woensdag 8 april 2026

Singapore is turning its skyscrapers into wind farms — engineering vertical axis wind turbines directly into new high-rise buildings so every tower generates its own clean electricity from urban wind.

 


Singapore is turning its skyscrapers into wind farms — engineering vertical axis wind turbines directly into new high-rise buildings so every tower generates its own clean electricity from urban wind.
The Building-Integrated Wind System developed by Nanyang Technological University installs compact vertical axis wind turbines in deliberately designed wind acceleration gaps between building floors at levels 20, 40, and 60 stories, where urban canyon airflow reaches speeds 3 times faster than ground level. Building aerodynamics are shaped during architectural design to channel wind from all directions toward turbine positions, ensuring generation regardless of wind direction. Each turbine cluster at a single floor gap generates 120 kilowatts, and three turbine levels per building provide 360 kilowatts of total wind generation capacity supplementing rooftop solar panels also integrated into the building systems.
Singapore's building energy regulations requiring new high-rises above 20 stories to achieve 30% energy self-sufficiency from 2026 onward drove adoption of this integrated wind technology. Combined with mandatory rooftop solar, building-integrated wind provides high-rises with 35-45% self-generated electricity, reducing grid dependence dramatically in a city-state where land scarcity makes conventional renewable farms impossible at meaningful scale.
Twelve buildings opened in 2024 and 2025 with integrated wind systems collectively generating 18 megawatts from urban airflow that previously served no energy function. Singapore's Urban Redevelopment Authority has mandated the technology in all new buildings exceeding 25 stories from January 2026.
Source: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Urban Redevelopment Authority, 2025

Canada just activated a 3,500-kilometer chain of offshore wind installations stretching the entire length of its Atlantic coast — from Newfoundland to Nova Scotia — collectively generating enough electricity to power every home in eastern Canada from ocean wind.


 

Canada just activated a 3,500-kilometer chain of offshore wind installations stretching the entire length of its Atlantic coast — from Newfoundland to Nova Scotia — collectively generating enough electricity to power every home in eastern Canada from ocean wind.

The Atlantic Canada Offshore Wind Corridor deploys wind farms at 14 strategically selected sites along Canada's Atlantic continental shelf where water depths between 30 and 80 meters, consistent North Atlantic westerly winds averaging 9.8 meters per second, and proximity to coastal population centers make offshore wind economically and technically optimal. The 14 installations combined generate 8.4 gigawatts continuously, covering the combined residential electricity demand of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island simultaneously. The corridor's 3,500-kilometer geographic extent means different installations experience different weather systems at any moment, providing natural generation smoothing that reduces output variability by 64 percent compared to any single installation site.
Atlantic Canada previously generated 78 percent of its electricity from hydro and wind, with 22 percent from aging thermal plants burning oil and natural gas on islands with no grid connection. The offshore corridor eliminates this thermal generation entirely while providing surplus electricity for export to New England through new submarine cable connections to Maine and Massachusetts.
Atlantic Canada's offshore wind resource is among the world's most powerful, rivaling the North Sea sites that powered Europe's offshore wind revolution — and Canada has barely begun to develop it.
Source: Natural Resources Canada, Nova Scotia Department of Energy, Canada Energy Regulator, 2025

Germany has opened the world’s largest green hydrogen pipeline, aiming to replace natural gas across five countries while eliminating carbon emissions.

 


Major leap in clean energy is underway. Germany has opened the world’s largest green hydrogen pipeline, aiming to replace natural gas across five countries while eliminating carbon emissions.This massive project transports hydrogen produced from renewable sources like wind and solar power. Unlike natural gas, hydrogen combustion releases no carbon, making it a truly sustainable alternative. The pipeline spans multiple nations, connecting energy grids and providing a steady, reliable supply of green fuel to homes, industries, and power plants.
The environmental impact is enormous. By replacing fossil fuels with green hydrogen, the project cuts greenhouse gas emissions and sets a new standard for international energy cooperation. It also demonstrates how infrastructure innovation can accelerate the transition to a low-carbon future.Germany’s pipeline is more than an engineering achievement, it’s a blueprint for global sustainability. Clean energy on this scale shows that nations can work together to tackle climate change while powering economies efficiently and responsibly.

China just completed a 14,500-kilometer solar desalination network along its entire eastern coastline — the largest water infrastructure project in human history, ending water scarcity for 400 million people in China's water-stressed northern and eastern provinces.

 


China just completed a 14,500-kilometer solar desalination network along its entire eastern coastline — the largest water infrastructure project in human history, ending water scarcity for 400 million people in China's water-stressed northern and eastern provinces.
The China Coastal Solar Desalination Corridor installs 340 individual solar-powered reverse osmosis desalination plants at 43-kilometer intervals along China's coastline from Dalian in the north to Hainan in the south, each plant generating its own electricity from co-located solar panels and producing between 200,000 and 500,000 cubic meters of fresh water daily depending on local demand. Fresh water from coastal plants connects to China's existing South-to-North Water Diversion canal infrastructure, distributing desalinated water 1,500 kilometers inland to water-scarce Beijing, Hebei, and Shanxi provinces where groundwater depletion has reached crisis levels threatening agricultural and industrial production.
China's northern provinces have been extracting groundwater faster than it replenishes for 40 years, with water tables in some regions falling 2 meters annually. The coastal desalination network effectively reverses this depletion by providing an alternative supply that allows groundwater to recover naturally over decades. Chinese hydrologists project northern groundwater tables stabilizing within 15 years of the network reaching full operation.
Total fresh water production reaches 420 million cubic meters daily — more than the Yellow River's average annual flow delivered as clean drinking water produced entirely from solar energy and seawater.
Source: China Ministry of Water Resources, China National Development and Reform Commission, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 2025

CÂY CẦU DÂY VĂNG DÀI 5,4KM, Cầu Bạch Đằng trên cao tốc Hải Phòng - Hạ Long, LỌT TOP 3 THẾ GIỚI DO NGƯỜI VIỆT LẦN ĐẦU TỰ THIẾT KẾ, THI CÔNG

 


CÂY CẦU DÂY VĂNG DÀI 5,4KM LỌT TOP 3 THẾ GIỚI DO NGƯỜI VIỆT LẦN ĐẦU TỰ THIẾT KẾ, THI CÔNG
Dự án cao tốc Hải Phòng - Hạ Long được khởi công năm 2014 và hoàn thành 2018. Đây là tuyến cao tốc đầu tiên trong cả nước mà Chính phủ giao cho địa phương tự đầu tư bằng nguồn vốn ngân sách và theo hình thức đối tác công tác công tư (PPP).
Tuy nhiên, điều khiến tuyến đường này trở nên khác biệt không chỉ nằm ở cơ chế triển khai, mà ở suất đầu tư. Với chiều dài 25,2 km và tổng mức đầu tư 14.077 tỷ đồng, chi phí bình quân lên tới khoảng 558 tỷ đồng/km – cao hơn đáng kể so với nhiều tuyến cao tốc khác.
Cầu Bạch Đằng là dự án thành phần lớn nhất của cao tốc Hạ Long – Hải Phòng, đây là cầu dây văng đầu tiên do người Việt Nam tự thiết kế và tổ chức thi công.
Công trình có quy mô lớn với trụ tháp chính cao 99,7 m, hai trụ còn lại cao 94,5 m. Hệ thống dây văng gồm 4 nhịp liên tục, tổng khối lượng hơn 800 tấn cáp, được chia thành 144 bó, mỗi bó từ 31 đến 85 sợi cáp chuyên dụng, đảm bảo khả năng chịu lực và ổn định kết cấu.
Cầu có khối đúc hẫng dài 9,6 m; tổng khối lượng cả xe đúc và khối đúc hẫng khoảng 700 tấn, đạt kỷ lục về đúc hẫng trên thế giới. Với quy mô và yêu cầu kỹ thuật cao, cầu Bạch Đằng được đánh giá là một trong những công trình có kỹ thuật thi công phức tạp nhất Việt Nam.
Trong tổng thể dự án, cầu Bạch Đằng là điểm nhấn nổi bật, thể hiện khả năng làm chủ công nghệ và thi công cầu đường của người Việt Nam. Công trình “Made in Việt Nam” này là minh chứng cho năng lực tự thiết kế, tổ chức thi công các dự án hạ tầng quy mô lớn.
Theo CafeBiz

America is quietly becoming Catholic… and many people don’t realize it.

 


America is quietly becoming Catholic… and many people don’t realize it.
At the 2026 Easter Vigil, tens of thousands of adults across the United States were baptized or received into the Church through the Order of Christian Initiation of Adults (OCIA). In city after city, dioceses reported some of their largest groups in decades.
Los Angeles alone welcomed over 8,000 new Catholics. Atlanta saw more than 3,400. Washington, D.C. had around 1,700. Newark reported over 1,700, a major increase from last year. Dallas, Portland, Phoenix, and many others also saw strong growth.
This is not coming from cultural pressure. These are adults choosing the faith after months of learning, prayer, and real conversion.
At the same time, the Catholic Church remains the largest Christian body in the world, with over 1.4 billion members. Even in a culture that often seems to move away from faith, something deeper is happening beneath the surface.
People are searching. And many are finding their way home.
The question is… why now?