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Fourth set of human remains found at Lake Mead

More human skeletal remains were found Saturday at a beach on Lake Mead, the fourth set of remains found at the lake where water levels have dramatically receded in recent years because of a lingering drought, authorities said.

Park Rangers responded to a call about the discovery of the remains at Swim Beach at Lake Mead National Recreation Area about 11:30 am Saturday, according to the National Park Service. They were assisted in their investigation by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department dive team.

The skeletal remains are the second set to be found at Swim Beach.

Authorities provided no additional information about the discovery. A spokesperson with the Clark County Office of the Coroner-Medical Examiner could not be reached for comment.

This is the fourth time since May that human remains have been discovered at Lake Mead, the nation’s largest reservoir, which has dropped to unprecedented lows amid a 22-year drought. The lake provides water to 25 million people and millions of acres of farmland in several states in the Southwest, including California.

The first set of skeletal remains was found in a barrel in May and likely belonged to a gunshot victim killed in the 1970s or 1980s, officials said.

Six days later, another set of remains was found at Callville Bay. A third set was recovered last month at the lake’s Swim Beach.

Authorities believe the region’s extreme drought and Lake Mead’s dropping water levels will lead them to discover more remains. None of the remains discovered have been identified.

In addition to human remains, the receding waters have revealed watercraft, including a World War II-era boat that had been put into service at the lake before sinking.

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Business

Bali travel: New photos show heartbreaking sight in Kuta

New photographs taken by an Australian traveler show a heartbreaking sight in Bali.

While more tourists are returning to the party island since international travel resumed, and businesses are reopening, things are still not quite the same at the famous tourist hub of Kuta as they were before the Covid-19 pandemic struck.

But despite this, there are still some parts of the resort area that remain a ghost town, with some of the pubs, shops and restaurants that were once major tourist drawcards still closed.

This can be seen in images of the once-popular Kuta Town Houses and its surrounds, which now appear to be an abandoned site, boarded up and overgrown with weeds.

Traveler Kat Willeme told news.com.au that on a recent visit she had gone for a morning walk to check out the area and was surprised by what she found.

“What an absolute heartbreaking sight to see things in such disrepair and all the surrounding businesses shut down,” Kat said.

“The area used to be so lively and was the main thoroughfare between Poppies Lane 1 and 2. We are understanding now why they are both struggling to recover.”

However, she said it’s crucial for tourists to keep coming back to support Bali as “they need our help”.

She explained that most of her friends have businesses in the area which were still struggling to recover, unlike other parts of Bali which were thriving. She hopes to raise awareness of what’s really going on in Kuta, in the hopes of bringing life back to the area.

“It is not like this everywhere,” she said.

Kat also posted the images in a Facebook travel group and it was flooded with comments, many reminiscing about the past and devastated to see the state of the building now.

One commenter said: “So sad – this was such an awesome place.”

Another said: “This is a crying shame. We are so lucky in this country. Good buildings going to waste, only increased tourism can remedy this. Please help by visiting Bali.”

And a third wrote: “Yes it’s so sad! We were there recently and it was a sight to see. Just want it back to the way it used to be.”

Another commenter shared some fond memories: “It’s so sad. We stayed there since they opened and they were like family … It’s the worst to see it all so overgrown.”

Others pointed out that with the boards removed, and some weeding and general maintenance work done, the building would look much better.

Closed for business

Kat also shared other images from the streets of Kuta showing businesses that are shut. They include places such as the Matahari Shopping Center on Kuta Square, and other eleven-busy shops nearby.

She said there were many shops still shut along the formerly bustling Poppies Lane 1.

Meanwhile, most shops are open for business along Poppies Lane 2, but due to some local hotels being shut Kat said she noticed “there is a lack of foot traffic getting down there”.

She also said popular businesses such as Tubes and Bagus Pub are shut, along with the famous Bounty Hotel which Kat said “is still all boarded up and looking a little shabby”.

But there is hope that things will slowly improve.

A local advised her the Bounty is hoping to reopen in September after doing some renovations.

“You can see them doing work and repairs everywhere you go and more and more stores and hotels are reopening each day,” Kat said.

tourism revival

The Covid-19 pandemic caused international travelers to disappear from the island nation, leaving 400,000 Balinese people without jobs.

In April this year, Indonesia’s Tourism Minister Sandiaga Uno asked Australians to return, as the nation “misses” us.

“We want you guys to be back,” he told 9news.

“We are seeing demand, very healthy demand from Australia in particular. Bali is now open.”

.

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Entertainment

The Block 2022 recap episode 1: Five new teams arrive in the country and realize their tree change will be tougher than they thought

The Block is back for more stunning home renovations and for the first time ever we are in the country for a tree change.

Five new teams arrive for what really is the biggest block ever and they’re thrown straight into the deep end with a 48-hour House Decider challenge.

Stream the latest episodes of The Block for free on 9Now.

the reality of the block hits hard and fast as the teams battle reno fails and misunderstandings to try to deliver a bedroom good enough to get them first choice of the houses.

And one team’s confusion over some well-intended design advice results in a unique room feature that leaves them fearing they won’t secure their favorite house.

READMORE: Meet the contestants taking on the Tree Change challenge of The Block 2022

Before we get to that we’re reunited with host Scott Cam who is also renovating a house this year.

He’s arrived three months early to get a few rooms ready. The façade, veranda and front lawn are also beautifully landscaped providing the perfect setting to meet the new contestants.

First to arrive on the Gisborne building site are block fans Tom and Sarah-Jane from Victoria.

When they get to Scotty’s front lawn there is no one to be seen, but soon enough another team arrives and it’s sunshiny Queensland couple Dylan and Jenny.

Next up its former AFL player Joel and influencer Elle from Sydney who are instantly recognized by Tom and Sarah-Jane as famous faces.

Then Victoria’s Ankur and Sharon drive up and they’re already vowing not to “break up as a result of The Block“, which is always a good sign.

Last but certainly not least are happy-go-lucky best friends Omar and Oz, who hail from Sydney.

Now everyone’s here Scotty – along with his kelpie Frankie – makes his entrance and explains the 48-hour House Decider challenge to the teams.

“So now what we want to see is what you guys can do over the next 12 weeks with 10 acres. It’s never been done before in block history. The question I’ve got for you guys is simple, have you got what it takes? Why don’t we find out right now?” Scotty asks the contestants.

New nine.com.au homepage
(Nine)

He tells them there are five homesteads on the property, each a different size and shape with their own unique views of the Macedon Ranges.

To get first pick of the house they’ll be renewing this season they’ll compete in a House Decider challenge. This requires them to makeover a bedroom in 48 hours with a budget of only $5,000 and the help of tradies from hipages.

Scotty allocates them a house for the challenge based on the order they arrived in and the teams run to the properties to get started.

After some debate over which room they’re going to do their bedroom in, Tom and Sarah-Jane settle on a space and get to work. They’re going for a modern farmhouse look with green and white walls.

And then we’re treated to our first reno fail of The Block 2022.

Once the walls have been plastered, Tom tries to save some time by priming the wall during the night. The only problem is, the plaster hasn’t been sanded yet.

“I don’t have to be neat now, just slap it on, that all gets sanded off tomorrow anyway,” he says not realizing his mistake.

The next morning the plasterer returns for sanding and giggles as he greets Sarah-Jane.

“They’re like what’ve you done to the walls? You don’t put primer on until the gyprock has been sanded,” Sarah-Jane recalls.

“I’m not aware it’s like paint,” Tom explains.

That means Tom had to hand sand the walls before redoing the first he stayed up all night to apply.

Later things take a turn when Tom struggles to operate a paint spray gun and ends up in an argument with Sarah-Jane. The stress and overwhelming nature of the first two days on The Block gets to Sarah-Jane as she tears up.

The Block 2022 Tom and Sarah Jane
Sarah-Jane is in tears after an argument with Tom. (Nine)

Elsewhere Omar and Oz have hit the ground running after a slow start and are planning a bedroom with a neutral palette, storage and an occasional chair.

Dylan and Jenny are progressing well with their bedroom which has “country vibes” and “Mediterranean farm style texture, nude colors and stuff like that, like luxury”.

The Block 2022 - Week 0
Dylan and Jenny get ready to transform this room into a bedroom. (Nine)

As for Joel and Elle, they’re looking far from the country for their bedroom inspiration and doing a coastal cool style. They’ve also decided to forego carpet and pay $750 for timber flooring, even though they’ve got a tight budget and a short deadline.

Scotty pays them a visit and though he claims he likes the features in the room tells them “it’s a room to lose”.

Over in House 4, Ankur and Sharon are having a reindeer fail of their own. Sharon is keen for a reclaimed timber feature wall in the bedroom but Scotty is concerned it might look like a “man cave”.

“I don’t think it should be really rustic, it can be timber – beautiful. I don’t know about the rough rusticity [wood]. You do that in a man cave by the pizza oven, but not in the bedroom,” he advises.

READMORE: Why The Block host Scott Cam thinks his dog Frankie will be the star of the 2022 season

Despite Scotty’s advice Sharon heads off to a farm in search of timber off-cuts and reveals a hidden talent for driving a forklift. It seems she’s misinterpreted his comments on her and thought he meant she shouldn’t do a whole wall with rustic timber, so she’s gone and done half a feature wall instead.

“Ta-daaaaa – I listened to you,” Sharon proudly tells Scotty.

“No you didn’t, you’ve done completely the opposite of what I said,” he laughs.

But that’s not the only problem, the timber beams on the ceiling are 30mm short. Scotty recommends fixing it because if they leave it like that the judges will notice and they definitely won’t win the challenge.

And that’s a worry for the couple who have their hearts set on House 4, especially because that’s the house everyone wants.

“It’s a got a big deck that wraps around for that east side, so you get the sunrise in the morning,” Dylan says about House 4’s features.

The Block 2022
This is the house everyone wants to renovate. (Nine)

Joel and Elle love it because the back of the house has direct views of Mount Macedon.

And Sarah-Jane is also a fan of House 4, so winning the House Decider challenge has never been more important.

To find out who gets first pick of the houses, we’ll have to wait until the rooms are judged in Episode 2. But that’s not only thing rocking The Block with one couple set to walk-off the show completely for the first time in history.

In Pictures

Inside Scott Cam's Block house renovation 2022.

Scotty’s house renovation so far

Sneak peek at the first three rooms.

ViewGallery

The Block airs Sunday at 7.00pm and Monday to Wednesday at 7.30pm on Nine. Catch up on all the latest episodes on 9Now.

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Sports

Netballers win Australia’s 1,000th Commonwealth Games gold medal | Commonwealth Games 2022

Another rush of gold in Birmingham saw Australia reach a major milestone as the Diamonds netball team claimed the nation’s 1,000th Commonwealth Games gold medal. It followed success – and another slice of history – for the women’s T20 cricketers at Edgbaston after they edged India by nine runs to win the first Commonwealth gold medal awarded to women.

Mission Petria chef Thomas said it was an honor to have led the team towards such a momentous occasion. “Australia has a long and proud sporting history, with this 1,000th gold medal cementing our spot at the top of the Commonwealth table,” said Thomas. “On behalf of the whole team, I congratulate the Diamonds in bringing home this significant medal in our amazing history and all those who have stood atop the podium at this year’s Games and all the Games, dating back to Hamilton in 1930.”

At the NEC Arena, Gretal Bueta shot 100% in a 55-51 win over Jamaica as Australia bounced back from the disappointment of silver on the Gold Coast four years ago to became the first nation to reach the milestone with their 66th gold of these Games in Birmingham.

In the two teams’ final pool game, Australia had let slip a six-goal lead at the final break and fell to their first Commonwealth loss to Jamaica. With their confidence high, the Jamaicans then routed New Zealand, as Australia found form when too strong for England. It sets the tone for a fierce finale.

But Australia were not going to make the same mistake again. Having leveled by half-time, they wrested control in the third quarter, moving 10 points ahead at one stage, and showed strong resistance against their richly-talented rivals to claim gold.

Steph Wood said there were flashbacks to the traumatic loss in the final against England on the Gold Coast but this time around they found a way to maintain their focus. “It’s very surreal. The emotion after the game. There were tears [and] a bit of PTSD from the Gold Coast in that last little bit,” she said. “It’s such a tight-knit group. We wanted to do it for each other.”

At Edgbaston, Meg Lanning’s all-conquering side added to their stunning record in women’s cricket, but it was a near run thing, with India threatening to pull off a remarkable run chase right to death.

On a day of drama, Australia confirmed midway through their innings that Tahlia McGrath had tested positive for Covid-19 on Sunday morning. If the final had been held in Australia, she would not have been able to play but the Commonwealth Games rules are more relaxed to match the laws of the host nation.

After checking with bodies including the International Cricket Council and the Commonwealth Games Foundation, she was allowed to take her place, with precautions. She sat isolated from her teammates during the batting innings and in a surreal moment after taking a catch in the third over, she waved her teammates away as they ran to celebrate.

Australia had been on top until reeled in late in their innings. Indian captain Harmanpreet Kaur then batted brilliantly when scoring 65 from 43 balls. But when she was caught by record-breaking wicketkeeper Alyssa Healy off the bowling of Gardner in the 16th over, the momentum swung back towards the Australians.

As Australia were trying to reel India’s run chase in, Peter Bol set off in pursuit of Kenyan Wycliffe Kinyamal at Alexander Stadium but had to settle for silver 0.14 seconds behind the record-breaker, who became the first man to defend the Commonwealth Games 800m title in 1:47.52.

“I got a medal and that’s what we wanted,” Bol said. “I had a lot of pressure and a lot of expectations, but I lived up to it, and that’s my first medal at a major championships.”

Earlier on Sunday, the Hockeyroos also fared second best in their final against England when beaten 2-1. A week after the Lionesses became the pride of England, the chant of “Hockey’s coming home” was heard ringing around the University of Birmingham as the host nation claimed their first gold medal in women’s hockey.

There were several standout individual performances from Australians leading into the women’s teams events later in the day.

Kelsey-Lee Barber throws on her way to gold in Birmingham.
Kelsey-Lee Barber throws on her way to gold in Birmingham. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

A double world champion in javelin, Kelsey-Lee Barber saved her very best for last again. Ella stricken with Covid-19 after her success at the world championships in Oregon, the 30-year-old missed the opening ceremony and spent several days isolated from her teammates.

Her compatriot Mackenzie Little raised the bar with a personal best in the final of 64.27m. But Barber, who was cleared to compete late in the week, loves a challenge. She responded with her final throw to edge her teammate by 16cm to continue her success in major championships with gold.

Cassiel Rousseau dived superbly to claim gold in the men’s 10m platform, scoring massive points with his final entry in the morning qualification and bettering that with a superb effort to close out the competition.

Cyclist Georgia Baker also saved her best for the finish of the women’s road race, in the process claiming a third gold following triumphs in London in the team pursuit and points race.

As Australia’s cricket innings began, Chris McHugh and Paul Burnett also clinched a gold medal for the nation in beach volleyball. But the defense of the title was not without drama either.

McHugh, who was part of Australia’s winning combination on the Gold Coast, and Burnett dropped the first set and had to save two match points in the decider when winning 17-21, 21-17, 20-18 over Canada. Amid the tension, referee Giovanni Bake had to be replaced at 12-all in the deciding set, ostensibly due to baking in the sun.

“It is crazy. To come from two match points down is a surreal experience,” Burnett said. “This is why we play, for moments like this, feelings like this.”

The women’s pairing of Mariafe Artacho del Solar and Taliqua Clancy won silver after falling in their final to Canada’s Sarah Pavan and Melissa Humana-Paredes in three sets.

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Entertainment

French socialite “outraged” over Sarah Ferguson’s Mayfair property purchase after owning millions on Swiss chalet sale

A former friend left out of pocket by the Duke and Duchess of York says she is “outraged” over Sarah Ferguson’s purchase of a multi-million London mansion because she thought the duchess “didn’t have a penny.”

Isabelle de Rouvre sold her Swiss ski chalet to the Yorks in 2014 but accepted lower payment believing the couple were short of cash and because of Prince Andrew’s sex abuse case.

Prince Andrew and Fergie bought de Rouvre’s chalet in Verbier for about £18 million ($31 million).

READMORE: The Queen Mother’s most spectacular jewels and who wears them now

Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson holiday in Spain amid Jeffrey Epstein scandal
Prince Andrew and the Duchess of York at Royal Ascot. (Getty)

They asked to buy the seven-bed chalet, which featured an indoor swimming pool, sauna and bar, after renting it regularly for holidays.

They took out a mortgage of £13.25 million ($22 million) and agreed to pay the remaining £5 million ($7 million) in cash facilities to de Rouvre, with interest accruing.

When the couple failed to pay the outstanding amounts, she took them to court in what became a long-running dispute.

Now, the French socialite has told The Sunday Times she was owed about £6.8 million ($12 million), which included interest, but agreed to a lower payment of about £3.4 million ($6 million), partly because she was under the impression that the Yorks were short of money.

De Rouvre said she also chose not to pursue the full payment because of the legal case brought by Virginia Guiffre against Prince Andrew, alleging that he had sex with her when she was 17, which he denies.

She said she “settled for about half the amount” she was owed by the Yorks.

Sarah Ferguson Duchess of York says she relates to Meghan Markle over bullying
The Duchess of York recently purchased a Mayfair terrace for an estimated $8.7 million. (Getty)

“I understood they didn’t have the money and believed he would be going to prison in America so I thought it best to get what I could,” she told the publication.

Her agreement freed up the Yorks to complete the sale of the chalet. She said of the situation in January: “The war is finished.”

Prince Andrew is believed to have borrowed money from members of the royal family to pay Giuffre an estimated £10 million ($20 million) because of the delay in getting funds from the sale of the chalet.

Last week it emerged the Duchess of York had bought a £5 million ($8.7 million) Mayfair home, believed to be an investment opportunity for her daughters Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie.

“I am outraged that I am now told she has spent millions on another property,” de Rouvre told the Times.

“It is just incredible and the whole story unbelievable.

“It is a dirty story as far as I am concerned. I thought she didn’t have a penny.”

Sarah Ferguson says charity work made her a better mother.
Sarah Ferguson with Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie. (Getty)

The address is in the Grosvenor Estate and was owned by the Duke of Westminster, who is a close friend of the royal family and godfather to the future King, prince george, according to The Sun.

Fergie and Prince Andrew, both 62, still live together at the Royal Lodge in Windsor – when she is based in the UK – which is owned by the Queen and on a long-term lease to Andrew.

In 2010 the duchess said she was “continually on the verge of financial bankruptcy”.

And during her decade-long marriage to Prince Andrew there were reports she had debts of up £4.2 million ($7 million) in debt during her ten-year marriage.

Recently, Fergie secured a 22-book deal with an Australian publisher as a children’s author.

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The British royals’ most shocking controversies and scandals

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Million-dollar Ashleigh Buhai wins playoff for Women’s Open and first major | Women’s Open

You wait more than 130 years for a mainstream women’s event at Muirfield then nobody wants to leave. The R&A, which presides over the Women’s Open, was at least spared the embarrassment of a Monday conclusion but such an outcome was in the equation as a playoff between Ashleigh Buhai and Chun In-gee rumbled on to the fourth sudden-death playing of the 18th hole.

For Buhai, glory and $1.1m from a major she looked at one point determined to give away. Chun, who would have completed a grand slam – but not a super slam – of majors with victory here, drove into a penal fairway bunker at the worst possible time and the rest is history. Muirfield, once the epitome of male-only golf environments, toasted a female major champion at ten past nine at night. Buhai beat rapidly fading light – the consequence of preposterously late tee off times to accommodate television schedules – as well as Chun.

Buhai led by five at the start of day four. Those below her on the scoreboard swung and missed all day until the 33-year-old reached the 15th tee, still with a three-stroke advantage. She drove into a bunker, from where she could only play out sideways. The trouble was, this attempted recovery flew into thick rough. Buhai advanced the ball 10 yards, with her fourth shot just short of the green. In no time, she was standing over a 15ft putt for a double-bogey six, which she missed. She was now tied with Chun. Almost simultaneously, Chun came so close to finding the bottom of the hole at the 16th, from 50ft, for a birdie. A procession had turned into an engrossing duel.

Buhai could have regained momentum but her birdie tried at the penultimate hole stayed above ground. At the last, the eventual champion rattled her putt for a three past the hole. Par was crucially saved from there but Chun had the momentum entering the playoff courtesy of Buhai’s 75 shots, four over par, in regulation play.

The playoff proved dramatic. On the first re-playing of the 18th, Chun had a wonderful shot from a greenside bunker to rescue a four. On hole 74, Chun fluffed a chip from left of the green. A bogey five, though, was sufficient to halve after Buhai failed to get up and down from the same sand trap.

Onwards to try number three; this time Buhai’s birdie putt, for the trophy, slid so narrowly by.

Next, Chun found a fairway bunker. This was, again, Buhai’s to lose and this time from the middle of the fairway. She carved into the same greenside bunker that she had featured previously but played a superb shot to tap-in range. Chun had to hole out from the fringe to extend play but she could not.

Buhai and Chun, at 10 under, had finished a shot ahead of Hinako Shibuno. The Japanese player, the champion in 2019, will perform a double bogey at the 14th. A second Women’s Open title was otherwise within her grasp of her.

Madelene Sagström’s 71 ensured a share of fourth at seven under. The Swede admitted she was “looking forward to some rest” after a testing week.

Ireland’s Leona Maguire signed off with a bogey-free 66, so she finished alongside Sagström and Minjee Lee on the leaderboard. “It would have been nice to get to 10 under,” she said. “I kind of had that total in my head. But this is my best Women’s Open so far and a really, really solid week. If I had had my week on the greens, things could have been a lot different.”

A year ago, Louise Duncan’s top 10 finish was worth nothing whatsoever in monetary terms as she competed when still an amateur. Her closing 69 of her for a share of 19th comes with the benefit of a £70,000 pay day. This marks just Duncan’s second event from her as a professional. “I’m over the moon with the end result,” said the 22-year-old Scot. “This is the first cut I’ve made all year, so I’m really delighted with that. Going forward, I’m going to keep this tournament in my mind.” Because of how long it lasted, few will readily forget it.

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US

Here’s how the Inflation Reduction Act’s rebates and tax credits for heat pumps and solar can lower your energy bill

It’s not the prettiest, or even most fulfilling, part of upgrading a home. But more energy-efficient heating, cooling, power and water usage can net savings that really adds up for household budgets and for doing right by the planet.

Congressional action this weekend and into next week looks to return more incentives, mostly via tax credits and rebates, to the pockets of homeowners who opt for energy-efficient choices, replacing fossil-fuel furnaces, boilers, water heaters and stoves with high-efficiency electric options that can be powered by renewable energy.

Read: Senate passes Democrats’ big healthcare, climate and tax package after marathon session

Of course, more of the nation’s electricity grid, currently run on natural gas NG00,
-2.15%,
along with lingering coal, and expanding wind and solar ICLN,
+0.76%,
will have to be powered by renewable energy for home upgrades to be truly green. But, alternatives are rising in use, and home efficiency has long been considered a good place to start.

The bill, a long-fought and greatly-downsized Democrat-crafted spending bill now known as the Inflation Reduction Act, includes rebates or a tax break for qualifying consumers who add efficient heat pumps (which, despite their name, move cold air around too ), rooftop solar, electric HVAC and electric water heaters.

The IRA was passed Sunday in the Senate and now makes its way to the House next week, where it is expected to be approved by a narrow majority for Democrats in that chamber. The Republicans who have opposed the bill have done so based on disagreements, they say, with the level of spending, but also because some support US oil and gas production on the grounds of cost savings and global security. And Democrats did agree to a future look at expediting environmental approvals for fossil fuels and clean energy.

“American families need relief from Democrat policies that attack American energy, send utility bills soaring and drive up prices RB00,

at the pump,” said Sen. Barrasso, a Republican of Wyoming who is a ranking member on the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.

Climate Nexus, an advocacy group, says a survey has shown 67% of voters support providing tax credits and other incentives to homeowners, landlords and businesses to purchase appliances that don’t use fossil fuels (such as electric water heaters, heat pumps, and electric induction cooktops).

What’s in the Inflation Reduction Act for home energy?

The legislation provides for $9 billion in total energy rebates, including the $4.28 billion High-Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Program, which returns a rebate of up to $8,000 to install heat pumps that can both heat and cool homes, and a rebate up to $1,750 for a heat-pump water heater. Homeowners might also qualify for up to $840 to offset the cost of a heat-pump clothes dryer or an electric stove, such as a high-efficiency induction range.

Read: Gas stoves targeted as US congressman alleges consumer watchdog has sat on decades of worrisome health data

and: More and more right-leaning Americans worry about climate change, but aren’t ready to give up gas stoves

Many homes will need their electrical panels upgraded before getting new appliances, and the program offers up to a $4,000 rebate toward that initial step.

“A household with an efficient electric heat pump for space heating and cooling, a heat pump water heater, one electric vehicle and solar panels would save $1,800 a year,” says Jamal Lewis and team, writing a brief on the legislation for the organization Rewiring America.

“These savings will be reflected in lower monthly energy bills, reduced bill
volatility and a lessening of disproportionately high energy burdens within disadvantaged communities,” Lewis said. “Importantly, these savings add up — so much so that if a household invests their energy bill savings from electrifying their home appliances, these savings will grow to over $30,000 after 10 years and $140,000 after 25 years (assuming an 8% annual return). ”

There are also funds in the IRA to be claimed for smaller actions: a rebate of up to $1,600 to insulate and seal a house, and a rebate of up to $2,500 for improvements to electrical wiring.

The program, to be administered at the state level, will run through Sept. 30, 2031, and homeowners would be able to collect a maximum of $14,000 in total rebates. To qualify, household income cannot exceed 150% of the area median income.

For homeowners who do not qualify for the rebates, the IRA provides for a tax credit of up to $2,000 to install heat pumps. And, installing an induction stove or new windows and doors, for example, qualifies for tax credits up to $1,200 a year.

What are heat pumps exactly?

Electric heat pumps, which replace a furnace, for instance, are energy efficient because they don’t create heat by burning fuels but rather move it (during the heating season) from cold outdoors to warm indoors. The downsides can include upfront costs and their suitability for all regions.

Still, over its lifetime, electric heat pumps generally offer the cheapest way to cleanly heat and cool single-family homes in all but the coldest parts of the US in coming decades, according to recent research from the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE). In very cold places, the analysis finds, electric heat pumps with an alternative fuel backup for frigid periods minimize costs.

“Our findings are good news for consumers and for the climate. Electric heat pumps, which heat and cool, are the cheapest clean heating option for many houses, especially now that we have cold-climate models,” says Steven Nadel, report coauthor and ACEEE’s executive director.

Cold-climate models, an advance in the technology, operate efficiently at temperatures as low as 5°F. Their energy costs, however, are minimized if an alternative fuel backup kicks in when it gets colder than 5°F for long periods.

EPA Energy Star program

EPA Energy Star program

The analysis finds that higher-income households are more likely to minimize costs with electric heat pumps, because they have newer—and more likely, single-family—homes with air-conditioning and improved energy efficiency.

The group backs congressional help for low- and moderate-income households, whose homes are often the most difficult to decarbonize. Notably, ACEEE calls for help to reduce the costs of ductless electric mini-split heat pumps in multifamily buildings.

And what about solar?

The legislation revives a 30% tax credit for installing residential solar panels and extends the program until Dec. 31, 2034.

The tax credit would decline to 26% for solar panels put into service after Dec. 31, 2032 and before Jan. 1, 2034.

What’s more, homeowners who install solar battery systems with at least three kilowatt-hours of capacity would also qualify for the tax credit.

The heating-and-cooling provisions are in addition to tax credits of up to $7,500 for the purchase of a new electric vehicle TSLA,
-6.63%

F,
-0.46%
and $4,000 for lower- and middle-income families who purchase a used EV. Early versions of this spending bill included help for e-bikes, but they are excluded in the final. Read more about those EV incentives.

Other programs

Homeowners can look beyond federal programs.

Safak Yucel, assistant professor of operations management at Georgetown University, who studies government policies relating to renewable energy and carbon emissions, said legislative uncertainty given the long slog to get this bill passed, and the risk that executive action is challenged in the courts, means that state and city incentives, and those offered by utilities, may make homeowners more assured.

“A lot of state governments, a lot of cities, they offer quite lucrative deals,” he said. “When it comes to rooftop solar, for example, Massachusetts comes to mind, which is not necessarily the sunniest of states, right, but they have quite a significant adoption of rooftop solar panels thanks to these state-level policies. I think as consumers look forward, they are more likely to see even broader involvement from state governments.”

Website EcoWatch, for instance, allows users to search by zip zode and ranks solar-friendly states.

Will incentives nudge consumer buy-in?

Broadly speaking, the new bill is meant to return more green technology manufacturing back to the US by tagging $60 billion to accelerate domestic production of solar panels, wind turbines and batteries, as well as support the critical minerals processing that are a must-have for the batteries that power EVs and help households leverage their solar power.

More domestic production could help alleviate the supply-chain issues that have hobbled markets during the COVID-19 recovery, and it could create more jobs, all of which is seen helping Americans “green up” their homes and businesses at a lower cost historically, bill proposers argue.

Biden has said the US will work to align with most major economies in the world, hitting net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and at least halving current emissions as soon as 2030.

“Electrification will play a crucial role in decarbonizing homes, but the transition will happen slowly as long as inexpensive fossil fuels are widely available,” says Lyla Fadali, an ACEEE senior researcher.

Targeting manufacturing changes can also trickle down to consumers.

“Rather than focusing on whether or not a consumer will buy into the product at this point, what we’re seeing is that the consumers’ hand is sort of going to be pushed over a certain amount of time because so many manufacturers and producers are incentivized to build more solar, more EVs and so on,” said Shannon Christensen, an attorney and a tax and accounting specialist editor with Thomson Reuters Checkpoint, an online research platform.

“When gasoline-powered vehicles came into popularity in the beginning, nobody wanted to switch from their horse and buggy. It took quite some time to get consumers at that time to go over into that new technology. And I think we’re seeing the exact same thing,” Christensen said. “But the technology is getting good enough. And Congress has made it available to lower-income folks and through tax credits. I think that you’re going to see a [demand] shift, and I think it will rise quickly.”

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Categories
Entertainment

Brisbane Fashion Week’s king of hair Ben Wright reflects on his humble roots

Backstage among the glitz and glamor of Brisbane Fashion Week 2022 (BFW22), Ben Wright will be a long way from the dusty, red streets of his rural Queensland hometown.

It was there, in the corner of a quaint, little Mount Isa news agency he first pried open the pages of a Vogue magazine and instantly fell in love.

“I think I was the only 14-year-old boy in Mount Isa buying Vogue,” he laughed.

A black and white photo of a young man wearing all-black smiling at the camera, arms-crossed
Ben Wright always wanted to be a hairdresser. Now he’s the director of hair for Brisbane Fashion Week 2022.(Supplied: @benwright_rixonhair)

“I loved looking at the amazing hairstyles in those pages and dreamt of one day creating looks like that and being a part of that industry.”

Since then, the 24-year-old has shot to success, working at an award-winning salon in Brisbane and behind the scenes at fashion shows and shoots across the country – including Melbourne Fashion Week and Australian Fashion Week.

As he readies himself for his new role as hair director for BFW22, Mr Wright remembers the moment he realized this was the world for him.

“It was my Nan that got me into hairdressing,” he said.

“I was always with her on school holidays and she was always one of those nannas dressed to the nines. I would go with her when she was in the salon getting a perm, a cut, a color or even just a blow-dry.

“I could never take my eyes off what the hairdresser was doing – I was enthralled.”

‘Passion was contagious’

From an early age, he cheekily started schooling his mum about the clothes she bought him.

“As a kid I always loved fashion and I always cared about what I was wearing and all of that.

“I’m pretty sure Mum stopped buying me clothes for Christmas when I was like nine or 10 because I just would refuse to wear whatever she bought me.”

As soon as he could, Mr Wright walked into his favorite salon – the Capricorn Hair Studio in Mount Isa – and demanded a job.

A black and white photo of a hairdresser attending a client
At age 14, Mr Wright started working at a local salon.(Supplied: @benwright_rixonhair)

Owner Michelle Donald still remembers that day.

“He said, ‘I want to be a hairdresser, that’s all I want to be and this is where I want to work, I’m happy to work for free if you’ll take me on’,” she said.

“I said, ‘You don’t have to work for free’ and that was it.

“He started work that Saturday. He was perfect and we bonded immediately. His enthusiasm and passion were contagious.”

From salon to behind-the-scenes

Whether he’s on set or in the shop, Mr Wright’s greatest motivation comes from the people he gets to work with.

A collection of headshots showing colorful and quirky hairstyles on different models
Some of Mr Wright’s work. (Supplied: @benwright_rixonhair)

“When you’re in the salon, you get that sense of gratification from the small act of making someone feel and look beautiful, changing how people feel about themselves,” he said.

“Seeing people so happy when they leave the salon that feeling stays with you.

“Backstage and on set, you get that sense of adrenaline and excitement. It’s fast-paced, you’re working with so many different creatives in such a pumped-up atmosphere.

“That’s a feeling that I’ve loved since I started dancing competitively in Mount Isa and that’s stayed with me to this day and a big part of why I love what I do.”

As his career skyrockets into its next phase, the 24-year-olds encouraged others to join the industry.

A group photo inside a lobby area
Mr Wright says he was “enthralled” as a child watching the hairdresser do his grandmother’s hair.(Supplied: @benwright_rixonhair)

“If you’re feeling a little lost or intrigued about what the industry might be like, if you’ve got a passion for hair, you’ve got a natural creative flair, if you love people and high-energy environments, and what’s happening in the world right now, this is an industry for you,” he said.

“Walk into a local salon and ask questions, get your hands dirty, even if you just do a day of work experience — try it out. Not only is it the best job, it’s the best world to be a part of.”

Woman stands next to a young woman who is holding a certificate III.
Michelle Donald (left), owner of Capricorn Hair Studio.(Supplied: Capricorn Hair Studio)

For his first-ever employer, his achievements come as no shock.

“Reading and hearing about Ben’s success never surprises me,” Ms Donald said.

“He was destined for greatness and it makes me super proud to know that, as a boy from the bush with a big dream, he let nothing hold him back.”

Mr Wright’s hair creations will feature on the runway at the BFW22 from August 22-26.

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Categories
Sports

Peter Bol takes silver in 800m at Commonwealth Games behind Kenya’s Wyclife Kinyamal

Since finishing fourth in the men’s 800 meter final at last year’s Tokyo Olympics, Peter Bol has become a national hero.

Everyone knows his name, his face, his story, and he felt that he was coming into the 800 final at the Commonwealth Games.

“I felt like the favourite. I knew there was a lot of pressure, a lot of expectations,” he said after claiming silver behind Kenya’s Wyclife Kinyamal.

“But at the same time, in our sport pressure’s a privilege. We know it’s there. And I was relaxed, really confident. [I] felt really strong.

“I thought I could really win it tonight. I just came short and can’t say any more than that.”

After Oliver Hoare’s heroics in the men’s 1,500 meters final a day earlier, it was hoped Bol could produce another classic on the track.

The 28-year-old was in the mix for most of the race, but Kinyamal started to make his move with around 250 meters left.

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Categories
US

Historic climate bill to supercharge clean energy industry

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer teed up the final vote, calling the legislation “the boldest climate package in US history.”

“It will kick start the era of affordable clean energy in America. It’s a game changer, it’s a turning point, and it’s been a long time coming,” he said.

The climate portions of the bill were far lower than the $550 billion originally envisioned as part of a broad $2.2 trillion bill a year ago, but they still represent the biggest investment in clean energy sources in US history — about four times as large as the incentives contained in President Barack Obama’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

The drop was due to inflation concerns from West Virginia’s Sen. Joe Manchin, who only acquiesced to the bill after private negotiations with Schumer last month and the assurances from leading economists like former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers that it would not worsen the economic pain for Americans. And Manchin won the addition of language that linked measures to help boost oil and gas production to some of the clean energy incentives, irking environmental activists — but not enough for them to pull their support for the bill.

The House of Representatives is expected to take up the bill later this week. Its climate measures include billions of dollars to expand wind and solar power production, bring electric vehicles closer to the financial reach of more Americans and make $1.5 billion available to oil companies cut down their greenhouse gas emissions and penalize them for failing to do so. And it would help develop technologies such as carbon capture and sequestration, hydrogen and small nuclear reactors that experts say will be needed to get the US to net-zero emissions by 2050, a level scientists say is necessary to prevent catastrophic climate change. It would devote $4 billion to help address an imminent disaster for the southwest as climate change-fueled drought threatens power and water supplies for 40 million people along the Colorado River.

The bill would also catapult the United States, the world’s second-biggest carbon emitter after China, to the forefront of countries taking concrete action on combating climate change after months of appearing as if it would lose its status as a global leader in the fight.

“It’s a landmark achievement,” Gregory Wetstone, president and CEO of the American Council on Renewable Energy, said in an interview. “We have never had a policy in the United States that was actually geared to drive the transition to clean energy and address the climate crisis. And we’re looking now at a measure that is up to the task.”

The new and expanded tax credits for low-carbon technologies would remain on the books for a decade, providing certainty to clean energy developers who have faced regular lapses in the incentives.

In all, the bill would help more than triple the clean power production in the country, adding up to an additional 550 gigawatts of electricity from wind, solar and other clean power sources, according to analysis from the American Clean Power Association. That’s enough to power 110 million homes, the industry trade group said.

An analysis from energy and climate analytics firm Rhodium Group estimated the bill would cut the country’s net greenhouse gas emissions by 31 to 44 percent below 2005 levels in 2030 compared to the 24 to 35 percent drop expected from current policies.

When paired with last year’s bipartisan infrastructure package, the US spending on climate change is poised to be on par with the EU’s climate budget, said Kate Larsen, who leads Rhodium’s international energy and climate research.

“The question isn’t every country exactly on a straight line path to meeting their 2030 emissions reduction target, but are they putting policies in place to get the ball rolling to make sure it’s possible to do that,” Larsen said in an interview . “With the passage of this bill, you can say definitely we are well on their way to meeting those targets.”

John Podesta, founder of the liberal Center for American Progress and who served in both the Obama and Clinton administrations, said in a text the bill will set off “a tsunami of investment, American job creation and innovation that will, if history is any judge , likely to result in even greater emission reductions [than] the modeling shows.”

The bill will dramatically remake parts of the US economy as it helps create new jobs in the green energy and carbon reduction sectors, said Robbie Orvis, senior director of energy policy design at Energy Innovation, a nonpartisan energy and climate policy think tank.

“This is kind of an industrial bill masquerading as an energy and climate bill,” Orvis said. “There’s just so much in the bill to bring clean energy manufacturing back to the US and to grow the industry, and that is the direction the world is headed.”

“This is going to be more massive than people realize,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) said in an interview. “If the government invests $300 billion in solar, wind, batteries and heat pumps, that has the potential to unlock trillions of dollars in private sector investment in climate.”

Still, some measures in the bill that Manchin insisted on inserting were criticized by some Democrats. That included requirements that tie offshore wind development to mandates that the federal government hold a lease sale beforehand of at least 60 million acres of federal waters for oil and gas production, and domestic content requirements for electric vehicles that critics say will make the $7,500 new car credit unreachable for any EV currently on the market. Those measures, critics such as Sen. Bernie Sander say, undercut the effectiveness of the climate measures.

Republicans have disputed Democrats’ claims that the bill would reduce inflation and instead attacked the taxes in the bill as a cost increase on US oil and gas production.

“One of their problems is inflation is an immediate problem,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (RN.D.) said in an interview. “Even if their theory is over time this bill will be deflationary, the election is in less than three months and inflation is really bad. None of it is going to kick in time. The message it sends is prices, taxes will go up in the short-term.”

Republicans point to a provision in the bill that would reinstate the so-called Superfund tax on crude oil and imported petroleum products to fund the cleanup of polluted industrial sites.

The bill adds new credibility to efforts by Biden and US climate envoy John Kerry to put the US at the forefront of the global efforts to fight climate change. The United States had been considered in danger of seriously lagging European efforts even as historic droughts deplete water supplies in the West, wildfires scorch millions of acres and devastating floods left dozens of people dead in Kentucky.

Now positions are reversed at least in the short term, with Europe finding it difficult to live up to its hawkish rhetoric on climate change amid a Russian land war that is making the region more dependent on fossil fuel mostly imported from the United States.

Nat Keohane, president of climate advocacy group C2ES, noted the US and other countries have struggled to fulfill emissions pledges they made at UN COP 26 conference in Glasgow last November intended to move the world closer to achieving the goals of the Paris climate agreement.

There, Biden declared the US would take a leadership role in fighting climate change after four years of evading the issue under former President Donald Trump, a promise that faced skepticism from other big emitters given Congress’ poor track record to deliver policy to produce emissions cuts .

“If the US were not able to do this, that would have real ripple effects,” Keohane said. “I am not sure we could have gotten back on track. By the US staying in the game, it gives real juice to the Paris Agreement model of setting targets, delivering implementation, and raising ambition going forward.”

Republicans had vowed to fight the package, despite many of its provisions promising to send money and create jobs in their states. But a slate of amendments targeting the energy provisions they submitted were all rejected in a Senate vote-a-rama that lasted through Saturday night and into Sunday afternoon.

The win comes at a crucial time for Biden and Democrats, who face a tough task in holding the House and the Senate in November’s election amid the decades-high inflation and Biden’s poor approval ratings.

Democrats had urged Manchin to back the bill, and negotiations to win his vote led to the inclusion of some “Easter Eggs” benefiting the fossil fuel industry, including funding to help develop the sort of carbon capture technology that Exxon Mobil, Chevron and other companies consider a new business opportunity. The bill focused heavily on incentives for oil companies to build their carbon capture and hydrogen businesses, which some environmental groups have opposed, arguing those technologies will prolong the use of fossil fuels.

The bill also includes a fee of up to $1,500 a ton for methane emissions, a powerful greenhouse gas that is the main component of natural gas. Many companies in the oil and gas industry had fought the measure, which the Democrats sought to soften by giving companies time and money to install equipment to monitor and cut their emissions.

Progressive Democrats complained about the money that could be used to help fossil fuel companies, but ultimately held their noses and voted to approve.

“There is no reason to be a purist about this stuff,” Sen. Brian Shatz (D-Hawaii) said in an interview. “The only thing we should care about is, how do we achieve the absolute largest emissions reductions given the current configuration of Congress.”

Even with the Manchin-inspired trade-offs, the bill will give Democrats a success to trumpet as the crucial mid-term election looms.

“It changes the overall narrative about Congress,” Schatz said. “We now have a record of accomplishment comparable to any Congress in the last decade. That is a really powerful body of work and a good argument about why you elect Democrats.”

Zack Colman and Annie Snider contributed to this report.