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SIN TRUMP VIVIREMOS MEJOR EL HUNDIMIENTO DEL CAPITALISMO POPULAR.—Trump está disimulando lo encantadísimo de la vida que está con que le hayan apeado de la Presidencia de EE.UU. No obstante, nadie le salva ya de ser el chivo expiatorio del hundimiento del popularcapitalismo.Las fantasías 'rerrecuperandistas' han recibido el segundo varapalo —el primero ha sido la pandemia de coronavirus—. El sistema concentrará esfuerzos a partir de ahora en la Transición Estructural administrada, aunque con el arsenal malbaratado.Rechinará como un repollo con lazo todo resentimiento contra el sistema por evolucionar a la Era Cero—v. gr., Trump, 'brexit', 'procés', etcétera—.La situación no puede ser más repincharreburbujista.LA CULPA DE QUE EL ESPAÑOL DEJE DE SER 'LINGUA FRANCA' EN AGUNAS NEOPROVINCIAS ESPAÑOLAS LA TIENE LA DERECHA SOCIALISTA ESPAÑOLA.—La derecha socialista española, es decir, el PP:— administró muy complacidamente la Segunda Alza Explosiva de la Burbuja;— hizo propaganda de una fantasmagórica 'recuperación precrisis', perpetrando añagazas roñosísimas, como la hotelización del inquilinato;— divulgó el mierdismo ('bendita mierda que es todo, que pone en valor mi 'himbersión' y vela mi corrupción);— llevó la deuda pública fuera del límite fiscal;´— gestionó negligentemente la deriva separatista catalanista desde el primer momento, en el año del Rescate-UE (Memorándum de Entendimiento), cuando recibió la orden de acabar con todas las Cajas de Ahorros; dicha negligencia dio pie al simulacro de referéndum separatista y al procesamiento y encarcelamiento de los líderes;— dio alas a Unidas Podemos para restarle votos al PSOE;— no apoyó la investidura del PSOE, a pesar de que, en su día, este si apoyó la del PP;— ha utilizado la pandemia de coronavirus como arma político-electoral, aprovechando la contradicción centralidad-neoprovincialidad.No se puede acusar al PSOE de lo que no tiene más remedio que hacer para administrar la presión establecida por el PP.
___USA eleccionesMás de lo mismo, esta vez con Big Data y muy facil de entender / visualizar:
___ USA voteHay un Comité pro Trump en Francia,Con el Listado de los (presuntos) fraudes.. En v/FR pero los links son usanos (y los números árabes )https://www.trumpfrance.com/single-post/la-liste-des-fraudes-d%C3%A9mocrates
TUI in talks for up to 1.8 bln euros of extra state aid - sourcesTUI is in talks with the German government on an extra 1.5-1.8 billion euros ($1.8-$2.1 billion) in state aid as two bailouts from earlier this year have not been enough for travel company to cope with the coronavirus travel slump, people close to the matter said.
Cita de: saturno en Noviembre 10, 2020, 16:05:23 pm___USA eleccionesMás de lo mismo, esta vez con Big Data y muy facil de entender / visualizar:Saturno, viendo solo el tercer gráfico sin la explicación del artículo no es fácil de entender el parrafo de conclusión. Y leyendo así el artículo por encima sin una explicación clara del sistema de mezcla de votos, cuando, como, donde, como se agrupa etc tampoco. Porque si estan contando votos de distintas areas geograficas aunque los mezclen entre sí, los aumentos se podríá explicar.Cuando cambia la visualización (tienen pinta de estar todo hecho en R) entonces dice que es nornal esperar un cambio a republiano.'This slight drift from D to R mail-ins occurs again and again, and is likely due to outlying rural areas having more R votes. These outlying areas take longer to ship their ballots to the polling centers.'Y sin embargo cuando hay un cambio mayor en la otra direccion dice que es imposible y que es una indicacion clara de fraude. Si lo lees con calma y encuentras algo que no veo, corrígeme - sin ironíá.Un poco de investigación rápida de Zero Hedge y los que comentan noticias aclara mucho las cosas. Austriacos, oro, un bulgaro baneado como inversor por 'insider trading'. Lo mejor de cada casa.
EU sees over 10-fold demand for second SURE issuance; German yields rise* EU receives 175 billion euros of demand for second SURE issuance* Markets continue focusing on Pfizer vaccine news* German 10-year yields touch new one-month high* Euro zone periphery govt bond yieldsThe European Union saw over 10-fold demand for the second bond issuance backing its SURE unemployment scheme on Tuesday, while German yields touched a one-month high with investors still digesting news of a vaccine against COVID-19.The EU will raise eight billion euros from the sale of a five-year bond, demand for which reached more than 105 billion euros, and six billion euros from a 30-year bond, which saw demand of over 70 billion euros according to a lead manager memo seen by Reuters.Both bonds are “social” bonds, with the entire SURE programme now being funded in this format.The deal follows the first issuance to fund the scheme in early October, which raised 17 billion euros and got 233 billion euros of orders, the highest level for any bond sale ever.Although the EU would pay more than it would have last week, Antoine Bouvet, senior rates strategist at ING in London, said it managed to bring a “very large size out given arguably much more challenging market conditions because of the sell-off we had yesterday.”“You could have expected investors to get a bit twitchy.” News that Pfizer’s experimental COVID-19 vaccine is more than 90% effective based on initial trial results led to a huge turnaround in markets on Monday. Hopes that the vaccine will be a key step towards economic recovery hit safe-haven bonds hard on Monday.Markets continued to digest the news on Tuesday. After seeing its biggest daily jump since March on Monday, Germany’s 10-year yield touched a one-month high at -0.473% before retreating slightly to -0.477% at 1551 GMT.News that the European Parliament and EU governments’ negotiators agreed on the details of the EU’s 2021-2027 budget, a crucial step for the activation of the bloc’s 1.8 trillion euro recovery package, had little impact on government bonds.A key gauge of long-term euro zone inflation expectations rose to their highest since Sept. 16 at over 1.21% then ticked down to 1.20%.The yield on Italy’s 10-year benchmark, which also jumped on the vaccine news, crept higher at 0.74%.“There is a range of views at the moment, with the key question being whether this a major turning point that gets rates trending higher, or does the economic damage done keep us in a (broad) range for a lot longer,” said Sabrina Jacobs, fixed income specialist at Insight Investment in London.She said the firm stopped out of long-duration positions in European government bonds on Monday out of caution.“Most portfolio managers are tending towards the latter; i.e., not expecting that the narrative of rates not going anywhere for three-four years and support from quantitative easing etc. changes.”
Trump's name spotted in Johnson's Biden congratulationsKeen-eyed political observers noticed an unusual feature in a tweet from British Prime Minister Boris Johnson congratulating US President-elect Joe Biden on his election victory: the ghost of an alternative message congratulating Donald Trump.The words "Trump" and "second term" could be seen faintly in the background of the message, which was sent on Saturday from the Prime Minister's Twitter account shortly after Biden was declared the winner of the US presidential election.The British government blamed a technical glitch."As you'd expect, two statements were prepared in advance for the outcome of this closely contested election," the government said."A technical error meant that parts of the alternative message were embedded in the background of the graphic."Johnson had a warm relationship with Trump, a supporter of Brexit, despite the two leaders' differences on major issues such as climate change and the Iran nuclear deal.(...)
Respecto a que los paises medio serios cuentan a mano, les dejo enlace a la plataforma elecciones transparentes. Yo no quiero ser malpensado, pero controlado el CIS y el algoritmo, y viendo la desidia cañí, es imposible perder. Mu dificil.....https://www.eleccionestransparentes.org/salud
$15 Trillion: The True Cost Of The Global Energy Transition$15 trillion: this is the amount of money to be invested in new power capacity globally over the next three decades. Most of this – 80 percent – will be poured into renewables. This certainly makes the energy transition far from cheap, but no one – at least no one reputable – ever said going green would be cheap. Yet the amount of investments to be directed towards expanding wind, solar, and associated systems will not be the only costs to be borne during the transition. There may well be steep environmental costs as well.BloombergnNEF, which conducted the analysis that resulted in the investment estimate for the next 30 years in energy, also said that between 2020 and 2050, another $14 trillion will be invested in the grid, likely to adapt it for a surge in solar and renewable power deployments, which, according to the analysis, will constitute 56 percent of total global generation capacity by 2050. And it will have spurred a mini golden age in mining. Wind power, like solar power, requires a lot of metals and other minerals to produce essential components for the installations. Therefore, as the demand for wind turbines and blades jumps, so will the demand for the metals they are made of. It’s the same with the metals and minerals necessary for the production of a solar panel.Here’s just one example that could perhaps illustrate the trend: according to a 2017 report by the World Bank, demand for silver could soar from the then-current 24,000 tons annually to more than 400,000 tons. And that’s under a best-case scenario that features a greater penetration of silver-free thin-film PV panels in the energy mix, at the expense of crystalline silicon panels that use silver. Under a worst-case scenario, demand for silver could top 700,000 tons.This is quite an increase that will require a major expansion in mining and mining is an energy-intensive, not particularly environmentally friendly way of getting finite resources out of the ground, as investor Sam Kovacs writes in an article for Seeking Alpha addressing the challenges of the energy transition from fossil fuels to renewables. Now add to silver a host of other metals used in renewable energy installations, and the mining expansion becomes even more substantial, adding economic, social, and environmental costs to the transition.Then there is energy storage. Without it, the transition will simply not happen. In fact, some are questioning whether it could happen given the current stage of development of energy storage technology. Two years ago, an article by James Temple for the Massachusetts Technology Review questioned the viability of the energy transition precisely because of energy storage, which, Temple argued, was still prohibitively expensive in light of the scale, to which such storage would need to be developed.The World Bank estimated in 2017 that grid-scale storage capacity would need to rise from 100 GW in 2015 to up to 305 GW. A 2014 IEA report made an even higher estimate, for up to 500 GW in storage to be necessary by 2050. As of 2015, almost all—99.3 percent—of the available grid-scale storage was pumped-hydro. The percentage cannot keep, however, because pumped-hydro has limitations. Batteries appear to be the alternative, at a cost. Tesla and Neoen, a French company, last week announced they would build a 300 MW/450 MWh battery in Victoria, Australia. The battery would be twice as large as their previous record, also set in Australia with 100 MW/129 MWh of capacity. Capacity on its own, however, tells little to the layperson. For context, the 300-MW facility would be capable of storing enough renewable energy to power half a million homes—for one hour.The project will cost $84 million.There are batteries that could supply power to households for more than an hour, and more are being developed. But their capacity remains limited to a few hours, which has made some observers compare them to the so-called peaker plants used during power demand surges. For a consistent power supply relying predominantly on renewable energy, battery storage is not yet feasible.Last month, Wood Mackenzie estimated the energy transition will require $1 trillion in investments in several key metals. In other words, the world will need nearly twice as much investment in critical energy-transition minerals over the next 15 years as it has invested over the past 15 years. And then, 20 to 25 years later, many of the installations made from these metals would need to be retired. This means going into landfills because not all solar and wind equipment can be recycled.Wind blades, for one thing, cannot be recycled. They are made of fiberglass and are therefore either dumped in landfills, sent to so-called wind blade graveyards, or in some cases, burned in metallurgical kilns, resulting in emissions. The good news is that 85 percent of windmills can be recycled, and the blades are harmless, even in landfills.Solar panels are also mostly recyclable, but the business is not particularly profitable, which is a deterrent for businesses: it is a fact often overlooked that recycling is a business like any other business, and if it doesn’t make a profit, it will switch to something else. As a result, many panels are headed toward landfills, adding to the environmental costs of the energy transition as they contain toxic materials.The energy transition, as urgent as it may be, according to some sources, will not be cheap. But in addition to the obvious costs of expanding solar and wind generation capacity, storage, and adapting the grid to their increased participation in the energy mix, there appear to be other, half-hidden costs that are not just financial but also social and environmental.