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Argentinian inmates-turned-video game developers, post-party snacks in Rome, and a look at the tensi͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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April 15, 2023
semafor

Flagship

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Ben Smith
Ben Smith

Welcome back to Flagship Weekend!

The phrase “slow news day” is an old newsroom curse. Use it, and inevitably, some horrible disaster immediately strikes. But last week had, let’s say, at least a little breathing room in it for journalists to consider, well, next week’s crises.

Here are two:

Liz Hoffman wrote about the big shoe that has yet to drop in the U.S. and European economies, commercial real estate. Remote work is in. Interest rates are up. And so big name investors have strategically defaulted on a series of office-space loans from Los Angeles to Helsinki.

The U.S. has been trying since George W. Bush left office to “pivot” away from the Middle East, and toward what Washington views as the higher-stakes rivalry with China. But regional powers keep dragging America back in. Iranian allies have launched attacks on American bases in Syria in “a new effort to test the willingness of American and Israeli forces to respond to acts of aggression,” officials tell Jay Solomon.

We also made some news of our own at Semafor. At our Media Summit, mogul Barry Diller rallied media companies to sue AI platforms, rather than to repeat the mistakes he thinks they made in giving their content away for free online. And at the Semafor World Economy Summit, top Biden adviser Lael Braiard told CNN’s Poppy Harlow the banking system was “sound” and “stable.”

In Flagship Weekend today, Tom tackles an underlying tension in the environmental movement, plus how late-night snacking is better in Rome, and what K-Pop is doing to a São Paulo neighborhood. When you’re done, put your phone down!

— Ben Smith, Editor-in-Chief

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The World Today
Heng/Lianhe Zaobao (Singapore). VIEWSOFTHEWORLD © CartoonArts International/CWS. Reprinted with permission of ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION. All rights reserved.
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Lean Back

Imagine a choose-your-own-adventure video game where your character is imprisoned. You must decide: Do you get into a fight with a rival? What do you say to a warden? Do you stand your ground against fellow inmates? That’s the plot of Marcolandia, one of several games designed and developed by actual inmates. They are part of a Argentinian program that aims to equip inmates with skills to help them get jobs upon their release. Prisoners’ game ideas often reflect their desperate situation: At an ideas session last year, Rest of World reported, one proposed a game that revolved around a character who had fallen in love with someone “on the outside.” The game’s goal was to keep the dwindling flame of love alive.

Mainland Italy from Messina, Sicily. WikimediaCommons.

Building projects — house renovations or major government projects — never finish on time. One that Italy’s government is reviving, however, dates back to the Roman Empire. Rome is once again pushing plans for a bridge to connect Italy’s southernmost regions. If built, it would be the world’s longest and tallest suspension bridge. Sicily and Calabria, Italy’s two poorest regions, are currently connected by a ferry that takes up to two hours. The new car and rail bridge would cut the crossing to just 10 minutes, potentially unleashing huge investment in the area. Locals on both sides of the Messina Strait are opposed, Wired reported, but as Matteo Salvini, Italy’s Infrastructure Minister put it: “They won’t stop us this time.”

David Smith/WikimediaCommons

A retired printer from northern England solved a confounding problem that had stumped even the best mathematicians for decades. While meditating with shapes, Dave Smith came up with the “Einstein tile,” a long-theorized figure which can be used to cover an infinitely large floor without ever repeating a pattern. “It was hard to get going. I almost dismissed it, to be honest,” Smith said, fearing his figure was a “non-tiler,” a shape that eventually wouldn’t tessellate. But he persisted, coloring both sides differently so that he could flip it upside down and use its reflection. “That’s when I noticed that it was producing this interesting pattern that I had never seen before.” Smith’s discovery, validated by an academic paper, is “one the most important findings in tiling theory in decades,” The Times said.

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Tom Chivers

The unspoken tension in environmentalism

Wallpaper Flare

THE NEWS

A surprisingly common headline across the West is a variation on “Environmentalists Oppose New Solar Farm.” Recent examples from the U.K. include a local Green Party politician speaking out against a huge new solar installation; another saying: “Obviously, the Green Party is in favour of increasing the supply of renewable energy. However…”; and a third complaining that a major new solar development will harm local wildlife, “such as badgers, foxes and hedgehogs.”

In France, green campaigners clash with police over plans to construct water reservoirs, intended to help farmers deal with droughts brought on by climate change, and oppose a lithium mine which will provide crucial raw materials for green tech such as electric vehicles. In the United States, renewable energy projects must clear a series of environmental regulatory hurdles, some of which are now used to block more solar and wind projects than oil and gas ones. In Norway, Greta Thunberg was among environmental and Indigenous rights activists campaigning to block a wind farm.

These clashes are not an accident. They point to an underlying tension within environmentalism. The things that feel environmentally sound — things like preserving local wildlife or landscapes — are often the exact opposite of what is good for preventing climate change, an unacknowledged trade-off between the local and the global. The green movement needs to acknowledge that sometimes, by defending the local environment, it is damaging the global one.

TOM’S VIEW

This tension is relatively new. A few decades ago, an energy project would have likely involved fossil fuels. Blocking it would have reduced local environmental damage, and possibly carbon emissions, too. Whether it would have been beneficial is of course a wider question — abundant energy is a good thing — but environmentally speaking, there would have been little ambiguity.

That’s not as true now. Solar and wind power are extraordinarily cheap and efficient, for example, but have a large territorial footprint: The Brookings Institution estimates that building enough wind and solar power to replace all the non-renewable energy production in the United States would, optimistically speaking, require a land area equivalent to 1.6 Delawares, or in international terms, roughly one Cyprus. Another, less optimistic, study put the figure at one South Dakota — Belarus, to non-Americans — about 20 times larger.

Whichever of those two figures is closer to the truth, the U.S. will have to do the equivalent of paving an entire state with solar panels and wind farms and associated infrastructure, in order to reach a fully zero-carbon energy system. This seems to me (speaking as someone in Britain, with a stake in the climate but not in the preservation of local beauty spots in the U.S.) a good thing to do. But it will involve building things, not leaving nature untouched.

Ironically, the way to minimize this impact would be to vastly increase reliance on nuclear energy, which is also zero carbon, and has a vastly lower land footprint. But that is even less popular with environmentalists, in part because of concerns over the long-term storage of nuclear waste, and in part because of safety fears. These worries are understandable, but nuclear waste storage is a solved problem now, and nuclear is far safer than any fossil fuel.

This tension applies not just to energy projects, but to many other facets of environmentalism. What feels like the ecologically sound thing to do is often not the thing that most reduces carbon emissions. It feels greener to live in the countryside, but city dwellers have far lower-carbon lifestyles because it’s easier for them to walk, take public transit, and cycle. Building more homes in cities doesn’t feel green, but it absolutely is. Major new rail projects don’t feel like environmental projects, but they shift cargo and passenger transport away from cars, and reduce carbon. Opening huge lithium and cobalt mines doesn’t feel very green, but if we want electric vehicles and battery storage, we need the raw materials.

ROOM FOR DISAGREEMENT

Environmental groups could make several responses to this. One would be that a lot of the NIMBY groups using environmental regulations to block wind and solar developments in the U.S. are astroturfed, funded by oil and gas companies as a way to stifle competition. That is no doubt true of some, although a lot of committed lifelong environmentalists — see the U.K. Green Party — really do block green projects.

But the fairest objection would be that, sometimes, preserving local wildlife or beautiful landscapes genuinely should be more important than building green infrastructure. If someone wanted to build a huge offshore wind farm on top of the Great Barrier Reef, that would be bad. In Flagship recently, we reported on calls to permit more deep-sea mining for lithium, manganese, and other vital minerals. No doubt that would make building renewable energy and batteries easier, but perhaps it would come at such high cost to delicate undersea ecosystems that it wouldn’t be worth it.

The starting point, though, is acknowledging that tradeoff. If we want a zero-carbon world, and we do, it involves building stuff, not blocking it. For some in the environmental movement, their first reaction is — understandably, given their history, but still regrettably — to block stuff.

NOTABLE

  • Britain Remade, a U.K. think tank, points out that an environmental impact assessment of a particular offshore wind farm was more than 100 pages longer than the complete works of Tolstoy. The organization is pushing for sweeping reforms of the country’s planning regime in order to speed up infrastructure and energy projects, and argues that changes could boost Britain’s economy, reduce its carbon emissions, and reduce reliance on unstable petrostates.
  • When you take into account both land use and carbon emissions, nuclear power is the least environmentally damaging source of electricity, a new study said. The research by scientists at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology found that nuclear power takes around a hundred times less land per kilowatt-hour produced than solar does in most of the world.
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Music to Your Ears
Andy Miah/Flickr

The popularity of K-pop and other Korean cultural exports is transforming a neighborhood in Brazil’s most populous city. Fans of Korean music and dramas are flocking to São Paulo’s Bom Retiro district, where a growing number of cafes and stores sell K-pop merchandise and other products promoted by Korean stars, Next City reported. A local street market features amateur K-pop dance performances, and one of the main streets in the area has been renamed to add the Portuguese word for “Korea.” The Korean consulate in São Paulo is now aiming to replace the area’s street lights with Korean-inspired lanterns and rename the local metro stop to promote the quarter’s reputation as a new Koreatown. But the plans face criticism from some who worry about diluting other cultures that helped shape the area’s history.

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Best of Semafor
  • Tim Scott is exploring a presidential run, but the Republican Senator for South Carolina has struggled to articulate a clear position on abortion. He’s not the only 2024 contender with that problem, Shelby Talcott reported.
  • Some $900 billion of office-tower and apartment-building debt will come due by the end of 2025. That means office-building loans are looking shaky, Liz Hoffman noted.
  • A sharp slowdown in fundraising by African startups, driven in large part by tech investors becoming more rigorous about due diligence, has exposed the continent’s reliance on foreign capital, according to Alexander Onukwue.
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Evidence

The shoes Michael Jordan wore during Game 2 of the 1998 NBA Finals — Jordan’s last title — sold for $2.2 million, becoming the most expensive sneakers ever sold. The price for the Air Jordan 13s — also known as the “Last Dance” sneakers in reference to the final season of one of basketball’s most successful teams — “proves that the demand for Michael Jordan sports memorabilia continues to outperform and transcend all expectations,” Sotheby’s head of streetwear and modern collectibles said. Three of the 10 most expensive sports memorabilia items ever sold were worn by Jordan.

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One Good Text

Dan Knowles, a journalist for The Economist, and the author of Carmageddon.

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Food for Thought
Marco Verch/Flickr

In cities with thriving late-night scenes like New York City, London, or Hong Kong, hungry party-goers typically opt for savory snacks before heading to bed. “In Rome, when the evening is coming to an end,” Eater’s Lara Gilmour notes, “it is not a kebab or a slice of pizza that late-night revelers crave, but something sweet.” At dozens of bakeries across the city, customers queue for Nutella-filled croissants, doughnuts oozing with custard, and other delights. The tradition stems from early-morning bakers firing up their ovens in the wee hours, only to be accosted by young people returning from drinks and clubs who wanted food. “It was only a matter of time until these two groups overlapped, creating a late-night market for early-morning treats.”

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Thanks for reading, and see you Monday.

— Tom, Prashant Rao, Jeronimo Gonzalez.

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