Monthly Archives: July 2017

Peak 2 Fire was human-caused, investigators seeking two hikers seen in area – The Denver Post

Posted: July 11, 2017 at 9:41 pm

The Peak 2 Fire near Breckenridge was human-caused, according to U.S. Forest Service investigators who now are trying to identify two people seen hiking on the Colorado Trail above Miners Creek Road junction at around 11 a.m. on July 5.

After fire conditions moderated and it was safe to enter the area, fire investigators examined the point of origin and determined the Peak 2 Fire was human-caused, acting Dillon District Ranger Kevin Warner said in a news release Tuesday. This information is important in helping us determine the cause of the Peak 2 Fire. We appreciate any information the public can provide about these individuals.

Reached by phone, Warner said he could not provide any additional detail due to the sensitive nature of the open investigation. He said that all ignition possibilities other than human activity had been ruled out.

Officials urge members of the public with information that might help identify the two individuals to call 970-262-3486 and leave a message with their name, return phone number and a brief summary of the information they can provide.

The Peak 2 fire started on July 5 about two miles north of Breckenridge, quickly growing to 84 acres and prompting a two-day evacuation of more than 450 homes in the Peak 7 area. So far, officials estimate the response has cost around $2 million and counting.

To read more of this story go to summitdaily.com

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Bond doubled for 2 charged in Texas human smuggling case – National Post

Posted: at 9:41 pm

HOUSTON A judge on Tuesday doubled the bond amounts for two women accused of helping smuggle a dozen people into the U.S. who were found in a locked, sweltering hot truck in Houston.

State District Judge George Powell raised each womans bond to $600,000 after Harris County prosecutors said Priscila Perez Beltran, 21, and Adela Alvarez, 26, were flight risks or would resume smuggling activities if released.

The women and a third person, Nelson Cortes Garcia, 27, were arrested Sunday and charged with two counts of human smuggling likely to cause injury or death and one count of human smuggling involving a minor. Ten men, a woman and a 16-year-old girl were inside the stifling truck, where temperatures topped 100 degrees.

Cortes Garcia, who is being held on $300,000, didnt appear at the hearing Tuesday. Prosecutors said they would seek to increase his bond at his next court appearance.

Prosecutors believe all three defendants are from El Salvador. Court records show none is a U.S. citizen.

The three were arrested at a strip centre construction site parking area where Houston police discovered the people inside the truck. Authorities believe the people were from Guatemala, Mexico and El Salvador.

Prosecutor JoAnne Musick said U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials already were aware of Beltran and Alvarez after a recent bust in Corpus Christi. Authorities have said they continue to investigate whether more people may be involved in the trafficking operation.

At a hearing late Monday for Cortes Garcia, prosecutors said Beltran told authorities that she previously helped him and Alvarez smuggle people into the U.S. and that Alvarez had acknowledged bringing an aunt and uncle into the country without documentation.

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Human Rights Campaign Expands Grassroots Effort, Looks to 2018 – Advocate.com

Posted: at 9:41 pm

The Human Rights Campaign is taking the LGBT rights fight to the grassroots in hopes of influencing the 2018 races.

HRC today announced what its calling the biggest strategic investment in its 37-year history, with an initiative called HRC Rising. The organization plans to add at least 20 full-time staffers to work on state and local issues, joining the two dozen already doing so, and working with 32 existing volunteer-led local steering committees. It will allocate $26 million to the effort.

Its not enough to resist the hateful policies and attacks coming from the Trump-Pence regime weve got to accelerate the pace of progress toward full equality and secure protections for LGBTQ people in states and communities across the country. Thats why were going on offense with the largest grassroots expansion in HRCs 37-year history, said HRC president Chad Griffin in a press release.

Our grassroots army of over 3 million has proven that, even in the face of unprecedented challenges, we can make incredible progress and defeat the hateful politicians who've been emboldened by Donald Trump when we organize and mobilize. The power and determination of the 10 million LGBTQ voters and our allies across America will only continue to grow stronger in the face of discriminatory attacks on our rights and freedoms.

HRC is well known for its work in Washington, D.C., but it has historically been involved in state and local matters as well. It worked with Equality North Carolina, for instance, in support of Democrat Roy Coopers successful run for governor; he defeated incumbent Republican Pat McCrory, who had signed the states anti-LGBT House Bill 2 into law and staunchly defended it. It turned out to be a key factor in McCrorys loss.

HRC Rising will work in all 50 states but will make what the press release calls an especially strong, early push in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Nevada. Theyre all swing states, most of which Trump won, and all have big 2018 Senate races as well as some potentially competitive governors races, notes The Washington Post.

One of the races HRC will focus on is Democrat Tammy Baldwins bid for reelection to the U.S. Senate from Wisconsin. Baldwin, a lesbian, is the only member of the LGBT population in the chamber, and she may face a tough opponent, the Post reports. There are also many anti-LGBT U.S. House members HRC would like to defeat.

The organization points out that LGBT voters can be a powerful bloc when mobilized, with these voters credited as crucial to President Obamas reelection in 2012. HRC Rising will focus on allies as well, seeking to turn out what the group calls pro-equality voters.

The election of Trump as president has motivated many of these voters, Griffin told the Post. I think folks believed that after the Supreme Court ruled on marriage, that we were headed quickly toward a place of full equality in this country, he said. And the president's attacks on our community and so many minority communities has served to be, in many ways, a great awakening of our democracy.

Griffin also emphasized the need to work across lines of identity.LGBTQ people are Muslims, he told the Post, so when he attacks Muslims, he's attacked our community. LGBTQ people are women, so when he tries to defund Planned Parenthood, that's an attack on LGBTQ people.

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Cory Booker And Elizabeth Warren Want To Treat Women In Prison Like Human Beings – HuffPost

Posted: at 9:41 pm

Two Democratic senators unveiled a bill on Tuesday that aims to drastically reform how the U.S. federal prison system treats women behind bars, a segment of the incarcerated population that is often overlooked despite its rapid growth.

Sens. Cory Booker (N.J.) and Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) introduced The Dignity for Incarcerated Women Act at a press conference Tuesday. The bill, which also had Sens. Kamala Harris (Calif.) and Dick Durbin (Ill.) as co-sponsors, would require federal prisons to provide free, quality sanitary napkins and tampons to female inmates, and would ban shackling them during pregnancy or placing pregnant women in solitary confinement.

At the heart of the bill are proposals that would make it easier for women to maintain strong family ties with their children while in prison. It requires that the Federal Bureau of Prisons consider the location of children when deciding where to place an inmate, and to create policies that make it easier for inmates to communicate with their families. These include longer and more frequent visiting hours, allowing physical interactions during visits, and not charging for phone calls.

It is in the societal interest to support families when members of those families are incarcerated, Booker told HuffPost. We do unnecessarily harsh things that are not necessary for public safety, but really punish women and punish their families as a whole.

Men make up the bulk of Americas imprisoned population, but the number of women behind bars has soared over the past few decadesto more than 200,000 as of 2014, and women are now the fastest growing segment. (Compared internationally, the U.S. incarcerates women at a higher rate than every country but Thailand).

The legislation would affect the nearly 12,695 women in federal prisons almost 60 percent of whom were convicted of drug offenses but not those in state prisons and local jails, where the majority of women are held.

Most women locked up in the U.S. are mothers, and many have histories of drug use, mental health problems, and were victims of sexual or physical violence before their involvement in the criminal justice system.

The bill comes at a time of growing national concern about the need for criminal justice reform. While most of the discussion focuses on men, the popular Netflix show, Orange Is The New Black, has highlighted the plight of women behind bars, and touched on many of the issuesthat the bill seeks to address: a lack of proper access to feminine hygiene products, the trauma histories of the inmates, and the difficulty of parenting from prison.

While many prisons do provide a limited amount of feminine hygiene products, they are often of poor quality and not useful. That means women are in the uncomfortable situation of either having to ask correctional officers for more which can be demeaning and raise the risk of abuses or use limited funds to buy them at the commissary.

Considering the fact that 72% were living in poverty prior to being incarcerated, that often isnt feasible, said Jesselyn McCurdy, senior legislative counsel at the ACLU.

In 2008, the Federal Bureau of Prisons announced it would no longer shackle pregnant women during labor.But women are still allowed to be shackled while pregnant, which the bill would prohibit.

The legislation was met with approval by prison reform advocates.

This bill could mark a profound shift toward treating people within our prisons as whole and feeling humans with a desire to do better for themselves and their families, said Diana McHugh, director of communications for the New York-based Womens Prison Association. We hope to see similarly well-informed policies at the city and state level, as well as a general shift toward alternatives to incarceration that promote public safety without prison.

Judith Resnik, a professor at Yale Law School, said that while the bill would provide an important step forward, sentencing reform is also needed. Many women are over-incarcerated, she said.

Booker said women in prison are in need of therapy, in need of healing, and in need of support, and called the criminal justice system profoundly unjust.

We need to create a prison that, yes, is holding people accountable, and yes, is allowing people to pay their debt to society for mistakes they have made, but also is about the dignity of humanity, he said. Weve got to be a better society than this.

This article has been updated to reflect that Sens. Durbin and Harris signed on as sponsors late Monday prior to the introduction of the bill.

Melissa Jeltsen covers domestic violence and other issues related to womens health, safety and security. Tips? Feedback? Send anemailor follow her onTwitter.

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Scientists Just Teleported a Photon from Earth to Orbit for the First … – Futurism

Posted: at 9:40 pm

In BriefResearchers from China successfully teleported a photon fromEarth to a satellite 500 km away. The work is an essential steptowards establishing a global-scale quantum internet. A Quantum Record

Not long ago, in the early 1990s, scientists only speculated that teleportation using quantum physics could be possible. Since then, the process has become a standard operation in quantum optics labs around the world. In fact, just last year, two separate teams conducted the worlds first quantum teleportation outside of a laboratory.

Now, researchers in China have taken the process a few steps further: theysuccessfully teleported a photon from Earth to a satellite orbiting more than 500 km (311 mi) away.

The satellite, called Micius, is a highly sensitive photo receiver capable of detecting the quantum states of single photons fired from the ground. Micius was launched to allow scientists to test various technological building blocks for quantum feats including entanglement, cryptography, and teleportation.

This teleportation feat was announced as one of the first results of these experiments. Not only did the team teleport the first object everfrom the ground to orbit, they also created the first satellite-to-ground quantum network, smashing the record for the longest distance for which entanglement has been measured.

Long-distance teleportation has been recognized as a fundamental element in protocols such as large-scale quantum networks and distributed quantum computation, says the Chinese team to MIT Technology Review.Previous teleportation experiments between distant locations were limited to a distance on the order of 100 kilometers, due to photon loss in optical fibers or terrestrial free-space channels.

What comes to mind when you think of teleportation?

Your brain might conjure images of Scotty beaming up the Enterprise crew in Star Trek, but its actually quite a different process than sci-fi films present.

Quantum teleportation relies on quantum entanglement a situation where one set of quantum objects (such as photons) form at the same instant and point in space. In this way, they share the same existence. This shared existence continues even when the photons are separated meaninga measurement on one immediately influences the state of the other, regardless of the distance between them.

This link can be used to transmit quantum information by downloading the information associated with one photon over an entangled link to another photon. This second photon takes on the identity of the first.

Voil. Teleportation.

In this particular instance, the Chinese team created entangled pairs of photons on the ground at a rate of about 4,000 per second. They then beamed one of these photons to the satellite, and kept the other photon on the ground. Finally, they measured the photons on the ground and in orbit to confirm that entanglement was taking place.

Its worth noting that there are some limits to this technology. Transporting anything large, for instance, is a ways off. In theory, theres also no maximum transportation distance, but entanglement is fragile, and the links can easily be broken.

Despite these limits, this research paves the way for even more ambitious studies of quantum teleportation. This work establishes the first ground-to-satellite up-link for faithful and ultra-long-distance quantum teleportation, an essential step toward global-scale quantum internet, says the team.

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Jaguar is Releasing its Tesla Rival in 2018 and it’s Stunning – Futurism

Posted: at 9:40 pm

Jaguar is releasing its Model X competitor in 2018 and the vehicle is absolutely gorgeous.

The SUV will be Jaguars very first electric car. Jaguar is smart to start with an SUV at a time where US consumers are consistentlyopting for more space.

The move puts Jaguar in direct competition with Teslas Model X, which has also experienced strong demand.In fact,Tesla soldroughly the same number of Model X SUVs (11,550) as Model S sedans (13,450) in the first quarter.

Heres what you need to know about Jaguars very first electric car:

Behold: Jaguars I-PACE, a five-seat SUV. Here it looks somewhat similar to Teslas Model X.

See what I mean?

The I-PACE is a preview of Jaguars electric, five-seat production car coming in 2018. That production car will be Jaguars first ever battery-powered vehicle. The brand new red I-PACE debuted at the Geneva Motor Show in March.

The car features a cab-forward design. Jaguar was able to execute this design because the car doesnt need an engine upfront. Jaguar said in a statement that taking a cab-forward design approach frees up room in the interior to make it more spacious.

The I-PACEs design is why many will consider the vehicle a crossover SUV. It has a compact body and is fairly low to the ground for a traditional SUV, but it still seats five while offering plenty of cargo space.

The Jaguar I-PACE has the same suspension system as the F-PACE, whichBusiness Insiders Matt DeBordcalled the most beautiful SUV on planet Earth in 2015.Jaguar has admitted the design it chose is unique in that sense.

The I-PACE Concept is, however, something altogether new: not a traditional sports car, saloon or SUV and absolutely not a traditional Jaguar, the automaker wrote in a press statement.

The car comes with a 90 kWh battery pack that powers two, 200 hp electric motors sitting over each axle.

Jaguar claims the car has a range of 220 miles, allowing it to compete most closely with the Model X 75D that offers 237 miles of range and starts at $85,500.

Theres no word on how much the Jaguar electric SUV will cost yet, so its hard to really compare it to the competition just yet. But Joe Eberhardt, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover North America, said in a Business Insider interview it will be comparable to luxury offerings from brands like Porsche.

AsBusiness Insiders Benjamin Zhangpointed out, that meansyoure looking at an asking price north of $50,000, which, again, not to beat a dead horse, really places it as a competitor with the luxury Model X in both offerings and price.

Jaguar said the car will offer 400 hp and 516 lb./ft. of torque, allowing it to accelerate to 60 mph in 4 seconds. That outpaces the Model X 75D and 90D, which can accelerate to 60 mph in 6 seconds and 4.8 seconds, respectively.

The I-PACE comes with a rear spoiler and a full-length panoramic sunroof.

Using a 50 kW DC rapid charger, it will charge the car in two hours.

The interior itself is striking. The seats are made of fine Windsor leather that matches the light color palette used inside.

The cockpit comes with two touchscreens on the center console.

The traditional drivers instrument was also replaced with a virtual screen that can be controlled using buttons on the steering wheel. The buttons offer haptic feedback when in use.

Heres another shot of the cockpit, which was finished with dark walnut veneers.

Its easy to see the attention to detail, from the stitching on the seats

To the seamless integration of metal and wood

To Jaguars personal engraving etched with laser on the instrument panels wood surface.

From what we know about the car so far, it seems Jaguars car has the potential to be a real contender in the electric car space when it arrives in 2018.

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Report: The US Will Exceed Its Paris Accord Goals Despite Trump’s Official Withdrawal – Futurism

Posted: at 9:40 pm

In Brief A report by analysts from Morgan Stanley confirms a bright future for renewable energy. According to the report, the global adoption trend is fueled by the decreasing cost of renewables and the more attractive economic options it presents when compared to fossil fuels. An Unstoppable Trend

After U.S. president Donald Trump decided to pull the country out of the Paris Climate Agreement, many expected a reduction in the nations efforts to transition to clean and sustainable energy. That hardly seems the case now, however, as a number of U.S. states and even private institutions have decided to pursue initiativesthat reinforce those outlined in the international climate deal.

In Renewable Energy: What Cheap, Clean Energy Means for Global Utilities, a report published Thursday by financial services firmMorgan Stanley, analysts confirm that renewable energy is fast becoming the cheapest option.

Numerous key markets recently reached an inflection point where renewables have become the cheapest form of new power generation, the report noted. A dynamic we see spreading to nearly every country we cover by 2020.The report continued:

By our forecasts, in most cases favorable renewables economics, rather than government policy, will be the primary driver of changes to utilities carbon emissions levels. For example, notwithstanding president Trumps stated intention to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate accord, we expect the U.S. to exceed the Paris commitment of a 26-28% reduction in its 2005-level carbon emissions by 2020.

Indeed, the cost of renewables particularly solar has recently decreasedsignificantly, with the price of solar panels dropping by 50 percent in just two years, according to the report. This certainly makes reaching the carbon emission limitsset by the historic climate accord much easier, and the increased affordability is helping major polluters like India and China step uptheir renewable energy efforts.

The impact ofrenewable energy adoption extends beyondthe environment it also benefits the economy.

Renewables are providing better investment opportunities for utility companies while loweringcosts for consumers. The ability to lower customer bills from utilizing low-cost renewables can improve utilities regulatory environment and provide related investment opportunities in grid modernization initiatives, the analysts wrote. Aside from this, renewables are also generating more jobs than their fossil fuel counterparts in the U.S., they account for even more jobs than tech giants Google, Apple, and Facebook combined.

So, despite the U.S. officially withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement, the Morgan Stanley analysts believe that industries in the country will continue to see renewable energy as the more economically attractive and environmentally sound alternative to fossil fuels. Not even politics can stop this trend.

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The Futurist: Why HR and IT need to be closer – Human Resources Online

Posted: at 9:40 pm

HR and IT functions need to keep helping each other to identify gaps in employee working patterns that require attention, says Usha Baidya, vice-president, human resources, Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa, BT.

Technology has brought comprehensive changes to the way companies operate and is now integral to every department especially HR. BT has a strong history of investment in HR technology and we host a global portal for all our HR systems, processes and policies.

Over the years, HR technology has brought significant improvements to businesses. Gone are the days when HR systems were only used to hold employee data, payroll and recruitment information.

These days, HR departments dont even have to create their own recruitment software. HR functions can now connect cloud-based HR systems to social networks to acquire talent in competitive markets.

We have entered a new wave of HR technology and the role and function of HR continues to change and evolve. Business leaders are requesting real-time employee insights on the go and HR departments need to be ready to meet this demand in real-time.

This is particularly important as HR technology is no longer a simple tool just to make HR processes more efficient, but also used by different teams within an organisation to make strategic decisions.

According to BTs 2016 Mobile Multiplier Study, nearly 80% of employees want to work either remotely or from home, via technology. Without this capability, dissatisfaction levels will rise and they may eventually consider leaving the company.

Employees also need accurate and reliable information in real-time and on-demand to perform their tasks efficiently and effectively so technology has an important role in equipping people with the tools that allow them to do their job easily.

HR and IT functions need to keep helping each other to identify gaps in employee working patterns that require attention, whether via changes in processes, systems or tools.

Close collaboration between HR and IT departments also allows both teams to be aware of employee usage behaviour and how data security threats can be avoided well ahead of time, by finding the right tools that serve the desired workplace requirements.

In the future, HR leaders need to focus on building digital HR strategies and roadmaps. There are lots of HR systems, products and apps available in the marketplace, which allow leaders to focus on productivity, employee engagement, innovation, team work, collaboration and coaching.

As a HR function, we need to be on the front foot and develop advanced predictive models and data analytics to meet the changing demands of those managing an agile and mobile workforce.

The June 2017 issue of Human Resources magazine is a special edition, bringing you interviews with 12 HR leaders, with their predictions on the future of HR.

ReadThe Futuristor subscribe here.

Need some guidance to help you lead the way? These soundbites should remind you to keep developing yourself, as well as others. ..

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16 things you didn’t know about The Bahamas, a land of sinkholes and swimming pigs – Telegraph.co.uk

Posted: July 10, 2017 at 8:39 pm

The Bahamas is celebrating 44 years of independence from the UK. Here are a few quirky facts about these fascinating islands.

Many people talk about The Ukraine, The Democratic Republic of the Congo, The Maldives and The Netherlands. These are all wrong. Only two nations officially start with The. The Bahamas is one (the name means shallow water, FYI). Do you know the other?

Big Major Cay or Pig Beach is renowned for its porcine residents, who spend their time wallowing in the shallows. The porkers are victims of their own cuteness, however. Earlier this year several were found dead, with tourists blamed for overfeeding them.

Telegraph Travel spoke to the astronaut Chris Hadfield, best known for his Bowie rendition on the ISS, in January, and asked him which Earthly place looked most beautiful from his lofty orbit. The Bahamas are gorgeous, he replied. The deep trench in the ocean floor called the Tongue of the Ocean, which comes between the islands, is the most beautiful deep indigo colour.

The Bahamas has a weight problem even more so than the US. Almost 35 per cent of the adult population are considered obese, according to the CIA's World Factbook. For the US the figure is 33 per cent (in Britain its 27 per cent). Only 12 places are fatter, with American Samoa taking the biscuit (so to speak) on a whopping 74.6 per cent.

Thanks to sprinters like Pauline Davis-Thompson, Tonique Williams-Darling and Shaunae Miller, The Bahamas has won 14 Olympic medals. That works out at 33.9 per million residents only Finland, Sweden and Hungary have a better per capita strike rate.

OK, so The Bahamas might only have around 10 branches. But with a population of 390,000, that works out at more than 26 per million residents. Only three countries, the US, Canada and Monaco, have more Starbucks per capita.

The aquarium at the garish Atlantis Paradise Island resort encompasses 14 lagoons, eight million gallons of water and more than 50,000 aquatic animals from 250 species. Theres even a water slide that runs through the middle of it.

The Bahamas needs you. Almost 20 per cent of its GDP comes from tourism, a higher percentage than all but six places (Macau, Maldives, British Virgin Islands, Aruba, Seychelles and Anguilla). In fact, the country attracts 3.7 overseas visitors each year for every resident, making it one of 51 nations where tourists outnumber locals.

And its named, rather unimaginatively, Pink Sands. Noelle Nicolls, our expert on The Bahamas, says: Some visitors suffer disappointment when they realise the beach is not entirely pink as some doctored photos suggest. A unique mix of coral, broken shells, miniature rocks and calcium carbonate speckles the sand with pink fragments.

Dean's Blue Hole, off Long Island, is the second deepest salt water sinkhole on Earth, plunging 202 metres. Only Dragon Hole, in the South China Sea, with a depth of 300.89 metres, can top it.

The Bahamas is the third most expensive country in the world to live, according to Numbeo's annual cost of living survey, which takes into account the price of around 50 items, including a wide variety of accommodation, food and drink from both supermarkets and restaurants, clothing, taxi fares, leisure activities, utility, internet and mobile phone bills. Only Bermuda and Switzerland are costlier.

Its not just piggies. Noelle Nicolls explains: Sandy Cay (also known as White Cay) is an uninhabited island at the southern tip of the Exuma chain. Easily accessible from Long Island, it's a beautiful sanctuary for critically endangered White Cay Rock Iguanas. When you arrive, the iguanas come crawling out of the native bush to greet you on the beach or along the rocky part of the shoreline. They are harmless and will run away if you step towards them too suddenly.

Pirates, privateers and buccaneers infested the area from the early 1600s to the 1700s, wrote Ben Fogle for The Telegraph in 2015. The shallow waters provided the perfect place for experienced pirates to lure heavily laden merchant ships and Spanish galleons on to the reefs, where they were wrecked and relieved of their cargos.

The most famous pirate was Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard, who was appointed magistrate of the self-declared Pirates Republic, a stronghold in Nassau which brought 11 years of havoc to the region.

Learn more at the Pirates of Nassau Museum or on an Islandz Rum Tour.

Thunderball Grotto is an accessible underwater cave that sits in the middle of a little island (probably better categorised as a big rock) in The Exumas, says Noelle Nicolls. It gets its name from the James Bond film Thunderball, which used the cave for underwater battle scenes. When you drop anchor, the entrance to the cave is not readily visible as most of it is underwater. Getting in is intimidating, but once you do, you can swim and breathe on the surface of the water as you snorkel around the hollowed-out chamber.

You cant drive on the Bimini Road, as its underwater and is actually a rock formation. Some believe it to be part of the legendary lost city of Atlantis. They are wrong. It is just a rock formation.

A sombre note to finish on. The Bahamas is one of 58 countries that still have the death penalty. It is, however, considered abolitionist in practice, with the last execution taking place in 2000 (unlike Iran, for example, where more than 977 took place in 2015).

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Caribbean Coke bottler upgrades to solar power in the Bahamas – FoodBev.com

Posted: at 8:39 pm

Coca-Colas bottling partner in the Bahamas, Caribbean Bottling Company, has announced investment of $1.8 million in a solar installation at its factory in Nassau.

The company has predicted that the panels will lower its overall energy bill by 30%, the equivalent of between $250,000 and $300,000 a year.With that level of saving, the panels will essentially pay for themselves within seven years of being installed.

According to the Bahamas Tribune newspaper, work on the panels will begin this month on a portion of the bottlers 92,000-square-foot roof, in the south east of the capital.

Weve paid a deposit for the equipment and it is now being shipped, Caribbean Bottling Company chief executive Walter Wells was quoted as saying by the Tribune.Im told it is on the way to us now, and I expect them to start installing it on our building later this month.

We hope to complete it before the end of this year. It should hopefully generate between 25-30% of our requirements. It pays for itself in around six-seven years, and has a life expectancy of between 20-25 years. It will also reduce our carbon footprint all those good things.

The panels will generate more than 1,100kW of energy, helping to save almost 25,000 tons of CO2 over the full 25-year life of the installation.

The investment has been helped by a $1 million loan from the Inter-American Investment Corporation.

Its part of a range of measures undertaken by Coca-Cola bottlers worldwide to reduce the soft drinks companys CO2 emissions and increase the proportion of energy used in its manufacturing operations from renewable sources.

In May, Coca-Cola European Partners (CCEP) started sourcing all of the electricity needed for its UK operations from renewable sources.

By making the switch, the bottler claimed it was demonstrating its commitment to sustainable manufacturing across the whole of its UK operations.

The solar farm covers eight hectares and will produce up to 5mW of energy at full capacity. In 2014, a 1 million combined heat and power system was also launched at CCEPs Wakefield site, helping to save 1,500 tons of 2 a year across the factorys operations.

Coca-Cola Femsa had already invested in a sustainable plant in Brazil, which combined technologies for energy efficiency, water treatment and solar power generation.

The factory came complete with a system for the harvesting of rainwater, and was the result of more than $250 millions worth of investment.

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