RSS feed source: Federal Emergency Management Agency

ASHEVILLE, N.C. – FEMA continues to support the state of North Carolina as it leads community cleanup and restores infrastructure damaged by Tropical Storm Helene and other disasters. 

On Aug. 24, Secretary Noem announced an additional $28 million in reimbursement funds for North Carolina disaster recovery. This brings the total in August alone to $124 million in recovery reimbursements to the state. 

Here are some of the FEMA grants obligated to the state and communities:

$14 million for emergency protective actions taken by approximately 40 North Carolina communities following Helene. $4.3 million for repairs to public parks and recreational facilities in Avery, Buncombe and Haywood counties and other communities. $3.6 million for public road and bridge repairs. $3 million for the repair or replacement of essential utilities including water treatment plants, water lines, and electrical systems. $2.8 million for local debris removal efforts in Buncombe County, Beech Mountain and other communities.

FEMA is reimbursing these costs at no less than a 75% federal share through its Public Assistance Program which provides funds for state and local governments response and recovery work. Helene costs are funded at no less than 90%. To date, more than $656 million has been provided to the state for road repair, debris removal, critical infrastructure repair and more. Since Jan. 20, 2025, more than $347 million in Public Assistance reimbursements has been approved to support the recovery

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RSS feed source: Federal Emergency Management Agency

Deep beneath southern China, JUNO has launched one of the most ambitious neutrino experiments in history. With its massive 20,000-ton liquid scintillator detector now operational, it’s poised to answer one of particle physics’ greatest mysteries: the true ordering of neutrino masses. Built over more than a decade and involving hundreds of scientists worldwide, JUNO not only promises to resolve questions about the building blocks of matter but also to open entirely new frontiers—from exploring signals of supernovae to hunting for evidence of exotic physics.

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RSS feed source: Federal Emergency Management Agency

Tue, 26 Aug 2025, 11:28 | BY: EARTHQUAKEMONITOR

An earthquake of magnitude 2.8 occurred 37 minutes ago 7 km north of Lubin, Poland, the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) reported.
The quake hit at a very shallow depth of 1. km beneath the epicenter near Lubin, Lubin County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Poland, around noon on Tuesday, August 26th, 2025, at 12:49 pm local time. Magnitude and other quake parameters can still change in the coming hours as the agency continues to process seismic data.
Towns or cities near the epicenter where the quake might have been felt as very weak shaking include Lubin (pop. 77,500) located 7 km from the epicenter, and Polkowice (pop. 21,600) 10 km away. In Glogow (pop. 67,300, 24 km away), Legnica (pop. 106,000, 28 km away), Zlotoryja (pop. 15,600, 42 km away), Jawor (pop. 23,900, 45 km away), Boleslawiec (pop. 40,700, 49 km away), and Leszno (pop. 63,600, 50 km away), the quake was probably not felt.

If you felt it, report it through our site or app right now!

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Earthquake data:

I felt this quake

Date & time: Aug 26, 2025 12:49 pm (GMT +2) local time (26 Aug 2025 10:49 GMT)
Magnitude: 2.8
Depth: 1.00 km
Epicenter latitude / longitude: 51.46°N / 16.2°E (Powiat polkowicki, Lower

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RSS feed source: Federal Emergency Management Agency

The Carbon Credit Assessment Framework aims to develop a computational environment that integrates environmental and economic perspectives to support the analysis of alternative technological pathways in offshore production. The project focuses on the conceptual modeling of offshore production chains, the elicitation of environmental parameters, and the development of tools for quantitatively assessing GHG emissions. These tools will be integrated with economic risk assessments (carried out by other team members) to support decision-making and the adoption of efficient emission reduction strategies.

Development of a conceptual description of offshore production chains through knowledge representation techniques, focusing on environmental parameters. Development of mathematical tools for quantitative assessment of GHG emissions along the production chains. Conducting and supporting the implementation of case studies to test and evaluate the developed systems. Support in supervising the Technical Training scholarship holders responsible for system development.

PhD in fields related

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