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80% of Japan s 47 prefectures have problems with solar power plants July 4, 2021 (Mainichi Japan) Solar panels cover an area of 82 hectares in the western Japan city of Akaiwa, Okayama Prefecture, in this photo taken from a Mainichi Shimbun helicopter on June 1, 2021. (Mainichi/Kenji Konoha) Solar energy, expected to replace nuclear power as a main source of electricity, has turned into a big headache across Japan, as solar power stations have proven to be eyesores and their impact on the environment destructive. A Mainichi Shimbun survey found that of all 47 prefectures in Japan, 80% have problems with solar power energy in one way or another. ....
Thousands Of Displaced Kebbi Residents Return Home, Would Rather Be Killed By Bandits Than Starve To Death Some of the IDPs, now in their thousands, say they have to return home as they are faced with choosing between dying of hunger and being killed by bandits. by SaharaReporters, New York May 04, 2021 Amid the rampaging banditry activities which forced them to flee their homes, thousands of residents of Zuru Emirate in Kebbi State who are Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) are now experiencing biting hunger. Findings showed that the people of the area are facing humanitarian crisis while more camps for IDPs continue to spring up. ....
How To Redefine The Housing Crisis In Hawaii - Honolulu Civil Beat Myths, truths and steps that can take us forward. About the Author Born and raised in Hawaii, Jonathan Likeke Scheuer is a consultant who helps clients manage environmental conflict. I am now in my seventh year of serving as one of nine members of the state’s Land Use Commission. The LUC is responsible for moving land from Hawaii’s conservation and agricultural districts into the urban district for housing and other purposes. Over those seven years I have wised up to a pattern that is as reliable as the return of the kolea. Each fall, in the lead up to the opening of the next legislative session, developers and their lobbyists and allies start to squawk about our “housing crisis!” ....