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Old 17-11-2021, 08:17   #16
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Re: In The News

Hmmm...
What about route in north, Jasper to Pacific Ocean atPrince Rupert (rail, and road open according to DriveBC)? Also a connection with CN Rail Prince George to Vancouver via Squamish (old BC Rail)?
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Old 18-11-2021, 02:53   #17
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Re: In The News

One of Ivermectin’s biggest promoters, Dr. Pierre Kory, a critical care doctor based in Wisconsin, claimed to take the drug weekly, last December, during a U.S. Senate hearing.
Eight months later, he contracted Covid-19, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported [1] on Wednesday.

Kory has not publicly stated if he is vaccinated against the disease.

Ivermectin's use as a Covid-19 treatment has been widely discredited by doctors and researchers alike.
As of November 14, 2021, there have been 1,924 reported cases of ivermectin poisoning, across the country, compared to 529 within the first 10 months of 2019 [over 3.5 times more], reports the AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF POISON CONTROL CENTERS [2].

[1] “In a long line of medical conspiracy theories, ivermectin is the latest to seduce many, including Aaron Rodgers”
https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/...ry/8473964002/

[2] AAPCC NPDS Bulletin ➥ https://piper.filecamp.com/uniq/4r22HIv3moDWIWRH.pdf
ivermectin poisoning Journal Sentinel
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Old 19-11-2021, 12:50   #18
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Re: In The News

The world's first fully electric and self-steering container ship, owned by fertiliser maker Yara, is preparing to navigate Norway's southern coast and play its part in the country's plans to clean-up its industry.

The Yara Birkeland, an 80-metre-long (87 yards) so-called feeder, is set to replace lorry haulage between Yara's plant in Porsgrunn in southern Norway and its export port in Brevik, about 14 km (8.7 miles) away by road, starting next year.

It will cut 1,000 tonnes of carbon emissions per year, equivalent to 40,000 diesel-powered journeys by road, and is expected to be fully autonomous in two years.
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Old 21-11-2021, 02:19   #19
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Re: In The News

In a single week
A timeline of how once-in-a-century flooding unfolded across British Columbia.

In a matter of days, extreme rain swamped rivers and farmland across southern B.C. and triggered mudslides that blocked every major highway connecting the Lower Mainland to the rest of the country.

Nearly 20,000 people have been forced to abandon their homes and thousands of animals have died. Dozens of volunteers have stepped up to help their communities however they can.

It has been one of the most severe natural disasters to strike British Columbia in a generation, even after a year that has brought crisis after crisis [heat-wave, drought, wildfire]. The sheer scope of the damage has been difficult to comprehend.

This is a timeline of the first week, from storm touchdown to early clean-up, of a disaster which has effects that will reverberate across the province for months to come.

Timeline ➥ https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/long...oding-unfolded


In pictures: Floods, mudslides bring chaos to Canada’s British Columbia
https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/20...itish-columbia


Meanwhile:
Environment Canada is warning that another rain storm is headed for British Columbia's North Coast.

A weather system associated with an atmospheric river will bring heavy rain, strong southerly winds and rapidly rising freezing levels beginning today. The heavy rain will ease on Monday morning.

Rainfall amounts of 100 to 150 mm are expected for Prince Rupert by Monday morning. Rainfall amounts of 30 to 60 mm are forecast for Haida Gwaii.

Impacts: Flooding could result from the heavy rain. Landslides could occur.

More ➥ https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canad...qyP?li=AAggNb9

Alert ➥ https://www.weather.gc.ca/warnings/report_e.html?bc49

Forecast ➥ https://weather.gc.ca/forecast/publi...in=fpcn12.cwvr
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Old 22-11-2021, 03:24   #20
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Re: In The News

US added to annual list of ‘backsliding’ democracies

The United States has been added to an annual list of “backsliding” democracies for the first time, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance NGO has said [1], pointing to a “visible deterioration” that began in 2019.

The Stockholm-based organisation [IDEA] makes its annual assessment using 50 years of democratic indicators.
It places about 160 countries into three categories: democracies, including “backsliding” democracies; “hybrid” governments; and authoritarian regimes.

Globally, the report [1] said more than one in four people live in a “backsliding” democracy, while two-thirds of the world live in either a “backsliding” democracy, “hybrid” or authoritarian regimes.

In 2020 there were 98 democracies in the world, 20 “hybrid” governments, including Russia, Morocco, and Turkey, and 47 authoritarian regimes, which include China, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, and Iran.

[1] “Global State of Democracy 2021" ~ International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance [IDEA]
Quote:
Originally Posted by IDEA
The world is becoming more authoritarian as non-democratic regimes become even more brazen in their repression and many democratic governments suffer from backsliding by adopting their tactics of restricting free speech and weakening the rule of law, exacerbated by what threatens to become a "new normal" of Covid-19 restrictions. For the fifth consecutive year, the number of countries moving in an authoritarian direction exceeds the number of countries moving in a democratic direction. In fact, the number moving in the direction of authoritarianism is three times the number moving towards democracy...
About ➥ https://www.idea.int/gsod/

Full Report ➥ https://www.idea.int/gsod/sites/defa...acy-2021_0.pdf

See also, Regional Reports (‘About’ link)
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Old 23-11-2021, 04:42   #21
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Re: In The News

Incoming 'parade of storms' bad news for flood-soaked B.C.

Warnings come after devastating floods, mudslides that displaced thousands.

A "parade of storms" headed for southwest British Columbia could worsen flooding and mudslide conditions within the week, according to the meteorologist responsible for warning preparedness at Environment and Climate Change Canada.

Much more ➥ https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...erts-1.6257938


Damage and repairs could make B.C. floods Canada’s most expensive natural disaster

While it will still be some time before B.C. officials can provide preliminary estimates as to how much it will cost to repair the damage from this week’s flooding, it could be the most expensive natural disaster in Canadian history.
Highway bridges need to be replaced, sections of rail lines relaid, and entire communities need to be rebuilt, meaning the cost of the flooding is expected to be unprecedented in B.C.’s history.
More ➥ https://globalnews.ca/news/8388250/b...adian-history/


Before the floods came this summer's heat dome and wildfires. The extreme heat killed nearly 600 people in B.C. between June 18 and August 12 — the deadliest weather event in Canadian history. On June 29, Lytton, B.C. registered the highest temperature ever recorded in Canada. The next day, a wildfire consumed the entire town.



Meanwhile:
Climate specialists say a major overhaul of infrastructure, in communities across Canada, is needed to make homes, buildings, roads, and rail lines more resilient to extreme weather events, as climate change makes those events more likely.

"Infrastructure decisions in Canada are not accounting for a changing climate," said Ryan Ness, research director for adaptation at the Canadian Institute for Climate Choices.

An engineer, Ness is lead author of a recent report [1] that found if there are not significant investments now to make infrastructure more resilient, Canada could see $13 billion in flooding damage yearly, by the end of the century.

Changes are necessary at the individual, and government levels, ranging from simple home retrofits, ensuring functioning sump-pumps, to regulations requiring disclosure of climate change risks for major projects.

Protecting the green space, that acts as a natural defence against extreme weather, is also crucial. Wetlands, for instance, help keep down temperatures, during heat waves, and help drain runoff, during intense periods of rain.

[1]UNDER WATER: The Cost of Climate Change for Canada’s Infrastructure” ~ Canadian Institute for Climate Choices
https://climatechoices.ca/wp-content...INAL-Sep29.pdf
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Old 24-11-2021, 02:14   #22
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Re: In The News

Einstein’s notes on theory of relativity fetch $13M at Christie’s

A manuscript co-authored by Albert Einstein, offering a rare insight into the legendary physicist’s thinking leading up to his general theory of relativity, was sold in an auction on Tuesday for 11.7 million euros ($13.17m).

Auction house Christie’s had estimated the value of the manuscript at between 2 million ($2.25m) and 3 million euros ($3.38m).

The 54 pages of paper, around half filled with Einstein’s handwriting, are one of only two working documents known in which the thinker approaches his famous theory that laid the groundwork for modern cosmology and technology such as global positioning system (GPS) navigation.

They had been kept in the custody of the Swiss physicist Michele Besso, a close friend and academic partner of Einstein’s, who co-authored the work between 1913 and 1914.

Made up mainly of endless calculations in black ink on wrinkled, lightly yellowed paper, the manuscript challenges Einstein’s popular image as an absolute genius, because it shows that even he – at least sometimes – made mistakes.

In May, a handwritten letter in which Einstein mentioned his famous E=mc² equation, a part of his earlier theory of special relativity, was sold at roughly one million euros in the United States, more than three times its estimated price.

The Einstein-Besso Manuscript ➥ https://www.christies.com/en/auction...Viewing%20room

From 1996 ➥ https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-1105382

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-59392771
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Old 25-11-2021, 03:39   #23
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Re: In The News

Offshore Wind Energy

Just one year ago, there were no large-scale offshore wind projects, approved in the federal waters of the United States.

Today there are two, with several more on the horizon.

As part of the Biden-Harris administration’s goal to deploy 30 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind energy by 2030, the Department of the Interior announced [1] it has approved the construction and operations of the South Fork Wind project offshore Rhode Island.

This represents the Department’s second approval of a commercial-scale, offshore wind energy project in the United States. Last week, Secretary Haaland celebrated the groundbreaking [2] of the first commercial scale offshore wind project, located off the coast of Massachusetts.

[1] “Interior Department Approves Second Major Offshore Wind Project in U.S. Federal Waters” ~ DOI Press Release
https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/in...federal-waters

[2] “Secretary Haaland, Massachusetts Leaders Celebrate Groundbreaking of Nation’s First Commercial Offshore Wind Project in Federal Waters” ~ DOI
https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/se...-nations-first

Associated Press Reporting:

“Interior Department approves 2nd large US offshore wind farm”
https://apnews.com/article/business-...f62c4f622731e9

“Work starting on 1st commercial-scale US offshore wind farm”
https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden...acfa8dd0975c02

“New wind farms would dot US coastlines under Biden plan”
https://apnews.com/article/business-...a02e524e7f6441
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Old 01-12-2021, 04:08   #24
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Re: In The News

World Health Assembly agrees to launch process to develop historic global accord on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response ~ WHO, December 1/21

In a consensus decision aimed at protecting the world from future infectious diseases crises, the World Health Assembly today agreed to kickstart a global process to draft and negotiate a convention, agreement or other international instrument under the Constitution of the World Health Organization to strengthen pandemic prevention, preparedness and response.

The Health Assembly met in a Special Session, the second-ever since WHO’s founding in 1948, and adopted a sole decision titled: “The World Together.” The decision by the Assembly establishes an intergovernmental negotiating body (INB) to draft and negotiate a WHO convention, agreement, or other international instrument on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response, with a view to adoption under Article 19 of the WHO Constitution, or other provisions of the Constitution as may be deemed appropriate by the INB.

More from WHO ➥ https://www.who.int/news/item/01-12-...s-and-response


WHO agrees to launch talks on pact to tackle pandemics
Dec 1 (Reuters) - The World Health Organization (WHO) agreed on Wednesday to launch negotiations on an international pact to prevent and control future pandemics at a time when the world is gearing up to battle the new Omicron variant of coronavirus.
The decision, entitled "The World Together", was adopted by consensus at a special assembly of the 194 nations that are members of the U.N. health body, drawing applause at the end of a three-day meeting.
https://www.reuters.com/business/hea...on-2021-12-01/
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Old 04-12-2021, 02:28   #25
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Re: In The News

New California law affirms Indigenous right to controlled burns

In 1918, a US forest ranger suggested shooting people who started fires. Now, a new law [1] affirms a right to ‘good fire’.

Overgrown forests and increasingly destructive wildfires are the legacy of more than a century of fire suppression policy in California. Historically, state laws held people liable for damages if they started a fire that burned out of control.

But a new California law [1] will remove the liability risk for private citizens and Indigenous people who set controlled burns, which are low-intensity fires proven to prevent catastrophic blazes. The law marks a paradigm shift in the United States, where in the pre-settler era, Indigenous people regularly set small fires to take care of the landscape.

More about ➥ https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/...ntrolled-burns

[1] “Senate Bill No. 332" https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/f...202120220SB332


*** AND ***

People, climate change make even forests carbon emitters

Land clearance and deforestation, as well as forest fires of increasing scale and severity, meant the forests released more carbon into the air than they stored, the study [2] by UNESCO, the World Resources Institute, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) found.

Among the World Heritage forests contributing to emissions were the Sumatran rainforest, the Kinabalu Park in Malaysian Borneo, and the Blue Mountains in Australia.
Yosemite and the Grand Canyon in the United States were also net emitters.

More about ➥ https://www.iucn.org/news/secretaria...arbon-emitters

[2] “World Heritage forests : Carbon sinks under pressure” ~ by Carvalho Resende Tales et al
https://portals.iucn.org/library/sit...021-034-En.pdf
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Old 08-12-2021, 01:57   #26
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Re: In The News

Comet "Leonard" [C/2021 A1] is now visible with binoculars. By this weekend, it could be seen by the naked eye, in rural areas.

Right now, the comet is visible in the Northern Hemisphere, in the eastern sky, to people using binoculars, from anywhere in Canada in the early pre-dawn morning [±6:00 AM].

It's expected to get brighter and closer to the horizon every morning until Saturday, Dec. 11.

On Sunday, Dec. 12, the comet should make its closest approach to Earth, then disappear the next day for Northern Hemisphere viewers.

It's expected to return Monday after sunset, as it heads away from the Earth toward the sun, getting fainter over the following weeks.

The comet formed about 4.5 billion years ago, and comes from about 550 billion kilometres away, or 3,700 times the distance between the sun and the Earth.
It's been inbound, toward the inner solar system, for the past 35,000 years.

More ➥ https://astrogeo.ca/comet-leonard-lo...ids-germinate/



This map of the sky at 6 a.m. (no matter where you are in Canada) shows where to look for Comet Leonard this week. It's based on a diagram created by Chris Vaughan with the software Stellarium for his blog Astronomy Skylights on his website, AstroGeo
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Old 08-12-2021, 02:45   #27
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Re: In The News

Climate change will cost us billions — and then it will get even worse

Ontario’s financial accountability officer, Peter Weltman, released a report [1], on Tuesday morning, about the looming costs of climate change, to provincial government infrastructure, and how that will affect how much the government spends, where it spends it, and for what purpose.

The FAO projects that, if the province takes no additional measures to adapt its buildings to climate-change impacts, it’ll have to spend at least $43 billion to maintain a state of good repair by the end of the century, even in the rosiest, lowest-emission climate scenario.
In a much warmer world, where governments don’t meaningfully constrain greenhouse-gas emissions, the cost could be as high as $116 billion.

How much we invest in adapting to climate change is an important topic, and one that government is going to need to decide on one way or another — in this case, as in so many others, not deciding is still a decision.
But it’s worth putting the spotlight on something else we can glean from the FAO’s copious charts and tables: the amount of climate change we allow is going to be the primary driver of how much we spend on adaptation. In the FAO’s projections, the increment between the low-emissions and high-emissions scenarios, is always many times larger, than the difference between the reactive and proactive adaptation scenarios.

This means that, while proactively hardening our infrastructure against likely climate impacts will probably be a wiser investment, than doing it reactively and slowly, the wisest investment of all for the government would be to do everything within its power to keep global warming to a minimum.

Even if the government chooses the most proactive adaptation policy, the difference between a low-emissions scenario, and a high-emissions scenario is around $70 billion, the kind of sum that governments usually say they care about spending judiciously.

We should be wary of anyone claiming that action to prevent climate change is too expensive — because the costs of inaction will surely be higher.

More about ➥ https://www.therecord.com/ts/politic...ven-worse.html

And ➥ https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toron...ance-1.6276542

Media Statement ~ by Peter Weltman, Ontario’s Financial Accountability Officer
https://www.fao-on.org/en/Blog/media/MS-cipi

[1] “Costing Climate Change Impacts to Public Infrastructure Project:
Assessing the financial impacts of extreme rainfall, extreme heat and freeze-thaw cycles on public buildings in Ontario”
~ by the Financial Accountability Office of Ontario

Over the long term, the extent of global climate change will influence the severity of these climate hazards and their impacts to public buildings. In a medium emissions scenario,[6] the cumulative cost of maintaining the existing portfolio of public buildings in a state of good repair will increase by $66 billion (8.2 per cent increase over baseline), or $0.8 billion per year on average over the rest of the 21st century. However, in a high emissions scenario,[7] cumulative costs would increase by $116 billion (14.5 per cent increase over baseline), or $1.5 billion per year on average over the rest of the century. These results reflect higher capital expenses from accelerated deterioration and higher O&M expenses.

Report ➥ https://www.fao-on.org/en/Blog/Publi...cipi-buildings
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Old 09-12-2021, 01:04   #28
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Re: In The News

Niagara Falls Rescue


The world watched Wednesday, as a Coast Guard rescue swimmer was lowered into the Niagara River, less than 50 metres from the precipitous edge of Niagara Falls, in a bid to rescue the lone occupant of a car, that had plunged into the frigid, fast-flowing water.

A woman in her late 60s, the lone occupant of the dark-coloured vehicle, was extracted — but pronounced dead on scene.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Derrian Duryea, a Detroit-based rescue swimmer, descended from a hovering helicopter, climbed into the car, and pulled out the body of its lone occupant.

After the rescue, the vehicle remained about 50 yards (meters) from the brink of the American Falls, one of three waterfalls that make up Niagara Falls.

More ➥ https://www.cp24.com/news/u-s-coast-...alls-1.5699064


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Old 12-12-2021, 03:09   #29
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Re: In The News

Google released it's 2021 ‘Year In Search’ report [1] on December 8, 2021. It shows the number one search terms, for this calendar year. Google presents it as an interactive webpage, and you can learn more about a search trend, by clicking it.

More About ➥ https://www.xda-developers.com/googl...n-search-2021/

[1] “Year in Search 2021" ~ Google Trends
U.S.A. ➥ https://trends.google.com/trends/yis/2021/US/
Canada ➥ https://trends.google.com/trends/yis/2021/CA/
World ➥ https://about.google/stories/year-in-search-2021/
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Old 12-12-2021, 12:42   #30
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Re: In The News

This is awsome.. About the comet..
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