- The Ural River on Sunday burst through a dam in Orsk, flooding two Russian cities that were evacuated. Authorities declared an emergency in the worst-hit Orenburg region. Guardian (LR: 2 CP: 5)
- Snowmelt due to warm weather caused rivers to overflow in some regions of Russia. In Kazakhstan, too, over 72K people were evacuated amid the worst floods "in 80 years." Euronews
- More than 4K people have been evacuated in Russia as 6.3K homes were inundated. Damages have been estimated to hit around 21B rubles ($227M). Associated Press (LR: 3 CP: 5)
- The Orsk dam was built to hold 5.5m (18 ft) of water, but the snowmelt caused River Ural to rise to 9.6m (315 ft), ultimately causing the breach. Al Jazeera (LR: 2 CP: 1)
- Orenburg Mayor Sergei Salmin said the waters will continue to rise further. Those affected are being supplied bottled water and are also being vaccinated against Hepatitis A. Onmanorama
- Officials said the situation remains critical and unstable. Peak flooding of the Ural River is expected on April 9 and the condition will remain critical through April 20. France 24
Pro-Russia narrative:
- In years past Pres. Vladimir Putin has been vocal in his criticism of man-made climate change, but he has recently also taken a proactive and progressive stance against its impacts. Russia has intensified operations to prepare its people for extreme weather events like this one. This is evidenced in its quick commissioning of a committee to tackle the Ural mountain floods which was exacerbated by warm temperatures in the region.
CBS (LR: 2 CP: 5)
Anti-Russia narrative:
- Moscow has publicly sought to gain from climate change — such as gaining leverage over the melting Arctic — although experts have disapproved. Russia's political and economic future is intertwined and largely dependent on a collective global response to a warming planet. No positive spin by state media will make up for its lack of preparation against extreme weather events that will inevitably torment it.
NOTRE DAME NEWS
Nerd narrative:
- There is a 50% chance that at least 35.1% of Russia's electricity generation will come from nuclear power in 2050, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
METACULUS (LR: 3 CP: 3)