Friday, April 30, 2021

Fwd: News Alert: TSA extends mask mandate for planes and public transportation in U.S. until September


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From: The Washington Post <email@washingtonpost.com>
Date: Fri, Apr 30, 2021, 4:21 PM
Subject: News Alert: TSA extends mask mandate for planes and public transportation in U.S. until September
To: <mbannerman@arcstarenergy.com>


The Transportation Security Administration said masks must be worn at train and subway stations, bus terminals and airports nationwide, as well as on planes, trains and other types of public transportation until Sept. 13. The previous order had been set to expire in May.

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News Alert

April 30, 4:16 p.m. EDT

 

The Transportation Security Administration said masks must be worn at train and subway stations, bus terminals and airports nationwide, as well as on planes, trains and other types of public transportation until Sept. 13. The previous order had been set to expire in May.

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Violent threats against US Congress leads to federal court conviction - words matter

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Fwd: News Alert: Florida legislature approves voting bill that curbs mail voting and use of drop boxes


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: The Washington Post <email@washingtonpost.com>
Date: Thu, Apr 29, 2021, 9:16 PM
Subject: News Alert: Florida legislature approves voting bill that curbs mail voting and use of drop boxes
To: <mbannerman@arcstarenergy.com>


The passage of the measure, which critics said is aimed at making it harder to vote, comes after both Democrats and Republicans, including Gov. Ron DeSantis, hailed Florida's administration of the November 2020 election as a model for the nation.

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News Alert

April 29, 9:15 p.m. EDT

 

The passage of the measure, which critics said is aimed at making it harder to vote, comes after both Democrats and Republicans, including Gov. Ron DeSantis, hailed Florida's administration of the November 2020 election as a model for the nation.

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Fwd: April 28, 2021 re Biden's address to Congress



Monty Bannerman
mob: +1 305-984-1177
tel: +1 646-402-5076

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American <heathercoxrichardson@substack.com>
Date: Thu, Apr 29, 2021, 12:10 AM
Subject: April 28, 2021
To: <mbannerman@tnag.net>


Earlier today, in anticipation of tonight's address to Congress, President Joe Biden met with news anchors. The president told them that his many meetings with foreign leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping, have convinced him that the story of this moment is whether democracy can survive the challenges of the twenty-first century. As things speed up, is it possible, he asked, to achieve the consensus necessary for democracy in time to compete with autocracy? ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

Earlier today, in anticipation of tonight's address to Congress, President Joe Biden met with news anchors. The president told them that his many meetings with foreign leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping, have convinced him that the story of this moment is whether democracy can survive the challenges of the twenty-first century. As things speed up, is it possible, he asked, to achieve the consensus necessary for democracy in time to compete with autocracy?

He told the anchors that "they're going to write about this point in history."

Biden nailed it. The struggle to preserve democracy is precisely what the story of this moment is—although it started long ago in the U.S., at least—and historians are already writing about it that way.

In the United States, the move toward oligarchy had been underway for decades. First, Movement Conservatives, who wanted to destroy the liberal state President Franklin Delano Roosevelt created, increasingly grabbed power through voter suppression, gerrymandering, filling the courts with originalist judges, focusing on the idea of the so-called "unitary executive," and propaganda. Once they controlled the Republican Party, their techniques left it open to a leader like Trump to gather power to himself alone. Their admiration for oligarchy left them open to autocracy.

And now the Republican Party appears to have embraced Trump over any principles the party once held. Its leaders support the Big Lie that Trump won the election and are exercising their control of certain state legislatures to cement their power in enough states to control the federal government. They are passing laws to restrict voting and outlaw protesting; at the same time they have given up on policy and are relying on such blatant propaganda that just yesterday a writer for the pro-Trump New York Post felt obliged to quit after writing a completely fabricated story.

Biden is calling this move to autocracy like it is, and making a bid to shift the course of the nation.

Today, the Department of Justice executed search warrants on both the Manhattan home and the office of Trump's ally and former lawyer Rudy Giuliani as part of an investigation into Giuliani's adventures in Ukraine as he tried to dig up dirt on Biden's son Hunter. Experts say such a search against a lawyer, and against a president's former lawyer, to boot, is extraordinary. To get a warrant, investigators had to convince a judge that they believed it would turn up evidence of a crime that they knew had been committed. Political appointees in Trump's Department of Justice had blocked such a warrant in the past, but Attorney General Merrick Garland lifted the block.

Federal officials also executed a search warrant on Victoria Toensing, a media personality and lawyer associated with Giuliani on his Ukraine work. The details of that search are still murky (but my long-time readers will be pleased to know that Lev Parnas is relevant).

Also today, federal prosecutors have added conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction to the charges against three men who allegedly plotted to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, and a jury in New York today convicted a Trump supporter of making a death threat against elected officials for his statements in a video he posted online after the January 6 insurrection calling for the "slaughter" of Democratic senators. The penalty for such a crime is up to ten years in prison.

While authorities seem finally to be exploring the potential lawbreaking of the previous administration, Biden is properly entrusting law enforcement to the branch of government responsible for it, leaving the actions of the previous administration to the Department of Justice and state and local authorities. He is also refusing to engage in the rhetorical brawls the right wing is trying to spark, ignoring, for example, the ridiculous story that he was going to outlaw the consumption of meat, or that the federal government had bought and distributed copies of Vice President Kamala Harris's children's book to incoming refugees, both of which then blew up in the faces of those who had pushed them.

Instead, Biden is advancing a vision of an active government that levels the legal, economic, and social playing field for all Americans. While observers tend to associate this vision with FDR, who gave us our modern government, in fact that vision has been shared by all our greatest presidents.

Indeed, it was Republican Abraham Lincoln who first proposed the idea that the country does best when government guarantees equality before the law and works to guarantee equality of resources to all. Under Lincoln, the Republican Party established public colleges, put farmers on land, built railroads, and backed Black equality before the law, paying for those things with our first national taxes, including an income tax.

Republican Theodore Roosevelt took that idea a step further, addressing the extremes of industrialization with a federal government strong enough to regulate business and provide support for labor. Democrat FDR went much further, using the government not just to regulate business but to provide a basic social safety net—Social Security and the Works Progress Administration, for example—and to promote infrastructure through investments like the Tennessee Valley Authority, which brought electricity and flood control to what had been a neglected region, and the Civilian Conservation Corps, which enabled men to recover the landscape from the ravages of the Dust Bowl.  

Biden is in the mold of such predecessors, but his vision is new. He wants the government to support all Americans, beginning not with the ability of a man to support his family but with the idea of protecting children. Since the beginning of his presidency, he has focused on rebuilding the economy by improving the conditions in which children live—famously, reformers credited his American Rescue Plan with reducing by half the number of children living in poverty—and with the plan he announced tonight, he illustrated this reworking of society by investing in our children.

The American Families Plan calls for investing $1.8 trillion in education, providing free schooling from pre-kindergarten through community college. It calls for funding for childcare and paid family medical leave, and it includes more money for fighting child poverty. Biden plans to pay for this, in part, by enforcing existing tax laws which wealthy people and corporations currently slide by, raising as much as $700 billion. Biden also proposes increasing the top tax rate from 37% to 39.6%, the rate it was under President George W. Bush, and by increasing the capital gains rate. 

"The question of whether our democracy will long endure is both ancient and urgent," Biden reminded us tonight, in an echo of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. "Can our democracy deliver on its promise that all of us —created equal in the image of God—have a chance to lead lives of dignity, respect, and possibility?  Can our democracy deliver on the most pressing needs of our people? Can our democracy overcome the lies, anger, hate and fears that have pulled us apart?" 

The world's autocrats are betting it can't, Biden said. But he listed the accomplishments of the past 99 days, when the people of the United States came together to administer 200 million doses of vaccine and create hundreds of thousands of jobs and he pointed out: "It's never been a good bet to bet against America." 

"Our Constitution opens with the words, 'We the People,'" Biden reminded his listeners tonight. And "it's time we remembered that We the People are the government. You and I. Not some force in a distant capital. Not some powerful force we have no control over. It's us. It's 'We the people.'"  

And if we remember that and come together, he said, "then we will meet the central challenge of the age by proving that democracy is durable and strong." "The autocrats will not win the future….

America will."

—-

Notes:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/trump-supporter-brendan-hunt-convicted-death-threat-democrats/2021/04/28/9a239624-a838-11eb-bca5-048b2759a489_story.html

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/28/nyregion/rudy-giuliani-trump-ukraine-warrant.html

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/feds-execute-search-warrants-on-trumps-ukraine-dirt-digging-legal-team

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/04/28/politics/gretchen-whitmer-kidnap-plot-charges/index.html

https://www.povertycenter.columbia.edu/news-internal/2021/presidential-policy/biden-economic-relief-proposal-poverty-impact

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Wednesday, April 28, 2021

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Friday, April 23, 2021

NYTimes: After Testing the World’s Limits, Putin Steps Back From the Brink

After Testing the World's Limits, Putin Steps Back From the Brink https://nyti.ms/3gMVRPd 

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

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Monday, April 12, 2021

Sunday, April 11, 2021

Saturday, April 10, 2021

New world record low solar PPA bid awarded in Saudi

Another eye-popper, but keep in mind that the gov't provides land, low cost capital and low/no cost IC.

From: pv magazine <daily.newsletter@pv-magazine.com>
Sent: Saturday, April 10, 2021 1:03:25 AM
To: mbannerman@mgilp.com <mbannerman@mgilp.com>
Subject: External - The Weekend Read
 




World records

Saudi Arabia's second PV tender has seen a world record low bid of US$0.0104/kWh. It was revealed that PPAs for seven large-scale solar power projects in various regions of the Kingdom were signed by the government and several undisclosed developers. The output capacity of these projects will amount to more than 3.6 GW.
In another world record, researchers at South Korea's Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne say they have achieved a new record conversion efficiency of 25.6% in a single junction perovskite solar cell. The cell is based on a type of metal halide perovskite called formamidinium lead iodide (FAPbI3), which is known for its thermal stability and narrow bandgap.
IRENA has crunched the numbers for its annual survey of new clean energy capacity and said 2020 saw PV and concentrating solar power reach rough parity with the amount of wind power capacity worldwide. Helped along by 78 GW of new grid-connected solar facilities across Asia, it said, solar caught up with wind, and the two non-hydropower sources of clean electricity now account for more global capacity than hydro plants.
In hydrogen news, BloombergNEF finds that green hydrogen costs should fall 85% by 2050, thanks to cheaper solar, leading to costs under $1/kg and easily undercutting natural gas as well as blue and gray hydrogen production. The continuous cost decline on the solar front is being driven by automated manufacturing, less silicon and silver consumption, higher PV efficiency of solar cells, and greater yields provided by bifacial panels.
Meanwhile, a partnership between the University of Newcastle and Southern Green Gas has developed a state-of-the-art green hydrogen fuel which has been demonstrated in Hyundai's Nexo Hydrogen fuel cell SUV; Vattenfall, Sweden-based steel company SSAB, and Swedish state-owned miner LKAB have started building a rock cavern storage facility for green hydrogen near Luleå, in northern Sweden; and Chinese module manufacturer Longi has set up Longi Hydrogen Technology Co Ltd, a new unit aimed at expanding the group's activities into the green hydrogen business.
To recognize the increasing amount of hydrogen news, pv magazine has started publishing a weekly hydrogen brief on Fridays and has created a new Hydrogen hub feature page. Let us know what topics you'd like to see covered by emailing editors@pv-magazine.com.
There was also a flurry of battery updates this week, including news that Russian scientists are using nickel-salen to develop a battery that charges in 10 seconds; the discovery of new materials for organic redox flow batteries; a collaboration between universities in China and the U.S. which are demonstrating a stable, superfast charging Al battery; and Taiwan Cement Corporation's plans to invest US$352 million in the construction of a 1.8 GW battery factory in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan.
Finally, from the new April pv magazine, you can find out if solar developers should be taking notice of ESG criteria.
Enjoy!


Highlights

The weekend read: Should solar developers take notice of ESG criteria?

By Michael Fuhs on Apr 10 2021, 6:00am

Something is brewing in the financial world. "Sustainable finance" and the growth of ESG funds have been taking the market by storm in recent years. Since most major PV projects end up needing investors from the capital market, it is only a matter of time before they will have to adapt. The beginning of March 2021 saw a milestone reached in this process.

Read more »

Solar powers novel green hydrogen fuel technology

By Blake Matich on Apr 9 2021, 9:04am

A homegrown technology developed by the University of Newcastle and Southern Green Gas has seen the development of a novel green hydrogen fuel and carbon-neutral green methane. The fuel was demonstrated in Hyundai's Nexo hydrogen fuel cell SUV in Sydney.

Read more »

Saudi Arabia's second PV tender draws world record low bid of $0.0104/kWh

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 8 2021, 5:53pm

The record low price was offered for the 600 MW Al Shuaiba PV IP project, which competed in the second round of the country's procurement scheme for renewable energies.

Read more »

Nickel-salen for a battery that charges in 10 seconds

By Mark Hutchins on Apr 8 2021, 5:17pm

Scientists in Russia introduce a promising new material for battery energy storage, the product of more than three years of research. Incorporating a nickel-salen polymer into the cathode, the group demonstrated a battery that can charge and discharge ten times faster than today's lithium-ion batteries. And though the battery still lags in terms of overall capacity, the group is confident that its discovery will lead to big improvements for lithium batteries.

Read more »

Work begins on green hydrogen storage cavern in Sweden

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 8 2021, 12:30pm

Vattenfall, SSAB and LKAB are building a rock cavern storage facility in a coastal city in northern Sweden. The 100-cubic-meter facility will be built 30 meters below ground and will begin storing green hydrogen next year.

Read more »

P-type TOPCon solar cell with 21.2% efficiency

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 8 2021, 11:43am

Fraunhofer ISE scientists have identified the best metallization pastes to help reduce contact resistivity and contact recombination in p-type TOPCon solar cells. They applied a silicon nitride layer through plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition onto both sides of a cell.

Read more »

Taiwan joins the gigafactory club

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 8 2021, 11:28am

Taiwan Cement is planning to build a US$352 million EV battery factory in southern Taiwan. The 1.8 GW facility will produce high-charge-discharge nickel ternary batteries.

Read more »

Australia's 'largest' solar facade

By David Carroll on Apr 8 2021, 9:48am

Victorian-based property developer Beulah has announced its soon-to-be-completed Paragon tower, in the heart of Melbourne, will be home to the nation's largest and most efficient vertical solar PV system.

Read more »

Solar PV driving green hydrogen to undercut gas, says BloombergNEF

By Blake Matich on Apr 8 2021, 6:34am

BloombergNEF has shown that solar PV is the key driver of declining green hydrogen costs. The forecast shows costs falling by 85% by 2050, undercutting natural gas and blue and gray hydrogen production.

Read more »

Egyptian government signs deal to buy power from 200 MW of Kom Ombo project

By Max Hall on Apr 7 2021, 3:20pm

Saudi power company ACWA Power today revealed it has signed a 25-year power purchase agreement with the Egyptian Electricity Transmission Company and said development was on track for generation to start before October next year.

Read more »

New materials for organic redox flow batteries

By Mark Hutchins on Apr 7 2021, 12:45pm

Scientists in Russia have designed a whole series of new compounds that could serve as catholytes and anolytes in organic redox flow batteries. The materials promise to open up new pathways for further research, and overcome some of the challenges for organic redox flow batteries in commercial, large-scale energy storage projects.

Read more »

Chinese startup claims 20.5% efficiency for mini perovskite PV module

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 7 2021, 11:04am

China's UtmoLight has developed a new PV module with an area of just 63.98 cm2 and a 20.5% efficiency rate, as certified by Japan Electrical Safety & Environment Technology Laboratories.

Read more »

Solar and wind together overhaul global hydro capacity

By Max Hall on Apr 7 2021, 10:50am

The latest set of clean energy statistics compiled by the International Renewable Energy Agency signal a changing of the guard when it comes to clean power, with legacy hydropower facilities overtaken by new intermittent renewables.

Read more »

Agrivoltaics plus storage at US cranberry bogs

By Tim Sylvia on Apr 7 2021, 6:54am

Pine Gate Renewables has announced plans to deploy 9 MW of solar and 36 MWh of storage above a commercial cranberry bog.

Read more »

A long-lasting aluminum battery

By Mark Hutchins on Apr 6 2021, 3:34pm

Scientists in the U.S. developed an aluminum battery that demonstrates better than 99.5% reversibility, and could offer "up to 10,000 error-free cycles". By incorporating a substrate of carbon fibers into the anode design, the group gained better control over chemical bonds that form as the battery charges, leading to greatly improved performance.

Read more »

Chinese PV Industry Brief: Longi expands into hydrogen, Eging PV secures 280 MW order

By Vincent Shaw on Apr 6 2021, 3:25pm

Monocrystalline module manufacturer Longi is venturing into new territory but missed out to its rival on two big panel orders from a state-owned power company.

Read more »

Uzbek government agrees to buy power from 200 MW solar plant

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 6 2021, 1:12pm

The solar park is being planned by UAE-based Phanes Group, in Nurata, in the Navoi region. It will sell electricity at a fixed rate over a 25-year period.

Read more »

UNIST, EPFL claim 25.6% efficiency world record for perovskite solar cell

By Emiliano Bellini on Apr 6 2021, 9:22am

Scientists have set a new efficiency record for a single-junction perovskite solar cell at 25.6%. The cell additionally showed operational stability for 450 hours, and intense electroluminescence with external quantum efficiencies of more than 10%.

Read more »

The weekend read: Enhanced solar module appearance and power output

By Jonathan Gifford on Apr 3 2021, 6:00amLongi cell surface

Enhanced module appearance and power output can be achieved by a smart cell interconnection technique Longi is employing in its Hi-MO5 module series. But as with all new technologies, there are potential pitfalls.

Read more »

Opinion & Analysis

Africa's solarized digitalization agenda

By SELVA OZELLI, ESQ., CPA

The seventh session of the Africa Regional Forum on Sustainable Development convened on the theme of "Building forward better towards a resilient and green Africa to achieve the 2030 & 2063 Agenda" and promote the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development.

Read more »

Innovations in battery storage key to a solar-powered future

By Radoslav Štompf, CEO, FUERGY

A few years ago, fluctuations and complex storage solutions were the main factors hampering solar growth. Today, the sector is poised to leverage technologies to make a decisive leap. With a sustainable future around the corner, it will be innovative battery storage that will drive solar PV to become more powerful and efficient than ever before. But what are the latest developments in PV and energy storage, and which innovations are poised to transform the industry?

Read more »
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