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Here’s a great article in The Economist that covers what China is (and isn’t) doing to put an end to the world’s consumption of coal, by far the most toxic source of energy. 

From the piece: China has good reason to prioritise the climate. Some of its biggest cities, including Shanghai, lie on the coast and could be swallowed by rising seas. The arid north lacks drinking water. And extreme weather is already taking a toll. Last year deaths associated with heatwaves in China increased by 343% compared with the historical average, according to a study published by the Lancet, a medical journal.  This summer floods damaged much of China’s wheat crop.

This calls to mind the reason we have this problem in the first place: money, and the fact that each of the world’s 200+ sovereign nations is essentially on its own to prioritize, fund, and implement its own climate change mitigation strategies.

China Lies at the Crux of the Effort to Mitigate Climate Change

Renewable Energy

Kelsey Grammer May Run for Office

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I can’t see it, if he means a national office.  Why? He’s an ardent and outspoken Trump supporter.

Support of Trump wasn’t a political non-starter until his second term, but now the screwworm and the algae in the Reflecting Pool have higher approval ratings.

Kelsey Grammer May Run for Office

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Renewable Energy

Trump and Vandalism

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I thought the cartoon below was clever.

Makes us wonder how much more appetite Americans have for this insanity.

Trump and Vandalism

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Renewable Energy

“The End Game?” The End of What? Organized Society?

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From “Mechanical Engineers Rock”:
Mary Barra has consistently maintained that electric vehicles represent the long-term future of the automotive industry.
Despite fluctuations in EV demand and market conditions, General Motors continues investing heavily in battery technology, vehicle platforms, charging networks, and manufacturing capacity.  The company views electrification as a central pillar of its future product strategy.
The auto industry can morph, at whatever speed it chooses, to electric transportation.  A prudent CEO needs to keep customer demand front of mind throughout this process.
Big Oil, on the other hand, is in a fight for its life, and needs to actively suppress the idea that fossil fuels are having a horrific effect on the climate, human health, and any hope for world peace.
If we’re not willing to make these industries pay the price of cleaning up after themselves, the environment will continue to degrade past the point of no return.

https://www.2greenenergy.com/2026/06/26/the-end-game-the-end-of-what-organized-society/

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