NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

In an era of billionaire media moguls, do press unions stand a chance?

  • Written by Marick Masters, Professor of Business and Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Wayne State University
imageBusinessman and philanthropist Joe Ricketts shut down DNAinfo and Gothamist after his workers voted to unionize. Dave Weaver/AP Photo

On Nov. 2, billionaire media owner Joe Ricketts abruptly shuttered the digital news sites DNAinfo and the Gothamist, terminating 116 employees.

Days earlier, these employees had voted 25 to 2 to join the Writers...

Read more: In an era of billionaire media moguls, do press unions stand a chance?

Many small island nations can adapt to climate change with global support

  • Written by Martina Grecequet, Postdoctoral Research Associate, Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota
imageCOP 22 President Salaheddine Mezouar from Morocco, right, hands over a gavel to Fiji's prime minister and president of COP 23 Frank Bainimarama, left, during the opening of the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Bonn, Germany, Monday, Nov. 6, 2017. AP Photo/Martin Meissner

Island nations are on the front lines of global climate change. Heavy...

Read more: Many small island nations can adapt to climate change with global support

After coup, will Zimbabwe see democracy or dictatorship?

  • Written by Steven Feldstein, Frank and Bethine Church Chair of Public Affairs & Associate Professor, School of Public Service, Boise State University

For decades, Robert Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe in a ruthless, even reckless manner. Over nearly 40 years, he turned the “jewel of Africa” into an economic basket case that’s seen inflation of up to 800 percent.

Then, late in the night of Nov. 14, the country’s security services detained and put Zimbabwe’s 93-year-old...

Read more: After coup, will Zimbabwe see democracy or dictatorship?

No, turkey doesn't make you sleepy – but it may bring more trust to your Thanksgiving table

  • Written by Kevin Bennett, Assistant Teaching Professor of Psychology, Pennsylvania State University
imageDon't blame the turkey for those snores coming from the living room!Shannon Jordan/Shutterstock.com

‘Tis the season for giblets, wattles and snoods – oh my. On Thanksgiving and Christmas, Americans consume about 68 million turkeys – one for about every five of us. In fact, 29 percent of all turkeys gobbled down in the U.S. are...

Read more: No, turkey doesn't make you sleepy – but it may bring more trust to your Thanksgiving table

Subsidizing coal and nuclear power could drive customers off the grid

  • Written by Joshua M. Pearce, Professor, Michigan Technological University

image

Solar home designed by University of Maryland students for the Department of Energy's 2017 Solar Decathlon.
DOE Solar Decathlon

Within the next month, energy watchers expect the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to act on an order from Energy Secretary Rick Perry that would create new pricing rules for certain power plants that can store fuel on site to support grid resilience. This initiative seeks to protect coal-fired and nuclear power plants that are struggling to compete with cheaper energy sources.

Perry’s proposed rule applies to plants that operate in regions with deregulated power markets, where utilities normally compete to deliver electricity at the lowest price. To qualify, plants would have to keep a 90-day fuel supply on site. Each qualified plant would be allowed to “recover its fully allocated costs.”

In other words, plant owners would be able to charge enough to cover a range of costs, including operating costs, costs of capital and debt, and investor returns. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chair Neil Chatterjee has stated that the extra money to keep coal and nuclear plants running “would come from customers in that region, who need the reliability.”

Will consumers willingly pay higher bills to support coal and nuclear power? My research group has analyzed another option: Going off-grid and generating electricity with home-based solar energy systems. Recently we compared the cost of grid power to off-grid renewable generation in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. We found that within a few years, a majority of single-family owner-occupied households could afford the necessary generating systems and economically defect from the grid.

Is reliable electricity at risk?

Coal and nuclear technology are struggling to compete as prices decline for solar, wind and natural gas generation. Some states, along with the Trump administration, are worried about early retirements of coal and nuclear plants and looking for ways to avoid more.

image

Natural gas and renewables account for nearly all new U.S. generating capacity added since the year 2000.
EIA

In early 2017 Perry commissioned a grid reliability study, which found that cheap natural gas and flattening electricity demand were the main drivers for coal and nuclear plant retirements, and projected more closures to come. Shortly after the report was released, Perry proposed this rule.

Many responses have been critical. Jon Wellinghoff, who chaired the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, said: “It’s gonna be as expensive as hell. Expensive as it can be because we will be paying the full freight on coal and nuclear plants.”

ICF Consulting estimates that Perry’s proposal would cost ratepayers an extra US$800 million to $3.8 billion annually through 2030. Others calculate the cost at up to $10.6 billion annually, depending on the rule’s design.

What can consumers do?

If retail prices do actually go up as a result of Perry’s proposed changes to the wholesale energy markets the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission regulates, ratepayers can manage their electric bills in three ways. First, they can reduce electricity use by adopting efficient technologies, such as Energy Star products, and conserve energy through steps such as turning off lights.

In areas with favorable rules, consumers can save much more by installing rooftop solar power while staying connected to the grid. The key requirement is that their utility must allow net metering. Under this arrangement, when homes generate more electricity than they need, they can sell excess power into the grid and receive credit for it on their electric bills.

The levelized cost of electricity from solar is lower than grid electricity in most of America. This makes it normally profitable to use solar power to reduce household electricity bills, if homeowners can afford the up-front investment to install solar systems. The most solar-friendly states, which are mainly in the Northeast and on the West Coast, support solar with tax credits, rebates and other policies. However, home solar systems are even becoming popular in southern and Appalachian states that provide less support for renewable energy.

imageThe U.S. Department of Energy’s SunShot program has already reached its 2020 targets for reducing the cost of utility solar power.DOE

But widespread adoption of home solar power can reduce utility profits and shift electricity demand patterns in ways that require power companies to make upgrades as their customer bases shrink. This conundrum has sparked debate over a scenario known as the “utility death spiral”: As customers leave the grid, utilities sell less energy and have to raise prices to cover their fixed costs. More customers install solar in response, pushing electricity prices up further and driving more customers away.

In response, some utilities have tried to slow the move to solar through steps such as distorting net metering rules and campaigning to limit access to net metering.

Defecting from the grid

Such tactics raise the cost of grid-tied solar systems and frustrate many customers. They give consumers incentive to pursue a third option: Disconnecting from their utilities and relying on on-site solar generation, supported by energy storage (and sometimes backup) systems.

One recent study investigated state-level markets in New York, Kentucky, Texas, California and Hawaii. It found that solar hybrid systems were already profitable for consumers in some places, particularly Hawaii, and could become so for tens of millions of customers over the next several decades.

My team studied the potential for grid defection in northern Michigan, one of the most challenging places in the United States to go solar. Winters there are dark and brutally cold, so households can rely entirely on solar power only in warm seasons.

However, solar coupled with so-called cogeneration systems and batteries can provide enough energy on cold, cloudy winter days. These small-scale combined heat and power systems, which are made mainly in Japan, usually run on natural gas and produce heat as they generate electricity. They can function year-round and are most effective in the winter when solar production is low. The costs of these hybrid systems are declining.

image

Recent advances in cogeneration, battery storage and solar photovoltaic technology have made going off-grid technically feasible.
Michigan Tech University, CC BY-ND

In our study we first calculated electricity demand by household size and type. Second, we compared costs of conventional grid electricity to an off-grid solar-hybrid system. Finally, to assess how many households could afford to invest in solar-hybrid systems, we analyzed household incomes and minimum credit score requirements for financing from the Michigan Saves program, which makes loans to help residents reduce energy costs.

We found that by 2020, about 75 percent of year-round Upper Peninsula households could meet their electricity needs using off-grid solar systems at less cost than staying on the grid. Not all households could afford to invest in these systems, but we found that by 2020, about 65 percent of single-family owner-occupied households would have access to affordable capital to purchase hybrid systems.

Our findings suggest that if Perry’s proposal is enacted and raises rates, it could drive many ratepayers to go off-grid, leaving fewer customers to cover the costs of maintaining the grid. This could raise electric rates substantially for utilities’ remaining customers, potentially triggering further defections. In sum, subsidizing coal and nuclear plants could destabilize the electric power system instead of strengthening it.

Dr. Joshua M. Pearce works as Professor of Engineering for the Michigan Technological University. He receives funding from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), The Air Force Research Laboratory (ARFL) with the National Center for Defense Manufacturing and Machining (NCDMM) and America Makes, and the National Science Foundation (NSF). In addition, his past and present consulting work and research is funded by many non-profits and for-profit companies, many of them in the energy field. He does not directly work for the DOE and has no direct conflicts of interests.

Authors: Joshua M. Pearce, Professor, Michigan Technological University

Read more http://theconversation.com/subsidizing-coal-and-nuclear-power-could-drive-customers-off-the-grid-87159

Why Puerto Rico is getting the brunt of 'donor fatigue'

  • Written by Samantha Penta, Assistant Professor, College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity, University at Albany, State University of New York
imageBeing one of a series of disasters made relief in Puerto Rico harder to come by after Hurricane Maria. AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa

Recovering from disasters is never easy. When disasters pile up, it gets harder.

On top of the inevitable competition for everything from the government’s funding for recovery efforts to construction materials,...

Read more: Why Puerto Rico is getting the brunt of 'donor fatigue'

Did early Christians believe that Mary was a teenager? It's complicated

  • Written by Christopher A. Frilingos, Associate Professor in the Department of Religious Studies, Michigan State University
imageThe holy family.CC BY

On Nov. 13, a fifth Alabama woman came forward to accuse Roy Moore, former judge and current GOP Senate candidate, of sexual assault when she was 16. Condemnation of Moore has been widespread, but Moore himself vehemently deniesthese allegations. He has backing from many in Alabama.

One of his most controversial statements of...

Read more: Did early Christians believe that Mary was a teenager? It's complicated

How Obamacare changed the love lives of young adults

  • Written by Joelle Abramowitz, Assistant Research Scientist at the Survey Research Center, University of Michigan
imageHealth insurance impacts decisions about contraception, marriage and more.Kamil Macniak/shutterstock.com

It seems that each week, a new development about the Affordable Care Act calls into question the future of health care in the U.S. Such policy changes may also have much more far-reaching effects on Americans’ major life decisions.

I am an...

Read more: How Obamacare changed the love lives of young adults

Learning to care for dying's forgotten

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
imageSurviving friends and family of a person who dies often go through deep grief. Ker_vil/Shutterstock.com

In most U.S. medical schools, lessons about death naturally focus on the care of the dying patient. But there is another group of people to whom health professionals need to learn to attend: the dying patient’s family and friends. In...

Read more: Learning to care for dying's forgotten

Nobody is going to bail out Venezuela

  • Written by Henkel Garcia U, Finance Instructor, Professional Studies Extension Programme, Andres Bello Catholic University (UCAB)

Venezuela, the South American country convulsed by economic and humanitarian catastrophe, has defaulted on some of its debt after missing an interest payment due in October.

Even as investors meet in Caracas to discuss restructuring US$60 billion in foreign debt, the country is in urgent need of international financial assistance.

Yet few nations...

Read more: Nobody is going to bail out Venezuela

More Articles ...

  1. Para Venezuela en default, no hay rescate
  2. Most mass killers are men who have also attacked family
  3. With teen mental health deteriorating over five years, there's a likely culprit
  4. The story of America, as told through diet books
  5. Can cities get smarter about extreme weather?
  6. Researchers find pathological signs of Alzheimer's in dolphins, whose brains are much like humans'
  7. Mortgage interest deduction is a terrible way to help middle-class homeowners
  8. Designing better ballots
  9. How social media fires people's passions – and builds extremist divisions
  10. Did Trump's charm offensive work in the Philippines?
  11. Why Nevada's new lethal injection is unethical
  12. Why it can make sense to believe in the kindness of strangers
  13. Here's why your local TV news is about to get even worse
  14. How a young Ernest Hemingway dealt with his first taste of fame
  15. The strange story of turkey tails speaks volumes about our globalized food system
  16. Veterans turned poets can help bridge divides
  17. The mystery of a 1918 veteran and the flu pandemic
  18. How the proposed budget and tax cuts could stunt new affordable housing
  19. The opioid crisis is at its worst in rural areas. Can telemedicine help?
  20. FBI tries to crack another smartphone: 5 essential reads
  21. Could Atlanta be on track to elect a white mayor?
  22. Why solar 'microgrids' are not a cure-all for Puerto Rico's power woes
  23. How the tax package would slam higher ed
  24. Public shaming of workplace harassers may force employers to stop protecting them
  25. Democrats' sweep of Virginia shows the state is moving beyond its Confederate past
  26. The emotional challenges of student veterans on campus
  27. The magazine that inspired Rolling Stone
  28. Gun violence in the US kills more black people and urban dwellers
  29. The climate science report Trump hoped to ignore will resonate outside of Washington, DC
  30. As angry voters reject major parties, Mexico's 2018 presidential race grows chaotic
  31. GOP plan to tax college endowments like Yale's and Harvard's would be neither fair nor effective
  32. The challenge of authenticating real humans in a digital world
  33. When Americans tried – and failed – to reunite Christianity
  34. Northam win in Virginia shows why newspapers should stop endorsing candidates
  35. Mass shootings in America: 4 essential reads
  36. 3 things I learned from delivering medical aid to a remote part of Puerto Rico
  37. The long, strange history of dieting fads
  38. Does American culture shame too much – or not enough?
  39. Rather than being free of values, good science is transparent about them
  40. Latino elites are paying the California dream forward
  41. One American woman's life in revolutionary Russia
  42. Two big problems with American voting that have nothing to do with Russian hacking
  43. Taxpayers are subsidizing hush money for sexual harassment and assault
  44. Improving women's lives through energy: What Rick Perry got right and wrong
  45. Why social media may not be so good for democracy
  46. Academic journal publishing is headed for a day of reckoning
  47. How citizen investigators can collaborate on crowdsourced fact-checking
  48. Maria will fundamentally change US policy toward Puerto Rico
  49. The curious relationship between altitude and suicide
  50. How burnout is plaguing doctors and harming patients