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At least nine people are dead and 140 missing after part of a glacier in the Himalayas broke off on Sunday, causing water, debris, boulders, and mud to surge down into villages in the Indian state of Uttarakhand. More than 2,000 people are part of the search and rescue effort, trying to get to villagers who are under the debris. Dinesh Negi lives in the village of Raini, and told The that when a piece of the Nanda Devi glacier snapped off on Sunday morning, “We heard a bang, which shook our village.

You can unsubscribe at any time.Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy noticeCommunity councillors for Thornhill and Blairdrummond have unanimously objected to plans for a new windfarm in the Stirling area.Force 9 Energy has lodged a proposal with Stirling Council planners for five turbines at Shelloch Wind Farm in the Fintry Hills.The spot is two kilometres north west of Wester Cringate and south of Ling Hill, 12km south west of Stirling and 7.5km east of Balfron.However, some objectors are already voicing concerns over the impact on the landscape.Although the site falls outwith the Thornhill and Blair Dummond Community Council (TBDCC) area, members say it will be clearly visible from a significant proportion of the council area, and therefore have an effect on the local community.TBDCC said this week it had been contacted by a significant number of residents from within the local community with concerns, prompting the community council to object on grounds including size and scale, landscape and visual aspects.They said: “With a tip height of 180m, the proposed turbines are materially larger than the previously consented windfarm at Shelloch.”The developer’s visual assessment of the proposal shows the proposed turbines prominent well above the skyline of the Fintry Hills, in a dominant position over the landscape. The proposed development would significantly disrupt the horizon and hill edges as seen from the north.Read MoreOpposition councillors dub Stirling Council budget survey ‘dangerous nonsense'”What the visual assessment cannot show is the effect of movement of the turbine blades. This dynamic effect draws the viewer’s eye towards the turbines, magnifying the effect of the turbines on the skyline.”The turbines will be visible from significant distances, in excess of 45km.

Look at [the pipeline] as an absolute waste of a valuable natural resource, says Kreck, an Alexander Valley resident whose home is near one of two proposed pipeline routes. Water is treated to a [high] level; it not just toilet water. It good usable water.