Want to win a trip to Australia’s Northern Territory? Hie thee to Twitter.

Here at Gadling, we’re not above shameless self-promotion. Particularly when the prize is a free trip to Australia for one lucky winner.

Our blogger-at-large, Andrew Evans, just returned from a month-long trip to Australia and he’s hosting a Twitter-based contest to send a winner (plus a friend) on a similar journey.

The best part? Entering is simple. Just tweet @WheresAndrew with the reason that the Northern Territory is the place you’d most like to visit in Australia. Be sure to include the hashtag #Takeme2NT or your entry won’t count – that leaves just 130 characters!

The rules are fairly simple. You must follow Andrew on Twitter, Fan the Northern Territorry on Facebook, and compose a tweet answering the above question.

The winner of the “best tweet” (decided by an external body in the Northern Territory) will win two round-trip tickets from the winner’s nearest flight departure city to either Darwin or Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia and a five-day rental of a Britz 4WD camper van.

Hurry, the contest ends February 11. Full contest details are avaiable here.

Cyclone Yasi destruction brought home on Facebook, Twitter

They were waiting and organizing even before the storm made landfall. Facebook messages and tweets sent out world-wide started a cascading effort of prayers, good wishes, advice and support from every corner of the planet. Social media has become an integral part of crisis management efforts

The numbers are staggering. 23,141 tweets from 10,000 individual users sent in the past 24 hours combined with 90,000 members joining Facebook page Cyclone Yasi Update are giving truly engaging definition to social media efforts.

“The Queensland government and in particular the Queensland Police have pioneered the use of social media in times of crisis. Updates on social media have been timely, accurate and sought to direct information to those most in need.” said Thomas Tudehope director of strategy and management for social media monitoring company SR7.

Many users added their personal experiences to the mix, giving the world a front row seat to the devastation as it occured. While traditional news sources have covered the story extensively, social media efforts extracted real-time accounts of the situation on the ground as it happened during the storm.

Some reports though turned out to be false.On Twitter, the most popular hash tags for users were #tcyasi, #cyclone and #roof. Facebook has been helpful but new groups poking fun at the situation such as Cyclone Yasi After Party have not been all that helpful nor is the ability to add Cyclone Yasi as a friend.

Reports last night that the roof of an evacuation center was being blown off by gale-force winds had to be ruled out.

User @CharlieMunsie posted: “#TCYasi Bad news just in. The evac centre in Innisfail has lost it’s roof. Has 500 ppl inside. No injuries to date but worst still to come.”

@ABCnorthqld followed with : “We are investigating reports that the Innisfail evacuation centre at the State College has lost its roof. We’ll let you know” followed by “a report about the Townsville evacuation centre losing its roof was untrue”.

A manipulated storm image showing a massive rain cloud coming in from the ocean was also circulated on Twitter.

@Bitfuzzy said “That’s a fake . . . it’s NOT a pic of Yasi”.

Now, after the storm has passed, Twitter and Facebook users are maintaining an unprecedented, ongoing dialogue with affected areas through users at the scene. The big difference was that websites could be accessed through the cell phones of those on the ground while power outages made it difficult if not impossible to watch television or listen to a radio.

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Update: Monster Cyclone Yasi slams Australia coast

The biggest storm in the country’s modern history has reached Australia’s coast with winds stronger than that of hurricane Katrina.

Hundreds of thousands of people have filled evacuation centers and homes. Tourists hunker down in their hotels as Yasi slams the Australia coast. Tens of thousands are without power across a region the size of Germany and France combined.

“I can’t sugarcoat this for people, it’s going to be a very tough 24 hours,” Queensland Premier Anna Bligh told reporters in Brisbane yesterday. “Without doubt we are set to confront scenes of devastation and heartbreak.”

Cyclone Yasi is expected to hit the North-east coast of Austraila in the next few hours.

The last cyclone of such strength to cross the state was in 1918 and this one would be “terrifying”.Mrs Bligh told the BBC.

Keeping in touch with friends and family or getting a good idea of what is happening may soon be difficult. Austailan Government’s Bureau of Meteorlogy allows us to watch Live images of the massive storm. Another site, suggested by reader Nicola, Cyclone Video HQ has the most recent video feeds from ground level.

Photo: NOAA

Australia storm bears down

It’s not just the United States facing big weather today, Australia has problems of a different nature.

Expected to remain a strong category 4 storm with sustained winds in excess of 175 miles per hour, Cyclone Yasi has Australians running for safety. The storms intensity and 400-mile wide size is expected to go as far as 600 miles inland, threatening more than 400,000 people in its path.

“There’s no time for complacency,” Mike Brunker, mayor of the Whitsunday area near the Great Barrier Reef told Reuters. “People in low-lying areas are evacuating to friends and family or, if they have to, leave town.”

Coal mines, rail lines and coal ports were closed in Queensland state as the massive storm headed toward the coast. Up to a third of Australia’s sugar crop was also under threat

“This storm is huge and life threatening,” Queensland Premier Anna Bligh told NewsDaily, warning the system was intensifying and picking up speed on its path from the Coral Sea, with destructive winds expected from Wednesday morning.

The situation worsens by the hour. 40,000 people were evacuated from the coastal areas overnight, Carins airport is expected to close on Wednesday and Tropical rains have been battering the area since November.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said residents up and down the coast needed to prepare. “It’s such a big storm – it’s a monster, killer storm – that it’s not just about where this crosses the coast that is at risk”

Photo: Reuters

Australia goes from record drought to record floods

It has been raining in northeastern Australia for two solid weeks, pushing rivers thirty feet out of their banks and forcing more than 200,000 people in an area the size of Texas to pick up stakes, or at least move everything they own to the second floor.

Locals have described the pounding, non-stop rains, intermingled with thunder, flash flooding and hail, as being “of biblical proportion.” One Queenslander said his house now felt like it was “in the middle of the ocean.” Images of kangaroos scrambling for refuge from the rising waters atop gravel piles and cars assure that this is Oz rather than other recently-flood ravaged regions, like Pakistan or southern California (where in December records were set by rainfalls four times more wet than average).

The cruel irony in Australia, of course, is that it has been wracked by a forty year drought, going back to the 1960s. The “worst on record” droughts really took hold in 2003, forcing towns across the continent to ration water and witnessing big cities like Victoria and Melbourne on the verge of going dry. In those days no one was thinking about loading sandbags to keep potential floodwaters at bay; everyone was focused on the construction of desalinators to make drinking water from the ocean.

Using Australia’s run of dry luck as example, the World Economic Forum predicted a coming global “water bankruptcy,” warning that by as soon as 2025, 1.8 billion people around the world could be living in water-scarce regions, while two-thirds of the world’s population could be flooded out.
Australia’s drought/flood ying/yang comes on the heels of a year just past during which many statistics suggest the planet endured the most extreme weather yet recorded.
From floods in Pakistan and China to earthquakes in Haiti, Chile and New Zealand, we watched forest fires in Russia and typhoons, blizzards, volcanic eruptions, landslides and droughts wipe out nearly 300,000 people. The last time the planet saw a human loss like that was largely thanks to famine-struck Ethiopia in 1983.

The “official” number of natural disasters in 2010 was put at 950; according to FEMA statistics, the number killed around the world last year by nature was more than all those who have been killed by terrorist attacks during the past 40 years.

The impacts of climate change cannot be discounted as a player in many of these natural disasters, whether heat wave or flooding, hurricane or drought. In 2010 at least 18 countries set records for “hottest day on record.”

The stats are loaded with irony, but Australia seems to be taking the brunt of the planet’s disconnect. As floodwaters rise there and its Army gears up to fly food and supplies in and stranded residents out, it was reported over the weekend by the Australia Antarctic Division that the reason for all of its recent droughts is record snowfalls in … Antarctica.

While it sounds like a stretch, the link is pretty straightforward: The more it snows in Antarctica (and we’re talking the most snowfall there in 38,000 years) the drier it’s going to get in Oz.

Which is yet another example for climate change deniers; the reason it is snowing more in parts of Antarctica is because there is less ice surrounding the giant continent. The more open, unfrozen ocean there is, means there’s more evaporation … thus more precipitation.

While it’s hard for some to swallow, one reason Australians are drowning today is thanks to man’s tinkering with the atmosphere, purposely or not.

[flickr image via good_keiran]