To my dear visitors and commenters

Hi, everybody! I've noticed with lots of joy and happiness, that thousands of comments have been written in my posts. It's wonderful that so may people around the world appreciate my work. Therefore, I want to thank you for that and ,at the same time I want to ask you to be this blog's followers. It's fast and easy! Make it be even more visited and spread all over the world! I'm a woman, a teacher of English in Portugal, and I've been away for quite a long time because of my father's health. Unfortunately he died from Covid19 a few months ago. Now I felt it was time to restart my activity in this and other blogs I owe. I've recently created a new one in a partnership with a street photographer, Mr. Daniel Antunes. He's fabulous! https://pandpbydandd.blogspot.com I'd like you to visit it and, who knows, become our followers. The poems, chronicles and thoughts are all mine. Thank you so much! Kisses :-)

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Saturday, March 07, 2015

World's first lagoon power plants unveiled in UK

Plans to generate electricity from the world's first series of tidal lagoons have been unveiled in the UK.

Swansea Bay lagoon scheme
The proposed Tidal Lagoon Swansea Bay project would be the world's first man-made, energy-generating lagoon
The six lagoons - four in Wales and one each in Somerset and Cumbria - will capture incoming and outgoing tides behind giant sea walls, and use the weight of the water to power turbines.
A £1bn Swansea scheme, said to be able to produce energy for 155,000 homes, is already in the planning system.
Energy Secretary Ed Davey says he wants to back the project.
The cost of generating power from the Swansea project will be very high, but the firm behind the plan says subsequent lagoons will be able to produce electricity much more cheaply.
It says the series of six lagoons could generate 8% of the UK's electricity for an investment of £30bn.
As well as Swansea, the proposed lagoon sites are Cardiff, Newport, and Colwyn Bay in Wales; Bridgwater in Somerset; and West Cumbria.
Each will require engineering on a grand scale. In Swansea, the sea wall to contain the new lagoon will stretch more than five miles and reach more than two miles out to sea.
The Cardiff lagoon could include up to 90 turbines set in a 14-mile (22km) breakwater around Cardiff Bay and could generate power for about 14 hours each day.
A planning application for the project is expected in 2017.
If approved, it could be generating power by 2022.
Swansea Bay lagoon scheme
Some anglers fears the lagoon might affect migrating fish, but planners say the new sea wall would act as a reef

Swansea Bay lagoon scheme
The firm proposing the lagoon say they want it to become a venue for culture and sports

The cost would be funded by electricity bill-payers under the existing government scheme to promote home-grown, low-carbon energy.
Tidal Lagoon Power is in negotiations with the government over how much it can charge for its power.
It wants £168 per MWh for electricity in Swansea, reducing to £90-£95 per MWh from a second, more efficient lagoon in Cardiff.
'Energy dance'
The £90 figure compares favourably with the £92.50 price for power from the planned Hinkley nuclear station, especially as the lagoon is designed to last 120 years - at a much lower risk than nuclear.
Mr Davey told BBC News: "I can't make a decision on this yet because discussions are ongoing. But I'm very excited by the prospect of tidal power.
"We have got some of the biggest tidal ranges in the world and it would be really useful if we could harness some of that clean energy."


From BBC Sci/ Environment

Tuesday, March 03, 2015

Woodpecker flies with a weasel on its back

Amazing wonders of Mother-Nature!

Woodpecker flying with weasel on back, Hornchurch Essex
Martin Le-May saw the woodpecker with a weasel on its back

Amateur photographer Martin Le-May took this amazing pic of a weasel riding on the back of a green woodpecker as it flies through the air.

He took the photo at a park in Essex on Monday afternoon and they've since gone all over the internet. Martin told the BBC that he was out walking with his wife Ann when he saw what was happening.
"I heard a distressed squawking noise and feared the worst," he said."I soon realised it was a woodpecker with some kind of small mammal on its back."
It's likely the weasel was attacking the bird - but Martin thinks he scared it off.
Martin Le May
"I think we may have distracted the weasel as when the woodpecker landed, it managed to escape and the weasel ran into the grass.

"I'm so proud so many people are getting to see my image," he added
From CBBC Newsround.

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