Articles

  • Dec 9, 2024 | sgtreport.com | Brian Shilhavy |John Hartnett

    by Brian Shilhavy, Health Impact News:I am re-publishing Dr. John Gideon Hartnett’s excellent article, Understanding UFOs: Military, Interstellar, and Interdimensional Insights. Dr. Hartnett is an Australian scientist who holds a PhD in physics from The University of Western Australia, and has gained international recognition for developing the world’s most precise clock, the cryogenic sapphire oscillator (CSO).

  • Dec 7, 2024 | healthimpactnews.com | John Hartnett

    Comments by Brian ShilhavyEditor, Health Impact NewsI am re-publishing Dr. John Gideon Hartnett’s excellent article, Understanding UFOs: Military, Interstellar, and Interdimensional Insights. Dr. Hartnett is an Australian scientist who holds a PhD in physics from The University of Western Australia, and has gained international recognition for developing the world’s most precise clock, the cryogenic sapphire oscillator (CSO).

  • Oct 15, 2024 | spectator.com.au | John Hartnett

    Fortescue Metals Group, a leading Australian iron ore miner, has been actively pursuing green hydrogen as a key component of its decarbonisation strategy. Green hydrogen reportedly results in no carbon dioxide emission or production. In May 2024, Fortescue launched its first US green hydrogen production project. It represented a $550 million investment in a facility to produce up to 11,000 tons of liquid green hydrogen annually.

  • Aug 8, 2024 | spectator.com.au | John Hartnett

    In recent years, there has been observed an increase in ocean temperature. Those who adhere to the Climate Change version of events say that the oceans are getting warmer because of trapped carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere causing a massive greenhouse effect leading to boiling oceans. Well, anyone who has a brain knows that the oceans are not boiling, but let’s assume that is just hyperbole.

  • Aug 6, 2024 | spectator.com.au | John Hartnett

    What I like to call ‘climate cult’ wind farms expose the myth that wind can replace hydrocarbon fuels for power generation. The following story is typical of the problems associated with using wind turbines to generate electricity in a cold environment. Apparently, diesel-fuelled generators are being used to power some wind turbines as a way of de-icing them in cold weather, that is, to keep them rotating.

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