Tesla starts shipping Powerpacks to Puerto Rico

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Tesla starts shipping Powerpacks to Puerto Rico

Elon Musk said last week that Tesla would accelerate its effort to help bring power back to Puerto Rico after sending a few hundred Powerwall battery packs to the island where the electric grid was destroyed by hurricanes last month.

Now we learn that Tesla is indeed stepping it up with now a new shipment of Powerpacks.

A single Powerpack 2 battery pack has the same energy capacity (210 kWh) as almost 16 Powerwall 2 battery packs combined (each 13.5 kWh).

Tesla’s Powerwall is useful to bring individual rooftop solar installations back online for homes and small businesses, but Tesla’s Powerpack has the potential to bring larger parts of the grid online by working with the electric utilities and combining the energy storage systems with solar farms or other renewable energy sources.

Now several Tesla Powerpacks were spotted at the San Juan airport in Puerto Rico over the weekend (pictures via José Valiente):

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The new shipment arrived not long after Musk spoke with Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello last week to talk about ways for Tesla Energy to help rebuild the power grid destroyed by the two hurricanes that recently hit the Caribbean.
 
The basic necessities - food, water and power - are still in short supply...
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Puerto Rico Still Struggling One Month After Hurricane Maria
18 Oct.`17 > One month after Hurricane Maria ravaged Puerto Rico, the basic necessities - food, water and power - are still in short supply on the island.
And the weather woes continue for the U.S. territory. The National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning for a large part of the island Wednesday, including San Juan and the vicinity. Puerto Rico has had steady rain all week, and the NWS warned that with the soil saturated, many rivers and streams could overflow their banks if the heavy rains continue. Puerto Rico's 3.4 million islanders, frustrated with a long-depressed economy and the devastation of Maria are expected to leave the island in droves. Governor Ricardo Rosello warned in a news conference last week that without significant help from the mainland, millions of Puerto Ricans could leave. 'You are not going to get hundreds of thousands Puerto Ricans moving to the states - you are going to get millions,' he said.

Slow recovery

The exodus was spurred by the initial slow response from the federal government and the island's poor infrastructure that has made it hard for Puerto Ricans to recover from the damage caused by the Category 4 hurricane. Across the island, residents have had to drink water contaminated with sewage or collected from a Superfund site, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Superfund sites are highly contaminated areas targeted by the federal government for cleanup. 'A month after Maria, 82 percent of Americans in Puerto Rico have no power 35 percent no water,' Congressman Don Beyer of Virginia said in a tweet aimed at President Donald Trump on Wednesday. 'And you're still tweeting attacks at football players.' But despite the slow recovery, Puerto Rico is filled with stories of hope and helping hands.

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Washington chef Jose Andres has been leading a group of volunteers to feed the islanders since the hurricane hit. As of this week, the chef and his nonprofit World Central Kitchen hit a milestone in their campaign. According to The Washington Post, Andres' team has prepared and delivered a million meals to residents, while the American Red Cross has served 540,000 meals and snacks. On Tuesday, Andres tweeted: 'After 3 weeks, 500 volunteers, today @WCKitchen ChefsForPuertoRico served 1 millionth meal in Puerto Rico!' Singers Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony, along with baseball star Alex Rodriguez, have raised more than $35 million through a concert, a telethon and corporate donations, as well as personal giving. Private donations are pouring into the island as well.

But the recovery is requiring coordination of thousands of troops and federal agencies. Trump is scheduled to meet with the Puerto Rico governor Thursday to discuss the recovery and rebuilding effort. Rossello asked Trump on Oct. 2 to expand the disaster declaration so that federal funds can be spent on fixing damaged schools, buildings and power plants. The governor has also asked the White House and Congress for at least $4.6 billion in block grants and other types of funding. But Trump has suggested there will be a limit to how much help Puerto Rico could expect from Washington to solve its long-term issues.

Puerto Rico Still Struggling One Month After Hurricane Maria
 
Video Shows Where Puerto Rico's Aid Went (Spoiler: It's In A Dumpster In Puerto Rico)



Marin states: "We got tipped about the mishandling of some of the supplies in a distribution center in Patilla, and we were able to corroborate what we didn't want to see. In a garbage dump truck we found pallets full of meals ready to be distributed at one time but now all spoiled. They were left under the rain in the open air under the sun subject to rodents and animals."

This is criminal.

Story @ Video Shows Where Puerto Rico's Aid Went (Spoiler: It's In A Dumpster In Puerto Rico)
 
Puerto Rico's Environmental Catastrophe

ARECIBO, P.R.—“There’s no way there were just 45 deaths,” said Myrna Conty, an environmental activist whose work takes her regularly across the most remote parts of the island. She scoffed at the radio reports of the official death toll, a common refrain among Puerto Ricans whose personal stories—a cousin who died needing dialysis here, a neighbor who simply hasn’t been heard from there—when multiplied 3.5 million-fold make the official estimate seem impossible.

The jungles are growing back but agriculture is destroyed for at least another year.

One has to wonder if any amount of money can create a healthy, productive community there.

Interesting story @ An Unsustainable Island
 

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