

That’s actually addressed in the book as well, you can get hardened ceramic rods that work even better, they’re just a bit more expensive
she/her
That’s actually addressed in the book as well, you can get hardened ceramic rods that work even better, they’re just a bit more expensive
You’re gonna get labeled a terrorist and probably shot
The way to go is in the monkey wrenching book (forgot the full name:
You take steel bars, and cut them to size
Then you remove a piece of bark
Drill a hole into the tree
Put the steel rod in
Glue the bark back on
Do it at eye level-ish, that way you’re not hurting the worker with a snapping chain, instead damaging the lumber mill. Bigger damage anyways
People don’t need to park busses and trams, and bikes are easy to park. The need to big parking lots is a symptoms of misguided and destructive urban planning
I’d much prefer turning parking lots into parks, but this is a good short-term compromise
Yet every time renewables are mentioned, the nuclear shills are out in force
I imagine it’ll shift the mentally on electric heating (mainly through heat pumps) first. People have been outright hostile towards it, but once energy’s free or negatively priced at peak, people will want to make the switch. People who own a large reservoir and a decently sized battery might be able to not pay for any heating or electricity in a good month.
As for industry, those that can allow for flexible production schedules will and in parts already have adapted to fluctuating energy prices. Whether that means less production in winter, or just adjust workflow so peak demand is during peak supply
I’ve seen that person in several threads now, always shilling for nuclear. I’m not sure why, but it’s always been at the expense of renewables
“Ecodefense: A Field Guide to Monkeywrenching” was the name