Three killed in northern China gas explosion by AFP Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) Oct 21, 2021 A gas explosion at a restaurant ripped through a busy street in a major Chinese city on Thursday, killing at least three people and injuring dozens, state media reported. Dramatic footage from a nearby car's dashboard camera, published by state media, showed a large cloud of smoke and dust erupting over the street, with people running to safety, State broadcaster CCTV showed windows ripped out of several buildings in a street coated with dust and debris in Shenyang, capital of Liaoning province in northern China. Rescuers found three people dead and more than 30 injured, and the cause of the explosion is under investigation, the People's Daily reported. Ambulances and fire engines lined the street after the blast as workers towed away destroyed cars and a smashed-in bus, the CCTV footage showed. The blast occurred Thursday morning on the residential street, which is lined with businesses, official news agency Xinhua said. Rescue work was still ongoing. Investigators have "preliminarily determined that the explosion occurred within a commercial and residential building," Liaoning's emergency response authority said in a social media post. Photos published by the Liaoning emergency services showed rescuers in hard hats surrounded by debris. Stunned passersby were seen shaking shards of glass and debris off their clothes. Gas explosions are common in China due to weak safety standards and poor enforcement. A blast in June killed 25 people and injured more than a hundred others when a gas line exploded in a residential compound in central China's Hubei province. Eight people, including the general manager of the company that owned the gas pipe, were later detained after authorities found "unsound" safety practices and serious defects in the pipe.
Helium: South Africa strikes new 'gold' Virginia, South Africa (AFP) Oct 20, 2021 In a grassy plain in South Africa, once the world's largest gold producer, prospectors have stumbled upon a new treasure: helium. Popularly known for birthday balloons and squeaky voices, helium plays an underappreciated role in medical scanners, superconductors, and space travel. It's also rare - produced by fewer than 10 countries and often treated as a waste product in natural gas wells. Natural gas is what Stefano Marani and Nick Mitchell had on their minds when they bought gas rights o ... read more
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