahmad Hasan at a government relief camp in Taunsa Sharif district.
The threat of disease loomed as well as some evacuees in the northwest arrived in camps with fever, diarrhoea and skin problems.
Officials said massive flood surges would enter the southern Sindh province between Tuesday and Thursday, and could cause widespread damage to property and farmland around the riverbanks and in low-lying areas.
“A super flood of this magnitude will be the first in 18 to 20 years to hit Sindh, but major cities like Karachi and Hyderabad were unlikely to be affected,” Jameel Soomro, a spokesman for the provincial Sindh government, told Reuters.
“The risk is there, danger is there but we are doing our best to minimise losses as much as can,” he said.
Monitoring Desk adds: The number of deaths caused by surging flash floods and lashing downpours in the country, skidded past 1,300 thus far, reported a private television on Sunday.

Offsite Disaster Recovery From Better Backup Posted By : jackauthors

Better Backup is the world leader in information management services, assisting organizations with storing, protecting and managing their information. offer a offsite Data backup service protecting your from Technical Disasters, Human Disasters, Natural Disasters, Laptop Disasters.

BP’s unfolding PR disaster

I think we all know – deep down – that the relentless burning of hydrocarbons brings with it some occasionally troubling consequences. Most of the time we don’t give it too much thought when we fill the petrol tank with that invisible black liquid gold. You’d probably go a bit mad if you worried constantly about all the things that aren’t quite right with the world. It’s a long list.

And let’s face it, we are still living in an economy that depends on the burning of hydrocarbons. We can wean ourselves off them, step by small step, but the alternatives are still not quite there, whether we are talking about power generation for electricity or powertrains for mass-market vehicles.

The dark side of mining, trading and burning the liquid black stuff – along with associated interdependencies – was neatly summarised by Al Gore: “We’re borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the planet. Every bit of that’s got to change.” I’m not sure I agree with everything Al Gore says, but that is very well put.

The Persian Gulf part of the sentence alludes to the ‘energy security’ argument that plays well in the US. Dependence on the Middle East for oil is widely seen as A Bad Thing. The implication is that things that lessen that dependence are A Good Thing. That might mean consuming less oil, which is where hybrids and electric vehicles can make a contribution. But it might also mean developing more oil extraction locally. And for the US, the Gulf of Mexico is pretty local. They’re now going into deeper water to get the oil.

The disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has shown what can happen when things go wrong with offshore drilling. Clearly something went very wrong with the systems and checks that are meant to ensure that a catastrophic event like that doesn’t happen, or that if it does, effective remedial action can be quickly applied to limit the resultant harm.

Hopefully, the relevant authorities and regulators will get to the bottom of it and put in place any necessary changes to ensure that it cannot happen again.

There will always be some level of environmental risk with oil though, in both its extraction and transportation.

As far as BP is concerned, as well as the immediate challenge of dealing with the crisis itself, there is clearly a very big PR disaster unfolding in North America (and to some extent the world) that it will have to contend with for many years to come. A fat multinational corporation that makes supernormal profits and colludes with dodgy regimes in the Middle East to bring us hydrocarbons to burn is probably walking a thin line at the best of times. But if it’s not whiter than white on safety and on presenting its case for corporate social responsibility, there surely will be a longish queue of unsympathetic people only too happy to have a pop.

What’s happened in the Gulf of Mexico is a nightmare scenario for an oil company and manna from heaven for those with a natural antipathy to oil companies and what they represent.

And these days, you have to fight your PR battles in the blogosphere and in social networking forums. A fake BP Twitter page has illustrated how easy it can be for your digitally agile opponents to quickly gain visibility and help to shape public opinion. Well honed – or even crude (sorry) – satire is not easy to fight.

Example of tweet from @BPGlobalPR: “We are dedicated to helping the wildlife in the gulf. Any birds that need cleaning must report to 287 Quartemain St, Baton Rouge, LA 70801″

I wonder how long it will be before other companies – dare I say it, maybe some in the auto biz – find themselves targeted by similar campaigns?

Mystery of fake BP Twitter account solved

International justice: Courting disaster?

At its forthcoming review, the International Criminal Court has things to celebrate, things to improve and pitfalls to avoid

EVERY time the world learns of some unspeakable outrage from a benighted battle zone, the cry goes out that such things must never recur. That was the reaction after the Rwandan genocide; after the ethnic cleansing, mass killing and rape perpetrated in former Yugoslavia; after the terrible atrocities of Sierra Leone and Congo; and after the targeting of civilians in Sudan’s Darfur region. So to its supporters, the opening eight years ago of an International Criminal Court (ICC) based at The Hague, ready if no one else will to arrest and try the worst perpetrators of such crimes, was a step in the right direction. Yet as they gather in Kampala, Uganda, on May 31st for a two-week review of the ICC’s workings, the 111 states that accept its jurisdiction face big responsibilities.

Their hard look at the court’s role and record comes as the ad-hoc tribunals set up to try those responsible for atrocities in Rwanda, Yugoslavia and Sierra Leone (before the ICC existed) are winding down. As their permanent replacement, the ICC is gaining authority as the proper court of last resort for three sets of crimes: crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide. Its record in handling cases it has taken on so far will be under close scrutiny. …

Rock On The Range Donates To Nashville Disaster

COLUMBUS, OHIO FESTIVAL CHIPS IN

With its Nashville neighbors experiencing unprecedented flooding and damage, Columbus, Ohio’s annual Rock On The Range Festival – May 22 and 23 at Columbus Crew Stadium – will make a $.50 cent donation per ticket sold to the Metro Nashville Disaster Response Fund. The Fund, consisting of a partnership between the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, the Office of the Mayor of Nashville, and Davidson County’s Office of Emergency Management, will support relief efforts necessitated by flooding, which has impacted so many lives.

ROTR headliner Slash

“From all of us involved with Rock on the Range, our hearts go out to the victims of the horrible flooding in Nashville. We cannot stand idly by and watch, so we are acting. The rock fans of middle-America are here to support the rescue and rebuilding efforts and we’re pleased to be making this donation on behalf of everyone attending the festival in the coming days,” commented Joe Litvag, co-executive producer of the festival for AEG Live.

Grants from the fund will be made to nonprofits supporting relief, restoration and clean-up efforts in the Davidson County area in the aftermath of the flooding and storms. Donations are being accepted through The Community Foundation’s website or by mail at P.O. Box 440225, Nashville, TN, 37244.

Gary Spivack, co-executive producer of the event for Right Arm Entertainment, says, “Rock On The Range is all about the music. It’s also the people’s festival. The people of the great Music City need support. ROTR is happy to lend a hand to our brothers and sisters of Nashville.”

Following this year’s Rock On The Range – featuring a lineup led by Godsmack, Limp Bizkit, Rob Zombie, Slash and Three Days Grace and featuring performances from 38 artists on three stages – organizers will make a Monday, May 24 announcement with a total of funds donated.


Tadić sends condolences after mine disaster

President Boris Tadić sent a telegram of condolences to his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev after a deadly explosion in the Raspadskaya mine. According to the latest information, 30 people died in the explosion and 60 are still trapped inside the pit.

BP to pay for oil slick disaster

U.S. Pres. Barack Obama has visited Louisiana to review efforts to stem an oil slick which is threatening to the devastate coastlines along the Gulf of Mexico. The oil is leaking from a ruptured pipeline after an explosion on a rig which killed 11 people. The platform is leased by the petroleum giant BP. Since then around 5,000 barrels of crude each day have been spewing out.

“U.S. oil slick could rival Exxon Valdez disaster”

The oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico is shaping up, experts say, to become the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history. Crude oil’s pouring out of an underground well at a rate of up to 5,000 barrels a day.

What exactly is Disaster Recovery Software Posted By : Brain

Disaster recovery refers to procedure, policies and the processes that associate to the preparation for the recovery and the continuation of technology infrastructure that is critical to an organization and disaster that can be natural or human-induced.

The Uses of Disaster Software’s Posted By : Brain

The recovery of disaster taken place is the process and policies which are in relation with the things for improvement and continuation of some disaster that has taken place and to minimize its effects on humans and natural environment too.

Innovation@Intel: Disaster Communications

As witnessed in the recent major earthquakes and other disasters around the globe, people need a rapid way to communicate to obtain emergency assistance and to locate their family members, water, food, and shelter. The current primary infrastructures (cellular networks, Internet) do not satisfy these needs well during disasters. Intel Labs Berkeley researchers are working on a project that would enable citizens to continue using familiar Internet applications on their personal devices (e.g., smart phones, laptops) even when network infrastructure is degraded or barely functioning. They have designed a new protocol with the ability to automatically discover neighbors as well as architecture to support media-rich situation awareness applications. See video and read more on this project and other Intel Labs Berkeley Research projects.