💨 Abstract
Hurricane Milton, the fifth-most-intense Atlantic hurricane on record, swept through Florida on Wednesday, leaving at least 16 people dead and millions without power. Utility workers, government crews, and residents have been repairing downed power lines, clearing debris, and mopping up floodwater. The storm's cost is estimated to be between $30 billion and $60 billion. Clean-up efforts could take weeks or months.
Courtesy: theprint.in
Summarized by Einstein Beta 🤖
Suggested
UNRWA chief says many Palestinians camps in Lebanon empty after Israeli strikes
Climate change made Hurricane Milton worse, scientists say
Soccer-European Leagues, FIFPRO to file antitrust complaint about FIFA on Monday
Hundreds march against Ghana's damaging informal gold mining boom
Nobel prize is a warning to a world on the nuclear brink
Nobel laureate Hidankyo co-chair worries about children in Israel and Gaza
Dollar flat against peers as markets digest U.S. economic data
Technical snag on Delhi Metro Yellow Line
NC-Congress alliance stakes claim to form govt in J-K: Omar Abdullah
Rupee falls 12 paise to hit all-time low of 84.10 against US dollar
Powered by MessengerX.io