You are so proud of Iran's ingenuity, but in the end the entire IRGC and the armament industry it generates is worthless. This is the FIRST time its been used to kill non-muslims. Up until now the only results they have caused is more Arab deaths.
In Yemen, the country has been devastated to a starving cholera invested nation with responsibility both with Iran and Saudi Arabia.
What they teach in the unviersities is worthless too: these weapons have no military effect on Israel. Have never had, will never have. All it does is get the Ghazans to be cannon fodder. Isreal continues to thrive, remove settlers, and for every single Israeli they may lose , they kill 100 Ghazans.
This is the worthlessness of Iranian ingenuity. This is the first time the weapons (which Iran completely denies of course) are being to used to some military effect but not against the military so it will phase itself out. Its another month before a countermeasure is developed for this but till Iran can for the FIRST time be proud that at least they are doing something to the enemy that is at par with Israel in Ghaza: , going after civilian buildings.
Genius Iran, genius
Unintended consequence: at some point way Putin may be regarded as a hero for getting the world off fossil fuels.
The IEA warns that investment in renewables needs to triple by 2030 to help countries achieve net zero
www.energylivenews.com
IEA: War in Ukraine likely to accelerate energy transition
The IEA warns that investment in renewables needs to triple by 2030 to help countries achieve net zero
Thursday 27 October 2022
The current
energy crisis, triggered by
Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, could become a “historic turning point” towards a cleaner energy system.
In its 524-page World Energy Outlook report, the
International Energy Agency suggests that the
current crisis provides a “short-term boost” to demand for
fossil fuels such as oil and coal but the “lasting gains” come from
renewables and
nuclear in some cases.
The Paris-based intergovernmental organisation predicts that a peak for fossil fuel demand is in sight – experts say that coal use will fall back within the next few years and
natural gas demand will reach a plateau by the end of the decade.
Rising sales of electric vehicles also mean that oil demand will start reducing in the mid-2030s, according to the report.
Analysts also estimate that the current
energy price rises could see nearly 75 million people worldwide who recently gained access to electricity lose it this year.
If that happens, it would mean that the number of people without access to modern energy rises for the first time in a decade.
The IEA has also stressed that the world must triple clean energy investment by 2030 to curb
climate change – it estimates that countries need to spend around $4 trillion (£3.4tn) in clean energy investment by 2030.
Dr Fatih Birol, Executive Director of the IEA, said: “It is essential to bring everyone on board, especially at a time when geopolitical fractures on energy and climate are all the more visible.
“This means redoubling efforts to ensure that a broad coalition of countries has a stake in the new energy economy. The journey to a more secure and sustainable energy system may not be a smooth one. But today’s crisis makes it crystal clear why we need to press ahead.”