Follow the Science? The Greenest Energy Isn t Even Being Considered
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Here in the state of Texas, we’re currently experiencing a freak chill with temperatures that dropped well below the southern part of Alaska. Many residents have fled their homes due to not having any power to heat, thanks to the fact that Texas has made around a quarter of its power source “green energy,” mostly in the form of wind farms.
As Tucker Carlson pointed out last night, Texas shouldn’t be having an energy problem at all. The state of Texas is the largest source of natural gas in the world. He likened running out of power in Texas to starving in a grocery store and pointed out that you can only do that on purpose.
Rapid population growth in many African countries plus climate change has focused attention on the increased development of groundwater for irrigation and drinking water supplies.
Published February 14, 2021, 9:40 AM
The Department of Science and Technology – Philippine Council for Industry, Energy and Emerging Technology Research and Development (DOST-PCIEERD) and the Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU) have launched the Philippine Groundwater Outlook (PhiGO) website, which seeks to mitigate the adverse impacts of flood and drought in selected areas in the country.
This was disclosed by DOST Secretary Fortunato de la Peña in his weekly report on Friday, Feb. 12.
According to him, researchers from the AdMU, with the support from DOST-PCIEERD, have developed a decision support system in monitoring the groundwater quality and quantity in nine highly urbanized water critical cities in the country.
A new study has revealed that Wiltshire’s world-famous Stonehenge Neolithic monument may have originally been situated in Wales and then moved to Salisbury Plain more than 5,000 years ago. In a new documentary on BBC 2 Television tonight, BBC Two s Stonehenge: The Lost Circle Revealed, Stonehenge expert Professor Mike Parker Pearson reveals his new theory on where Stonehenge originally came from and why it was moved to Wiltshire. He says that hidden below the ground on a stunning Welsh mountainside is the answer to one of the last remaining secrets of Stonehenge. Under a former peat bog is the proof that the iconic World Heritage site is in fact a second-hand monument which was moved 180 miles to Wiltshire.