The Anonymous Widower

‘Drone Boats Will Be The New Normal’

The title of this post is the same as this article on the BBC.

This is the sub-heading.

A remotely operated boat will survey an area hundreds of miles offshore – while being controlled from an inland airport.

These two paragraphs add more details to the story.

The Orsted Examiner is being launched this week from Grimsby by the renewable energy company, which is currently building the Hornsea 3 windfarm in the North Sea.

The vessel contains enough fuel to be at sea for several months, and an internet connection means it can be remotely controlled from anywhere.

Note.

  1. This would appear to be an elegant way to improve both productivity and safety.
  2. In RWE Opens ‘Grimsby Hub’ For Offshore Wind Operations And Maintenance, I indicated that RWE will have a Grimsby hub.
  3. Will the two companies have similar drone boats?

I certainly agree with the title of the post.

January 24, 2026 Posted by | Computing, Energy | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

One Million Passenger Journeys Made On The Northumberland Line As Date For Next Station Opening Is Announced

The title of this post, is the same as this press release from Northern Trains.

This is the sub-heading.

Passengers have made more than 1,000,000 journeys on the Northumberland Line, just over a year after it opened.

These four paragraphs add detail to the story.

Northern, which runs services along the route, marked the milestone during an event held at Blyth Bebside station earlier today.

It comes after the line reopened to passengers – for the first time in 60 years – in December 2024, thanks to a project involving the Department for Transport, Network Rail, Northumberland County Council and Northern.

Services currently call at Newcastle, Manors and new stations in Seaton Delaval, Newsham, Blyth Bebside and Ashington, with a journey along the entire route taking around 35 minutes and a single ticket costing no more than £3.

The next station, Northumberland Park, is due to open to customers on Sunday, 22 February.

Note.

  1. I intend to be there, when the last station; Bedlington is opened.
  2. Will they get the dogs out?
  3. Once Northumberland Park and Bedlington stations are opened, all that will be needed to complete phase one, will be some new battery-electric trains.

The signs are there that Great British Railways will buy a unified fleet of Siemens Desiro Verve battery-electric trains that will be made at Goole in Yorkshire.

So I asked Google AI “Are Great British Railways Going To Buy A Large Fleet Of Siemens Desiro Verve Battery-Electric Trains” and received this answer.

While a large, finalized, and signed order for a fleet of Siemens Desiro Verve battery-electric trains by Great British Railways (GBR) or the Department for Transport (DfT) has not yet been formally announced, Siemens Mobility is in active negotiations with operators (including Great Western Railway) and positioning the Desiro Verve as a primary solution for replacing aging diesel fleets across the UK.

Here is a breakdown of the current status and plans based on industry reports:

  • Proposed Solution for Fleet Replacement: Siemens Mobility is proposing the Desiro Verve, a battery-electric multiple unit (BEMU) designed for the UK market, to replace 1,650 aging diesel trains, with the potential to significantly reduce the need for full route electrification.
  • Active Negotiations: Siemens is in discussions with several operators, with reports in June 2024 indicating that Great Western Railway (GWR) was leading the way with potential plans to order 100 battery trains for services in Bristol, Devon, Cornwall, and routes like Cardiff to Portsmouth.
  • Production in Goole: The trains are planned to be assembled at Siemens’ new Goole Rail Village in Yorkshire, which opened in October 2024.
  • Potential Savings and Advantages: The Desiro Verve is being marketed as a more cost-effective alternative to “tri-mode” trains, with estimates suggesting it could save £3.5 billion over 35 years. The trains are designed to run on overhead wires where available and switch to battery power on unelectrified sections, utilizing specialized “Rail Charging Converters”.
  • Timeline: While testing is ongoing and the technology is being deployed elsewhere, these trains are expected to enter service on regional and local routes in the UK shortly after 2030 to meet the 2040 net-zero target.

While the Desiro Verve is a leading contender for future, large-scale, low-carbon fleet orders, the formal confirmation of a “large fleet” contract by Great British Railways is still pending competitive procurement processes. 

I’ll believe them, when I see the trains in the metal.

What Other Lines Could Use Trains Like These?

Typical lines that have been upgraded in recent years, that could use these trains .include.

  • Borders Railway
  • Dartmoor Line
  • East-West Rail
  • Levenmouth Rail Link
  • Northumberland Line

Typical lines that could be upgraded in the near future, that could use these trains include.

  • Barton Line
  • Ivanhoe Line
  • Leamside Line
  • Marshlink Line
  • Sheffield and Cleethorpes.
  • Uckfield Branch
  • West London Orbital Railway.

It should be a rolling program.

As the new trains could be spread all over the country could it be an election winning poolicy in 2030?

January 24, 2026 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Rail Agreement Signed ‘Subject To Value For Money’

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

This is the sub heading.

An agreement to reopen a regional rail line has been signed by the transport secretary, subject to the assurance that it delivers good value for money.

These three paragraphs add detail to the story.

Further development work on the Leamside Line, which runs from Pelaw in Gateshead to Tursdale in County Durham, is set to progress as part of the Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR) initiative.

Regional politicians said the line could provide train links for 100,000 people in the north-east of England, after it closed to passengers in the 1960s.

The document stated the government would ensure resources were available for the Leamside Line reopening “subject to agreement of that business case and assurance that this delivers good value for money”.

Note.

  1. There is an excellent map in the BBC article.
  2. It looks like there will be at least five new or refurbished stations at Ferryhill, Sincliffe, Belmont, West Rainton and Penshaw.
  3. Belmont appears to have an alternative name of Durham Parkway, so will it be a Park-and-Ride for the area?
  4. There will be an alternative path for freight trains between Newcastle and York.
  5. In New Direct Rail Link To Seaham: How This Picturesque Seaside Town Will Connect To London Starting December 2025, I described Seaham’s new link to London, courtesy of Grand Central Trains.
  6. In Arriva Group Invests In New Battery Hybrid Train Fleet In Boost To UK Rail Industry, I talked about Grand Central’s new trains, which should be in service by 2028 to Seaham and Sunderland.
  7. It was in June 2020, that I wrote about Boris Johnson making a speech about the Leamside Line in Boris Johnson Backs Station Opening Which Could See Metro Link To County Durham.

This important link has been a long time coming.

Will The Rail Improvements Between London and The North East Create More Tourism?

Consider.

  • The digital signalling will create more paths for trains between London and the North East.
  • Journey times will come down to generally below three hours.
  • There is a lot of excellent walking in the area.
  • The North-East doesn’t just host top-class football and athletics.
  • A trip could be combined with a day-trip to Edinburgh, Glasgow or the Scottish Borders.
  • I have met Americans, who’ve started their holiday in Europe, in Edinburgh and worked their way down via York and London to Paris by train, and then flown back non-stop to the United States.

As I’ve spent a couple of enjoyable weekends in Newcastle and Sunderland, I don’t see why the area can’t attract tourists.

Should The East Coast Main Line Be Renamed?

Consider.

  • It is one of the oldest long-distance main lines in the world.
  • It links two of the UK’s capitals.
  • It is 331 miles long, which is covered in four and a half hours.
  • There are some of the world’s best hotels at either end.
  • There is good shopping at either end.
  • There is no Trump hotel in London or Edinburgh.

Perhaps, it should be called High Speed East Coast?

 

 

January 23, 2026 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Do B12 Injections Help Stroke Recovery?

A friend, who thinks I’ve made a good recovery from a stroke, asked me if there is anything I could recommend, for another of his friends, who has just had a stroke.

As a coeliac, am I in a group with a higher risk of a stroke?

So, I asked Google AI, the question, if this were true and received this answer.

Based on recent studies, individuals with coeliac disease have a small, slightly higher, or “modestly increased” risk of stroke, especially around the time of their diagnosis.
However, this risk does not appear to be significant in the long term, particularly for those who adhere to a strict gluten-free diet. 
Key Findings on Coeliac Disease and Stroke:
  • Initial Higher Risk: Some studies suggest a slightly increased risk of stroke (roughly a 10-15% increased likelihood). This risk is highest in the first year after diagnosis.
  • Effect of Gluten-Free Diet: After 5 years on a strict, gluten-free diet, the risk of stroke for people with coeliac disease is virtually the same as that of the general population.
  • Overall Risk: While some studies have suggested a link, others, including a 2023 UK Biobank study, found no clear evidence of an association between coeliac disease and stroke, although they did find an overall increased risk of cardiovascular disease (27% higher).
  • Mechanism: The potential for a higher risk is likely due to the chronic inflammation associated with untreated coeliac disease, rather than traditional risk factors like high blood pressure or smoking.
  • Children: A 2023 study found that coeliac disease plays a minimal role in the risk of stroke in children, but recommended that doctors consider it a potential factor in cases of stroke with unknown causes.

Conclusion:
While untreated coeliac disease may slightly increase the risk of stroke due to chronic inflammation, adhering to a gluten-free diet helps manage this risk.

This study by coeliacUK and Oxford University, was the source of the findings by Google AI.

Do B12 Injections Help Stroke Recovery?

For nearly thirty years, ever since I was diagnosed as coeliac, I have had regular three-monthly B12 injections. So ever since my stroke in 2011, I have had B12 injections.

So now AI is available, I felt I should ask Google AI to see if it says anything useful.

This is the answer I received.

Vitamin B12 injections show promise in stroke recovery by supporting nerve repair, promoting brain cell communication, reducing inflammation, and potentially lowering future stroke risk, especially if a deficiency exists; studies link higher B12 levels to better functional outcomes, though it’s crucial to discuss supplementation with a doctor as individual needs vary, notes this rehab article and this NIH article.
How B12 Helps Stroke Recovery:
  • Nerve Repair & Axonal Growth: B12 aids in repairing damaged nerve fibers (axons) and regenerating nerve cells, vital for restoring lost function after a stroke.
  • Reduces Inflammation: It helps calm the harmful inflammatory response (neuroinflammation) in the brain after an ischemic stroke, notes this ScienceDirect article.
  • Improves Brain Communication: B12 supports neurotransmitter production, allowing brain cells to communicate more effectively and speeding up healing, according to this Flint Rehab article.
  • Lowers Stroke Risk: By reducing homocysteine levels, an amino acid linked to stroke, B12 can help prevent recurrent strokes, reports this Flint Rehab article and this NIH article.
  • Supports Microglia Function: It helps functionalize microglia (brain immune cells) to reduce injury and promote recovery, states this ScienceDirect article.
When Injections Are UsedDeficiency: Injections are often recommended for those with absorption issues (like vegans or stomach problems) or severe deficiency, notes this Verywell Health article and this National Institutes of Health (NIH) article.
  • To Boost Recovery: For those with moderate deficiencies, injections or supplementation can improve neurological function, notes this NIH article. 

Conclusion

B12 injections seem to have done me no harm.

I also have them on the NHS, at no cost to myself.

If the NHS said I couldn’t have them, I’d pay for them.

January 21, 2026 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Computing, Health | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Trump Administration’s Legal Setbacks Are Good News For Offshore Wind — And The Grid

The title of this post is the same as that of this article on Tech Crunch.

These two paragraphs give more details.

The Trump administration suffered a series of legal setbacks this week after judges allowed work to restart on several offshore wind farms under construction on the East Coast.

The Department of the Interior had ordered a stop to five projects totaling 6 gigawatts of generating capacity in December, citing national security concerns. The judicial orders will allow three projects to resume construction: Revolution Wind off Rhode Island, Empire Wind off New York, and Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind off — you guessed it — Virginia.

The developers each filed lawsuits shortly after the Trump administration issued the stop work order, which had been effective for 90 days.

Trump is now learning you don’t win them all.

I would suggest that you read the full article, as there is a lot of good stuff there.

This is the concluding paragraph.

he potential is even bigger when viewed on a national scale. Offshore wind could generate 13,500 terawatt-hours of electricity per year, which is three times more than the U.S. currently consumes.

If the US, were to use all the fossil fuels, that Trump would like, there would be no point in buying Greenland as the Trump proportion of the resulting Global Warming would probably melt the country.

January 18, 2026 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

How Did South East Water Become Such A Disaster?

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

As tens of thousands of homes in Kent and Sussex lose supply the company and its well-remunerated boss, David Hinton, face a torrent of anger

These two paragraphs add some detail.

Perhaps the worst moment for South East Water was when it opened a bottled water station in the wrong town. Staff set up in Tonbridge, Kent, and not Tunbridge Wells five miles away, where the company had left some 24,000 properties without drinking water for two weeks.

Or maybe it was when David Hinton, the chief executive, repeatedly called the local MP one evening not to apologise but to berate him about the crisis — not, Hinton later admitted, “my finest moment”. Or it could have been when more properties lost their supply only hours after Hinton had told MPs his company’s response to the incident should score eight out of ten.

It wasn’t exactly the water industry’s finest moment.

I played a small and hopefully professional and a hundred-percent scientifically correct manner in the formation of the modern water industry in the UK.

In the 1970s, I wrote the software, that WS Atkins rented from their time-sharing computer to the Water Resources Board at Reading to model water supply in all or part of the UK.

My differential equation solving software had been designed to handle up to around a million equations and the contact at the WRB was a Dr. David Dimeloe.

I was never given details of their model and the conclusions, but I assume they must have done a good job, as there haven’t been too many problems with actual water supply, but mainly with management, ownership and failure of ancient infrastructure.

In my 79 years in the UK, I’ve never had a problem with water supply.

Searching for the WRB on the Internet finds one in Sri Lanka.

It would be good to get a copy of that report or even talk to one of the engineers on the project.

January 13, 2026 Posted by | Computing, Environment | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Legal Challenge Against Gatwick Airport’s Second Runway To Begin

The title of this post is the same as that of this article on ITVX.

These four paragraphs add more details.

Plans to challenge a second runway at Gatwick Airport will be heard in the High Court next week.
The campaign and environmental group Communities Against Gatwick Noise Emissions (CAGNE) opposes Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander’s decision to grant development consent for the project.
In the hearing, which will run from 20 to 23 January 2026, CAGNE’s argues that the climate change impacts of the extra runway have not been properly assessed.
The planned expansion would see the repurposing of Gatwick Airport’s emergency runway for use as a second operational runway. The extra capacity is expected to lead to more than 100,000 more flights per year.

These two paragraphs give CAGNE’s case.

CAGNE says that this decision was flawed, arguing that there are numerous gaps in the environmental assessment of the airport expansion. These include a failure to adequately assess inbound flight emissions, the climate impact of non-carbon dioxide emissions, the handling of additional sewage, and noise pollution.

The group also argues that the second runway plans rely too heavily on the UK’s Jet Zero Strategy (JZS), which assumes ambitious improvements in the aviation industry in areas such as fuel efficiency.

My feelings are as follows.

  • We need more runway capacity.
  • Eventually all aircraft will be powered by electricity, hydrogen or sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).
  • Because of the need for large amounts of renewable electricity to make hydrogen and SAF, the runway will need to be near offshore wind farms.

Only Doncaster Sheffield, Gatwick, Liverpool, Stansted and some Scottish airports are near the sea or could be connected to the coast by an easy-to-build cable or pipeline.

CAGNE may well win their case, but I fell Nimbys will also stop Heathrow getting a third runway.

 

January 13, 2026 Posted by | Energy, Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

US Federal Court Clears Revolution Wind To Resume Construction As Ørsted, Skyborn’s Lawsuit Against Stop-Work Orders Progresses

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

The US District Court for the District of Columbia has granted the preliminary injunction sought by the joint venture between Ørsted and Skyborn Renewables for the Revolution Wind project, which was ordered to pause construction by the US government. When the stop-work order was issued on 22 December 2025, the 704 MW project had seven wind turbines left to install.

This paragraph adds more detail.

The underlying lawsuit that the Revolution Wind joint venture filed against the first stop-work order issued for the offshore wind farm on 22 August 2025, which was supplemented to also challenge the 22 December 2025 order, continues to progress in the court, while the preliminary injunction will allow the construction activities to restart immediately.

Note.

  1. Ørsted said on the 12th January 2026, that they would resume work as soon as practically possible.
  2. Ørsted have also said that the project is approximately 87 per cent complete and was expected to begin generating power this month.
  3. In New York Attorney General Files Lawsuits Against Trump Admin’s Stop-Work Orders For Empire Wind, Sunrise Wind, Trump is also facing a second legal action over offshore wind.

It does seem that we are seeing what happens, when the irresistible force that is Trump meets the immovable force, that is United States law.

 

 

January 13, 2026 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

New York Attorney General Files Lawsuits Against Trump Admin’s Stop-Work Orders For Empire Wind, Sunrise Wind

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

New York Attorney General (AG) Letitia James has filed two lawsuits against what the AG says is “the Trump administration’s unlawful attempt to halt construction” on Empire Wind 1 and Sunrise Wind, two large-scale offshore wind projects being built in the US federal waters off New York.

These three paragraphs add more detail.

In the lawsuits, filed simultaneously for the two projects in the US District Court for the District of Columbia on 9 January, Attorney General James argues that the stop-work orders fail to explain the federal government’s change in position and to provide a genuine justification for the suspension. This makes the orders “arbitrary and capricious, in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act”, says the New York AG, whose lawsuit is asking the court to declare the stop-work orders unlawful and block their enforcement.

Pointing out that the two offshore wind farms are expected to power more than one million New York homes, the Attorney General says pausing them could threaten the state’s economy and energy grid, as well as the jobs created by the projects, which currently employ thousands of workers and have already invested billions of US dollars.

Furthermore, the New York AG emphasised that both Empire Wind 1 and Sunrise Wind had undergone more than a decade of extensive review by federal, state, and local authorities, including environmental impact analysis, public comment periods, and coordination with numerous federal agencies, including the US Department of Defense.

I’m no lawyer, but I do think that the New York Attorney General has a good case.

January 12, 2026 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Formal Bid To Extend Railway Line

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

This is the sub-heading.

A formal bid to extend a railway line which has seen more than 900,000 passenger journeys in the year since it reopened has been submitted.

These three paragraphs add more detail.

Northumberland County Council asked the North East Combined Authority to extend the Northumberland Line, which connects south-east Northumberland to Tyneside, to Newbiggin-by-the-Sea.

Conservative leader of the council Glen Sanderson said the total cost of the scheme was yet to be worked out, adding: “It is going to be very expensive, but I’m sure it will be worthwhile.”

Labour North East Mayor Kim McGuinness said she would like to see the line extended further into the county. She said: “We’ll support a business case to see what is possible.”

I wrote more about this extension in Onward To Newbiggin-by-the-Sea For The Northumberland Line?

I certainly believe it is an extension, that should be properly costed.

January 10, 2026 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment