“Without children and young people, a country loses its desire for the future.”
Bout 30 years too late for that, old man. I grew up with that hopelessness. Between the climate and the economy, the damage is done. Gonna need more than a tax break to change course.
But hey, it’s nice to see that he’s not completely oblivious.
The most disturbing thing about this is the fact that when I saw this image, I couldn’t immediately figure out which of our current hellscapes was being protested.
I shouldn’t have to wonder WHICH disaster a display of coffins is supposed to represent.
One of Milan’s iconic squares, was filled with symbolic coffins by Italy’s second-largest union to highlight the issue of workplace fatalities.
The protest in Piazza La Scala put 172 cardboard coffins on the ground to remember all of the workers who lost their lives last year in the northern Lombardy region.
Enrico Vezza, the leader of the UIL union, described the day as one of anger and anguish, highlighting that behind each coffin lay the identities of individual people.
A sign at the heart of the square displayed the escalating number of workplace fatalities since 2018, reaching a peak of 1,709 in 2020 amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.
Friday’s protest unfolds amid a disputed discourse on workplace safety in Italy, prompted by a string of fatalities across the country.
In April, seven workers died in an explosion that engulfed several levels of an underground hydroelectric plant in northern Italy.
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I am pretty sure the EU will soon reach the final phase of the electricity transition. Soon it will be more about balancing the grid with storage and upgrading the electricity network and no longer about build out rates of solar and Wind.
That’s outstanding! I wonder if regular comparisons could help us laggards on the other side of the Atlantic. There’s got to be some competitive drive that can help us get off our butts.
I think we’re doing well at getting off coal (except West Virginia and Wyoming), but that just means natural gas dominates in most places
Offshore wind was the best way to go here. We’re lucky with the North Sea, it’s relatively shallow (just up to 40m deep in many areas) and very windy. Turbines are enormous machines now reaching more than 200m high and more than 10MW, and growing, but all are still rather far out it even barely disturbs views from land. I’m sure there’s a lot of room to grow offshore wind in gulf of Mexico and east coast. West Coast would be harder I think because deep.
The problem is that not so much industry is around the North Sea. For Germany most of the industry is in the middle and south, so very far away from the generated energy. But in general I think the EU does a great job to show other countries that we could do a lot to reduce CO2 emissions. If only others would care and try to compete here….
I’m surprised geothermal isn’t in the mix there, or at least not in any big way. You would think Italy and Greece especially would want to take advantage of that.
Probably one of the reasons, other reasons could be ( geo?) complexity and the building (time)'of the whole unfrastructure. I haven’t digged very deep in this yet tbh.
In addition to cost (which I don’t have numbers for) there’s a question of efficiency: Geothermal heat it typically relatively “low temperature” heat, which makes for very inefficient power plants, especially in southern places like Italy and Greece, where there is little or no easy access to cold reservoirs (like the sea around Iceland).
Geothermal energy is the perfect source for heating cold places in winter, or otherwise heating places you want warm, but you need quite specific geological conditions for it to be an efficient means of producing electricity.
The drop in fossil fuel generation was driven by wind and solar growth as well as the recovery of hydropower.
Wind and solar growth as well as the recovery of hydropower drove the fall in fossil fuel generation and increased the share of renewables in the electricity mix to a record 54 per cent.
Solar and wind have stepped up as the main players, proving they are ready to take on their role as the backbone of the modern clean electricity system.”
Seven coal fired power stations closed in the country at the end of March 2024 after their shut down was postponed due to the energy crisis.
Despite rising demand, fossil fuel electricity generation still fell as renewables displaced them from the mix.
“From 2016 to 2023, coal fell by over 300 terawatt hours and there was a similar rise in wind and solar over that period,” she explains.
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