Category Archives: Energy

Flexible Wings Reduce Energy Drain for UAV

A team from Southampton, Edinburgh, Tokyo, and Delft just published a paper in npj Robotics demonstrating a soft underwater wing that senses its own deformation and uses that signal to reject flow disturbances autonomously.

The wing uses a liquid-metal capacitive e-skin. Six EGaIn electrodes in silicone produce nine capacitance signals to estimate its camber in real time. When a sudden gust hits, the wing’s flexibility causes a characteristic shape oscillation. The controller detects that signature and hydraulically morphs the wing to compensate.

The result is an 87% reduction in unwanted lift impulse compared to a rigid wing, using nothing more than a proportional controller and threshold-based detection.

What matters here is the design philosophy. The softness is the sensing mechanism. Deformation under fluid load becomes the primary signal for disturbance detection, the same way fish fin rays and bird feather mechanoreceptors work. The passive compliance of the material handles baseline gust mitigation on its own (three times better than rigid), and active camber control mops up the residual bias. They call it hybrid passive-active disturbance rejection, and it performs roughly twice as well as a barn owl’s gust-rejection maneuver, with the caveat that cross-domain comparisons are imprecise.

The implications for personal submarines and long-range UAVs are immediate. Underwater vehicles burn enormous energy on thruster-based station-keeping in currents — compliant control surfaces that passively absorb disturbances while actively trimming residual error could extend operational range significantly.

The e-skin is body-shape agnostic, meaning it can wrap around different fin geometries without redesigning the sensor architecture. The current limitation is actuator speed (1.7-second rise time on hydraulic), which the team’s follow-on ICRA 2026 work addresses with a formal disturbance observer.

The real story here is when you let the structure do the sensing instead of bolting instruments onto rigid frames, you get embodied intelligence that scales naturally with the problem it’s trying to solve.

Defamation as Dispossession: Big Oil Uses Courts to Censure Nation and Greenpeace

A North Dakota judge just finalized erasure of Native American rights with an absurd $345 million judgment. It claims to be against Greenpeace for, among other things, defamation of Energy Transfer during the Dakota Access Pipeline protests. The defamation finding is bullshit. It rests on two very political and narrow claims the jury decided: that the pipeline crossed Standing Rock Sioux tribal land, and that DAPL personnel desecrated sacred burial grounds.

Read that again.

The defamation verdict requires the court to rule that Indigenous people’s own claims about their land and sacred sites are not just disputed but demonstrably false because the billionaire white men of Big Oil say so.

That’s 1800s disinformation at work in 2026.

Erasure Mechanism

The Standing Rock Sioux’s position that the pipeline crosses their land is grounded in the 1851 Fort Laramie Treaty, which established boundaries the federal government subsequently ignored.

Whether the pipeline “crosses tribal land” depends on a legal framework you recognize. Do you believe in the treaty that the United States signed, or in the illegal seizures that followed?

The burial ground claim reflects what tribal members themselves reported about construction disturbance to sacred sites — reports that prompted challenges to the Army Corps of Engineers’ own environmental review as inadequate.

Greenpeace didn’t fabricate these claims. They amplified what Indigenous people were saying about their own land, their own treaties, their own sacred places. To find those statements “demonstrably false,” the jury had to accept Energy Transfer’s legal framework as the only valid one — ruling the tribe’s understanding of their territory out of existence as a prerequisite for the verdict.

The people whose dispossession created the underlying dispute got erased twice: first from their land, then from the factual record.

Oil Fumbled and Dropped the Ball to Win the Match

Energy Transfer quietly withdrew all defamation claims related to Greenpeace’s water and climate statements before trial. The core environmental and public health arguments that motivated the entire protest — the reason thousands of people showed up — were too defensible to take before a jury. What remained were narrower claims about treaty boundaries and burial grounds, reframed as simple factual falsehoods rather than the contested historical and legal disputes they actually are.

Energy Transfer’s former CEO Kelcy Warren fought to avoid deposition entirely, and the company argued that pipeline safety documents were “patently irrelevant” once they dropped the water and climate claims. Strip away the substance of the dispute, leave only the claims you can win by denying Indigenous legal standing, and call it defamation.

$50 Million Charge for a UN Report

The judgment includes tens of millions of dollars against Greenpeace International for co-signing a letter with over 500 other organizations that echoed findings from United Nations reports. The UN recognized the Indigenous position. Hundreds of organizations recognized it. A jury in Morton County, North Dakota — where the pipeline is critical infrastructure — said it was all false anyway.

Greenpeace International’s entire involvement in the on-the-ground protests amounted to six employees visiting the camps. Their real offense was lending institutional credibility to Indigenous claims that Energy Transfer needed erased.

SLAPP Architecture

North Dakota has no anti-SLAPP statute. There was no procedural mechanism to challenge the reframing of contested historical claims as defamation before it reached a jury. Energy Transfer’s first attempt was a federal RICO lawsuit — the statute designed to prosecute organized crime — which a federal judge dismissed in 2019, stating the evidence fell “far short.” So they refiled in state court with state law claims, in a jurisdiction where the pipeline moves 40% of North Dakota’s oil production.

That structure is textbook aggression: use a legal system that lacks procedural safeguards, in a venue with maximum structural bias, to convert political speech into tortious conduct. Greenpeace has countersued in the Netherlands under the EU’s anti-SLAPP Directive — the first test of that law — because the American system provided no defense against the strategy.

The Actual Verdict

Defamation doctrine distinguishes between statements of fact and expressions of opinion or rhetorical hyperbole. Protest speech has historically received strong protection precisely because reasonable listeners understand it as advocacy, not factual reporting. This verdict collapses that distinction entirely.

But the deeper problem isn’t doctrinal. It’s that the entire defamation finding is constructed on a foundation of Indigenous erasure. You can only call “this pipeline crosses tribal land” a false statement of fact if you’ve already decided that tribal land claims don’t exist. The 1851 treaty doesn’t count. The tribe’s understanding of their own territory doesn’t count. The UN’s recognition doesn’t count. Only Energy Transfer’s title, derived from the very dispossession being protested, counts.

Defamation law became the instrument for completing what the pipeline started.

The land was taken.

Now the right just to admit the truth and say it was taken has been priced by an American court at $345 million.

Desch Nuts: Foreign Affairs Publishes Koch-Funded Anti-Ukraine Propaganda

Foreign Affairs published a Koch brothers propaganda puff piece today, attributed to Michael C. Desch of Notre Dame.

Why?

It plays dumb while trying to be serious and claim that Ukraine should surrender to Russia. Of course Koch nuts would say that. They dropped it hot during live negotiations, as if academics are just hired guns to provide cover for whatever the Trump administration is about to impose on Kyiv. The author and all that big money behind him however give away the game.

The article is titled plainly “Ukraine Is Losing the War” without a timeline. Today? Last year? Always and forever no matter what? See the dumb trick?

Then it is subtitled “With Moscow Pressing Its Advantage, Kyiv Should Trade Land for Peace.” In just 5,000 words it manages to stumble and crash into at least nine major logical contradictions.

Given how much disinformation was being stuffed down the throat of Foreign Affairs editors, it should surprise nobody Russian-language media was celebrating within hours of publication. Yet the historical reasoning alone would fail any LSE seminar I ever took. Foreign Affairs owes its readers an explanation, if not a retraction. In the meantime, I’ll take a poke at what’s really going on.

Desch Keeps Punching Himself in the Nuts

# Desch Claims Then Also Claims Nut Punch
1 Mass and resources make Ukrainian resistance futile Post-surrender Ukraine should build drone defenses and pursue battlefield innovation Prescribes the same technology-over-mass strategy he spent 3,000 words saying doesn’t work
2 Russian war aims expanded at every stage (Minsk to recognition to annexation of four oblasts) Conceding the Donbas would satisfy Moscow His own evidence documents serial escalation after each accommodation
3 The Donbas is not the Sudetenland because Russian tactics are not blitzkrieg Munich was about appeasement dynamics, not Wehrmacht tactics. Refutes a comparison nobody made
4 At current rates it would take Russia 30 years to conquer east-bank Ukraine Ukraine should stop fighting and lose Western support The 30-year timeline depends on the Western assistance he wants to end
5 Ukraine’s 36 million population cannot match Russia’s 140 million Russia has 700,000 troops in theater vs. Ukraine’s 300,000 Operational ratio is 2.3:1, not the 4:1 demographic ratio he leads with
6 Russia’s GDP at PPP is $7 trillion vs. Ukraine’s $657 billion PPP inflates domestic purchasing power, not capacity to buy weapons on international markets. Nominal GDP puts Russia near Italy
7 Ukrainian corruption undermines fortifications and recruitment Russia’s corruption is absorbed by its size Russian corruption collapsed logistics at Kyiv, lost 1,000+ tanks, and sank the Moskva. Scale multiplies procurement corruption
8 Western technology has not given Ukraine a decisive edge Russian technological innovation (fiber-optic drones, ISR-enabled artillery) is providing decisive advantages Technology is irrelevant when the West provides it, decisive when Russia deploys it
9 The Surovikin Line proves Ukraine cannot breach fortified positions Ukraine should not build similar fortifications because Russian infiltration defeats them Russian fortifications work. Ukrainian fortifications would not. Logic runs whichever way the conclusion needs

The table speaks for itself, hopefully. Foreign Affairs should be ashamed. Now let’s look deeper at the disinformation methods.

Rigged Numbers

Desch compares Ukraine’s population of 36 million to Russia’s 140 million as though Russia can send its entire male population to just one meat grinder.

Russia has a 4,000-mile border with China, commitments in Syria, internal security requirements across eleven time zones, and a domestic economy that requires workers. His own operational numbers of 300,000 Ukrainian troops versus 700,000 Russian show a much narrower gap than raw population figures, but he buries this operational reality under a demographic spectacle.

Why?

Then he uses purchasing power parity to inflate Russia’s GDP to $7 trillion, making it look like a near-peer competitor. Their nominal GDP, measuring the actual capacity to purchase weapons systems on international markets, deflates Russia’s economy to roughly the size of Italy’s. Everyone knows this and says it repeatedly. Russia is like Italy, yet he tries to make it seem so much bigger.

Again, why?

PPP measures how many bad haircuts you can buy in Novosibirsk, not how many precision-guided munitions could be imported.

Russian contract soldiers, known for their low morale, somehow get inflated as more motivated than Ukrainian conscripts. The piece inverts everything documented about defensive warfare psychology. Ukrainians are fighting for their homes. Russian “volunteers” are bored, annoyed, reluctant, disproportionately recruited from impoverished regions by financial incentives they distrust. The claim that cheap mercenaries outperform homeland defenders contradicts everything everyone knows about combat motivation.

Corruption as Hypocrisy

Desch flags corruption as undermining the war effort, but not Russian corruption. No, he acts like only corruption in Ukraine matters. Fortifications not built, recruitment compromised? He waves away Russian corruption by arguing it simply “absorbs the damage.” But Russian military corruption is the very reason they lost over a thousand tanks in the first year, the reason logistics collapsed north of Kyiv, the reason the Moskva sank. Scale does not neutralize corruption in military procurement. It actually multiplies it, meaning Ukraine has less of a problem.

Then he prescribes “comprehensive political and economic reforms” and “a serious anticorruption effort” for post-surrender Ukraine. Part of the reason for the war was Ukraine was cracking down on Russian corruption. Calling that a solution after the war is like totally ignoring the causes. If corruption undermines Ukrainian fortification-building during a war for survival, why would it suddenly resolve after a demoralizing territorial surrender? He identifies corruption as the disease and surrender to corruption as the cure.

Technology Only Works for the Hero

Desch argues that Western technology has not given Ukraine a decisive edge. He then spends several paragraphs detailing Russian technological innovation (e.g. fiber-optic drones, infiltration tactics, ISR-enabled artillery) as if these are decisive advantages. Well, which is it? Technology matters enormously when Russia deploys it. When the West provides it to Ukraine, suddenly it is irrelevant.

He cites the Surovikin Line as proof that Ukraine cannot advance through fortified positions. He then argues Ukraine should not bother building similar fortifications because Russian infiltration tactics can defeat them. Russian fortifications prove offense is impossible. Ukrainian fortifications would be useless against offense.

Follow the Money

Desch is not a random academic voice.

He sits on the advisory board of the John Quincy Adams Society, which is funded by the Charles Koch Foundation and operates within a “let bad guys win because profit” ecosystem that includes the Quincy Institute, Defense Priorities, and the Cato Institute’s foreign policy shop. His Notre Dame colleague Eugene Gholz sits on the same board. His daughter was a JQAS Marcellus Policy Fellow. Their ideological pipeline has consistent output toxic to analysts: NATO caused the problems, whatever they are, Ukraine is not vital to anyone, and the answer is accommodation of Russia because authoritarian rule is good for profit.

Desch has been saying exactly this since before the invasion. In January 2022, he told Newswise that “the way out of this crisis is the neutralization of Ukraine.” Weeks later, in February 2022, he told Notre Dame’s student paper that Russia was unlikely to invade because Putin was just posturing for diplomatic concessions. The full-scale invasion followed shortly after.

This Koch lineage now makes a funding trail into the case study of laundered influence.

Fred Koch built his fortune constructing oil refineries for Stalin’s Soviet Union in the 1930s, then built the third-largest refinery serving the Third Reich. Soviet money and Nazi money became Koch Industries money. He came home, co-founded the John Birch Society in 1958, called Eisenhower a communist dupe, fought the civil rights movement as a Soviet plot, and bankrolled McCarthyism. Charles Koch held a lifetime JBS membership and funded its bookstores distributing attacks on Martin Luther King.

The sons inherited the fortune of refined Soviet and Nazi crude. They laundered it through decades of right-wing institution-building, setting a precedent for Peter Thiel, and now fund academics arguing we should accommodate Russian territorial expansion. The empire that literally built Stalin’s oil infrastructure finances the intellectual apparatus telling us to let Moscow keep what it has taken.

This is how old big dirty money works.

No need to wire funds from the Kremlin direct to Notre Dame with a magazine piece purchase order. Instead, build infrastructure for dictators, convert profits into a political network, fund the network for generations, and eventually the network produces a Foreign Affairs article arguing that dictators should get to keep conquests so they can order more infrastructure. Ka-ching!

The money has been cleaned by the time it reaches the endowed chair. The conclusions are a starting point within the institution, to which evidence is curated.

Editorial Decision Time

Foreign Affairs historically publishes pieces aligned with administration policy preferences. This piece reads like pre-positioning and intellectual cover for whatever territorial concessions the Trump team plans to impose. Within hours, Pravda USA was summarizing it approvingly. The article’s framing maps perfectly onto Russian information warfare messaging.

I’m not saying Desch needs to coordinate with Moscow. It means the Koch school’s output gets laundered through Russian media with zero friction because the conclusions are structurally identical to what Putin needs.

Foreign Affairs editors know how to count logical contradictions, right?

They know what PPP does and does not measure, right?

They know the Munich analogy is about appeasement dynamics, not blitzkrieg tactics, right?

They know that prescribing post-surrender reform to a country whose wartime morale is already collapsing is not serious analysis, right?

They published this weak-sauce article anyway, on the day it would do the most work for Putin and Trump, by an author embedded in a network funded by a fortune that traces back to Stalin and Hitler.

Any trained historian can see what this is. Desch perhaps believes what he wrote, and maybe even enjoys the public self-flagellation. The question is why Foreign Affairs enabled him.

Trump Guts Security of Nuclear Plants to Feed Lust for AI

Grab’em by the fuel rods.

What Pennsylvania officials told residents about Three Mile Island. In the 1970s they at least pretended to inform the public. Now they don’t even do that.
TMI safety for kids. Source: Nuke’em Postcards

Three Mile Island is a lesson apparently lost on the billionaire tech kids riding Trump’s descent into madness.

NPR obtained copies of over a dozen of the new orders, none of which is publicly available. The orders slash hundreds of pages of requirements for security at the reactors. They also loosen protections for groundwater and the environment and eliminate at least one key safety role. The new orders cut back on requirements for keeping records, and they raise the amount of radiation a worker can be exposed to before an official accident investigation is triggered. […] Backers of the reactors, including tech giants Amazon, Google and Meta, have said they want the reactors to one day supply cheap, reliable power for artificial intelligence.

The integrity controls aren’t being circumvented, they’re being rewritten by the entity charged with enforcing them, then shared with the regulated parties while being withheld from the public.

That’s not deregulation, that’s capture.

That’s privatization of the regulatory framework by the regulated to deny safety. The paperwork now follows action, not the other way around, which is how dictatorship works. It’s all fake accountability that tracks to pure corruption.

The nuclear regulator literally has been reorganized as a service provider for the entities it regulates. Like how ICE are just stormtroopers loyal to Trump, refusing to follow law or respect the Constitution. The criminals now are the ones wearing the badges, occupying political spaces to prevent anyone from invoking actual law that would stop crimes.

Got ICE?

Over 500 pages of necessary security directives were slashed and burned down to 23 pages, for reactors that use higher levels of enriched uranium in their cores, which make them targets of theft.

More attractive targets, less security. This batshit threat model logic is by a small group of elites who plan to profit rapidly and hide, regardless of increased and widespread suffering.

Materials security for weapons-grade fuel, gutted so billionaires can shave construction costs?

No wonder the Big Tech boys keep buying their own islands, to isolate themselves from nuclear catastrophe they are rushing everyone else into.

Google Founder Larry Page Would Rather Die Self-Imprisoned on Desert Island Than Pay a Cent for Freedom