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22nd Energy and Managing Authorities (EMA) Network meeting
Refocusing programmes for addressing new challenges and opportunities and accelerate implementation / Moderator by Tudor Constantinescu – DG ENER
Tour de table and presentations from Member States: EMA members will intervene in a tour the table for updating on the latest developments and challenges on the implementation of energy Specific Objectives under cohesion policy and submitting the modified programs according to the new priorities and conditions from Mid Term Review.
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“Catastrophic Consequences”: Scientists Warn of Abrupt, Irreversible Antarctic Collapse – SciTechDaily
- “Catastrophic Consequences”: Scientists Warn of Abrupt, Irreversible Antarctic Collapse SciTechDaily
- Researchers issue warning on troubling phenomenon impacting Earth’s poles: ‘Rhythmic pulse’ The Cool Down
- Antarctica’s Ice Dwindles at…
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Triglyceride-glucose index association with kidney function in adults; a population-based study | BMC Endocrine Disorders
Chen T, Knicely D, Grams M. Diagnóstico e Tratamento de doença renal crônica: Uma revisão. Revista JAMA. 2019;322(13):1294–304.
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Sarnak MJ, Levey AS, Schoolwerth AC,…
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Pakistan Navy seizes drugs worth $972M in Arabian Sea
Operation comes in coordination between Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, France, Spain, United States Naval assets
Pakistan Navy Ship Yarmook has seized drugs…
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How algae learned to harness the Sun without getting burned
A day of strong sunlight can spoil more than just a beach outing — it can also harm the process of photosynthesis, the way plants and other organisms convert sunlight into energy. Underwater, however, certain algae have evolved a unique way to…
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Post your questions for Terry Gilliam | Film
Terry Gilliam has done a lot of things in the past 50 years: he’s been a cartoonist, animator, writer, artist, actor, opera director, title sequence designer. But we can safely say that directing films has been his main calling, and where the…
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Figure skating – Cup of China 2025: Full schedule, all results, scores and standings
Cup of China 2025: Schedule
All times China Standard Time (UTC+8)
Friday, 24 October
- 14:45–16:03 – Ice dance rhythm dance
- 16:35–17:54 – Women’s short program
- 19:00–20:29 – Men’s short program
- 20:50–21:54 – Pairs short program
Saturday,…
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Jennifer Saunders to reunite with Ab Fab co-star Joanna Lumley in Amandaland
Paul GlynnCulture reporter
BBC
Saunders (left) and Dame Joanna are better known to millions as Ab Fab’s Edina and Patsy Jennifer Saunders will play the sister of her Absolutely Fabulous co-star Dame Joanna Lumley in the Christmas special of sitcom…
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Rondo Energy turns on first major thermal battery — at…
Thermal energy storage systems, which turn electricity into heat that can be tapped for hours or days at a time, could help decarbonize the production of everything from cement to beer.
But in the U.S., where the economics of replacing fossil fuels with electricity remain challenging, thermal-battery startup Rondo Energy has found its first industrial-scale opportunity in a more controversial place: the oil fields of California.
Last week, the San Francisco Bay Area-based firm announced the start of commercial operations for its first 100-megawatt-hour “heat battery,” located at a Holmes Western Oil Corp. facility in Kern County, the heart of the Central California oil patch.
The installation is housed in what looks like a four-story prefabricated office building. Inside sits a massive stack of refractory bricks, which are heated to temperatures of more than 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 degrees Fahrenheit) by an adjoining 20-megawatt solar array. That heat is tapped to generate steam that is injected into oil wells to increase production — a job previously done by a fossil-gas-fired boiler.
The project is something of a Faustian bargain. It will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by about 13,000 metric tons per year, said John O’Donnell, Rondo’s cofounder and chief innovation officer. But, of course, those reductions are in service of bringing more planet-warming fossil fuels to market.
Rondo’s argument for pursuing this application is twofold. For one, fossil fuels will be in use for decades to come, and so we might as well reduce emissions from the sector where we can. Second, thermal-storage startups need paying customers in order to scale up their technology, which could prove necessary to minimize pollution from a host of hard-to-decarbonize sectors.
“We’ve got to decarbonize the world the way it is right now,” O’Donnell told Canary Media in a Thursday call from the Washington, D.C., hotel hosting the annual summit of the Renewable Thermal Collaborative, a coalition of organizations working to cut emissions from heating and cooling. “And because California is kind of an island unto itself, we see this opportunity to make a very big impact in the state.”
Those companies haven’t said if they plan to continue work on those projects absent federal funding, and O’Donnell declined to comment on their prospects. “We are ready to work with them when they’re ready to go,” he said.
“Transitioning the world’s industrial economy to clean is going to take a minute — and by a minute, I mean multiple decades,” said Blaine Collison, executive director of the Renewable Thermal Collaborative. “This is a big shift that has to happen at a lot of discrete points. There are tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of facilities that have to be addressed.”
Building a first-of-a-kind project
Rondo’s first 2-megawatt-hour pilot-scale heat battery started operating two years ago at a California ethanol-production facility. But that served more as a “constructability test” for the company’s technology than as a full-scale proof point for commercial viability, O’Donnell said.
Rondo’s Kern County battery, meanwhile, is its first major installation, though it has several others in the works across Europe. It’s building similar heat batteries at a chemicals plant in Germany, a green industrial park in Denmark, and an undisclosed food-and-beverage processing facility in Spain or Portugal.
The market for Rondo’s tech is stronger in Europe, where companies pay much higher prices for fossil gas and face sizeable fees and taxes on their greenhouse gas emissions, O’Donnell said. In the U.S., by contrast, fossil gas is cheap, and only a handful of states impose costs on industrial carbon emissions.
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