Tag: europe

Africa powering Europe

Not a bad start. With DC all the way to Norway, they could of course play a colossal game of battery charging across the continent.

Europe is considering plans to spend more than £5b on a string of giant solar power stations along the Mediterranean desert shores of northern Africa and the Middle East. More than 100 of the generators, each fitted with 1000s of huge mirrors, would generate electricity to be transmitted by undersea cable to Europe and then distributed across the continent to European Union member nations, including Britain.

2017-06-19: Off-grid solar is making inroads in Africa.

Many Western entrepreneurs see solar power in Africa as a chance to reach a large market and make a substantial profit. This is a nascent industry, which, at the moment, represents a small % of the electrification in the region, and is mostly in rural areas. There’s plenty of uncertainty about its future, and no guarantee that it will spread at the pace of cell phones. Still, in the past 18 months, these businesses have brought electricity to 100Ks of consumers—many of them in places that the grid failed to reach, despite a 100-year head start.

2018-09-10: It would also green the Sahara

Canada sized Solar and wind farms could make the Sahara Desert green again with 2x the rain. With enough solar panels, albedo increases enough to cause lots of extra rain.

2023-05-13: If solar is so cheap, why hasn’t it scaled in Sub-Saharan Africa? Because do-gooders are lying.

Scaling Solar continues to be paraded as an example that the MDBs can use billions of dollars of ODA to catalyze trillions of private sector investments needed to fund sustainability goals. The facts tell a different story. Every $1 of concessional financing catalyzed only 28 cents of private sector financing. Scaling Solar’s official messaging masqueraded a heavily subsidized development finance program as a private sector driven solution. Governments canceled existing solar contracts citing Zambia’s purportedly unsubsidized low tariffs. Developers left the space because the deal economics no longer made sense.Beyond distorting market signals, the messaging perpetuated the myth that solar can be funded by the private sector in lower-income countries. Solar isn’t scaling in poor countries. The cost of capital is too high.

The IFC could take 3 actionable steps to return to the original vision of the Scaling Solar initiative:

  1. Acknowledge that expanding clean power access will continue to rely heavily on concessional DFI lending and guarantees to reduce the cost of capital.
  2. Transparently report explicit and implicit subsidies.
  3. Innovate to enhance power contract transparency, empowering market participants to scrutinize pricing drivers and prevent the accumulation of large undisclosed public debts.

Europe railways

Whether through competition, co-operation or both, a plethora of European directives such as the “Railway Interoperability Directive” and the “Third Railway Package” will encourage the emergence of this new era of international rail travel. Rail bosses note that on 6-hour journeys they are typically winning more than 60% of the leisure market from airlines. The same is happening with business travelers on 4-hour journeys. It may be a while before you can choose between a French TGV or a German ICE to ride to Bucharest or even Naples. But as when Lenin sped in his sealed carriage through war-torn Germany 90 years ago, the train of revolution has left the station.

london – paris at 2:20. suck it, airlines.

Dutch regression

Orthodox Christian members of parliament have introduced a bill that would allow civil officials with moral objections to refuse to perform gay marriages. And Dutch authorities are trying to curtail the activities of an abortion rights group that assists women in neighboring countries where abortions are illegal.

prime example of voter bias as defined by bryan caplan

Street View Paranoia

The Drudge Report, that early-warning system for democracy, is now using a screencap of someone peering out of a living room window as his top image. If that didn’t scare you, the banner headline might: SMILE, YOU’RE ON GOOGLE EARTH!

wow, the retards have discovered street view.
2008-04-10:

Google Australia is expected within months to launch an application that will publish highly detailed, street-level photos of much of Australia, in a move that has drawn strong criticism from privacy advocates.

While Google has defended the project, the internet company baulked when The Weekend Australian requested the personal details and addresses of the group’s key figures to allow the paper’s photographers to take pictures of their homes.

it’s luddite season again!
2008-07-30:

The report also includes the distance from the street to the executive’s front door, the most likely driving route the executive would take to Google’s Mountain View headquarters and photos of the stop signs, stoplights and intersections the executive would pass along the way. The Center is publicly releasing the document today to highlight the invasiveness of these Google technologies to individual privacy.

who are these assclowns?

What is it about Europeans that makes them so susceptible to populist arguments in favor of expectations of privacy in a public space? In Europe, Street View is getting a steady onslaught of negative publicity, mainly instigated by populist newspapers, about the evils of taking photography in a public place and publishing it. What a strange concept: Government officials complaining that a company is observing the law, but that they don’t like it anyway.

2010-08-23:

Geht es allerdings um Googles fotografierenden Fuhrpark, klingt Konstantin von Notz plötzlich so, als sei er frisch einer kommunistischen Kaderschmiede entsprungen: Google stelle “monopolartig” den “kompletten öffentlichen Raum” dauerhaft und “aus kommerziellen Interessen” ins Netz, schimpft er dann und fordert “eine Beteiligung der Öffentlichkeit an den Gewinnen”. Hui! Da kommt einfach dieser Internet-Konzern aus einem fernen Land und verdient Geld mit Abbildern des öffentlichen Raums? Ohne zu fragen? Also in etwa so, wie Postkarten- oder Reiseführer-Verlage? Das geht natürlich nicht! Enteignen! Notz ist in bester Gesellschaft, beim Wettbewerb um die höchste Punktzahl auf der nach oben offenen Streetview-Hysterie-Skala.

the real reason germany is so nuts about street view: it exposes the widespread technological illiteracy in europe.

Farm Subsidies

Shining light on the biggest waste of taxpayer money ever.
2007-04-04: In celebration of the new annotated Google Maps, I have created 2 maps that show your taxes at work:

Top EU CAP farm subsidy in the UK: $700 millionTop USDA farm subsidy in the US: $541 million

The top recipient of EU CAP farm subsidies in the UK got $700M, the top recipient of USDA farm subsidies in the US got $541M.

2007-08-28: Nice complement to my pork mapshop maps.
2007-11-08: This is why I make farm subsidy maps 🙂

eliminating farm subsidies in the first world and liberalizing trade would produce annual benefits of $2.4t, with 50% of that accruing to the third world.

2008-06-10: Nice! They now have their own maps, starting with Sweden. Fight the pork.

€100B subsidy transparency

wow

the biggest release of information held by governments to the public and the media since the creation of the European Union. All 27 EU countries will disclose data revealing details of some €100bn given in subsidies by the Eurotaxpayer every year to farmers, food companies, industrial regeneration schemes and the fishing industry, from the Black Sea resorts in Bulgaria and Romania to the Canary Islands and Madeira.

Don’t Arrest Andrea!

Andrea Sandberg is a female graphics designer living quite close to where I grew up. She has a past as an officer in the Swiss navy, but recently decided to aim for a career as an artist. But she does a bit of consulting for the biotech company Pentapod Corporation. Andrea is fictional, a persona I use when I have to sign up for websites and do not feel like disclosing my personal information. No doubt she has millions of relatives, many living at zipcodes such as 123 45 or with email addresses like foo@foo.no. But a new EU proposal will seek to outlaw using fake information to set up email accounts or websites,