- for whites: 3.2%
- adult men: 3.2%
- adult women: 3.1% (will go lower if Biden's plan to bring 720 million women back into the workforce)
- teenagers: 12.5%
- Asians: 2.5% (no typo: 2.5%) -- I find that interesting that Asian unemployment is actually lower than "white" unemployment -- reverse discrimination? Harvard has a plan to stop that, I know.
- Hispanics: at 3.9%, a record low; has never been this low; never;
- African-Americans: maintains record low of 5.5% set in August
Apple: strong demand for the new iPhone 11;
- here;
- west coast refineries operating at just 78% of capacity
- the lowest since November, 2016
- almost 20% lower than this time last year
- why: can't get enough crude oil
- why: Pacific Northwest limiting CBR
- much more at the linked site
So, how do you interpret this headline (link here):
At the linked article:
- 3,204 MW of solar gas canceled in ERCOT
- 284 MW ok'd for operation --
- yeah, that's what I thought; "284" is such a small number, I thought it was all wind/solar; wrong
- I thought was solar
- nope, here's the data:
- fifteen projects (wind, solar, natural gas) were canceled in September
- two projects went forward
a 100-MW natural gas plant - a 184-MW wind farm (at 25% likely production, translates to 46 MW)
The quotes trying to make this great news for solar seems to be a real stretch.I first saw that story at twitter:
Of the 3,204 MW of generation canceled in September, 2,491 MW was solar and 713 MW was gas-fired. Manan Ahuja, S&P Global Platts Analytics manager of North American Power analytics, noted that the number of projects canceled was not unusual, exactly equal to last September's project cancellations.
Fake news: "jobs drying up in the Permian" -- read the story to see for yourself and if still confused, read the comments; first hint that it's fake news -- it's an "oil" story by Bloomberg
Social Security:
- for all those folks who were worried that "Social Security" would run out of money, not gonna happen; need proof?
- politicians who make the Social Security laws are now looking at increasing benefits across the board;
- it's going to be hard for a senior to vote "against" Pocahontas when she promises an increase of $200/month for all Social Security recipients;
- Paul Krugman: debt doesn't matter;
- the story is not in some left-leaning tabloid; it's in The Wall Street Journal;
Investing: will Enbridge (ENB) beat estimates again? Clickbait: the article doesn't give estimates for the 3Q19 report, unless I missed that, which is very possible. So, what are estimates for ENB this quarter?
- mean estimate: 39 cents (EPS last quarter: 50 cents)
- high: 42 cents
- low: 30 cents
- range: $1.60 to $2.15
- mean estimate: $2.00
- Close reading of the article suggests that "over-charging" the batteries is the problem. Tesla fixed that problem by over-the-air software updates to prevent over-charging. The updates reduced the range of the involved Teslas by 25 miles.
- Murphy's law of EVs: when you have but 20 miles range remaining, the map reveals the next EV charging station 25 miles away.
Best quote of the day, from a reader: "I hope Ruth Bader Ginsburg lives long enough to see Trup re-elected."
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For The Granddaughters
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