Is voting third party a waste? – The Baylor Lariat

By Ava Dunwoody | Staff Writer

Third-party candidates have won over a small minority of voters and continue to campaign for more votes come the presidential election on Nov. 3. Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins and Libertarian Party candidate Jo Jorgensen are still running for the presidential seat.

According to Pew Research Centers polling, Joe Biden is currently leading the polls with 52% support and Donald Trump comes second with 42%. Jorgensen is in third with 4% support and Hawkins is fourth with 1%. That means both third-party candidates together comprise about 5% of voter support.

Parker sophomore Conner Ammar is able to vote for the first time in the upcoming election and said he credits Duvergers Law as an explanation of why our system is set up all across the country where basically all elections are going to be two party. This is why, he said, its hard for third-party candidates to even come close to getting a majority of the votes.

His theory is that when you have an election where there is one seat being filled and you have [a] simple majority election, Ammar said, Its going to be two party, invariably.

Ammar said this is because there is a certain amount of votes needed to win over a seat, and voters arent always encouraged to vote for what represents their beliefs best.

Third-party voting in the United States has almost always been a little bit of a waste of time and a little bit of a waste of peoples votes, Ammar said. Largely speaking, people, when they vote third-party, usually vote for the Libertarian candidate. That is the most popular non-Democrat or Republican Party in the country right now followed not really closely by the Green Party.

Lauren Daugherty is involved with the Libertarian Party of McLennan County and ran for office as a Libertarian candidate for Justice of the Peace in 2018. She said she votes Libertarian because she wants to vote for what she believes in, not against what she doesnt.

The libertarian platform best speaks to my values, Daugherty said. I believe that our Constitutional rights are very important and thats what our country is founded on and thats what makes us special. I think individual rights are sacred and I want to support candidates who take that very seriously.

Ammar said he thinks many people who will vote third-party and who voted third-party in the 2016 election did so because they were ticked off at Trump and/or Hillary and/or Biden. He said he predicts there will be a similar turnout of third-party voters in this election as in the last one.

I think that for a lot of people our age, people are going to vote Libertarian or otherwise third-party because its a protest vote in a lot of ways, Ammar said.

Voting for Kanye West would be an example of a protest vote, Ammar said, as Kanyes Tweet declaring his candidacy has created social media hype. Those who dont like Trump or Biden may vote for him as a meme instead of for other third parties, Ammar said.

Ammar also said he thinks its unclear how recent events, including the Black Lives Matter movement and COVID-19, will impact third-party voter turnout other than candidate responses to these events swaying voter opinions.

Reporter John Stossel is a recognized Libertarian voter who speaks openly about why he votes the way he does. In an interview with Ben Shapiro posted by The Daily Wire on Nov. 11, 2018, Stossel said he thinks the reason the third-party turnout is so low is because the majority of voters do not pay attention to politics consistently until election time.

Theyre not paying attention to politics, then suddenly they are asked to vote, Stossel said in the interview. Half those people then do vote, [and] they vote who? Republican or Democrat. They dont pay attention long enough to hear the Libertarian argument.

Another reason Ammar said people may vote third-party is in hopes of a change.

Maybe some of them think that things can change and there can be multiple parties, Ammar said, because they look at places like Britain where you have [many parties], and they all have substantial influence in Parliament, but were built different. We dont have the same structure in our elections.

Daugherty said the defeatist attitude of voting third party is a big reason for the lack of voter turnout. As with so many things throughout history, she said, just because something has been the status quo doesnt mean it should continue to be the status quo.

On the ballot this year, the Libertarian candidate will be listed along with the Republican and Democrat candidate. This happened in the 2016 election as well.

We only have three presidential candidates that will be on every single ballot in America, Daugherty said. Theres some others that will be on various ones, but only three will be on literally every ballot. And yet, only two of them are allowed at the debate.

Daugherty said this is a significant example of how the Libertarian Party isnt given the same platform, which causes less recognition as a legitimate option for voters.

Another factor Daugherty said affects third party voter turnout is the straight ticket voting system, which means voters are able to select one political party across the entire ballot without seeing the other options.

A lot of people go in and only click that one button, and I think that does a great disservice to our democracy, Daugherty said. I think people should see all of these different candidates and need to choose each one.

Libertarian candidate Jo Jorgensen said in a video of a campaign rally posted on YouTube by Jo Jorgensen for President 2020 on Aug. 9 that she does not think voting third party always means wasting a vote.

If its somebody who lives in a very red or very blue state, I say youre wasting your vote by voting for whoever is going to take your state anyway If youre in California, your vote is wasted if you are voting for Joe Biden, so how about voting for what you really want? Jorgensen said. Also, there are something like 40 million Americans who lean Libertarian. If everybody voted the way they wanted, we would win overwhelmingly.

A 2017 study from the Cato Institute suggests voters with libertarian leanings may comprise around 20% of the U.S. electorate, though other studies yielded a range of estimates.

Especially in this election, Daugherty said people need more options. She said voters are often told there are only two options, which causes less people to vote for the Libertarian party even though they are a good and viable option.

We see this very strongly in certain election years when people arent keen on the Republican nominee and they are not keen on the Democratic nominee and they wish there were more options, Daugherty said. I think when we give people more options, they can better choose what is best for them.

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Is voting third party a waste? - The Baylor Lariat

Libertarian Candidates Meet with Voters and Show them a Third Choice for This Upcoming Election – WICZ

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. -

Former Gubernatorial Candidate, Larry Sharpe, is traveling the state introducing the public to Libertarian candidates, and today was Broome's turn.

Three libertarian candidates and one Republican candidate spoke at the event at the DoubleTree in Binghamton.

They spoke about how the lesser of two evils is still evil, and that voting Libertarian and third party isn't throwing your vote away.

Sharpe said "Imagine for a second that the Libertarian candidate Jo Jorgenson actually got 300 thousand votes in New York State this year... Imagine how amazing that would be... In reality would it affect the election... no, Biden would probably win New York either way... but it just told New York that we are not going to support your bad behavior..."

Tom Daniel Quiter, running against Senator Fred Akshar, said "The reason why we need more voices and parties... the Libertarian Party... so that we don't have that hand shaking control... one side wants one thing one side wants another... but their may be millions of people that need a third thing... and they are not getting it if only two sides are making that agreement..."

The event included Congressional Candidates Keith Price and Victoria Alexander, State Senate Candidate Tom Quiter, and Broome Legislature Candidate Michael Vasquez.

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Libertarian Candidates Meet with Voters and Show them a Third Choice for This Upcoming Election - WICZ

The Town That Went Feral – The New Republic

In its public education campaigns, the U.S. National Park Service stresses an important distinction: If you find yourself being attacked by a brown or grizzly bear, YES, DO PLAY DEAD. Spread your arms and legs and cling to the ground with all your might, facing downward; after a few attempts to flip you over (no one said this would be easy), the bear will, most likely, leave. By contrast, if you find yourself being attacked by a black bear, NO, DO NOT PLAY DEAD. You must either flee or, if thats not an option, fight it off, curved claws and 700 psi-jaws and all.

A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town (and Some Bears)

by Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling

PublicAffairs, 288 pp., $28.00

But dont worryit almost never comes to this. As one park service PSA noted this summer, bears usually just want to be left alone. Dont we all? In other words, if you encounter a black bear, try to look big, back slowly away, and trust in the creatures inner libertarian. Unless, that is, the bear in question hails from certain wilds of western New Hampshire. Because, as Matthew Hongoltz-Hetlings new book suggests, that unfortunate animal may have a far more aggressive disposition, and relate to libertarianism first and foremost as a flavor of human cuisine.

Hongoltz-Hetling is an accomplished journalist based in Vermont, a Pulitzer nominee and George Polk Award winner. A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town (and Some Bears) sees him traversing rural New England as he reconstructs a remarkable, and remarkably strange, episode in recent history. This is the so-called Free Town Project, a venture wherein a group of libertarian activists attempted to take over a tiny New Hampshire town, Grafton, and transform it into a haven for libertarian idealspart social experiment, part beacon to the faithful, Galts Gulch meets the New Jerusalem. These people had found one another largely over the internet, posting manifestos and engaging in utopian daydreaming on online message boards. While their various platforms and bugbears were inevitably idiosyncratic, certain beliefs united them: that the radical freedom of markets and the marketplace of ideas was an unalloyed good; that statism in the form of government interference (above all, taxes) was irredeemably bad. Left alone, they believed, free individuals would thrive and self-regulate, thanks to the sheer force of logic, reason, and efficiency. For inspirations, they drew upon precedents from fiction (Ayn Rand loomed large) as well as from real life, most notably a series of micro-nation projects ventured in the Pacific and Caribbean during the 1970s and 1980s.

None of those micro-nations, it should be observed, panned out, and things in New Hampshire dont bode well eitherespecially when the humans collide with a newly brazen population of bears, themselves just working to create their own utopia, property lines and market logic be damned. The resulting narrative is simultaneously hilarious, poignant, and deeply unsettling. Sigmund Freud once described the value of civilization, with all its discontents, as a compromise product, the best that can be expected from mitigating human vulnerability to indifferent nature on one hand and our vulnerability to one another on the other. Hongoltz-Hetling presents, in microcosm, a case study in how a politics that fetishizes the pursuit of freedom, both individual and economic, is in fact a recipe for impoverishment and supercharged vulnerability on both fronts at once. In a United States wracked by virus, mounting climate change, and ruthless corporate pillaging and governmental deregulation, the lessons from one tiny New Hampshire town are stark indeed.

In a country known for fussy states with streaks of independence, Hongoltz-Hetling observes, New Hampshire is among the fussiest and the streakiest. New Hampshire is, after all, the Live Free or Die state, imposing neither an income nor a sales tax, and boasting, among other things, the highest per capita rate of machine gun ownership. In the case of Grafton, the history of Living Freeso to speakhas deep roots. The towns Colonial-era settlers started out by ignoring centuries of traditional Abenaki law by purchasing land from founding father John Hancock and other speculators. Next, they ran off Royalist law enforcement, come to collect lumber for the king, and soon discovered their most enduring pursuit: the avoidance of taxes. As early as 1777, Graftons citizens were asking their government to be spared taxes and, when they were not, just stopped paying them.

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The Town That Went Feral - The New Republic

The 14 Best Nootropics and Smart Drugs Reviewed

Adderall is a prescription medication that contains highly stimulating amphetamines.

Its most commonly prescribed to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and narcolepsy, but its increasingly taken by healthy adults to improve attention and focus (64).

Adderall works by increasing the availability of the brain chemicals dopamine and noradrenaline within your prefrontal cortex, an area of your brain that controls working memory, attention and behavior (65).

The amphetamines found in Adderall make people feel more awake, attentive and optimistic. They also reduce appetite (66).

A review of 48 studies found that Adderall significantly improved peoples ability to control their behavior and enhanced short-term memory (67).

Depending on the dose and type of pill prescribed, the effects last up to 12 hours (68).

Its important to note that these drugs are not without side effects.

Adderall is widely abused on college campuses, with some surveys indicating that up to 43% of students use stimulant drugs without a prescription (69).

The side effects of Adderall abuse include anxiety, low sex drive and sweating (70).

Recreational Adderall abuse can also cause more severe side effects, such as heart attack, especially when mixed with alcohol (71, 72, 73).

Evidence that Adderall enhances mental performance is strong, but it should only be taken as prescribed.

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The 14 Best Nootropics and Smart Drugs Reviewed

Global Nootropics Market Size, Share & Growth, Market Research and Industry Forecast Report, 2025 (Includes Business Impact of COVID-19) -…

Trusted Business Insights answers what are the scenarios for growth and recovery and whether there will be any lasting structural impact from the unfolding crisis for the Nootropics market.

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Industry Insights, Market Size, CAGR, High-Level Analysis: Global Nootropics Market

The global nootropics market size was valued at USD 2.17 billion in 2018 and is expected to expand at a CAGR of 12.5% during the forecast period. Rising demand for brain booster and smart drugs is anticipated to drive the growth. A large number of students and professionals consume these smart drugs to improve focus and memory. Continuous product development using both synthetic and natural raw materials is projected to further fuel the demand.Over the past few years, consumer preference has shifted toward natural nootropics such as caffeine, matcha tea, green tea, kucha tea, spinach, beets, peanuts, eggs, liver, brahmi, arctic root, turmeric, ginseng, pine bark, and fish oil. According to the American Council on Exercise (ACE), 50% American consumers prefer buying products with natural ingredients. The rise in vegan population in developed regions such as North America and Europe is expected to drive the demand for plant-based products. Nootropics manufacturers focus on natural ingredients to cater to the rising demand. For instance, in April 2019, Gaia Herbs launched new vegan supplements called Bacopa made using Bacopa; Nootropic Focus made with saffron, lemon balm, and spearmint; and Agile Mind made with Bacopa, gingko, and turmeric.

Rising demand for multi-utility drugs that work as antidepressant, energy booster, and anxiety resistant is expected to encourage R&D in the nootropics market. Increasing demand from sports industry owing to their ability to enhance brainpower is expected to create growth opportunities for the key players. In early 2018, HVMN launched HVMN Ketone, which improves physical and cognitive and performance. It also ensures endurance performance of professional sportspersons.Nootropics manufacturers also emphasize on the product packaging. Plastic, glass, and metals are used for producing pouches, bottles, and cans. Packaging and labeling play important role in the marketing of the product as students and young professionals are the target consumers of the market. Furthermore, continuous innovation such as gums, new flavors, and use of natural ingredients is expected to increase the consumer base of the market.Distribution Channel InsightsOffline distribution channel held the largest market share of more than 80% in 2018. Drug stores led the offline segment due to high consumer preference. On the other hand, the online distribution channel is expected to expand at the fastest CAGR of 14.2% from 2021 to 2026, due to increased preference by students. The hassle-free shopping experience offered by Amazon and other online channels is expected to drive the growth. Easy payment methods, which fit into regulatory standards of different countries, has made the operations easier. Major nootropic manufacturers emphasize on online distribution channel to reach more consumers.

Application Insights of Global Nootropics Market

Memory enhancement held the largest market share of over 30% in 2018. Increasing competition in academics has fueled the demand for nootropics among students. Preference for naturally derived nootropics over synthetic supplements is expected to create growth opportunities for the key players. Growing preference for smart drugs to cope with the stress of examinations is anticipated to further fuel the segment growth. A significant number of university students from Europe consumer these supplements for better academic performance. Memory enhancement supplements are also gaining significant importance among elderly population suffering from mild Alzheimers disease. The popular memory enhancement drugs include Adrafinil, Modafinil, Noopept, Phenylalanine, and Phosphatidylserine.

Over the past few years, smart drugs have gained significant demand as antidepressants. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), over 300 million people of all ages suffer from depression on global scale. In U.S., anxiety disorder is the most common mental illness. In 2018, around 40 million adult population in U.S. suffered from anxiety. Increasing awareness about mental illnesses is expected to widen the scope of application for nootropics in near future.Attention and focus application is expected to register the fastest CAGR of 13.4% from 2019 to 2015, due to the rising number of working population. Rapidly increasing participation in e-sports and gaming is also expected to boost the demand for nootropics. Smart drugs help the brain stay focused, which is the most important requirement for e-sports players. Koios, a Colorado-based nootropic beverage company, has been promoting its products in e-sport industry by using professional players for advertisement and by sponsoring popular e-sports teams such as Impulse.

Regional Insights of Global Nootropics Market

In 2018, North America held the leading market share of about 37% in terms of revenue. Around half of the adult population in U.S. consumes vitamin supplements. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has classified the product as Generally Regarded As Safe (GRAS). The manufacturers target professional overachievers by using innovative packaging and products. High consumer awareness about brain health along with the presence of a large number of manufacturers is expected to bode well for the regional growth.Asia Pacific is expected to witness the fastest CAGR of more than 18% from 2021 to 2026. China dominates this region with a significant revenue share. Australia also has a significantly large market for nootropics. Modafinil and Piracetam are the most popular products in this nation. The multinational companies are collaborating with local players from China and India producing herbal and natural drugs. Rapid growth of the education sector along with increasing awareness about brain health in the developing countries including China, India, and Bangladesh, is expected to fuel the regional demand for nootropics in near future.Nootropics Market Share InsightsMajor market players include Accelerated Intelligence Inc.; AlternaScript; HVMN; Onnit Labs, Inc.; Peak Nootropics; Teva Pharmaceutical Industries; Purelife bioscience Co., Ltd.; United Pharmacies; SupNootropic bio co., Ltd.; and Powder City. M&A and product innovation are the major marketing strategies adopted by the market players. In March 2016, HVMN, also known as Nootrobox, launched chewable coffee cubes called Go Cubes. These sugar-coated coffee cubes are more convenient and less expensive than regular cups of coffee. Go Cubes are available in three different flavors, namely, latte, pure drip, and mocha. Additionally, in November 2018, Nootrobox, invested USD 2 million to enhance clinical research and development of the product. The company has upgraded its popular products such as Rise, Kado, Yawn, and Sprint, packaged in attractive glass bottles.

Segmentations, Sub Segmentations, CAGR, & High-Level Analysis overview of Global Nootropics Market Research ReportThis report forecasts revenue growth at global, regional, and country levels, and provides an analysis of the latest industry trends in each of the sub-segments from 2015 to 2025. For the purpose of this study, this market research report has segmented the global nootropics market report based on application, distribution channel, and region:

Application Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2019 2030)

Memory Enhancement

Mood & Depression

Attention & Focus

Longevity & Anti-aging

Sleep & Recovery

Anxiety

Distribution Channel Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2019 2030)

Offline

Online

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Nootropics Brain Supplements Market 2020 Estimate CAGR Analysis, Technological Development Overview, Growth Trends and Competitive Research till 2027…

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Synergy, Zhou Nutrition, Onnit, Excelerol, Opti-Nutra LTD., Cognetix Labs, NOOESIS, Neurofuse, LFI Labs

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Nootropics Brain Supplements Market 2020 Estimate CAGR Analysis, Technological Development Overview, Growth Trends and Competitive Research till 2027...

‘The Biohackers Guide to Getting Things Done In Times of Uncertainty’ Episode 1: ‘Why You Really Procrastinate’ – CT Post

Photo: Entrepreneur Network

'The Biohackers Guide to Getting Things Done In Times of Uncertainty' Episode 1: 'Why You Really Procrastinate'

My excitingnew video series, The Biohackers Guide to Getting Things Done In Times of Uncertainty a complement to my booksUnstoppable andThe Unstoppable Journal will show you why we've been looking at productivity all wrong, so you can uncover the biological andpsychological triggers behind why we make excuses. The four installments will Includepractical, helpful tips involving binaural beats, visualization, sleep and fitness trackers, nootropics andmore so your mind is fired up and focused for whatever life throws at you.

Your excuses are a symptom, not the cause of your procrastination. For many of us, we've been led to believe that we procrastinate and make excuses because were just weak-minded.Its been drilled into us by countless gurus of the self-help industry, and while I completely understand why most believe that procrastination and excuses are the cause of why you cant get things done, the truth is, there are two sides to procrastination and peak performance. Press play on the video above for more on eight crucial triggers that have been hijacking your focus.

Related:Is The Air In Your Home Making You Stupid? You Might Be Surprised

Want to understand how your Focus Scores? Take this60-second quiznow to find out why you're unable to focus and get more done.

Related:'The Biohackers Guide to Getting Things Done In Times of Uncertainty' Episode 1: 'Why You Really Procrastinate'Elevator Pitch Ep. 1: What Could You Build With Another $500,000?Ocean Spray Seized Its Viral Marketing Moment Like It Makes Its Juice: Naturally

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'The Biohackers Guide to Getting Things Done In Times of Uncertainty' Episode 1: 'Why You Really Procrastinate' - CT Post

Thirty books to help us understand the world in 2020 – The Guardian

Michael E Mann on the environment

A distinguished climatologist and geophysicist, Michael Mann is director of the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of more than 200 peer-reviewed and edited publications tagias well as four books, including 2012s The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars and his forthcoming The New Climate War: The Fight to Take Back Our Planet, due out in January 2021 (Public Affairs Books).

For Small Creatures Such as WeSasha Sagan (Murdoch Books, 2019)

Carl Sagan was arguably the greatest science communicator of our time. He inspired many including me to enter the world of science. He is sadly no longer with us. But his daughter, Sasha Sagan, honours his legacy in her wonderful new book. Drawing its title from a line taken from Carls novel Contact ( adapted into the 1997 feature film of the same name), Sasha invites us to appreciate the everyday wonders of life through the eyes of science, sharing a worldview instilled by her unique upbringing, which she delightfully recounts for us. Read this book and feel a bit better about our world, our universe, and our place in it.

The Ministry for the FutureKim Stanley Robinson (Orbit, 2020)

Doomist framing can be disabling, and it is all too common these days in popular climate change-themed narratives. A refreshing counterbalance to the glut of apocalyptic visions of climate catastrophe is this latest novel from sci-fi novelist Kim Stanley Robinson (with whom I recently spoke about the effort). In The Ministry for the Future, Stan uses the accounts of fictional future eyewitnesses to convey the stark threat of climate change. But that future, by some measure, is already here. Rather than suggesting our doom is destined, he shows how we can rise to this extraordinary challenge. A dystopian future is possible if we fail to act. But a utopian future is not out of reach if we succeed in doing so.

All We Can SaveEdited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine K Wilkinson (Penguin Random House, 2020)

Climate change is a powerful threat multiplier, taking existing vulnerabilities and injustices and making them worse. Women and girls face greater risk of displacement or death from extreme weather disasters, and there is a link between climate change and gender-based violence. Tasks core to survival, such as collecting water and wood or growing food, fall largely on female shoulders in many cultures. These are already challenging activities; climate change can increase the burden, and with it struggles for health, education, and financial security. All We Can Save is a welcome collection of provocative and illuminating essays from more than 60 women, many of them friends and colleagues of mine, who are at the forefront of the climate movement.

The Great DerangementAmitav Ghosh (University of Chicago Press, 2016)

Are we deranged? The acclaimed Indian novelist Amitav Ghosh argues that future generations may well think so. How else do we explain our imaginative failure in the face of global warming? In his first major book of nonfiction since In an Antique Land (1992), Ghosh examines our inability at the level of literature, history, and politics to grasp the scale and violence of climate change. And he calls for collective action and transformative change as we rise to tackle the defining challenge of our time.

Resetting Our Future: What If Solving the Climate Crisis Is Simple?Tom Bowman (Changemakers, 2020)

Too often we encounter efforts to dismiss climate change as a wicked that is, essentially unsolvable problem. But nothing could be more wicked than such unhelpful framing. Tom Bowman is a communication expert who has helped create museum experiences that engage and educate the public about climate change. In this breezy, concise primer on climate action, he explains why the only obstacles that remain are societal and political will. And we have the ability to surmount those obstacles, if we simply make the commitment, to paraphrase the great Yoda, to not just try, but do.

A Polish-American journalist and historian, Anne Applebaum is a staff writer at the Atlantic and a senior fellow at the Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University. In 2004, she won a Pulitzer prize for Gulag: A History. Her latest book is Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism.

What Is Populism?Jan-Werner Mller (Penguin, 2017)

The movements that we have come to call populist are defined by one central idea: they reject pluralism. Thats the argument Jan-Werner Mller makes in What Is Populism?, the definitive account of contemporary authoritarian populism. Populists, Mller explains, claim that they alone represent the people, or the nation; that their opponents are traitors, foreigners or unpatriotic elites; that there can be no neutral political institutions and symbols. If they obtain power, authoritarian populists invariably argue that they need to change the rules of the system, undermining democratic norms and institutions so that they can remain in power. If they can convince people that these norms and institutions are worthless, they can succeed.

The People vs Democracy: Why Our Freedom Is in Danger and How to Save ItYascha Mounk (Harvard University Press, 2018)

Authoritarian populism, which he calls democracy without rights is also an important focus of Yascha Mounks The People vs Democracy. But Mounk also identifies another phenomenon, that of rights without democracy the rise of technocratic elites who effectively take what should be political issues out of public contestation. Mounk argues that to combat both of these dangerous trends, a broader rejuvenation of democracy is needed: deep economic and cultural changes that can give people agency and control over their lives as well as the conviction that they are truly represented by their political leaders.

How Democracies DieSteven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt (Viking, 2018)

In How Democracies Die, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, scholars of democratic breakdown, concentrate their formidable historical and political knowledge on the United States. They pick up some of the warning signs that Mller describes: the breakdown of mutual toleration respect for election results, respect for media as well as the rising number of political actors who are no longer convinced that their political opponents are legitimate. Using their study of other countries, they also offer some solutions. Everyone, on all sides, should learn how to speak to their political opponents; everyone, on all sides, should treat opposition parties and platforms as legitimate. As the US election gets closer the lessons of this bestselling book seem to become more pertinent every day.

Ruling the Void: The Hollowing-out of Western DemocracyPeter Mair (Verso, 2013)

The late Peter Mairs Ruling the Void was a kind of canary in the coalmine, a book that pointed to the real dangers of democratic decline before they were widely acknowledged, and before the populist movements in Europe and the US were fully visible. Mair, a keen observer of political parties, noted that political participation was falling, that the public was less interested in democratic debate; like Mounk, he also identified the dangerous emergence of a separate class of professional politicians, cut off from the trade unions and church groups that had produced grassroots political leaders in the past. He explained why they were losing support, and why this was dangerous, before they knew it themselves.

Post-Communist Mafia State: The Case of HungaryBlint Magyar (Central European University Press, 2016)

Authoritarian populism is usually associated with a rise in corruption. This is no accident, argues Blint Magyar. Once government inspectors, courts and media are all politicised, run by people with links to the ruling party, there is no accountability and a mafia-like oligarchy will inevitably emerge. Magyar explains how this worked in Hungary, a country where cynicism and greed have led not only to the end of democracy but to the end of fair markets. Instead, Hungary has a rigged system, one in which the top layer of the economy is dominated by the prime ministers friends. Required reading for anyone who wants to understand not just how populism begins, but where it ends.

A writer and teacher from south London, now living in Yorkshire, Jeffrey Boakye is the author of Hold Tight: Black Masculinity, Millennials, and the Meaning of Grime, and Black, Listed: Black British Culture Explored. His forthcoming book, I Heard What You Said, examines racism in British schools.

Think Like a White ManDr Boul Whytelaw III: As told by Nels Abbey (Canongate, 2019)

Powerful exploration of race politics is one thing, searing social commentary is another, and razor-sharp satire is a third entirely. But put them all together? This is a book like no other, taking you on a thrill ride/thrill guide through the world of default white dominance. Nels Abbey has created a work of the blackest humour (pun intended) and it is unrepentantly rewarding. Think Like a White Man is a reminder that while the race debate doesnt come with a safety net, a sense of humour will soften the blow. Or make it hit harder, Im not sure. Im still recovering. Wicked in every sense of the word.

Brit(ish): On Race, Identity and BelongingAfua Hirsch (Jonathan Cape, 2018)

Afua Hirsch takes a journalistic lens to her life, her times and her own thoughts on race and identity, and the outcome is compelling. Brit(ish) operates as a beautifully written, poignantly honest memoir while also scrutinising modern history and popular culture. The breadth of Hirschs focus is impressive, throwing the spotlight on everything from sport, arts and the media to politics, education and capital H history. Her insights are numerous and profound, big and small, woven into the details of a personal life we can all learn from.

The Good Immigrant USAVarious, edited by Chimene Suleyman and Nikesh Shukla (Dialogue, 2019)

Twenty-six writers reflect on America might sound straightforward enough, but this collection of essays on the experiences of being othered in the United States today quickly reveals itself to be a complex and varied tapestry of marginalised perspectives from numerous fascinating angles. White, mainstream Americas relationship with minority groups is always worthy of serious attention, with space needing to be given to hear narratives, plural, lived by first and second-generation immigrants. This is a book that lays bare the fissures, cracks and cavernous ravines that ripple through American identity politics, offering sensitive, generous debate and genuine insight.

I Am Not Your Baby MotherCandice Brathwaite (Quercus, 2020)

When you start with the sobering fact that black British women are five times more likely than their white peers to die during childbirth, you know that this is going to be an essential exploration of the realities of black motherhood in the UK. Candice Brathwaite does the difficult job of packing deep treatise and social commentary into a seriously readable memoir. Not only does this book lift the lid on the biases and racial prejudices entrenched in our various institutions; it also invites you to make a new friend one who has something important to teach you about being a) black, b) a mum and c) British, at the same time.

Natives: Race and Class in the Ruins of EmpireAkala (Two Roads, 2018)

Akala has aimed to carve a fairly narrow niche for himself as a (deep breath) rapper producer recording artist theatre producer novelist essayist entrepreneur historian, but he pulls it off with impressive confidence. Natives is a vital interrogation of the myths of empire, namely the British empire, zooming in on the intersections of race and class, while exposing the realities of growing up black and British in imperial shadows. Without sensationalism, Akala draws back the curtain on parts of the empire that it would rather not see, with insights that throw our current position into sharp relief. Illuminating.

Formerly deputy editor of the New Statesman, Helen Lewis is a staff writer for the Atlantic and a regular host of BBC Radio 4s The Week in Westminster. Her first book, Difficult Women: A History of Feminism in 11 Fights, was published earlier this year.

Men Who Hate WomenLaura Bates (Simon & Schuster, 2020)

Women have very little idea of how much men hate them, wrote Germaine Greer in The Female Eunuch. Well, the internet certainly fixed that. At first, it seems surprising that Laura Bates perhaps the nicest woman in British feminism would choose to immerse herself in the worst sewers of online misogyny. But Bates has spent eight years giving talks to schools, and in that time she has watched boys become angry, resistant to the very idea of a conversation about sexism. The book uncovers the incels, pickup artists and trolls whose sense of victimisation can bleed into threats and violence.

In the DarkroomSusan Faludi (William Collins, 2016)

The life of Susan Faludis father born Istvan, became Steven, died as Stefnie would be unbelievable if it werent true. In 1930s Hungary, the young Istvan Friedman escaped Nazi death squads who pulled down mens trousers to see if they were circumcised. After the war, he reincarnated himself as all-American Steven Faludi. And at 76, Faludi went to Thailand to become Stefnie, before returning to a homeland once again succumbing to authoritarianism in the early 2000s. Today, the farright in eastern Europe rails against LGBT ideology; Hungary recently banned citizens from changing their legal gender. Istvan Friedmans generation of assimilated Jews found it hard to believe that acceptance can go backwards; before she died, Stefnie Faludi might have wondered if the same was happening with gender nonconformity.

Invisible WomenCaroline Criado Perez (Chatto, 2019) Shameless nepotism Caroline is a friend but for a good cause. Simone de Beauvoirs book The Second Sex was a feminist landmark, untangling how cultural codes designated women as the other. Here, Criado Perez updates that observation for an age where algorithmic bias matters just as much as human prejudice. The pandemic has made her message even more relevant: men are more likely to die from Covid-19, while many women have struggled with poorly fitting protective equipment designed for male bodies. It will help women and men if medical trials and industrial design take biological sex and cultural gender into account.

Loud Black GirlsYomi Adegoke and Elizabeth Uviebinen (Fourth Estate, 2020)

Not every essay in this collection of young black British female writers is a knockout it is heavy on undigested slabs of biography but it is full of gems. My favourite contributions are from financial journalist Fiona Rutherford, on her struggle to get out of debt; writer Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff on conquering shyness; and influencer Candice Brathwaite on the moment her father-in-law expected her daughter to wait on him at the dinner table. (But Grandpa, why? the six-year-old asked him, innocently. There is nothing wrong with your legs.) Read it to understand the fears, obsessions and cherished beliefs of a generation of writers who are determined to be heard.

How Not to Be a BoyRobert Webb (Canongate, 2017)

Men are often the forgotten half of the gender conversation perhaps because they are less likely to buy books telling them what theyre doing wrong. Like Caitlin Morans feminist blockbuster How to Be A Woman, this book is a bittersweet memoir about growing up in the Midlands, reckoning with gender roles, and the challenges of adolescence. Webb is honest about his struggle with alcohol, his flirtation with bisexuality, and the importance of male friendship. Also like Moran, his success created a mini-industry: this years masculinity-themed memoirs include Alan Daviess Just Ignore Him and Charlie Gilmours Fatherhood.

A British science journalist based in Paris, Laura Spinney is the author of Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How It Changed the World. She has written for Nature, National Geographic, New Scientist and the Guardian, and has also published two novels.

The Black Death 1346-1353Ole Benedictow (Boydell Press, 2004)

Some excellent books have been written about possibly the worst pandemic of all time. Im thinking of Philip Zieglers The Black Death (1969) and Barbara Tuchmans A Distant Mirror (1978), in particular. Unfortunately, theyre out of date. If you want the latest facts on a calamity so terrible that the poet Petrarch lamented nobody in the future would ever believe it had happened, pick up Ole Benedictows complete history of the Black Death. A historian at the University of Oslo, Benedictow has revised the death toll up dramatically, arguing that the plague wiped out 60% of Europes population. His revision is based on painstaking analysis of mortality data, rather than estimates, and he continues to strengthen his case. A new, expanded edition is due early next year.

28: Stories of Aids in AfricaStephanie Nolen (Walker & Company, 2007)

Likewise, some memorable books have been written about Aids including David Frances How to Survive a Plague (2016) but relatively few nonfiction accounts of one of the other great pandemics of our time have addressed its impact beyond the United States of America. Stephanie Nolens 28 does just that, through 28 stories of Africans whose lives were affected by Aids. One thing her book brings home is how powerfully politics, society and culture shape a pandemic and hence, how it assumes different forms depending on where it strikes.

The Pull of the Stars Emma Donoghue (Picador, 2020)

The other big one, sometimes referred to as the mother of all pandemics, is the 1918 Spanish flu. Contemporary writers of fiction mostly ignored it, training their gaze on the first world war instead, but lately their modern counterparts have been playing catch-up. Emma Donoghues novel is set in a flu-ridden maternity ward in Dublin. Pregnant women were extremely vulnerable to that flu, as were their unborn babies, and Donoghue does something clever: she shows that their struggle was no less dramatic, or heroic, than the one unfolding on the western front.

The Rules of ContagionAdam Kucharski (Wellcome Collection, 2020)

If youve seen one pandemic, youve seen one pandemic, is a saying dear to disease modellers. Covid-19 behaves differently from flu which behaves differently from every other disease that has ever caused a global outbreak, and yet they all obey a basic set of rules. Epidemiologist Adam Kucharskis timely book explains those rules along with such by-now celebrity concepts as the R (reproduction) number and herd immunity. One intriguing idea he explores is that a fake news pandemic such as were witnessing obeys the same internal logic as the disease it feeds off. Kucharskis is an accessible account of the science that is guiding our governments, when they choose to listen.

Sulphuric UtopiasLukas Engelmann and Christos Lynteris (MIT Press, 2020)

Lest we forget what a pain in the arse infectious diseases are, and how much effort our forebears invested in keeping them at bay, the magnificently titled Sulphuric Utopias exists to remind us. A pleasure to read and also available via open access, its the story of how early 20th-century fumigation technologies transformed maritime quarantine practices and inspired utopian visions of disease-free global trade. Remember that?

The Observers technology columnist, John Naughton is emeritus professor of the public understanding of technology at the Open University and a senior research fellow at the University of Cambridges Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities. His most recent book is From Gutenberg to Zuckerberg: What You Really Need to Know About the Internet.

Steve JobsWalter Isaacson (Little, Brown, 2011)

Steve Jobs revolutionised five industries personal computers, animated movies, music, phones and tablet computing so if you want to understand how our digital world evolved, this sprawling, 630-page biography by a man who knew him well is a good place to start. Although Jobs cooperated with the author, he asked for no control over what was written and put nothing off limits. Reading it, you wouldnt want to work for Jobs. On the other hand, youre glad that people like him exist.

The Nature of Technology: What It Is and How It EvolvesW Brian Arthur (Simon & Schuster, 2009)

Brian Arthur is a brilliant economist who one day started to wonder what this force that we call technology is. What is its nature, its essence? And how does it evolve? This remarkable book was the outcome of his search for an answer to these questions. It comes in the form of a theory about technologys origins and evolution. In a way, Arthur did for our understanding of technological progress what Thomas Kuhn did for our understanding of how science advances. In his account, technology doesnt advance by the lightbulb moments of popular imagination but at points where a number of other apparently unrelated developments suddenly come together to enable something entirely new. Which, of course, is also why tech often catches us unawares.

Re-engineering HumanityBrett Frischmann and Evan Selinger (Cambridge University Press, 2018)

We like to think that technology is there to serve humanity. But this sobering book by a legal scholar (Frischmann) and a philosopher (Selinger) suggests a darker possibility, which is that we have been building a world in which humans are being subtly re-engineered to make them more receptive to machine-driven logics. Our looming problem, they argue, isnt so much the rise of smart machines as the dumbing down of humanity. Implausible? Maybe. And then you remember that the only response option offered to its users by Facebook is to Like something: the entire spectrum of possible human responses is forced through a single, narrow aperture. If that isnt dumbing down, I dont know what is.

Human Compatible: Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of ControlStuart Russell (Allen Lane, 2019)

Stuart Russell is one of the leading experts on artificial intelligence and this book is a real tour de force that outlines the risks of increasingly powerful AI in an authoritative and readable way. Russell believes that our current approach to designing intelligent machines is fundamentally misguided and would indeed lead to dystopian outcomes if the visions of its evangelists ever came to fruition. Hes very good at explaining how we got to where we are now, but is also able to make a persuasive case for how we can escape catastrophic superintelligence and ensure that machines augment human capabilities rather than make them redundant.

The Age of Surveillance CapitalismShoshana Zuboff (Profile Books, 2019)

A big book in every sense of the term. Its the first account of how capitalism morphed to exploit the conditions of the digital age. Its a new economic order that claims human experience as free raw material for hidden commercial practices of extraction, prediction and sales. Whats most interesting about the book is the way it provides a historical context that makes the business models of Facebook and Google more intelligible. In a way, capitalism hasnt really mutated. Its merely adapted to new opportunities and found new kinds of resources to pillage. Except that now its not the Earths resources that are being appropriated, but our minds and behaviour.

To order books mentioned in this feature for a special price go to guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

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Thirty books to help us understand the world in 2020 - The Guardian

Can Apocalypse Be Dealt With? The Diplomat – The Diplomat

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In a lecture at the Australian National Universitys National Security College on October 13, Australias Department of Home Affairs Secretary Mike Pezzullo enumerated a long and frightening list of security risks the country and the world would have to reckon with over the next hundred years. Pezzullo, who became the first head of the Home Affairs ministry in 2017, took a refreshingly expansive view of the notion of security itself in his speech, interrogating traditional conceptions, with a veritable whos who of Australias national security establishment in the audience.

Indeed, his was the only speech by a serving senior security official I have heard so far that included a reference to the French post-structuralist Jacques Derrida. Pezzullos repeated invocation of another French philosopher, Michel Foucault, was marginally less unexpected given Foucaults work on surveillance and biopolitics topics painfully relevant to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The pandemic in many ways provided the senior-most bureaucrat responsible for internal security in Australia a perfect entry point for the inclusion of a wide variety of threats, beyond traditional ones, which do not emanate from human actors and therefore cant be deterred or met with through the use of force. (Noting that overarming the state is as bad as underarming it, at one point Pezzullo suggested, quite correctly, that when it came to Australias security right now, handwashing is more important than every weapon system in the arsenal of the Australian Defense Forces.)

Pezzullos self-described apocalyptic list of risks included catastrophic ones, defined loosely as those with the potential to inflict serious harm to humanity on a global scale, perhaps even spanning generations. Pandemics clearly are catastrophic risks; but so are many others he named, ranging from geomagnetic storms from unusual solar activity and permanent loss of natural diversity to manmade risks, including those posed by advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and synthetic biology.

Get briefed on the story of the week, and developing stories to watch across the Asia-Pacific.

Three fundamental questions arise when it comes to catastrophic risks, none of which are easy to answer: To what extent can probabilities be assigned to these risks within a fixed time horizon and such risks compared; how much resources should a state a priori allocate to mitigating their impact; and what is the role of the national security bureaucracy in managing them?

Lets start with the issue of estimating probabilities of catastrophic risks. Many natural ones, from the risk of direct hit from an asteroid to the existential risk posed by a supernova explosion, can be easily calculated. In a new book, Oxford scholar Toby Ord computes them: It turns out that the probability of an asteroid bigger than 10 kilometers hitting the earth over the next century is less than one out of 150 million. The chance of a supernova depleting the earths ozone layer by more than 30 percent over the next century is less than 1 in 50 million. However, when it came to significant mortal risks from pandemics, probabilists Pasquale Cirillo and Nassim Nicholas Taleb have mathematically established they are higher than widely assumed.

That said, when it comes to human-generated anthropogenic risks, odds become harder to calculate: Consider Pezzullos Terminator example or, dressed in academese, the problem of an artificial superintelligence of the kind studied by Ords colleague Nick Bostrom. (In Bostroms theorizing, it is entirely possible that such an AI could wipe out humanity leaving no possibility of regeneration in the future a truly existential risk.) Such an intelligence could naturally arise out of exponential progress in machine learning within the next 10 years or not in a 100; much depends on how you see certain technological trends projecting into the future. Absent precise, objectively reliable, ways to quantify many anthropogenic risks, pooled expert predictions are often used to arrive at a number. (One such, in 2008, put the chances of human extinction this century at 19 percent.)

This naturally leads to a very practical question: How much of government resources should be allocated to meet catastrophic risks, especially when there is a plethora of them competing for money with on-the-horizon plausible national security challenges, such defense spending in the face of great power rivals, and there is no obvious way to rank all of the risks side by side? Furthermore, planners like armies often tend to prep for the last contingency they faced. With COVID-19 very much still here, it is likely that it would animate debates around government spending priorities for some time to come. (However, this is not to say that the possibility another pandemic after COVID-19 is remote; if anything, systematic destruction of animal habitats and climate change very much makes it possible that another deadly virus will reappear in the foreseeable future. The point here is that to focus on that possibility alone, at the expense of other risks, would be foolish.)

But fundamentally, theres a conceptual issue at hand. A catastrophic risk is almost by definition something with significant second and higher-order effects. (The ongoing global economic decimation from COVID-19 and attendant possibility of political chaos are cases in point.) Given that many such risks are distributed, networked and interconnected, as Pezzullo described them, estimating the cost of their impact (that is, pricing the risk) is extremely hard though not impossible. Add to this the fact that different potential catastrophic risks will play out differently: For example, while the ongoing pandemic has spared the earths environment, that may not be the case with a supervolcanic eruption.

When it comes to mitigation strategies too, there are no silver bullets. Take the issue of machine superintelligence, as an example. Beyond repeated calls for responsible, ethical AI research and hysteria around killer robots, the fact of the matter is that a large part of the cutting-edge research in this direction is taking place in the private sector, whose compliance with a voluntary set of regulations should they be put in place by governments is uncertain. While it is common in some circles to note, as Pezzullo did in his lecture, that risks acquire added lethality when they transmit themselves through networks the very reason why social distancing holds the key to beating the coronavirus, as Taleb and collaborators prophetically argued in January a uniform strategy of shutting networks down in face of an incipient threat could also backfire in unexpected ways. Think of the economic costs of a large-scale internet shutdown, for example.

Finally comes the role of the national security bureaucracy in managing catastrophic non-traditional threats. Here too are two sides of the same coin. As some security studies scholars have long argued, declaring a threat (such as a pandemic) to be a national security one, to securitize it, has obvious downsides. For one, such a move restricts the flow of information which, as we saw with Chinas initial reaction to the coronavirus, is singularly detrimental. At the same time, denoting something as a security threat also stands to attract significant resources to meet it and centralize response authority. And while Pezzullo, in his lecture, rightly argued that the definition of national security should not be broadened to include all policy discourse, the fact of the matter is that the national security apparatus, especially intelligence agencies, have resources (for example, intel collectors at global hotspots) that stand to significantly help mitigate emerging threats.

At the end, the answer to many of these questions may indeed lie with a proposal of the Australian Home Affairs secretary: of an extended state a network of governmental organizations, businesses, civil society and others that rises to meet security challenges rather than leaving that task to the state alone. Fleshing that idea out fully to incorporate a range of catastrophic risks their mitigation or dealing with them when they manifest remains an interesting exercise.

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Can Apocalypse Be Dealt With? The Diplomat - The Diplomat

These Are The 10 Highest-Paid Actresses Of 2020 – Marie Claire

Based out the outlet's annual list, television actresses were amongst the highest earners this year, with the vast majority of stars in the ranking having reaped most of their financial rewards from appearing in hit TV shows, includingThe Handmaid's Tale, Grey's AnatomyandModern Family.

The actress who placed 'second' last year officially surged ahead in 2020, thanks to her role as a reality TV show host, a hit sit-com and a number of endorsements, earning USD $43 million (AUD $60 million) this year alone.

This year also saw the inimitable Viola Davis make her debut on the list, thanks to her role in the hit showHow To Get Away With Murder.

That said, there are a few other surprise entrants on theand it must be said, overwhelmingly whitelist. Scroll on to see the complete list of the 10 highest-paid actresses in Hollywood for 2020.

Appearing on the list for the first time (although we'd argue, based on her talent, she should have been here a long time ago), Viola Davis takes out the 10th spot, thanks to her roles as Annalise Keating inblockbuster seriesHow To Get Away With Murder and Ma Rainey in Netflix's filmfilm adaption of the August Wilson play,Ma Raineys Black Bottom.

Blessed be the fruit! For her role in the dystopian TV seriesHandmaid's Tale,Moss is paid USD $1 million per episode (AUD $1.4 million).Forbes also revealed that her role in the surprise hit filmInvisible Man also accounted for a large, undisclosed portion of her earnings in 2020.

Following a contract regnotiation in 2017, Pompeo earns about USD $550,000 (AUD $767,800) for her role in the iconic TV seriesGrey's Anatomy. PerForbes, she also pockets around USD $6 million per year (AUD $8.38 million) from her share of the show's syndication profits.

According toForbes, Nicole Kidman will be joining herBig Little Lies co-star Meryl Streep in Ryan Murphy'sThe Prom on Netflix (due for release in December 2020) which will pay her an eight-figure upfront salary. She will also earn approximately USD $1 million (AUD $1.4 million) per episode for her role in the psychological thriller seriesThe Undoing.

The first film in Emily Blunt'sA Quiet Place series grossed AUD $477 million on an AUD $23.73 million budget. Blunt has negotiated an upfront eight-figure salary for the sequel, to be released next year. Her part in the film Disney's upcoming filmThe Jungle Cruisewill also earn her a check in the high seven figures.

Meryl Streep reportedly made USD $5 million (AUD $6.98 million) between 2019 and 2020 from her HBO comedy filmLet Them All Talk.The rest of her earnings came from her roles in the hit filmsLittle WomenandThe Prom, alongside Kidman.

The comedy star maintains a regular income as the host of TV showLittle Big Shots, but also bolstered her earnings by appearing in two films:Thunderforce and Superintelligence. Forbes also factored in her upcoming role asUrsula in the live-action version ofThe Little Mermaid to place her fourth on the list.

Although filming forWonder Woman 1984 may be on hiatus, Gal Gadot's partnership with Netflix proved to be rather fruitful, with the actress raking in over USD $20 million (AUD $27.9 million) for her role in the filmRed Notice.

One of the few actresses to make almost all of her earnings from traditional films, Angelina Jolie's biggest money-maker for 2020 comes from her starring role inThe Eternals,slated for release in November 2021.

And the top spot goes to: Sofia Vergara! Following the series finale of her internationally beloved showModern Family in April 2020, the actress began her run as a judge onAmerica's Got Talent, with the vast majority of her earnings come from the reality TV show.Forbes also reports that Vergara padded out her pockets with a number of endorsements and licensing deals, including a line of jeans and furniture at US retailers Walmart and Rooms To Go, respectively.

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These Are The 10 Highest-Paid Actresses Of 2020 - Marie Claire

So, What Exactly Is Floating Offshore Wind? – Greentech Media News

Onshore wind turbines can be found everywhere from the tropics to the Arctic. Three decades ago, developers started putting them on fixed foundations out at sea, sparking the rise of the offshore wind market, which added 6.1 gigawatts of new capacity in 2019.

More recently, the wind industry embarkedon an even more ambitious endeavor: putting turbines on floating platforms in the water, rather than fixed foundations. Now on the verge of commercial maturity, floating wind has the potential to become one of the most important new renewable energy markets.

Its pretty much exactly whatit sounds like. Instead of putting a wind turbine on a fixed foundation in the sea, you attach it to a structure that floats in the water. The structure is tethered to the seabed to stop it from drifting off into a beach or shipping lane.

Todays floating wind designs envision using standard offshore turbines, export cables and balance-of-plant materials. The key difference between floating and fixed-foundation offshore wind is that the latter is limited to water depths of up to around 165 feet.

To keep turbines upright, floating foundations rely on the iceberg principle: Most of the mass is underwater.

At Hywind Scotland, the worlds only commercial floating wind farm today, each Siemens SWT-6.0-154 turbine has a towerhead mass of around 350 tons and sits on a foundation with roughly 6,060 tons of solid ballast and a displacement of some 13,230 tons.

Provided the water underneath the turbine is deep enough, the shape of the foundation may not matter much. In practice, though, floating foundation developers have focused on designs that are going to be cheap to build and easy to work with from the perspective ofoperations and maintenance.

That still leaves plenty of room for imagination: Every developer has a different concept and a compellingargument forwhy it is the best. Four basic designs are leading the market today.

Using its experience in the oil and gas industry, Equinor (formerly Statoil) has based its pioneering Hywind floating platform on a spar buoy design that relies on gravity for stability. The spar buoy is assembled in sections and extends down to around 260 feet beneath the sea surface, making it appropriate for water depths of between roughly 310 and 390 feet.

Other developers, such as Principle Power and Hexicon, favor a semi-submersible platform design that relies on buoyancy for stability and is suitable for shallower drafts. Critics note that the large size of the structures could restrict maneuverability in ports.

A third design,championed by the French foundation maker Ideol, is a square barge that contains a damping pool to maintain turbine stability. Like the semi-submersible model, this is suitable for shallower waters, and Ideol touts the fact that its concrete fabrication comes inhandy from a local content perspective.

Finally, a concept called the tension-leg platform relies on a taut mooring system to provide stability. This allows the structure to have a smaller physical footprint and potentially be cheaper than competing models. Danish firm Stiesdal Offshore Technologies is leading the development of this concept with a product called TetraSpar.

Equinor was the first company to build commercial-scale floating wind farm, and to date, its Hywind design is the only one that has a significant operational track record.

The Norwegian energy giant claims it was able to cutcostsby up to 70 percent between its first demo project, off the coast of Scotland, and its 30-megawatt commercial wind farm. It's expecting to cut foundation costs by up to an additional50 percent for Tampen, an 88 MWproject scheduled to enter operation off the Norwegian coast in 2022.

In February, Sebastian Bringsvrd, Equinors head of floating wind development, cited a cost target of 40 to 60 ($44 to $66) per megawatt-hour by 2030. These rapid cost reductions could give Equinor the upper hand in forthcoming floating offshore wind tenders.

But a May 2019 analysis of upcoming project figures collated by IHS Markit foundthat 90 percent of floating offshore wind capacity is likely to be installed on semi-submersible platforms, with Principle Power leading the market.

Equinors spar buoy foundation is essentially a hollow steel cylinder that can be towed out to the site before being partially filled with water and ballast to force it to remain upright. The latest iteration of the foundation needs at least 345 feet of water when upright, meaning turbine installation would most likely happen out atsea, as with traditional foundations.

With other foundation designs, the minimum depth requirement is much lower so turbine installation could happen onshore with the fully assembled turbines and foundations then towed to site, significantly cutting costs.

Putting turbines onto floaters gives a developer access deeper waters, which meansmore potential project sites and lots more potential capacity.

Some 60 percent of available offshore wind resource in the U.S.is beyond the reach of fixed-bottom foundation turbines, includingpractically the whole of the West Coast, according to a2017 statement from industry body WindEurope,

In Europe, floating offshore wind could deliver an extra 4 terawatts over and above the continents already leading level of bottom-fixedcapacity. And in Japan, floating foundations will be critical for the development of an offshore wind sector that could offer 500 gigawatts of capacity.

Beyond the ability to capture vast untapped energy resources, floating offshore wind also carries significant industrial promise. For the U.S., it could be a way to get into a renewables sector that the country has so far barely been able to qualify for. And Europes oil and gas companies, which seem increasingly committed to joining the energy transition, see floating wind as an area where their existing offshore experience can pay handsome dividends.

European oil and gas companies, for starters. Equinor is the most notable example, but Royal Dutch Shell is emerging as a major player, and Italian contractor Saipem unveiled a platform last year.

France's Total bought into the market in Marchand earlier this month acquired a 20 percent stake in the Eolmed project in the Mediterranean that willuse Ideol's foundation and MHI Vestas turbines.

These players seem keen to compete or partner with a host of independent floating platform developers, such as Ideol, Principle Power and Stiesdal Offshore. At the same time, the oil majors may take on project development and asset ownership roles. In this respect, they could compete with established offshore wind farm developers such as rsted and Iberdrola.

rsted hasnt revealed any floating offshore wind plans yet, but EDP Renewables and Engie have joined forces onthe WindFloat Atlantic project (alongside Spanish oil and gas firm Repsol), and Iberdrola announced two pilot projects in March.

Finally, there arethe wind turbine manufacturers. Offshore wind turbine leaders such as Siemens Gamesa, MHI Vestas and GE have stayed away from the intricacies of floating foundation design, but they hardly need to worry. The massive turbines they are launching are increasingly designed to operate far offshore on floating platforms, and the market potential they are looking at is impressive.

Regardless of whether it takes off in the U.S., there's no doubt that floating offshore wind is going places at the global level. Even in the short term, that could lead to some interesting developments in the offshore wind sector.

American companyPrinciple Powercould playa leading role in the development of the industry, for example. Japan could finally develop offshore wind. And European oil and gas majors might really come into their own as wind energy players.

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So, What Exactly Is Floating Offshore Wind? - Greentech Media News

Charting the future at AWEA’s Offshore WINDPOWER Virtual Summit – Into the Wind – The AWEA Blog

Charting the future at AWEAs Offshore WINDPOWER Virtual Summit

The U.S. offshore wind industry is set to deliver significant economic benefits over the next decade and stands ready to play a leading role in the nations economic recovery. U.S. offshore wind development will deliver billions in new economy activity, support tens of thousands of jobs, create new American supply chains and revitalize port communities. Nearly 1,100 attendees joined us online last week for the AWEA Offshore WINDPOWER 2020 Virtual Summit to discuss how we can build this industry inclusively and responsibly and cultivate the next generation of clean energy leaders. This years conference theme, Offshore Wind: Building the Future, focused on the economic impact and opportunities that offshore wind brings to the U.S.

After a sold out 2019 event, we were looking forward to continuing the momentum. Though we had hoped to come together in person, adaptability is key in 2020 as we navigate the countrys rapidly changing environment. The switch to a virtual event allowed us to remove space limitations and provide companies with the opportunity to send unlimited participants while remaining thoughtful about fluctuating budgets.

Special thanks to our program chairs, Damian Bednarz, External Affairs Director at EnBW North America and Alana Duerr, Director Offshore Wind North America at DNV-GL, in addition to the full program committee for volunteering their time and knowledge. I was amazed by the amount of education and top-notch speakers packed into two days: 20 live streamed sessions, 13 on-demand presentations and 20 posters!

I couldnt catch every session but look forward to watching the recordings of what I missed. Here are a few highlights of what I was able to watch live:

Its no surprise the hardest part to recreate in a virtual event is the business development and networking. However, we need that human interaction now more than ever! The Offshore event offered a few different unique ways to connect:

The wind industry is eager to cultivate the next generation of clean energy workers and leaders, and for the first time, we offered free access to educational content throughout the event for full-time high school, college and Merchant Marine Academy students. Over 100 students took advantage of the complimentary registration to learn more about the emerging offshore wind industry and the various and abundant job opportunities that will come with its growth. With more than 70 different types of occupations needed to plan, develop, operate, and maintain offshore wind farms, the summit featured self-recorded videos of professionals in the industry, with opportunities to connect. In addition, many sessions were dedicated to workforce and opportunities in the industry, including:

While we werent able to meet in person for the event, that didnt stop the industry from coming together for an important cause. AWEA selected to support the Boys & Girls Club (BGC) for our community service project this fall. We specifically supported the STEM/STEAM program and BGCs equity and inclusion efforts. Theyve made it their mission to change the opportunity equation for millions of kids who may not receive the same chance as their peers, sometimes because of their economic status, color of their skin, or other factors that contribute to the cycles of inequity we see in America today.

There is still time to donate and any amount makes a big difference. Click here to make a donation today.

Thank you again to our sponsors, speakers, partners, and attendees for helping make the event a success. We look forward to seeing you all again for the AWEA Offshore WINDPOWER 2021 Conference & Exhibition in Boston, October 13 15! In the meantime, check out AWEAs upcoming event schedule.

If youre looking for additional resources on Offshore Wind, explore supportoffshorewind.org and download the U.S. Offshore Wind Power Economic Impact Assessment. And be sure to visit Clean Power for America to support policies that harness the full potential of renewable energy in the U.S.

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Charting the future at AWEA's Offshore WINDPOWER Virtual Summit - Into the Wind - The AWEA Blog

IRENA: Offshore Wind Capacity to Reach 228 GW by 2030 – Offshore WIND

Global offshore wind installed capacity will reach 228 GW by 2030, according to from projections the International Renewable Energy Agencys (IRENA).

Of the currently installed offshore wind capacity in the world, 90 per cent is located in Europe, mostly in the North Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. This is attributed to regional cooperation on interconnection, marine spatial planning, and sector coupling in the North Sea.

According to Ben Backwell, CEO of the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC), similar regional partnerships can be fostered in other parts of the world, and the Collaborative Framework on Offshore Renewables can play a critical role in achieving this.

The Collaborative Framework, set up by IRENA, gathers around 40 countries with an aim to identify priority areas, actions and foster international collaboration to understand the role of offshore renewables in the energy transition and ensure its widespread deployment in the future.

The Framework held its first meeting in June, during which Members and States in Accession provided inputs on the thematic scope of the Collaborative Framework and agreed to include relevant stakeholders in future meetings.

Recently, a second meeting was held to identify collaboration areas and agree on concrete actions to accelerate progress and ensure rapid uptake of these promising technologies. The latest meeting included participation, insights, and support from GWEC and Ocean Energy Europe (OEE), the latter representing the ocean energy sector for which IRENA anticipates an installed capacity of 10 GW by 2030.

In June, 69 Participants from 38 Countries identified areas where IRENA could support its Membership in advancing joint demonstration projects and the commercialisation of new offshore technologies. This includes the reduction of technology cost, the coupling of offshore renewables with power-to-X and the transfer of knowledge and skills from offshore oil and gas to offshore renewables.

Furthermore, countries underlined the importance to develop floating technologies for both wind and PV as well as ocean energy in general. The design of financing mechanisms and enabling policy frameworks were also identified as priority to advance the offshore renewable agenda, according to IRENAs press release following the first meeting of the Collaborative Framework.

Offshore renewables, including offshore wind, wave, tidal, ocean thermal, and floating solar PV, will witness substantial growth in capacity over the next decade and play an essential role in the global energy transformation, IRENA pointed out.

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IRENA: Offshore Wind Capacity to Reach 228 GW by 2030 - Offshore WIND

Tropical Storm Epsilon Forms And Could Become A Hurricane Offshore Later This Week – WMFE

Tropical Storm Epsilon has formed in the central Atlantic, 735 miles to the southeast of Bermuda. Epsilon is near stationary and will continue to be slow moving through Monday night. A slow west-northwest motion should begin on Tuesday which will contine through midweek.

The National Hurricane Center is expecting the storm to be at or near hurricane strength as it approaches the island of Bermuda late this week. While it is too soon to determine Epsilons track and intensity near the island, there is a risk for high winds, storm surge, and excessive rainfall. Interestes there should monitor the progression of Epsilon this week.

This is the second time on record that the Greek alphabet letter has been used. The last time Epsilon was used was in the historic 2005 Hurricane Season where the storm formed over a month later on November 29.

Update 9 a.m. Monday

Tropical Depression 27 formed early Monday morning about 720 miles southeast of Bermuda.

The depression does not pose any risk to the east coast of the United States, for now. A blocking high pressure to the north of the system is preventing it from traveling northward into the open Atlantic. Instead it is expected to meander in the vicinity over the next few days. However, there is expected to be some coastal impacts due to the strong high pressure to the north and Tropical Depression 27. Large swells will push westward towards the coastlines leading to high surf and dangerous rip currents this week. These coastal hazards could extend as far south as Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Onshore winds from the depression could exacerbate the King Tides which have been peaking since Saturday along parts of the Southeast coast. Coastal flooding may continue across shorelines through early this week, especially if the depression intensifies offshore. The Monday morning forecast from the National Hurricane Center strengthens the depression into a tropical storm later Monday and into a hurricane late Wednesday or early Thursday.

Additionally, the National Hurricane Center said there is a slight chance of tropical cyclone development in the western Caribbean late this week. A broad area of low pressure may develop in the next two to five days to the south of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands. Forecasters Monday morning have given this area a low chance of development over the next few days. It is too soon to determine if this system will pose a threat to Florida or the U.S. East Coast.

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Tropical Storm Epsilon Forms And Could Become A Hurricane Offshore Later This Week - WMFE

Draft law on offshore wind farms silently approved by the Romanian Senate – Lexology

The draft law regarding the necessary measures for performing operations for offshore wind exploitation (Draft Law) has been forwarded this week to the Chamber of Deputies after being tacitly approved by the Senate. The draft has been registered with the Senate in June 2020 and, if approved by the Chamber of Deputies, would be the first Romanian law which aims at providing a comprehensive legal framework for the construction and operation of offshore wind farms.

The Draft Law regulates matters relating to all stages of development and operation of an offshore wind farm: project study, permitting and performance of construction works, production phase and decommissioning.

The competent authority to issue the relevant licenses and authorizations and oversee the observance of the Draft Law is the Ministry for Economy, Energy and Business Environment (Ministry).

As per the Draft Law, the necessary licenses and authorizations for construction and operation of offshore wind farms may be obtained through a competitive tender procedure or could be directly attributed to an interested party, upon its request open procedure.

During an open procedure, the project developer sets the location and capacity of the envisaged wind farm and submits a request with the Ministry. The Ministry then analyses if the project developer fulfils the technical and financial requirements and if the offshore wind perimeter is relevant.

In accordance with the Draft Law, the construction and operation of offshore wind farms would be regulated through a set of licenses and authorizations which should be obtained successively, as the project transitions from one development stage to another and finally to the operational phase, as follows:

As per the Draft Law, the license will be valid for one year, with the option of being extended for another year and will grant the license holder the right to perform investigations related to the construction of the offshore wind farm. The requirements which have to be met will be established depending on the procedure followed (tender or open procedure).

The license act as a construction permit for offshore works and for onshore works up to (and including) the coast terminal. A set of documents, which differ depending on the location of the construction, offshore or onshore, will have to be submitted in order to obtain the license.

For onshore constructions the developer will have to obtain an urbanism certificate and the permits and authorizations indicated therein, as is the case for typical wind projects. The difference however is that the urbanism certificate (and related permits and authorizations) for onshore construction works related to an offshore wind farm is valid for up to five years (including extensions) as opposed to the normal validity period of an urbanism certificate which can be of maximum three years (including extensions).

Legal provisions regarding protection of historical monuments, archaeological sites and natural protected areas are applicable for offshore wind projects as well, with special norms being included in the Draft Law in this respect.

Both the production license and the production authorization will grant the holder the right to exploit wind energy and produce electricity. The production authorization would be required for electricity power plants with a capacity of over 25 MW high capacity power plant. Both the production license and the production authorization will be granted to if the applicant has the technical and financial capacity for operating the relevant wind farm/high capacity power plant. The Ministry may impose additional conditions before granting a production authorization.

The Draft Law further provides that any direct or indirect transfer of rights and obligations resulting from licenses/authorizations may be performed subject to approval from the Ministry. It is not clear if this provision was intended only for specific licenses/authorizations due to lack of correlation between the articles in the Draft Law.

When it comes to securing rights over lands necessary for development and operation of offshore wind farms, the Draft Law provides that lands owned by natural or legal persons, other than the State or territorial administrative units, will have to be secured through common legal operations such as sale, exchange of lands, lease.

For lands publicly or privately owned by the State or by territorial administrative units, the Draft Law establishes a right of way over the lands, including their underground and overground, necessary for performance of works relating to the offshore wind farm (e.g., geotechnical drilling, construction of technological installations, transport network, offshore platforms, access roads). The Draft Law also regulates an easement right over lands, other than lands of public use, necessary for access to the offshore perimeters. Both the right of way and the easement right regulated by the Draft Law will be obtained in exchange for a fee payable annually.

As a complete novelty, the Draft Law provides for a rather unusual and poorly drafted obligation incumbent upon owners of wind farms located offshore: as per the Draft Law, it would seem that 20% of the shareholding in the company owning the offshore wind park should be offered for sale to local citizens whose residence is located at a distance of less than 4.5 kilometres from the wind farm or whose residence is in a town/village located 16 kilometres from the wind farm.

Subventions are also regulated by the Draft Law, for wind farms developed following a tender procedure, the contracts for difference mechanism will be applicable whereas wind farms developed based on the open procedure are entitled to a premium of up to EUR 0.025/kWh, in addition to the electricity market price. Note should be made that the amount obtained by cumulating the electricity market price and the premium may not exceed EUR 0.060/kWh, otherwise the premium will be reduced accordingly. In addition, for a period of 20 years as of connecting top the grid, wind farms developed based on the open procedure would also benefit from a compensation for balancing costs of EUR 0.020/kWh.

Although we welcome the initiative of regulating offshore wind farms, we expect amendments being brought to the Draft Law during analysis and debates in the Chamber of Deputies, as some of the provisions included in the current draft can be improved upon.

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Draft law on offshore wind farms silently approved by the Romanian Senate - Lexology

Magnomatics secures offshore wind funding – Windtech International

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Magnomatics secures offshore wind funding - Windtech International

West P&I Club Strengthens Offshore Team To Support Members In Oil & Gas And Renewables Sector – Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide

West of England P&I Club, a leading insurance provider to the global maritime industry, has strengthened its offshore team with the appointment of Michael Stockwell as Offshore Underwriter.

Michael Stockwell is a well-known figure in the salvage industry and joins West from his previous position as Director, Legal and Insurance, with Ardent Group. He brings extensive knowledge of the marine insurance sector, having also worked at the leading insurance broking house, Marsh.

Stockwells appointment adds further technical expertise to Wests offshore team, as well as significant legal and commercial experience in the offshore sector.

Will Tobin, Head of Offshore at West P&I Club said:

I am delighted Mike Stockwell is joining West to strengthen our offshore team. His depth of knowledge in the offshore and salvage industries will be invaluable in providing a first-class service for our Members. Mikes first-hand experience of the offshore industry, coupled with his knowledge of the liability insurance market, makes him an ideal fit for the team and his appointment further bolsters Wests credentials as a leading provider of liability cover to the offshore and specialist vessel sector.

The offshore industry presents a uniquely complex risk environment, from the decommissioning of end-of-life assets to the installation of new infrastructure, across oil & gas and the fast-growing renewables sector, as well as other specialist vessel operations, such as salvage and wreck removal, subsea activity or heavy lift projects. The pitfalls can be acute when placing or bidding for contracts, and even experienced operators need fast, accurate support to understand their contractual liabilities.

Will Tobin, Corporate Director at West of England P&I Club

Tom Bowsher, Group CEO at West of England P&I Club, commented:

In our 150th year, we are taking a relentlessly forward-looking approach to helping our Members control the full scope of risks that they face. The offshore sector is fast-evolving, from the burgeoning renewables sector to the opening up of new offshore markets around the globe. This brings opportunity, but also significant contractual and physical challenges. Our growing offshore team offers the specialist knowledge, expertise and products to help Members properly manage their liabilities.

Tom Bowsher, Group CEO at West of England P&I Club

Wests Offshore department provides bespoke insurance products to cover risks that lie beyond the scope of P&I for all vessel types used in the offshore sector, as well as other specialist vessels, including those deployed in the subsea and heavy lift operations. West also provides a contract review service and guidance on required insurance covers.

Michael Stockwells appointment follows the appointment last month of Captain Simon Hodgkinson as Global Head of Wests Loss Prevention department. Captain Hodgkinson joined West from Polarcus, where he was responsible for a fleet of seismic survey vessels.Source: West of England P&I Club

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West P&I Club Strengthens Offshore Team To Support Members In Oil & Gas And Renewables Sector - Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide

Magnetic drive for offshore wind turbines secures grant funding – Riviera Maritime Media

19 Oct 2020byDavid Foxwell

UK-based Magnomatics has secured more than 300,000 (US$390,000) in grant funding as part of a 5M UK Government grant to develop and supply innovative power electronics, machines and drives

The funding will be used for the Winder project, which will derisk technology required for the manufacture of large generators for offshore wind to the UK.

Magnomatics pseudo direct drive (PDD) combines a magnetic gear with a permanent magnet generator. The PDD is very efficient and reliable with no meshing gear teeth. Independent analysis has shown that it could be capable of reducing the levelised cost of energy from offshore wind when commercialised.

Magnetic gears are contactless and therefore very efficient over a broad range of speeds. They are compact and also incorporate a torque fuse feature. In the PDD, a magnetic gear is combined with a stator to form a very efficient and torque dense motor or generator that is especially suited to high torque, low-speed applications.

Magnomatics chief executive David Latimer said, We are excited to have received this funding and to embark on the project, which aligns perfectly with our experience in the offshore wind sector.

Our technology is becoming increasingly recognised across the world, not only for offshore wind but for a multitude of applications including marine propulsion, automotive and wider industrial.

Magnomatics was formed in 2006 as a spin-out from the University of Sheffield. The company is commercialising novel products based upon highly efficient proprietary magnetic gear technology.

Sheffield-based Magnomatics earlier participated in the compact high-efficiency generator project, an EU DemoWind-funded collaborative programme aimed at driving down costs and increasing generator efficiency in large offshore wind turbines.

Riviera is hosting a week of free to attend 45-minute webinars focused on offshore wind commencing 2 November. Register your interest now

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Magnetic drive for offshore wind turbines secures grant funding - Riviera Maritime Media

Offshore wind project completes final step, ready to deliver renewable energy to Virginians – WAVY.com

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) Dominion Energy announced Wednesday that the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind(CVOW) pilot project has completed the final stage of testing and is ready to enter commercial service providing clean, renewable energy toVirginians.

This is a monumental day for the Commonwealth and the burgeoning offshore wind industry in America as CVOW is ready to deliver clean, renewable energy to ourVirginiacustomers, saidJoshua Bennett, Dominion Energy vice president of offshore wind.

Our team has worked diligently with key stakeholders and regulators while safely navigating through the coronavirus pandemic to complete this vitally important project that is a key step to reducing carbon emissions, Bennett continued.

The next step for the two turbine, 12-megawatt project is submitting final documentation to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to complete its technical review which is expected to be complete by the end of the year.

Dominion Energy officials say that the turbines will remain operational during the review process. The project is the only one permitted under BOEM and will be the first fully operational wind power generation facility in U.S. federal waters with the capability to generate enough electricity to power up to 3,000Virginiahomes.

Offshore wind generation is a significant portion of Dominion Energys comprehensive clean energy plan to meet Virginia Clean Economy Act standards by achieving net-zero carbon dioxide and methane emissions throughout the state by 2050.

Dominion Energy announced the company will apply the valuable permitting, design, installation, and operations experience from the pilot project to its proposed 2,600-megawatt commercial project.

That project, which is the largest announced offshore wind project inNorth America, is on track to commence construction in 2024, and upon completion, will provide enough renewable electricity to power up to 660,000 homes.

Glen Allen-based Mangum Economics recently conducted an economic impact study published by the Hampton Roads Alliance that estimates the CVOW project may create about 900 jobs and$143 millionin economic impact annually during construction. During the operation of the turbines, an estimated 1,100 jobs, and nearly$210 millionin economic impact can be expected annually.

The study also estimates that during construction, the 2.6-gigawatt CVOW commercial project is estimated to generate nearly$5 millionper year in local and state tax revenue which potentially increases to about$11 millionannually once the project is commissioned and operational.

Dominion Energy says customers will not see an increase in rates for the pilot project under the provisions of the Grid Transformation and Security Act of 2018.

Last year, Old Dominion University established an offshore wind task force to help with preparations as Dominion Energy worked to build the 220-turbine wind farm 27 miles off the Virginia Beach coast. Once complete, the $7.8 billion project would be the largest offshore wind farm in the country.

The installation of the two pilot turbines was completed in June. rsted served as the offshore engineering, procurement, and construction lead for the pilot project. The L. E. Myers Company with members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers performed the onshore construction work.

Work continues on Dominion Energys proposed 2.6-gigawatt commercial wind project and its Construction and Operations Plan is on schedule to be submitted to BOEM later this year.

For more information on the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) project, click here.

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Offshore wind project completes final step, ready to deliver renewable energy to Virginians - WAVY.com

The Nearshore is emerging as an option for outsourcing product support – Nearshore Americas

US organizations have been outsourcing product support to offshore locations for many years, but as Nearshores reputation continues to rise, North American companies are growing more curious about the regions viability as an alternative.

With its advantages of time zone alignment, solid English-language skills, and a young, well-educated, tech-savvy talent pool, the Nearshore region has a great opportunity to stake a claim in product support. The question is, what should Nearshore tech support providers focus on to compete against their offshore rivals?

Right now, the offshore region holds several key advantages over Nearshore when it comes to outsourced product support, but, with a little creativity and dedication, none of them are insurmountable.

The foundational advantage that offshore holds over Nearshore is maturity. Countries like India and the Philippines are the forefathers of offshore product support, allowing them to achieve a much higher level of government support for the industry, which has led to deeper integration into the regions employment culture.

In recent years, the Nearshore BPO industry has garnered an increasing amount of public sector support, but it still falls far short of what we see in offshore markets. Areas like Manila, for example, can offer richer incentives to attract BPO providers, while the citys universities offer courses that lead to employment opportunities straight out of education.

Maturity, of course, takes time, so we can expect to see Nearshore measure up against offshore in this space eventually. In the meantime, Nearshore product support providers would benefit from lobbying their governments to integrate BPO-related studies and career tracks into university curriculums, as it would spark new interest in the sector and help to expand the talent pool much faster.

Offshore tech support facilities tend to be built around product labs, which are designed to facilitate extensive hands-on relationships between agents and products. This relationship is vital for achieving a positive customer experience, as it strengthens the agents knowledge and familiarity with the product.

In the Nearshore region, product labs are less pervasive, making it more difficult to compete against offshore providers, whose customers have grown accustomed to the availability of product labs, especially when supporting verticals like consumer electronics.

For clients, it is advisable to ask whether or not your potential Nearshore product support partner already has a virtual or physical lab, or at least plans to create one. If not, there is a high chance that construction and implementation costs will factor into your final bill.

With BPO services becoming a massive part of offshore culture, agents in the region know that cross-training and multiple re-assignments throughout the year are part of the job. Nearshore workers, on the other hand, can often resist these kinds of changes, making them harder to retain.

Solving this requires a cultural shift that comes through time and targeted training. Companies need to prepare their agents for the possibility of sudden assignment transfers by training them on multiple products. Again, a product lab is a great way to improve this, as agents can have immediate access to their new products and the resistance to change is easier to manage.

When choosing a Nearshore partner, it also helps to investigate whether the product is already available in the country you are looking at. If not, expect significant training costs as agents need more time to familiarize themselves with your product.

Mass market adoption is achieved when a product no longer feels like a chore to set up and use, so the best support call is one that never needs to be made, said Peter Butler from Everise PX. To get there, companies need to invest in product and service specialists who can systematically draw insights from customer support data and effectively test the results in the field.

With a population of around 13 million, Manilas labor pool is nearly as big as the workforce in all Central American capital cities combined. Product launches result in support surges or coincide with seasonal ramping, so the size of the available talent pool is a huge factor in organizations decision-making process.

Even so, there are some ways that Nearshore can get around this clear disadvantage.

Several Nearshore markets, such as Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras, have benefitted from recent waves of millennials returning to their home countries after growing up in the US. About 250,000 deportees leave the United States each year, bringing a level of native English fluency and American cultural understanding that greatly surpasses that of offshore markets.

This mass migration coincides with a larger trend of tech-savvy millennials in Nearshore markets who grew up around BPOs and are more likely to see the industry as a stable, long-term career option. Their experience with these products, combined with a Nearshore partner who has strong product support expertise, can result in a cost-effective solution in root cause analysis and the extraction of product improvement insights.

Furthermore, product launches and upgrades happen with limited notice, resulting in a need to aggressively ramp up support staff and put a premium on expansive offshore talent pools. If Nearshore providers can attract agents with the right skills and experience, they can hone in on higher-value support like white glove services, carving out a niche in the broader product support segment.

Overall, Nearshore and offshore are like David and Goliath when it comes to product support, but by attracting the right talent, establishing product labs, pushing to integrate BPO services into the local culture and training people for sudden adaptation, Nearshore providers stand a much better chance of toppling the giant.

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The Nearshore is emerging as an option for outsourcing product support - Nearshore Americas