(합4.19 국4.20) 화산재 전 유럽 비행금지

조회수 630 2010-04-17 20:45:23

(재해) 화산재 유럽 비행금지

 

Tonight on World News, bad to worse. That massive volcano cloud that stranded발을 묶다 hundreds of thousands of passengers spreads. Our correspondent is at the volcano. From ABC News, this is ABC World News with Diane Sawyer, reporting tonight Elizabeth Vages. Good evening. The ripple effect파급효과 is now a global tidal wave. Hundreds of thousands of airline passengers are helpless tonight.

 

That dense dangerous cloud of volcanic ash on the move while they stay put. The cancellations keep coming. Another 17,000 in Europe today. The scene in the air is spectacular. That cloud of dust and ash from a spewing분출되다 volcano in Island spreading across Europe. The scene on the ground is chaos. The disruptions costing airlines at least $200 million a day.

 

Nowhere fast. Air travel is crippled심각한 손상. Hundreds of thousands could be stranded again as that huge cloud of ash spreads across the sky. What happens when volcanic ash goes anywhere near a jet engine and why is it so dangerous? Now to the other major story. We have been following Mother Nature reminding all of us this is her planet, not ours. She still runs things. We just think we are masters of the skies.

 

A volcano has paralyzed마비 air travel. You still can’t fly to London or Paris from the United States. Europeans can’t fly to other cities within Europe. President Obama may not be able to take air force one to a funeral in Poland this weekend. Our coverage starts tonight with NBC’s Dana Frizon at London’s still quiet Heathrow airport tonight. Dana, good evening.

 

Good evening, Brian. What was a bad situation just got worse through the course of today and  tonight much of Europe remains a no fly zone. As the cloud of volcanic ash slowly spreads south and southeast, more countries became no fly zones today from Britain where planes were grounded for a second day and across northern and central Europe to the edge of Russia, no flights in eleven countries and limited takeoffs and landings in at least six others. 17,000 flights were cancelled across Europe and no one’s sure when the skies will clear.

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