Das Reich des Todes: Milliardengewinne und "coole Militärkommandeure"

“Antiterror-Krieg”: Für eine Milliarde US-Dollar bei Abgeordneten werben, zwei Milliarden einnehmen – Die Lobbyarbeit von Raytheon, Lockheed Martin et al. und das Prestige von Ex-Generälen bei großen Unternehmen

"Antiterror-Krieg": Für eine Milliarde US-Dollar bei Abgeordneten werben, zwei Milliarden einnehmen - Die Lobbyarbeit von Raytheon, Lockheed Martin et al. und das Prestige von Ex-Generälen bei großen Unternehmen

21st-century storms are overwhelming 20th-century cities

Infrastructure that wasn’t built to handle warmer, wetter climate is increasingly risky.

Cars sit abandoned on the flooded Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida  on September 02, 2021, in New York City.

Enlarge / Cars sit abandoned on the flooded Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 02, 2021, in New York City. (credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

In just a few hours on Wednesday night, between 6 and 10 inches of rain fell on New York City—more than has fallen on San Jose, California, in the past year. Water rose in basement apartments and leaked through roofs. Rain streamed into subway stations and pooled on the tracks. The remains of Hurricane Ida, which had thrashed the Gulf Coast earlier in the week, brought floods to the Northeast. Across the region, the death toll reached 40 by Thursday evening. Subway delays and suspensions continue.

The city’s infrastructure, you see, was built in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to withstand the sort of storm that comes every five to 10 years. Now brutal, record-breaking storms are an annual occurrence. What was left of Ida transformed the scene of everyday commutes into a disturbing reminder that climate change comes for us all. Wildfire thunderclouds in the West, blackouts in Texas, hurricanes in the South, torrential downpours in the East: “It’s all the stuff we said would happen 20 years ago,” says Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist and the director of climate and energy at the Breakthrough Institute. “It’s just a little crazy to see it all happening at once.”

The storm flooded roadways. But it also inundated the alternatives aimed at getting people out of their cars: bike lanes, sidewalks, and public transit systems. For a time in New York on Thursday, all that was underwater. The images of water spilling into subway stations brought the crisis home. “You don’t have to be a person with a great understanding of infrastructure to know that that is a problem,” says Michael Horodniceanu, former president of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s Capital Construction Company and now the chair of the Institute of Construction Innovations at NYU. “We’re starting to see the results of what is, in my view, a certain amount of lax attention to what our infrastructure is doing.”

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Gaia-X: Hat die groß angekündigte Cloud-Initiative eine Zukunft?

Befürwortern gilt Gaia-X als Goldstandard für Datensicherheit in der Cloud, Kritiker sehen das Projekt von Hyperscalern und Überwachungsfirmen unterwandert. Eine Analyse von Stefan Krempl (Cloud Computing, IBM)

Befürwortern gilt Gaia-X als Goldstandard für Datensicherheit in der Cloud, Kritiker sehen das Projekt von Hyperscalern und Überwachungsfirmen unterwandert. Eine Analyse von Stefan Krempl (Cloud Computing, IBM)

BMW’s i Vision Circular concept thinks about sustainable car-making

The concept is informing BMW’s next Neue Klasse, due in 2025.

MUNICH, GERMANY—The BMW i Vision Circular is not the company's new Neue Klasse. But the new concept, revealed this morning at IAA Mobility, explores idea which the company says will inform that electric vehicle, due in 2025.

Not so much in the way it looks, which is a shame since this compact one-box shape—described by a fellow journalist as a Cyber Twingo—is a refreshing break from oversized SUVs. Instead, it's the car's approach to sustainability that BMW is running with—"Circular" refers to the car's lifecycle, which aims to use entirely recycled materials resulting in a vehicle that is entirely recyclable too. Currently, BMW says that across its brands (which include Mini and Rolls-Royce), it's already at 30 percent recycled and reused materials.

"The BMW i Vision Circular illustrates our all-encompassing, meticulous way of thinking when it comes to sustainable mobility. It symbolises our ambition to be a pioneering force in the development of a circular economy," said BMW Chairman Oliver Zipse. "We lead the way for resource efficiency in production and we are seeking to extend this status to all stages of the vehicle life cycle. This is a question of economic sustainability too, as the current trend in commodity prices clearly shows the financial consequences in store for any industry that is reliant on finite resources."

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