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Hurricane Helene was artificially created, similar to cloud seeding, to control and manipulate the weather. The purpose was to flood and devastate certain places, thereby crashing land values and reducing the amount paid out as compensation.

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I'm here to show you these old turbine blades that have been dumped. Despite being called renewable energy, there's nothing renewable about them. These blades are quite short, around 20 meters, and they're worn out with not much life left. Recycling them is a challenge, and they sit here like massive beach whales. Compared to the ones in action, they're not that big. So when they run out, they'll just be sitting here, telling a story. The Chilumbin wind farm cost $1.4 billion, but in 15 years, these blades will still be here, not being used.

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I'm here to show you these old turbine blades that have been dumped. Despite being called renewable energy, there's nothing renewable about them. These blades are quite short, around 20 meters, and they're worn out with little life left. Recycling them is a challenge. Compared to the massive ones we've seen in action, these blades are not that big. When they run out, they'll just sit here like beached whales. This highlights the story of the Chilumbin wind farm, which cost $1.4 billion but will end up abandoned in 15 years.

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More people die from extreme heat than from floods, hurricanes, and tornadoes combined. Heat-related deaths surpass the combined total of deaths from these three other major issues.

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America is under attack from natural disasters like hurricanes and wildfires, including one in Wyoming that burned hundreds of thousands of acres. This may not be random, especially since a 73,000-acre fire was allowed to burn for days near Acme, where rare earth minerals worth $1 billion were discovered. The Rock Springs uplift in Wyoming could contain 18 million tons of lithium carbonate equivalent. North Carolina with its lithium and Florida with phosphate are also at risk of being ravaged for resources. This reflects a mindset that treats land as expendable, prioritizing profits over people's lives, potentially leading to a dystopian future. Many affected by the disasters in Wyoming lack insurance to rebuild, and homeowners in rural areas struggle with fire insurance coverage.

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Solar panel waste is highly toxic and requires special disposal. However, due to the high cost involved, discarded panels are being sent to landfills in poor countries instead. Research shows that by 2030, there will be around 8 million tons of green waste, which is expected to increase to 80 million tons by 2050.

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Scotland's power sector is facing criticism for using large diesel generators to support wind turbines. A whistleblower raised concerns about environmental and safety issues, including the use of six diesel generators for up to six hours a day to de-ice the turbines. Scottish Power explained that they had to connect 71 windmills to the fossil fuel supply due to a grid fault that prevented the turbines from functioning properly in December. The whistleblower also mentioned oil leaks from hydraulic units and technical faults that caused the turbines to consume energy instead of generating it.

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As we near the solar maximum expected in 2025, the risk of solar flares rises. The Carrington event of 1859 was the strongest geomagnetic storm recorded, causing spectacular auroras visible as far south as central Mexico. The storm disrupted telegraph systems, with operators experiencing sparks and fires from the equipment. Even after disconnecting batteries, some telegraphs continued to operate due to induced current from the solar activity. A similar event today would be catastrophic, potentially crippling power and communication systems globally.

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The Ivanpah solar plant in California, not India, went live ten years ago with the goal of producing clean power for at least thirty years. The plant uses giant mirrors to concentrate the sun's energy on towers, boiling water to create steam and generate electricity. The project was expected to employ about a thousand people to build the facility. As part of a climate agenda, President Obama provided Ivanpah with significant federal support, including a $1.6 billion loan, a $535 million grant, a 30% tax credit worth about $600 million, and an accelerated depreciation schedule.

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High amounts of electricity interacting with concrete and other surfaces cause melting and holes. Photos from high earth orbit show a scar running across the Sahara Desert, created simultaneously like a massive wall of electricity. This scar resembles the burn marks and holes seen in previous examples.

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A wind turbine caught fire and collapsed due to lightning and wind damage. Despite the need for energy, none of the turbines in the wind farm were turning. The burning turbine was damaged by a tornado, with smoke containing chemicals and fiberglass. Old turbine blades were found dumped, questioning the true renewable nature of wind energy projects.

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In Pasadena, the owner of a house reported that the front part of the house does not have a smart meter, and it remained unharmed. In contrast, the back part of the house, which had a smart meter, was completely destroyed by fire. The front house and surrounding trees are intact, while the back house is entirely burnt down.

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I'm here to show you these old turbine blades that have been dumped. Despite being called renewable energy, there's nothing renewable about them. These blades are quite short, around 20 meters, and they're worn out with little life left. Recycling them is a challenge, so they end up sitting here like beached whales. This is the fate of the turbines from the chilumbin wind farm, which cost $1.4 billion. In 15 years, they'll still be sitting here, telling a story of wasted resources.

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Hurricane Milton was an extremely powerful category 5 hurricane. It caused widespread damage across its path in October 2024.

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Solar panels were invented in America in 1954, but China has been better able to capitalize on the technology. China commercialized solar panels at a large scale and now controls over 80% of the global solar panel supply chain. The United States manufactures virtually none of the required components for solar panel production. The US is prioritizing building up its supply chain from scratch to compete with China. The US has less than half of China's solar capacity, and nearly four out of five solar panels installed in the US are from Chinese companies. China dominates the entire global supply chain and has spent almost 10 times as much on solar manufacturing than the US and the EU combined. Of the world's top 10 largest solar manufacturers, seven are Chinese, and only one is American.

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Copper and aluminum are the primary beneficiaries of the grid spending increase. That $800,000,000,000 is going to buy copper, which is money. The oil market, compared to the metals market, is dwarfed by the demand for metals like copper, aluminum, iron ore, gold, and nickel, which are said to be so thinly traded and critical that there is no chance to get off crude oil. You can’t build electric cars, windmills, solar, or a modern military without these metals. Underwater power cables are expensive, and offshore wind and bringing that electricity green requires copper—copper, copper, copper. Copper now is described as a trillion-dollar annual market by tomorrow morning. There is no copper inventory to meet this demand. Since Mohenjo Daro, humanity has mined 700,000,000 metric tons of copper. If we put that in a big cube for scale (about 4 thirty-meter sides), approximately 80% of all the copper ever mined is still in human possession. Recycling could recover about 80% of that 700,000,000 tons, but it would require tearing down every building in the United States, Europe, Japan, and China. We can recycle copper from buildings and even from the university in front of us, but the consequence would be living in the dark. Currently, we consume 30,000,000 tons of copper per year, with only 4,000,000 tons recycled. To maintain 3% GDP growth with no electrification, this speaker claims we must mine the same amount of copper in the next eighteen years as we mined in the last ten thousand years. In the next eighteen years, we would need to mine the same copper volume as mined in the entire previous span of human history, without electrification, without data centers, without solar and wind, and without the greening of the world economy. Since 1900, the energy required to produce copper has increased sixteen-fold, and as ore grades decline, more energy is needed to produce the same metal while water consumption has doubled. Grades are declining globally, and easy copper mines are depleted; Chile is highlighted as a major producer (24% of global copper mine production), yet costs are in the third or fourth quartile. They burn coal in the Chilean grid, and solar is ineffective for mining because the sun only shines a few hours a day; solar is useless without grid-scale storage. The speaker asserts we are heading for a train wreck in Chile and that we need six giant tier-one mines online every year from now until 2050 to meet copper demand for electrification, data centers, and grid upgrades—40% of the production to come from new mines. All the hype about AI is dismissed as fantasy because we do not have the energy. Nuclear power is proposed as a solution, but what are those plants made of? All the metals mentioned earlier. The country reportedly does not have the capability to weld containment vessels in a traditional nuclear power plant anymore, whereas Korea can build a nuclear power plant.

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In Afghanistan, a group of Russian men successfully delivered a wind turbine using an old Soviet-era plane that landed smoothly in the sand. They left the plane behind as a makeshift sculpture, showing the value of using resources creatively.

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Ivanpah, a solar farm in the Mojave Desert, was funded by a $1.6 billion Department of Energy loan obtained with the help of Bechtel for Google, NRG Energy, and BrightSource Energy. The project aimed to sell solar power to PG and E and California Edison until 2039, create 1,000 construction jobs, and power 40,000 homes. The 350,000 garage-door-sized mirrors reflecting sunlight onto 450-foot boilers attracted bugs, which attracted birds that were singed to death midair by the reflected rays. The project harmed desert tortoises and destroyed desert habitat. Ivanpah operated at half capacity due to weather and equipment challenges and used natural gas to operate the boilers. PG and E ended their contract fifteen years early, and Ivanpah will close two of its three units by 2026.

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To make a wind turbine, you need a large amount of iron ore, concrete, and steel. The concrete production emits carbon dioxide, and the steel requires rare earth elements, which are often sourced from China and come with environmental concerns. Additionally, the cobalt used in wind turbines is often mined by child slaves in dangerous conditions in the Congo. The turbine blades are made from balsa wood obtained by clearing parts of the Amazon forest, and they contain a toxic chemical called Bisphenol A. These blades cannot be recycled and end up as landfill, polluting the soil and water. Supporting wind and solar power means supporting pollution, slavery, and environmental damage.

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More people die from extreme heat than from floods, hurricanes, and tornadoes combined. Heat-related deaths surpass those from the other three major issues combined.

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A tornado hit. A tree went down. The speaker exclaimed about the tornado's size.

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We're already seeing in Southwest Africa, Namibia has a huge drought, they're killing animals, including elephants, to feed the hungry during this drought. This was a hydro climate whiplash. Globally, the extreme weather events related to climate have cost $3,500,000,000,000 over the last decade. That's an increase of almost $800,000,000,000 over the previous decade. We now measure the specific point source solution sites for six sixty million, the most significant virtually all of the global warming pollution sites in the world. 25% of the pollution comes from those cities. It's all free. You can go to the site right now. They get an 88% reduction by going to electric arc furnaces.

TED

Solar Energy Is Even Cheaper Than You Think | Jenny Chase | TED
Guests: Jenny Chase
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Solar panels are becoming increasingly affordable, with 444 GW installed worldwide last year, primarily in China. In Pakistan, solar installations are booming despite official data underreporting, driven by the need for affordable power amid extreme heat. Solar is also displacing fossil fuels in California, where emissions have dropped over 30% since 2012, aided by battery storage.

The Why Files

TESLA KNEW The Secret of the Great Pyramid: Unlimited Energy to Power the World
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Nicola Tesla aimed to harness Earth's energy and transmit it wirelessly, but his research disappeared after his death. The Great Pyramid of Giza, long thought to be a tomb for Pharaoh Khufu, lacks typical tomb characteristics and may have served a different purpose. Its precise alignment and construction suggest advanced knowledge of the Earth's dimensions. The pyramid's materials, including quartz-rich granite, could generate electricity through piezoelectricity. Christopher Dunn theorizes it functioned as a power plant, using sound waves and chemical reactions to create hydrogen and electricity. Recent studies indicate the pyramid can focus electromagnetic energy. Tesla's Wardenclyffe Tower, built on an aquifer, aimed to transmit power similarly. However, Tesla faced opposition from financiers like JP Morgan, who stood to lose from free energy. The Great Pyramid may have been built by an advanced civilization that vanished after a cataclysmic event. The potential for unlimited clean energy remains unexplored, as historical powers benefit from fossil fuels.

The Why Files

Solar storms: more dangerous than you think. Can we survive another Carrington Event?
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On September 1, 1859, astronomer Richard Carrington witnessed a massive coronal mass ejection (CME) that led to the Carrington Event, the most powerful solar storm recorded. This storm caused widespread chaos, shorting telegraph lines and creating auroras visible far beyond their usual range. Solar storms, including past events like the Miyake Event in 774 AD, have occurred throughout history but had minimal impact until the rise of electrical technology. Future storms could devastate modern infrastructure, leading to power outages, communication failures, and societal collapse. With a 4% annual chance of severe storms, preparation at the community level is crucial, as government resources may be insufficient.
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