Humanity
Rotterdam's Delta-Linked Climate Strategy
by Futoshi Tachino In Europe’s busiest river mouth, Rotterdam has learned to treat water as both antagonist and ally. The city’s climate playbook reads like delta pragmatism: keep the surge out, make room for the rain, reuse the heat, stash the carbon, and choreograph daily life so the low-carbon choice is the easy one. It’s a system, not a showpiece—barriers and basins, blue-green roofs and hot-water pipes, all pulling together.
By Futoshi Tachino7 months ago in Earth
Steam, Not Smoke
by Futoshi Tachino In Kenya’s Rift Valley, the ground exhales. Around Naivasha, at a place called Olkaria, wells tap rock-hot water and steam that have already helped Kenya become Africa’s geothermal leader—and one of the few countries where clean, firm power anchors the grid. Recent analyses put geothermal’s share of Kenya’s electricity around the mid-40s, with some reports citing roughly 47 percent in 2024. That matters in a drought-prone region where hydropower is variable and diesel is expensive.
By Futoshi Tachino7 months ago in Earth
Catching Clouds
by Futoshi Tachino In the Anti-Atlas mountains of southwest Morocco, fog rolls inland from the Atlantic and clings to ridgelines above the Amazigh (Berber) communities of Aït Baamrane. For decades, that fog was little more than a damp inconvenience in a place short on rain and poorer still in pipes. Then a local NGO, Dar Si Hmad, turned it into a municipal water source—stringing engineered meshes along a windy ridge, funneling condensed droplets into tanks, and gravity-feeding the result down to village taps. It’s one of the world’s largest fog-to-water systems and a rare example of a climate solution that is passive, energy-free in operation, and profoundly shaped by the people it serves.
By Futoshi Tachino7 months ago in Earth
The World’s Growing Water Crisis – Why Everyone Should Care
Water is one of those things we hardly think about until it’s gone. We wake up, brush our teeth, make coffee, take showers—all without realizing how precious this simple resource really is. For billions of people, clean water isn’t guaranteed. In fact, the world is slowly moving toward a crisis that could define the future of humanity: water scarcity.
By Legends Unfold7 months ago in Earth
Collapse as Routine:
Civilizations rarely fail in a single headline. They fail by habit. What shocks at first becomes tolerable, then law, then culture. Cruelty becomes commerce. Moral authority becomes political capital. Money becomes the mechanism of coercion. By the time the fracture is visible, the architecture that produced it has long been in place.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin7 months ago in Earth
Pakistan as a Superpower in World War 3
Pakistan as a Superpower in World War 3: A Strategic Imagination The idea of Pakistan becoming a superpower in the context of a possible World War 3 may sound ambitious, even unrealistic at first. Yet, in geopolitics, wars often transform nations in unpredictable ways. Countries that were once considered secondary players can rise to global dominance if they combine geography, military strength, alliances, and national resilience at the right historical moment. If World War 3 erupts, Pakistan—situated at the crossroads of South Asia, Central Asia, and the Middle East—could emerge as a decisive global power.
By Wings of Time 7 months ago in Earth









