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Architecting the Grid:

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GRID ARCHITECTURE REVIEW Energy Systems Engineering  ·  April 2026 Technical Analysis — Companion Article A Systems Engineering Framework  for U.S. Energy Storage The United States is executing the largest infrastructure transformation in its history without a systems architect in the room. The consequences are now visible: community resistance, toxic fires, supply chain vulnerability, and a grid increasingly exposed to catastrophic instability. Here is what a disciplined engineering approach would actually prescribe.   Domain Systems Engineering / Energy Infrastructure Date April 2026 BLUF — Bottom Line Up Front U.S. grid storage policy is failing not because the underlying technology is inadequate, but because it is being deployed without a governing systems architecture. Component-level optimization — selecting the cheapest, fastest-to-deploy storage technology without reference to system-l...

Developer drops controversial battery storage project

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Developer drops controversial battery storage project Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF) A nationwide grassroots revolt is slowing the deployment of utility-scale Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS), as dozens of communities from California to Massachusetts reject proposals citing documented fire hazards, toxic emissions, residential zoning violations, and inadequate regulatory oversight. The January 2025 Moss Landing catastrophe — the worst BESS fire in U.S. history — deposited an estimated 25 metric tons of heavy metals into protected coastal wetlands and evacuated 1,200 residents, supercharging opposition coast to coast. The energy industry and state governments argue storage is non-negotiable for renewable grid stability; communities argue they are being asked to bear concentrated industrial risk without meaningful consent. Both sides are correct. The resolution lies in siting reform, chemistry transition, and transparent engagement — not in dismissing c...

San Diego's Crown Public Asset:

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Politics Report: Could the City Lose Liberty Station? | Voice of San Diego The Epoch Times SAN DIEGO REGIONAL EDITION INVESTIGATIVE REPORT  |  CALIFORNIA GOVERNANCE  |  PUBLIC LAND POLICY Liberty Station Ownership Crisis San Diego's Crown Public Asset: A $2.7 Million Lowball, Decade-Old Leases, and the Battle Over Who Really Owns Liberty Station A Michigan-based real estate firm is using California's redevelopment dissolution law to force the sale of a historically significant 365-acre public property — at a price roughly equivalent to a starter home. Civic critics say it is the latest chapter in San Diego's long history of mismanaging its greatest public lands.   San Diego, California  |  April 4, 2026  |  Updated: April 4, 2026  ► Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF) San Diego faces a genuine legal threat to its ownership of Liberty Station — the 365-acre former Naval Training Center now housing publi...