Bahamas Tops Caribbean On Data Centre Expansion – Bahamas Tribune

By NEIL HARTNELL

Tribune Business Editor

nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

The Bahamas has been ranked among the top six nations in the Latin American and Caribbean region for the development of data centres, although high electricity costs remain a major obstacle to further growth.

An Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) report, titled Data Centres and Broadband for sustainable economic and social development, ranked the Bahamas as the Caribbeans leader in developing such facilities, placing it alongside regional giants such as Brazil and Argentina.

Using its own Data Centre Development Index (DCDI), the report said: According to DCDI, the top seven Latin American and Caribbean countries for the construction of data centres are Argentina, the Bahamas, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Panama and Uruguay. Unsurprisingly, recent data centre investments are occurring in most of these countries.

Data centres are used to store, manage and distribute data on behalf of hundreds of companies, centralising their information technology (IT) operations and equipment. They are built to withstand natural disasters, and provide security against fire and theft, and are seen as a vital cog in developing knowledge-based economies - a key target for the Bahamas.

Given the increasing role IT is playing in economies and societies, the IDB report said: Data centres, where information is stored and processed, are essential for the development of the ICT ecosystem.

The speed of networks, security of the critical infrastructure and information, and the quality of public services, data and systems all depend on the availability and quality of data centres. Due to their vital role, the design and development of these centres is a priority for both private stakeholders and governments in Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) countries.

The report indicates that the Bahamas has a strong foundation on which to build a knowledge-based economy, ranking the Bahamas among six of 26 Latin American and Caribbean countries who show very high values for economic development and connectivity.

Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay have very high levels of fundamental infrastructure, while the Bahamas and Panama show moderate levels of that pillar, the IDB report and its authors state.

The level of data centre infrastructure is very high for Panama, high for the Bahamas, Chile and Uruguay, moderate for Argentina, and low for Brazil. Finally, values for the CIP (Critical Protection Infrastructure) pillar are very high for Bahamas, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay, high for Argentina, and low for Panama.

Assessed on five criteria, the Bahamas was ranked fourth out of 26 for data centre development, behind only Uruguay, Chile and Brazil, but ahead of Argentina, Panama, Costa Rica and all Caribbean rivals.

This nations weakness was identified as the relatively high cost of electricity, given that data centres and communications networks require significant amounts of energy to operate. Operational costs as a percentage of communications company revenue was also high in the Bahamas.

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Bahamas Tops Caribbean On Data Centre Expansion - Bahamas Tribune

Moody’s Shows Bahamas Has ‘No Room For Mistakes’ – Bahamas Tribune

By NATARIO McKENZIE

Tribune Business Reporter

nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net

A prominent governance reform campaigner warned yesterday that the Bahamas has "no time for mistakes" on fiscal reform, with Moody's having expressed alarm at the deterioration unveiled in the 2017-2018 Budget.

Robert Myers, a principal with the Organisation for Responsible Governance (ORG), told Tribune Business that this nation was "absolutely on the radar" of both credit rating agencies - Moody's and Standard & Poor's - reiterating that he, too, was shocked by the vast gulf in the fiscal forecasts between the Minnis administration and its predecessor.

"When one administration says that it is going to narrow the deficit and it doesn't happen, it just makes us all look stupid," he said. "That's not good from a number of standpoints; there are no ifs, ands or buts about it.

"The reality is that we have to do better with managing our fiscal affairs.

"We have to take this stuff very seriously or we are going to face some very hard socio-economic times."

Moody's recently warned that the Minnis administration's much-revised fiscal forecasts, and its planned $722 million borrowing, show this nation's fiscal strength was "much weaker" than it had bargained for.

The ratings agency wrote-off its previous projection that the Bahamas' direct government debt-to-GDP ratio would stabilise below 70 per cent, instead estimating that this will continue to climb through the 2019-2020 fiscal year - in contrast with the Government's forecast that it will peak near 73 per cent in 2017-2018.

Mr Myers said that while the Minnis administration appears to be saying the right things, how effective it can be remains to be seen. "The new administration is saying the right things for the most part," he agreed.

"The question remains how effective they can be in terms of making it happen, and does it have enough people who understand the changes that need to be made in order to make that happen.

"We really don't have time for mistakes.

"We need people in there that are going to do what they say and act responsibly.

"There needs to be a big shift in the culture of governance in this country."

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Moody's Shows Bahamas Has 'No Room For Mistakes' - Bahamas Tribune

Rugby Cup: Bahamas Routs Dominican Republic 42-5 – Bahamas Tribune

By RENALDO DORSETT

Tribune Sports Reporter

rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

TEAM Bahamas returned to the win column in regional play and closed out the current stage of the Rugby Americas North Cup Series in dominant fashion.

The team scored a 42-5 win over the Dominican Republic at the Centro Olmpico Juan Pablo Duarte in Santo Domingo, the Dominican Republic, on June 3.

The win secured the second spot in the Rugby Americas North North Cup for the Bahamas. Both teams lost previous games to the Turks and Caicos Islands, who finished atop the group.

The Bahamas fell 26-16 to the visiting Turks and Caicos Islands at the Winton Rugby Centre on May 20, an historic win for the visiting side as they secured their first-ever victory against a full member of International World Rugby on the international 15 a-side stage.

TCI successfully defended home turf on May 4 with a 24-15 win over the Dominicans in the first game of the series.

The Dominican Republic, first-time participants in the tournament, aimed to repeat TCIs feat of winning their first match against an IRB side, but fell short.

During the DR/TCI matchup, the game produced an historic feat for the country, as Jamaal Curry became the first Bahamian ever to referee an officially sanctioned international rugby match.

In their last appearance at the Rugby Americas North Championship in June 2016, the Bahamas suffered consecutive losses to Mexico, Cayman Islands and Bermuda.

This years event marks the 10th edition of the RAN Championship, traditionally geared toward Tier 3 North American and Caribbean teams.

Pool play began on April 22 and will continue through July 1. Unlike last years tournament, 2017 will not serve as an iRB World Cup qualifying event and non World Rugby full member teams return to take part.

The North Zone returns to the 2015 format with a higher Championship level and a lower Cup level, however the South Zone has been reduced to one level of three teams.

The tournament has been divided into two competitions and three divisions, accompanied with a relegation and promotion system playoff. The two competitions are the Championship League (North Zone, South Zone) and the Cup League.

The Bahamas is a member of the Cup League, which features the aforementioned Dominican Republic and Turks and Caicos Islands. Championship League includes Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Mexico and USA South in the North Zone. The South Zone includes Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and Barbados. The winners in the Cup League will earn an opportunity to play their way into the Championship League by facing off against the third place side among the Champions. Each division plays a single round robin. After pool play is complete, the winners play in the final on July 1.

Turks and Caicos Islands,

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Rugby Cup: Bahamas Routs Dominican Republic 42-5 - Bahamas Tribune

Bahamas Bound! Women’s Basketball Set for Thanksgiving Caribbean Tournament – Penn Athletics

Tournament Website

PHILADELPHIA Get out your sunblock, and book your flights the University of Pennsylvania womens basketball team is heading to the Bahamas! The 2016 and 2017 Ivy League Champions will play two games and celebrate Thanksgiving in the Caribbean during the 2017-18 season.

Penn will take on Georgia Tech and either Baylor or Missouri State as part of the 2017 Junkanoo Jam annual tournament. Penn will take on the Yellow Jackets in the opening round and will play one additional game as part of the event. Game dates and times are to be determined.

Under head coach Mike McLaughlin, the Quakers have made these destination trips a habit. Last season, the Quakers spent New Years Eve in Southern California where they posted two wins over UC Riverside and CSU Northridge to ring in the New Year. The Red and Blue have also competed in Italy, Hawaii, Miami, San Diego and Chicago in recent seasons.

"Our players hear me say it a lot, but it is true," McLaughlin said. "Their time as a student-athlete at Penn is all about the experience. We play to win no matter where we go, but it's not always just about basketball. These are trips, moments and games that they will remember their entire lives, and that's what these four years are truly about - strengthening friendships and making memories that will last a lifetime."

This will be the program's first trip to the Bahamas and more details on this trip will be available in the coming months. A complete 2017-18 schedule will be announced late this summer.

#FightOnPenn

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Bahamas Bound! Women's Basketball Set for Thanksgiving Caribbean Tournament - Penn Athletics

Bahamas Alarm At Us Withdrawal From Paris Climate Change Deal – Bahamas Tribune

President Donald Trump speaks about the US role in the Paris climate change accord on Thursday, June 1, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. Photo: Andrew Harnik/AP

THE Ministry of Foreign Affairs has expressed The Bahamas concern regarding the announced withdrawal of the United States from the Paris Agreement on climate change.

The ministry noted that The Bahamas remains committed to the climate accord.

While each nation must determine its own course on international matters, the prospect of the effects of climate change are particularly significant for low-lying, coastal, small island developing states (SIDS) such as The Bahamas, the very existence of which stands to be adversely impacted by climate change and global warming, a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs noted.

The Bahamas remains committed to the Paris Agreement which was signed by 195 parties and ratified by 146 countries plus the European Union, and its aspiration to reduce risk to economies and lives everywhere, and to build a secure and sustainable world.

The Bahamas will continue to work with its partners in the context of the Paris Agreement, as well as its neighbours in the United States in ongoing efforts to mitigate the long-term effects of global weather on states in the region, the statement also noted.

Last Thursday, US President Donald Trump announced he was withdrawing America from the Paris Agreement, which some critics see as a blow to the worldwide effort to counter global warming.

Were getting out, Mr Trump said Thursday at the White House. And we will start to renegotiate and well see if theres a better deal. If we can, great. If we cant, thats fine.

The decision was widely denounced by American politicians, pundits and leaders from around the world.

Former US President Barack Obama also criticised the move.

The nations that remain in the Paris Agreement will be the nations that reap the benefits in jobs and industries created, Mr Obama noted in a statement. I believe the United States of America should be at the front of the pack. But even in the absence of American leadership; even as this administration joins a small handful of nations that reject the future; Im confident that our states, cities, and businesses will step up.

In May 2015, then Prime Minister Perry Christie told Parliament that with 80 per cent of The Bahamas land mass within one metre of sea level, climate change was a growing threat.

Our situation is rendered especially urgent in the face of information that ocean acidification, sea surface temperatures and sea levels are already rising, he said.

These processes, particularly sea-level rise, will therefore irreversibly change the geography and ecology of many coastal states and territories. It has been projected that responding to these factors can have particularly disastrous consequences, causing a perpetual recession in each of the Caricom member states for a significant period as our infrastructure, built environment, settlements and economic well-being are concentrated in coastal areas prone to flooding and inundation.

The regions challenge associated with the ongoing climate change negotiations is that even if the goal to limit global warming to 1.5 or 2(degrees Celsius) is achieved, the Caribbean will experience severe adverse impacts for which stronger programmes of adaptation would have to be implemented, Mr Christie said at the time.

America joined Nicaragua and Syria as the only nations that did not sign the Paris Agreement.

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Bahamas Alarm At Us Withdrawal From Paris Climate Change Deal - Bahamas Tribune

Offshore Definition | Investopedia

What is 'Offshore'

Offshore identifies any item that is located or based outside of one's national boundaries. The term "offshore" is used to describe foreign banks, corporations, investments and deposits. A company may legitimately move offshore for the purpose of tax avoidance or to enjoy relaxed regulations. Offshore financial institutions can also be used for illicit purposes such as money laundering and tax evasion.

Offshore can refer to a variety of foreign-based entities or accounts. In order to qualify as offshore, the accounts must be based in any country other than the customers or investors home nation, existing somewhat separately from the persons other resources and assets.

In the terms of business activities, offshoring is often referred to as outsourcing. This is the act of establishing certain portions of the business functions, such as manufacturing or call centers, in a nation other than the one in which the business most often does business. This is often done to take advantage of more favorable conditions in a foreign country, such as lower wage requirements or looser regulations, and can result in significant cost savings for the business.

Offshore investing can involve any situation in which the investors reside outside of the nation in which they are investing. This may require the creation of accounts in the nation in which the investor wishes to participate.

Offshore banking involves the securing of assets in financial institutions in foreign countries. This practice, which may be limited by the laws of the customers home nation, can be used to avoid certain unfavorable circumstances should the funds be kept in a financial institution in the home nation. This can include the avoidance of tax obligations as well as making it more difficult for these assets to be seized by a person or entity in the home nation. For those who work internationally, the ability to save and use funds in a foreign currency for international dealings can be a benefit. This can provide a simpler way to access funds in the needed currency without have to account for rapidly changing exchange rates.

Due to the fact that banking regulations vary from nation to nation, it is possible the country in which your funds are located does not offer the same protections as other nations.

Businesses with significant sales overseas, such as Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp., may take the opportunity to keep related profits overseas in markets with lower tax burdens. In 2015, it was estimated that $2.10 trillion in profits were held overseas, across 304 U.S. corporations, which was an 8% rise when compared to 2014.

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Offshore Definition | Investopedia

Dong Energy plugs offshore wind farm into world-first battery system – Telegraph.co.uk

Offshore wind giant Dong Energy has become the first to plug an offshore wind farm into a battery system to store power to be used as needed.

The world-first hybrid system has powered up on the Merseyside coast to store electricity generated from the first phase of Dong Energys 90 megawatt (MW) Burbo Bank wind farm in order to help to balance the frequency of the power grid.

The new 2MW battery system helps to combat criticism that renewable power could lead to flickering light bulbs, or even blackouts, by disrupting the normal power grid frequency of around 50 hertz.

Richard Smith, National Grids head of networks, said the system operator plans to call on Dong Energy to release electricity into the grid to help stabilise the frequency.

"I'm looking forward to seeing how the Dong Energy solution of storage connected to the offshore wind farm will provide services to help us respond to day-to-day operational challenges," he said.

Benj Sykes, Dong Energys UK boss, told The Telegraph last month that battery storage technology is a game changer for the booming offshore wind market.

Mr Sykes was speaking ahead of the launch of the second phase of the Burbo Bank offshore wind project which uses the worlds largest operating wind turbines to produce almost 260MW of power.

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Dong Energy plugs offshore wind farm into world-first battery system - Telegraph.co.uk

Vestas Launches 9.5-Megawatt Offshore Wind Turbine; Shell Looks … – Greentech Media

Danish wind manufacturer MHI Vestas launched a 9.5-megawatt offshore turbine this week. The machine is an upgrade from the company's 9-megawatt model released earlier this year.

In January, Vestas reported that its new machine -- an 8-megawatt-capacity turbine that can be uprated to 9 megawatts at certain sites -- generated216,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity in one day. That was a record for any commercial offshore wind turbine, according to the company.

Vestas also says its 9.5-megawatt model, which features blades that are 80 meters long, can produce enough electricity to power more than 8,000 U.K homes.

"With only minimal design changes, including a redesigned gearbox and cooling system upgrades, this turbine continues the legacy of the proven V164 platform and is available now to all MHI Vestas customers," saidTorben Hvid Larsen, the company's chief technology officer,in a statement.

Vestas is at the leading edge of turbine design. Windpower Monthly has a list of the biggest turbines on the market today. The Vestas V164 8-megawatt model topped the rankings.

In less than a year, the V164platform was expanded to 9.5 megawatts.

Manufacturers are regularly developing turbines rated in the 5- to 8-megawatt range. Some are already looking beyond 10-megawatt designs -- and researchers are even toying with the idea of 50-megawatt capacity turbines.

"For many years, 3- to 4-megawatt turbines were standard; now 8- to 10-megawatt models are common, and by 2024, 13- to 15-megawatt models will likely hit the market," wrote McKinsey researchersin a recent analysison the economics of offshore wind.

"This reduces the cost per megawatt. Even as turbines have become larger, they have also become better. In the 1990s, the expected lifetime of offshore wind parks was only 15 years; now it is closer to 25 years, and new sites project an operational lifetime of 30 years."

Meanwhile, energy supermajors are looking to use those mega-turbines to build out mega-projects.

Shell said this week it is eyeing 10-gigawatt offshore wind parks, according to Recharge News.

We believe that a few large, integrated projects up to 10 gigawatts, with an anchor tenant who takes the biggest risk for about half the project, need to be developed to ensure we all learn how best to do this" saidMark Gainsborough, the executive vice president of Shell New Energies, speaking at a European offshore wind conference.

Shell has an equity stake in half a dozen offshore wind farms around the world. In December, it partnered with Mitsubishi and a group of Danish companies to develop a 700-megawatt offshore project.

What's driving wind technology change? Listen to our Interchange episode with Ryan Wiser, who discusses the evolution of turbine size and applications.

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Vestas Launches 9.5-Megawatt Offshore Wind Turbine; Shell Looks ... - Greentech Media

Offshore wind turbines vulnerable to Category 5 hurricane gusts – Phys.Org

June 7, 2017 Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Offshore wind turbines built according to current standards may not be able to withstand the powerful gusts of a Category 5 hurricane, creating potential risk for any such turbines built in hurricane-prone areas, new University of Colorado Boulder-led research shows.

The study, which was conducted in collaboration with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado and the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, highlights the limitations of current turbine design and could provide guidance for manufacturers and engineers looking to build more hurricane-resilient turbines in the future.

Offshore wind-energy development in the U.S. has ramped up in recent years, with projects either under consideration or already underway in most Atlantic coastal states from Maine to the Carolinas, as well as the West Coast and Great Lakes. The country's first utility-scale offshore wind farm, consisting of five turbines, began commercial operation in December 2016 off the coast of Rhode Island.

Turbine design standards are governed by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). For offshore turbines, no specific guidelines for hurricane-force winds exist. Offshore turbines can be built larger than land-based turbines, however, owing to a manufacturer's ability to transport larger molded components such as blades via freighter rather than over land by rail or truck.

For the study, CU Boulder researchers set out to test the limits of the existing design standard. Due to a lack of observational data across the height of a wind turbine, they instead used large-eddy simulations to create a powerful hurricane with a computer.

"We wanted to understand the worst-case scenario for offshore wind turbines, and for hurricanes, that's a Category 5," said Rochelle Worsnop, a graduate researcher in CU Boulder's Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences (ATOC) and lead author of the study.

These uniquely high-resolution simulations showed that under Category 5 conditions, mean wind speeds near the storm's eyewall reached 90 meters-per-second, well in excess of the 50 meters-per-second threshold set by current standards.

"Wind speeds of this magnitude have been observed in hurricanes before, but in only a few cases, and these observations are often questioned because of the hazardous conditions and limitations of instruments," said George Bryan of NCAR and a co-author of the study. "By using large-eddy simulations, we are able to show how such winds can develop and where they occur within hurricanes."

Furthermore, current standards do not account for veer, a measure of the change in wind direction across a vertical span. In the simulation, wind direction changed by as much as 55 degrees between the tip of the rotor and its hub, creating a potentially dangerous strain on the blade.

The findings could be used to help wind farm developers improve design standards as well as to help stakeholders make informed decisions about the costs, benefits and risks of placing turbines in hurricane-prone areas.

"The study will help inform design choices before offshore wind energy development ramps up in hurricane-prone regions," said Worsnop, who received funding from the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program to conduct this research. "We hope that this research will aid wind turbine manufacturers and developers in successfully tapping into the incredibly powerful wind resource just beyond our coastlines."

"Success could mean either building turbines that can survive these extreme conditions, or by understanding the overall risk so that risks can be mitigated, perhaps with financial instruments like insurance," said Professor Julie Lundquist of ATOC and CU Boulder's Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute (RASEI), a co-author of the study. "The next stage of this work would be to assess how often these extreme winds would impact an offshore wind farm on the Atlantic coast over the 20-to-30-year lifetime of a typical wind farm."

The findings were recently published online in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, a publication of the American Geophysical Union.

Explore further: Utility plans vote on New York offshore wind project

More information: Rochelle P. Worsnop et al, Gusts and Shear Within Hurricane Eyewalls Can Exceed Offshore Wind-Turbine Design Standards, Geophysical Research Letters (2017). DOI: 10.1002/2017GL073537

A New York utility is set to vote later this month on a plan to construct an offshore wind farm off eastern Long Island.

There has been a hiccup at the nation's first offshore wind farm as it prepares to start delivering power.

Local authorities approved the largest offshore wind farm in the United States on Wednesday, to be located near Long Island and capable of powering some 50,000 households.

For the past 24 years, Mark Z. Jacobson, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford, has been developing a complex computer model to study air pollution, energy, weather and climate. A recent application ...

(Tech Xplore)A small team of researchers with Sorbonne Universit and cole Nationale Suprieure des Arts et Mtiers-ParisTech has found that using flexible blades on a wind turbine can dramatically increase its efficiency. ...

A new design for gigantic blades longer than two football fields could help bring offshore 50-megawatt (MW) wind turbines to the United States and the world.

Rising seas are making flooding more common in coastal areas around the country. Now, a new study finds that sea-level rise will boost the occurrence of moderate rather than severe flooding in some regions of the United States, ...

India is now two and a half times more likely to experience a deadly heat wave than a half century ago, and all it took was an increase in the average temperature of just 0.5 degrees Celsius (less than 1 degree Fahrenheit), ...

Using seismic data and supercomputers, Rice University geophysicists have conducted a massive seismic CT scan of the upper mantle beneath the Tibetan Plateau and concluded that the southern half of the "Roof of the World" ...

Scientists at The Australian National University (ANU) have found that independent estimates from geology and biology agree on the timing of the breakup of the Pangaea supercontinent into today's continents.

Offshore wind turbines built according to current standards may not be able to withstand the powerful gusts of a Category 5 hurricane, creating potential risk for any such turbines built in hurricane-prone areas, new University ...

Scientists at The University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG) have found that a devastating combination of global warming and El Nio is responsible for causing extreme temperatures in April 2016 in Southeast Asia.

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I think Al Gore said storms will get bigger in the future so what do we do, build the most vulnerable power system to storms, brilliant !!

Is there any type of power plant that isn't vulnerable to category 5 eye wall winds?

I am not generally a proponent of building "better technology" on a never ending scale to deal with problems the existing technology has caused since the newer technology tends to create problems of it's own. In this case I fervently hope to be proven incorrect. Since we are not wise enough of a species to greatly reduce the number of our species we will simply have to make do with structures that can handle the situational stresses we have created or excacerbated.

50 k wind and the wind turbines shutdown.

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Offshore wind turbines vulnerable to Category 5 hurricane gusts - Phys.Org

DONG Energy to Incorporate Batteries Into UK Offshore Wind Farm … – New York Times


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DONG Energy to Incorporate Batteries Into UK Offshore Wind Farm ...
New York Times
Danish state-controlled utility and wind power developer DONG Energy will install a battery system at its Burbo Bank Offshore wind farm off the coast of Britain to ...
Dong to link Burbo Bank to battery in offshore wind first | RechargeRecharge (subscription)
Dong Energy to launch battery solution at offshore windfarmOffshore Wind Journal
Dong to add 2-MW battery at UK offshore wind farmRenewables Now (subscription)

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DONG Energy to Incorporate Batteries Into UK Offshore Wind Farm ... - New York Times

A U-Boat Strikes and Terror Follows on the High Seas – New York Times


New York Times
A U-Boat Strikes and Terror Follows on the High Seas
New York Times
But until the Mid-Week Pictorial of June 7, 1917, you might have had no idea what the final moments looked like before a torpedoed steamer, sinking by the bow, slipped under the waves; its screw and rudder raised helplessly high above the water, a big ...

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A U-Boat Strikes and Terror Follows on the High Seas - New York Times

Hitting The High Seas: US LNG Finds A Home – Seeking Alpha

US LNG exports have not only provided an important source of incremental demand for the domestic natural gas market, but those exports, along with other sources of growing global LNG supply, have begun to disrupt traditional seaborne flows of gas. As the LNG spot market develops and the share of contracts without fixed destination clauses grows, a fight for market share is likely to ensue. So, how will US LNG fare in an increasingly congested global market?

One market that saw major changes in supply over the last year is Mexico. Over the last five years, Mexico has imported an average of 600 MMcf/d of LNG to meet its demand. However, the sources of these imports have changed dramatically, specifically over the past year. The graphic below shows Mexico's LNG suppliers over time with the US taking a larger portion of total Mexican LNG import market share, virtually displacing all other sources of cargoes.

This change is occurring close to home and leaves us wondering if US LNG will have the same effect in other parts of the world? The US is not the only country bringing on new LNG terminals and adding incremental cargoes into the market. Australia, Malaysia and Russia, among others, have also announced LNG export projects with in-service dates in the next few years. Asia and Europe are often cited as the markets that are likely to soak up this impending incremental supply. Not only are they currently the two largest markets, as the graphic below shows, but they also hold the greatest potential for growth.

Historically, Asia has proven to be the largest source of imports, reaching 31 Bcf/d in winter 2017. European imports have dwindled from an average of 7.9 Bcf/d in 2010 to 4.3 Bcf/d in 2016. However, European declines are not necessarily directly attributable to declines in demand. While, according to the 2016 BP Statistical Review, European gas consumption has been on the decline since peaking in 2008, Europe also received much of its supply from piped-in Russian gas, which might have squeezed out some LNG imports over the past few years. This means that, if made economic, LNG imports could retake market share back from Russian gas.

Assuming that Asia will continue to be a large source of demand for LNG, will US LNG be able to compete into the region? To answer this, we must look at how economic US LNG cargoes would be entering the region (in this case Japan).

To be incentivized to ship to Asia, Japanese LNG prices need to be greater than the variable costs to ship a cargo. Let's assume the cost of the gas (115% of Henry Hub) and shipping costs are variable. That would mean over the past year it would have been economic to send cargoes to Asia. However, if incremental demand in the region is not able to keep up with supply, Japanese LNG prices would have to fall below variable costs to disincentivize imports into the region. While the US gas market is set to enter a time of potential oversupply and depressed Henry Hub prices, transport costs into the region could become prohibitive in a liquid spot market leaving US cargoes heading back to sea in search of a destination closer to home.

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Hitting The High Seas: US LNG Finds A Home - Seeking Alpha

Barker and Team Japan ruling the high seas – Royal Gazette

Published Jun 7, 2017 at 8:00 am (Updated Jun 6, 2017 at 11:07 pm)

Falling away: Artemis Racing lost both races to SoftBank Team Japan (Photograph by Blaire Simmons)

Dean Barker had to draw on his vast experience as he steered SoftBank Team Japan to back-to-back wins over Artemis Racing in rough conditions yesterday.

With both boats being battered by the high winds, it was Barker who rose to the challenge to open up a healthy 3-1 lead in the race to first-to-five points in their semi-final.

Bits were flying off both boats during the first race as Team Japan crossed the finish line moments before Artemis confirmed their retirement from the contest.

We had a bit of a stuff just before the start of that first race and blew out a bunch of the fairings, Nathan Outteridge, the Artemis skipper, said.

We spent a lot of time just trying to bandage up the boat and it just shows how fragile these boats are.

It was a disappointing day but you just have to keep chipping away. It was pretty tough but now the boat is back in the shed and we are doing all the checks, and Im sure it will be good for tomorrow.

There was some hastily reupholstering to both boats before the second race, Barker showing his skill with another strong start to give his team an early advantage.

Artemiss woes were further compounded after incurring two costly penalties, awarded against them for sailing out of the racecourse boundary on leg three after avoiding a collision.

Iain Percy, the Artemis tactician and grinder, was left fuming at Richard Slater, the chief umpire, who issued the sanctions that all but ended the Swedes challenge.

Do your f***ing job, the British double Olympic gold medal-winner roared at Slater, before adding: This is ridiculous; you get ready for when I am back on shore.

Percy already had reason to be upset at Slater after he issued the Swedish team with a penalty that cost them victory against Emirates Team New Zealand in the double round-robin stage. That time, Slater admitted that he had got it wrong.

Outteridge said he feared his boat was at risk of a pitch-pole capsize, much like Team New Zealand did in the next race, had he not veered out of bounds.

I saw Team New Zealands incident and we had plenty of close moments ourselves, Outteridge said. You would have seen in the second race how close we got to Dean when we had a little nose stuff.

We bailed out of that situation, turned up and that eventually put us out of bounds. I was a bit nervous that we were going to do something like Pete [Burling] did and we would have gone right on top of [Team Japan].

Although more measured in his criticism of the umpires than Percy, Outteridge also feels his teams treatment was unjust.

When we re-entered the racecourse, we had to lose two boat lengths from SoftBank Team Japan, he said. From what I understand, the umpires decided it was a deliberate intention going out of bounds.

So they added a second penalty and we had to lose four boat lengths.

Outteridge said that most of the damage to Artemiss boat was surface-related and that he had no real concerns.

I was talking to Dean and he said they had little issues with their boat as well, Outteridge added.

Most of the stuff was cosmetic, but there were one or two other bits and pieces that were holding us back as well.

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Barker and Team Japan ruling the high seas - Royal Gazette

Navy dispatched 52 flotillas to high seas in 8 years – Mehr News Agency – English Version

Rear Admiral Sayyari described Iranian Navys mission as protecting and defending the country's maritimeboundaries as well as national resources and interests in territorial waters, adding since 2009 and upon the directive of Irans Leader saying the Navy is a strategic force, our mission zone and presence on high seas and international waters has expanded, in a way that we have so far dispatched 52 flotillas to high seas.

He went on to add that the Iranian Navy has been also conducting patrols in the Gulf of Aden since November 2008 in order to safeguard merchant ships and oil tankers owned or leased by Iran or other countries against piracy.

Sea diplomacy is needed so that the enemy will not assume that Iran is isolated, said Sayyari, adding our presence on high seas neutralizes the Iranophobia campaigns by displaying Iranian culture, science, and identity at various ports in the world.

The Navy commander went on to add, today, we are proud to say that the Iranian Navy receivesall of its required modern equipment, destroyers and vessels from domestic manufacturing.

Sayyari noted that the Navy has so far provided security to 4,000 merchant ships and oil tankers on high seas, adding our presence on high seas is in accordance with the international law. We will not allow an ounce of insecurity in the zone under our patrol and will stand firm against anyone who seeks to cause insecurity.

On Tuesday, Sayyari said up to 25 naval exercises have been planned to be staged by March 2018.

MS/3997863

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Navy dispatched 52 flotillas to high seas in 8 years - Mehr News Agency - English Version

Inside Faith Hill and Tim McGraw’s $145 Million Empire: Private Islands, Record-Breaking Tours and More – E! Online

Getty Images; Melissa Hebeler / E! Illustration

Tim McGraw and Faith Hill have been together for over 20 years, and while that kind of love is a reward in itself, it's also proven to have some other benefits, too.

Both Tim and Faithsaw quite a bit of success in the early '90s, and they ended up gettingtogether at the peak of their careers in 1996. Faith joined the country crooner on hisSpontaneous Combustion Tour, and they ended up falling hard and fast for one another. They married in October of that year and welcomed their first child, Gracie, into the world in May of 1997.

Many stories like this would continue by saying "the rest was history," but the rest was only about to get better for these two.

The next 20 years of marriage proved to not only be filled with love, family (including two more daughters, Audrey and Maggie), friendship and tons of memories, it also proved to be quite lucrative, too.

Tim and Faith have built a massively successful empire together...and by massive we mean $145 million worth.Just check out some of the numbers below...

Becky Fluke

$145 Million: Together, it's estimated that the couple is worth a whopping $145 million, which putsthem in the list of top earning celebrity couples.

$80 Million:Faith's estimated net worth adds up to around $80 million thanks to her music career as well as her occasional acting roles on television shows and movies. She's also seen some payoffs from her fragrance line as well as her involvement with the NFL's Sunday Night Football.

$70 Million: Tim's estimated net worth comes in around $70 million, which can be chalked up to his music career as well as a couple acting appearances here and there.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

20 Million: Faith has sold over 20 million album units since debuting her first albumin 1993. She's released seven studio albums, four compilation albums and 42 singles.

40 Million: Tim has sold over 40 million album units since his debut album in 1994. Since then, he's released14 studio albums, 11 compilation albums and 67 singlesall of which havegrossed around $530 million.

$139 Million:After getting together, Tim and Faith decided they didn't want to spend more than a few days apart. Thus, they started touring together in 2000 with their first Soul2Soul tour. They followed that tour with the Soul2Soul II tour on which they embarked in 2006. The first grossed $50 million and the second grossed $89 million, becoming the highest grossing country music tour of all time (a record they held for several years). Together, the two tours grossed around $139 million. The couple has recently taken off for their third tour together, the Soul2Soul World Tour, which will only continue to add to their empire.

$18.3 Million: The couple just put their Franklin, Tenn., mansion on the market for $18.3 million.The 3,152square-foot home was built in 1800 and features three bedrooms with four baths as well as a master suite. The home also boasts sixfire placesand is part of a 622-acre property they own (though they sold off 131 acres of it in 2015). Faith and Tim bought the property in two separate transactions 17 years ago (in 2000) paying $13.75 million total for both.

20 Acres: The couple have recently transition theirpermanent residence to the 20-acre Bahamas islandthat they call "L'le d'Anges." They bought the land in 2003, and it took over a decade todevelopas they realized it was like building a small town. We can only imagine the cost that went into that!

Clint Spaulding/Patrick McMullan

$85,000: This is the base price listed for Faith's cara Range Rover, which she shared a photo of her hubby washing on Instagram not too long ago.

$149,000: Tim keeps a couple cars in his garage (that we know of), which add up to around $149,000. First and foremost, he's always talked about his red Jeep Wrangler, which he shared a photo of last year, noting "that's how I'll always be." He also owns a Land Rover Defender 90, which can cost around $70,000 as well as his late father's vintage Mercedes 200 series 280SL, which he could sell upwards of from $64,000.

Priceless: Although the couple is certainly not lacking when it comes to finances (they live on a damn island!), there's one thing money simply can't buy...20 years of marriage and unbreakable love.

"Tim has given me confidence and strength and my foundation," Faith said in an interview in 2000. "He makes me feel like I can conquer the world."

Tim, on the other hand, said, "I'm lucky to have her. She's the light of our whole family's life. She keeps everything going for us. We all strive to be like my wife, everybody in our family. If your wife holds the example for everybody in your family, that's a good thing."

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Inside Faith Hill and Tim McGraw's $145 Million Empire: Private Islands, Record-Breaking Tours and More - E! Online

Casual! Kim Kardashian Rented An Entire Island For Kanye West’s 40th Birthday – ELLE

No more parties in, around, or even related to L.A.

Kim Kardashian and Kanye West are a pretty low-key couple who like to spend most of their time out of the limelight, so it makes sense that they hosted a quiet and casual affair for Kanye's 40th birthday.

The family of four kept things small and intimate by renting out an entire private island in the Bahamas for a four-day vacation with their friends. The Kardashian-Wests booked out the Bakers Bay Golf and Ocean Club in the Abaco Islands for their stay, where they drank, played golf, swam in the ocean and had an all-round good time. According to Travel + Leisure, the trip put them back a cool $233,200 for the resort alone, and an extra $349,800 for the four private jets.

"Kim rented out an island and had all of Kanye's friends come and their families. They rented 4 planes and everyone left in secrecy and there was a no social media rule so no one would find them," a report from E! News read.

"It was a fun weekend for the family. Everyone hung out by the pool and the kids played on the beach making sand castles."

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Casual! Kim Kardashian Rented An Entire Island For Kanye West's 40th Birthday - ELLE

Archbishop: In ‘post-Christian world’ fidelity, charity, truth stand out – CatholicPhilly.com

Posted June 7, 2017

The following interview with Archbishop Charles Chaput, conducted by Australian writer Marilyn Rodrigues, appeared in slightly edited form on June 2 in The Catholic Weekly, newsweekly of the Archdiocese of Sydney.

***

Archbishop Charles Chaput. (Photo by Sarah Webb)

Q. Your latest book is clearly written for the American Catholic people, but its relevance for us here in Australia is also very clear. Briefly, for those who are yet to read your book, in what ways do you understand us to be living in a post-Christian world?

A. Theres actually no such thing as post Christian as long as people anywhere believe in Jesus Christ and try to live accordingly. Jesus is the lord and meaning of history. And since he is, there can be no history after him. The Church has often found herself dying or extinguished in some places and thriving in others. Its no different today.

But we can do our best to ignore or diminish Jesus. So in that sense, much of the developed world, or at least its leadership class, makes itself post Christian by trying very hard to forget God.

Q. You paint a comprehensive picture of the historical philosophical, political, and social anti-Christian forces underpinning contemporary life. Much of your book is concerned with how we got to this point. Why is it not enough to simply get on with things why is it so important to understand the past?

A. The ability to remember and learn from the past sets humans uniquely apart. So a man with amnesia literally becomes a nobody. He loses his identity. Hes a blank slate for others to write on. Thats because his life story is shaped by the past, by his beliefs and experiences over time, and once forgotten, others can insert a new life story in its place.

The same applies to nations and communities. Thats why totalitarian systems and democracies, too, can be totalitarian always end up trying to erase or revise the past.

Q. You explain that Christian hope is the overcoming of despair, differentiating it from optimism which assumes things will always improve. In many ways we are witnessing a crisis of despair, maybe best manifested in Australia in unprecedented suicide rates. You clearly lay out the reality of, and good reason for, much despair and disquiet in our culture today. Would you say that the world we face today is crystallizing into precisely a most Christian moment of hope? What should this inspire? Where do you most see manifestations of hope today?

A. The Christian faith is growing rapidly in much of the world. But we rarely hear about it because it doesnt fit the standard secular narrative. So we over-focus on our own problems. Thats natural. But its also dangerous, because when we lose a sense of the larger picture, we can lose confidence in our own beliefs. The reality is this: Even in countries like the United States and Australia, God is raising up plenty of strong young clergy, religious and laypeople, and movements and communities committed to renewal. Theyre the future. They need to be encouraged. Thats where we need to focus. God will take care of the rest. Theres no reason to be bitter or afraid.

What believers are now experiencing in the developed world is equivalent to a cold shower. Its not fun, its not pleasant, but it does wake us up. It forces each of us into a choice. The indifferent may leave the Church, and thats a sadness. But those who stay with the Church will be more alert and intentional. Thats a good thing. Honesty and clarity are always good things. Confusion and ambiguity are never of God.

Q. In Australia, among other things we are seeing companies exerting pressure on the federal government to enact same-sex marriage laws. New South Wales has been facing a push for extreme abortion laws, and euthanasia is on the table in Victoria. Where do you see examples of Christians engaging well in political life? What are they doing successfully?

A. I cant speak to Australias situation, obviously. But in the United States, companies like Apple and Salesforce.com have been very aggressive in pushing same-sex marriage and similar issues, often in the face of strong popular resistance. They have no interest in the will of the people unless the economic and public relations cost of their actions is too high. So Christians need to get involved in the kind of political organizing and economic boycotts that inflict an appropriate penalty. That has to start at the local and regional level. Lots of people are already doing it. Even when good people lose a battle in the public square, they achieve something good. They witness to the truth, they clarify whats at stake in an issue, and they extract a cost from those who would do evil.

None of this should lead us to believe that politics is the most important part of a Christian life. Its not, by a long shot. And none of this absolves us from the Christian duty to act with good sense about strategy and tactics, or with the respect, justice, charity and prudence we owe to others including those with whom we disagree. But avoiding a fight on matters of real importance is never excusable.

Q. Increasingly, Christian values around marriage and family, reverence for life from conception until natural death, and are being understood to be archaic and nave at best, and inhibitory of human freedom and equality at worst. A Catholic mentality means different things by freedom and equality. What is happening here at the level of language of meaning? Is it more important than ever now for Christians to say what we mean and mean what we say?

A. Those who control the language of a debate largely control the outcome. Words shape thought. An expression like marriage equality is deeply misleading and arguably dishonest. But its also very effective. It bypasses serious thought and goes straight to the emotions that surround the word equality. So its vital for Catholics to know and understand what their faith teaches, to speak the truth, and to challenge the words of a public debate when they mask lies and ambiguities.

Q. You express some sympathy for, but dont advocate for, the Benedict option the idea that people wanting to preserve Christian culture might need to withdraw into alternative communities. You would rather see Catholics as healthy cells within society. Why is this this the better option, and why do you think the idea of the Benedict option is so appealing to many people?

A. Rod Dreher the author of the recent book The Benedict Option is a man I know and admire, and Im quite sure he doesnt mean the Benedict Option as a call to withdraw to a religious bomb shelter. He does mean, and I think hes right, that we Christians need to find better ways to build intentional communities of faith and separate ourselves mentally from the bad things in our culture. But this isnt a new message. And Benedict probably isnt the best model for our age. Augustine is.

Augustine never ran or hid from adversity. He was a bishop for and with his people, people who had to continue their everyday lives even as the Roman world around them fell apart. Augustine knew that the City of God and the City of Man overlap and interpenetrate. He wanted Christians to realize that their real home, their real loyalty, is heaven, but we get there by passing through the City of Man. So we need to seed this world with as much good as we can while were here.

Like anything else, the Benedict Option is unhelpful when its over-marketed and poorly understood. People are always attracted to escape hatches in trying times. But there arent any escape hatches. The world follows us. The world is in us, so we need to deal with it. Jesus accepted the cross, and if we claim to be his disciples, why would we try to avoid it? And even if we could hide from the world, we shouldnt, because we have the mandate to heal and convert it.

Q. What can young parents do, who are worried about their children being exposed to toxic elements of culture at younger ages, from which its becoming increasingly impossible to shield them at younger ages?

A. Turn off the electronics. Unplug the devices. Read to them. Pray with them. Play with them. Teach them the value of silence. Develop their critical skills in examining the daily life around them. These things sound simple, and in a sense they are. But try to do them for a couple of weeks and youll see that theyre actually quite radical. Most of all, love each other as a couple and show it, because the love, tenderness and fidelity between parents has a profoundly formative effect on children. Theyre watching their parents every waking minute of every day.

Q. You write that the fundamental crisis of our time, and the special crisis of todays Christians, is a crisis of faith. Could you offer some thoughts about the continuing disunity among Christians, and within the Catholic community (as manifested by the disagreements over Pope Francis ministry and Amoris Laetitia) on how this relates to the crisis of faith?

A. Any current disunity we have in the Catholic Church and we can easily overstate it comes down to how much we want to accommodate the world; how much were willing to bend; how much we want to gloss the hard edges of the Gospel message and Church teaching. I was a Capuchin Franciscan before I was a bishop, so Francis of Assisi has always had a big influence on my thinking. Francis had no use at all for glosses, so I think we need to be more radically faithful to the uncomfortable parts of our faith and teaching, not less.

Numbers arent essential for the Church. Fidelity is. Charity is. A commitment to truth is. And thats because the Church doesnt finally belong to us, but to Jesus Christ. Its his Church, not ours.

As for our relations with other Christians: The disdain often shown toward religion today has the ironic effect of drawing many believing Christians together across lines that once divided them. I have more friends who are pastors, scholars and persons I deeply admire in other, non-Catholic Christian communities than I ever thought possible 45 years ago as a young priest. Denominational labels are often less important than whether a person really believes in Jesus Christ, the Word of God and the core of the Christian faith. Our differences are important. They cant be minimized. But the common faith we share in Jesus Christ is equally important.

Q. You recommend an effort to live the beatitudes, in their radicalness, for people who live in the world of mortgages, tough jobs, and complaining children all Christians in their daily lives. Theyre meant for plumbers and doctors, teachers and salesmen, mothers and fathers. It reminded me of GK Chestertons comment, that Christianity has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found difficult and not tried. Can you give an example, perhaps from your own family or friends, where you have seen someone (not a priest or religious) has really tried to live this way? What impact has that made on you?

A. Dorothy Day had a huge impact on my life. And there are many other invisible people like her in the Catholic Worker movement, the Neo-Catechumenal Way, the [Protestant] Bruderhof communities, Communion and Liberation, and a dozen other renewal movements and communities. And there are thousands of similar examples of ordinary people doing extraordinary things in local parishes.

No one lives the Beatitudes perfectly. We all fail. Its in our deliberate, persistent efforts in trying to live them that God remakes us, and through us, provides a witness of holiness to others which is the only way a culture really changes for the better.

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Archbishop: In 'post-Christian world' fidelity, charity, truth stand out - CatholicPhilly.com

How Power Street Theatre Company is taking on representation in the arts – Generocity

Power Street Theatre Company (PSTC) was founded out of rage.

Gabriela Sanchezstarted the theatre company the only one in Philly run by all women of color, she said in 2012 while studying theater and communications at Temple University. It was there where she felt the frustration of knowing that it wasnt for a lack of she skill she wasnt getting more opportunities on stage. Rather, it was because her stories as a Latinx woman werent being represented and as weve heard before, representation is everything.

Sanchez realized if she was feeling this way, there must be others around her who also felt the same way, and soon enough, she met and collaborated with Erlina Ortiz, a classmate at Temple, to start PSTC, where Ortiz is now the resident playwright.

Five years later, the theatre company is going strong with its main focus of providing accessible theater and arts to the North Philly communities, through which Sanchez said theyve engaged more than 3,000 audience members through seven productions and six contract performances.

That focus on serving the North Philly area, where Sanchez has deep familial ties to having been born and raised in Philly, is an intentional effort in promoting diversity and inclusion, which are values Sanchez said are still just buzzwords in the theater industry.

Im very intentional about the work that I produce, the relationships that I build and knowing that it takes time, Sanchez said. My work is very rooted in the communities that I care about, that I serve, that I come from.

PSTCs most recent production series, Theatre en Las Parcelas, is currently underway through a partnership with the Norris Square Neighborhood Project, where she is the education director for the organization that aims to make social change by engaging youth in education, leadership and the arts. The second show of the series, Out of Orbit, will feature Sanchez and two other women tackling the topic of privilege, among other things, through the lens of space and the universe.

The free performance will take on June 10 at the Las Parcelas garden, where the last event, an open mic garden party, will also take place on Aug. 12.

Working in tandem with community and social change organizations is nothing new for PSTC, like when it partnered with Women Organized Against Rape and Warrior Writers to produce She Wore Those Shoes, a production that looked at sexual assault in the military.

The art-for-social-change effort is also something Sanchez herself has personally been involved in with since she was 15 years old, when her first full-time job for six years was being part of the City of Philadelphias Conflict Resolution Theatre, part of a series of Strength-Based (Trauma-Informed) Leadership Programs hosted throughout the city.

I saw a need in my city, I saw a need in communities that were disenfranchised and young people that didnt have access to the arts, she said.

Location and pricing of tickets are bothaccessibility factors PSTC has givenattention to, whichSanchez says shes proud of. All youth under the age of 18 get free access to any shows, college students and senior citizens get half-off their tickets and community residents just pay $5. All in all, inclusivity is key to keep theatre alive, Sanchez said.

Theres this stigma that people of color dont like theater, but the reality is that thats not true were storytellers, its ingrained in who we are, she said. We just dont have the platform or the resources or the accessibility to access theatre because its an expensive and secluded art form in some ways.

Even as a student, Sanchez felt that her studies would often not teach her how to sustain the art, thus prompting her to learn how to run a theatre company through experience, whether it be writing grants or fostering those relationships with community organizations. She hopes to grow PSTC into a full-time company within the next two years, and in that effort, teach and grow other women and people of color in the theater world.

Sanchez credits the success of PSTC so far to her team Ortiz; Asaki Kuruma, Diana Rodriguez and Lexi White who have often volunteered much of the administrative labor, and its through listening to other communities PSTC may have not yet reached out to where they hope to find more stories.

Creating art and social change arent on one person, Sanchez said. I believe its about dialogue, about reflection, about asking questions and having conversations. In order for all of us to get on the same page, we have to start listening to each others stories.

Albert Hong is Generocity's contributing reporter. He started hanging around the Technically Media office as a summer intern for Technical.ly and eventually made his way to freelancing for both news sites. While technology and video games are two of his main interests, he's grown to love Philadelphia as a city and is always excited to hear someone else's story.

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How Power Street Theatre Company is taking on representation in the arts - Generocity

Open house will celebrate Folk Art Guild’s 50 years – News – The … – Penn Yan Chronicle-Express (blog)

The Rochester Folk Art Guild attains a milestone accomplishment this year, as the group celebrates 50 years as a vibrant and creative crafts community.

The first seven members put down roots on East Hill, Middlesex in 1967. Since that time, hundreds of people have spent time at East Hill Farm, helping the Guild grow and develop into an exceptional school for crafts, and one of the most successful and long-lasting intentional communities in the country.

The Guilds fine pottery, woodworking, weaving, and other handcrafts have found their way around the world into museums, galleries, and private collections, even appearing on the table at the White House on different occasions.

The half-century marks a special point in the Guilds history, and the members are extending a warm welcome to all in the local communities to come share in a day of celebration, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 10.

There will be tours of the studios and East Hill Gallery, chamber music by Ensemble Resonance, and free, light refreshments for all.

Ensemble Resonance is flute, bassoon, and piano, and the three will play Mozart, Nino Rota, and Taylor-Coleridge at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m.

We are thankful to have great supporters, as well as wonderful neighbors in Middlesex and the surrounding Finger Lakes communities, says Guild spokesperson David Barnet.

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Open house will celebrate Folk Art Guild's 50 years - News - The ... - Penn Yan Chronicle-Express (blog)

Local ties: New tailgate market locations highlight business and community connections – Mountain Xpress

From homemade sauces to local artwork, North Asheville residents now haveanother place to shop on Saturday mornings: Anew community market debuted June 3 outside Gan Shan Station on Charlotte Street.

The market was created to give localbrick-and-mortar businesses an alternativeplace to sell their goods, says Jade Pombrio, director of the new project. Currently, most areatailgate markets are producer-only, meaning that you can only sell things that you produce, saysMolly Nicholie, program director at ASAP Connections.

Weve been wanting for a while for a venue to be able to sell all of our hot sauces and rib glaze, Pombrio says. So it kind of started as someone else wanting to sell stuff realizing that, Oh, we do have a good space. We really wanted to make this a community restaurant and make it a place with lots of community engagement, and a market seems like a natural symptom of that.

In addition to Gan Shans products, the market will feature fresh bread and pastries from The Rhu, handmade sausage and ethical meats from Intentional Swine, flowers from Paper Crane Farms and a food pantry with items from Lees Asian Market. Pombrio also plansto have a rotating weekly schedule of featured artists from the community.

The Gan Shan Market joins the North Asheville Tailgate Market as a Saturday morning shopping destination for North Asheville residents. Competition amongmarkets can be challenging, Nicholie says, as markets tend to attract similar vendors and customer bases. However, Pombrio thinks the Gan Shan market will appeal toresidents in the immediate Charlotte Street neighborhood and shoppers who are looking for items they cant get at other markets.

Coffee, pastries, breads, sauces this is going to be more pantry items because theres already so much produce, there are already so many farmers here, Pombrio says.

Gan Shan Station isnt the only business to embrace the idea of community farmers markets. Breweries have also jumped at the chance to offer their establishments as potential locations, with the intent of strengthening ties within the immediate community and bringing in a new set of customers.

Several months ago, Highland Brewing Co. reached out to offer its Meadowspace to the Oakley Farmers Market. Themarket declined the offer at the time, but when itsprevious Fairview Road sitebacked out just days before the 2017 season opened, the Oakley Farmers Market relocated toHighland on May 4.

While the market has been operating at Highland for only a few weeks,Oakley Farmers Market directorLexi Binns-Cravensays shehas received positive feedback from both vendors and visitors.

Our new location is a lot more child-friendly, where [vendors] can just bring their children, Binns-Craven says. People bring their dogs to the Meadow, and weve had a lot more families come. They bring their children, the kids are playing around as the parents shop, and its just a much more child-friendly atmosphere.

The current popularity of farmers markets is causing people to try and align their mindsets and shopping needs with local vendors, Nicholie says. Over the years, there have been amazing partnerships between businesses and farmers markets, she says. One thing I dont think the public realizes is how farmers markets serve as an incubator for businesses many cant necessarily afford a brick-and-mortar building but can sell their product at a farmers market.

Highland Brewing Co. President Leah Ashburn says the community-focused market fits well with the brewerys community-oriented mindset and that partnerships between businesses and local grassroots effortsare important for growth.

Asheville, in general, has so many wonderful resources for people that grow or bake or make things, and farmers markets are such a nice way for residents to connect directly to those growers, Ashburn says. Theres a similarity to directly connecting with brewers they are both crafting a product, and there are individual people behind that. And those individual people that make beer and craft beer are going to be shopping and buying baked goods and produce at local farmers markets, and that just feels good.

New Belgium Brewing Co. also extended an offer to house the West Asheville Tailgate Market, says market director Quinn Asteak. Although the market decided not to change locations, Asteak appreciates the offer.

While we all think it would be great to have a market at New Belgium for so many reasons they are a beautiful space and a great organization and theres a lot of great appeal we wont be leaving Grace Baptist Church, Asteak says. When the conversations started, everyones ears perked up. Theres a lot of benefits to it; its definitely a thing where it would help both businesses for markets to exist at their locations.

Despite the fact that New Belgium will not host the West Asheville Tailgate Market, the brewery remains a great place for local community involvement, says Suzanne Hackett, communications specialist at New Belgium.

What weve heard from the community is that they love to meet here and see our neighbors here, which feels really good to us, Hackett says. Supporting farmers, for us, is more than just interacting with communities; its essential to our business. Without sustainable agriculture, we dont exist, so its very important to us.

The Gan Shan Farmers Market happens 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdaysthrough midfall. The Oakley Farmers Market operates 3:30-6:30 p.m.Thursdays through the end of September at The Meadow at Highland Brewing Co.

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Local ties: New tailgate market locations highlight business and community connections - Mountain Xpress