Blast furnaces and aerial cableway in Pompey, Lorraine region of France
French vintage postcard

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Blast furnaces and aerial cableway in Pompey, Lorraine region of France
French vintage postcard

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Furnace Cube
minecraft has gotten so much better over the years with quality of life features like ender chests, being able to place double chests next to each other, and then sometimes you'll run into something that hasn't changed since the release and be like. oh that was so inconvenient and poorly designed. definitely made by notch
Building by building, New York and other cities are trying to stop the age-old use of fossil fuels to heat homes and buildings. In the U.S., new climate laws aim to speed things up.
Excerpt from this story from the New York Times:
For years, Tami Nelson struggled with what she called the “temperamental old man” in the basement. He was inefficient. He was smelly. Plus, he took way too much of her money.
That was Ms. Nelson’s nickname for the ancient oil-fed burner that provided heat and hot water for her 8-unit apartment building on a historic block in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood.
Her tenants called to complain of cold showers. In winters, her monthly heating oil bill went upwards of $1,000. Her basement walls were coated with soot and stench.
No more. This past spring, she evicted the old machinery and replaced it with electric heat pumps. In so doing, she brought her century-old property in New York City along an increasingly urgent global transformation: weaning homes and offices off oil and gas.
In the United States, the Biden administration is trying to hasten that shift with billions of dollars in tax rebates to electrify buildings and make them more energy efficient. The global energy crisis, spurred by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, has also hastened that shift. In 2021, sales of heat pumps grew significantly in the United States and several other major markets, according to research published in Nature.
It’s important because emissions from buildings — primarily for heat and hot water — account for more than a quarter of the nation’s emissions. In New York City, it’s roughly 70 percent, and under a 2019 city law, most large buildings have to drastically reduce their numbers starting in 2024. If they exceed their emissions limits, they will be fined.
The Inflation Reduction Act, the climate law signed in August by President Biden, offers up to $8,000 in tax rebates for property owners to purchase electric heat pumps and make energy efficiency improvements (think insulation and better windows). Many buildings will need to upgrade their electric panels in order to fully electrify. There are rebates for that, too. The bill also allocates $200 million to train workers who can install new electric appliances and insulate homes.
https://youtu.be/CujeqXZ2P1g
If you haven’t seen this Fezco edit, what are you doing??

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Johann Glauber – Scientist of the Day
Johann Rudolf Glauber, a German chemist and apothecary, was born Mar. 10, 1604.
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Furnaces by Richard Berndl, Munich 1909