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Κυριακή 24 Ιανουαρίου 2016

Skiers and snowboarders take to the streets of NYC

Skiers and snowboarders take to the streets of NYC

The blizzard hitting the east coast has placed New York City and New Jersey under a travel ban but that hasn’t stopped industrious New Yorkers from getting around.
Instead of using the mostly-empty subways, some are cross country skiing or snowboarding around town.
Casey Neistat, 34-year-old YouTube personality, snowboard-towed from the back of a car.
Since he didn’t have rope, Neistat used a 30 foot HDMI cable.
He even got pulled over at one point but instead of getting a ticket, the officer said “we’re just going to pretend like we’re talking to you.”
Neistat said he had absolutely no reservations.
“When it came to taking advantage of a storm this rare, riding around on a snowboard seemed like a clear choice,” he told Buzzfeed.
Luckily, he caught the whole thing on tape.
He wasn’t the only one with the idea. Lots of people decided to strap on cross country skis and head out into the city.

Συνέντευξη Επιτρόπου Δ. Αβραμόπουλου στην εκπομπή "Mega Σαββατοκύριακο", 24/1/2016


AUDI STEPS CLOSER TO PRODUCTION OF ALL-ELECTRIC SUV, PICKS FACTORY WHERE 2018 AUDI Q6 E-TRON WILL BE MADE


AUDI STEPS CLOSER TO PRODUCTION OF ALL-ELECTRIC SUV, PICKS FACTORY WHERE 2018 AUDI Q6 E-TRON WILL BE MADE


AUTOMOBILES & MORE
Audi Steps Closer to Production of All-Electric SUV, Picks Factory Where 2018 Audi Q6 e-tron Will Be Made
BY NIKKI GORDON-BLOOMFIELD
• JANUARY 21, 2016


Since it debuted the Audi e-tron Quattro Concept SUV at the 2015 Frankfurt Motor Show last fall, Volkswagen’s premium marque Audi has been hard at work preparing the all-electric crossover for production as a 2018 model-year car.


AUDI’S NEW ELECTRIC SUV WILL BE MADE IN BELGIUM.

Offering a claimed 500-kilometers of range (310 miles) on the overly-optimistic NEDC test cycle, the all-electric model, rumored to be called the 2018 Audi Q6 e-tron, will fit in between the Audi Q7 and Audi Q5 in the Audi SUV lineup. If we ignore the Audi R8 e-tron sports car (a special low-volume, build-to-order variant of the popular R8 sports car) the Q6 e-tron will become Audi’s first mass-produced electric car.

Since Audi committed to the car’s production back in November, the German automaker has been gradually drip-feeding us information about what we can expect from the new car, from its capabilities to recharge from a special high-power CCS quick charge station from empty to 80 percent full in 30 minutes to its flush door handles OLED lights and wireless charging capabilities.

Now, it has disclosed where the high-end plug-in will be manufactured: Audi Brussels, Belgium.


UNVEILED IN FRANKFURT THIS PAST FALL, THE Q6 E-TRON WILL ENTER PRODUCTION IN EARLY 2018

Audi says the Audi Brussels production facility, located on the southwest side of Belgium’s capital city, will become a key plant for electric mobility at the Volkswagen Group, manufacturing both the unnamed 2018 model-year electric SUV as well as other future Volkswagen-group electric cars.

Alongside the production facility, Audi plans to construct a battery manufacturing plant similar to ones found alongside Nissan’s LEAF production facilities in Sunderland UK, Smyrna Tennessee and Oppama Japan. Making the high-capacity 95 kilowatt-hour battery pack that gives the Audi electric SUV its long range, the facility will also eventually produce battery packs for other Volkswagen-group vehicles, most of which are likely to use Volkswagen’s recently-developed MQB electrification toolkit.

To make space at the Audi Brussels facility, Audi says it will shift production of the A1 subcompact car to its facility in Martorell, Spain. In turn, the Audi Q3 — which is currently produced in Martorell — will have its production shifted to Audi Hungaria in Györ, Hungary.

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Σάββατο 23 Ιανουαρίου 2016

ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ ΧΑΛΕΠΙΟΥ ΠΑΥΛΟΥ ΑΓΝΟΕΙΤΑΙ ΕΔΩ ΚΑ ΤΡΙΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ!

Ο ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ ΧΑΛΕΠΙΟΥ ΠΑΥΛΟΥ ΑΓΝΟΕΙΤΑΙ ΕΔΩ ΚΑ ΤΡΙΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΝΕΙΣ ΔΕΝ ΓΝΩΡΙΖΗ ΚΑΤΙ ΓΙΑ ΑΥΤΟΝ.
ΔΕΙΤΕ ΕΝΑ ΑΠΟΣΠΑΣΜΑ ΑΠΟ ΕΝΑ ΠΡΟΣΦΑΤΟ ΒΙΝΤΕΟ ΜΕ ΜΙΑ ΟΜΙΛΙΑ ΤΟΥ!

"Δεν μπορούμε να κάνουμε θρησκευτικά κράτη ... η θρησκεία δεν είναι φανατισμός ... ο Θεός δεν είναι Βασιλεύς Επίγειος": είπε προφητικά, ανάμεσα σε άλλα πολύ σημαντικά, ο Σεβασμιώτατος Μητροπολίτης Χαλεπίου Παύλος στην τελευταία του συνέντευξη που παραχώρησε στην Πεμπτουσία, όταν είχε επισκεφθεί το Άγιον Όρος και πριν από τον εμφύλιο πόλεμο στην Συρία και την απαγωγή του.


Συμπληρώθηκαν 1000 μέρες από την απαγωγή του Σεβ. Μητροπολίτου Χαλεπίου κ. Παύλου, ο οποίος απήχθη στις 22 Απριλίου του 2013 μαζί με τον Συρακωβίτη Μητροπολίτη Γρηγόριο στα σύνορα Τουρκίας.
Να αναφερθεί ότι οι δύο ιεράρχες απήχθησαν από ένοπλους αντάρτες, ενώ νεκροί είναι ο οδηγός και ο διάκονος του μητροπολίτη που τους συνόδευαν.
Ο Πατριάρχης Αντιοχείας κ. Ιωάννης ο οποίος είναι κατά σάρκα αδελφός του Μητροπολίτη Χαλεπίου, καθημερινά κάνει έκκληση για τον Μητροπολίτη Παύλο για τον οποίο μέχρι σήμερα δεν έχουν καμία πληροφορία.
Παραθέτουμε παρακάτω μερικά βίντεο με τον Σεβασμιώτατο Μητροπολίτη Χαλεπίου, ώστε να ακούσουμε την φωνή του και να μην τον λησμονούμε στην καθημερινή μας προσευχή!
Σεβασμιώτατε ευχόμαστε να σας ξαναδούμε μια μέρα και να λάβουμε την ευχή σας, από τα άγια χέρια σας...

Why Solar and Wind Are Thriving Despite Cheap Fossil Fuels

Why Solar and Wind Are Thriving Despite Cheap Fossil Fuels

Low oil prices are rattling stock markets, but investors remain bullish on solar, wind, and other clean energy. Here are three reasons why.




The prolonged plunge in fossil fuel prices is rippling across the globe. Yet it’s barely put a dent in the booming market for clean energy, heralding perhaps a new era for wind and solar.



Oil prices of less than $30 a barrel—the lowest in 12 years—have shaken stock markets and ravaged the budgets of major producers such as Russia and Saudi Arabia. Along with falling gas prices, they’ve slashed the profits of fossil fuel companies, which are delaying dozens of billion-dollar projects and laying off thousands of workers.


In Texas, home to shale-rich oil deposits, once-crowded trailer parks that housed workers are now largely empty.


But solar, wind, and other clean energy? They’re expanding. Last year, they attracted a record $329 billion in investment—nearly six times the total in 2004, according to a report this month by Bloomberg New Energy Finance or BNEF. Wind and solar also installed a record amount of power capacity.


The clean energy revolution is not entirely immune to cheap oil, which has lowered prices at the pump. In the United States, where gas prices are now below $2 a gallon in many places, sales of SUVs rose last year while those for electric or fuel-sipping hybrid cars fell.


“We’re not saying there’s no impact, but we’re not seeing a significant impact yet,” says Angus McCrone, BNEF’s chief editor. “There’s a lot of momentum behind clean energy.”


He and other experts explain why:

1. Prices have fallen as government incentives have risen.


Oil and gas may now be a lot cheaper than a few years ago, but solar and wind are cheaper, too. Since 2008, according to U.S. government data, prices have plummeted 60 percent for large-scale solar, and 40 percent for wind.


Solar and wind are “competitive in many countries,” says Alex Klein, senior research director of renewables at IHS Energy, a research firm. He notes they don’t compete much with oil, used mostly as a transportation fuel, but they do compete with natural gas, often used to power plants that produce electricity.


Despite low natural gas prices, solar and wind accounted for 60 percent of new U.S. power capacity last year and will likely account for 70 percent this year, saysMarlene Motyka, U.S. alternative energy leader at Deloitte.


Such competitiveness is new. “The last time oil was at this price, the cost of renewables was much higher,” says Jonathan Grant, director of the climate change team at PwC (also known as PricewaterhouseCoopers.)


Their economics could improve. “For renewables, particularly solar, substantive improvements in cost and efficiency are not only possible but likely,” writes Sott Nyquist, director of McKinsey & Company's Houston office. In contrast, he says, coal is facing steeper costs partly because of tighter U.S. regulations, and gas is already using technologies that are highly efficient.


Solar and wind got a huge boost in December, when the U.S. Congress renewed their tax credits for another five years. BNEF expects this extension will add an extra 20 gigawatts of solar power—equal to the total amount installed via solar panels in the U.S. prior to 2015.

2. Demand has expanded, driven partly by public policy.


Countries are looking to renewable energy to meet the pledges they made as part of the UN climate accord last month in Paris. They agreed to cut the carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that are emitted when oil, gas, or coal are burned.


Some, such as India, also see renewables as a way to reduce their severe air pollution. China is cutting back its use of coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, even though it’s cheap.


Developing countries in Africa, where many people don’t have access to a central power grid, are pursuing solar projects as a quicker and less costly way to provide electricity. Wealthier countries are using solar to create microgrids that can keep the lights on when storms like Hurricane Sandy knock out the grid.


States and local governments are pushing low-carbon or carbon-free energy alternatives as well. In the U.S., dozens of states now require they account for at least a certain amount of their electricity. On Thursday, New York Governor AndrewCuomo announced the state will spend $5 billion over a decade to promote clean energy. Hawaii has pledged to get all its power from renewables by 2045, Vermont has pledged to get 75 percent by 2032 and California, 50 percent by 2030.


I don’t see businesses stepping back.
Marlene Motyka

3. Corporate and investor support is strong.


Companies are making similar pledges. The Paris climate summit prompted a “tipping point” in corporate support, says a report this month from Influence Map, a nonprofit based in the United Kingdom. The report says more than half of the world's largest companies now back steps to cut heat-trapping emissions and a third support putting a price on carbon.


“The corporate side is here to stay. I don’t see businesses stepping back,” says Deloitte’s Motyka. In a recent Deloitte analysis, more than 55 percent of companies report generating some of their electricity on-site, 13 percent of which comes from solar panels or wind turbines.


Renewables are attracting capital. A recent study by Goldman Sachs says the combined market size of low-carbon technologies—including wind, solar, LEDs, and hybrid or electric vehicles—now exceeds $600 billion, about the size of the U.S. defense budget.


Investments are expected to rise. Some oil-importing countries, including China and India, have saved money from low prices that they can invest in renewables. Even some oil-exporting countries are investing in solar. Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iran and Kuwait are trying to curb fossil fuel use at home so they can maximize profits for oil exports.


“Fossil fuels will be here for decades to come, but their share will fall,” says PwC’s Grant. Even in the transportation sector, where oil is so important, he expects electric vehicles will eventually catch on—but not because of price.


Consumers will see them as more “desirable,” he says, noting EV perks such as dedicated parking spots and use of HOV lanes. Besides, he says they promise all sorts of self-driving and gee-whiz tech features, adding: “They’re much cooler.”


The story is part of a special series that explores energy issues. For more, visit The Great Energy Challenge.

Watch Mesmerizing Video Of Baby Octopus Hatching

Watch Mesmerizing Video Of Baby Octopus Hatching

The miracle of life is an amazing thing. But it’s even more amazing when we get an up close look at something actually being born. This is definitely true of these hundreds of octopus being born.
In video taken by Pang Quong in Port Phillip Bay in Australia, we get front row seats to an octopus birth. This particular species, the pale octopus, also known as Octopus pallidus, lays its eggs in small caves. Sometimes it uses submerged litter to its advantage and lays their eggs on any hard surface like a small bottle or even a tire. They even take advantage of these objects other times during the day to hide from any predators.
According to Quong, the female stays with her eggs until they all hatch. Quong visited the octopus mother over the course of three weeks to check on the status of the mother in the making. Put together, this footage is the final result. At the end of the video, you can even see the dozens, possibly hundreds of hatching octopus and the empty shells that they left behind.
This species can be found in much of the waters off Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania.
Watch the entire mesmerizing video here.