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#davidwright — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #davidwright, aggregated by home.social.

  1. American Airlines lanza paquetes promocionales rumbo al Mundial de futbol

    La expectativa por el Mundial incrementa el interés de empresas internacionales ligadas al deporte y la movilidad aérea.

    Por Deyanira Vázquez | Reportera                                        

    La aerolínea American Airlines anunció el lanzamiento de nuevos paquetes promocionales inspirados en la Copa Mundial de la FIFA 2026. La empresa realiza el proyecto en colaboración con Qatar Airways y la Federación de Futbol de Estados Unidos (US Soccer). Los artículos estarán disponibles desde junio y permanecerán durante julio en vuelos seleccionados.

    La compañía informó que los kits formarán parte de la experiencia de viaje rumbo al torneo internacional que se celebrará en Norteamérica. Los productos fueron diseñados para acompañar a aficionados desde el aeropuerto hasta los estadios sede del campeonato. La estrategia comercial se enfocó en fortalecer la experiencia temática de cara al Mundial de 2026.

    American Airlines indicó que operará vuelos hacia las ciudades anfitrionas del torneo con una cobertura amplia dentro de Estados Unidos. La empresa sostuvo que busca posicionarse como una de las principales aerolíneas vinculadas con la justa internacional. La iniciativa también incluyó elementos promocionales relacionados con la selección estadounidense de futbol.

    Kits para aficionados

    La directora de marketing de American Airlines, Caroline Clayton, afirmó que el verano representará una etapa relevante para la aerolínea por su participación como proveedor oficial de la Copa Mundial. La ejecutiva señaló que los kits ayudarán a incrementar el entusiasmo y la identidad futbolística entre los pasajeros. También indicó que los artículos estarán preparados para acompañar a los aficionados durante los días de partido.

    Los kits promocionales incluyeron distintos diseños dependiendo de la categoría del asiento contratado por los pasajeros. Para las áreas Flagship First y Flagship Suite Preferred, la aerolínea preparó bolsas transparentes con ribetes de cuero azul y correa desmontable. Los pasajeros de Flagship Business y Flagship Suite recibirán bolsas adaptables con opción de uso cruzado o tipo riñonera.

    La categoría Premium Economy contará con una bolsa transparente equipada con correa de muñeca desmontable. Los artículos buscaron combinar funcionalidad y diseño temático relacionado con el futbol internacional. La aerolínea indicó que los productos acompañarán la experiencia de viaje durante la temporada deportiva. –sn–

    Paquetes de cortesia de American Airlines del Mundial de futbol

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    #NoticiasMX #PeriodismoParaTi #PeriodismoParaTiSociedadNoticias #aerolíneasMundial2026 #americanAirlines #artículosTemáticosFIFA #CarolineClayton #Cdmx #ciudadesSedeMundial2026 #CopaMundialFIFA2026 #DavidWright #experienciaFIFA #FIFA2026 #futbolEnEstadosUnidos #futbolInternacional #Información #InformaciónMéxico #kitsPromocionales #México #Morena #mundial2026 #noticia #noticias #NoticiasMéxico #NoticiasSociedad #QatarAirways #SeciedadNoticiasCom #SN #Sociedad #SociedadNoticias #SociedadNoticiasCom #sociedadNoticias #SociedadNoticiasCom #TimHoward #transporteAéreoMundial #turismoDeportivo #USSoccer #viajerosFutbol #vuelosMundial2026
  2. https://medicinehatnews.com/news/local-news/2026/05/01/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-minimal-savings/

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.



    #ClimateDefense #DataCentres #AlbertaWaterCouncil #WaterforLife #LandStewardshipCentre #WatershedRestorationResiliencyProgram #WonderValley #MihtaAskiy #Synapse #DavidWright #RyanFournier #ImpactAssessmentAgency #NigelBankes

    #AbPoli #AbLeg #CdnPoli

  3. https://medicinehatnews.com/news/local-news/2026/05/01/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-minimal-savings/

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.



    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/435123/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-m

    #ClimateDefense #DataCentres #AlbertaWaterCouncil #WaterforLife #LandStewardshipCentre #WatershedRestorationResiliencyProgram #WonderValley #MihtaAskiy #Synapse #DavidWright #RyanFournier #ImpactAssessmentAgency #NigelBankes

    #AbPoli #AbLeg #CdnPoli

  4. https://medicinehatnews.com/news/local-news/2026/05/01/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-minimal-savings/

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.



    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/435123/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-m

    #ClimateDefense #DataCentres #AlbertaWaterCouncil #WaterforLife #LandStewardshipCentre #WatershedRestorationResiliencyProgram #WonderValley #MihtaAskiy #Synapse #DavidWright #RyanFournier #ImpactAssessmentAgency #NigelBankes

    #AbPoli #AbLeg #CdnPoli

  5. https://medicinehatnews.com/news/local-news/2026/05/01/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-minimal-savings/

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.



    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/435123/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-m

    #ClimateDefense #DataCentres #AlbertaWaterCouncil #WaterforLife #LandStewardshipCentre #WatershedRestorationResiliencyProgram #WonderValley #MihtaAskiy #Synapse #DavidWright #RyanFournier #ImpactAssessmentAgency #NigelBankes

    #AbPoli #AbLeg #CdnPoli

  6. https://medicinehatnews.com/news/local-news/2026/05/01/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-minimal-savings/

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.



    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/435123/alberta-water-council-among-several-environmental-advisory-groups-being-eliminated-for-m

    #ClimateDefense #DataCentres #AlbertaWaterCouncil #WaterforLife #LandStewardshipCentre #WatershedRestorationResiliencyProgram #WonderValley #MihtaAskiy #Synapse #DavidWright #RyanFournier #ImpactAssessmentAgency #NigelBankes

    #AbPoli #AbLeg #CdnPoli

  7. Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    The UCP government pulled the plug on an independent council that provided expert advice to the province on water policy.

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.

    https://www.upgrad.com/blog/chinese-ai-returns-to-haunt-markets-one-year-after-deepseek/

    https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-ai-models-rattling-markets-42ee512e

    https://archive.is/iFbbd

    As each year passes, and new models are released, these Data Centres have regular maintenance schedules that require regular replacement of spent chips and all of its components - much like a vehicle. Under the present geopolitical situation in the Middle East, the massive volumes of natural gas and precious water that will be spent feeding these centres pose a real risk that Albertans can be holding the bag to some extremely destructive Data Centres without appropriate security or collateral.

    Some of these projects will be within ear shot of residential areas. You don’t have to search very far for people complaining about the noise from the power generators on site to figure out these Data Centres can literally alter the way entire communities are built

    So, it’s true, Canadians cannot manage what we don’t measure. But, we can also see what’s happened already to know we’re not even managing the risk of when these Data Centres go wrong.

    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/426197/impact-assessments-not-required-for-olds-mihta-askiy-data-centres-expert-says-legislatio

    Should Canadians be disturbed that Assessments are being set aside for these very slap dash projects that are considered Natural Gas Plants, and are presented as “infrastructure”? Of course.

    Should Canadians be worried about what little we already know? Let’s take a peek at Wonder Valley: From the National Observer’s Marc Fawcett-Atkinson, Albertans are also aware that the Wonder Valley project is not just about power generation. Specifically, the Wonder Valley project alone is expected to consume enough water to match that of 460,000 people over their entire lifetimes….

    The plan is outlined in a heavily redacted land sale contract signed on March 25, 2026, between O’Leary’s company and a rural municipality of fewer than 9,000 people north of Edmonton.

    Under the agreement, the Municipal District of Greenview will transfer a large part of a planned industrial park developed by the district to O’Leary’s company in three phases as it builds out the 7.5-gigawatt Wonder Valley project. But there’s a catch: before the sale goes through, the municipality must “act as an agent” for O’Leary’s company by securing provincial water licences that give the facility access to up to 24 million cubic metres of water annually.

    That’s enough water for about 460,000 people over their lifetimes, drawn from a municipality that last year declared an agricultural emergency because of drought.

    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2026/04/20/news/kevin-oleary-pins-water-licence-70-billion-data-centre-project-small-alberta

    The Politician may like the prospect of pleasing Oil and Gas incumbents with a solid source of demand for Natural Gas. But no one seems to give a damn about where the costs are landing - seems to be on everyone else’s backs.

  8. Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    The UCP government pulled the plug on an independent council that provided expert advice to the province on water policy.

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.

    https://www.upgrad.com/blog/chinese-ai-returns-to-haunt-markets-one-year-after-deepseek/

    https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-ai-models-rattling-markets-42ee512e

    https://archive.is/iFbbd

    As each year passes, and new models are released, these Data Centres have regular maintenance schedules that require regular replacement of spent chips and all of its components - much like a vehicle. Under the present geopolitical situation in the Middle East, the massive volumes of natural gas and precious water that will be spent feeding these centres pose a real risk that Albertans can be holding the bag to some extremely destructive Data Centres without appropriate security or collateral.

    Some of these projects will be within ear shot of residential areas. You don’t have to search very far for people complaining about the noise from the power generators on site to figure out these Data Centres can literally alter the way entire communities are built

    So, it’s true, Canadians cannot manage what we don’t measure. But, we can also see what’s happened already to know we’re not even managing the risk of when these Data Centres go wrong.

    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/426197/impact-assessments-not-required-for-olds-mihta-askiy-data-centres-expert-says-legislatio

    Should Canadians be disturbed that Assessments are being set aside for these very slap dash projects that are considered Natural Gas Plants, and are presented as “infrastructure”? Of course.

    Should Canadians be worried about what little we already know? Let’s take a peek at Wonder Valley: From the National Observer’s Marc Fawcett-Atkinson, Albertans are also aware that the Wonder Valley project is not just about power generation. Specifically, the Wonder Valley project alone is expected to consume enough water to match that of 460,000 people over their entire lifetimes….

    The plan is outlined in a heavily redacted land sale contract signed on March 25, 2026, between O’Leary’s company and a rural municipality of fewer than 9,000 people north of Edmonton.

    Under the agreement, the Municipal District of Greenview will transfer a large part of a planned industrial park developed by the district to O’Leary’s company in three phases as it builds out the 7.5-gigawatt Wonder Valley project. But there’s a catch: before the sale goes through, the municipality must “act as an agent” for O’Leary’s company by securing provincial water licences that give the facility access to up to 24 million cubic metres of water annually.

    That’s enough water for about 460,000 people over their lifetimes, drawn from a municipality that last year declared an agricultural emergency because of drought.

    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2026/04/20/news/kevin-oleary-pins-water-licence-70-billion-data-centre-project-small-alberta

    The Politician may like the prospect of pleasing Oil and Gas incumbents with a solid source of demand for Natural Gas. But no one seems to give a damn about where the costs are landing - seems to be on everyone else’s backs.

  9. Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    The UCP government pulled the plug on an independent council that provided expert advice to the province on water policy.

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.

    https://www.upgrad.com/blog/chinese-ai-returns-to-haunt-markets-one-year-after-deepseek/

    https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-ai-models-rattling-markets-42ee512e

    https://archive.is/iFbbd

    As each year passes, and new models are released, these Data Centres have regular maintenance schedules that require regular replacement of spent chips and all of its components - much like a vehicle. Under the present geopolitical situation in the Middle East, the massive volumes of natural gas and precious water that will be spent feeding these centres pose a real risk that Albertans can be holding the bag to some extremely destructive Data Centres without appropriate security or collateral.

    Some of these projects will be within ear shot of residential areas. You don’t have to search very far for people complaining about the noise from the power generators on site to figure out these Data Centres can literally alter the way entire communities are built

    So, it’s true, Canadians cannot manage what we don’t measure. But, we can also see what’s happened already to know we’re not even managing the risk of when these Data Centres go wrong.

    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/426197/impact-assessments-not-required-for-olds-mihta-askiy-data-centres-expert-says-legislatio

    Should Canadians be disturbed that Assessments are being set aside for these very slap dash projects that are considered Natural Gas Plants, and are presented as “infrastructure”? Of course.

    Should Canadians be worried about what little we already know? Let’s take a peek at Wonder Valley: From the National Observer’s Marc Fawcett-Atkinson, Albertans are also aware that the Wonder Valley project is not just about power generation. Specifically, the Wonder Valley project alone is expected to consume enough water to match that of 460,000 people over their entire lifetimes….

    The plan is outlined in a heavily redacted land sale contract signed on March 25, 2026, between O’Leary’s company and a rural municipality of fewer than 9,000 people north of Edmonton.

    Under the agreement, the Municipal District of Greenview will transfer a large part of a planned industrial park developed by the district to O’Leary’s company in three phases as it builds out the 7.5-gigawatt Wonder Valley project. But there’s a catch: before the sale goes through, the municipality must “act as an agent” for O’Leary’s company by securing provincial water licences that give the facility access to up to 24 million cubic metres of water annually.

    That’s enough water for about 460,000 people over their lifetimes, drawn from a municipality that last year declared an agricultural emergency because of drought.

    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2026/04/20/news/kevin-oleary-pins-water-licence-70-billion-data-centre-project-small-alberta

    The Politician may like the prospect of pleasing Oil and Gas incumbents with a solid source of demand for Natural Gas. But no one seems to give a damn about where the costs are landing - seems to be on everyone else’s backs.

  10. Alberta Water Council among several environmental advisory groups being eliminated for minimal savings

    https://archive.ph/8t9hK

    The UCP government pulled the plug on an independent council that provided expert advice to the province on water policy.

    Canadians are basically being told we can’t be scared of what we don’t know. And, we don’t know what we don’t know, right?

    Danielle Smith’s UCP is cutting off our ability to assess and track the environmental impacts of 3 major datacentre projects that are proposed for Alberta in Wonder Valley, Mihta Askiy, and Synapse. With the Federal Government also signalling a pull back on Environmental Assessment, experts rightly sound the alarm to state the obvious:

    You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

    Worse, these projects are not traditional infrastructure projects that provide critical “Public Goods” to society. They’re in many ways long-term investments in data management technologies that may prove to be bad gambles. As of 2026, in the midst of an on-going US-Iran conflict, and what most observers expect will lead to $150 per barrel oil, fuel shortages, fertilizer shortages, and worse, data centres are enormous investments in time, energy, water, and space. In exchange, these Data Centres may lead to contributions in “Artificial Intelligence”, but the reality of the technology is uneven adoption and even less productivity than hoped for.

    As the world develops these “AI” products, there’s also an expectation that they become leaner, more efficient, and more performant. When these efficiencies are developed, and become industry changing, whole markets rattle wondering if the existing data centres and their investments were wasted. For example, Canadians can just look at the 2025 release of DeepSeek, which essentially introduced a new competitor to the AI sector, and a model that was indeed more efficient and performant at the same time. At that moment, NVIDIA stocks lost $600 Billion in value.

    With additional developments in this space, Canadians can see that the markets continue to rattle in 2026, costing Billions more in losses.

    https://www.upgrad.com/blog/chinese-ai-returns-to-haunt-markets-one-year-after-deepseek/

    https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-ai-models-rattling-markets-42ee512e

    https://archive.is/iFbbd

    As each year passes, and new models are released, these Data Centres have regular maintenance schedules that require regular replacement of spent chips and all of its components - much like a vehicle. Under the present geopolitical situation in the Middle East, the massive volumes of natural gas and precious water that will be spent feeding these centres pose a real risk that Albertans can be holding the bag to some extremely destructive Data Centres without appropriate security or collateral.

    Some of these projects will be within ear shot of residential areas. You don’t have to search very far for people complaining about the noise from the power generators on site to figure out these Data Centres can literally alter the way entire communities are built

    So, it’s true, Canadians cannot manage what we don’t measure. But, we can also see what’s happened already to know we’re not even managing the risk of when these Data Centres go wrong.

    https://kopitalk.net/c/canada/p/426197/impact-assessments-not-required-for-olds-mihta-askiy-data-centres-expert-says-legislatio

    Should Canadians be disturbed that Assessments are being set aside for these very slap dash projects that are considered Natural Gas Plants, and are presented as “infrastructure”? Of course.

    Should Canadians be worried about what little we already know? Let’s take a peek at Wonder Valley: From the National Observer’s Marc Fawcett-Atkinson, Albertans are also aware that the Wonder Valley project is not just about power generation. Specifically, the Wonder Valley project alone is expected to consume enough water to match that of 460,000 people over their entire lifetimes….

    The plan is outlined in a heavily redacted land sale contract signed on March 25, 2026, between O’Leary’s company and a rural municipality of fewer than 9,000 people north of Edmonton.

    Under the agreement, the Municipal District of Greenview will transfer a large part of a planned industrial park developed by the district to O’Leary’s company in three phases as it builds out the 7.5-gigawatt Wonder Valley project. But there’s a catch: before the sale goes through, the municipality must “act as an agent” for O’Leary’s company by securing provincial water licences that give the facility access to up to 24 million cubic metres of water annually.

    That’s enough water for about 460,000 people over their lifetimes, drawn from a municipality that last year declared an agricultural emergency because of drought.

    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2026/04/20/news/kevin-oleary-pins-water-licence-70-billion-data-centre-project-small-alberta

    The Politician may like the prospect of pleasing Oil and Gas incumbents with a solid source of demand for Natural Gas. But no one seems to give a damn about where the costs are landing - seems to be on everyone else’s backs.

  11. Mets legend David Wright sees Hall of Fame chances improve with spike in votes – amNewYork rawchili.com/mlb/530691/ #Baseball #DavidWright #Mets #MLB #Sports

  12. Mets legend David Wright sees Hall of Fame chances improve with spike in votes – amNewYork rawchili.com/mlb/530691/ #Baseball #DavidWright #Mets #MLB #Sports