Wednesday

7 out of 10 based on 14 ratings

109 comments to Wednesday

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    Office of Nuclear Energy
    5 Ways the U.S. Nuclear Energy Industry Is Evolving in 2024
    September 30, 2024

    Nuclear Complements Renewable Energy Sources

    “Finally, another key takeaway from the report is that building nuclear power plants along with renewables and storage is actually a cheaper way to decarbonize the grid than just nuclear or renewables alone.

    Nuclear energy can provide clean electricity during the most expensive hours when wind and solar are unavailable and also reduces the amount of generation capacity, storage, and transmission needed to ensure grid reliability.

    A diverse mix of clean firm generation, variable renewables, and energy storage creates the most cost-effective system.

    Across multiple power system models, pairing renewables and storage with nuclear energy could lead to a ~37% reduction in generation and transmission system costs.”

    https://www.energy.gov/ne/articles/5-ways-us-nuclear-energy-industry-evolving-2024

    This really is BIG and Dutton should run with it especially knowing that we have AUKUS (if it actually does happen) and the Lucas Heights Nuclear Reactor.

    Albo and Blackout Bowen and the entire LayBore Party are Luddites.

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    David Maddison

    More climate “science”.

    They ship 19,000 tonnes of wood chips from Canada and dump them into Icelandic waters for “carbon capture”.

    https://www.halifaxexaminer.ca/commentary/nova-scotia-wood-chips-dumped-into-iceland-coastal-waters-and-called-carbon-capture/

    Nova Scotia wood chips dumped into Iceland coastal waters and called ‘carbon capture’

    by Joan Baxter
    June 27, 2024

    SEE LINK FOR REST.

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      DM – good spot!
      Looks like the guy has scammed various folk – including the good souls from Microsoft.

      Oh dear. What a pity. Never mind.

      Whilst it is possible Marty Odlin [for it is he!] has not enriched himself, I doubt if that’s where the smart money has gone.

      Just remember P.T. Barnum’s wise words – “There’s one born every minute!”

      Auto

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      TdeF

      I have always been amazed that alleged scientists have no idea that CO2 is in rapid equilibrium, the vapour pressure of CO2 set by air pressure, concentration and temperature. CO2 enters and leaves the water in incredible volumes. In a Laboratory this really obvious phenomenon is covered by Henry’s Law.

      So people, alleged Climate Scientists, ecologists tell us humans who output a record of only 1% of atmospheric CO2 each year can change CO2 levels? That’s nuts. 10% of all atmospheric CO2 goes in and out of the ocean each year. And slight warming increases CO2 levels.

      It’s all in the graph of CO2.
      https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/top/523651/carbon-dioxide-levels-reach-another-new-record-at-niwa-s-monitoring-site-on-wellington-s-coast
      Humans have no impact at all on the graph of CO2. ‘Emissions’ are utterly inconsequential, as China knows.

      The ONLY science question is why isn’t the dead straight line perfectly horizontal ? And the answer is slight warming of the ocean surface related to peaking solar activity( DeVries cycle) and slight warming from peaking AMO/PDO ocean circulation. And you can prove from radio carbon dating that the fossil fuel content of the carbon dioxide is only 2.0%. There is no counter to this direct measurement.

      This completely fake story of carbon capture, sequestration, emissions is enshrined in many Australian Laws for 25 years, robbing us all. It’s not science. It’s never been debated and the politicians and the press refuse to even talk about it. Why?

      And everyone’s onboard with the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the people of Australia. At least before The Voice.

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    Sorry – intended as a supplement to #1 – Johnny Rotten.

    “A diverse mix of clean firm generation, variable renewables, and energy storage creates the most cost-effective system.”
    Hmmm.
    Clean firm generation, alone, would be cheaper – no need for endless rows of pylons from where [it is hoped] the wind blows to where the juice is needed, for a start.
    And, also, no Chinese-made – although obviously utterly secure – bat-busters or slaver-panels.

    And batteries at half a billion per Gigawatt-hour … ??
    Really??

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      I tend to agree but now that the Wind Towers and Solar Panels are already here then let’s use them in conjunction with Nuclear Energy.

      Australia should dig up all the Coal that it can and export it. The country needs the export income to pay for all the other stuff. Same for Gas except that enough Gas should be set aside for Domestic use. WA already does this. It works.

      With Australia getting back to cheaper electricity, the Country can get Manufacturing back and start processing those raw materials and adding value. Processing Rare Earths should be a “No Brainer” really. Hey, the Country could even enrich the Yellow Cake and add value.

      The potential money spinners are there for the taking IMHO.

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        “I tend to agree but now that the Wind Towers and Solar Panels are already here then let’s use them in conjunction with Nuclear Energy.”
        Okay – those that exist and are connected – even if not reliable.
        As you know, even in the absence of heavy hail, their lifespan is limited – might TPTB recognise that?

        Auto

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        Chad

        Johnny Rotten
        October 2, 2024 at 2:22 am · Reply
        I tend to agree but now that the Wind Towers and Solar Panels are already here then let’s use them in conjunction with Nuclear Energy.

        Not quite that simple …
        What happens when there is one of those “wind drought’s” at 6 pm or6 am ?
        There needs to be enough “dispatchable” electricity (Nuclear) to cover those periods..IE, 100% supply at peak periods. So you either have huge amounts of storage (impractical) , or full 100% Nuclear capacity…which means tthere is no justification for the wind or solar, which will need replacement soon anyway !

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          Graeme4

          I have noted that WA’s SWIS grid wind was regularly disappearing each evening, starting around 6:30 pm, the peak evening time, and not reappearing until the next morning. So gas and coal had to do all the heavy lifting overnight, night after night.

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      Graeme4

      I believe that a large-scale battery would cost around $1bn/GWh. The reason for this belief is that often these battery costs are amortised over many years and are partly based on usage payment agreements, which surely must increase over time. Naturally these costs are claimed as “commercial in confidence “, so the actual final costs of these batteries may never be known.

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    David Maddison

    The looming disaster in Australia’s mobile phone system.

    The regulators and the telcos have no clue what they are doing, they don’t even understand the technology they are trying to regulate or use.

    There must be some DEI there somewhere.

    This is very important and little known.

    Please watch the video. (14.5 mins)

    https://youtu.be/RPlTz-3estM

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      Earl

      Be afraid. Be very afraid. If (embedded video) James’ claim that he is the only one who initially identified the pending disaster is correct then he is also the pin up boy for stopping the mis/dis information bill. A sole voice flagging his thoughts on an issue would probably be relegated to conspiracy theorist mis/dis informationist under the bill given that all of Australia’s “expert” telecoms engineers and networks clearly believe they can just switch off 3G and she’ll be right. He claims that one of the (dei?) carrier experts noted that mother England has already switched off their 3G network with no issue – but as James points out while this is true they (once Great Britain) have kept their 2G network operating because of this exact operating issue with “modern” phones.

      Great find, Thank you.

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      Brenda Spence

      Excellent video, and as you say, very imortant

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      John Connor II

      This is very important and little known.

      Which is why I posted it already (#12 on Monday). People only have THIS MONTH left.
      Check your phones NOW or call 000 in 4 weeks only to find out you can’t.

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        Brenda Spence

        I’ve got a 3G phone, so I am waiting for the next extension of time 😁

        No point in buying another one until this issue is resolved.

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      Graeme4

      Loaded and ran the the iTest App. A very good method of confirming that my phone was ok. Includes a lot of other phone tests as well.

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    David Maddison

    Video:

    The Left’s war against female beauty, as explained by Matt Walsh.

    https://youtu.be/1VP7bt0p2KY

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    Mike Jonas

    Really good article by Matt Ridley in Spiked:

    There is now very little doubt that Covid leaked from a lab

    “What was the worst industrial accident in history? Bhopal in India, where in 1984, at least 25,000 people died as a result of a leak of methyl isocyanate from a pesticide plant? No, if – as most people who have examined the evidence now believe – the Covid pandemic began as a result of a laboratory leak, then what happened in Wuhan, China was worse than a thousand Bhopals. It killed around 28million people – and was by far the most lethal industrial or scientific accident that has ever occurred.

    Yet the silence of members of the scientific establishment about even the possibility of a laboratory leak in Wuhan is deafening. They refuse to debate it – quite literally. The World Health Organisation studiously avoids talking about it. I tried to get the Royal Society to organise a debate: it’s not a suitable topic for discussion, it replied. I tried the Academy of Medical Sciences, of which I am a fellow: too controversial, it said. A former president of the Royal Society told me he hopes we never find out what happened, lest it annoy the Chinese. Would he have said the same about Bhopal, I wondered, or a plane crash?

    []”

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      Friend

      The leak happened. We know that because they refuse to talk about why it could not have happened.

      The research community is implicated, they are afraid.

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      Gee Aye

      It is ok because the “leak” caused no deaths

      a. It is a scam to get people to inject a bioweopon. Everyone will die in today plus 3 months.
      b. there is no such thing as a virus.
      c. the virus is harmless

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        Paul Siebert

        Gee Aye, #6.1.1
        ____Nah. It was the headline about the rumour of a story about a headline.
        ____Are we so smart, we reckon we couldn’t get taken in by six levels of obfuscation – one of those being silence?
        ____The origin story doesn’t matter a damn anyway. Fact is, on the strength of a scary tale, we injected a range of who knows what into ourselves. Now statistics are being used every which way to fortify whichever story($) we wish to run with.

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      Gerasim

      It seems that the worlds health/science institutions have no evidence of a Sars-Co-V virus, at all, so I guess, discussing a leak would be to get a bit ahead of themselves.

      “FOIs reveal that health/science institutions around the world (225 and counting!) have no record of SARS-COV-2 isolation/purification, anywhere, ever”

      https://www.fluoridefreepeel.ca/fois-reveal-that-health-science-institutions-around-the-world-have-no-record-of-sars-cov-2-isolation-purification/

      “Colleagues around the world and I (Christine) have been filing Freedom of Information “requests” to institutions in various countries seeking records that describe the isolation/purification of the alleged “COVID-19 virus” from any unadulterated sample taken from a diseased patient… Every institution has failed to provide or cite even 1 record describing the isolation aka purification of the alleged “COVID-19 virus” directly from a patient sample that was not first adulterated with other sources of genetic material. (Those other sources are typically monkey kidney aka “Vero” cells and fetal bovine serum)… In their responses, numerous institutions have made it explicitly clear that isolation/purification is simply never done in virology, and that “isolation” in virology means the exact opposite of what it means in everyday English. This is also evidenced in every “virus isolation” paper we have ever seen, for any alleged “virus.””

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        Gee Aye

        It seems that the worlds health/science institutions have no evidence of a Sars-Co-V virus, at all, so I guess, discussing a leak would be to get a bit ahead of themselves.

        this is 100% false

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      Broadie

      Meanwhile what actually happened in the city of Wuhan.

      The hospital was closed on April 15 after treating a total of 3,059 COVID-19 patients and curing 2,961 within some 70 days, ranking it No. 1 in terms of the number of patients admitted and cured by a hospital in the city.

      The others continued to have a runny nose or diminished sense of smell after leaving hospital.

      It was really bad and over by April 15 2020

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    Grid scale battery fires loom large
    By David Wojick
    https://www.cfact.org/2024/10/01/grid-scale-battery-fires-loom-large/

    The beginning: “America faces a growing threat from grid scale lithium battery fires. Construction of huge battery arrays with no concern for potentially catastrophic fires is out of control. There are no established standards to follow and local permitting authorities seem oblivious to this very real danger. What follows is a brief introduction to the issue. To begin with look at this photo of an existing grid battery array called Desert Sunlight:

    https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desert_Sunlight_(52290008686).jpg#

    The batteries are teamed with a big solar facility because until recently that was the only way to get the battery subsidies. Each lithium battery unit is the size of a tractor trailer or big shipping container and there are well over a hundred of them, with a rated storage capacity of 230 MW. This is a medium sized storage facility. That these units can spontaneously burst into flames is well established. The question is how to design and prepare for this destructive event?

    To scale the problem consider the following event. A battery powered tractor trailer rig recently crashed and it’s battery burned on an interstate in California. Lithium battery fires cannot be put out so this one burned for around eleven hours. In order to keep the fire from spreading to create a wildfire the fire crew continuously sprayed it using a reported 50,000 gallons of water in the process. The interstate was closed due to the toxic fumes from the fire. One of these grid scale battery units is easily 10 to 20 times the size of that truck battery. If the water usage required to keep a grid battery fire from spreading scales with size that is 500,000 to a million gallons of water. The actual amount is an engineering calculation that needs to be established and incorporated into battery facility design standards.

    Note that we are not talking about the fire spreading to create a wildfire although that is certainly a concern. The vital need is to keep it from igniting the nearby batteries. If this happened the whole facility could go up with a hundred or more giant batteries burning. That would be truly catastrophic. So now look at the Desert Sunlight photo and note there is no water tank. There should be something like a million gallon water tank with a high volume system to deliver that water to every unit in the facility. Clearly there is not.”

    Lots more in the article including a glaring example of ducking the issue at Horse Heaven renewables in Washington State with a proposed 300 MW battery facility..

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    Friend

    ‘storage capacity of 230 MW’

    Energy storage is measured in MW*hours. Watts are a measure of power capacity.

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      Chad

      For some reason, utility battery installations are frequently defined by their discharge capability (MW), rather than their storage capacity (MWh) wich can be much greater numerically ?

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        Chad

        To add…
        Sometimes , that discharge rate MW, is specified for a period of time .. usually 4 hours… for some reason equally unknown !

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        Graeme4

        Agreed. I have noticed that two figures are often quoted, and the relationship, although not stated, seems to be energy delivery for only two hours. Why the two main specs, battery capacity in MWh, and maximum discharge capacity in MW, cannot be simply quoted I don’t understand.

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          “Why the two main specs, battery capacity in MWh, and maximum discharge capacity in MW, cannot be simply quoted I don’t understand.”

          Just a guess …

          Might it be because the journalist/PR executive/scribbler behind the story cannot understand the difference – and is too lazy [or too indoctrinated] to even seek to find out?

          Auto, wondering what happened to investigative journalism …

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    Steve of Cornubia

    An friend came to stay with us for a few days just recently and, while here, told me about her job in Canberra. Needless to say, she works for a gov’t department. Despite earning what I would call a good salary and having some degree of responsibility, she is allowed an enormous amount of flexibility in her role, along with being able to work from home two days per week. Even on the days she’s actually in the office, she can decide to go home at the drop of a hat should her child be sent home from school.

    I don’t begrudge her those perks as she’s a single mum, but it really does make me wonder what the productivity levels in the public service are these days. It’s no wonder that service levels are so poor and taxes, rates and charges rising so fast.

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    Ronin

    Govt productivity would be close to zero, I notice they never include themselves when talking about National Productivity rates.

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      Coochin Kid

      Not only in Government Departments. I know somebody in Insurance, and a new recruit on a high pay rate refused to work on a clients folio because he was going to the Gym. Two and a half hours later , returned from Gym to office in gym clothes, and again refused to contact his client, because he was too tired..
      unbelievable, Australia is in deep s.it.

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      “I notice they never include themselves when talking about National Productivity rates.”

      They are not ENTIRLY dishonest!

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    YYY Guy

    The building revolution
    Maybe not
    So, what courses are they really offering?
    Ve free R’s (don’t forget 1 in 3 failed NAPLAN.
    Better not upset anyone. There’s a course for that.

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    Greg in NZ

    The prophecy hath come true: we’re going to be as hot as Perth today – or in realspeak – Perth is going to be as cold as us, 18C, with wind rain hail thunder & flying trampolines.

    Frank Zappa was a prophet too: Yellow Snow Watch ⚠️ for Queenstown Lakes today with ‘heavy snow’ to 600m as the ‘eye of the storm’ parks itself over Central Otago, a perfect snowmaker as warm & cold collide at altitude.

    Shirley the sky gods & goddesses have nought to do with it (it’s all our fault right left?). The next 24 hours will feel the effects of a). new moon b). perigee c). crossing the equator d). annular solar eclipse due to syzygy and e). people going crazy: then again, the sons of Abram have been squabbling since the Bronze Age – time to grow up kiddies.

    And the Earth shall ring as a bell… shallow 5.0 shook Cook Strait last night, a 6.6 wobbled Tonga this morning with more to come. Enjoy the show huh.

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    another ian

    FWIW – crank this into the “misinformation bill”

    “The devil is in the details – doubly so for terrorists”

    Concludes

    “That level of monitoring will do the same to all of us should an autocratic, controlling government want to force its citizens to behave in a certain way, and punish them if they don’t obey.

    That’s a scary thought . . . but it’s the reality in which we live right now. It’s why I, and many who feel as I do, prefer to pay cash for most of my purchases, and leave my cellphone at home on random, unpredictable occasions, and purchase privately rather than through big corporate vendors whenever possible. It may not help much, but any sand I can throw in the gears of Big Brother is a worthwhile effort, IMHO. I wish everyone would do the same.”

    https://bayourenaissanceman.blogspot.com/2024/10/the-devil-is-in-details-doubly-so-for.html

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    Trying to find a spot when this is not following doom and gloom! It is a big contrast. Well maybe not so much. They both highlight the best of America! The ‘deplorables’, and the ‘hippies’, doing what they do. The post Burning Man videos are pouring out, and this one shows burners taking it to the next level. Americans can do it, in good times and bad. I was at BM when Katrina hit New Orleans, and watched the Temple burn, as Joan Baez sang ‘Ave Maria’ . That was a moment. Burning Man crews went down to New Orleans with machinery and skills, and spent months helping with the clean up.
    Anyway these are called mashups, combining the old and new. The whole performance is over an hour, but try 14.10 – 17.05 California Dreaming. 55.35 – 59.57 Leonard. or 1.10.00 – 4 mins to finish.
    The best Of America

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    another ian

    FWIW

    “Nuclear Is Back: U.S. Closes On $1.5 Billion Loan To Resurrect Holtec’s Palisades Nuclear Plant”

    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/nuclear-back-us-closes-15-billion-loan-resurrect-holtecs-palisades-nuclear-plant

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    Dave in the States

    It’s hybrids too.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/cars/recalls/2024/10/01/jeep-hybrid-recall-wrangler-cherokee/75466533007/

    Jeep hybrids are burning down left and right. “Park them outside.”

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    OldOzzie

    NRMA chief pushes for EV battery testing to be part of roadworthy checks after spate of fires

    Electric vehicle batteries should be tested as part of compulsory roadworthy checks to improve safety and lift the uptake of EVs, according to the chief executive of one of Australia’s largest insurers.

    NRMA chief Julie Batch said “busting EV myths” was critical if the nation wanted to encourage a more rapid transition to a greener fleet.

    While EVs have consistently doubled their market share annually – rising from 1 per cent of new car sales in 2020 to 8.5 per cent in 2023 – it stagnated at 8.4 per cent this year. A Deloitte report, published in January, has projected 43 per cent of all new passenger vehicle sales in a decade will be EVs.

    “We see a very similar sort of frequency of fires in cars in EVs as we do in ICE [internal combustion engine] vehicles, however, when that battery does catch fire, the car is often damaged to a greater degree because the battery is that much bigger,” Batch said.

    “What we’re asking for is that as part of the regular roadworthiness checks that batteries are comprehensively checked.”

    There have been growing concerns about EVs catching alight as lithium-ion battery fires become an increasing problem for fire services around the world.

    Fire and Rescue NSW said in a report, published in March, it attended 456 lithium-ion battery fires in 2022 and 2023 – a 66 per cent increase in incidents year-on-year. But only three involved electric vehicles, with the vast majority being electric bikes and scooters.

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      OldOzzie

      Fire at Tesla battery supplier factory – report

      The company that supplies batteries to some of the biggest car makers in the world – including Tesla – has reported a fire at a plant in China.

      A fire has broken out at a Chinese factory owned by the world’s largest electric vehicle battery supplier, CATL.

      While no injuries have been reported, CATL says a “relatively small” number of products were affected by the blaze – though impacts to its production line are expected to be limited, according to news outlet Reuters.

      With almost 50 per cent of the global market share – and Tesla as its biggest client – CATL also supplies electric vehicle batteries to BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai, Honda, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Volvo, as well as several Chinese car makers.

      The company says the fire – located at its plant in the Fujian province – was extinguished relatively quickly, with the cause under investigation.

      In June 2024, a fire at a lithium battery factory in South Korea claimed the lives of 23 workers and injured eight more – many of whom were Chinese nationals, Reuters reported.

      The South Korean fire occurred after a series of battery cells exploded inside the warehouse, which contained an estimated 35,000 batteries.

      Police claim the deadly fire was caused by a lack of quality control as workers rushed to fulfil orders.

      According to CATL officials, the latest incident in China was brought under control quickly thanks to the facility’s fire monitoring system.

      The 15,000m2 plant is only four years old and is considered an ‘Industry 4.0’ smart factory, which means it is largely automated – reducing the risk to human life – while also incorporating connected and artificial intelligence technologies.

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      Graeme4

      How the heck will battery testing detect potentially faulty batteries? For a supposedly vehicle expert organisation, the NRMA seems to have totally lost the plot.

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        another ian

        Graeme4

        That might have something to do with the recent upsurge in emails trying to sell me “NRMA Emergency Kits” – from decidedly non-NRMA email addresses?

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        Vladimir

        Very easy – Aus/Vic authorities are hereby invited to call me for details.

        A spoiler: the tests will be voluntarily (no one forced you to buy an EV) and non-compliance fines will be the size of Japan national debt.

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      Dave in the States

      “We see a very similar sort of frequency of fires in cars in EVs as we do in ICE [internal combustion engine] vehicles

      Really? Where?

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      Yarpos

      Does Julie Batch have any advice on how to test an EV battery so that potential failures can be detected, in a timely and cost effective manner? If she has insights they need to be shared because it would greatly improve EV resale value if used battery condition can be certified.

      It appears to be wishful thinking but I am always happy to learn.

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      OldOzzie

      Tesla fire video shows EV threat in storms

      US authorities call out EV makers over “threats of their cars” following footage of a Tesla bursting into flames after a flood.

      American politicians have hit out at EV brands such as Tesla for failing to make customers aware of the risks posed by electric cars following storms.

      Viral video of a Tesla Model X electric car bursting into flames following Hurricane Helena in Florida shows the risk posed by EV batteries that have been submerged, particularly in salt water.

      Homeowner Lisa Hodges told Reuters that “I’m just glad we’re alive, but everything, we’ve been married 38 years and everything we put into that house … it’s all gone.”

      Florida’s Pinellas County posted on X that “Electric Vehicles that have been flooded in saltwater can catch fire. If you evacuated and left an electric vehicle or golf cart in your garage or under a building and you are not able to get to it or move it, we want you to let us know.”

      Florida politician Jimmy Patronis said “I don’t think EV manufacturers have been proactive in notifying consumers about the threats of their cars and storm surge,” he said.

      “As grids become reenergized EV owners impacted by storm surge must work with urgency to get it pulled away from homes.”

      Patronis previously tweeted about the risks posed by EVs following storm surges in 2022, when Teslas affected by floodwater would burst into flames several days after floodwater subsided.

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    OldOzzie

    Over 200 Retired Generals and Admirals Endorse Trump for President: ‘Our National Security and Personal Safety Are at Stake’

    <strong>Over 200 retired military generals and admirals endorsed former President Donald Trump in an open letter released on Monday, saying that he has demonstrated the leadership ability needed to provide for the safety and security of the United States.

    The group who organized the letter, Flag Officers 4 America, said in a statement: “Donald Trump has a proven track record of success providing the most fundamental responsibilities required of a U.S. President: protecting national security, domestic safety, and the U.S. Constitution.”

    Meanwhile, they said, “The current administration, led by the President and Vice President, has allowed our nation to become unsecure, our citizens unsafe, and our country divided due to the cultural war being waged across America in the form of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI).” They added:

    This divisive domestic strife is dividing our Country, allowing our foreign adversaries to take advantage of the political/social disorder in America. A recent bipartisan congressional report ‘Commission on the National Defense Strategy’ said: ‘The United States confronts the most serious and the most challenging threats since the end of World War II. The United States could in short order be drawn into a war across multiple theaters with peer and near-peer adversaries, and it could lose.’

    “We urge our fellow Americans to join us in supporting the election of Donald J. Trump for president. Our future is at stake,” they said.

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      el+gordo

      ‘ … across multiple theaters …’

      I can’t see it, the US is going out of its way not to allow their missiles to land on Russian soil, for good reason.

      The Russian public are finally seeing the effect of this war, their assets are devaluing and hyper inflation is on the cards.

      China is also in trouble, the people are feeling the effects of a great depression and there is nothing the authorities can do to remedy the situation. Xi is in panic mode and won’t be looking for war with the Alliance.

      Not to mention that other never ending war which shall remain nameless.

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    John Connor II

    The old parable of the tortoise and the hare

    https://va.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_sko9s2bi4u1z23obp.mp4

    Stop and look after you win.😎

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    another ian

    FWIW

    “EU To Rule ESG For The World”

    “Well This Is Going To Suck
    Never underestimate the power mad Globalist desire to control everyone.

    Per this video, there’s a new EU Law that will force ESG “rules” and the DIE, er DEI Agenda onto the rest of the world. ANY company that does more than the limit size of business in the European Union MUST impose ESG & Woke Agenda crap on EVERY SUPPLIER they have. Globally. If they don’t, they get a “fine” of a percent of their global business (that for companies like McDonald’s and Apple is $Billions).

    We need a ruling, pronto, from the Supreme Court that says this is illegal in the USA. That an EU Globalist can not impose rules on US Companies outside of the EU. And certainly not down stream on their suppliers.

    Then they go on to talk about the U.N. “Summit of the future” where I’m slowly working through the UN Document…and it’s bad.”

    (My bold)

    More at

    https://chiefio.wordpress.com/2024/10/01/eu-to-rule-esg-for-the-world/

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    John Connor II

    Wednesday words of wisdom

    “At the same time you’re getting all this mouthing of diversity, there is an extremely narrow ideological conformity that’s being enforced.”
    — Thomas Sowell

    “It’s amazing how much panic one honest man can spread among a multitude of hypocrites.”
    – Thomas Sowell

    “A friend to all us a friend to none.”
    – Aristotle

    “I would rather offend you with the truth than please you with flattery.”
    – Seneca

    50

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      Vladimir

      Having been born & bred in in the workers paradise I know everything about hypocrisy.
      The skills & dedication of everyone – from parents and teachers to country leaders was more than art of survival, many of them truly believe their own words…
      But the last week UN speech by HM King of Jordan really took my breath away – everyone should watch it.
      A reminder: this is the fellow who last night spared no effort to protect Israel from incoming rockets.

      20

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        el+gordo

        This caught my eye.

        ‘The minister also highlighted His Majesty’s frustration with Israeli extremism, especially regarding the notion of an “alternative homeland” for Palestinians, adding: “This was most apparent when the King pointed directly at the Israeli delegate in the General Assembly Hall.” (Jordan Times)

        He must mean the two state solution.

        10

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    another ian

    FWIW

    Anyone who has a pressure cooker grounded by lack of spare parts?

    Might be worth a look here –

    https://www.therazorshop.com.au/pressure-cooker-spare-parts/

    He saved mine – it is a Sears Roebuck model of about 1973 which turns out to have been made by a firm that also sold to Namco here

    10

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    another ian

    FWIW

    “Ed Miliband faces growing legal threat over pylons roll-out”

    https://wattsupwiththat.com/2024/10/01/ed-miliband-faces-growing-legal-threat-over-pylons-roll-out/

    “ElBowen” next?

    10

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    another ian

    FWIW – latest Kunstler

    “Heroes and Villains

    “It’s really hard to govern today. . . . The First Amendment stands as a major block.” – John Kerry.”

    https://jameshowardkunstler.substack.com/p/heroes-and-villains

    10

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    Vicki

    While Walz was actually better than I expected, JD Vance was exceptional. In contrast to the agitated Walz, JD was calm, considered, and exceptionally well prepared. He exuded confidence in his values. Voters must think that if anything happens to Trump, this man would grasp the reins firmly and guide the nation to safety and prosperity.

    90

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    Yes Vicki,

    Even though,par-for the-Marxist-rule-book-aims-justifying-the-means,
    even cutting off the microphone of one side in the debate being legit
    for the arbiter on partisan grounds, he won!

    20

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