On the day of the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics, a short thread. 30 years ago in 1992, I was very proud to be walking in the opening ceremony of the Albertville Olympics. No, that's not me carrying the flag, I was only a mid-ranked moguls skier.
OK, since you asked...
Here's another one. Yes, that is me. No, it's not a one-piece. And no, we didn't wear helmets.
Opening ceremonies are great for the athletes. It's like four years of work is finally over. You don't know what the next two weeks is going to bring (Glory? Injury?) but the excitement is at fever pitch. OK, yes, those were one-pieces. In 1992 Team GB had the worst uniforms.
Opening ceremonies are very inspiring. All that symbolism! Trigger alert: this is where the thread takes a bit of a darker turn.
You know where all that symbolism in the Olympic opening ceremony comes from? The torch relay, the flags, the oath, the bell, the doves? All introduced in 1936 at the Nazi Olympics, lifted straight from the Nuremberg Rallies. Watch and learn: dailymotion.com/video/x6uajey
In 1992, there was another stark reminder of the dark past of the Olympics. President of the International Olympic Committee at the time was an old fascist, Juan-Antonio Samaranch, who dropped in to declare the Games open. Nice work, if you can get it, right?
When I say he was an old fascist, it's not a figure of speech. He was old, and had been the de-facto sports minister under the Franco regime. The Olympics was never de-nazified after WWII, unlike most public bodies. Here he is, giving the fascist salute. opendemocracy.net/en/shine-a-lig…
If you have not listened to or watched my conversation with Ban Ki Moon on @MLCleaningUp, I strongly recommend it. He stunned me by saying we need deal with climate change first and human rights later. And he's the chair of the IOC's ethics committee! cleaningup.live/ep70-ban-ki-mo…
Despite being an Olympic athlete, I support the diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Games by the US, UK, Canada, Australia, India and Denmark. Japan is sending no senior officials. Let the athletes go and compete, that's all.
If you need to ask why a diplomatic boycott is justified, you need to read more news. Tibet, Hong Kong, Uyghurs, Covid, threats to Taiwan, Peng Shuai, labour rights... we cannot turn a blind eye. And I speak as someone well aware of the West's history and present-day failings.
Anyway, you're all asking, how did I get on 30 years ago? Olympic Gold went to @edgar_grospiron, who kept his cool despite skiing through a hellish snow shower. His look of concentration at the start is everything: he was born to win this and he knew it.
@edgar_grospiron I didn't medal. In fact I came 32nd. Out of how many, you ask? Oh, about 5.5 billion, and the top-placed management consultant! But seriously, I put in some good turns, hit a few problems. Would have liked to make top 20. But can't complain - what a day! olympics.com/en/athletes/mi…
And I did get an Olympic Participation Medal. A bit like school, everyone gets some sort of prize, but a cool bit of merch nevertheless. Not everyone can get one of these!
I mustn't forget the pin. Four years of my life, and I got a medal you can buy on eBay and a lapel pin. Oh, and I get to use the letters OLY after my name, should I so desire (I don't).
But what an experience! What a joy to push your body to its limits! What stories! What friendships! What fun! So, back to the opening ceremony. Here's me, preparing to march into the stadium as part of the British Olympic Team, Albertville 1992. The whole thing was like a dream.
Coda. Already quite a few have asked how my knees are. Not great to be honest, but then I am 58. Having said that, this was me skiing icy bumps over New Year. Good genes: my mum is about to turn 91, she skied until the start of the Covid pandemic!
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My discussion with Ban Ki Moon on @MLCleaningUp, covered a lot of ground - lessons from the pandemic, energy access, climate change, human rights, the Olympics - and it contained some real bombshells. IN this thread, just some of the highlights... 1/17 cleaningup.live/p/ep70-eh/
"We are suffering this pandemic because the world's leaders have forgotten past experiences. I sincerely hope that when we get over this pandemic, political leaders remember what we have been suffering, and don’t repeat the same foolish mistakes." 2/17
"I telephoned Tedros at the WHO and said you may not be able to handle this crisis alone. Then President Trump withdrew membership from the WHO rather than supporting it, and that was the beginning of the problems for the international community." 3/17
If you really want to know about blue hydrogen, whether it is inevitably incompatible with net zero or whether it is within the laws of physics and engineering - and the wit of humans - to do it right, here's a new paper, written by 16 researchers. 1/4 chemrxiv.org/engage/api-gat…
It says "our main conclusion is that, if the above requirements [limits on CO2 and methane emissions] are met, blue hydrogen can be close to green hydrogen in terms of impacts on climate change and can thus play an important and complementary role" on the road to net zero. 2/4
In fact, the new paper says almost exactly what I was saying before #bluehydrogengate blew up: "I've got nothing against blue hydrogen, as long as there are no fugitive [methane] emissions and [it has] 100% capture, or high-90s per cent capture.” 3/4 rechargenews.com/energy-transit…
So, my lovelies, I just dropped Version 4 of the Clean Hydrogen Ladder! For anyone new to all this, the ladder is my attempt to put use cases for clean hydrogen into some sort of merit order, because not all use cases are equally likely to succeed. 1/10
By way of background, the ladder is intended to debunk the naive view of clean hydrogen as the Swiss Army Knife of the future net zero economy. Just because you could *technically* do something with clean hydrogen, it doesn't mean you will. Thanks for the image idea, Paul! 2/10
This time round, I have written up the Clean Hydrogen Ladder on LinkedIn, so you can see some of my thinking. In the piece I go through the various types of sector where hydrogen might, or might not, play a role. 3/10 linkedin.com/pulse/clean-hy…
My latest for @BloombergNEF: Climate action - It's The Trade, Stupid. Why free trade and fixing the WTO are more important than carbon border adjustments. about.bnef.com/blog/liebreich…
Although dealing with carbon leakage is certainly an important question, it is not the most important question. What is critical is to unleash trade to play its full role in support of climate action. about.bnef.com/blog/liebreich…
How can trade accelerate the uptake of clean technologies? How can it help poorer countries leapfrog to low-carbon solutions? How can it help decarbonize corporate supply chains? These questions will decide the speed, fairness and success of the global net-zero transition.
OK folks, you want zero-emissions construction, forestry and farming machines? The future may be hydrogen, but not as you know it. I spent yesterday with Lord Bamford and his team at @JCBmachines's secret test quarry near Uttoxeter. This puppy burns hydrogen in a thermal engine!
Engineers at @JCBmachines have developed a range of battery machines, which work great if they are not in constant use and have a grid connection. For off-grid, continuous use they tried fuel cells, but found them complex and expensive. Et voila, they developed a hydrogen engine!
I was well impressed. I'm a mech engineer with a thing for fluid dynamics and thermodynamics. The first ever IC engine ran on hydrogen in 1807, but solving all its problems (hotspots producing NOx, steam removal, reliability, etc) is hard. If @JCBmachines has done it, it's a BFD!
This thread by @herdyshepherd1 has been getting a lot of airplay. I'm not a farmer but I have worked on trade and sustainability for over a decade, and I'm an advisor to the Board of Trade. Although I am a huge fan of James's books, I disagree with him on a number of counts. 1/13
2/13. First, it's easy to rebut some of the claims James makes, or at least show that they are not relevant to the trade deal just struck with Australia. And for the record, I find mulesing a repellent practice that has no place in the 21st century.
3/13. Let me also say that I think James and I would agree 100% on the need not just for there to be a competitive farming sector, but one that can contribute fully to the UK's environmental targets, including net zero emissions by 2050 and still be economically successful.