[Swlugevents] Solar system saves man $1500 a year

Energy independence Energyindependence at ncdecodearomal.us
Wed Sep 18 13:22:31 UTC 2013


Man sells power back to utility company

http://www.ncdecodearomal.us/2288/141/303/1193/2555.10tt74103107AAF9.php






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at could eventually affect 
our national security in the short term," the source said. "And we're 
not talking midterm or long-term, this is the short-term."The source said 
"it's a daily frustration."Another threat is a larger terrorist haven that 
continues to build in parts of Libya and North Africa. Those working 
the region in the interest of U.S. security say the ball is 
being dropped by top leaders at the White House, Pentagon and State 
Department."Benghazi, the second-highest population of foreign fighters, 
and the war in Iraq came from Benghazi, second to Saudi Arabia, 
so we are talking about a historic location and region that has 
fed foreign fighters to kill Americans, and kill other coalition forces," 
one source said."The analysts, the intelligence experts all say the same 
thing, that if we just ignore the situation as it presents itself, 
eventually it will be another invasion will have to take place for 
us to eventually turn the tide."He says the region also remains a 
weapons hub after the overthrow of former leader Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, 
which saw massive stockpiles of weapons in Libya move freely across the 
Mediterranean and in many cases into Syria. While the U.S. has claimed 
a more active role to find and remove an estimated 20,000 shoulder-launched 
missiles called MANPADS, some Americans working the area say they aren't 
allowed to take or even destroy the missiles because they have not 
been given the authority from thei
bique."Their legal system is 
far from adequate and an individual found guilty is given a slap 
on the wrist and then they say 'OK. Give me my horn 
back,'" said Michael H. Knight, chairman of the African Rhino Specialist 
Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Species 
Survival Commission.A meeting of the group in February reported there might, 
possibly, be one white rhino left in Mozambique and no black rhinos 
at all, Knight said.According to Abacar: "We have already announced the 
extinction of the rhino population in Limpopo National Park."But Bartolomeu 
Soto, director of Mozambique's transfrontier conservation unit, told the 
AP "We believe we still have rhinos, though we don't know how 
many."Mozambican news reports have said the last 15 rhinos in the park 
were slaughtered in the past month, but park officials said those reports 
were wrong. Soto said the misunderstanding had arisen over Abacar's statement 
to journalists that he had not seen a rhino in the three 
months since he was put in charge of the large park.The only 
official figure available for rhino deaths is that 17 rhino carcasses were 
found in the park in 2010, Soto said. He said officials believe 
poaching must be taking place because rhino horn and elephant tusks carried 
by Asian smugglers are regularly seized at Mozambique's ports, although 
at least some of the contraband could be from animals killed by 
Mozambican poachers in neighboring South Afri

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