
Ook minister Vandenbroucke stelt werk van ziekenfondsen in vraag #Echobox=1778311287" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">tijd.be/politiek-econo…
widged
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@widged
ex-CTO. Stopped working in tech as it pollutes more than the air industry. Back to Brussels 🇧🇪after 10 years in NZ 🇳🇿 (ze/zir/zirs)

Ook minister Vandenbroucke stelt werk van ziekenfondsen in vraag #Echobox=1778311287" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">tijd.be/politiek-econo…








What should concern all New Zealanders is the increasingly obvious role of smear merchants, fringe micro-bloggers pretending to be journalists, and political PR operatives in shaping public narratives and targeting journalists they see as inconvenient. Our own political warfare is no longer confined to Parliament. It is now playing out through tightly coordinated outrage campaigns and selective leaks designed to damage credibility and shift public perception ahead of the election. As Steve Abel argued he smells a rat; too many people are afraid to say it out loud, but the rise of smear campaigns inside our media landscape is becoming impossible to ignore. It should raise alarm bells when dirty political operators appear more interested in destroying individuals than debating issues openly and honestly. #nzpol


















Many of the onshore wind farms along the coasts of the UK and Denmark are falling apart after only 10 years. A study reveals that energy contributions from wind farms begin to fall sharply after only 10 to 15 years, leaving the skeletons of steel and plastic blowing in the wind. The economic analysis reveals the lifespan of an onshore turbine is not 20 to 25 years, as stated by the wind industry itself, supported by the UK Government. This peer reviewed British study reveals that the energy production of onshore wind farms falls substantially as they get older, due to wear and tear. Energy and environmental economist, Professor Gordon Hughes (University of Edinburgh), carried out the statistical analysis of wind farm performance data in the UK and Denmark. He concluded that load factors, like electricity generated as a percentage of capacity, declined a lot faster than expected, suggesting a baseline 10 to 15 year lifespan. This is when the technical life of most turbines crunch to halt, and become unprofitable to continue. Rising maintenance costs makes them uneconomical. The study found the average UK wind farm's ability to meet electricity demand had fallen by a third after around 10 years, leading to a conclusion that many are fully uneconomic to run after only 12 years. While the wind industry generally forecasts a 25-year lifespan, the data reveals a different reality about the viability of keeping them spinning so long. Many companies now 'repower' (replace old turbines with new ones) long before the 25-year target to maximise subsidies and output. This often ends the lifespan of the original hardware much sooner. The wind farm study is published by the 'Renewable Energy Foundation on the Performance of Wind Farms in the United Kingdom and Denmark, 2012'.














