“Quit Coal” Painted on Fisk Smokestack

I often talk about the need for quick response to threats to critical infrastructure but here’s a video of Greenpeace climbers who took a long time to scale a 455 ft smokestack at a power plant in Chicago and paint it with giant letters: “QUIT COAL”

FOX News reports that the sign is related to a protest movement to regulate urban emissions.

Studies indicate that Chicago has the highest concentration of people in the country living near coal-fired power plants.

The Chicago City Council for the past year has been discussing an ordinance for clean energy generation sponsored by Alderman Daniel Solis.

The ordinance would obligate Fisk and Crawford to substitute natural gas for coal.

In addition, it would subject other polluting plants around Pilsen and Little Village to strict emission controls.

The proposed ordinance establishes that if a facility has a quarterly emissions average exceeding federal and state limits, it must suspend its operations until pollution controls are installed to bring it into compliance with those standards.

Will the Fisk plant just paint over the QUIT at the top?

Easy to turn the protest sign right back into a COAL message — no QUIT — although the publicity of climbers getting arrested is still a factor.

Had they painted SUSPEND OPERATIONS UNTIL POLLUTION CONTROLS ARE INSTALLED it would have left behind a sign much harder to convert or paint over (and even better publicity from a more sophisticated and impressive attack). Painting over SUSPEND OPERATIONS UNTIL would leave the smokestack with POLLUTION CONTROLS ARE INSTALLED…

The Pissalyzer

A beer company in Italy has created a heat-activated coaster-sized sticker that fits in urinals for men. If they pass more than a pint’s worth of liquid the sticker reveals a message that says they should call a cab.

…after 25 seconds of pee – a length of time at the urinal that would only occur if the person relieving themself had drunk more than one pint of beer (the Italian drink-drive limit).

I am sure bars also like it because it reduces the cost of cleaning the men’s toilets.

Denmark Bans Cereal Killer: Marmite

Maybe they have a different reason than what I explored at length in the case of America’s ban on Vegemite. It reads very similar to me at first glance:

It is unclear exactly why the Danish authorities have launched a crackdown on foods with too many vitamins.

But Marmite now joins the ranks of Australian alternative Vegemite, Horlicks, Ovaltine and Farley’s Rusks – all products the Danes have an apparent aversion to.

The anger expressed from the British seems to head towards the whole continent.

The ban highlights the absurdity of the EU which states that it is a legal product, but which has no authority over nation states about what can and cannot be sold.

I wouldn’t go so far as to say a Marmite ban highlights the absurdity of the EU.

It appears to be a situation where a state reserves the right to regulate a subset of the total legal products available to them. This is like if Kansas banned beer even though the US federal rules said beer is legal.

It highlights peculiar food and health standards in Denmark but does not appear to tarnish the relationship between Denmark and the EU.

At least you can still go to England and buy it…for now.