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Monthly Archives: August 2022
Video: X1 Wind poised to install prototype offshore wind floater ‘as soon as weather allows’ – Windpower Monthly
Posted: August 2, 2022 at 2:29 pm
But towing the prototype to site and hooking it up will have to wait for a suitable weather window, probably after mid-September when strong trade winds in the Canary Islands subside.
The company installed gravity-based foundations comprising three reinforced concrete blocks in December last year. It mounted the nacelle on the PivotBuoy structure in October 2021, using a Vestas V29 225kW turbine originally designed for fixed foundations, which has been retrofitted using a full-converter supplied by ABB.
The PivotBuoy design is one of three technologies aiming to demonstrate up to 300MW of precommercial offshore solutions at test sites around Gran Canaria by 2025under the Plocan initiative.
Adrian Oliva, X1 Winds electrical engineering manager, said installing the 1.4km 20kV cable will allow us to fully validate the floater and wind turbine performance, feeding the electricity to Plocans smartgrid, as well as transmitting data through its fibre optic connection. Also, we will be able to validate the cables dynamic behaviour.
X1 Wind claims its PivotBuoy system is lighter than other spar and semi-submersible offshore platforms and towers and is designed for future mass production at a low cost. Fitting the turbine in a downwind configuration enables the structure to orientate passively and maximise energy yield. The single-point swivelling mooring system is connected to the foundations by vertical tensioned tendons that reduce the platform and cable dynamic motions, facilitating maintenance and minimising fatigue in the power cable.
PivotBuoy won a 4 million grant from the EUs Horizon programme in March 2019 and a 2.5m accelerator grant from the European Innovation Council (EIC) in June 2021 to develop the design and certify the platform.
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What the Inflation Reduction Act Would Do, and Not Do, to Support Continued Offshore Wind Development – JD Supra
Posted: at 2:29 pm
The Inflation Reduction Act spending bill, reflecting compromise between Senator Joe Manchin and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, contains several measures to bolster offshore wind and other renewable energy development in the United States. If passed, the bill would allocate hundreds of billions of dollars to help facilitate a clean energy transition, primarily through clean energy tax credits, as we discuss here. Several provisions related to offshore wind and related transmission infrastructure stand out, and the incentives they provide may succeed in spurring necessary infrastructure development, though some constraints remain.
The spending bill earmarks $2 billion in loans to support new and upgraded electric transmission facilities, and another $760 million in grants to siting authorities to assist high voltage interstate projects and offshore electricity transmission projects in navigating the review and approval processes. This funding reflects a key reality: the clean energy transition is not just a shift in the type of energy source used (e.g., fossil fuels to renewables like wind and solar), but also a shift in where electric generation occurs. The electric grid needs new large-scale transmission lines to deliver power generated at onshore and offshore wind and other renewable generation facilities, and siting these lines can be a challenge. For example, we have previously discussed the limited siting and interconnection options necessary to deliver offshore wind power, as well as the gap in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commissions backstop siting authority in overcoming a state or siting authoritys rejection of a transmission project, since that authority withholds the power of eminent domain for state-owned land.
The new spending bill does not solve the backstop siting authority problem, but it does offer financial incentives to address the problem. First, it offers grants to siting authorities to fund studies and analyses of proposed transmission projects, negotiations with project proponents and opponents, and other measures and actions that may improve the chances of, and shorten the time required for, approval. (Sec. 50152). The bill incentivizes faster approvals, as receipt of grant funds requires the siting authority to agree to make a final siting decision within two years of grant funding. It also incentivizes approvals by allowing economic development money to flow to siting authorities and state, local, or tribal governments that approve projects, in order to address communities that may be affected by a transmission projects construction and operation.
The spending bill also includes an additional $100 million specifically allocated to address planning and modeling for interregional and offshore wind electricity transmission projects. Funded activities include studying cost allocation methodologies that facilitate expansion of the bulk power system, power flow modeling, evaluating existing rights-of-way and the need for additional transmission corridors, and planning for a national transmission grid to optimize the grid for interconnection to offshore wind farms.
The spending bill would open additional areas to offshore leasing in two main ways. First, it would amend the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) to extend the acts coverage to federal offshore waters within the exclusive economic zone of U.S. territories, including Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands. For several years, members of Congress have introduced bills to bring offshore wind development to these areas. This bill would require the government to issue calls for information and nominations for proposed wind lease sales in waters offshore of U.S. territories by September 30, 2025.
Second, the spending bill would override the Trump-era moratorium that currently prohibits federal leasing on the outer continental shelf off the Southeast United States coast. The ten-year moratorium took effect on July 1, 2022, but despite the Biden administrations desire to revoke or sidestep that moratorium to advance clean energy development in that area, revocation requires legislative action. (The Trump administration faced this same barrier in trying to undo an Obama-era withdrawal of unleased federal lands off the coast of Alaska, where a federal court in League of Conservation Voters v. Trump found that the President lacks authority to reinstate previously withdrawn lease areas.)
However, a potential hurdle for both of these changes remains since the spending bill is being advanced through the reconciliation process. That process allows fast-tracked tax and spending bills to have House and Senate differences reconciled before being forwarded to the President for approval. The Senates Byrd Rule prevents legislators from using the reconciliation process to include extraneous provisions unrelated to tax and spending matters. If a senator objects to an extraneous provision, the Senate Parliamentarian reviews and may strike offending provisions, which then cannot be re-added by amendment. The spending bills provisions expanding OCSLAs coverage area and overriding the leasing moratorium could potentially be challenged, as they make no mention of the budgetary impact of reinstating the lease areas, contain no tax provisions, and do not discuss government spending.
The spending bills attempt to override the Southeast area moratorium is not alone. Separately, an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2023 would similarly override the Trump-era withdrawal. It would also clarify that presidential withdrawals of leasing areas are presumed to only apply only to oil, gas, and sulphur leases unless explicitly written to apply to other leasing. The impetus behind that provision is to avoid general and broad language like that Trump used in issuing the moratorium from applying to renewable energy projects, and to force specificity in such withdrawals.
The spending bills expansion of wind and solar opportunities on federal land and in federal waters comes with a catch: the government would only be able to grant these new leases and rights-of-way if the governments oil and gas leasing meets certain metrics. For offshore wind, the government could only issue a lease if, during the prior year, the government offered at least 60 million acres in oil and gas lease sales. To put that volume in perspective, a recent oil and gas lease sale (the November 2021 auction for Lease Sale No. 257) offered approximately 81 million acres for oil and gas leasing, with only 1.7 million acres receiving bids. At present, only about 12 million acres out of over two billion acres on the outer continental shelf have current oil and gas leases. This provision and a sister provision applying to onshore oil and gas leasing have already drawn fierce opposition, but reflect a compromise between renewable energy development and measures to support energy security and reliability, and presumably were necessary to obtain Sen. Manchins support.
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Siemens Gamesa Sinks Further Into Red, Takes Action to Stabilize Business – Offshore WIND
Posted: at 2:29 pm
Wind turbine manufacturer Siemens Gamesa has reported a loss of EUR 343 million pre PPA and before integration and restructuring costs recorded in the third quarter of the Fiscal Year 2022.
The company reported revenue of EUR 2.436 billion in the three months up to 30 June, a ten per cent decrease year-on-year.
The reported net income attributable to Siemens Gamesa equity holders amounted to EUR 446 million between April and June 2022.
In the first nine months of fiscal year 2022, the companys revenue amounted to EUR 6.442 billion, a 12 per cent decrease year-over-year. The loss pre PPA and before integration and restructuring costs for the period stood at EUR 957 million, with an EBIT margin of -14.8 per cent.
The reported net income attributable to Siemens Gamesa shareholders in the first nine months of fiscal year 2022 amounted to -EUR 1.226 billion.
The turbine manufacturer said that its performance continued to be negatively affected by volatile market dynamics such as the inflation of energy, raw material and logistics costs, non-availability of key wind turbine components, port congestion, and supply delays.
All these factors impacted manufacturing, project execution, and delivery, the company said.
There were also internal challenges, including a difficult ramp-up of the Siemens Gamesa 5.X onshore platform and higher costs driven mainly by failure of components and repairs in legacy onshore platforms.
Consequently, the company has adjusted its target for EBIT margin pre-PPA and before integration and restructuring costs for FY 2022 to -5.5 per cent after previously announcing -4 per cent.
The company maintains its expectation that it will achieve revenue growth in line with the lower end of the previous range of -2 per cent to -9 per cent.
Record Backlog, Strong Offshore Order Intake
In an extremely challenging situation, the strong momentum in renewables boosted the companys backlog to a record EUR 33.98 billion, Siemens Gamesa said.
Siemens Gamesas order intake from April to June amounted to EUR 3.523 billion, EUR 2.094 billion of which was in Offshore, a 14.3-fold increase year-over-year. Order intake during this quarter was 2.3 times the figure registered in the third quarter of fiscal year 2021.
Mistral Strategy Program
In response to this situation, Siemens Gamesa said it is taking decisive steps for long-term value creation under the recently launched Mistral strategy program, which aims to overhaul the current operating model, making the organization simpler and leaner. The strategy is also expected to improve organizational efficiency and effectiveness.
The company will maintain a business-focused setup while strengthening the Chief Operating Officer (COO) and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) teams to accelerate harmonization and standardization across Siemens Gamesa. Businesses will focus on sales, projects and product roadmap, and keep full P&L responsibility.
Details of the new operating model will be finalized by 1 October, Siemens Gamesa said.
Under the new structure, which will go into effect on 1 January 2023, Siemens Gamesa will create a single technology roadmap across the businesses, making cross-company platform solutions scalable and reducing non-conformance costs (NCCs) through harmonized processes and by focusing on key competencies across Siemens Gamesa.
Now is the time to take decisive action and sustainably shape our future. Under our new operating model, we will be able to support our customers faster and with greater expertise, said Siemens Gamesa CEO Jochen Eickholt.
By setting up simpler processes, we will empower our people, teams and organizations to take responsibility and enable faster learning cycles. As for investors, Eickholt emphasized that, The new setup will accelerate our companys turnaround. It will provide a very clear picture of business activities and greater transparency overall regarding the trajectory that Siemens Gamesa will take as a global leader in the green energy transition.
In the new operating model, the COO will be responsible for manufacturing across the entire Siemens Gamesa portfolio. In addition, all supply-chain- and production-related activities globally will be combined under the COOs scope, enabling production standardization with the support of a qualified supplier network. The new setup is expected to unlock significant value and enable a transition to mid- to long-term procurement contracts of direct materials. Overall, the strategy is expected to ensure competitive high-quality products across businesses and provide greater transparency for the capital market.
Additionally, there will be a single technology development team spanning Offshore, Onshore, and Service, led by the newly created CTO position, summarizing all product-development-related activities globally. Integrating the teams under a global function at the corporate level is a prerequisite to accelerating the harmonization and standardization of technologies across the company, providing overall stability to the development process and product quality, Siemens Gamesa said. The new CTO will be announced in due time.
Three-Phased Approach
The Mistral strategy program will be deployed in three phases, spanning short-term to long-term timelines, from 2022 to 2025 and beyond.
The immediate goals are to achieve product maturity in the Siemens Gamesa 5.X onshore platform coupled with cost assurance.
In the medium term, the team will achieve a lean structure in all target markets, while improving competitiveness and profitability, and growing the top line.
By 2025, Siemens Gamesa aims to have streamlined its platform strategy and achieved a scalable, cross-application operating model for Offshore, Onshore, and Service combined with a highly commoditized supply chain that is robust against market disruptions.
Under the new operating model, Siemens Gamesa is preparing to reap significant cost synergies through the potential integration into Siemens Energy, the company said.
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Onshore and Offshore Surveys Wrap Up at Australia’s First Offshore Wind Farm – Offshore WIND
Posted: at 2:29 pm
Two wind measurement devices, called floating LiDARs, have been retrieved and inspected after two and a half years of collecting wind data at the proposed Star of the South offshore wind project site in Australia, with the ground investigations wrapping up as well along the projects proposed transmission route.
The wind data collected by the two floating LiDARs confirmed that the proposed project area experiences strong and consistent winds and is a suitable location for generating electricity from the wind, according to Star of the South.
The LiDARs, deployed back in 2019, were assessed by the projects marine specialists to see what had grown on the buoys during their time on the water. This provides extra data for the team to understand the local marine environment, Star of the South said.
Star of the South procured LiDAR wind and wave monitoring buoys from France-based Akrocean in 2019, while TEK-Ocean was responsible for the installation, maintenance work, and retrieval of the LiDARs.
Meanwhile, the ground investigations along the projects proposed transmission route have been completed as well.
Since April, engineering consultants Douglas Partners collected more than 1,100 soil samples from more than 150 sites with the support of Gunaikurnai Land and Waters Aboriginal Corporation which advised on cultural heritage, and Kiernan Plant Hire which supplied excavators and haulage equipment.
Laboratory testing of the samples is ongoing while the findings will assist in designing the projects underground transmission system.
Located off Gippslands south coast in the Bass Strait, the Star of the South offshore wind farm is planned to have up to 200 wind turbines and an installed capacity of 2.2 GW.
If it proceeds to construction, the wind farm would be able to power up to 1.2 million Victorian homes with clean energy, meeting up to 20 per cent of the Australian states electricity needs.
At the beginning of March, the Victorian Government announced a plan to build up to 9 GW of offshore wind by 2040 and to have the first offshore wind-generated electricity flow in 2028.
Star of the South, the first and most progressed offshore wind project in Victoria, is being developed to deliver clean energy to the grid by 2028.
Along with Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners and Cbus, the project is also owned by Australian Founders Terry Kallis, Andy Evans and Peter Sgardelis.
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Data analytics hiring levels in the offshore industry rose in July 2022 – Offshore Technology
Posted: at 2:29 pm
The proportion of offshore oil and gas industry operations and technologies companies hiring for data analytics-related positions rose in July 2022 compared with the equivalent month last year, with 72.2% of the companies included in our analysis recruiting for at least one such position.
This latest figure was higher than the 65.1% of companies that were hiring for data analytics-related jobs a year ago and an increase compared to the figure of 69.4% in June 2022.
When it came to the rate of all job openings that were linked to data analytics, related job postings dropped in July 2022 from June 2022, with 7.9% of newly posted job advertisements being linked to the topic.
This latest figure was an increase compared to the 6.7% of newly advertised jobs that were linked to data analytics in the equivalent month a year ago.
Data analytics is one of the topics that GlobalData, from which our data for this article is taken, has identified as being a key disruptive force facing companies in the coming years. Companies that excel and invest in these areas now are thought to be better prepared for the future business landscape and better equipped to survive unforeseen challenges.
Our analysis of the data shows that offshore oil and gas industry operations and technologies companies are currently hiring for data analytics jobs at a rate higher than the average for all companies within GlobalData's job analytics database. The average among all companies stood at 5.8% in July 2022.
GlobalData's job analytics database tracks the daily hiring patterns of thousands of companies across the world, drawing in jobs as they're posted and tagging them with additional layers of data on everything from the seniority of each position to whether a job is linked to wider industry trends.
You can keep track of the latest data from this database as it emerges by visiting our live dashboard here.
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GDG to Make Waves in the Japanese Offshore Wind Market – Off Grid Energy Independence
Posted: at 2:29 pm
Gavin & Doherty Geosolutions (GDG), founded in Dublin in 2011, is furthering their global expansion with a new venture into the Japanese market to support them in achieving the ambitious offshore wind targets set out by the Japanese Government in the Basic Energy Plan.
The development of offshore wind farms in Japan brings some unique challenges, such as earthquakes, typhoons and unusual geological formation. In this new collaboration, GDG will combine their unique expertise in offshore engineering and geoscience with the local Japanese knowledge of Geo Marine Service Co., Ltd and Nikken Sekkei Ltd, to offer unparalleled survey specification, wind turbine foundation design and certification process support to the Japanese market.
Speaking at the recent signing of a Memorandums Of Understanding (MOU) between the partners, Paul Doherty, Founder of GDG and Executive Vice President of Engineering at Venterra Group, said "The GDG team are experts at finding innovative engineering solutions to support some of the most challenging offshore wind projects around the world and we look forward to building on our current base of foundation design projects in Japan. We're delighted to partner with Japanese organisations who hold invaluable local knowledge of the marine regulatory regime, grid and development procedures. Together, we are committed to supporting projects that contribute to the global sustainability agenda."
To date, GDG has supported 35,000MW of offshore wind globally, that's enough energy to power approximately 25 million homes. They are leaders in geotechnical engineering design and have already expanded to the UK, EU and the US. They will bring their unique capabilities to their latest target, Japan.
The Basic Energy Plan, issued by the Japanese Government, has set a target of 45,000MW of offshore wind by 2040 and will go some way to helping Japan achieve its decarbonisation targets, as well as the growing need to reduce energy costs for consumers. However, the Japanese service supply chain required to make this happen has not been sufficiently established.
Ken Yoshizumi, Representative Director, Geo Marine Service Co., Ltd, explains, "Our aim is to offer solutions for these challenges through combining our extensive experience in onshore wind with GDG and Nikken Sekkei Ltd, who can introduce the latest international technologies and knowhow. We are fully committed to supporting the needs of the Japanese market through competitive foundation design work, which is of major importance in the development of offshore wind farms."
ENDS
About Gavin & Doherty Geosolutions
About Geo Marine Services Co Ltd
About Nikken Sekkei
Source and top image: Gavin & Doherty Geosolutions
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Huge new offshore wind farm could power a third of Welsh homes – The Independent
Posted: at 2:29 pm
A huge new offshore wind farm could power over a third of Welsh homes with renewable energy, those behind the project have claimed.
The wind farm, which is still in its planning phase but is set to include up to 50 turbines, could supply energy to around 500,000 of the countrys 1.38 million households.
If built, Awel y Mor could help tackle climate change and minimise the UKs reliance on imported energy, German-owned energy company RWE Renewables has said.
It could also cut energy costs and help the Welsh Government reach their 70% renewable energy target by 2030.
But critics of the scheme say the turbines, which would stand just over 10km off the north Wales coast, would harm marine life and affect tourism by spoiling the views from Snowdonia, other beauty spots and conservation areas.
Speaking to PA news agency from Gwynt y Mor wind farm, located in the Irish Sea, Tamsyn Rowe, RWE project lead, said: Awel y Mor would be a fantastic opportunity for Wales. It would bring significant benefits in terms of helping the Welsh Government meet their renewable energy targets of 70% by 2030.
Tamsyn Rowe at RWEs Gwynt y Mor, one of the worlds largest offshore wind farms located eight miles offshore in Liverpool Bay, off the coast of North Wales (Ben Birchall/PA)
(PA Wire)
It would also bring lots of skills and supply chain opportunities and jobs to the region.
If its approved, as the project is in an early stage at the moment, it could power up to 500,000 homes with green, clean, renewable energy.
Climate change is real, its happening now and we do need to be acting urgently, she added.
Projects like Awel y Mor could help us de-carbonise society and protect it for future generations.
They also have the benefit of helping the UKs security of supply, which is a really important issue at the moment, and help us reduce our reliance on imports whilst also reducing the cost of energy to the consumer.
Awel y Mor would be situated to the west of the existing Gwynt y Mor wind farm and create 1100MW of energy with its grid connection planned to reach the shoreline between Rhyl and Prestatyn.
Ms Rowe said the company had spent three years preparing surveys on sea bed ecology, and on the bird population due to the proposed turbines being larger and having a maximum tip height of 332m.
RWE reduced the number of turbines to address concerns over the visual landscape raised during a public consultation last autumn.
In May, the proposals were accepted for consideration by the UK Planning Inspectorate.
Members of the public will be able to submit their thoughts on the project to the planning body from next month.
The final decision on consent will rest with the UK Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, with a decision anticipated in 2023.
The project lies in Welsh waters and therefore a Marine Licence must also be granted by the Welsh Government through Natural Resources Wales whose consultation ends on August 18.
Awel y Mor could help tackle climate change but proposals for larger turbines have led to concerns it will harm the view from Welsh beauty spots (Ben Birchall/PA)
(PA Wire)
If permission was granted, Awel y Mor and Gwynt y Mor combined would have the capacity to power the equivalent of more than one million Welsh homes.
RWE is already the largest provider of renewable energy in Wales and it is now looking at building floating wind farms off the south coast of Wales.
Ms Rowe said: Floating wind opens up whole new geographical areas around the coastline of the United Kingdom and Wales where we can deploy turbines in deeper water.
The Crown Estate has recently announced a leasing round for around four gigawatts of floating turbines in the Celtic Sea, so off the south coast of Wales.
RWE are seeking to develop at least one gigawatt of commercial scale floating in that area.
RWE has already began working with ports in South Wales to help them get ready for the floating turbine industry.
Last month the company struck up a partnership with Tata Steel to explore how components for the high-tech floating wind turbines might be produced by the Port Talbot steelworks.
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Ambassador eyes offshore wind team-ups between UK and Norway – Energy Voice
Posted: at 2:29 pm
Just as oil and gas has borne decades of partnerships between the UK and Norway, Britains ambassador wants to see similar team-ups as offshore wind booms.
Richard Wood has been the UKs top diplomat to our North Sea neighbors since 2018 seeing first-hand the fruitful collaboration between Aberdeen and Stavanger; a relationship he describes as basically symbiotic in the energy world.
Now, just the as the UK has unveiled sizeable offshore wind ambitions, Norway has announced similar plans to develop 30GW by 2040.
We see exactly the same opportunities for companies on both sides of the North Sea to work together and develop capability on both sides of the continental divide, says Wood.
There are a lot of big investments from Norwegian companies in the UK, offshore wind opportunities and a couple of Norwegian winners in the recent ScotWind round, but perhaps more so even in England so far.
And similarly, Id like to see British and Norwegian companies teaming up in consortium for the Norwegian build up as well.
Because a lot of those skills built up in oil and gas are clearly transferable, alongside directly transferable technologies in many ways from oil and gas to offshore wind.
Unlike the UK, which has had a strong sense of energy security issues historically, emphasised by recent events in Ukraine and the gas price crisis, security of supply is a relatively nascent issue in Norway.
The country has always been safe in the knowledge that its impressive hydroelectric industry will cater to its needs.
However an ambitious electrication programme for industry means that demand for electricity is almost going to double by 2050.
Therefore they do need, for the first time, to start looking at a different sources of power, Wood reports.
I think that the recent announcement on offshore windthe timing of that is probably not coincidental and there is a need to start getting that on the road.
Were also trying to raise the issue of electricity interconnection as another means of ensuring security of supply and a kind of efficient and effective use of resources in the North Sea.
These are issues which have risen up the debate pretty rapidly in Norway and all part of a wide partnership agreement signed by the two countries Prime Ministers on May 13.
In keeping with the theme of Trust at ONS 2022, delivering on the energy transition requires governments to describe the transition in a way that engenders trust with the general population and ensure that no sector or no part of society will bear costs unduly compared to others, Wood argues.
While addressing those issues, Wood is clear that people shouldnt be scared of managing down demand for oil and gas and the world tries to kickstart the green economy.
The UK Government is targeting 480,000 green jobs by 2030 the estimates may sound over-optimistic, but Wood disagrees.
High ambition begets momentum and once you start down that road and prove the benefits and prove that you know massive and accelerated rollout is possible, that just in itself engenders a huge amount of trust in the green shift and at the same time builds up a whole associated green economy.
So those figures around of 480,000 clean jobs by the end of the decade including 90,000 jobs in offshore wind thats absolutely not pie in the sky figures plucked out of nowhere.
Those things we know are true because of huge shifts in the green economy and clusters around green technology that weve seen building up in Aberdeen and elsewhere in the UK.
So that issue about the green economy and kickstarting a green economy, is a really powerful thing to introduce and people shouldnt be scared of managing down demand for oil and gas.
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Condemning Twitter’s Censorship and Thanking Our Supporters – The Epoch Times
Posted: at 2:28 pm
As an independent news organization dedicated to reporting the truth, The Epoch Times has been subjected to excessive censorship by Big Tech.
In the latest such incident, Twitter on July 28 censored all of our content by putting up a blockade to our website, describing it as unsafe, and encouraging users not to proceed.
Twitters actionsjust like those by other tech giants such as Facebook and YouTubespecifically targeted the reach of our independent news and video content.
Twitter hasnt responded to multiple requests for comment and appeal, nor has the company explained what led it to censor our content or what caused it to lift its blockage two days later, following a public outcry.
The move by the social media giant came less than a week after we published our new documentary The Real Story of January 6 and, on the same day, posted an interview with sex trafficking survivor Eliza Bleu, on our program American Thought Leaders.
While it remains unclear why Twitter targeted us, what is clear is that The Epoch Times is different from most other major news organizations, in that we dare to follow the stories where the facts lead.
In our Jan. 6 documentary, our reporters take an unvarnished look at the events of that day and present new witnesses and evidence that challenge the prevailing narratives. It provides extensive evidence of excessive use of force by police that broke protocol and policy, and raises questions about the lack of security that day. So far, the documentary has received more than a half-million views on our EpochTV platform.
In recent years, there have been other major stories on which The Epoch Times, because of our independence and adherence to traditional journalism, has differed from other major news organizations, only to be proven right.
For example, The Epoch Times reported accurately on events surrounding allegations that then-candidate and later President Donald Trump had colluded with Russia. From day one, The Epoch Times reported on the facts and through our reporting uncovered significant problems with the FBIs probe of Trumps campaign, which included problematic conduct involving surveillance.
While other news organizations won Pulitzers for their articles suggesting collusion between the president and Russia, The Epoch Times was, in fact, correct in reporting that the allegations had no supportas confirmed through investigations by special counsel Robert Mueller and the Department of Justice inspector general, as well as the ongoing probe of the origins of the FBIs investigation by special counsel John Durham.
The Epoch Times also was among the first to report on the possibility that the novel coronavirus was leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China. Our April 2020 documentary on the subject was censored by Facebook. Today, a lab leak is now held as the most likely explanation for the spread of the virus, by both media organizations and many government officials.
The danger of allowing platforms such as Twitter to take on the role of arbiter of the truth is that they, in many cases, are plainly wrong. The most prominent example was Twitters suppression of the New York Post over its reporting on a laptop belonging to Hunter Biden, the son of then-presidential candidate Joe Biden.
This censorship behavior, which is antithetical to the protections Big Tech receives under Section 230, has also raised concerns about social media platforms censoring content on behalf of the government. Most recently, a federal judge ordered the government to cooperate in a lawsuit that alleges behind-the-scenes efforts to target the dissemination of information of stories related to COVID-19including its possible origins and alternative treatmentsthat didnt fit the governments narrative.
Government cant outsource its censorship to Big Tech, Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt said.
The public outcry against Twitters censorship of The Epoch Times was swift, with three U.S. senators publicly questioning the social media platformwhich in recent years has repeatedly found itself in hot water for acts of censorshipover its targeting of the news organization.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) demanded that Twitter explain itself for this outrageous act of censorship.
Meanwhile, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) asked, Wheres the respect for free speech and freedom of press, Twitter?
We all remember your biased censorship of [the New York Post] and how that ended for you, he said.
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) described the action by Twitter as alarming.
Twitter is censoring [The Epoch Times] under the guise of unsafe speech. Remember what happened the last time corporate media and big tech tried to censor my investigation on Hunter Biden corruption? he wrote. The truth always prevails.
Kevin Roberts, president of The Heritage Foundation, described Twitters action as an outrageous act of censorship.
Stanford professor Jay Bhattacharya called out Twitters suppression, writing: It is perfectly safe to click through to the [Epoch Times] site in the quote tweet. For some reason, Twitter decided that today was a good day to suppress access to Epoch Times.
Sex trafficking survivor Bleu, who was among the first to notice the censorship by Twitter because of its blockage of her interview withtheEpochTV program American Thought Leaders, posted a video condemning the platforms actions that went viral.
It also created a stir among Twitter users, with many condemning the platforms actions.
The Epoch Times wants to thank everyone who spoke out against this latest instance of censorship.
We will keep reporting the only way we know how, rooted in our tagline Truth & Tradition, without favor or fear. The fight for truth is one that has no shore and that is as old as the ages. We believe that only with brave individuals going the distance and striving to record the truth of what happens can the world have an accurate picture of events and history.
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After ‘Censorship’ Claims, Hulu Will Air Democrats’ Abortion and Gun Ads – Reason
Posted: at 2:28 pm
Hulu caves to political pressure on ads. Hulu will now accept ads from Democratic groups criticizing Republican stances on abortion and guns. Previously, the Disney-owned streaming service rejected these political adsprompting fierce outcry from groups including the Democratic Governors Association, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC).
The groups ridiculously accused the streaming service of "censorship" for rejecting their political ads, even though Hulua private companyis under no obligation to air speech about hot-button political topics. A "person familiar with Hulu's policies" told The Washington Post the company avoids ads that take any position on controversial issues.
"Their shady policies amount to outrageous political censorship," the DSCC tweeted. "Americans deserve to know the truth about these issues, and Hulu has no right to block it."
This is exactly wrong, of course. Hulu has a right to block ads from Democrats, Republicans, or any advertiser on whatever topics it chooses. Part of the beauty of the First Amendment is that it protects us from government-compelled speech, too. It's politicians who have no right to force Hulu to run particular ads.
The groups harassing Hulu over its decision are not government bodies or elected officials (rather, they're devoted to getting Democrats elected), so this stops short of being a First Amendment violation. And it's understandable that the groups didn't like Hulu's decision. It would be totally defensible for them to publicly criticize the company, encourage supporters to do the same, or encourage a boycott.
But where things cross the line is their attempt to mislead people into thinking that Hulu "has no right to block" Democrats' political ads.
Aren't Democrats the ones always crowing about how more must be done to stop misinformation on social media? And yet here are some of their biggest groups spreading misinformation in a self-serving manner and encouraging followers to retweet it.
This may have led to a short-term win for them, with Disney announcing that "Hulu will now accept candidate and issue advertisements covering a wide spectrum of policy positions." But it's bad news for free speech and liberal, democratic values more broadly.
Throughout the Trump era and continuing today, Republicans have insisted that search engines, social media companies, and other digital entities must platform their candidates, causes, and pundits, frequently condemning and threatening those that reject conservative content. Throughout this, Democrats often pointed out that these private companies are well within their rights to block user content, ads, and accounts as they see fit.
Democrats rejecting that wisdom just so they can get some midterm ads against Republicans on Hulu seems like a strategy bound to backfire. But alas, neither Democrats nor Republicans seem to have any principles in this realm beyond "digital companies should platform the content we like and not the content we don't like"
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is going after the Miami bar and restaurant R House for allowing minors to eat at the restaurant during drag performances. DeSantis and the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation have filed a complaint against the restaurant, accusing it of disorderly conduct that is "manifestly injurious to the morals or manners of the people." The complaint cites a 1947 Florida Supreme Court ruling saying that "men impersonating women" in "suggestive and indecent" ways was a public nuisance. The state is now seeking to have R House's liquor license revoked, DeSantis said at a press conference.
The state's complaint, obtained by NBC News, goes on to state that a video shared by the Twitter account Libs of TikTok "shows what appears to be a transgender dancer leading a young girl by the hand and walking through Respondent's dining area.The dancer's buttocks were fully exposed, and his 'g-string'-style bikini bottom was stuffed with dollar bills a practice that is commonly known to occur at strip clubs. The dancer's breasts unmistakably female in appearance were also fully exposed except for the nipple and areola, which were covered with adhesive 'pasties.'"
"We are an inclusive establishment and welcome all people to visit our restaurant," said R House in a statement. "We are hopeful that Governor DeSantis, a vociferous supporter and champion of Florida's hospitality industry and small businesses, will see this as what it is, a misunderstanding, and that the matter will be resolved positively and promptly."
This is why we can't have nice things:
You can find the full letter here.
Most Americans think we're in a recession.
"The big question is not whether the U.S. is in a recession. It's whether the economy will soon worsen," writes David Leonhardt at The New York Times.
The RAP Act would restrict the use of musical lyrics and "artistic expression" as criminal evidence.
After Dobbs, Democrats and Republicans are switching places on Section 230.
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act has now been "holding America back" for two decades, write John Berlau and Josh Rutzick in The Wall Street Journal.
The "the antitrust duel of the summer" doesn't involve tech companies, but a much more traditional industry.
The family of a boy murdered over a water-gun fight is trying to hold TikTok responsible, since water-gun shooting videos have been popular on the app.
The American Data Privacy and Protection Act "mimics some of the worst flaws found in the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), while creating new problems that the GDPR had avoided."
"Home distilling, unlike home brewing and winemaking, is still prohibited by federal law," points out Reason's Jacob Sullum.
"55% of America's top startups were founded by immigrants," so why won't Congress let more of them in?
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After 'Censorship' Claims, Hulu Will Air Democrats' Abortion and Gun Ads - Reason
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