Der Sturm vor dem Sturm: Hat Duke Energy (hauptsächlich im Besitz von BlackRock, Van Guard, State Street) einen großen Staudamm eröffnet, der North Carolina während des Hurrikans Helene überflutete?

Von missscarlett1977

11 Comments

  1. gus_thedog on

    It’s standard operating procedure to release water in anticipation of a major storm. But I’m sure you’d be blaming them if they hadn’t and the dams broke though too.

  2. Bocephalus on

    Pretty sure they had widespread flooding, not just along that river. It affected the entire western North Carolina

  3. missscarlett1977 on

    Interestingly, Duke Energy also owns the dams that released water in North Carolina and Hawaiian Electric, tied to the Lahaina fire in Maui. Major shareholders include BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street.

  4. missscarlett1977 on

    Duke Energy’s track record: https://www.sott.net/article/396493-Duke-Energy-dam-fails-in-NC-Coal-ash-leaking-into-Cape-Fear-River.
    Fri, 21 Sep 2018**-**Hurricane Florence floodwaters have breached the dam at a retired Duke Energy coal power plant near Wilmington, North Carolina, likely causing a spill of coal ash into Cape Fear River.
    Floodwaters topped the earthen dike at the northern side of Sutton Lake on Friday. Water from the south end of the lake is flowing back into the river, Duke Energy spokeswoman Paige Sheehan told AP.
    Water has also crested over the steel retaining wall of a coal ash dump on the lake shore, Sheehan said. Duke “can’t rule out” that ash might have spilled into the river. **This is the second time in four years that Duke Energy has suffered a coal ash spill; in 2014, a pipe collapse at a plant in Eden dumped 39,000 tons of ash into the Dan River, contaminating about 70 miles (110 kilometers) of it. The utility company paid $102 million in fines and restitution and pleaded guilty to nine Clean Water Act violations as a result.**

  5. celtic_sea_salt on

    It rained for like 2 days straight there before Helene even hit there. Probably had 10 inches and then Helene went through with her wet windy shit.

  6. missscarlett1977 on

    This interview was done with a resident of the flooded area in NC. Christy is sharing how she banded together with neighbors to help people get drinking water. She describes something unusual: the river she is standing near is normal 2 feet deep. The night BEFORE the hurricane it rose to 9 feet. Check out her comments at around 2:00 minutes into the vid. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ag-hb45J6MQ&t=201s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ag-hb45J6MQ&t=201s)

  7. Yall always throw around Blackrock. They have mutual funds. Mutual funds are available to investors. They’ll have a utilities fund or an equity income fund. And it’ll buy shares of Duke. I own shares of a Blackrock Fund. I guess that makes me conspirator #1

  8. New_Try6368 on

    You can clearly see the dam is already full when they start releasing water in the video. Can you imagine how bad that would be if it had broken? That is why Hurricane Katrina was so deadly, 3 levees broke and the flooding killed over 1,800 people.

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