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'I felt like I was about to die': survivors of Hurricane Milton tell their stories – video
Some Florida residents rode out Hurricane Milton despite evacuation orders, staying in their homes after the second major hurricane in two weeks. Milton slammed into Florida as a category 3 storm, killing at least 10 people, spawning tornadoes and leaving more than 3 million homes and businesses without power
Continue reading...Call for Australia to make wind turbine towers as well as solar PV and battery storage
The post Call for Australia to make wind turbine towers as well as solar PV and battery storage appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Energy Insiders Podcast: A spring full of renewable and battery records
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: A spring full of renewable and battery records appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Big batteries have already put an end to minimum demand shocks in Australia’s most vulnerable grid
The post Big batteries have already put an end to minimum demand shocks in Australia’s most vulnerable grid appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Why hurricanes like Milton in the US and cyclones in Australia are becoming more intense and harder to predict
“All over the shop:” State Coalition leaders join push to stymie renewables, prop up fossil fuels
The post “All over the shop:” State Coalition leaders join push to stymie renewables, prop up fossil fuels appeared first on RenewEconomy.
WCI Markets: CCA secondary market activity intensifies awaiting ARB next steps
Can wind propulsion technology really help power modern ships?
The post Can wind propulsion technology really help power modern ships? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Hurricane Milton: US Coast Guard rescues man clinging to ice chest in Gulf of Mexico – video
The man was aboard a fishing vessel that became disabled off Madeira Beach, Florida, hours before Hurricane Milton made landfall, a Coast Guard press officer says. The man was able to radio the Coast Guard in nearby St Petersburg before contact was lost
Continue reading...Brown bear in Kent recovering well after UK-first brain surgery
Conservation trust says Boki ‘not out of the woods’ yet but doing well after operation to drain buildup of fluid
A brown bear that underwent brain surgery in the first operation of its kind in the UK is doing well but is “not out of the woods” yet, a charity has said.
Boki went under the knife on Wednesday after an MRI scan revealed he had hydrocephalus, a buildup of fluid in the brain.
Continue reading...Industry members call for strengthened 45Q incentives to support CCS
Activating investment in Chilean carbon projects will require ‘signals of clarity,’ IETA rep says
INTERVIEW: US SAF deployment slowed by regulatory inefficiencies
PREVIEW: Next US administration to determine future path of domestic, international environmental policy focus
US DOE releases CO2 management strategy for remaining IIJA funding
Ikea owner takes another slice of Australia’s biggest wind project
Ikea owner signs up for another stake in Australia's biggest wind project as production ramps up.
The post Ikea owner takes another slice of Australia’s biggest wind project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
What's next for Elon Musk's SpaceX Starship rocket?
A patchwork of spinifex: how we returned cultural burning to the Great Sandy Desert
The Guardian view on Hurricane Milton and other disasters: extreme politics is worsening extreme weather | Editorial
Climate change deniers such as Florida’s Ron DeSantis lament the impact of such events but won’t acknowledge the underlying problem
The preparations for Hurricane Milton were on a mammoth scale, as the clean-up will be. The storm thankfully lost some of its force before it slammed into Florida, making landfall on Wednesday night as a category 3 hurricane. But many more lives would surely have been lost without the massive evacuation and the deployment of thousands of national guard troops and personnel from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
This was the second direct hit on the state in less than a fortnight, after Hurricane Helene, which killed at least 225 people in the US. The hotter ocean temperatures which worsened these storms are hundreds of times likelier because of human-made global heating, a new analysis has shown. Climate change may have increased the rain dumped on parts of the south by Helene by 50%, scientists believe. Another study has suggested such double punches could arrive every three years thanks to the continuing burning of fossil fuels.
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