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Houston Warns Bridges And Roads Are "Starting To Fail"

As Tropical Storm Harvey heads back inland, slamming southwest Texas with another 15-25 inches of rain, Housting officials are reporting that the city's critical infrastructure is starting to fail under the weight of the floodwaters, and may soon collapse.

According to Reuters, roads and bridges in Houston have started to buckle under the impact of the catastrophic flooding in parts of the city. According to Jeff Linder of the Harris County Flood Control District, one bridge had collapsed and some roads had been damaged by the torrential rains.

One Chinese Coal Power Company Employs 4x More Workers Than The Entire US Coal Industry

One Chinese Coal Power Company Employs 4x More Workers Than The Entire US Coal Industry

On Monday, China’s government and president Xi blessed the merger between the country's top coal miner, Shenhua Group and China Guodian Group, one of the country’s top five state power producers, in a deal that will create the world’s largest power company, worth 1.8 trillion yuan, or $278 billion. Putting the sheer size of the two merged behemoths in context, the resulting entity will be the world’s second-biggest company by revenue and largest by installed capacity.

Brazoria County Urges "GET OUT NOW" After Columbia Lakes Levee Breached

Brazoria County Urges "GET OUT NOW" After Columbia Lakes Levee Breached

Levees at Columbia Lakes in Brazoria County have been breached, according to the official Brazoria County website.

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There Is "Eight Feet Of Water" On Houston Roads, And It's About To Get Much Worse

There Is "Eight Feet Of Water" On Houston Roads, And It's About To Get Much Worse

Amid desperate efforts to save stranded citizens - police report over 3,000 rescues alone - and the arrival of the so-called 'cajun navy' to assist, Harvey continues to pummel Texas, paralyzing Houston as the region braces for yet more rain after the Tropical Storm recharged over warm waters and heading back in-land.

Army Begins Releasing Water From 2 Houston Dams, Flooding Thousands Of Nearby Homes

Army Begins Releasing Water From 2 Houston Dams, Flooding Thousands Of Nearby Homes

The US Army Corps of Engineers began releasing water into the Buffalo Bayou - the main body of water running through Houston - from two flood-control dams whose water level has risen too rapidly, a move that will flood thousands of nearby homes. Emergency workers said they began to release water from the Addicks and Barker dams located 17 miles west of downtown Houston early Monday to prevent uncontrollable flooding of the Houston metropolitan area from torrential rains released by Tropical Storm Harvey, according to ABC News.

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