AppleMagazine

ABOVE-GROUND POWER LINES GROW IN RISK AS CLIMATE CHANGES

Trees toppling onto above-ground power lines spark wildfires, more than 1,000 of them in the last decade in California alone. The wires snap in blizzards and hurricanes, causing dayslong outages. Everywhere, power poles topple in all kinds of disasters, blocking escape routes.

Around the U.S., dealing with the vulnerability of overhead power lines — one of many problems that experts say will only get worse as the climate deteriorates — by burying them or strengthening them is spotty and disorganized on a national level, and painfully slow, at best.

Utilities say there’s no one best way to safeguard the millions of miles of U.S. power lines and that doing so would cost many billions of dollars

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine1 min readMusic
Top 10 Music Videos
HIT ME HARD AND SOFT BILLIE EILISH FORTNIGHT (FEAT. POST MALONE) TAYLOR SWIFT HUNTER GOT HIGH AFROMAN ALL’S FAIR IN LOVE AND POETRY... TAYLOR SWIFT LEGS (KEEP DANCING) VANESSA WILLIAMS MAESTRO SEVENTEEN GOODNESS OF
AppleMagazine1 min read
FCC Fines Wireless Carriers For Sharing User Locations Without Consent
The Federal Communications Commission has leveraged nearly $200 million in fines against wireless carriers AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon for illegally sharing customers’ location data without their consent. “These carriers failed to protect the
AppleMagazine5 min read
How Tiktok Grew From A Fun App For Teens Into A Potential National Security Threat
If it feels like TikTok has been around forever, that’s probably because it has, at least if you’re measuring via internet time. What’s now in question is whether it will be around much longer and, if so, in what form? Starting in 2017, when the Chin

Related Books & Audiobooks