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Best podcasts about sany

Latest podcast episodes about sany

VerkehrsRundschau Funk
#359: Neuer E‑Lkw aus China – Hat Sany eine Chance in Europa?

VerkehrsRundschau Funk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2026 24:00 Transcription Available


Der Markt für (batterieelektrische) Nutzfahrzeuge ist in Bewegung – und neue Hersteller drängen mit Nachdruck nach Europa. Einer davon ist Sany: ein chinesischer Industriekonzern, der bislang vor allem im Bau‑ und Maschinenbereich bekannt ist und nun auch im Lkw‑Segment angreift. In dieser Folge von VerkehrsRundschau Funk spricht Tabea Schaaf mit Technik‑Ressortleiter Jan Burgdorf über den ersten Eindruck des batterieelektrischen Sattelzugs Sany e263. Im Fokus stehen Technikdaten wie Antrieb, Batteriekapazität und Ladeleistung, aber auch Fahrerhaus, Bedienkonzept und Fahreindruck. Gleichzeitig wird deutlich, wo der Newcomer noch hinter europäischen Wettbewerbern zurückliegt – etwa bei Abstimmung und Detailqualität. Besonders spannend: die Marktstrategie. Mit einem potenziellen Preisvorteil von bis zu 30 Prozent, einem bestehenden Servicenetz über Alltrucks und der Unterstützung durch Putzmeister bringt Sany Voraussetzungen mit, um langfristig eine Rolle zu spielen.

VISLA FM
lml show - lazyNEET with SANY-ON 06.17.26 | VISLA FM

VISLA FM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2026 106:34


lml show - lazyNEET with SANY-ON 06.17.26 | VISLA FM by VISLA

sany
The Enterprise Podcast
Morning Drive: Another exit

The Enterprise Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2026 10:11


A15 eyes 10th exit. Egypt’s grain hub economics. Sany backs turbine factory. Morning Drive is your daily download of the essential headlines shaping Egypt. From business policy and finance to the latest in tech, all in under 10 minutes. Hosted by ‘Synthetic Salma’ — an AI-powered version of our own Executive Editor Salma El-Saeed. You can read the full newsletter on the website. Morning Drive is brought to you by: Madinet Masr GRANITE Financial Holding Bonyan for Real Estate Investments And check out our other show Making It, where we speak to CEOs and entrepreneurs about building a great business in the region.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast
NextEra Buys Dominion, China Outpaces Vestas

The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2026 32:19


NextEra’s $67B all-stock Dominion deal targets data center alley. Plus China’s top five each outpace Vestas, and 80% of Swedish wind producers ran at a loss. Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes’ YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! [00:00:00] The Uptime Wind Energy podcast, brought to you by StrikeTape, protecting thousands of wind turbines from lightning damage worldwide. Visit striketape.com. And now, your hosts Speaker 6: Welcome to the Uptime Wind Energy podcast. I’m your host, Allen Hall, and I’m here with three other people, Matthew Stead, Rosemary Barnes, and, uh, Yolanda Padron down in Texas. Uh, we’re all getting ready to go to American Clean Power in Houston, Texas, where it will be practically 150 degrees and 99% humidity, and we’re all looking forward to those warm, wet days that we will spend It is very similar to New Orleans. New Orleans was also very warm and very humid. So there’s a trend going on here with American Clean Power, although we were up in Minneapolis not too long ago, uh, but I guess we were in Phoenix too, so we gotta find a middle ground, everybody. Can we go someplace like– [00:01:00] Rosemary says we should always go to the Maldives, Tahiti. I got a lot of requests from Tahiti from people. We never go there. We never go to Hawaii.  Rosemary Barnes: I’ve suggested Hawaii so many times, and I’ve been told that Americans are not gonna be given permission from their manager to go to Hawaii.  Speaker 6: It’s kinda like Las Vegas.  Rosemary Barnes: Maybe one day we’ll make it to San Diego or something and get, um, beach adjacent facility And if your presentation is too boring, then everyone will be at the beach. So that will be how we ensure quality control of the speakers, which is a big problem at these events now, right? Like you can’t, um, there’s– It’s more like the norm is fairly boring sales pitches rather than informative discussion.  Speaker 6: We used to have OMNS, when I say we, I mean the wind community used to have OMNS out in San Diego in Coronado at the Del Coronado is, I think that’s the hotel name. And the one time that I went, I think I’ve been [00:02:00] there, I would say one time, uh, everybody was outside on the, at the beach, basically on the patio. So they’re holding all these talks and discussions, and it’s… I’m looking around, it’s like me and five other people. Everybody else is out there next to the water. So they had a problem with that. So I guess what they figured, either make it really cold or make it really hot, so it forces everybody into the climate-controlled conditions of, uh, the, uh, auditorium to watch the speakers. Maybe that’s the, the plan. All right. Let’s, let’s, let’s talk about what happened with NextEra and Dominion because there’s going to be a huge merger. So if you thought utility business was boring, it’s not anymore. NextEra announced a sixty-seven billion dollar all-stock deal to acquire Dominion Energy, a move that would create the largest regulated electricity utility in the world by market cap. Uh, [00:03:00] the combined company would serve about ten million customers accounts across Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, where I’m based, and South Carolina with one hundred and ten gigawatts of generation across renewables, nuclear, and natural gas. Uh, but the real driver here is data centers, of course. Dominion sits in the heart of Virginia’s data center alley, where it has connected more than four hundred and fifty data centers, and NextEra is building thirty data center hubs through its NextEra Energy Resources subsidiary and has partnered with Google Cloud on paired generation campuses. So together, they would control about a hundred and thirty gigawatts of large load pipeline. And the question is whether the regulators will let it happen. And I think that’s, having watched some of the news articles over the last several days, uh, the news broke pretty much Sunday morning or late Saturday night that this was happening and [00:04:00] The first thing that came to mind, are the regulators going to let it happen? And the concern is going to be, and you can well imagine how this plays out, they’re going to drag Dominion and NextEra up to Washington, D.C. and berate them about how electricity rates cannot increase due to data centers. And if they don’t swear to that, then this merger won’t happen. That’s my interpretation of what’s about to happen. It may not, but how does this play out? How does everybody else on the team at Uptime see this play out?  Matthew Stead: Seems like a good idea to me. So more economies, more geographic diversity, more opportunity for renewables.  Yolanda Padron: I can’t speak to Dominion, um, but being relatively close to the NextEra engineering team, they, they really know their stuff, right? So I think it’s something that should kind of give us a, a sense of relief here that it, [00:05:00] it’s a big team, but it’s a really smart and competent team taking over a big undertaking.  Speaker 6: You would like to see renewables and data centers work together. This would be the perfect match of the two, right? The, the largest renewable owner management company, along with the biggest data center, uh, region. Connecting those two would make infinite sense, but in the, our political environment today in the United States, that may be the reason to oppose it.  Matthew Stead: Yeah, why would it be a bad idea?  Speaker 6: Windmills, Matthew. Windmills. Windmills are bad. Can’t even call them wind turbines anymore. They’re windmills.  Rosemary Barnes: I used to mock people for saying windmill instead of wind turbine, but then when I moved to Denmark, um, you know, who, you know, have a firm, firm ownership of modern wind energy, or at least did back 10, 20 years ago They say windmill when they speak English. Um, the Danish word for it is vindmølle, um, which means windmill. [00:06:00]And so I can’t… I couldn’t maintain that, that energy because like, am I gonna, am I gonna mock these, you know, like everybody at that company knew more about wind energy than I did. Am I gonna mock them for not, not knowing the difference between a windmill and a wind turbine? No. So yeah, that’s, that’s something that I, I don’t do anymore.  Matthew Stead: That is really valuable to know, um, Rosie. I must admit, I did not know that, and I would mock people saying w- windmill, so thank you for setting me straight.  Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, there are plenty of, um, plenty of people who don’t know the difference between a windmill and a wind turbine and think, “Oh, why you only got three blades with so much air between them? You know, you’re gonna… Y- if you would just put twice as many blades, you’d get twice as many energy. Everybody who works in wind energy is just an obs- obvious complete and utter idiot.” Um, so there’s that kind of person, but then there’s also the industry. Another fun fact that they call the blades wings. Uh, um, yeah, in Danish they call them blade wings, which they are. [00:07:00] Speaker 6: In Spanish, isn’t it shovels? ‘Cause when I always translate those, uh, Spanish questions over to English, it always comes out shovel. At least early on, y- the early versions of Google Translate would translate it to shovel. Like, what are they talking about shovel on a wind turbine? That doesn’t make any sense.  Yolanda Padron: Yeah, like a shovel or a stick or like a, what you row with.  Speaker 6: Oh, like an oar. Okay, that makes a lot more sense. Okay. Thank you, Yolanda.  Matthew Stead: I think it’s really interesting that, um- We don’t have much material on NextEra, Dominion. Um, yeah, we just don’t think it’s a good– We all think it’s a good idea. There’s no controversy here.  Speaker 6: Oh, there’ll be controversy. Don’t worry about that. There’s always controversy. Welcome to America.  Matthew Stead: But among the four of us-  Speaker 6: We all think it’s great.  Rosemary Barnes: Well, it’s, um, I mean, some of the interesting facts that I read was that they’ve got 130 gigawatts of load, um, that they’re bringing to the table, and 51 gigawatts of that is contracted data centers. So that’s, that’s interesting. [00:08:00] And I think large amounts of new data centers on the grid are controversial because in– if you’re not very, very careful about how you integrate them, then you can end up just making electricity more expensive for everybody in the area that doesn’t necessarily get, you know, profit sharing from the data center. So, um, I think that, uh, like, you know, the wind ind- in the wind industry, we’ve obviously been through and are still in the phase of where social license, um, community acceptance is one of the most important things, maybe the most important thing when you’re developing a new project. And I think that we’re just at the start of that realization for data centers as well. Companies that are building the, the data centers, they need to do more than what’s required of them because otherwise they have big risks of project delays. It’s millions of dollars delay, um, for the delay for, um, yeah, for every, every day that, um, a data center is held up. And so how can you afford to risk annoying anybody? [00:09:00] You know, you just wanna be like the just, just perfect, um, addition to the community so that everybody is just happy and, and lets the project proceed. So, yeah, I thought– think that that’s, that’s quite an interesting aspect that I think I’m gonna s- we’re gonna see changing as, you know, all these planned data centers become real data centers. There’s a real risk that everybody hates data centers soon as much as they, um, hated wind tur- um, wind farms for a while.  Yolanda Padron: For the consumer, aren’t there, like, I don’t know if they’re in Virginia, but aren’t there price caps too for the market? When you’re– When it comes to how expensive the megawatt hour is? Speaker 6: Not necessarily. Re- remember that AEP in Ohio, uh, was requiring data centers to buy electricity at a certain amount. Because they both basically committed not to raise prices for electricity to the local communities, and that would be really hard to do. And okay, great, if, if they can pull it off, awesome. But there’s already a lot of [00:10:00] pushback about it, and it hasn’t even gotten to the point of being real yet, so it’s only gonna get worse. I see. And all the data centers are gonna be up in space no matter what. Everybody’s talking about building data centers on the ground. There’s no shot that that’s gonna happen. I’m just telling you, ’cause they can’t do it. They don’t– They can’t build gas turbines fast enough. There’s just limitations there, and transformers and everything else. It’s gonna be in space. It’s so much easier.  Yolanda Padron: And all the approvals you have to get and everything.  Speaker 6: It will be easier to do it in space In space, you don’t have neighbors. Matthew Stead: I said it before, it’s just crazy. The key issue around data centers is it’s actually the transmission rather than generation. I mean, you know, at least in Australia, and correct me if I’m wrong, Rosie, but you know, less than half the price in Australia is generation. The other half is sort of retail and transmission and this and that. And so actually, you know, the generation cost shouldn’t really increase. It’s really the transmission and the, the poles and the wires, which are the problem. And [00:11:00] you know, to your point, Rosie, social, social license for poles and wires.  Rosemary Barnes: I’m actually really surprised at Allen, ’cause normally, Allen and I have this, um, you know, we’ve played out this scenario probably 50 or 100 times over the, over the years with emerging technologies, and it’s always me that’s like, “You know what? I think, uh, I think there’s something to this one.” Um, and Allen always poo-poos it, and in this case, Allen’s, Allen’s excited. I, I’m on Allen’s– So I also, I also think space data centers is, is a thing that’s more likely to happen than not, at least to some extent. Um, so yeah, but I think, Matt, you’ve got the more mainstream opinion. Speaker 6: The voice of the common man. I  Yolanda Padron: think for all of our listeners out there, this is the first time Rosie and Allen agree on anything, so round of applause team.  Speaker 6: It won’t last long, Yolande.  Rosemary Barnes: It’s not true because, you know, nine out of 10 new technologies I also think are stupid. Um, so Allen and I agree on the bulk of them, but then of that one in 10, you know, nine out of 10 of those I, I [00:12:00] like and Allen doesn’t, so this is the, you know, the one-tenth of the one-tenth, so. Speaker 6: I don’t like gas turbines. Can we all agree we don’t like gas turbines? It’s– That would be insane to scale.  Rosemary Barnes: You know what? I, I don’t have a particular problem with gas, gas turbines. I don’t want a lot of new gas turbines. Um, I guess that that’s– We can all agree on, on that. I don’t think the– I think we have most of the gas turbines that we need, or at least, um, will in the next couple of years. And, um, yeah, I do think that their existence supports faster electrification, um, and faster growth of wind and solar. So I’m definitely not someone that wants to see all gas turbines turned off tomorrow.  Speaker 6: No, I don’t, I don’t want to turn them off. I’m  Matthew Stead: just saying you can’t get to scale. Speaker 6: Delamination and bond line failures in blades are difficult problems to detect early. These hidden issues can cost you millions in repairs and lost energy production. CIC NDT are specialists to detect these critical flaws before they become [00:13:00] expensive burdens. Their non-destructive test technology penetrates deep into blade materials to find voids and cracks traditional inspections completely miss. CIC NDT maps every critical defect, delivers actionable reports, and provides support to get your blades back in service. So  Matthew Stead: visit cicndt.com because catching blade problems early will save you  Speaker 6: millions. Well, for the first time, five Chinese turbine manufacturers have all individually outpaced Danish wind giant Vestas in annual installations. Goldwind topped the global list with twenty-nine point seven gigawatts installed in twenty twenty-five. Behind them, Envision put up twenty-one point eight, Windy nineteen point eight, Mingyang at eighteen point six, and Sany at fifteen point one gigawatts. Vestas came in [00:14:00] sixth at twelve point nine gigawatts. The Chinese dominance was fueled by an enormous domestic market that has accounted for about ninety-four percent of those five manufacturers’ sales. Uh, but exports are obviously growing out of China too. The five captured nearly sixty percent of the hundred and seventy-eight gigawatts installed globally in twenty twenty-five, a year that saw the world market grow forty percent over twenty twenty-four. So Vestas still holds the crown for cumulative installations at two hundred and one gigawatts, but the gap in annual volume is now almost impossible to ignore. So Vestas has a lot of competition over in China. The, the amount of, uh, gigawatts coming out of the largest manufacturers in China is quite impressive, almost, well, more than double than what, uh, Vestas is doing, and Vestas is doing a pretty brisk business. What are, what are the outcomes of this, everyone? Is, can this be sustained in China [00:15:00] for very much longer? Can they continue to, to create at, at that rate?  Rosemary Barnes: Yes. Okay, move, move on to the next segment  Speaker 6: Well, that’s a, that’s a huge amount of gigawatts coming out of China. And if 94% of it’s staying in China, eventually you run out of China to put wind turbines in. Rosemary Barnes: They– I mean, we’re a long way from running out of places in China to put wind turbines in, because China is gigantic. A lot of it is not that populated. They’ve got a lot of offshore area still. But I just think it’s gonna follow the same playbook as, as solar probably, where you see, you know, early on heaps of domestic market, which is totally rock solid because it’s not relying on people to see a positive business case in doing it. You know, like it’s really… You know, targets are, are really mandated and people make sure that they are met. Um, and then the incentives are also different as well. Like my understanding is that [00:16:00] there’s a lot of incentives about installation of megawatts, um, and then, you know, the, the operation is like, we’ll figure that out as we go. The volume, the number of manufacturers that are there, they’ve got, you know, like such a great supply chain all there in the same area, so you can move fast and like I, I don’t see anything can get in the way of, you know, continuing to pump out these turbines at that speed. It’ll keep going until, you know, the government basically decides we’ve got, uh, enough wind energy now and then puts the, the brakes on it. And, you know, that’s what we’ve just been through in solar recently. China is, um… You know, they’ve just– they’ve got a big economy and they’ve just got like rock solid resolve to follow through on, on things that they commit to. Um, whether we can, you know, argue about whether it’s a smart strategy or not, but you know that they will follow it, they will execute on, on it. I don’t think anyone would, would say that they won’t. So I think, [00:17:00]can it continue forever? No. But do I think it can continue for another 10 years? Yes. And is that long enough to cause massive problems for any other manufacturer? I think also yes.  Matthew Stead: Hey, Rosie, can I ask you a question? You know, obviously there was some cable was proposed, you know, between Australia and Singapore. Do you see China going in that direction? You know, putting rather than pipes with gas in it, um, pipes with electrons? Uh,  Rosemary Barnes: I don’t see China– I’m actually working on a video at the moment about a global sub-sea grid, and I just interviewed, um, uh, Xlinks, you know, that was originally a project from Morocco to the UK, and then the other one, which is super cool, um, we might have an argument about the plausibility of it, is NATO L, which is just in like early development stages. It’s going to connect the UK to Canada. Um, and yeah, so that’s, um, a few thousand kilometers long. The ocean depth is maximum [00:18:00] three, I think, kilometers, maybe even a tiny bit more than that, um, which is like right on the edge of what is possible. N-none of those projects really actually rely on big technological improvements. Um, they’re possible with today’s technologies. Um, but I don’t see China doing so much of that. I think that one thing that might actually stop that is that, um, when you have big interconnectors like that, I think the engineering part is not the hard, the hard part. I think that the, it’s the politics. I do see them exporting their, um, you know, they’ve got really good ultra high voltage DC technology, but the transmission lines, they have exported a little bit. There’s some projects in Brazil that are Chinese made. There’s one in India. I don’t actually know if that is Chinese made, but you know, like I could really imagine them also rolling out projects in Africa, for example. Um, but beyond that sort of thing, I, I wouldn’t tip China as the country to, you know, develop a global [00:19:00] sub-sea grid. Speaker 6: Do you think the low solar prices have hurt the wind manufacturers in China a little bit? Obviously, there’s a lot of solar panels that are able to be shipped immediately, which is what’s happening right now. But turbines, not so much. It’s a little harder to do. But you, you would think that a lot of these countries and communities would be putting in wind But solar is so cheap right now that, that is what is winning at the moment, and it must be hurting the Chinese wind manufacturers, you would think. Rosemary Barnes: I don’t think they’re really in a competition with each other, um, at the moment. In Australia, I think yes. I think that, um, the, like, roaring success of solar and especially batteries is, um, making wind less appealing to develop. But globally, I think that it’s, you know, it’s a race between, um, fossil fuels and renewables. It’s a race between energy security and continued reliance on, you know, countries that [00:20:00] you don’t really want to rely on for fossil fuels. I think that those are the, the much bigger, um, competition at the moment. It’s a bit short-sighted because, yeah, wind and solar is really easy for the, the part of the, uh, energy transition that we’re doing now, and, uh, if you just don’t build any wind until you reach the limit of solar and batteries, then you’ll find yourself quite far behind. So that’s what we’re really struggling with in Australia and finding, like, what is the right level of government, um, support because people… You know, like in an electricity market like Australia, you’re not supposed to rely on governments, you know, planning out the system and deciding what thing to build, and I think that that has been a real strength of the Australian market that it has, you know, the government has got out of the way. It is hard to see, um, us getting to where we need to go in a orderly fashion without some planning for this, like, lumpy middle part of the energy transition. I don’t know. What do you think, Matt? Is that how you see it in Australia as well?  Matthew Stead: Yeah, I think there’s a place [00:21:00] for everything, and, you know, wind, solar, battery is a perfect match and the right places for the right thing. Rosemary Barnes: It’s really hard because, you know, like, when you look at the system as a whole, you know, like you plan out what, what full energy system is cheaper and better, you know. Is it the, you know, the current fossil fuel system and all of the, you know, annual maintenance and, um, improvements like, um, extensions that need to go along with that to support, you know, things like data centers and population growth, or is it the fully renewable system? And, you know, if you look at the end state, then I don’t think that many studies or maybe any studies come to the conclusion that anything other than renewables is the, the cheaper, better system. But it’s just, it doesn’t mean that every step along the way is cheaper, and so you end up with this, yeah, like this hump in the middle that you’ve gotta, you’ve gotta get over if you wanna get from one to the other, and it’s, um, it’s complicated. Speaker 6: I just listened to a podcast about this half an hour ago, uh, and it [00:22:00] was very contentious. And I won’t get into the details of it, but it was just one or the other. We wanna have all petroleum-based, coal-based generation in the UK, or we want zero emissions. They never got into anywhere in the middle, which is where it’s going to have to be. So why don’t we talk about that? I– It doesn’t… The political atmosphere of the UK is, is a little unstable, as we’ve all read in the newspapers and seen online. Uh, but it, but it’s just causing the both sides to go to extremes. And on the renewable side, some of the arguments that are being made were so outlandish that I could hardly continue to listen to it. Same thing on the gas and coal side. Like, what are we gonna do? The UK is really in a pinch. They’re gonna have to do something, and it all– as Rosemary’s pointed out, doing nothing is real ex- it’s gonna be tremendously expensive too. So there’s, there’s gonna have to be a, a reckoning somehow, but it, it’s all tied to the [00:23:00] economy at the moment. Like most things that happen in a country, decisions are made about what’s happening right now, not what’s gonna happen five years from now.  Yolanda Padron: Right. And to your point, like countries need to protect themselves, right? Like what are you gonna do, bank on world peace?  Speaker 6: That’s a bad bet historically.  Matthew Stead: But, um, how many, how many of those charts have you seen in the last one to years where you’ve got the, the fossil fuel, say the coal generation versus renewable generation? How many of those, um, charts have crossed over in the last few years where, you know, renewables generation is, is higher than coal generation? It’s just, it’s happening all over the world. It’s just happening, and you look at the graphs, it’s just happening.  Speaker 6: It’s less expensive, so that’s why they’re doing it. The decision’s made with the dollar. You know, the financing and the bankers and insurance are all gonna drive that, and it’s not gonna be the decision you, the homeowner, are gonna have a lot of influence on. It’s all gonna be done at a higher level, and it’s gonna be whatever’s cheaper and whatever’s available. Back to Rosemary’s point, [00:24:00] solar is cheap and available, people are gonna do it. Wind is cheap and available, they’re gonna choose it no matter who’s in office, right? I… Yeah, that’s the engineer talking, not the politician.  Matthew Stead: Battery, wind, and solar is only gonna get cheaper. Is, um, is, uh, gas turbines and coal gonna get cheaper? Speaker 6: They can’t. In order to get the efficiency up where they need to, it’s gonna be super expensive, which is what we’re at today. That’s why gas turbines are s- you can’t mass produce them, and that’s why they cost so much money. It’s a great business if you sell a couple a year. You can’t sell thousands of them. There’s just not a way to do that. As wind energy professionals, staying informed is crucial, and let’s face it, difficult. That’s why the Uptime podcast recommends PES Wind magazine. PES Wind offers a diverse range of in-depth articles and expert insights that dive into the most pressing issues facing our energy future. Whether you’re an industry veteran or new to wind, PES Wind has the high-quality content you need. Don’t miss [00:25:00] out. Visit peswind.com today. Over in Sweden, they built all the wind farms, and here at Weather Guard we’ve talked to a number of operators over in Sweden, so has EOLOGIX-PING, uh, and the– So but the wind farms and the customers haven’t really showed up, and researchers in Sweden have analyzed two hundred and forty-four Swedish wind power producers owning more than about thirty-seven hundred turbines covering eighty-five percent of the country’s total wind generation. So it’s a pretty large study. They found that eighty percent were effectively operating at a loss in twenty twenty-four. The total sector losses reached six point three billion Swedish kronor, uh, about six hundred and twenty million euros. The sector’s profit margins fell to a negative fifty-one percent. That’s right, negative fifty-one percent. Uh, and here’s the real paradox. Although wind production actually [00:26:00] rose from thirty-four point two to forty point six terawatt-hours, revenues fell for the first time in at least six years. Uh, the more they produced, the less they earned. And the real culprit is overcapacity. So they have so many turbines up in northern Sweden, uh, that it’s driving the energy prices down, much like Australia. Uh, and the missing link is obviously transmission because it is big demand to the south. It’s just getting the power there. Vattenfall alone lost eight hundred and seventy million euros in its wind business in twenty twenty-four, and one of its subsidiaries curtailed seventeen percent of the potential production because of, uh, shutting the turbines down was less expensive than selling into negative prices, which would make sense. So the price has gotten so low in Sweden that it’s better just to turn the turbine off and, and eat the loss than to generate power at a, at a negative price. This is a common theme [00:27:00] as wind has grown, and solar for the same matter, is that when you have so much of it, the price of electricity will drop. And until you can get that power out to other areas that has high demand It becomes a losing proposition. How does this play out? Will the– Now will countries finally take transmission seriously and start to even out the grid? Is that where we’re going?  Yolanda Padron: I mean, I hope so. The idea of curtailing potential energy isn’t something new, right? It happens here in Texas all the time. It happens in a lot of places all the time, um, just to, to not overflow the grid. And it makes sense, but it doesn’t make sense too much, at least to me, that in the same country you have parts of it where you have an electricity surplus and negative pricing, and other parts of it where you just, you don’t have enough energy for the whole, uh, region, right? So, uh, I really hope they take it a bit more seriously than they, than they currently are.  Matthew Stead: Uh, I think the interesting thing about Sweden is [00:28:00]that they’ve got a lot of hydro as well, and so those two things tie together. Um, you know, much like Australia, we’re building the, like the largest in the Southern Hemisphere, um, hydro scheme, and, um, maybe that’s part of the missing puzzle is the actual, the storage element. So if they had more pumped hydro, you know, they could, um, perhaps store that excess energy and then, then reuse it. But, you know, unless there’s no pipes from the north to the south, you know, that’s not gonna help anyone.  Speaker 6: Hydro is expensive. The more recent news articles I’ve seen about pumped hydro is it’s way less expensive to put in wind or put in solar or put in some batteries than to do pumped hydro projects. It’s complicated. It’s a lot of construction, obviously, and, uh, the pumps and the equipment are not cheap. So, uh, yeah, so although if you do have hydro and it’s currently running, you would leave that alone, but I think some of the newer pumped hydro projects probably won’t happen. Even if they’re on the– have [00:29:00] been planned and, and even started, I think they’re really reevaluating that it’s probably cheaper to do batteries. Matthew Stead: In Australia, in Snowy 2.0, I think the original budget was, was it 3 billion? And now it’s up to 12 to 15 billion.  Rosemary Barnes: Anybody that was working on that would’ve known that the price was very likely to blow out because that particular project has a really long tunnel. The two reservoirs that, like the reservoirs were existing, so you think, okay, that’s good, you save money. But the expensive part of pumped hydro is the tunneling and then, and it’s a very long tunnel. Um, and it’s just so super predictable that when you have a super long tunnel, you one, increase the cost a lot, but two, increase the risk of a massive cost blowout. So I think it’s not a good predictor of, of projects as some other ones that are, that are happening. I think the biggest problem with hydro is that, um, the project lives are so long, like 100 years e- easily, [00:30:00] but that doesn’t mean anything in today’s dollars, y- you know? So it’s like no one can, no company is gonna assign any value to the electricity they’re gonna generate in 100 years time, you know? So it’s, um, it, it’s really hard for it to stack up to, as a project today unless it’s a government doing it. Matthew Stead: But I mean, once Snowy 2.0 is done, it will still be reasonably cost-effective as a long-term storage source.  Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. If it had been made on time, then I think it would’ve, it would’ve been a real enabler for the energy transition for getting heaps of wind and solar. But it wasn’t done on time, and we barely we- storage isn’t our problem right now. We have actually got lots of, of storage. That’s not what’s stopping people from building projects. So, um, I think it is a bit of a shame.  Speaker 6: Back to your point, Rosemary, how old hydro is in terms of electricity generation. I, I went to go look up when Niagara River, Niagara Falls in, in the States first [00:31:00] started producing power, 1895. That’s how long we’ve been using water power in the States to create electricity. Hoover Dam, which also does something very similar, is in the 1930s, 1935, ’36, around that timeframe. So it’s almost been 100 years there too, 90 years. Yeah. It’s, it’s amazing. So you don’t plan for those, those pieces of, uh, infrastructure to run that long, but they do. That wraps up another episode of the Uptime Wind Energy podcast. And if today’s discussion sparked any questions or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Reach out to us on LinkedIn, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode. And if you found value in today’s conversation, please leave us a review. It really helps other wind energy professionals discover the show. For Rosie, Yolanda, and Matthew, I’m Allen Hall, and we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy [00:32:00] podcast.

Aujourd'hui l'économie
La Chine, championne du monde des poids lourds électriques

Aujourd'hui l'économie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2026 3:03


Alors que l'Europe accélère son électrification pour réduire sa dépendance au pétrole et au gaz dans un contexte de tensions au Proche-Orient, la Chine a déjà franchi un cap. Dans le secteur stratégique des poids lourds électriques, Pékin s'impose comme leader mondial, avec une avance considérable sur les marchés occidentaux. On parle beaucoup d'électrification en Europe, dans le but de réduire la dépendance énergétique et de verdir les transports. Mais pendant que Bruxelles débat et planifie, d'autres ont déjà changé d'échelle. C'est le cas de la Chine. Si le pays est déjà bien connu pour sa production de voitures électriques, un autre secteur connaît une progression fulgurante : celui des camions électriques. Aujourd'hui, près de 20 % des poids lourds vendus en Chine sont électriques, contre à peine 1 % à 2 % en Europe. L'écart est considérable et il continue de se creuser. Si Pékin affiche une telle avance, ce n'est pas un hasard. Depuis plus de 15 ans, les véhicules électriques (voitures comme camions) sont considérés comme un secteur stratégique. Résultat : une véritable filière industrielle a été bâtie. Batteries, bornes de recharge, réseaux de maintenance, tout un écosystème a été structuré pour faciliter l'adoption des poids lourds électriques. L'objectif est clair : faire en sorte qu'opter pour un camion électrique ne soit pas plus contraignant que choisir un modèle thermique. Dans ce domaine, la Chine bénéficie d'un avantage majeur. Elle domine la production de batteries, notamment grâce à des technologies moins coûteuses et plus durables. Un atout clé, car la batterie représente la part la plus importante du coût d'un véhicule électrique. À lire aussiLes alliances entre constructeurs automobiles occidentaux et chinois s'accélèrent Des camions plus chers à l'achat… mais rentables sur la durée Reste une question essentielle : les camions électriques sont-ils plus chers ? À l'achat, oui. Comme pour les voitures électriques, le prix est plus élevé que celui d'un modèle diesel. Mais cette différence s'atténue sur le long terme. Selon plusieurs estimations, les exploitants peuvent réaliser entre 10 % et 25 % d'économies sur la durée de vie du véhicule. En cause, une énergie moins coûteuse que le diesel, des frais d'entretien réduits et une meilleure efficacité énergétique. Dans un contexte de hausse des prix du pétrole, cet argument économique devient de plus en plus déterminant. Malgré ses atouts, le poids lourd électrique doit encore surmonter plusieurs obstacles. L'autonomie reste un sujet sensible. Les batteries sont lourdes, occupent de l'espace et réduisent la capacité de chargement. Sans compter le temps de recharge, qui peut immobiliser les véhicules pendant plusieurs heures. Une offensive mondiale des constructeurs chinois Pour répondre à ces contraintes, la Chine mise notamment sur une solution innovante : l'échange de batteries. Le principe est enfantin : remplacer une batterie vide par une pleine en quelques minutes, sans attendre la recharge. Une technologie déjà largement déployée sur le territoire. Forte de son avance, la Chine passe désormais à l'offensive à l'international. Des groupes comme BYD ou Sany exportent déjà leurs camions électriques vers l'Europe ou l'Amérique latine, en reprenant une stratégie éprouvée : proposer des véhicules compétitifs et produire localement lorsque nécessaire. Comme pour les voitures électriques, les industriels chinois pourraient bien bouleverser le transport routier mondial. Leur avance technologique, leur maîtrise des coûts et leur puissance industrielle en font désormais des acteurs incontournables. Et demain, ce ne seront peut-être pas seulement nos voitures qui seront électriques mais aussi les camions qui livrent nos marchandises, venus tout droit de Chine.

Bate-Papo Empreendedor
Papo Empreendedor EP: 194 - Thayni Librelato conversa com Sany Araujo Marques e Daniel da Silva Pereira.

Bate-Papo Empreendedor

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2026 58:02


No Papo Empreendedor desta semana, o foco esteve em um ativo que antecede qualquer estratégia, tecnologia ou processo: as relações humanas.Com Sany Araujo Marques e Daniel da Silva Pereira, o episódio abordou o tema “O poder das relações humanas na construção de resultados”, trazendo reflexões sobre como conexões sólidas, comunicação eficiente e confiança mútua impactam diretamente a performance de equipes e negócios.Ao longo da conversa, ficou claro que resultados sustentáveis não nascem apenas de boas estratégias, mas da qualidade das relações que sustentam essas estratégias. Networking estratégico, cultura organizacional saudável e inteligência emocional foram apontados como pilares para transformar vínculos em oportunidades concretas.Mais do que falar sobre relacionamento, o episódio explorou práticas aplicáveis para quem deseja fortalecer parcerias, liderar com mais empatia e gerar resultados por meio da colaboração.

Marathi stories by Sudheer Mahajani
Bhagavad Gita - Adhyay 04 - Verses 32 to 42 and Adhyay 05 - Verses 01 to 10

Marathi stories by Sudheer Mahajani

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 28:20


Namaskar.In this episode, Lord Krishna continues to explain the various forms of Yajña, emphasizing the supreme importance of right and complete knowledge. He tells Arjuna that once true knowledge is attained, confusion and inner conflict dissolve—knowledge is the ultimate authority.Krishna explains that a person who has control over the senses, a sincere desire to gain knowledge, humility toward those who possess it, and faith in that knowledge, becomes free from the binding nature of action that leads to rebirth. In contrast, one who constantly doubts and indulges in baseless skepticism is likely to falter on the path.The discussion then moves into the Fifth Adhyaya – Sanyāsa Yoga. Arjun once again finds himself in a dilemma—should he follow the path of Karma Yoga and perform his duties, or renounce action altogether through Sanyāsa? Krishna clarifies that while both paths lead to liberation, the path of diligently performing one's duty is superior and more practical.Krishna further explains that the idea of “not doing any Karma” is an illusion—the body continues to function, breathe, and act, driven by nature. Action is inevitable. What truly matters is recognizing that we are not the ultimate doers; nature plays its role, and the Almighty works through us. One must continue to act, while remaining humble, detached, and aware that all action is ultimately guided by the Divine.

Hírstart Robot Podcast - Film-zene-szórakozás
Már nem kell bizonygatni, hogy Szendrey Júlia méltó feleség és özvegy volt

Hírstart Robot Podcast - Film-zene-szórakozás

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 4:58


Már nem kell bizonygatni, hogy Szendrey Júlia méltó feleség és özvegy volt 94 évesen meghalt a XXI. század leghíresebb mémfestője, a Majomkrisztus alkotója Akik 2025-ben távoztak – legendák, akik örökre velünk maradnak Időről időre: Lehet ma vagy holnap Így nézett ki karrierje kezdetén Brigitte Bardot, szinte alig ismerünk rá barna hajjal Egyedülálló előadás az Örkény Színháztól A Házasság első látásra 60 éves Sanyája először osztott meg szerelmes fotót az új, 27 évvel fiatalabb párjával Meghalt a magyar éjszakai élet ikonja - Steiner Kristóf: "Az aranykor anyja volt" Nyitott könyv – Közösségi színházi alkotófolyamat indul a Pim-ben No. 1 a Netflixen: Erre a sorozatra nagyon rákattantak a magyar nézők a hétvégén! A Házasság első látásra Zsoltja súlyos traumát cipel: az édesapja nyomtalanul tűnt el, később halottnak nyilvánították A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Hírstart Robot Podcast
Már nem kell bizonygatni, hogy Szendrey Júlia méltó feleség és özvegy volt

Hírstart Robot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 4:58


Már nem kell bizonygatni, hogy Szendrey Júlia méltó feleség és özvegy volt 94 évesen meghalt a XXI. század leghíresebb mémfestője, a Majomkrisztus alkotója Akik 2025-ben távoztak – legendák, akik örökre velünk maradnak Időről időre: Lehet ma vagy holnap Így nézett ki karrierje kezdetén Brigitte Bardot, szinte alig ismerünk rá barna hajjal Egyedülálló előadás az Örkény Színháztól A Házasság első látásra 60 éves Sanyája először osztott meg szerelmes fotót az új, 27 évvel fiatalabb párjával Meghalt a magyar éjszakai élet ikonja - Steiner Kristóf: "Az aranykor anyja volt" Nyitott könyv – Közösségi színházi alkotófolyamat indul a Pim-ben No. 1 a Netflixen: Erre a sorozatra nagyon rákattantak a magyar nézők a hétvégén! A Házasság első látásra Zsoltja súlyos traumát cipel: az édesapja nyomtalanul tűnt el, később halottnak nyilvánították A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Hírstart Robot Podcast
Ennél nincs cukibb: kiszivárgott egy kép Ördög Nóráék családi fészkéből

Hírstart Robot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 3:49


Ennél nincs cukibb: kiszivárgott egy kép Ördög Nóráék családi fészkéből Januárban a Netflixen: Erről a 6 új filmről és sorozatról nem érdemes lemaradni! Meghalt Brigitte Bardot Szerencsét hozó falatok: 7 virslis étel, ami nélkül nincs szilveszter Anyasebet gyógyító özönvizes antiutópia A Házasság első látásra 60 éves Sanyája először osztott meg szerelmes fotót az új, 27 évvel fiatalabb párjával Meghökkentő Ai-videóval jelentette be a Tv2 a 2026-ban induló műsoraikat: visszatér a Házasság első látásra is! Kiakadtak a Stranger Things rajongói, ezt követelik petíciójukban az ötödik évad epizódjai miatt "Üdvözlünk mindenkit a gazdagok és szépek világában" – ez a Budapest Luxe A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Hírstart Robot Podcast - Film-zene-szórakozás
Ennél nincs cukibb: kiszivárgott egy kép Ördög Nóráék családi fészkéből

Hírstart Robot Podcast - Film-zene-szórakozás

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 3:49


Ennél nincs cukibb: kiszivárgott egy kép Ördög Nóráék családi fészkéből Januárban a Netflixen: Erről a 6 új filmről és sorozatról nem érdemes lemaradni! Meghalt Brigitte Bardot Szerencsét hozó falatok: 7 virslis étel, ami nélkül nincs szilveszter Anyasebet gyógyító özönvizes antiutópia A Házasság első látásra 60 éves Sanyája először osztott meg szerelmes fotót az új, 27 évvel fiatalabb párjával Meghökkentő Ai-videóval jelentette be a Tv2 a 2026-ban induló műsoraikat: visszatér a Házasság első látásra is! Kiakadtak a Stranger Things rajongói, ezt követelik petíciójukban az ötödik évad epizódjai miatt "Üdvözlünk mindenkit a gazdagok és szépek világában" – ez a Budapest Luxe A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Energypreneurs
E293: Mining, Mobility & Megawatts: SANY Group's Bold Energy Play

Energypreneurs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 42:47


Description: In this episode, our guest is Stanley Choi, a dynamic leader at SANY Group Australia, a global OEM driving electrification in heavy industry and infrastructure. Stanley shares insights into how SANY is delivering complete energy and transport solutions—from electric mining trucks to autonomous factories producing EVs in under 10 minutes. He discusses how SANY's off-grid power systems are helping decarbonize mining operations in Australia and South Africa, leveraging in-house solar, battery, and wind technologies. Stanley also highlights the challenges and opportunities for commercial EV adoption, including Australia's infrastructure gaps and the promise of autonomous and AI-driven logistics. A compelling look at innovation in energy, transport, and industrial automation. Please join to find more. Connect with Sohail Hasnie: Facebook @sohailhasnie X (Twitter) @shasnie LinkedIn @shasnie ADB Blog Sohail Hasnie YouTube @energypreneurs Instagram @energypreneurs Tiktok @energypreneurs Spotify Video @energypreneurs

Cette semaine en Chine
21 novembre 2025

Cette semaine en Chine

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2025 7:30


Arrivée des astronautes de Shenzhou-20 à Beijing;La Chine a achevé la première phase d'essais technologiques 6G;La Chine émet quatre milliards d'euros d'obligations souveraines au Luxembourg;Chine : lancement de la construction de la première unité nucléaire Hualong One équipée d'une tour de refroidissement ;Bayer ouvre son premier centre d'innovation en Chine;La Chine va émettre des pièces commémoratives pour l'Année du Cheval;Le salon Euro Tea Expo 2025 met l'accent sur les échanges culturels avec la Chine;Chine : les exportations d'automobiles en hausse de 15,7% au cours des dix premiers mois;Les trains de fret Chine-Europe ont effectué près de 120.000 voyages;Chine : le secteur de la livraison express enregistre une croissance régulière au cours des dix premiers mois;Mise en service d'un parc industriel du groupe chinois SANY en Afrique du Sud

Hírstart Robot Podcast
2025 ősz-tél legjobban várt filmjei – Miért érdemes sorba állni a jegypénztáraknál?

Hírstart Robot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 4:43


2025 ősz-tél legjobban várt filmjei – Miért érdemes sorba állni a jegypénztáraknál? A Monstersen túl – a 6 legjobb Charlie Hunnam-film, amit látni kell Besúgók és téglák, avagy megfigyelések, lehallgatások a magyar popban Már szerdán a Netflixen: Valós eseményeket dolgoz fel az új sorozatgyilkosos széria Kristen Bell elárulta, hogyan áll a Disney a Jégvarázs harmadik részének munkálataival Különleges személy játszott a Tizenkét okos emberben Sosem látott, különleges produkciókkal november 9-én indul a Csillag Születik Magyarországon koncertezik a Squid Game zeneszerzője A párizsi Pókember, az elviteles Rembrandt, és amikor kisétáltak a Mona Lisával – 8 emlékezetes műkincsrablás Vércukormérővel törtek kódokat a Kaptár-filmben Árulkodó bejegyzés: összejött Miló Viki és a Házasság első látásra Sanyája? A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Hírstart Robot Podcast - Film-zene-szórakozás
2025 ősz-tél legjobban várt filmjei – Miért érdemes sorba állni a jegypénztáraknál?

Hírstart Robot Podcast - Film-zene-szórakozás

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 4:43


2025 ősz-tél legjobban várt filmjei – Miért érdemes sorba állni a jegypénztáraknál? A Monstersen túl – a 6 legjobb Charlie Hunnam-film, amit látni kell Besúgók és téglák, avagy megfigyelések, lehallgatások a magyar popban Már szerdán a Netflixen: Valós eseményeket dolgoz fel az új sorozatgyilkosos széria Kristen Bell elárulta, hogyan áll a Disney a Jégvarázs harmadik részének munkálataival Különleges személy játszott a Tizenkét okos emberben Sosem látott, különleges produkciókkal november 9-én indul a Csillag Születik Magyarországon koncertezik a Squid Game zeneszerzője A párizsi Pókember, az elviteles Rembrandt, és amikor kisétáltak a Mona Lisával – 8 emlékezetes műkincsrablás Vércukormérővel törtek kódokat a Kaptár-filmben Árulkodó bejegyzés: összejött Miló Viki és a Házasság első látásra Sanyája? A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Miasto Jest Nasze
Warszawskie Tętno: pustostany, SIMy, SANy..., czyli o tym jak moglibyśmy mieszkać godnie

Miasto Jest Nasze

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2025 50:27


Jesień objawiła się nam w pełnej krasie, a więc zapraszamy na najnowszy odcinek Warszawskiego Tętna - idealny pod kocyk z pyszną herbatką w kubku!Tym razem Maja Handke i Damian Gregier mieli okazję porozmawiać z przedstawicielkami Habitat for Humanity Poland - Justyną Nakielską oraz Aleksandrą Krugły - które opowiedziały nam o początkach organizacji, osiedlu zbudowanym przez wspólnymi siłami ze społecznością lokalną, niezwykłej transformacji, którą polski Habitat przeszedł w wyniku rozpoczęcia pełnoskalowej wojny w Ukrainie oraz dlaczego pustostany i inne nieoczywiste rozwiązania mogą być gamchangerem w zaspokojeniu głodu miekszaniowego Polek i Polaków.Miłego słuchania!

Misteri Jam 12
MJ12 ORIGINAL EP18: RUMAH SEWA MURAH

Misteri Jam 12

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 15:07


Bagi episode kali ini, saya membacakan kiriman yang dikirimkan oleh Sany. Beliau menceritakan pengalaman, sewaktu beliau menetap di rumah sewa yang angker. Gangguan mistik berlaku bukan sahaja pada beliau, malah, ia berlaku pada sesiapa sahaja yang datang untuk bermalam. Jadi, beberapa lama beliau dapat bertahan ? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #193: Holiday Mountain, New York Owner Mike Taylor

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2024 84:43


This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Nov. 30. It dropped for free subscribers on Dec. 7. To receive future episodes as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription. You can also subscribe to the free tier below:WhoMike Taylor, Owner of Holiday Mountain, New YorkRecorded onNovember 18, 2024About Holiday MountainClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Mike TaylorLocated in: Monticello, New YorkYear founded: 1957Pass affiliations: NoneClosest neighboring ski areas: Villa Roma (:37), Ski Big Bear (:56), Mt. Peter (:48), Mountain Creek (:52), Victor Constant (:54)Base elevation: 900 feetSummit elevation: 1,300 feetVertical drop: 400 feetSkiable acres: 60Average annual snowfall: 66 inchesTrail count: 9 (5 beginner, 2 intermediate, 2 advanced)Lift count: 3 (1 fixed-grip quad, 1 triple, 1 carpet - view Lift Blog's inventory of Holiday Mountain's lift fleet)Why I interviewed himNot so long ago, U.S. ski areas swung wrecking ball-like from the necks of founders who wore them like amulets. Mountain and man fused as one, each anchored to and propelled by the other, twin forces mirrored and set aglow, forged in some burbling cauldron and unleashed upon the public as an Experience. This was Killington and this was Mammoth and this was Vail and this was Squaw and this was Taos, each at once a mountain and a manifestation of psyche and soul, as though some god's hand had scooped from Pres and Dave and Pete and Al and Ernie their whimsy and hubris and willfulness and fashioned them into a cackling live thing on this earth. The men were the mountains and the mountains were the men. Everybody knew this and everybody felt this and that's why we named lifts and trails after them.This is what we've lost in the collect-them-all corporate roll-up of our current moment. I'm skeptical of applying an asteroid-ate-the-dinosaurs theory to skiing, but even I'll acknowledge this bit. When the caped founder, who stepped into raw wilderness and said “here I will build an organized snowskiing facility” and proceeded to do so, steps aside or sells to SnowCo or dies, some essence of the mountain evaporates with him. The snow still hammers and the skiers still come and the mountain still lets gravity run things. The trails remain and the fall lines still fall. The mountain is mostly the same. But nobody knows why it is that way, and the ski area becomes a disembodied thing, untethered from a human host. This, I think, is a big part of the appeal of Michigan's Mount Bohemia. Ungroomed, untamed, absent green runs and snowguns, accessible all winter on a $109 season pass, Boho is the impossible storybook of the maniac who willed it into existence against all advice and instinct: Lonie Glieberman, who hacked this thing from the wilderness not in some lost postwar decade, but in 2000. He lives there all winter and everybody knows him and they all know that this place that is the place would not exist had he not insisted that it be so. For the purposes of how skiers consider the joint, Lonie is Mount Bohemia. And someday when he goes away the mountain will make less sense than it does right now.I could write a similar paragraph about Chip Chase at White Grass Touring Center in West Virginia. But there aren't many of those fellas left. Since most of our ski areas are old, most of our founders are gone. They're not coming back, and we're not getting more ski areas. But that doesn't mean the era of the owner-soul keeper is finished. They just need to climb a different set of monkey bars to get there. Rather than trekking into the mountains to stake out and transform a raw wilderness into a piste digestible to the masses, the modern mountain incarnate needs to drive up to the ski area with a dump truck full of hundred dollar bills, pour it out onto the ground, and hope the planted seeds sprout money trees.And this is Mike Taylor. He has resources. He has energy. He has manpower. And he's going to transform this dysfunctional junkpile of a ski area into something modern, something nice, something that will last. And everyone knows it wouldn't be happening without him.What we talked aboutThe Turkey Trot chairlift upgrade; why Taylor re-engineered and renovated a mothballed double chair just to run it for a handful of days last winter before demolishing it this summer; Partek and why skiing needs an independent lift manufacturer; a gesture from Massanutten; how you build a chairlift when your chairlift doesn't come with a bottom terminal; Holiday Mountain's two new ski trails for this winter; the story behind Holiday Mountain's trail names; why a rock quarry is “the greatest neighbors we could ever ask for”; big potential future ski expansion opportunities; massive snowmaking upgrades; snowmaking is hard; how a state highway spurred the development of Holiday Mountain; “I think we've lost a generation of skiers”; vintage Holiday Mountain; the ski area's long, sad decline; pillage by flood; restoring abandoned terrain above the Fun Park; the chairlift you see from Route 17 is not actually a chairlift; considering a future when 17 converts into Interstate 86; what would have happened to Holiday had the other bidders purchased it; “how do we get kids off their phones and out recreating again?”; advice from Plattekill; buying a broken ski area in May and getting it open by Christmas (or trying); what translates well from the business world into running a ski area; how to finance the rebuild and modernization of a failing ski area; “when you talk to a bank and use the word ‘ski area,' they want nothing to do with it”; how to make a ski area make money; why summer business is hard; Holiday's incredible social media presence; “I always thought good grooming was easy, like mowing a lawn”; how to get big things done quickly but well; ski racing returns; “I don't want to do things half-assed and pay for it in the long run”; why season two should be better than season one; “you can't make me happier than to see busloads of kids, improving their skills, and enjoying something they're going to do for the rest of their life”; why New York State has a challenging business environment, and how to get things done anyway; the surprise labor audit that shocked New York skiing last February – “we didn't realize the mistakes we were making”; kids these days; the State of New York owns and subsidizes three ski areas – how does that complicate things?; why the state subsidizing independent ski areas isn't the answer; the problem with bussing kids to ski areas; and why Holiday Mountain doesn't feel ready to join the Indy Pass.Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewI met Taylor in a Savannah bar last year, five minutes after he'd bought a ski area and seven months before he needed to turn that ski area into a functional business. Here was the new owner of Holiday Mountain, rolling with the Plattekill gang, more or less openly saying, “I have no idea what the hell I'm doing, but I'm going to do it. I'm going to save Holiday Mountain.”The National Ski Areas Association's annual show, tucked across the river that week, seemed like a good place to start. Here were hundreds of people who could tell Taylor exactly how hard it was to run a ski area, and why. And here was this guy, accomplished in so many businesses, ready to learn. And all I could think, having skied the disaster that was Holiday Mountain in recent years, was thank God this dude is here. Here's my card. Let's talk.I connected with Taylor the next month and wrote a story about his grand plans for Holiday. Then I stepped back and let that first winter happen. It was, by Taylor's own account, humbling. But it did not seem to be humiliating, which is key. Pride is the quickest path to failure in skiing. Instead of kicking things, Taylor seemed to regard the whole endeavor as a grand and amusing puzzle. “Well let's see here, turns out snowmaking is hard, grooming is hard, managing teenagers is hard… isn't that interesting and how can I make this work even though I already had too much else to do at my other 10 jobs?”Life may be attitude above all else. And when I look at ski area operators who have recycled garbage into gold, this is the attribute that seems to steer all others. That's people like Rick Schmitz, who talked two Wisconsin ski areas off the ledge and brought another back from its grave; Justin Hoppe, who just traded his life in to save a lost UP ski area; James Coleman, whose bandolier of saved ski areas could fill an egg carton; and Danielle and Laszlo Vajtay, who for 31 years have modernized their ridiculously steep and remote Catskills ski area one snowgun at a time.There are always plenty of people who will tell you why a thing is impossible. These people are boring. They lack creativity or vision, an ability to see the world as something other than what it is. Taylor is the opposite. All he does is envision how things can be better, and then work to make them that way. That was clear to me immediately. It just took him a minute to prove he could do it. And he did.What I got wrong* Mike said he needed a chairlift with “about 1,000 feet of vertical rise” to replace the severed double chair visible from Route 17. He meant length. According to Lift Blog, the legacy lift rose 232 vertical feet over 1,248 linear feet.* We talk a bit about New York's declining population, but the real-world picture is fuzzier. While the state's population did fall considerably, from 20.1 million to 19.6 million over the past four years, those numbers include a big pandemic-driven population spike in 2020, when the state's population rose 3.3 percent, from 19.5 million to that 20.1 million number (likely from city refugees camping out in New York's vast and bucolic rural reaches). The state's current population of 19,571,216 million is still larger than it was at any point before 2012, and not far off its pre-pandemic peak of 19,657,321.* I noted that Gore's new Hudson high-speed quad cost “about $10 million.” That is probably a fair estimate based upon the initial budget between $8 and $9 million, but an ORDA representative did not immediately respond to a request for the final number.Why you should ski Holiday MountainI've been reconsidering my television pitch for Who Wants to Own a Ski Area? Not because the answer is probably “everybody reading this newsletter except for the ones that already own a ski area, because they are smart enough to know better.” But because I think the follow-up series, Ski Resort Rebuild, would be even more entertaining. It would contain all the elements of successful unscripted television: a novel environment, large and expensive machinery, demolition, shouting, meddlesome authorities, and an endless sequence of puzzles confronting a charismatic leader and his band of chain-smoking hourlies.The rainbow arcing over all of this would of course be reinvention. Take something teetering on apocalyptic set-piece and transform it into an ordered enterprise that makes the kids go “wheeeeee!” Raw optimism and self-aware naivete would slide into exasperation and despair, the launchpad for stubborn triumphalism tempered by humility. Cut to teaser for season two.Though I envision a six- or eight-episode season, the template here is the concise and satisfying Hoarders, which condenses a days-long home dejunking into a half-hour of television. One minute, Uncle Frank's four-story house is filled with his pizza box collection and every edition of the Tampa Bay Bugle dating back to 1904. But as 15 dumpster trucks from TakeMyCrap.com drive off in convoy, the home that could only be navigated with sonar and wayfinding canines has been transformed into a Flintstones set piece, a couch and a wooly mammoth rug accenting otherwise empty rooms. I can watch these chaos-into-order transformations all day long.Roll into Holiday Mountain this winter, and you'll essentially be stepping into episode four of this eight-part series. The ski area's most atrocious failures have been bulldozed, blown-up, regraded, covered in snow. The two-seater chairlift that Columbus shipped in pieces on the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria has finally been scrapped and replaced with a machine that does not predate modern democracy. The snowguns are no longer powered by hand-cranks. A ski area that, just 18 months ago, was shrinking like an island in rising water is actually debuting two brand-new trails this winter.But the job's not finished. On your left as you drive in is a wide abandoned ridge where four ski lifts once spun. On the open hills, new snowguns glimmer and new-used chairlifts and cats hum, but by Taylor's own admission, his teams are still figuring out how to use all these fancy gadgets. Change is the tide climbing up the beach, but we haven't fully smoothed out the tracked sand yet, and it will take a few more hours to get there.It's fun to be part of something like this, even as an observer. I'll tell you to visit Holiday Mountain this winter for the same reason I'll tell you to go ride Chair 2 at Alpental or the triple at Bluewood or the Primo and Segundo Riblet doubles at Sunlight. By next autumn, each of these lifts, which have dressed their mountains for decades, will make way for modern machines. This is good, and healthy, and necessary for skiing's long-term viability. But experiencing the same place in different forms offers useful lessons in imagination, evolution, and the utility of persistence and willpower. It's already hard to picture that Holiday Mountain that teetered on the edge of collapse just two years ago. In two more years, it could be impossible, so thorough is the current renovation. So go. Bonus: they have skiing.Podcast NotesOn indies sticking togetherDespite the facile headlines, conglomerates are not taking over American skiing. As of my last count, about 73 percent of U.S. ski areas are still independently operated. And while these approximately three-quarters of active ski areas likely account for less than half of all skier visits, consumers do still have plenty of choice if they don't want to go Epkonic.New York, in particular, is a redoubt of family-owned and -operated mountains. Other than Vail-owned Hunter and state-owned Belleayre, Gore, and Whiteface, every single one of the state's 51 ski areas is under independent management. Taylor calls out several of these New York owners in our conversation, including many past podcast guests. These are all tremendous conversations, all streaked with the same sincere determination and grit that's obvious in Taylor's pod.Massachusetts is also a land of independent ski areas, including the Swiss watch known as Wachusett:On PartekPartek is one of the delightful secrets of U.S. skiing. The company, founded in 1993 by Hagen Schulz, son of the defunct Borvig lifts President Gary Schulz, installs one or two or zero new chairlifts in a typical year. Last year, it was a fixed-grip quad at Trollhaugen, Wisconsin and a triple at Mt. Southington, Connecticut. The year before, it was the new Sandy quad at Saddleback. Everyone raves about the quality of the lifts and the experience of working with Partek's team. Saddleback GM Jim Quimby laid this out for us in detail when he joined me on the podcast last year:Trollhaugen owner and GM Jim Rochford, Jr. was similarly effusive:I'm underscoring this point because if you visit Partek's website, you'll be like “I hope they have this thing ready for Y2K.” But this is your stop if you need a new SKF 6206-2RS1, which is only $17!On the old Catskills resort hotels with ski areasNew York is home to more ski areas (51) than any state in America, but there are still far more lost ski areas here than active ones. The New York Lost Ski Areas Project estimates that the ghosts of up to 350 onetime ski hills haunt the state. This is not so tragic as it sounds, as the vast majority of these operations consisted of a goat pulling a toboggan up 50 vertical feet beside Fiesty Pete's dairy barn. These operated for the lifespan of a housefly and no one missed them when they disappeared. On the opposite end were a handful of well-developed, multi-lift ski areas that have died in modernity: Scotch Valley (1988), Shu Maker (1999), Cortina (mid-90s), and Big Tupper (2012). But in the middle sat dozens of now-defunct surface-tow bumps, some with snowmaking, some attached to the famous and famously extinct Borsch Belt Catskills resorts.It is this last group that Taylor and I discuss in the podcast. He estimates that “probably a dozen” ski areas once operated in Sullivan County. Some of these were standalone operations like Holiday, but many were stapled to large resort hotels like The Nevele and Grossingers. I couldn't find a list of the extinct Catskills resorts that once offered skiing, and none appeared to have bothered drawing a trailmap.While these add-on ski areas are a footnote in the overall story of U.S. skiing, an activity-laying-around-to-do-at-a-resort can have a powerful multiplier effect. Here are some things that I only do if I happen across a readymade setup: shoot pool, ice skate, jet ski, play basketball, fish, play minigolf, toss cornhole bags. I enjoy all of these things, but I won't plan ahead to do them on purpose. I imagine skiing acted in this fashion for much of the Bortsch Belt crowd, like “oh let's go try that snowskiing thing between breakfast and our 11:00 baccarat game.” And with some of these folks, skiing probably became something they did on purpose.The closest thing modernity delivers to this is indoor skiing, which, attached to a mall – as Big Snow is in New Jersey – presents itself as Something To Do. Which is why I believe we need a lot more such centers, and soon.On shrinking Holiday MountainSome ski areas die all at once. Holiday Mountain curdled over decades, to the husk Taylor purchased last year. Check the place out in 2000, with lifts zinging all over the place across multiple faces:A 2003 flood smashed the terrain near the entrance, and by 2007, Holiday ran just two lifts:At some indeterminant point, the ski area also abandoned the Turkey Trot double. This 2023 trailmap shows the area dedicated to snowtubing, though to my knowledge no such activity was ever conducted there at scale.On the lift you see from Route 17Anyone cruising NY State 17 can see this chairlift rising off the northwest corner of the ski area:This is essentially a billboard, as Taylor left the terminal in place after demolishing the lower part of the long-inactive lift.Taylor intends to run a lift back up this hill and re-open all the old terrain. But first he has to restore the slopes, which eroded significantly in their last life as a Motocross course. There is no timeline for this, but Taylor works fast, and I wouldn't be shocked to see the terrain come back online as soon as 2025.On NY 17's transformation into I-86New York 17 is in the midst of a decades-long evolution into Interstate 86, with long stretches of the route that spans southern New York already signed as such. But the interstate designation comes with standards that define lane number and width, bridge height, shoulder dimensions, and maximum grade, among many other particulars, including the placement and length of exit and entrance ramps. Exit 108, which provides direct eastbound access to and egress from Holiday Mountain, is fated to close whenever the highway gods close the gap that currently splits I-86 into segments.On Norway MountainHoliday is the second ski area comeback story featured on the pod in recent months, following the tale of dormant-since-2017 Norway Mountain, Michigan:On Holiday's high-energy social media accountsTaylor has breathlessly documented Holiday's comeback on the ski area's Instagram and Facebook accounts. They're incredible. Follow recommended. On Tuxedo RidgeThis place frustrates me. Once a proud beginners-oriented ski center with four chairlifts and a 450-foot vertical drop, the bump dropped dead around 2014 without warning or explanation, despite a prime location less than an hour from New York City.I hiked the place in 2020, and wrote about it:On Ski Areas of New YorkSki Areas of New York, or SANY, is one of America's most effective state ski area organizations. I've hosted the organization's president, Scott Brandi, on the podcast a couple of times:Compulsory mention of ORDAThe Olympic Regional Development Authority, which manages New York State-owned Belleayre, Gore, and Whiteface mountains, lost $47.3 million in its last fiscal year. One ORDA board member, in response to the report, said that it's “amazing how well we are doing,” according to the Adirondack Explorer. Which makes a lot of the state's independent ski area operators say things like, “Huh?” That's probably a fair response, since $47.3 million would likely be sufficient for the state to simply purchase every ski area in New York other than Hunter, Windham, Holiday Valley, and Bristol.On high-speed ropetowsI'll keep writing about these forever because they are truly amazing and there should be 10 of them at every ski area in America:Welch Village, Minnesota. Video by Stuart Winchester.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us.The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 82/100 in 2024, and number 582 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

Nostalgie - L'info qui va Bien
Les calendriers de L'Avent 2024 !

Nostalgie - L'info qui va Bien

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 2:29


Vous faites peut- être partie des 13 millions de français a en avoir un : un calendrier de l'Avent ! Philippe et Sany vous donnent toutes les nouveautés de cette année

sany
Nostalgie - L'info qui va Bien
Les calendriers de L'Avent 2024 !

Nostalgie - L'info qui va Bien

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 2:29


Vous faites peut- être partie des 13 millions de français a en avoir un : un calendrier de l'Avent ! Philippe et Sany vous donnent toutes les nouveautés de cette année

sany
泰度Voice
S3E7|从世界工厂到去全世界建厂,中国制造业的钢铁与梦想

泰度Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 41:06


历史上,英国、美国、日本和德国等国家在成为全球最大的贸易顺差国后,均不约而同通过推动产业出海解决贸易失衡问题,在此过程中成长出诸如施耐德、小松机械及丰田汽车等全球龙头企业。如今,中国企业和中国资本大规模扬帆起航、出海弄潮已有超过二十年历史,在一步步走向世界的过程中,中国企业出海经历了从单纯出口到全球资源布局的演变,拥有完备产业链的中国制造业正是其中的典型代表。 在快速变化的内外部环境下,出海已成为众多行业共识,但如何选择合适的出海方式——海外并购、直接投资建厂或与当地企业合资经营——以及如何高效、巧妙地本地化,更考验企业的决策智慧与远见。本期《泰度Voice》邀请华泰联合证券国际业务部联席主管项晨对话研究所机械行业首席研究员倪正洋,以制造业为窗口,结合丰富的行业案例和真实的海外见闻,深入浅出地解释当前中国制造企业出海的拉力与推力,本土化的动力与阻力,欢迎收听。 第三季以来,泰度栏目已推出多期出海主题,涉及交通运输、互联网、汽车、消费及海外并购等话题,欢迎对出海感兴趣的听众在历史节目中订阅收听。未来我们将持续更新出海系列,伴随并记录中国企业乘风破浪、激流勇进。 聊天的人 华泰联合证券国际业务部联席主管 项晨 研究所机械行业首席研究员 倪正洋 时间轴 00:02 中国企业出海的核心在于扩大市场和推动技术创新 03:11 企业出海是实现全球化增长的必然路径,可以借鉴日本、德国等国的海外投资经验 06:09 丰田通过本地建厂和推出雷克萨斯品牌成功进入国际市场 07:45 施耐德电气与中国企业成立合资公司,以此进入中国市场 10:36 小松在美国以高报价并购本地公司,使得小松的美国市占率显著提升 14:46 中国制造业在产能与技术广度上已经领先,需要通过并购补齐技术稳定度 17:04 机械行业出海案例:三一重工的海外营收占比过半,在欧美市场表现突出 21:36 中国企业出海并购目前以产业链整合为导向,逐步聚焦风险控制和长期发展 24:10 产品出海相对成熟,产能出海因成本和效率差异需谨慎布局 29:26 全球制造业大国中,中国在全产业链布局和产能上占优势 33:18 国际并购面临文化差异和规则壁垒,需充分了解当地商业规则与监管要求 40:43 当前宏观环境和产能提升为企业出海创造了良好机会 泰度小课堂 中国溢价(China Premium):过去一些中国企业在海外收购时,为了顺利完成交易,可能支付了高于市场平均水平的价格。这种现象逐渐减少,反映出中国企业在国际并购中愈加成熟,注重投资的理性和经济效益。 中联重科(Zoomlion):中国领先的工程机械制造公司。近年来,中联重科加速在全球市场布局,特别是开拓中东和东南亚等新兴市场。 三一重工(SANY):中国领先的工程机械制造公司。近年来,三一重工的海外业务不仅依赖直接出口,还通过建立生产基地、并购本地企业等方式提升国际市场份额。 小松(Komatsu):日本著名的工程机械制造公司,专注于生产工程机械、矿山设备和工业机械。在上世纪80年代,小松通过进入北美市场并实施本地化生产,逐步巩固了其全球市场地位。 灯塔工厂:在数字化和智能化生产方面处于领先地位的工厂,具备高度自动化、实时监控和数据驱动的生产管理特点。这类工厂通常配备AI、物联网、机器人等前沿技术,极大地提升了生产效率和产品质量。 延展阅读 1、研报名称:全球化路在何方?来自施耐德的启示 时间:2024-07-15 作者:倪正洋S0570522100004 | BTM566 杨云逍S0570523070001 风险提示:汇率变动,海外市场需求增长不及预期,海外出口竞争加剧,研报所涉及未覆盖或未上市公司仅系资料整理,并非推荐或覆盖此类公司。 2、研报名称:小松:全球化扩张启示录 时间:2024-08-06 作者:倪正洋S0570522100004 | BTM566 史俊奇S0570522110002 | BTM901 风险提示:复盘具有主观性,汇率变动,海外出口竞争加剧。 制作团队 主编:原瑞阳 项目统筹:韦晔 协调:张婷婷 声音设计:邵旻 节目运营:邓逸轩 本节目录制于2024年10月18日,本播客不保证节目播出时援引数据信息的及时、准确、完整。 法律声明 本播客不是华泰证券股份有限公司研究报告(下称”华泰证券”)的发布平台,旨在为公众提供宏观、产业、市场热点解读,不构成华泰证券开展证券投资咨询业务或提供任何的投资建议、投资分析意见。本播客不构成任何合同或承诺的基础,不因任何单纯订阅本播客的行为而将订阅人视为华泰证券客户。任何读者在订阅本播客前,请自行评估接收相关推送内容的适当性,且若使用本播客所载内容,务必寻求专业投资顾问的指导及解读。 本播客内容可能涉及华泰证券分析师对华泰证券已发布研究报告的解读,或转发、摘编华泰证券已发布研究报告的部分内容及观点,完整的分析应以报告发布当日的完整研究报告内容为准。订阅者仅使用本播客内容,可能会因缺乏对完整报告的了解或缺乏相关的解读而产生理解上的歧义。如需了解完整内容,请具体参见华泰证券所发布的完整报告。 就本播客内容涉及的嘉宾言论,华泰证券已事先提醒嘉宾其言论及信息来源应合法合规,不得泄露内幕信息、上市公司重大未公开信息或其他敏感信息,不得侵犯第三方任何合法权益。本播客内容中的嘉宾言论仅代表嘉宾个人意见,不代表华泰证券立场,也不构成对读者的投资建议。 华泰证券对本播客节目文字、音频、图片、链接等形式所载信息的准确性、可靠性、时效性及完整性不作任何明示或暗示的保证。播客内容所述意见、观点和预测仅作为音频录制日的观点和判断。该等意见、评估及预测无需通知即可随时更改。 在任何情况下,本播客文字、音频、图片、链接等形式所载信息均不构成对任何人的投资建议。订阅者不应单独依靠本播客内容而取代自身独立的判断,应自主做出投资决策并自行承担投资风险。对依据或者使用本播客内容所造成的任何后果,华泰证券及节目嘉宾均不承担任何形式的责任。 本播客所有内容的版权均为华泰证券所有。未经华泰证券书面许可,任何机构和个人不得以任何形式转发、转载或部分转载、发表或引用本播客任何内容。 本节目由华泰证券出品,JustPod制作,小宇宙、喜马拉雅、苹果播客同步上线。

The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast
Macquarie Invests $1.7B in DESRI, Sany Plans European Factory

The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 8:34


Macquarie Asset Management invest $1. 7 billion in D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments, which operates over 6 gigawatts. Chinese wind turbine manufacturer Sany is preparing to establish a production facility in Europe by 2026. GCM Grosvenor has acquired a 25% stake in the 845 megawatt Shepherds Flat Wind Farm in Oregon. Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard's StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes' YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! Pardalote Consulting - https://www.pardaloteconsulting.comWeather Guard Lightning Tech - www.weatherguardwind.comIntelstor - https://www.intelstor.com Allen Hall: I'm Allen Hall, president of Weather Guard Lightning Tech, and I'm here with the founder and CEO of IntelStor, Phil Totaro, and the chief commercial officer of Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Joel Saxum and this is your News Flash. News Flash is brought to you by our friends at IntelStor. If you want market intelligence that generates revenue, then book a demonstration of IntelStor at intelstor. com. Macquarie Asset Management has agreed to acquire a substantial minority stake in D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments, also known as DESRE. This investment, valued up to 1. 7 billion U. S. dollars, aims to bolster Desiree's growth and enhance its market position. Desiree, a leading renewable energy company, currently operates a platform with over 6 gigawatts of gross capacity in projects either operational or under construction. Phill, when you start tossing around the B for billion number in financial exchanges, there's a massive movement of cash in renewables. Philip Totaro: Well, and this follows on the theme that we've been talking about over the past, whatever, two, three months about asset management firms and financial investors kind of pouring money into renewable energy asset owners. Obviously, Macquarie's got a substantial background throughout their investments in Australia, in Europe throughout the rest of the world. Interestingly enough, the U. S. is a market where they've been kind of under penetrated. So, they took their time with evaluating who to partner up with and the fact they picked D. E. Shaw is, is kind of fascinating. You Shaw's got a, a fine track record with the, the performance of their assets, according to our data. And most of their projects are quite profitable. So it's it's a good way for Macquarie to get their, their foot in the door. Joel Saxum: De Shaw on the renewable side, right? De Shaw is a very large company, $60 billion in assets and committed capital with a smaller portion of that being the renewables arm. But it's, it's an odd thing because in the, in the operational circles that we talk to a lot in the wind energy industry in the United States, we don't hear de Shah's name too much. But of course you look at this six gigawatts of power moving and grooving here. One thing that's interesting to me, of course, is the stuff that we follow on the the Uptime podcast here is Macquarie Asset Management recently acquired Onyx Insight. So you could see some Onyx Insight kit being deployed on these DE Shaw renewables Allen Hall: assets shortly. Chinese wind turbine manufacturer Sany is preparing to establish a production facility in Europe by 2026. The company is in advanced talks with potential European customers and has narrowed down potential production locations to three, with Germany and Spain among the options. The company expects to finalize its first European order by the end of this year, initially shipping turbines from China while offering services through partners in Europe. And it's service center in Germany, China, moving into the European marketplace with a fac...

7 milliards de voisins
Vivre dans une ville olympique – Barcelone, 1992

7 milliards de voisins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2024 48:30


C'est avec des «hola, hola, hola» que les 67 000 spectateurs du stade de Montjuïc saluent le monde entier, ce 25 juillet 1992. Une manière de dire «bienvenue à Barcelone» et d'accueillir les Jeux olympiques. Souvent citée en exemple comme la ville bonne élève, les planètes sont en effet alignées pour Barcelone, en cette année 1992. L'engouement des habitants est au rendez-vous devant la transformation de la ville qui s'ouvre sur la mer et gagne son périphérique. La capitale catalane est désormais sur la carte du monde. Sur le plan sportif aussi, la ville se prend au jeu grâce à la construction d'infrastructures et la mise en place d'une formation sportive pour les plus jeunes.  Avec :• Elise Gazengel, journaliste, correspondante de RFI à Barcelone en Espagne. En fin d'émission :  La chronique Le futur du sport de Juliette Brault :Le monde des enfants : 5 - Égalité Filles-garçons.  C'est le dernier épisode de notre série spéciale du « Monde des enfants » en version olympique. Des enfants nous parlent de leur rapport au sport. Que mettent-ils derrière les mots «mental», «performance» ? Quels champions suivent-ils avec passion ? Et aujourd'hui, un sujet qui prête souvent à débat, car il ravive des souvenirs de la cour de récréation : l'égalité entre les filles et les garçons dans le sport. Vous allez entendre Alexandre, Dayenka, Tya, Sany, Hants, Celya, Clément, Davy, Léana et Farah au micro de notre reporter Charlie Dupiot. Programmation musicale :► Barcelona – Montserrat Caballe y Freddie Mercury ► Gitana Hechicera – Peret ► Polvo de tu vida - Chencho Corleone, J. Balvin. 

7 milliards de voisins
Vivre dans une ville olympique – Barcelone, 1992

7 milliards de voisins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2024 48:30


C'est avec des «hola, hola, hola» que les 67 000 spectateurs du stade de Montjuïc saluent le monde entier, ce 25 juillet 1992. Une manière de dire «bienvenue à Barcelone» et d'accueillir les Jeux olympiques. Souvent citée en exemple comme la ville bonne élève, les planètes sont en effet alignées pour Barcelone, en cette année 1992. L'engouement des habitants est au rendez-vous devant la transformation de la ville qui s'ouvre sur la mer et gagne son périphérique. La capitale catalane est désormais sur la carte du monde. Sur le plan sportif aussi, la ville se prend au jeu grâce à la construction d'infrastructures et la mise en place d'une formation sportive pour les plus jeunes.  Avec :• Elise Gazengel, journaliste, correspondante de RFI à Barcelone en Espagne. En fin d'émission :  La chronique Le futur du sport de Juliette Brault :Le monde des enfants : 5 - Égalité Filles-garçons.  C'est le dernier épisode de notre série spéciale du « Monde des enfants » en version olympique. Des enfants nous parlent de leur rapport au sport. Que mettent-ils derrière les mots «mental», «performance» ? Quels champions suivent-ils avec passion ? Et aujourd'hui, un sujet qui prête souvent à débat, car il ravive des souvenirs de la cour de récréation : l'égalité entre les filles et les garçons dans le sport. Vous allez entendre Alexandre, Dayenka, Tya, Sany, Hants, Celya, Clément, Davy, Léana et Farah au micro de notre reporter Charlie Dupiot. Programmation musicale :► Barcelona – Montserrat Caballe y Freddie Mercury ► Gitana Hechicera – Peret ► Polvo de tu vida - Chencho Corleone, J. Balvin. 

Pânico
Rav Sany e César Mello (Caçador de pickpockets)

Pânico

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 121:55


O convidado do programa Pânico dessa terça-feira (30) é Rav Sany. Rabino Sany Sonnenreich, mais conhecido como Rav Sany, é neto de sobreviventes do Holocausto. Começou sua preparação para o rabinato em Israel logo após terminar o Colegial na renomada Or Israel College. Estudou a Torá por oito anos ao lado de grandes cabalistas, rabinos e mestres da Torá de nossa geração e, por fim, especializou-se no trabalho comunitário voltado para os jovens. Recebeu seu diploma de rabino pelo Instituto Ner le Élef, em Jerusalém. Atualmente, mora em São Paulo e é diretor do Olámi Faria Lima, projeto de aproximação e direcionamento de jovens às suas raízes na cidade. Eles fazem parte da rede mundial Olámi, com 320 centros pelo mundo todo, toda semana seu projeto traz um cardápio eclético de atividades como: palestras, encontros com bate-papo, projetos sociais, assistenciais, viagens, almoços, entre outros eventos que contam com lições de vida, e conteúdos focados em preparar os jovens para uma jornada mais alegre e repleta de significado tanto no aspecto pessoal como profissional, para uma vida bem sucedida na esfera material e também na espiritual. Rabino Sany também é presidente do Instituto Rav Sany que visa disseminar os valores milenares judaicos por meio de uma linguagem acessível, moderna, atrativa e irreverente, mas sem perder suas raízes originais e tradicionais, ambicionando ir além dos muros da comunidade e impactar toda a sociedade maior. Além do audiovisual, o instituto Rav Sany promove eventos culturais beneficentes e ações sociais voltados para as comunidades carentes, a fim de promover a igualdade e a justiça social.  Sany ainda é presidente da Sonnen Group, Holding que administra, coordena e executa os negócios presentes no RS Networking Prime Club, ecossistema para Ceo's extraordinários que atrela seus lucros a um propósito nobre e entidades de valor. O rabino também é apresentador do Rav Sany Live Show, programa de entretenimento com inspiração e entrevistas exibido em rede nacional pela Rede Mais Família, TV SCC SBT e + SBT. Como escritor, assina a obra “Já Pensou Nisso?”. Rav Sany leciona em diversas entidades, onde colabora como consultor e disseminador da cultura judaica, é continuamente convidado para ministrar palestras por todo o Brasil e no exterior e representa constantemente a comunidade judaica na imprensa brasileira! Como comentarista, o programa traz César Mello, o caçador de pickpockets.

Inteligência Ltda.
1141 - MOISÉS E A HÍSTORIA DA FÉ: LUIZ SAYÃO E RAV SANY SONNENREICH

Inteligência Ltda.

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 169:55


LUIZ SAYÃO é mestre em hebraico e SANY SONNENREICH é rabino. Eles vão conversar sobre Moisés e a história da fé. O Vilela era amigão de Moisés e fez a ilustração das tábuas da lei.

THE STARTING 5
SANY HIS NAME AND HE APPEARS... I BELIVE IN ED MOLINA!

THE STARTING 5

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 93:28


Oh, you thought I was calling for Joe Hendry? Lol. Our friend Ed Moina(of The Ed and Fuzz Show) joins us this week for some fun! For everything THE STARTING 5 PODCAST related. Visit our Linktree  https://linktr.ee/THESTARTING5PODCAST Or our website  https://www.thestarting5podcast.com don't forget to support our sponsor while using our promo code “STARTING5” for 20% off at Hooksrub.com JOIN OUR FACEBOOK GROUP!!! https://www.facebook.com/groups/577971386096987/?ref=share THESTARTING5SHOW@GMAIL.COM

BrunetCast
BrunetCast #267 | Rav Sany | A verdadeira missão do povo de Israel no mundo

BrunetCast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 82:41


Inscreva-se na Conferência Destino: https://conferenciadestino.com.br/

Pânico
Pânico - 07/12/2023 - Rav Sany e Gustavo Segré

Pânico

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 116:31


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Julie McCarthy: Jewels Says
Fun Friends: Sany Guest

Julie McCarthy: Jewels Says

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 64:05


Jewels chats with Sany Guest about her rocky start in life, her adoption, celiac disease, growing up feeling different and at times even fetishized, in spite of having a safe and loving home; plus so many things, such as algorithmic bubbles, allowing people, including yourself, the grace to feel, listen and learn; housing insecurity, why representation matters, her wonderful mom and the positive male influences in her life.Instagram: @jewelssaysEmail: jewelssays@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Inteligência Ltda.
1004 - GUERRA SEM FIM: MÁRCIO PITLIUK, GHUNTER, PAULO MATHIAS E RAV SANY

Inteligência Ltda.

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 176:54


MARCIO PITLIUK é cineasta, GUNTHER RUDZIT é cientista político, PAULO MATHIAS é jornalista e RAV SANY é rabino. Eles vão conversar sobre o conflito entre Israel, Hamas e a Palestina. O Vilela, mais uma vez, vai ficar balançando a cabeça e concordando, sem fazer ideia do que tá rolando no papo.

The More You Know, The Better It Tastes
Ep. 48 Chan Sany - Stuffed Burritos

The More You Know, The Better It Tastes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2023 37:48


Two former Californians met in San Antonio and though they love Texas, they missed the burritos they used to get back home. They decided to fix that problem by opening their own burrito shop. Guest Chan Sany and his business partner, Dimitri Karimbakas own Stuffed Burritos. They have created a ton of super flavorful burritos, eggrolls, tacos and other goodies! Here the story of Stuffed in this week's podcast! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
The Storm Live #1: Ski New York President Scott Brandi

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 26:30


The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and to support my work, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.What is this?A new, occasional podcast series capturing on-the-ground conversations with prominent ski industry leaders. All 148 Storm Skiing Podcasts have been recorded via phone or an internet recording service (mostly Zencastr). That is partly because it's easier, and partly because I had the misfortune to launch this podcast five months before Covid shin-kicked the world into hibernation. But over the past year, I've led panels or one-on-one interviews with industry execs in Boston, Banff, Savannah, and Lake Placid. In many cases, these are confidential sessions for the benefit of the folks in the room. However, sometimes I'm allowed to record them. And when I do, I'll share them here.In this case, Ski Areas of New York and Ski PA invited me to their annual joint expo to moderate a panel of five ski area general managers. That session was off the record, but I spoke with Ski NY President Scott Brandi afterward. We sat down in a room bristling with camaraderie and positive energy, ski people enjoying one last inhale before ratcheting into turbo mode and the ramp-up to winter.WhoScott Brandi, President of Ski Areas of New YorkRecorded onSeptember 26, 2023About Ski Areas of New York (and Ski PA)Ski Areas of New York is a trade group representing, well, the ski areas of New York. According to their website, SKI/NY works “on behalf of its membership to promote fair legislation, develop marketing programs, create educational opportunities, and enhance the public awareness of snow sports throughout the State and region.” Most large ski states have some version of Ski New York, but as far as organization and effectiveness, this is one of the best.Ski NY co-hosts this annual session with Ski PA, the smaller state association to its south. The two organizations share a lot of challenges: crummy weather, dated infrastructure, and legislatures that are not always aligned with the industry's interests. But their ski areas are also national leaders in crafting a viable ski experience from marginal weather, in high-volume operations, in hacking the improbable from the impossible.Here's the combined inventory of active ski areas from both states – not all of which are necessarily members of the state organization (mostly, the little ropetow joints and private neighborhood ski areas don't bother or can't afford the membership dues):What we talked aboutWhat's the point of this whole thing?; why should skiers care what happens here?; why independent ski areas are more connected to one another than you may think; the grind of working in skiing; how events like the SANY convention benefit family-owned ski areas; how SANY helps its ski areas from a regulatory point of view; why Pennsylvania and New York combine this annual event; the detrimental impact of ski industry consolidation on the event; what killed Ski PA's kids' passport program; and reasons for optimism in skiing;    Podcast NotesOn Kelly Pawlak, head of the National Ski Areas Association (NSAA)Brandi mentions Kelly Pawlak, CEO of the National Ski Areas Association (NSAA). The NSAA is the national version of the state associations, and it works closely with all of them. Pawlak has appeared on The Storm Skiing Podcast a couple of times, most recently in 2021:On my “What Keeps You Up At Night” panelMy conversation followed a panel that I hosted with five ski area general managers:* Ski Big Bear, Pennsylvania GM Lori Phillips* Mount Pleasant of Edinboro, Pennsylvania GM Andrew Halmi* Whiteface, New York GM Aaron Kellett* Woods Valley, New York owner and GM Tim Woods* Mountain Creek, New Jersey GM Evan KovacThat session was not recorded, and the context of it was meant to be kept to the room we held it in. However, my intention is to host each of these folks on The Storm Skiing Podcast at some future point. Halmi has already appeared on the podcast, and it was a terrific conversation:On “what happened at Snow Ridge”Brandi references “what happened at Snow Ridge.” What happened at Snow Ridge was an EF3 tornado smashed all five of the mountain's lifts. Since this isn't a topic I've been able to focus on explicitly in this newsletter, I'll refer you to this recent blog post by Snow Ridge owner Nick Mir:let's go back to the morning of Tuesday, August 8th. I made my way out early that morning, where people had already gathered to witness the destruction. I figured there would be some trees down, maybe a little damage after the high winds and rain, but I was not prepared for the reality of the situation. From the top of Snow Pocket, straight down to the bottom of Little Mountain, an EF3 tornado had left a trail of mangled trees, lifts, equipment, and buildings in its wake. Four of our 5 lifts had been severely damaged, our secondary groomer crushed by a massive tree, the warming yurt resembled a pancake more than it did a building, among countless other damages. It was overwhelming, to say the least. In all honesty, the thought of packing it in and abandoning ship crossed my mind more than once. Wondering if this was something that we could realistically recover from, let alone operate this season.But then the support started pouring in. Phone calls, texts, emails, visits from friends, family, strangers. It was not only comforting, but incredibly humbling. We quickly realized that this was not just a tragedy for our family business, but for a much larger community that wasn't going to let this keep us down. The shear amount of support we've received speaks volumes to the importance of this ski area to so many people. Without it, Snow Ridge would be no more than a memory. The scope of the recovery effort truly is staggering, and none of it would have been possible without those who have stood behind us and lifted us back up.Over 120 people have showed up to our two volunteer clean up days. Most notably some of our closest competitors including a crew from Dry Hill, a crew from Greek Peak, and Tim Woods from Woods Valley. Businesses donated equipment including Caza Construction, Riverside Equipment Rentals, and G&G Tree Service. Countless others have made monetary donations, donated tools, and their time to help us bounce back. We started a GoFundMe campaign after we learned that the majority of the tree removal, the crushed groomer, yurt, and other smaller damages would not be covered under our insurance policy. That campaign is nearing $40,000 and may very well cover the logging and reclamation expenses that we've incurred so far. The generosity shown by so many of you has literally kept this business alive. We quite literally cannot thank you all enough!The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 92/100 in 2023, and number 478 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane, or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

DBAOCM Podcast
Podcast Carreira em TI - Sany Arruda

DBAOCM Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2023 20:10


Podcast Carreira em TI - Sany Arruda   Entre no nosso canal do Telegram para receber conteúdos Exclusivos sobre Banco de dados Oracle:   https://t.me/joinchat/AAAAAEb7ufK-90djaVuR4Q

The Runner's Club Podcast
Ep 064 | Family Style

The Runner's Club Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2023 123:33


In this episode we're joined by Sany Nguyen. Born in San Diego, raised in Southern California, and currently a dual resident of California and Chicago. Sany is an attorney and business consultant by profession, but her passion also lies in community work and sports and always trying to find ways to intersect these two groups into a cohesive unit with a focus on DEI. She is the Founder of Family Style RC, an Asian American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander centric (AANHPI) community initiative centered on bringing visibility, community, and representation to these athletes. Find her and her group on IG @sany.delight + @familystylerc Hosted by Courtney Phillips @courtneynphillips & Ian Gonzalez @acoolthought. Intro by producer Dini - @dinibeats. Podcast edited by Jerami Watson - @teezythegreat (twitter) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/therunnersclubpodcast/message

“54 Days of Roses”
S8 Day 8: Sorrowful Mysteries in Petition

“54 Days of Roses”

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 33:18


Hello Family.Welcome back! This is day 8 of our 54-Day Rosary Novena.Today is the day before Ash Wednesday and lent begins tomorrow. Lent is such an important time for Christians around the world. It is a 40 day period of preparation to Celebrate the Lords Resurrection at Easter.There's a beautiful quote from Pope Benedict XVI (16)"Lent stimulates us to let the Word of God penetrate our life and in this way to know the fundamental truth: who we are, where we come from, where we must go, what path we must take in life." -Pope Benedict XVI.In this time of Lent, I invite you to ask your family and friends to Join us in prayer. Our 54-Day Rosary Novena is a beautiful way to prepare our hearts for Easter.If you would like us to pray for you and your family, Please submit your prayer request on our website. 54daysofroses.com. the link is listed in the show notes.Day 8 -  Sorrowful Mysteries in PetitionLet's get started; today, we're praying the Sorrowful mysteries in the petition. Blessed Mother, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, help us to live and celebrate, in our daily lives, Jesus in the Eucharist.Blessed Mother, we pray for our family's intentions here on the podcast, intentions received by email, Instagram, and YouTube.And we pray for the intentions of everyone who sponsor season 8 by sharing, rating, and donating to the podcast: Monica, Annie, Abel, Patty, Jasbir, Sany, Yenny, Emily, Julie, Angel, Merv, Gabby, Vriza, Rosemary, Sue, Enrique, Keev, Dan, Lizbeth, Sharon, Mary, Ryan, and Maria. With love,Maritza MendezLinktr.eehttps://linktr.ee/54daysofrosesWebsite:https://www.54daysofroses.com/Submit your prayer requesthttps://www.54daysofroses.com/requestsSubscribe to our YouTube channelhttps://www.youtube.com/@54daysofrosesDownload the Prayer Guidehttps://www.54daysofroses.com/how-to-praySupport our Ministryhttps://www.54daysofroses.com/supportDonate via Venmohttps://account.venmo.com/u/Novena54DaysofRosesDonate via PayPalhttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/54DaysOfRosesContent Creator & Web designhttps://lillywriteshere.com/Support the show

“54 Days of Roses”
S8 Día 8: Misterios Dolorosos en Petición

“54 Days of Roses”

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 38:24


Hola familia¡Bienvenido de nuevo! Este es el día 8 de nuestra Novena del Rosario de 54 días.Hoy es un día antes de Miércoles de Ceniza y mañana comienza la Cuaresma. La Cuaresma es un tiempo tan importante para los cristianos. Es un período de 40 días de preparación para Celebrar la Resurrección del Señor en Semana Santa.Hay una hermosa fraze del Papa Benedicto XVI (16): “La Cuaresma nos estimula a dejar que la Palabra de Dios penetre en nuestra vida y así conocer la verdad fundamental: quiénes somos, de dónde venimos, hacia dónde debemos ir, qué camino debemos tomar en la vida”. - Papa Benedicto XVI.En este tiempo de Cuaresma, los invito a pedirles a sus familiares y amigos que se unan a nosotros en oración.  Nuestra Novena del Rosario de 54 días es una hermosa manera de preparar nuestros corazones para la Pascua.Si desea que oremos por usted y su familia, envíe su solicitud de oración en nuestro sitio web. 54diasderosas.com. el link aparece en las notas del programa.Dia 8: Misterios Dolorosos en PeticionEmpecemos; hoy rezamos los Misterios Dolorosos en Petición.Santísima Madre, Reina del Santísimo Rosario, ayúdanos a vivir y celebrar, en nuestra vida diaria, a Jesús en la Eucaristía.Santísima Madre, oramos por:  Monica, Annie, Abel, Patty, Jasbir, Sany, Yenny, Emily, Julie, Angel, Merv, Gabby, Vriza, Rosemary, Sue, Enrique, Keev, Dan, Lizbeth, Sharon, Mary, Ryan, and Maria. Con amor,Maritza Mendez.Linktr.eehttps://linktr.ee/54daysofrosesPágina webhttps://www.54daysofroses.com/Envía tu Petición de Oraciónhttps://www.54daysofroses.com/requestsSuscríbete a nuestro canal de YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@54daysofrosesApoya nuestro Ministeriohttps://www.54daysofroses.com/supportVenmohttps://account.venmo.com/u/Novena54DaysofRosesPayPalhttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/54DaysOfRosesCreación de Contenido y Diseño Webhttps://lillywriteshere.com/Support the show

On Peace
Joseph Sany on the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit

On Peace

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 7:49


Ahead of this week's summit, USIP's Joseph Sany says the United States has shifted its approach toward the continent: "Long gone are the days where America will come and dictate solutions. This time around, we are willing to listen and support African solutions for African problems."

Trade for Peace
A Trade for Peace Approach for African Stability

Trade for Peace

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 58:48


Tune in today for a special Trade for Peace podcast episode, A TRADE FOR PEACE APPROACH FOR AFRICAN STABILITY, released just in time for the US-Africa Leaders' Summit, taking place in Washington DC this week! Don't miss this enthralling and timely discussion on fragility in Africa! Please join Dr. Joseph Sany, Vice President of the African Centre of the United States Institute for Peace (USIP), an independent institute founded by the US Congress dedicated to the proposition that a world without violent conflict is possible, practical and essential for U.S. and global security. In this episode, Dr. Sany shares his personal and professional experiences in working in fragile and conflict affected states (FCS). He talks about the challenges and drivers of instability and conflict in Africa and how this affects people's daily life. He also explains the United States Strategy to Prevent Conflict and Promote Stability as well as the Global Fragility Act and its role in building sustainable peace by including all stakeholders in the process of resolving conflicts. In particular, Dr. Sany emphasizes the importance of local ownership in addressing fragility. He ends the conversation by sharing his views on the role of the international trading system in fostering and sustaining peace and stability in African countries, particularly those currently acceding to the WTO.   Guest: Joseph Sany, Vice President of the Africa Center, United States Institute for Peace (USIP) Host: Axel M. Addy, former Minister of Commerce and Industry and Chief Negotiator of Liberia's accession to the WTO.

We Say What They Can't Radio
UP It TV - Princess Sany

We Say What They Can't Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2022 55:45


From Growing up Between Manhattan and Brooklyn with a Mom whom herself is in the Entertainment Industry Princess Sany let's it's all out. 21 yrs old and a passion for music, she's walking a lil different now, By Herself

On Peace
Joseph Sany on the International Day of Peace

On Peace

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 10:05


Ahead of the International Day of Peace on September 21, USIP’s Joseph Sany says the occasion is “an opportunity to celebrate, reflect and demonstrate our commitment” to building peace in our communities — as well as a chance to connect with millions of others through the Peace Day Challenge.

Drink the Movies
92 - Pink Ladies & Grease

Drink the Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 56:26


School is back in session at Rydell High, but the star-crossed lovers Danny and Sany get a surprise reunion as they try to navigate their love against the musical backdrop of the Pink Ladies and the T-Birds. This week we are going back to a musical classic, doing the hand jive, mixing up an amazing strawberry cocktail and singing and dancing our way through our senior year. Join us for greased lightening, beauty school dropouts, Twinkies, lettering in cross-country, the impeccable grace of Olivia Newton-John, and a chat about Grease! This week's cocktail comes from Cointreau! https://www.instagram.com/drinkthemovies/ https://twitter.com/drinkthemovies https://www.facebook.com/drinkthemovies https://www.drinkthemovies.com *Please Drink Responsibly*

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
Pony.ai forms autonomous truck JV with Sany Heavy Truck in China

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 3:20


Autonomous vehicle company Pony.ai is forming a strategic joint venture with Sany Heavy Truck, a subsidiary of Chinese heavy equipment manufacturer Sany Heavy Industry, to create an autonomous truck brand.

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
Pony.ai forms autonomous truck JV with Sany Heavy Truck in China

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 3:20


Autonomous vehicle company Pony.ai is forming a strategic joint venture with Sany Heavy Truck, a subsidiary of Chinese heavy equipment manufacturer Sany Heavy Industry, to create an autonomous truck brand.

My Story with CareCredit

After a year of putting of dealing with a painful toothache, Sany was miserable.  Her husband finally convinced her to go see a dentist, where she discovered she'd need to figure out how she could afford an immediate extraction.  "I was in a tailspin," she recalls.  That is, until she found a way out.   My Story is a weekly podcast where we sit down with everyday folks like yourself to talk about how using the CareCredit credit card has helped improve their lives. Check in every Tuesday for new stories at carecredit.com/mystory or subscribe on your favorite podcast app.   CareCredit is a health, wellness and personal care credit card that has helped millions of people through promotional financing options and is accepted at hundreds of thousands of provider and retail locations nationwide.  Learn more at carecredit.com.

Pânico
PÂNICO - 12/04/2022 - Rabino Sany

Pânico

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 130:22


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

444
Kellett-e csalás az újabb kétharmadhoz?

444

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 52:22


Az országgyűlési választásokkal kapcsolatban mind az ellenzéki, mind a kormányoldalon többen beszéltek arról, hogy történtek csalások. Mik voltak a Tiszta szavazás kampány tapasztalatai? Ki és hogyan követhetett el csalást? Lesz-e ennek következménye? Tényleg ezen múlhatott a kétharmad? A Lakmusz podcastjában Bálint Mónikával, a Civil Kollégium Alapítvány ügyvezetőjével, a Tiszta szavazás kampány szervezőjével és Sanyó Ádám adatelemzővel, a taktikaiszavazas.hu egyik szerkesztőjével beszélgettünk.

Gysgacha
#13 - Birinji sezonyň soňky sany we täze ýyl barada.

Gysgacha

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 26:01


Gysgaça podkastynyň birinji ýylyny hem tamamladyk we toparymyz bilen birinji sezonyň jemini jemlemek üçin birnäçe pikirleri paýlaşmagy isledik. Şunuň bilen birlikde Gysgacha topary sizi täze ýylyňyz bilen gutlaýar we düşümli ýyl arzuw etýär. Goşgynyň çeşmesi: Ylham Çeşmesi Youtube kanaly

bizi sany
Stress Free SOULutions Podcast
33. Realities of American Culture | Sany Nguyen

Stress Free SOULutions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 53:42


Vlogger, Health & Wellness Ambassador, and Speaker Sany Nguyen. truly stands behind her mantra of finding “balance, intention, and delight in all I eat, see and do.” Hence her handle Sany Delight. We chat about how Sany Delight came to be, growing up with 5 other siblings, being an Asian American, non-profit work, marathon training, collaboration with brands, and being authentic when creating a brand. Find out more about Sany and follow her on Instagram @sany.delight Fill out the application for Enhance Your Life at: https://www.livewellenhanceyou.com/workwithme Find the full show notes at: https://www.livewellenhanceyou.com/podcast/realities-of-american-culture

The Guys Review
Varsity Blues

The Guys Review

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 103:17


Varsity Blues Welcome to The Guys Review, where we review media, products and experiences.  **READ APPLE REVIEWS/Fan Mail**Mention Twitter DM group - like pinned tweetRead emails**Twitter Poll** - Breakfast Club: 66% gave it 1-2 beers, 33% less than one beerBilly Madison: 100% of the votes gives it 1-2 beers.  Varsity Blues Directed by: Brian Robbins (who hasn't directed anything since 2012, but lots of exectutive producer credits; currently is the President of Kids & Family Entertainment for ViacomCBS Domestic Media Networks, so he over sees Nickelodeon and all kid related stations. Starring:James Van Der BeekJon VoightPaul WalkerRon Lester (was 28 when he shot this movie)Scott CaanAli LarterAmy Smart Released: January 15, 1999Budget: $16M ($26.2M 2021)Box Office: $54.3M ($89M 2021) worldwideRatings:   IMDb 6.5/10 Rotten Tomatoes 43%Metacritic 50% Google Users 80% 1999 Teen Choice AwardsChoice Movie Breakout: James Van Der Beek (won)Choice Drama Movie (nominated)1999 MTV Movie AwardsBest Breakout Performance: James Van Der Beek (won)Best Movie Song (nominated)2000 Blockbuster Entertainment AwardsBest Male Newcomer: James Van Der Beek (nominated) First time you saw the movie? Plot:It opens with a voice over talking about American laws, and how the laws are different in West Canaan Texas, and it's all about Football. To win at all costs. Mox has a conversation with his brother, strapped to a cross. A brief breakfast and Billy Bob arrives to pick up Mox, Harbor, Tweeter, who wants to fuck a pig...? At the school pep rally, Coach Kilmer spells out his successes of 2 state titles, and 22 district titles... Sounds mediocre, like Treys efforts in bed. Harbor speaks about a dream of beating Bingville by more than 22 points. Mox and Julie kiss and make plans to "watch trains tonight." So they gonna bone. Pre game in the locker room, we see the new tweeter end zone dance, and Harbor having a needle stuck in his knee. In the game, up 28-17, Harbor runs the ball in, Billy Bob blocking for him, takes a hit to the head, and he goes down. Game ends Coyotes win, 35-17. After the game, Kilmer finds the book Mox was reading and threatens to cut his ass if his dad hadn't worked his ass off for him. Harbor gets some pills for his knee, and Mox counts down 4 more games. At the after party, everyone is drinking, Tweeter hits some old dude at a high school party in the nuts (SOUND 1), Darcy and Harbor bang on a dryer. They're interrupted by BIlly Bob puking in the washer, but he pukes and rallies (SOUND 2). At practice, 2nd string offence comes in, as Kilmer chews their asses out, the dads on the sidelines comment how great it is, and that the boys need it. As Mox is about to run the oopty-oop, Kilmer kills it and chews out Mox. At a cook out, the dads, again re-living the glory days (like Chris and the 1930's... What were actual flappers like, btw?) Moxs dad misses his pass, and the dads have a pissing contest about their boys, and Mox hits his dad in the face (SOUND 3). In school, they're now talking about sex, in a very clinical sense, Mox gives many examples of boner slang (SOUND 4), followed by Billy Bob collapsing. In the nurses office, he tells Kilmer the nurse said he shouldn't play, but Kilmer doesn't care, tells him he's good to go, like an asshole. In the game, Billy Bob obviously doesn't look well, but he goes out anyway. He collapses, Harbor gets sacked, injuring his knee. HIs dad comments for this not to be happening to him, you know, like a selfish asshole. 17 to 21, with 1:09 to play, Mox goes in. First play he makes a 40 yard pass. He doesn't know the next play, so just calls one, which ends up getting a touchdown, and winning the game. S:The intro, all the characters and hype, obviously every sterotypical highschool football movie ever. So was this the first one?All the announcers were/are actual announcers from small town texas, not actors.When they're at the cook out, Mox doesn't want to throw the ball with his dad, saying "you're going to fall on the bar-b-q"... Now, I'm pretty sure Texas is similar to Alabama. Bar-b-q is a food, you smoke bar b q to cook it. Or you use a grill, or you are grilling on a friday/saturday night. Weird word usage.Y'all ever have highschool parties like that? In the hospital, the Dr tells them Harbor has torn every ligament in his knee, that he'll be out at least a year and a half, if he'll ever play again. Saying, he shouldn't have been playing in the first place, and Kilmer said he never said anything to him before...again, you know, like an asshole. Mox drives Darcy home, and she changes in the car, obviously coming on to him because he's the starting qb now. Tweeter jokes with the police about their "mount me" hats... he claims hes going to go home, but steals the police cruiser, saying he's going to jail instead. Mox stops by a store and is given some free beer...and if that happened, they are SORELY underselling reasons to be playing football. Luckily for Tucker, he could just steal beer from the fridge of his football coach, at home. Tweeter pulls up, naked with some girls in the police cruiser, to get Mox to come with, but he declines. Mox walks to Julies and talks to her about how weird of a night it was. The sheriff is bitching about the players "esposing themselves" and taking the cruiser, saying he may have to start doing something, and Kilmer asks him if his boys are too much for him. The Coyotes are playing an away game, and Mox kills it. In an interview after, he gives a contrived answer, thanking teammates and God, as he starts to revel in the spotlight. At practice, they run the hook and ladder, which Billy Bob didn't understand. After, in Kilmers office, he blames Billy Bob for Harbor, and tells him to 
"fix it"... Again, you know, like an asshole. At school, Darcy comes on to Mox again and invites him to her house. He convinces himself to go, while buying condoms with his little brother at the store. Mox gets to Darcys house, and in a throw back to the intro, he says he feels like he's breaking the law being there. Darcy offers to make an ice cream sundae, with whipped cream, as Mox gets comfortable... She comes out wearing a whipped cream bikini... They kiss, and he stops, to her chagrin. He talks about about he's not sure he loves Julie or not, and she says it's not about love, it's about getting a better shot, and getting out. She's worried Harbor will end up a manager for walmart, coaching JV football. The next day, Wendell tells Mox about his issues with Kilmer being racist, and his stats, which he says he'll help fix. Julie sees Darcy kiss Mox in the hall. Tweeter then tels his theory about bitches (SOUND 5)... as he checks out something wrong with his junk. Julie breaks up with Mox at the drive-in she works at, because she doesn't date football players. The main players are at a strip club, and someone is covering their tab. Billy bob ends up on stage dancing, to everyones amusement. The next dancer ends up being the sex ed teacher...and she can educate them. The boys toast to Ms. Davis (SOUND 6), and walk out to a very bright day. S:Talking about the privilege of being a "star" player, stealing the police car, and Mox being given free beer. Talk about brother being brought home by police, so he wouldn't get suspended, etc.What happened to Moxs car? He dropped off Darcy, what happened to it? He walked downtown, got beer, walked to Julies, and no car?How different do you think football culture is NOW, compared to the 70's, 80's, 90's 2000's? Think it's still like this in places? College level?Oldest woman you've ever had sex with? Ms. Anita doesn't count... Give someone eles a chance, Chris. During the game, they're being crushed, Mox is getting blocked and sacked. They're all hungover, and cant make a play, interceptions, Kilmer is pissed. They lose 20-3. Kilmer blames Mox for poisoning his team; billy Bob is crying, and Kilmer makes fun of him, and kicks him out of the locker room. Mox and his dad argue, with Mox telling him (SOUND 7). Moxs brother shows up with Bacon, saying Billy Bob said he'd know how to take care of him. Mox takes off and finds Billy Bob, at the field, shooting his trophies, having a breakdown. Billy Bob has listened to Kilmer being an asshole, and blames himself. Mox convinces him that he needs him. The adults stop by to make sure Mox will stick to the game plan, as his little brother has started a cult. Mox gets a letter that he made it into Brown, with a full academic scholarship, but his dad wants to talk to him about the upcoming football game. At school, Billy Bob is cleared to play and is excited. Kilmer threatens Mox to fuck with his grades and transcripts, to get what he wants... You know... Like an asshole. Mox goes to Julie, but as she tries to help, he's a whiny bitch because he can't just fucking play one game the way the coach wants him to. Fucks sake. He's complaining about the institution in West Canaan, and Kilmer. Julie calls him a whiner, and tells him to be the hero. SAny good going to work stories while hung over? Momma g's hung over story A pregame lords prayer, after Kilmer gives a little too much gravity to the next 48 minutes of the game to make the next 48 years of their lives. The game starts with Coyotes winning the toss, and Kilmer reminds Mox to run his game. They're riding Wendell down the field, and when they get into the red-zone, Kilmer calls to give someone else the TD, so Mox changes the play for Wendell to score, which Kilmer doesn't like. Gilroy scores on a long run. Unlike Tucker who can't score, and even loses short runs to Trey. Coyotes have the ball and Wendell goes down, Kilmer tells the Dr to make him understand he needs to finish the game.... You know.. Like an asshole. Gilroy scores again. 14-7. 1:30 left in the half and Kilmer tells Mox to kneel, which he does, and the fans boo. Halftime in the locker room, Wendell is about to get a shot in the knee, the players turn on Kilmer. Mox walks, Tweeter, and BIlly Bob follow, (SOUND 8). He tries to get them to follow, and they don't. He's lost the room, and he knows it. He turns and walks down the hall, alone. Mox gives a speech about playing the next 24 minutes for only 24 minutes, not the rest of their lives. Can't be scared with Football... like you can't cry in baseball. He talks about being heroic, and being heros. Slow clap. They bust out and back to the field. Hard hits all over, and more football. 17-7 with 8 minutes left, and no Kilmer. They choose to run the oopty-oop, and turn to a no-huddle offense, calling the plays on the line (SOUND 9)... No one knows what they're doing. A long pass to Tweeter for a TD. Kilmer is in his office, packing things up. 14-17 Gilroy, with 38 seconds left, and no time outs. Billy Bob tells him to put him in on defense to block the kick...which he and Tweeter does. 27 seconds left. Out route to Tweeter, but he doesn't get out of bounds. Mox hits the oppsoing mascot to stop the clock, 7 seconds left. They call the hook and ladder. Silence falls. Ball is snapped. Mox to Tweeter, as he's hit, he tosses it to Billy Bob, who catches it... He tucks, and takes off towards the end zone. Three players are trying to tackle him, and he goes down in the end zone. Touch down! Everyone celebrates. Even Julie celebrates, all though she doesn't like football players... Stick to your guns, girl. She pushes through the crowd to Mox and they kiss. A voice over of Mox never forgetting that day; Billy bob cried, Tweeter drinks beer, Harber found his calling as a coach, Wendell got his ride to Grambling, Kilmers statue still stands, only because it was too heavy to move, he never coached again. Mox got his scholarship, and will graduate from Brown. The day was theirs and they can never take it away. Fade to black.  S:Any of ya'll know the feeling of what Kilmer is talking about? Missing out on climbing sponsorship.Think something like the players turning on the coach would or has actually happened?Kinda funny seeing the HUNH back in 99... wonder if it would work with colleges...? Web: https://theguysreview.simplecast.com/EM: theguysreviewpod@gmail.comIG: @TheGuysReviewPodTW: @The_GuysReviewFB: https://facebook.com/TheGuysReviewPod/