logo
Dead whale washes ashore in Richmond

Dead whale washes ashore in Richmond

Yahoo14-06-2025

RICHMOND, Calif. - A dead whale was found along the Point Isabel shoreline in Richmond Friday morning.
The mammal is one of more than a dozen whales found dead in the Bay Area this year.
Earlier this month, another whale washed up on Montara Beach in San Mateo County.
According to the Sausalito-based Marine Mammal Center, they've responded to 17 dead gray whales in the Bay Area. It's unclear what species the Richmond whale is.
Five of the dead whales have been found in recent weeks, we reported last week.
Researchers with the California Academy of Sciences and the Marine Mammal Center said last week that they haven't seen so many dead whales in the region since what they call the "unusual mortality event" between 2019 and 2023.
There have been 33 gray whale sightings confirmed by photo identification so far this year, compared to only four in 2024.
"The migration is a little bit later than it has been in years past, and we're seeing more whales enter San Francisco Bay," Kathi George, the director of cetacean conservation biology at the Marine Mammal Center, told KTVU. "The entrance to San Francisco is a very busy area with lots of vessel traffic."
If you spot a whale, you're asked to take a picture and upload it to the Whale Alert app or contact the Marine Mammal Center.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New AI safety group launches ad buy to build right-left alliance to protect humanity
New AI safety group launches ad buy to build right-left alliance to protect humanity

The Hill

time3 hours ago

  • The Hill

New AI safety group launches ad buy to build right-left alliance to protect humanity

A new advocacy group focused on building a left-right alliance to push for regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) rolled out a six-figure ad campaign Monday targeting the Washington, D.C. area. In a nod to the deep partisan divides they hope to overcome, the two spots by the Alliance for Secure AI offer different messages for different audiences — at a time when AI regulation is one of the more contentious issues in the passage of Trump's budget bill. 'What are the odds of killer robots annihilating humanity?' Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) asks Elon Musk in a clip from his podcast that airs on the right-targeted ad spot, which is running on FOX News and Newsmax. 'Likely 20 percent,' Musk responds, before a clip where Steve Bannon warns that for tech companies, 'productivity' gains mean 'human beings who are now tech workers eliminated.' And in the left-of-center spot aimed at MSNBC and CNN, New York Times podcaster Ezra Klein warns that AI will be 'the single most disruptive thing to hit labor markets — ever,' before cutting to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) saying that 'the job you have today ain't going to be here in 10 or 15 years.' The ads aim to add weight to a growing 'strange bedfellows' left-right consensus worried about the risks of the American tech sector's headlong rush toward ever-more-powerful AIs, founder and chief executive Brendan Steinhauser told The Hill. Steinhauser, a Texas-based political consultant and former Tea Party organizer who ran Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) 2014 re-election campaign, told The Hill that recent polling shows 'the American people are with us, and they're ahead of the politicians.' April polling in Pew showed twice as many Americans think AI will harm them as believe it will help them. Those concerns were echoed in a March YouGov poll, which also found that a third of respondents were worried about AI causing 'the end of the human race on Earth.' The ads come out as AI becomes a yawning fault line in Republican politics. Despite Musk's warnings about the dangers of AI, Cruz remains a major AI booster, and from his position as chair of the powerful Senate Commerce Committee has sought to keep states from regulating it — or, as he describes it, slowing its pace of development. 'We are in a global race for leadership in AI, and the winner will dominate the coming decades, both economically and militarily,' Cruz said in May, arguing that 'light touch' regulation helped springboard the twin revolutions of the Internet and fracking. In the contentious Trump budget bill, Cruz initially sought to withhold $42 billion in badly needed broadband funding from states that passed bills regulating AI — as states from Tennessee to California have done. That move spurred a bipartisan wave of opposition. An alliance of 40 attorneys general — many of whom agree on little else — sent Congressional leaders a letter opposing the language, as did more than 260 state lawmakers. Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) released a a June press call to decry a measure that they said would leave Americans 'vulnerable to AI harm.' Other opponents ranged from Sanders to Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga) — members whose common thread, Steinhauser said, is they're all 'a little weird, a little radical, and principled — who will stand up to their party.' Over the past weeks, Cruz has walked the AI supremacy language back in the face of that opposition. First, the penalties for states that continued to regulate AI were reduced from losing access to billions in broadband funding to forfeiting their share of a $500 million fund of AI infrastructure money. Then on Sunday, a deal between Cruz and Blackburn shortened the moratorium from ten to five years, and added carve-outs for state laws targeting deepfakes, child pornography or some forms of fraud. But the core tension remains. 'You can't say you support working people and then replace us with machines,' Teamsters president Sean O'Brien said last week on X. In an op-ed in Fox, he warned that Big Tech wants 'driverless trucks crisscrossing our roads without oversight. Delivery drones flying over our neighborhoods without regulation. Fully automated warehouses and ports operated by machine.' Meanwhile, religious groups like the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) have released statements warning of the dangers of unregulated AI to Americans economic and environmental conditions — as well as to their souls. 'The Fall has adversely affected every aspect of creation, including the development and use of these powerful innovations,' the SBC wrote. 'We call upon civic, industry, and government leaders to develop, maintain, regulate, and use these technologies with the utmost care and discernment, upholding the unique nature of humanity as the crowning achievement of God's creation.' The threat of AI has the power to unite these groups into a new social movement, Steinhauser argued, because its challenge is so deeply 'metaphysical' — a potential assault on what it means to be human. That universal quality makes the topic so 'big, existential and multifaceted,' Steinhauser said, that he hopes it will repel easy polarization. 'There's a latent fear of being replaced,' he said. 'As workers, and also as a species.'

Google Signs Deal to Buy Fusion Energy From Future Virginia Plant
Google Signs Deal to Buy Fusion Energy From Future Virginia Plant

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Google Signs Deal to Buy Fusion Energy From Future Virginia Plant

Tech giant Google has signed a power purchase agreement (PPA) with Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS) to buy at least 200 MW of energy from CFS's planned fusion-based power plant in Chesterfield County, Virginia. The deal announced June 30 is the latest among companies in the technology and artificial intelligence (AI) space to secure the power supply for hyperscale data centers. CFS has said it hopes to begin producing fusion energy at a commercial scale early in the next decade. It currently is building a demonstration plant, known as SPARC, in Massachusetts. Michael Terrell, head of advanced energy at Google, said, "By entering into this agreement with CFS, we hope to help prove out and scale a promising pathway toward commercial fusion power. We're excited to make this longer-term bet on a technology with transformative potential to meet the world's future energy demand, and support CFS in their efforts to reach the scientific and engineering milestones needed to get there." Terrell at a June 27 media briefing prior to Monday's announcement acknowledged the company is betting on the promise of fusion despite uncertainties about deployment. "Yes, there are some serious physics and engineering challenges that we still have to work through to make it commercially viable and scalable, but that's something that we want to be investing in now to realize that future," he said. Google as part of its investment in CFS is supporting development of a demonstration tokamak fusion reactor, a donut-shaped technology that uses large magnets and molten plasma to merge atoms and create energy. The challenge for researchers is to get more energy out of a fusion reaction than it takes to create the reaction. Scientists at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California confirmed they had accomplished that goal in a test at the NIF in December 2022. Google has signed several PPAs with various energy groups to buy electricity for its global operations, including purchasing renewable energy since 2010. It also is buying power from battery energy storage and geothermal sites. The company recently committed to support three nuclear power projects with 600 MW of generation capacity, though this is the company's first deal for fusion energy. Google, which began funding CFS in 2021, also said it would increase its investment in CFS, and the deal also gives the company rights to take power from future CFS-built reactors. Terms were not disclosed. Terrell in a blog post on Google's website wrote: "Fusion holds huge potential as an energy source of the future: it's clean, abundant and inherently safe, and it can be built just about anywhere. Commercializing fusion is immensely challenging, and success is not guaranteed. But if it works, it could change the world by providing a more secure and clean energy future." Massachusetts-based CFS, a company spun out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), was founded in 2018. The company has raised more than $2 billion in funding. Commonwealth CEO and co-founder Bob Mumgaard said the deal is the "largest offtake agreement for fusion." He said Google's investment would allow his company to continue with the research and development needed for the commercial fusion plant in Virginia, and support completion of the demonstration facility in Devens, Massachusetts. 'Fusion power is within our grasp thanks in part to forward-thinking partners like Google, a recognized technology pioneer across industries,' said Mumgaard. 'Our strategic deal with Google is the first of many as we move to demonstrate fusion energy from SPARC and then bring our first power plant online. We aim to demonstrate fusion's ability to provide reliable, abundant, clean energy at the scale needed to unlock economic growth and improve modern living—and enable what will be the largest market transition in history." The agreement between Google and CFS is tied to the SPARC demonstration achieving net fusion energy, known as Q>1. "It's hard to say exactly how much [the deal with Google] accelerates it, but it definitely puts it in a category where now we can start to work more and more on ARC [the Virginia plant] while we finish SPARC, instead of doing them very sequentially," said Mumgaard, who talked about the company's technology in this 2020 interview with POWER. "In 2024, we achieved approximately 66% global average carbon-free energy across our data centers and offices," Google wrote in a report released last week. Terrell said Google is "using this purchasing power that we have to send a demand signal to the market for fusion energy and hopefully move [the] technology forward." Fusion produces no pollution, and the tokamak is said to generate 10 million times more energy than fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas. Unlike nuclear fission, the technology the powers today's reactors, there is no radioactive waste from fusion. "Today's announcement builds on a long history of clean energy leadership. Since 2010 we've procured over 22 GW of clean energy which has helped these technologies mature and enabled us to successfully reduce our data center energy emissions by 12%," said Terrell. "We are adding fusion to our portfolio because of its potential to be transformative in delivering abundant, sustainable energy for the planet. Our new partnership with CFS marks an exciting step forward on this journey." —Darrell Proctor is a senior editor for POWER.

China Research Ship Spotted on NATO's Doorstep
China Research Ship Spotted on NATO's Doorstep

Newsweek

time12 hours ago

  • Newsweek

China Research Ship Spotted on NATO's Doorstep

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. China continues to expand its military reach around the world as one of its naval ships was seen transiting the Strait of Gibraltar and heading into the Atlantic Ocean over the weekend. The presence of the Chinese navy near NATO member states comes as the United States has dispatched an aircraft carrier-led strike group from the East Coast for a mission in Europe. Newsweek has contacted the Chinese defense and foreign ministries for comment by email. Why It Matters The Chinese military possesses the world's largest navy by hull count, with more than 370 vessels in service—enabling Beijing to flex its military muscle both within and beyond East Asia. In January, a Chinese three-ship flotilla concluded a 339-day overseas mission, during which it carried out escort missions, port visits and war games across Asia, Africa and Europe. Situated between Morocco, Spain and the British overseas territory of Gibraltar, the Strait of Gibraltar serves as a passage for about 300 ships daily. American warships, along with those of other NATO allies, frequently transit this key strait as part of their operations. What To Know A Chinese Type 636 distant-ocean survey ship crossed the Strait of Gibraltar westward from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic Ocean on Saturday afternoon local time, according to Daniel Ferro—a Gibraltar-based user on X, formerly Twitter—who photographed the ship. This type of Chinese naval vessel collects oceanographic and meteorological data to support chart production and the development of forecasting systems as the country's navy expands its geographic operations, according to a report prepared by the U.S. Naval War College. The mission of the Chinese survey ship—operated by the People's Liberation Army Navy—remains unclear. It is also not clear whether the vessel—which, as Ferro noted, is "a long way from home"—will make any port calls during its deployment in the Atlantic Ocean. Before the Chinese navy's transit toward the Atlantic Ocean, the U.S. Navy deployed USS Gerald R. Ford—the world's largest aircraft carrier—from Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia on June 24 for what the service described as a "regularly scheduled deployment" in Europe. The aircraft carrier forms a strike group with the destroyers USS Mitscher, USS Mahan, USS Winston S. Churchill, USS Bainbridge and USS Forrest Sherman, providing "increased capacity" to deter adversaries and project power on a global scale, the U.S. Navy said. It remains to be seen whether the Gerald R. Ford will move further east to the Middle East following strikes between the U.S. and Iran. Two other U.S. aircraft carriers—USS Nimitz and USS Carl Vinson—are in the region, according to U.S. Naval Institute News. What People Are Saying A report prepared by the U.S. Naval War College in 2018 said: "The geographic expansion of Chinese naval operations has created intense demands to speed mastery of the 'ocean battlespace environment' in new ocean areas. Some of these demands are met by the [People's Liberation Army Navy] itself. The Chinese Navy, like the U.S. Navy, possesses a corps of meteorologists and oceanographers that support the fleet." U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Paul Lanzilotta, the commander of the Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group, said in a news release on June 24: "Our force stands prepared and ready to execute sustained, multi-domain operations at sea, wherever and whenever tasked, in support of American security and economic prosperity." The United States aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford departing Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia on June 24 for a regularly scheduled deployment. The United States aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford departing Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia on June 24 for a regularly scheduled deployment. Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Maxwell Orlosky/U.S. Navy What Happens Next China is expected to continue deploying its naval fleet across various oceans to challenge U.S. naval dominance and assert its influence.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store