Climate in the 21st Century

Will Humankind see the 22nd Century?

  • Not a fucking chance

    Votes: 41 28.5%
  • Maybe. if we get our act together

    Votes: 35 24.3%
  • Yes, we will survive

    Votes: 68 47.2%

  • Total voters
    144

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/3546066-did-the-supreme-court-just-tell-the-senate-to-abolish-the-filibuster/

i'd like to not like this article, but he seems to be correct.
the senate has ducked their responsibilities for a long time now, looking for scapegoats to point at while they do nothing.
time to get them back to work. the EPA is supposed to advise
https://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/our-mission-and-what-we-do
third point in their mission statement is
EPA works to assure "Federal laws protecting human health and the environment are administered and enforced fairly, effectively and as Congress intended."

they aren't supposed to be making laws, they're supposed to be making sure people follow the laws congress makes.
they are responsible for making those congress people on the appropriate committees aware of problems, and for advising them on available options to solve those problems.
Congress has to decide which of those options to follow, or not to follow.
 

GoatSoup

Well-Known Member
Floods in China, Oman, Switzerland, Australia, Philippines, and droughts in the western US??? Permafrost releasing vast amounts of methane and Congress dithers about because the Oil Oligarchs need to keep oil price up and coal co's (Manchin!) need to keep polluting.

It's not aliens it's Republicans and Dino's!
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
things like this give me hope.
https://scitechdaily.com/mit-physicists-discover-a-family-of-magic-superconducting-graphene-structures/

there are a lot of very smart kids out there, and they know what kind of future our couple of generations are leaving them to deal with.
there are going to be a lot of kids that hate their grand parents and great grand parents for not standing up and saving their future.
there are going to be a lot of heated discussions with parents, as well...generations of kids growing up knowing that we shit on them for our own comfort. i hope it inspires them to be better than us.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
https://bgr.com/science/mit-scientists-think-theyve-discovered-how-to-fully-reverse-climate-change/

they said this could be a plan B....fuck it, blow up some bubbles and send them bitches up now, give us a little breathing room.
I read about the idea years ago when Angel thought it up, he revolutionized telescope mirror making by developing spin casting, the glass was melted in a spinning furnace and as the glass cooled, it was at close to the correct concave shape because of centrifugal forces. This greatly reduced the expense, cooling time and grinding required to make large telescope mirrors.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Maybe they can wish for snow.
Texas grid operator calls on users to conserve power amid heatwave
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates the Lone Star State’s self-contained power grid, called on residents to voluntarily conserve power amid a heat wave Monday.

In an advisory Sunday, ERCOT appealed to residents and businesses to conserve power between 2 and 8 p.m. Monday. The operator warned of shortages in reserve power capacity during the same period, but said it did not expect any system-wide outages.

ERCOT is projecting a total of more than 79 gigawatts’ worth of demand over the course of the day, a new record. Compounding the demand, low winds are likely to place further strain on the grid, with wind power generation at less than 10 percent of capacity. Solar power, meanwhile, is far closer to full capacity, at 81 percent, according to ERCOT.

Meanwhile, parts of the state saw average temperatures of 110 to 114 degrees as much of the southern U.S. has seen the impact of a “heat dome” in recent days. This has been acutely felt in South Central Texas. The National Weather Service projected “dangerous heat” in the Austin/San Antonio region over the course of the day, appealing to locals to regularly check in on elderly family members and neighbors.

The advisory from ERCOT comes two months after the grid operator called on customers to conserve power over the weekend of May 13-15. Six power plants unexpectedly went down that Friday in the state, causing the loss of some 2.9 megawatts of power.

The challenges of a self-contained grid made national headlines in early 2021, when extreme winter weather knocked out the ERCOT grid. Grid operators have said the grid has made necessary adjustments since then, but former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D), who is challenging Gov. Greg Abbott (R) in November, has repeatedly raised the grid’s preparedness as an issue on the campaign trail.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Maybe they can wish for snow.
Texas grid operator calls on users to conserve power amid heatwave
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates the Lone Star State’s self-contained power grid, called on residents to voluntarily conserve power amid a heat wave Monday.

In an advisory Sunday, ERCOT appealed to residents and businesses to conserve power between 2 and 8 p.m. Monday. The operator warned of shortages in reserve power capacity during the same period, but said it did not expect any system-wide outages.

ERCOT is projecting a total of more than 79 gigawatts’ worth of demand over the course of the day, a new record. Compounding the demand, low winds are likely to place further strain on the grid, with wind power generation at less than 10 percent of capacity. Solar power, meanwhile, is far closer to full capacity, at 81 percent, according to ERCOT.

Meanwhile, parts of the state saw average temperatures of 110 to 114 degrees as much of the southern U.S. has seen the impact of a “heat dome” in recent days. This has been acutely felt in South Central Texas. The National Weather Service projected “dangerous heat” in the Austin/San Antonio region over the course of the day, appealing to locals to regularly check in on elderly family members and neighbors.

The advisory from ERCOT comes two months after the grid operator called on customers to conserve power over the weekend of May 13-15. Six power plants unexpectedly went down that Friday in the state, causing the loss of some 2.9 megawatts of power.

The challenges of a self-contained grid made national headlines in early 2021, when extreme winter weather knocked out the ERCOT grid. Grid operators have said the grid has made necessary adjustments since then, but former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D), who is challenging Gov. Greg Abbott (R) in November, has repeatedly raised the grid’s preparedness as an issue on the campaign trail.
ERCOT seems to be a misnomer...a more accurate acronym might be eucot or electric unreliability council of texas...their motto could be "killing the elderly and the poor, so you don't have to."
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Maybe they can wish for snow.
Texas grid operator calls on users to conserve power amid heatwave
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates the Lone Star State’s self-contained power grid, called on residents to voluntarily conserve power amid a heat wave Monday.

In an advisory Sunday, ERCOT appealed to residents and businesses to conserve power between 2 and 8 p.m. Monday. The operator warned of shortages in reserve power capacity during the same period, but said it did not expect any system-wide outages.

ERCOT is projecting a total of more than 79 gigawatts’ worth of demand over the course of the day, a new record. Compounding the demand, low winds are likely to place further strain on the grid, with wind power generation at less than 10 percent of capacity. Solar power, meanwhile, is far closer to full capacity, at 81 percent, according to ERCOT.

Meanwhile, parts of the state saw average temperatures of 110 to 114 degrees as much of the southern U.S. has seen the impact of a “heat dome” in recent days. This has been acutely felt in South Central Texas. The National Weather Service projected “dangerous heat” in the Austin/San Antonio region over the course of the day, appealing to locals to regularly check in on elderly family members and neighbors.

The advisory from ERCOT comes two months after the grid operator called on customers to conserve power over the weekend of May 13-15. Six power plants unexpectedly went down that Friday in the state, causing the loss of some 2.9 megawatts of power.

The challenges of a self-contained grid made national headlines in early 2021, when extreme winter weather knocked out the ERCOT grid. Grid operators have said the grid has made necessary adjustments since then, but former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D), who is challenging Gov. Greg Abbott (R) in November, has repeatedly raised the grid’s preparedness as an issue on the campaign trail.
Now if it were a democratic government in Texas, republicans would all be running their AC at full blast and turn every light on in their houses. They would try to bring down the grid in order to make the democrats look bad, even if it killed them or thousands. Chaos and disfunction are the name of game and only they can fix it.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Republican voters fucking themselves and everybody else for a fuzzyheaded "greater cause". Well enjoy the heat and dark, cause they is taken over and hoards of brown folks are at the borders and in war sacrifices have to be made!
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Let's talk about Texas, ERCOT, and the future....
 
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PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/3546066-did-the-supreme-court-just-tell-the-senate-to-abolish-the-filibuster/

i'd like to not like this article, but he seems to be correct.
the senate has ducked their responsibilities for a long time now, looking for scapegoats to point at while they do nothing.
time to get them back to work. the EPA is supposed to advise
https://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/our-mission-and-what-we-do
third point in their mission statement is
EPA works to assure "Federal laws protecting human health and the environment are administered and enforced fairly, effectively and as Congress intended."

they aren't supposed to be making laws, they're supposed to be making sure people follow the laws congress makes.
they are responsible for making those congress people on the appropriate committees aware of problems, and for advising them on available options to solve those problems.
Congress has to decide which of those options to follow, or not to follow.
Yep, regulatory agencies don't make laws, they enforce them. Now you're getting it.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Ercot sucks ass..106 to 108 and they want us to conserve.. :finger: there ya go ercot
It won't change very many republican's minds, they are part of a suicide cult, covid proved that. They would rather drink bottled water and shit in a hole in their backyard while living in the dark, than have responsible democratic government. I mean who needs electricity and public utilities like water and sewer, the brown people and liberals might git some then!

You gotta get yer priorities straight, abortion and the brown folks pouring across the southern border are more important than the basic necessities of life itself! Deep in the ass of Texas, chop chop chop... :o The people get the government they deserve, there's a lot of truth to that old saying.
 
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