Fires around the world

Fire consumes six companies in industrial park in Mérida, Yucatán

A large fire burned six companies in an industrial park in the north of the city of Merida, Yucatan.

During this afternoon, members of the Fire Department of the Secretariat of Public Safety went to the site and continue to fight the flames to prevent them from spreading to other nearby businesses.

Paramedics and police officers are on site as part of the emergency and security operation. In addition, all employees in the affected area have been evacuated. The damaged companies include a telecommunications company and another specializing in ribbons and textiles.

However, for the moment, the authorities have no information on the origin of the disaster. It is presumed that the fire may have started in the textile distribution center, although this has not yet been confirmed.

 
Canada continues to burn.
Thousands of N.W.T. (Northwest Territories) residents have fled the 236 wildfires tearing through the northern boreal forest. More than 20,000 square kilometres have burned, an area almost four times the size of Prince Edward Island.
 
Fire consumes six companies in industrial park in Mérida, Yucatán

A large fire burned six companies in an industrial park in the north of the city of Merida, Yucatan.
That news was from last year, however it happened another yesterday.
#Yucatán|| This afternoon a strong fire broke out in some industrial warehouses in the #Xcanatún police station, near the #Mérida-#Progreso highway.

Apparently the fire originated in a plant located in Industrias No Contaminantes, (Non-Polluting Industries) which has generated a strong mobilization of emergency services, so far no intoxicated or injured people have been reported.
Oh! The irony.


A strong fire broke out this Tuesday afternoon in some industrial warehouses in the #Xcanatún police station, on the #Mérida-#Progreso highway.

The state governor, @MauVila, reported that emergency services are attending the fire; no injuries were reported.


Few days ago, Parisina is a fabric store, which has branches all over Mexico.

This is how impressive the fire at the Parisina store located in Soriana Encinas looks.

Firefighters from Hermosillo are already extinguishing the fire.
 
The length of the line of people waiting to receive a piece of orange card allowing them to travel in other parts of the island is astonishing. Why would these people not allowed to go wherever they want/need? There is a lot of crazy things going on there. Footage on yesterday at Napili Park, which is about 8 miles north of Lahaina.
Interesting things happening in Maui today

MPD is issuing Orange cards to people and you cannot travel other parts of the island without it#Hawaii #hawaiifires #LahainaFires #MauiFires #lahaina #Maui #Prayformaui

 
Six months ago, a Chinese satellite was directing lasers to the ground over Hawaii.

So that explains the notion of directed energy weapons being used. It was covered in the news.


And...
Those pictures of the rainbow phenomena prior to the Hawaii fires... I captured a picture of the same phenomena in Alaska. It looked very similar - last winter.
 
On parle d'arme à énergie directe. Portez attention aux arbres, certains ont encore leurs feuilles.
Observez le niveau de destruction, tout est vaporisé...
Les plomberies, la baignoire, etc., tout est incinéré, ne laissant derrière que de la poudre de béton, et même les troncs d'arbre restent debout. Comment cela est-il possible ?
Pouvez-vous m'expliquer pourquoi la maison avec la pelouse verte n'a pas du tout été affectée, alors que la maison à côté n'a plus rien, rasée au sol ?
WEBJOURNAL DE RADIO-QUÉBEC 13 août 2023 - LE POUVOIR
Web complet: LE POUVOIR

We're talking about a direct energy weapon. Pay attention to the trees, some still have their leaves.
Observe the level of destruction, everything is vaporized...
The plumbing, the bathtub, etc., are all incinerated, leaving behind nothing but concrete powder, and even the tree trunks remain standing. How is it possible ?
Can you explain to me why the house with the green lawn has not been affected at all, while the house next to it has nothing left, razed to the ground?
WEBJOURNAL DE RADIO-QUÉBEC August 13, 2023 - THE POWER



🇺🇸 Hawaii
Voici une vidéo qui montre que les habitants de Hawaii ont vu et vécu l'ENFER sur terre.

Here is a video that shows that the people of Hawaii have seen and experienced HELL on earth.



Arme à énergie dirigée - Maui - "Les armes à micro-ondes pénètrent la cible et détruisent de l'intérieur. Ceci expliquerait les maisons rapidement brûlées et les nombreuses voitures détruites, avec des températures suffisamment élevées pour liquéfier le verre et le métal."

Directed Energy Weapon - Maui - "Microwave weapons penetrate the target and destroy from within. This would explain the rapidly scorched homes and many destroyed cars, with temperatures high enough to liquefy glass and metal."
 
About Maui.
BREAKING:
#MAUI
Just had confirmation by phone from a Private Detective that Maui Authorities turned the Water Supply OFF when Residents began dousing their homes with Water from hoses.
Maui was a Terror Attack


Desperate Maui Update from a resident: 1400 people missing. The dead are ashes. Children were home from school for high winds & burned. Lahaina needs URGENT help!! They need military. The gov't is not showing up!!
Donations Needed! Ed Dowd Posted Direct Aid: https://x.com/dowdedward/status/1691161352277233665?s=46…
Dr. Kirk Milhoan's church (Pediatric Cardiologist & pastor) is directly giving to Lahaina's needs NOW. Under church donations, select Lahaina: http://calvarymaui.org
 
BREAKING:
#MAUI
Just had confirmation by phone from a Private Detective that Maui Authorities turned the Water Supply OFF when Residents began dousing their homes with Water from hoses.
Maui was a Terror Attack
A State Official Refused To Release Water For West Maui Fires Until It Was Too Late
With wildfires ravaging West Maui on Aug. 8, a state water official delayed the release of water that landowners wanted to help protect their property from fires. The water standoff played out over much of the day and the water didn’t come until too late.
Dispute?...In such an emergency did they take the time to discuss it?
The dispute involved the Department of Land and Natural Resources’ water resource management division and West Maui Land Co., which manages agricultural and residential subdivisions in West Maui as well as Launiupoko Irrigation Co., Launiupoko Water Co., Olowalu Water Co. and Ha’iku Town Water Association.
DLNR delayed releasing water requested by West Maui Land Co. to help prevent the spread of fire, sources familiar with the situation said.
Specifically, according to accounts of four people with knowledge of the situation, M. Kaleo Manuel, a Native Hawaiian cultural practitioner and DLNR’s deputy director for water resource management, initially balked at West Maui Land Co.’s requests for additional water to help prevent the fire from spreading to properties managed by the company.
According to the sources, Manuel wanted West Maui Land to get permission from a taro, or kalo, farm located downstream from the company’s property. Manuel eventually released water but not until after the fire had spread. It was not clear on Monday how much damage the fire did in the interim or whether homes were damaged.
Manuel declined to be interviewed for this story. DLNR’s communications office said in an email that it was supporting the state’s emergency communications response and “unable to facilitate your inquiry at this time.”

Glenn Tremble, an executive with West Maui Land Co. said to have knowledge of the dispute, did not return a request for comment.
However, Gov. Josh Green spoke candidly Monday during a press briefing about conflicts over water on Maui – although not the DLNR-West Maui Land Co. incident directly – and encouraged news media to explore the issue. The conflicts are rooted in the diversion of water by large plantations, which starved downstream users from a resource essential for Native Hawaiian agriculture, particularly the traditional practice of growing taro or kalo.
 



Maybe not directly related considering the gap between the two events (but who knows!), this strange cloud was seen in the sky of Maui both above Ukumehame Beach Park, not far South of Lahaina, and Pukalani more in the center of the island, exactly one month before the fire: July 8th. It was shared by @Ca. on the Strange clouds thread:





i saw a video saying the burning is a result of direct energy weapons = dew. the result reminds me of 911
 
Pyrocumulonimbus Clouds (pyroCB)
Pyrocumulonimbus clouds are thunder clouds created by intense heat from the Earth’s surface. They are formed similarly to cumulonimbus clouds, but the intense heat that results in the vigorous updraft comes from fire, either large wildfires or volcanic eruptions. So it is, for this reason, the prefix ‘pyro’ is used – meaning fire in Greek.
Pyrocumulonimbus clouds were reported during the Australian bushfires in late 2019/early 2020, and a number have more recently been observed in Siberia with the Arctic heatwave. These intense wildfires reach temperatures above 800°C and can essentially create their own weather systems.

The hot smoke released from these fires acts as a plume of heat into the atmosphere. Hot and very buoyant, the air in the plume rapidly rises. As it rises, it cools and expands. Once cooled sufficiently, water vapour condenses on the ash to form a grey or brown cloud above the plume. At this stage, the cloud is called a pyrocumulus. Still, if enough water vapour is available and the updraft intensifies, it can develop into a pyrocumulonimbus cloud. Then, similar to other thunderstorms, there may be a downburst of intense localised rain. This rain can create a downdraft of cooler air, which can then carry embers from the fire, igniting spot fires away from the source. In some cases, dry lightning from these storms can strike without rain, further spreading the wildfire. They have also been known to dangerously generate fire tornadoes.
Pyrocumulonimbus clouds are thought to be responsible for several aerosol pollutants (such as smoke and ash) trapped in the stratosphere and upper atmosphere. However, a paper by the American Meteorological Society, ‘The Untold Story of Pyrocumulonimbus’, re-evaluated the data from previous stratosphere studies to conclude that volcanic eruptions had been wrongly attributed to these pollutants. Dr Glenn K. Yue, one of the paper’s authors, stated in an article by NASA that one of the reasons for this misinterpretation was that it was initially thought the only force strong enough to penetrate the tropopause in a short period was a volcanic eruption.

As our climate changes, these unusual but significant storms could occur more frequently due to hotter and drier conditions increasing the risk of wildfires.
What is other force strong enough to penetrate the tropopause in short period? The Nasa article does not specifies that, though.

Ah! Yes!! the humans, the humans re-evaluating the data.
 
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