They could link to the original report. I guess they mean this one:
https://sdgtransformationcenter.org/reports/sustainable-development-report-2025
They could link to the original report. I guess they mean this one:
https://sdgtransformationcenter.org/reports/sustainable-development-report-2025
Though the graph they show is more promising, with wind having a complementary pattern to solar. If reliable, it would be great.
You can still see a spike in gas around Feb 2025, when wind was weaker and there was still little irradiation.
Ain't solar (compared to wind) so-and-so idea in most of the EU? I mean, unless you are in southern Italy, southern Spain, or Greece, you you'll need that gas to survive the winter.
I mean - one thing ugly, and the other thing is that this land could be arable or a nature reserve.
The hill in the photo looks ugly, tbh. Still, much better (and livelier) than the landscape after oilsands or brown coal extraction.
Preferably, most grid-connected solar panels would be on buildings, deserts, and postindustrial land. But in the face of the climate catastrophe, the South China hills are also fine.
Totally agree, our agriculture is so primitive, in the sense of not being sophisticated at all (just plough, remove everything that lives there, plant grass, cut early, repeat). Great links. Thanks!
*Robots and humans to build Canada's 9-storey timber tower together
I guess we should just do more offshore wind at home, in Europe ¯_(ツ)_/¯
And support wind elsewhere. I know that in much of the world, solar is more feasible. But I am also sure there are places where access to electricity and pollution are problems at the same time, and where wind would be a better option.
It is an Opal Plum.
BTW, my first search results agree with my palette ^‿^
Some call plum ‘Opal’ the most delectable of all fruit. https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/fruits/plum/caring-for-opal-plum-trees.htm
Picked straight from the tree it's probably the best tasting of all the plums. https://gardenfocused.co.uk/fruitarticles/plums/variety-opal.php
PS: If you really want to be technical, it is the pathogen that is transmissible. Infection is what happens when the pathogen "invades" the tissues and/or afterward (different uses). Some dictionaries (e.g., Merriam-Webster) literally put the word disease in the definition of infection. But yes, the pathogen is being transmitted, not the disease, as in the spread of HIV, not the spread of AIDS.
My mum has a sweet plum that fruits in July in Dfb (Poland). It is amazing, it gives a lot of fruit every two years, a real treat, my favorite.
If you want to plant a pear, look out for juniper in the neighborhood. There is a common disease that transfers between these two.
What do you mean by "The System is (Not) Totalizing"?