Cold Front Hits Russia After Two-Month Heat Wave
20 August 2010
Andrei Savelyev, 46, stands at the site of his house that was burnt down during the forest fires, 17 Aug 2010, in the village of Yuzhny, in the Nizhny Novgorod region, some 300 kilometers (187.5 miles) east of Moscow.
Russia had been experiencing the hottest weather on record. The drought and temperatures triggered tens of thousands fires across the country. More than 50 people are dead, thousands of homes have been destroyed and millions of crops have been affected due to the heat, drought and flames.
Russian Emergency officials say a wave of cold air from the north and strong winds have helped them drastically reduce the number of fires raging around the country to about 9,000 hectares. That's less than one 20th of the area that was affected by the blazes when they were at their worst.
Muscovite Nikolai, who refused to give his last name, says he's happy about the weather change.
He says the air has become colder, it's easier to breath and he feels more comfortable. He says the heat made it hard for him to stay in Moscow and he was sick and tired of it. So, he's really happy about the change.
The cooler weather has also lifted the toxic smog that has enveloped the Russian capital off and on for weeks. At its worst, the acrid smoke caused carbon monoxide to soar to nearly seven times the acceptable level.
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