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1000 results for “futurezone”
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Historic #Hanford #Contamination is Worse Than Expected: #Oregon Experts Weigh In
July 7, 2023
"In late June, the U.S. Department of Energy reported that radioactive contamination beneath a building at the #HanfordNuclearSite is worse than originally thought.
"The Hanford 324 Building is located on the south end of Hanford – in what’s known as the 300 Area – just 1,000 feet from the #ColumbiaRiver. The US DOE has known about one spill under the building for over a decade, and has been working on a plan for cleanup of the area while also making progress in other areas of Hanford since production turned to cleanup at the site in the 1980s.
"The agency knew the contamination in the soil was serious, but sampling this spring found unexpected contamination deeper in the soil and outside the previously known spill area. So what does that mean? Oregon Department of Energy Assistant Director for Nuclear Safety and Emergency Preparedness Maxwell Woods and Hanford Hydrogeologist Tom Sicilia weigh in.
"Q: Is the #groundwater or the Columbia River at risk of exposure to the contaminated soil?
"A: Based on data from monitoring wells, the US DOE reports that the spill has not migrated to groundwater, so at this time the groundwater that flows to the river poses a minimal risk. But it will be important moving forward that the area remain covered and protected and for monitoring to continue while a cleanup plan is identified.
"We hear US DOE may also be considering adding additional groundwater monitoring in the area to capture more data, which we support.
[...]
"Q: What are the risks with the new plan?
"A: If US DOE decides to construct the big metal shell, a next question will be whether work should continue with robots or remotely operated equipment to resume the digging, or if the agency should wait a few more decades to allow the #radioactive materials in the soil to decay further.
"Depending on how “hot” the soil really is – it could be hundreds of years before it would be safe enough for humans to manually excavate it. Remotely operated equipment is used across the Hanford site for safe cleanup activities.
"While the risk to groundwater and the river are low, there is a balance between the inevitable migration of #contaminants over time and the ability to safely complete the cleanup. In the near-term, US DOE seems to be doing the right thing, and is 'measuring twice' to avoid having to go back out and re-dig this complicated and dangerous soil. This pause will allow a more efficient and protective remedy to be developed for review by stakeholders, Tribal nations, the public, and site regulators."
#WaterIsLife #Oregon #WashingtonState #HanfordNuclearFacility #NoNukes #NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar #NoNuclearWeapons #RethinkNotRestart #NuclearWaste #NuclearWeaponsDump -
Historic #Hanford #Contamination is Worse Than Expected: #Oregon Experts Weigh In
July 7, 2023
"In late June, the U.S. Department of Energy reported that radioactive contamination beneath a building at the #HanfordNuclearSite is worse than originally thought.
"The Hanford 324 Building is located on the south end of Hanford – in what’s known as the 300 Area – just 1,000 feet from the #ColumbiaRiver. The US DOE has known about one spill under the building for over a decade, and has been working on a plan for cleanup of the area while also making progress in other areas of Hanford since production turned to cleanup at the site in the 1980s.
"The agency knew the contamination in the soil was serious, but sampling this spring found unexpected contamination deeper in the soil and outside the previously known spill area. So what does that mean? Oregon Department of Energy Assistant Director for Nuclear Safety and Emergency Preparedness Maxwell Woods and Hanford Hydrogeologist Tom Sicilia weigh in.
"Q: Is the #groundwater or the Columbia River at risk of exposure to the contaminated soil?
"A: Based on data from monitoring wells, the US DOE reports that the spill has not migrated to groundwater, so at this time the groundwater that flows to the river poses a minimal risk. But it will be important moving forward that the area remain covered and protected and for monitoring to continue while a cleanup plan is identified.
"We hear US DOE may also be considering adding additional groundwater monitoring in the area to capture more data, which we support.
[...]
"Q: What are the risks with the new plan?
"A: If US DOE decides to construct the big metal shell, a next question will be whether work should continue with robots or remotely operated equipment to resume the digging, or if the agency should wait a few more decades to allow the #radioactive materials in the soil to decay further.
"Depending on how “hot” the soil really is – it could be hundreds of years before it would be safe enough for humans to manually excavate it. Remotely operated equipment is used across the Hanford site for safe cleanup activities.
"While the risk to groundwater and the river are low, there is a balance between the inevitable migration of #contaminants over time and the ability to safely complete the cleanup. In the near-term, US DOE seems to be doing the right thing, and is 'measuring twice' to avoid having to go back out and re-dig this complicated and dangerous soil. This pause will allow a more efficient and protective remedy to be developed for review by stakeholders, Tribal nations, the public, and site regulators."
#WaterIsLife #Oregon #WashingtonState #HanfordNuclearFacility #NoNukes #NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar #NoNuclearWeapons #RethinkNotRestart #NuclearWaste #NuclearWeaponsDump -
Historic #Hanford #Contamination is Worse Than Expected: #Oregon Experts Weigh In
July 7, 2023
"In late June, the U.S. Department of Energy reported that radioactive contamination beneath a building at the #HanfordNuclearSite is worse than originally thought.
"The Hanford 324 Building is located on the south end of Hanford – in what’s known as the 300 Area – just 1,000 feet from the #ColumbiaRiver. The US DOE has known about one spill under the building for over a decade, and has been working on a plan for cleanup of the area while also making progress in other areas of Hanford since production turned to cleanup at the site in the 1980s.
"The agency knew the contamination in the soil was serious, but sampling this spring found unexpected contamination deeper in the soil and outside the previously known spill area. So what does that mean? Oregon Department of Energy Assistant Director for Nuclear Safety and Emergency Preparedness Maxwell Woods and Hanford Hydrogeologist Tom Sicilia weigh in.
"Q: Is the #groundwater or the Columbia River at risk of exposure to the contaminated soil?
"A: Based on data from monitoring wells, the US DOE reports that the spill has not migrated to groundwater, so at this time the groundwater that flows to the river poses a minimal risk. But it will be important moving forward that the area remain covered and protected and for monitoring to continue while a cleanup plan is identified.
"We hear US DOE may also be considering adding additional groundwater monitoring in the area to capture more data, which we support.
[...]
"Q: What are the risks with the new plan?
"A: If US DOE decides to construct the big metal shell, a next question will be whether work should continue with robots or remotely operated equipment to resume the digging, or if the agency should wait a few more decades to allow the #radioactive materials in the soil to decay further.
"Depending on how “hot” the soil really is – it could be hundreds of years before it would be safe enough for humans to manually excavate it. Remotely operated equipment is used across the Hanford site for safe cleanup activities.
"While the risk to groundwater and the river are low, there is a balance between the inevitable migration of #contaminants over time and the ability to safely complete the cleanup. In the near-term, US DOE seems to be doing the right thing, and is 'measuring twice' to avoid having to go back out and re-dig this complicated and dangerous soil. This pause will allow a more efficient and protective remedy to be developed for review by stakeholders, Tribal nations, the public, and site regulators."
#WaterIsLife #Oregon #WashingtonState #HanfordNuclearFacility #NoNukes #NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar #NoNuclearWeapons #RethinkNotRestart #NuclearWaste #NuclearWeaponsDump -
Historic #Hanford #Contamination is Worse Than Expected: #Oregon Experts Weigh In
July 7, 2023
"In late June, the U.S. Department of Energy reported that radioactive contamination beneath a building at the #HanfordNuclearSite is worse than originally thought.
"The Hanford 324 Building is located on the south end of Hanford – in what’s known as the 300 Area – just 1,000 feet from the #ColumbiaRiver. The US DOE has known about one spill under the building for over a decade, and has been working on a plan for cleanup of the area while also making progress in other areas of Hanford since production turned to cleanup at the site in the 1980s.
"The agency knew the contamination in the soil was serious, but sampling this spring found unexpected contamination deeper in the soil and outside the previously known spill area. So what does that mean? Oregon Department of Energy Assistant Director for Nuclear Safety and Emergency Preparedness Maxwell Woods and Hanford Hydrogeologist Tom Sicilia weigh in.
"Q: Is the #groundwater or the Columbia River at risk of exposure to the contaminated soil?
"A: Based on data from monitoring wells, the US DOE reports that the spill has not migrated to groundwater, so at this time the groundwater that flows to the river poses a minimal risk. But it will be important moving forward that the area remain covered and protected and for monitoring to continue while a cleanup plan is identified.
"We hear US DOE may also be considering adding additional groundwater monitoring in the area to capture more data, which we support.
[...]
"Q: What are the risks with the new plan?
"A: If US DOE decides to construct the big metal shell, a next question will be whether work should continue with robots or remotely operated equipment to resume the digging, or if the agency should wait a few more decades to allow the #radioactive materials in the soil to decay further.
"Depending on how “hot” the soil really is – it could be hundreds of years before it would be safe enough for humans to manually excavate it. Remotely operated equipment is used across the Hanford site for safe cleanup activities.
"While the risk to groundwater and the river are low, there is a balance between the inevitable migration of #contaminants over time and the ability to safely complete the cleanup. In the near-term, US DOE seems to be doing the right thing, and is 'measuring twice' to avoid having to go back out and re-dig this complicated and dangerous soil. This pause will allow a more efficient and protective remedy to be developed for review by stakeholders, Tribal nations, the public, and site regulators."
#WaterIsLife #Oregon #WashingtonState #HanfordNuclearFacility #NoNukes #NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar #NoNuclearWeapons #RethinkNotRestart #NuclearWaste #NuclearWeaponsDump -
What’s being done now about #RadioactiveWater that threatens the #ColumbiaRiver in #WashingtonState?
by Annette Cary
Tue, July 9, 2024"A major #radioactive contamination threat to the Columbia River should be removed at the #Hanford #nuclear site before the end of summer.
"Hanford workers have started to pump contaminated water from the final basin of the nuclear reservation’s nine reactors along the Columbia River.
"'This effort will eliminate the risk of a leak of contaminated water to the groundwater about a quarter-mile from the Columbia River,' said Andy Wiborg, the Department of Energy acting deputy assistant manager for river and plateau cleanup."
[...]
"The K West and K East Reactor basins were the last to be used, after storing irradiated fuel from N Reactor that was not processed following the end of the Cold War. Before the fuel was removed in 2004, it #corroded underwater, contributing to a highly #RadioactiveSludge.
"In 2019 the last of the sludge was removed, leaving draining the water the next major task to reduce risk from the basins.
"The nearby K East Reactor basin was emptied first.
"Then in June, the first tanker truck with basin water pulled away from the K West Reactor.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River."About 400,000 gallons have been pumped out of the basin so far, which is the equivalent of six residential swimming pools, said Heather Dale, DOE Hanford assistant manager for the river and plateau. About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with basin water.
[...]
"They also installed a system to pump out and then filter the contaminated water before it it loaded into tanker trucks.
"The filtering system removes particles and also uses an ion exchange system to remove radioactive #cesium and #strontium from the water. The initial resin used in the ion exchange system DID NOT WORK WELL, the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board said in January.
[...]
"Some of the contents of the vertical pipe units in the K West Reactor basin may be required to be sent to the nation’s repository for transuranic radioactive waste in New Mexico for disposal [#WIPP].
Read more:
https://news.yahoo.com/news/being-done-now-radioactive-water-181740119.html#WaterIsLife
#NoNukes
#NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar
#NoNuclearWeapons
#RethinkNotRestart
#NuclearWaste
#HanfordNuclearSite -
What’s being done now about #RadioactiveWater that threatens the #ColumbiaRiver in #WashingtonState?
by Annette Cary
Tue, July 9, 2024"A major #radioactive contamination threat to the Columbia River should be removed at the #Hanford #nuclear site before the end of summer.
"Hanford workers have started to pump contaminated water from the final basin of the nuclear reservation’s nine reactors along the Columbia River.
"'This effort will eliminate the risk of a leak of contaminated water to the groundwater about a quarter-mile from the Columbia River,' said Andy Wiborg, the Department of Energy acting deputy assistant manager for river and plateau cleanup."
[...]
"The K West and K East Reactor basins were the last to be used, after storing irradiated fuel from N Reactor that was not processed following the end of the Cold War. Before the fuel was removed in 2004, it #corroded underwater, contributing to a highly #RadioactiveSludge.
"In 2019 the last of the sludge was removed, leaving draining the water the next major task to reduce risk from the basins.
"The nearby K East Reactor basin was emptied first.
"Then in June, the first tanker truck with basin water pulled away from the K West Reactor.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River."About 400,000 gallons have been pumped out of the basin so far, which is the equivalent of six residential swimming pools, said Heather Dale, DOE Hanford assistant manager for the river and plateau. About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with basin water.
[...]
"They also installed a system to pump out and then filter the contaminated water before it it loaded into tanker trucks.
"The filtering system removes particles and also uses an ion exchange system to remove radioactive #cesium and #strontium from the water. The initial resin used in the ion exchange system DID NOT WORK WELL, the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board said in January.
[...]
"Some of the contents of the vertical pipe units in the K West Reactor basin may be required to be sent to the nation’s repository for transuranic radioactive waste in New Mexico for disposal [#WIPP].
Read more:
https://news.yahoo.com/news/being-done-now-radioactive-water-181740119.html#WaterIsLife
#NoNukes
#NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar
#NoNuclearWeapons
#RethinkNotRestart
#NuclearWaste
#HanfordNuclearSite -
What’s being done now about #RadioactiveWater that threatens the #ColumbiaRiver in #WashingtonState?
by Annette Cary
Tue, July 9, 2024"A major #radioactive contamination threat to the Columbia River should be removed at the #Hanford #nuclear site before the end of summer.
"Hanford workers have started to pump contaminated water from the final basin of the nuclear reservation’s nine reactors along the Columbia River.
"'This effort will eliminate the risk of a leak of contaminated water to the groundwater about a quarter-mile from the Columbia River,' said Andy Wiborg, the Department of Energy acting deputy assistant manager for river and plateau cleanup."
[...]
"The K West and K East Reactor basins were the last to be used, after storing irradiated fuel from N Reactor that was not processed following the end of the Cold War. Before the fuel was removed in 2004, it #corroded underwater, contributing to a highly #RadioactiveSludge.
"In 2019 the last of the sludge was removed, leaving draining the water the next major task to reduce risk from the basins.
"The nearby K East Reactor basin was emptied first.
"Then in June, the first tanker truck with basin water pulled away from the K West Reactor.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River."About 400,000 gallons have been pumped out of the basin so far, which is the equivalent of six residential swimming pools, said Heather Dale, DOE Hanford assistant manager for the river and plateau. About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with basin water.
[...]
"They also installed a system to pump out and then filter the contaminated water before it it loaded into tanker trucks.
"The filtering system removes particles and also uses an ion exchange system to remove radioactive #cesium and #strontium from the water. The initial resin used in the ion exchange system DID NOT WORK WELL, the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board said in January.
[...]
"Some of the contents of the vertical pipe units in the K West Reactor basin may be required to be sent to the nation’s repository for transuranic radioactive waste in New Mexico for disposal [#WIPP].
Read more:
https://news.yahoo.com/news/being-done-now-radioactive-water-181740119.html#WaterIsLife
#NoNukes
#NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar
#NoNuclearWeapons
#RethinkNotRestart
#NuclearWaste
#HanfordNuclearSite -
What’s being done now about #RadioactiveWater that threatens the #ColumbiaRiver in #WashingtonState?
by Annette Cary
Tue, July 9, 2024"A major #radioactive contamination threat to the Columbia River should be removed at the #Hanford #nuclear site before the end of summer.
"Hanford workers have started to pump contaminated water from the final basin of the nuclear reservation’s nine reactors along the Columbia River.
"'This effort will eliminate the risk of a leak of contaminated water to the groundwater about a quarter-mile from the Columbia River,' said Andy Wiborg, the Department of Energy acting deputy assistant manager for river and plateau cleanup."
[...]
"The K West and K East Reactor basins were the last to be used, after storing irradiated fuel from N Reactor that was not processed following the end of the Cold War. Before the fuel was removed in 2004, it #corroded underwater, contributing to a highly #RadioactiveSludge.
"In 2019 the last of the sludge was removed, leaving draining the water the next major task to reduce risk from the basins.
"The nearby K East Reactor basin was emptied first.
"Then in June, the first tanker truck with basin water pulled away from the K West Reactor.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River.
About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with filtered water to remove radioactive contamination from the K West Reactor basin as it is being drained. The work will protect the nearby Columbia River."About 400,000 gallons have been pumped out of the basin so far, which is the equivalent of six residential swimming pools, said Heather Dale, DOE Hanford assistant manager for the river and plateau. About 60 tanker trucks have been filled with basin water.
[...]
"They also installed a system to pump out and then filter the contaminated water before it it loaded into tanker trucks.
"The filtering system removes particles and also uses an ion exchange system to remove radioactive #cesium and #strontium from the water. The initial resin used in the ion exchange system DID NOT WORK WELL, the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board said in January.
[...]
"Some of the contents of the vertical pipe units in the K West Reactor basin may be required to be sent to the nation’s repository for transuranic radioactive waste in New Mexico for disposal [#WIPP].
Read more:
https://news.yahoo.com/news/being-done-now-radioactive-water-181740119.html#WaterIsLife
#NoNukes
#NoDumping
#FutureGenerations
#NoWar
#NoNuclearWeapons
#RethinkNotRestart
#NuclearWaste
#HanfordNuclearSite -
https://www.europesays.com/uk/727762/ Wales at “critical tipping point” as new report warns nature crisis is already here #BridgesToTheFuture #Britain #ClimateChange #DerekWalker #Environment #FutureGenerationsCommissioner #GreatBritain #HuwIrrancaDaviesMS #NaturalResourcesWales #NeilSachdev #UK #UnitedKingdom #Wales
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Wales at “critical tipping point” as new report warns nature crisis is already here
Neil Sachdev issued the stark message as NRW launched its latest State of Natural Resources Report (SoNaRR 2025) – a major assessment published under the Environment Act and designed to inform political debate ahead of the Senedd elections.
The report paints a bleak picture of Wales’ natural environment, warning that the country is “one of the most nature‑depleted in the world”, with almost one in five species now at risk of extinction. Only 40% of water bodies meet good status, and ecosystems across Wales are struggling under the combined weight of climate change, pollution, habitat loss and unsustainable land use.
NRW says the pressures are now “systemic”, built into everyday life – from how homes are heated to how food is produced, how people travel and how land is developed. While progress has been made in areas such as peatland restoration, air quality legislation and the Sustainable Farming Scheme, the report warns Wales is still consuming and degrading natural resources faster than they can be replenished.
Launching the report at Cardiff University’s Spark Innovation Campus, Neil Sachdev said Wales must now embrace major systems change.
Neil Sachdev, Chair of Natural Resources Wales, said:
“SoNaRR has shown us that the most damaging pressures on nature are not confined to environmental policy. They are built into how we heat our homes, how we travel, how we grow and consume food, how we use land, and how we invest in places. If Wales is to remain a place where people and nature thrive, we must change the systems themselves – not just manage their impacts.”
He said SoNaRR was “the diagnosis”, while a new chapter titled Bridges to the Future sets out a shared response, offering a roadmap for transforming Wales’ food, energy, transport and land systems.
The launch brought together senior figures including Deputy First Minister Huw Irranca‑Davies, Future Generations Commissioner Derek Walker and Elspeth Jones, Nature Guardian for the National Infrastructure Commission Wales.
Derek Walker, Future Generations Commissioner for Wales, said:
“Nature is one of our most powerful allies in creating better lives for all of us. Without urgent, coordinated action across the public sector to halt and reverse the dangerous decline laid out in SoNaRR 2025, we are quite literally putting lives at risk unnecessarily.”
He warned that the consequences of failing to act would fall hardest on the most disadvantaged communities.
Deputy First Minister Huw Irranca‑Davies said:
“Protecting and enhancing nature is essential for people today, and for future generations. The people of Wales have made real progress – but we need to go further again. This report sets out how we can work together to respond, strengthening action to restore nature, tackle pollution and build resilience to climate change.”
The SoNaRR 2025 assessment concludes that Wales is still not meeting any of the four long‑term aims of sustainable natural resource management. Ecosystem resilience remains low, environmental risks are unevenly distributed across communities, and Wales’ consumption levels far exceed sustainable limits.
Neil Sachdev said the findings must act as a turning point.
Neil Sachdev added:
“This is not just a warning about our future; it is a reckoning with our present. If we act now, with urgency and shared ownership, Wales can lead – not just in ambition – but by delivering the scale of transformation the nation needs. If we don’t, the next SoNaRR will simply document deeper loss, higher costs and narrower choices.”
NRW says the decisions made in the coming months will shape Wales for decades, urging leaders across all sectors to use the evidence to drive bold, long‑term action.
More Environment News
Michael Sheen fronts new BBC series on South Wales contamination claims
Actor investigates decades‑old chemical pollution allegations in explosive new documentary.Pupils and artist hit back at fly‑tippers with bold Neath Port Talbot mural
Schoolchildren team up with a celebrity artist to call out illegal dumping.Millions of plastic bags to be scrapped in Swansea recycling shake‑up
Major overhaul aims to cut waste and boost recycling rates across the city.Pembrokeshire wins big as Erebus offshore wind project secures UK backing
#BridgesToTheFuture #climateChange #DerekWalker #Environment #FutureGenerationsCommissioner #HuwIrrancaDaviesMS #NaturalResourcesWales #NeilSachdev
Record auction result paves the way for a major Celtic Sea renewable energy boost. -
In Österreich bekommt man von Aliexpress noch immer fast nichts geliefert, vor allem keine Elektronikersatzteile, die man für Reparaturen braucht. Wie eine an und für sich gute Verordnung jetzt für Probleme sorgt, die offenbar nicht mitgedacht worden sind, habe ich recherchiert.
https://futurezone.at/netzpolitik/lieferstopp-aliexpress-verpackungsverordnung-eu-kommission-umwelt-klimaschutz/402423815#repair #reparieren #Recycling #werkstatt #RechtAufReparatur #Wegwerfgesellschaft #nachhaltigkeit #umweltschutz #aliexpress #basteln #DIY #Elektronik #Mikrocontroller #Maker #elektronikschrott
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In Österreich bekommt man von Aliexpress noch immer fast nichts geliefert, vor allem keine Elektronikersatzteile, die man für Reparaturen braucht. Wie eine an und für sich gute Verordnung jetzt für Probleme sorgt, die offenbar nicht mitgedacht worden sind, habe ich recherchiert.
https://futurezone.at/netzpolitik/lieferstopp-aliexpress-verpackungsverordnung-eu-kommission-umwelt-klimaschutz/402423815#repair #reparieren #Recycling #werkstatt #RechtAufReparatur #Wegwerfgesellschaft #nachhaltigkeit #umweltschutz #aliexpress #basteln #DIY #Elektronik #Mikrocontroller #Maker #elektronikschrott
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In Österreich bekommt man von Aliexpress noch immer fast nichts geliefert, vor allem keine Elektronikersatzteile, die man für Reparaturen braucht. Wie eine an und für sich gute Verordnung jetzt für Probleme sorgt, die offenbar nicht mitgedacht worden sind, habe ich recherchiert.
https://futurezone.at/netzpolitik/lieferstopp-aliexpress-verpackungsverordnung-eu-kommission-umwelt-klimaschutz/402423815#repair #reparieren #Recycling #werkstatt #RechtAufReparatur #Wegwerfgesellschaft #nachhaltigkeit #umweltschutz #aliexpress #basteln #DIY #Elektronik #Mikrocontroller #Maker #elektronikschrott
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In Österreich bekommt man von Aliexpress noch immer fast nichts geliefert, vor allem keine Elektronikersatzteile, die man für Reparaturen braucht. Wie eine an und für sich gute Verordnung jetzt für Probleme sorgt, die offenbar nicht mitgedacht worden sind, habe ich recherchiert.
https://futurezone.at/netzpolitik/lieferstopp-aliexpress-verpackungsverordnung-eu-kommission-umwelt-klimaschutz/402423815#repair #reparieren #Recycling #werkstatt #RechtAufReparatur #Wegwerfgesellschaft #nachhaltigkeit #umweltschutz #aliexpress #basteln #DIY #Elektronik #Mikrocontroller #Maker #elektronikschrott
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In Österreich bekommt man von Aliexpress noch immer fast nichts geliefert, vor allem keine Elektronikersatzteile, die man für Reparaturen braucht. Wie eine an und für sich gute Verordnung jetzt für Probleme sorgt, die offenbar nicht mitgedacht worden sind, habe ich recherchiert.
https://futurezone.at/netzpolitik/lieferstopp-aliexpress-verpackungsverordnung-eu-kommission-umwelt-klimaschutz/402423815#repair #reparieren #Recycling #werkstatt #RechtAufReparatur #Wegwerfgesellschaft #nachhaltigkeit #umweltschutz #aliexpress #basteln #DIY #Elektronik #Mikrocontroller #Maker #elektronikschrott
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🎉💪 Wir sind mit unserem Workshopangebot und offenen E-Learning zu #DigitalerSelbstverteidigung für den Futurezone Award in der Kategorie Digital Skills nominiert. #DigitalAustria https://futurezone.at/myfuzo/futurezone-award-2023-nominierte-preise-preisverleihung/402628622
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Durchbruch bei Windturbinen mit 2 Rotorblättern erreicht
Zweiblättrige Windräder sind günstiger als herkömmliche Modell mit 3 Blättern. Noch sind sie allerdings nicht weit verbreitet.
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Durchbruch bei Windturbinen mit 2 Rotorblättern erreicht
Zweiblättrige Windräder sind günstiger als herkömmliche Modell mit 3 Blättern. Noch sind sie allerdings nicht weit verbreitet.
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Deutschland baut bisher größte Offshore-Windfarm
Die Arbeiten an Nordlicht 1 und 2 sollen 2026 beginnen. 2028 sollen die Windräder in Betrieb gehen.
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Deutschland baut bisher größte Offshore-Windfarm
Die Arbeiten an Nordlicht 1 und 2 sollen 2026 beginnen. 2028 sollen die Windräder in Betrieb gehen.
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Lebensqualität steigern mit Basenpulver: Ein einfacher Weg zu mehr Wohlbefinden
Das Streben nach einem gesunden und ausgeglichenen Leben ist ein Ziel, das viele von uns teilen. In unserem Alltag sind wir oft Stress, unausgewogener Ernährung und Umweltbelastungen ausgesetzt.
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Lebensqualität steigern mit Basenpulver: Ein einfacher Weg zu mehr Wohlbefinden
Das Streben nach einem gesunden und ausgeglichenen Leben ist ein Ziel, das viele von uns teilen. In unserem Alltag sind wir oft Stress, unausgewogener Ernährung und Umweltbelastungen ausgesetzt.
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Politikerbonus 🤥
#Trump darf auf #Facebook lügen, aber nicht fluchen
Facebook entfernte ein #Werbemittel aus Trumps #Wahlkampagne, weil es eine #Beleidigung enthielt.
Werbung mit falschen Informationen blieben online 😮
https://futurezone.at/digital-life/trump-darf-auf-facebook-luegen-aber-nicht-fluchen/400641839
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Elon Musks Chatbot Grok stellt Zahlen zu Holocaust in Frage
Der KI-Chatbot fällt erneut mit fragwürdigen Aussagen auf. Diesmal über die Zahl der Toten im Holocaust.
https://futurezone.at/digital-life/grok-chatbot-elon-musk-holocaust-leugnung-in-frage/403042851
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Elon Musks Chatbot Grok stellt Zahlen zu Holocaust in Frage
Der KI-Chatbot fällt erneut mit fragwürdigen Aussagen auf. Diesmal über die Zahl der Toten im Holocaust.
https://futurezone.at/digital-life/grok-chatbot-elon-musk-holocaust-leugnung-in-frage/403042851
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2026 Future Energy Summit – BIC Magazine
Be part of the Future Energy Summit from March 2–4, 2026, at the DoubleTree by Hilton, Houston Intercontinental…
#Energy #FutureEnergy #In-PersonEvent #networkingevents
https://www.europesays.com/2802961/ -
New on the Blog: @typographica praises the jacket for Kaveh Akbar’s novel Martyr!, designed by Linda Huang for Alfred A. Knopf, 2024, using Zangezi by Daria Cohen / @futurefonts plus Favorit by Dinamo.
Stephen calls for publishers to include typeface credits on the jacket flaps of their books.
https://fontsinuse.com/uses/59513/martyr-book-jacket
#FontsInUse #typefaces #fonts #BookDesign #BookCovers #credits #KavehAkbar #AlfredAKnopf
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New on the Blog: @typographica praises the jacket for Kaveh Akbar’s novel Martyr!, designed by Linda Huang for Alfred A. Knopf, 2024, using Zangezi by Daria Cohen / @futurefonts plus Favorit by Dinamo.
Stephen calls for publishers to include typeface credits on the jacket flaps of their books.
https://fontsinuse.com/uses/59513/martyr-book-jacket
#FontsInUse #typefaces #fonts #BookDesign #BookCovers #credits #KavehAkbar #AlfredAKnopf
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New on the Blog: @typographica praises the jacket for Kaveh Akbar’s novel Martyr!, designed by Linda Huang for Alfred A. Knopf, 2024, using Zangezi by Daria Cohen / @futurefonts plus Favorit by Dinamo.
Stephen calls for publishers to include typeface credits on the jacket flaps of their books.
https://fontsinuse.com/uses/59513/martyr-book-jacket
#FontsInUse #typefaces #fonts #BookDesign #BookCovers #credits #KavehAkbar #AlfredAKnopf
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New on the Blog: @typographica praises the jacket for Kaveh Akbar’s novel Martyr!, designed by Linda Huang for Alfred A. Knopf, 2024, using Zangezi by Daria Cohen / @futurefonts plus Favorit by Dinamo.
Stephen calls for publishers to include typeface credits on the jacket flaps of their books.
https://fontsinuse.com/uses/59513/martyr-book-jacket
#FontsInUse #typefaces #fonts #BookDesign #BookCovers #credits #KavehAkbar #AlfredAKnopf