Wait, are they not getting enough energy from wind turbines and solar panels?
Europe’s streets go dark to save energy
Pushed by a looming energy crisis, cities across Europe are switching off the lights.
While Spain has made such measures mandatory, ordering shops to turn their lights off at night, in other places local authorities are voluntarily hitting the switch, arguing it’s a good time to trial light-saving measures.
Berlin is switching off the spotlights illuminating 200 of its historic buildings and monuments, and a number of towns and cities in Austria, Germany and Italy have reduced street lighting or turned off commercial signs.
In France, 14 communes in the Val d’Oise department north of Paris are trialing measures to fully switch off public lighting at night. Local authorities estimate shutting off street lights for three-and-a-half hours every night will help curb energy consumption by about a quarter.
Perhaps they should restart some nuclear and coal plants. Nah. They voted for this green stuff, let them deal with it. I have to wonder, will the government buildings, especially for the elected officials, also have the power turned off?
But the communes are keen to highlight that the experiment will also tamp down on light pollution. More darkness will help “respect the rhythm of day and night, allowing species to regenerate,” said Carole Faidherbe, the first deputy mayor of Taverny.
Look, I’m good with reducing light pollution, but, this is in a city
Most of the concerns raised by locals revolve around safety, according to Faidherbe, the official from Taverny, though she also stressed that the backlash wasn’t as strong as she’d expected.
The measures were designed with safety in mind, she said. The time window accounts for the arrival of the last train of the night and the departure of the first train of the morning and can be adjusted on national holidays, when streets are busier than usual at night. She added that video surveillance continues to operate even when the lights are off.
That’s all well and good, but, do we not think that the criminals will take advantage of this, especially all the migrants let in over the years?
Spain Air Conditioning Crackdown Set to Take Effect
Escaping the sweltering heat baking much of Spain just got a little bit harder. The government last week declared that businesses will not be allowed to run their air conditioning below 80 degrees Fahrenheit (27 degrees Celsius), part of a broader effort to save energy as Europe contends with record heat and races to cut its dependence on Russian gas.
Starting on Aug. 9 and lasting through November 2023, commercial buildings will have to keep summer air conditioning above 80 degrees — matching a policy in place at public buildings — and winter heating below 66 degrees Fahrenheit (19 degrees Celsius). The new rules apply to theaters, cinemas, museums, restaurants and shopping malls, while kindergartens, hospitals, schools and universities are off the hook. So are gyms, hair salons and laundries.
Well, that will seriously reduce income at theaters, cinemas, museums, restaurants, and shopping malls. And, who’s going to want to work there, either sweating or being cold? If only Europe had listened to Donald Trump about their reliance on Russia energy, instead of laughing.