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03/06/2026

From Georgia Wildfires to Brussels Nanoplastics: Counting the Real Cost of 2026 Extremes

“This has never happened before” is becoming the new baseline: deadly storms, surprise hail, and fires in places that rarely burn are piling up into record losses and shaken communities.

🔹 May 11–17, 2026 chronicle: South Africa’s Western Cape storms and flooding; Bulgaria’s 2,200+ landslides since early May; Japan hail destroying Fukushima’s peach harvest
🔹 India: a thunderstorm in Uttar Pradesh with winds up to 130 km/h killed 117 people
🔹 Russia: a magnitude 4.2 earthquake in the Novosibirsk region, where tremors have been rising over the past decade
🔹 U.S. wildfires (National Interagency Fire Center): nearly 2.35 million acres burned by May 23, compared with just over 5.15 million acres in all of 2025
🔹 Southern Georgia disaster zone: Pineland Road Fire (reported April 18, Clinch County) burned 32,500+ acres by mid-May; firefighting costs near $12.8M
✅ Highway Eighty-Two Fire (detected April 12, Brantley County): jumped about sixfold in half a day; 800+ evacuated, 5 shelters opened, 22,400+ acres burned; costs exceeded $18.3M; state of emergency declared in 91 counties, 120+ homes destroyed, no fatalities
📌 Severe convective storms have become the most costly insured natural hazard of the 21st century, with Aon estimating $61B in losses in 2025 alone—and this stream looks at why storms can now form suddenly in clear daylight.
🎤 In Brussels, MEP Ing. Ondřej Knotek discusses the European Parliament conference “Nanoplastics: Hidden Connections and Emerging Risks,” organized with the ALLATRA Global Research Center—bringing experts from across Europe and the U.S. to examine nanoplastics found in air, water, food, and the human body, and what steps may be needed at European and global levels.

Recommended materials:

✅ Nanoplastics: Hidden Connections and Emerging Risks | Conference in the European Parliament
👉 https://youtu.be/EZony1cFgjk

✅ Nanoplastics. Threat to Life | ALLATRA Documentary
👉 https://youtu.be/BVap0MdbCZg

20/05/2026

Deadly Skies and Rising Earth: Mayon Eruption, Extreme Storms, and Clear-Air Turbulence

A Boeing 777 dropped 54 meters in 4.6 seconds, killing a passenger—while Mayon Volcano and a wave of extreme storms underline how quickly routine travel and daily weather can turn dangerous!

🔹 Dr. Egon Cholakian on clear-air turbulence: a radar-undetectable threat that can drop aircraft tens of meters in seconds
📌 May 2024 Singapore Airlines Boeing 777 incident: first turbulence-related fatality in 27 years; severe turbulence incidents up 55% in recent years
🔹 Cholakian’s framing: clear-air turbulence as a geodynamic phenomenon tied to Earth’s core destabilization, electromagnetic anomalies, and air-rarefaction zones
🔹 Mayon Volcano (Albay Province): unrest noted around May 2 (12:40–12:45 a.m.), with a main episode at ~3:33 a.m. including lava effusion, 284 rockfalls, and 14 pyroclastic density current signals
🔹 NDRRMC/PHIVOLCS/PhilSA/Office of Civil Defense details: ~3,497,000 pounds of SO₂ released; 32 volcanic earthquakes (25 tremors lasting 2–15 minutes); ashfall in at least 52 villages and mapped coverage of ~21,113 acres
✅ Impacts and restrictions: state of calamity in multiple municipalities, evacuations and road clearing, and CAAP limits—no flights up to 11,000 feet within ~3.7 miles of the summit

Recommended materials:

✅ Why Is the Ocean Warming Up So Fast? | Dr. Egon Cholakian
👉 https://youtu.be/8WGubs29zGo

✅ Nanoplastics. Threat to Life | ALLATRA Documentary
👉 https://youtu.be/BVap0MdbCZg

🌐 Official links:
https://earthsavesciencecollaborative.com

07/05/2026

Earth on Edge: Synchronized Extreme Weather, Japan’s 7.4 Quake, and Turbulence Warnings

Dr. Egon Cholakian and the international scientific group ALLATRA connect these fast-moving hazards to broader planetary processes—from disrupted heat exchange between Earth’s interior, the ocean, and the atmosphere to clear-air turbulence that radar can’t detect. The stream also points to the Unified International Science Center and emphasizes practical preparedness: in the first critical minutes, neighbors are often the first responders when roads, debris, or floods cut communities off.

⚖ A 7.4 earthquake off Japan triggered a tsunami warning and evacuation advisories for more than 170,000 people—while the same week brought historic hail, record-fast typhoon intensification, and U.S. tornadoes and floods across multiple states.
🔹 April 13–19, 2026: “ice rivers” from historic hail in Saudi Arabia, and destructive hailstorms in Vietnam with hailstones up to 7 cm
🔹 Super Typhoon Sinlaku intensified from a tropical depression to Category 5 in 72 hours and impacted the Northern Mariana Islands
🔹 Central U.S. outbreak: 75 tornadoes recorded (some EF-3), plus hail larger than 2.8 inches; Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Missouri were hardest hit
🔹 Great Lakes flooding: saturated soil and snowmelt pushed rivers to record levels, including the Muskegon River; evacuations were ordered downstream of the Croton Dam after overtopping and earthen-dam breaches
🔹 Japan quake timeline: April 20, 4:53 p.m. local time, M7.4 off Sanriku at ~12 miles depth; strongest shaking in Hashikami (Aomori Prefecture), Shinkansen suspensions and road closures, and about ten injured
📌 Japan Meteorological Agency advisory: added-tremor risk across 182 municipalities in seven prefectures (Hokkaido to Chiba), with ~1% chance of a 7.8+ quake—about ten times normal; seismicity has stayed elevated since a late-2025 jump

Recommended materials:

✅ Why Is the Ocean Warming Up So Fast? | Dr. Egon Cholakian
👉 https://youtu.be/8WGubs29zGo

✅ Why Turbulence Is on the Rise? Egon Cholakian on Atmospheric Anomalies and Nanoplastic Pollution
👉 https://youtu.be/pvT9JkP_b4o

🌐 Official links:
https://earthsavesciencecollaborative.com

26/04/2026

Extreme storm disasters: 75 tornadoes, floods and giant hail hit the United States.

The central US was hit by a powerful series of storms. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Missouri were hit hardest.

The severe weather peaked on April 17, when a large series of tornadoes occurred. A total of 75 tornadoes were recorded, some reaching EF-3 intensity.

The first impacts were felt in parts of Minnesota. Near Rochester, tornadoes ripped through residential areas, destroying buildings and tearing off roofs. In the city of Marion, approximately thirty homes were damaged, and streets were littered with debris, fallen trees, and structural fragments.

In Wisconsin, in the small town of Ringle, the storm damaged approximately seventy-five homes. Some residents were trapped in basements and required rescue crews. The day before, on April 15, in the city of Waukesha, a man was killed by lightning during a storm.

Significant damage was also reported in Illinois and Missouri, affecting both residential areas and urban infrastructure. Power lines were downed, leaving vast areas without power.

At the same time, the region was hit by large hail, including rocks over 2.8 inches in diameter. Hundreds of similar incidents were reported over the course of the week. Hail smashed cars, windows, and roofs, compounding the damage caused by the tornado.

Flooding caused the most severe impacts. In the Great Lakes region, particularly in Michigan and Wisconsin, prolonged heavy rains, combined with saturated soil and active snowmelt, led to widespread flooding. Rivers overflowed their banks, reaching record levels in some places.

Water levels in the Muskegon River exceeded historic records, forcing the emergency evacuation of residents from floodplains below the Croton Dam. The dams were critically overwhelmed: in several places, water overflowed their protective structures, and earthen dam failures led to the flooding of residential areas, affecting hundreds of people.

According to officials, this flooding was unprecedented. They noted that local residents were accustomed to harsh conditions, but the scale of the disaster exceeded even their ability to cope.

Each new, unprecedented natural disaster is a signal that it is crucial for everyone to understand what is happening to the planet and what is causing the increase in the frequency and intensity of natural disasters. This topic was explained in detail and clearly in Egon Cholakian's video.

https://youtu.be/8WGubs29zGo?si=mI2ojUQDHqC2GaWA

26/04/2026

Nanoplastics. Threat to Life | ALLATRA Documentary

This documentary is the result of a comprehensive scientific investigation that reveals one of the most urgent environmental and public health challenges of the 21st century: micro and nanoplastic pollution, and presents it in an accessible popular science format.

Plastic symbolizes technological progress: lightweight, durable, and nearly everlasting. But humanity has overlooked something critically important – the very material created to improve our lives has begun to endanger them.

Today, society vastly underestimates the real scale of the threat posed by plastic pollution. The plastic crisis is no longer limited to landfills or floating garbage patches in the world’s oceans. The true catastrophe is unfolding on a microscopic level: nanoplastics can pe*****te biological barriers and accumulate within living organisms, including humans.

This documentary brings together cutting-edge scientific data and insights from leading experts. It examines how micro- and nanoplastics disrupt ecosystems, impact human health, and why understanding the magnitude of this threat is essential for the future of our planet.

Recent studies show that micro- and nanoplastics can accumulate and retain electrostatic charges for long periods of time. In this film, this property is examined as a key factor in their destructive effects – an angle rarely explored before. This perspective offers a new way to understand the dangers of plastics through the lens of their electrostatic activity.

The film presents scientific findings on the scale and consequences of micro- and nanoplastic contamination, including:

• Detection of plastic particles in air, water, food, and the human body – regardless of region.

• Harmful effects of micro- and nanoplastics on human health, such as:
– inflammation, DNA damage, and mutations,
– endocrine disruption,
– accelerated cellular aging,
– cognitive impairment,
– erectile dysfunction, infertility,
– increased rates of cancer;
– impacts on children beginning in the prenatal stage and continuing after birth.

• The influence of micro- and nanoplastics on the climate. Plastic particles contribute to accelerated ocean warming, atmospheric anomalies, and disruptions to the hydrological cycle.

It is crucial to understand that simply abandoning plastic today is no longer enough to solve this global problem, as micro- and nanoplastics have already become an integral part of the biosphere, and of the human body itself.

25/04/2026

Category 5 Super Typhoon Sinlaku: 175 MPH Winds & 30ft Waves Cause Devastation in the Pacific

Super Typhoon Sinlaku was one of the most powerful and anomalous tropical cyclones to hit the western Pacific. It formed over the waters of Micronesia as a normal thunderstorm system but then developed at an unusually high rate. In just 72 hours, it strengthened from a tropical depression to a Category 5 super typhoon with winds exceeding 174 mph.

The typhoon caused widespread destruction, destroying homes, damaging roads and port infrastructure, and causing severe power and water outages. In some areas of Chuuk State, one of the Federated States of Micronesia, up to 75% of the power grid was damaged.

Communications, including emergency services, were almost completely disrupted, significantly complicating rescue operations. As of April 20, at least four people had been reported killed, although the death toll could rise as information from hard-to-reach areas becomes available.

The storm's brunt fell on the Northern Mariana Islands. The eye of the typhoon passed over the islands of Saipan and Tinian, where sustained winds of approximately 145 mph, with gusts up to 175 mph, were recorded, equivalent to a Category 4 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale. The storm surge also played a significant role, with waves reaching approximately 29.5 feet in some areas, causing severe coastal damage.

Some residents were evacuated to special shelters, and hundreds of tourists were stranded due to flight cancellations. The island of Saipan, known for its resorts and diving, was virtually paralyzed.

During the typhoon's passage, six people aboard a damaged vessel went missing after contact with it was lost on April 16. The U.S. Coast Guard conducted a search, but four days later, they have not been found.

Experts note that Sinlaku displays a combination of anomalies.

First, an extremely rapid intensification was observed. At one stage of the typhoon's development, wind speeds increased by approximately 75 mph in 24 hours, which is close to the upper limits of observed intensification rates.

The main factor behind this rapid intensification was abnormally warm ocean water. In the area southeast of Guam, where the cyclone was gaining strength, sea surface temperatures reached approximately 86–90 degrees Fahrenheit, significantly above the climatic norm, especially for April.

This is the second anomaly. The peak of the typhoon season in the western Pacific is usually in June, so such a powerful cyclone in April is extremely rare.

Third, satellite observations recorded an unusual vertical structure of the storm: the temperature at the cloud tops in the central convective zone dropped to approximately minus 140 degrees Fahrenheit.

These values ​​are close to the tropopause, the upper boundary of the troposphere. This means that the rising air currents within the typhoon were so powerful that they pe*****ted the upper atmosphere. This structure indicates a highly efficient energy system in which the ocean's latent heat is converted into rotational energy as quickly as possible.

Sinlaku's large size and slow movement were additional characteristics. According to the US National Weather Service in Guam, the typhoon's wind zone extended approximately 275 miles from the center. In areas where the cyclone had nearly stalled, destructive winds and heavy rains continued for up to 48 hours straight, significantly increasing the damage.

It's worth noting that the United States has experienced an unprecedented series of Category 4 and 5 tropical cyclones in recent years.

Since 2017, the country has already experienced approximately ten such events: seven on the US mainland, one in Puerto Rico, and two in the Northern Mariana Islands. This number is comparable to the previous 57 years. In other words, these aren't random spikes, but rather a sharp shift to a new statistical norm for extreme storms, in which Sinlaku is part of a broader and more alarming trend.

To understand why climate events are unfolding in such a dangerous direction, watch the video "Why Is the Ocean Warming Up So Fast?" - • Why Is the Ocean Warming Up So Fast? | Dr....

24/04/2026

Why Is Turbulence Increasing? Atmospheric Anomalies and Nanoplastics

Turbulence is increasingly becoming a serious threat. But it’s only one of the visible global symptoms that could transform the world we know in the coming years. Lightning bursts in the Arctic, a massive earthquake in Kamchatka, intensifying activity of the Siberian mantle plume in Russia, and the rapid contamination of the atmosphere with microplastics — turning it into a giant “energy accumulator”— are not isolated events but symptoms of a single systemic failure of planet Earth.

- Why are atmospheric anomalies intensifying so rapidly?
- Why do many experts prefer to downplay the true scale of the danger — or deny it altogether?
- What deep processes inside the planet and beyond are disrupting the biosphere’s balance and threatening aviation, ecosystems, and life on Earth itself?

In his new address, Dr. Egon Cholakian answers these and other questions, drawing on thirty years of research by the ALLATRA international scientific group. He shows how cosmic, geodynamic, and environmental factors are interconnected within a single picture of an escalating planetary crisis. Most importantly, Dr. Cholakian offers a concrete solution that could be humanity’s last chance to avoid catastrophe.

Life is worth fighting for!

Dr. Egon Cholakian's official website: https://earthsavesciencecollaborative.com

Egon Cholakian’s previous addresses:

"Powerful Earthquake in Kamchatka. ALLATRA Warned Us":
https://youtu.be/JthRJRMgQ-k

"How Nanoplastic Robbed Humanity of Its Future | Address by Egon Cholakian":
https://youtu.be/CVtLfWhax20

20/04/2026

From Dagestan Floods to Indonesia’s 7.6 Quake: A Week of Synchronized Extremes (Mar 30–Apr 5, 2026)

Extreme weather didn’t arrive one region at a time: floods, hail, late snow, and major earthquakes stacked up across continents in the same week—pushing response systems and forecasting to their limits.

🔹 March 30–April 5, 2026: Russia and Afghanistan hit by extreme floods as winter conditions reappear in parts of Europe
🔹 Dagestan: a second wave of flooding as of April 5—over 500,000 without electricity at the peak, 3,000+ displaced, and emergency status in cities including Makhachkala, Khasavyurt, and Dagestanskiye Ogni
🔹 Dagestan specifics: bridge collapses halted train traffic; emergency vaccination against hepatitis A began; by April 8 the floods had claimed six lives, including two children
🔹 Afghanistan: heavy rainfall from March 26 flooded 25 of 34 provinces; as of April 5 at least 99 dead and 154 injured, with ~5,000 homes destroyed or damaged and water systems knocked out in many areas
🔹 Afghanistan’s cascade: unusual April 2 snowfall in provinces including Zabul, Ghazni, and Maidan Wardak; 217+ miles of roads flooded and the Kabul–Jalalabad highway closed by landslides and rockfalls
🔹 Indonesia: a 7.6 quake on April 2 in the Molucca Sea (near Bitung, North Sulawesi Province) triggered a small tsunami and, per the Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysics Agency (BMKG), 960 aftershocks; Dr. Egon Cholakian’s video reports are cited on intensifying climatic and geodynamic cataclysms

Recommended materials:

✅ Why Is the Ocean Warming Up So Fast? | Dr. Egon Cholakian
👉 https://youtu.be/8WGubs29zGo

✅ Nanoplastics. Threat to Life | ALLATRA Documentary
👉 https://youtu.be/BVap0MdbCZg

18/04/2026

Nanoplastics: The Invisible Threat That's Already Affecting Everyone | Excerpt #2 from the scientific report

Plastic does not decompose. Therefore, it does not disappear without a trace. Over time, it transforms into micro- and nanoparticles that become part of the environment. As a result, plastic pollution takes on a new dimension: it is no longer just visible litter, but a factor capable of influencing natural processes at a fundamental level.

The second part of the audio version of the report examines how, after accumulating in the soil, micro- and nanoplastics alter its structure and water regime, and also affect microorganisms, plants, and animals. Particular attention is paid to pollinators, primarily bees, whose health directly impacts ecosystem stability and agricultural production.

The report also emphasizes the climate aspect, examining plastic not only as an environmental pollutant but also as a factor that can influence the physical properties of water, including its thermal conductivity and heat capacity, and therefore the ocean's heat balance and, ultimately, climate processes. Micro- and nanoplastic particles are becoming a factor in environmental and climate change that directly affects everyone.

Audio version of the report. Part 2.
Ecological and Climate Impacts of Micro- and Nanoplastic Pollution

Timestamps:
0:00 Introduction
0:30 How Microplastics Disrupt Ecosystems at the Molecular Level
1:27 The Impact of Microplastics on Soil Properties and Ecosystem Degradation
5:10 Microplastics in Food
11:10 Forests as Global Reservoirs of Microplastics
12:39 How Nanoplastics Destroy Fauna
15:50 The Transfer of Microplastics through the Food Chain from Plankton to Humans
18:14 Plastic Kills Marine Organisms
20:20 Corals Under Threat: A Global Microthreat
21:39 The Impact of Microplastics on Oxygen Balance in Ecosystems

The Impact of Micro- and Nanoplastics on Climate
26:37 Ocean Functions
28:10 Changing Ocean Temperatures
31:45 Why Is the Ocean Warming? Hypothesis
33:29 Fundamental Properties of Water
37:42 The Impact of Water Properties on Climate and Ecosystems
38:11 The Role of Micro- and Nanoplastics in Changing the Physical Properties of Seawater
40:32 Areas of Micro- and Nanoplastic Concentration in the Ocean
41:43 The Relationship between the Electrostatic Charge of Micro- and Nanoplastics and Atmospheric Phenomena
43:43 Electric Charges in Clouds
47:24 Impact on Cloud Formation and Precipitation
49:12 The Role of Micro- and Nanoplastics in Disrupting the Earth's Climate Balance
51:51 Interaction between the Ocean and the Earth's Magnetic Field

The scientific report "Nanoplastics in the Biosphere: From Molecular Impact to Planetary Crisis" warns of a new global threat. Authors of the report: ALLATRA International Public Movement
In collaboration with the Bolivian Catholic University of San Pablo, the Autonomous University of Juan Misael Saracho (UAJMS), and the international project CREATIVE SOCIETY.

For the first time, a single document comprehensively examines data on the distribution of micro- and nanoplastics in the biosphere, their pe*******on into food chains, and their devastating impacts on human health and ecosystems.

Micro- and nanoplastics have the ability to accumulate an electrostatic charge, making them a powerful factor in negative impacts. This ability and their nanosize allow plastics not only to overcome the protective barriers of organisms but also to pe*****te the cells of living organisms.

The report is the result of a large-scale interdisciplinary analysis covering the environmental, climatic, medical, physical, and chemical aspects of the negative impacts of micro- and nanoplastics on the biosphere and human health.

The full report, "NANOPLASTICS IN THE BIOSPHERE: FROM MOLECULAR IMPACT TO PLANETARY CRISIS," can be found at: https://allatra.org/storage/app/media/repo...

Subscribe to stay up-to-date with the next important episodes, and share this video. In subsequent episodes of this series, we will discuss the impact of micro- and nanoplastics on human health. You will also learn about potential solutions that can make a difference.

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