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Gervonta Davis is an unbeaten pay-per-view star, a three-division and five-time champion and perhaps the premier knockout specialist in the sport.
And if you ask two-time welterweight champion Shawn Porter, “Tank Davis” is “the best fighter at 130, 135 and 140” pounds.
“We just finished five rounds of sparring with Tank Davis. I think Tank Davis has been the best fighter at 130, 135 and 140. It’s no secret that he’s not going back to 130, so we can eliminate 130,” Porter said following a recent sparring session with Davis 9,000 feet above sea level at the B.E.S.T. Program Gym at The Spring Mountain Detention Camp an hour outside of Las Vegas.
“Tank is the best fighter at 135, and I believe he’s the best fighter at 140,” Porter added. “I have not seen anyone at 140 who can handle Tank. Tank is a sharpshooter who is very fast and who is a very good counterpuncher who can throw the right punch at the right time. That speaks well of him going into his next fight.”
The “next fight” for Davis (25–0, 24 KOs) is a Dec. 5 defense of his WBA “regular” 135-pound title against Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz (22–1–1, 15 KOs), who could represent the southpaw’s 17th straight knockout victim when they clash at Staples Center in Los Angeles in a Premier Boxing Champions event on Showtime Pay-Per-View.
“I definitely appreciate the words from Shawn Porter,” said Davis, a Baltimore native who turned 27 on Nov. 7. “Shawn is a top guy who has been in with the top guys, so I appreciate that.”
Porter’s assertion came two weeks before his 10th-round TKO loss to the WBO’s 147-pound champion Terence Crawford (37–0, 28 KOs) on Nov. 20, after which he announced his retirement.
“Those are wonderful comments from Shawn Porter, and Tank is one of the best fighters in the world,” said Leonard Ellerbe, CEO of Mayweather Promotions. “But our focus isn’t that. Tank just has to go out there and continue to be the best version of himself.”
Porter’s declaration encompasses a trio of 135-pounders in IBF/WBA/WBO and WBC (franchise) champion Teofimo Lopez (16–0, 12 KOs), WBC counterpart Devin Haney (26–0, 15 KOs) and three-division title winner Vasyl Lomachenko (15–2, 11 KOs).
Lopez will be in action against Australia’s George Kambosos Jr. (19–0, 10 KOs) on Saturday, Haney battles former champion Joseph Diaz (32–1–1, 15 KOs) on Dec. 4, and southpaw Lomachenko fights former champ Richard Commey (30–3, 27 KOs) on Dec. 11.
“I’m excited and grateful to be in this position,” Davis said. “I’m just trying to continue to grow as a fighter and just improve each day.”
Also included are WBO 130-pound titleholder Shakur Stevenson (17–0, 9 KOs) and IBF/WBA/WBC/WBO 140-pound titleholder Josh Taylor (18–0, 13 KOs), who has a clash of southpaws with Jack Catterall (26–0, 13 KOs) on Feb. 26.
Davis holds the WBA’s 140-pound “regular” title with Taylor being that organization’s super champion.

“We knew many years ago when other fighters were pound-for-pound at that time that Floyd Mayweather was one the best fighters in the world,” Ellerbe said. “It’s no different with Tank. It’s just a matter of time before everyone catches on, and then, it’s going to be what it’s going to be.”
Cruz represents the third straight pay-per-view opponent for Davis, whose past three victories are a 12th-round knockout of three-division title winner Yuriorkis Gamboa (December 2019), a sixth-round KO of four-division champion Leo Santa Cruz (October 2020), and an 11th-round TKO that dethroned previously unbeaten WBA 140-pound champion Mario Barrios (June 2021).
Gamboa hit the deck three times as Davis won the WBA’s vacant lightweight crown, a ripping left uppercut left Santa Cruz knocked out for the first time in his career and Barrios was floored three times to fall to 26–1 (17 KOs).
“Barrios had decent power and I felt it,” said Davis, who yielded both height (5-foot-5 and a half to 5-foot-10) and reach (67 and a half to 71 inches) to Barrios, 26.
“It was so powerful that I didn’t want to get hit cleanly multiple times. Me fighting at 140, in the future, that will probably be good, but for right now, I wanna stay at 135 and focus on Isaac Cruz.”
Fighting for the third time this year, Cruz is 17–0–1 (12 KOs) since falling by eight-round unanimous decision to Luis Miguel Montano in February 2016.
“The Pitbull’s” aggressive style portends an action-packed fight with Davis, particularly in light of his past four bouts, three of which went the distance.
“Defeating Gervonta Davis is the only thing on my mind. When I win, I know he’s going to want the rematch,” Cruz said. “I can promise that I will train twice as hard for that fight when it happens. I am going to pull off the upset, and a brand-new star will be born on Dec. 5.”
In consecutive bouts in February and October 2020, Cruz earned a 10-round majority decision over Thomas Mattice, who entered at 15–1–1 (11 KOs), and scored a two-knockdown, 53-second stoppage of two-time world title challenger Diego Magdaleno.
Cruz followed those triumphs with consecutive 12- and 10-round unanimous decisions over Jose Romero and Francisco Vargas in March and June, respectively. Romero entered at 24–0 (8 KOs) and Vargas at 27–2–2 (19 KOs).
“Cruz has impressed me in his past fights. He comes in there to win. He doesn’t look to just hang in there. Cruz is one of those people who come forward and throw a lot of punches,” Davis said.
“We will both come forward. I can box and I can hit. We’ll see what he’s saying when he gets hit in the face. People say I’m only a power puncher, but this will be another chance to display my boxing skills.”
Those skills were on display against Barrios.

“Being that Barrios was my first time fighting at 140 with eight-ounce [gloves,] I didn’t know how hard he hit,” Davis said. I didn’t wanna get caught by someone who is a natural 140-pounder and get clipped. The first couple of rounds, I really didn’t throw that many punches.”
“I just let him wear himself out, making him throw punches and miss, being there and not being there,” Davis added. “It makes you more tired when you’re throwing punches and not hitting anything, so I let him throw his punches, wear himself out, and then I started attacking.”
Davis’ only distance fight was in October 2014 against hammer-fisted German Meraz, who was floored twice during a shutout unanimous decision loss. A year later in October 2015, Davis scored a two-knockdown, third-round TKO of former world champion Cristobal Cruz.
“Tank” earned his initial crown via seventh-round TKO in January 2017 by dethroning previously unbeaten IBF 130-pound champion Jose Pedraza and defended it that May in London by flooring previously undefeated southpaw Liam Walsh for a third-round TKO.
An overweight Davis lost that title on the scales in August 2017 before scoring an eighth-round knockout of previously unbeaten Francisco Fonseca in his next fight, doing so on the undercard of Mayweather’s victory over Connor McGregor.
In succession, Davis regained the WBA’s version of the crown via three-knockdown, third-round TKO of left-handed former champion Jesus Cuellar in April 2018, and made two defenses of the WBA crown in 2019 — first- and second-round knockouts of former titleholder Hugo Ruiz (February) and Ricardo Nunez (July) before rising to face Gamboa.
After Pedraza lost to Davis, the switch-hitter’s second loss was at 135 pounds 23 months later in December 2018 by unanimous decision to Lomachenko.
Pedraza had won three straight 135-pound bouts after falling to Davis before being floored twice during a 40-plus punch 11th round by Lomachenko, a two-time Ukrainian Olympic gold medalist whose run of eight straight knockouts ended against Pedraza.
In October 2020, Lomachenko lost a unanimous decision to Lopez, who added Lomachenko’s WBA, WBC (franchise) and WBO 135-pound belts to his IBF version. Lomachenko rebounded with June’s ninth-round TKO of Masayoshi Nakatani.
“I believe that Tank’s style and Lomachenko’s style match up very well. I can’t pick a winner, but I think Tank is fast, strong and sharp enough to beat Lomachenko,” said Porter, who also serves as a ringside boxing analyst and commentator.
“What I feel now about a fight between Tank Davis and Vasyl Lomachenko is that it is the best fight that can be made at 135. I have Tank No. 1 and Lomachenko No. 2 at 135, even though Teofimo has all of the belts.”
How does Davis believe he does against Taylor, Lopez, Lomachenko, Haney or Stevenson?
“We’ve just got to wait and see. But those days are gonna come,” Davis said. “I’m just ready to put on a great show on Dec. 5.”
Edited by Stan Chrapowicki and Kristen Butler
The post Shawn Porter Calls Gervonta Davis ‘The Best Fighter At 130, 135 And 140’ Pounds appeared first on Zenger News.

In the COVID-19 era, an employee shortage is taking many U.S. restaurant owners to the brink. Labor shortages at each stage of the supply chain mean restaurant owners have to pay much more.
Ezequiel Fuentes, the owner of the Mi Tierra de La Villita restaurant in Chicago, is very concerned about the crisis.
“I’ve had to pay 25 to 40 percent more on supplies over pre-pandemic prices,” said Fuentes, who is invested in 32 more restaurants.
He says labor issues abound not only in restaurants but also in the food-production centers that supply them.
“They’re facing the same problem. This phenomenon has brought about a chain reaction: the slowdown in production impacts prices and the entire industry,” said Fuentes.
He believes the problem is that “people don’t want to work.”

Even though patrons are going back to restaurants, the industry has been hit by food and supply price hikes, even on uniforms.
In a letter to Congress, the National Restaurant Association warned the recovery was losing ground.
“Deteriorating business conditions are impacting operators’ outlook to the point that they state a recovery from the pandemic will be prolonged well into 2022,” said the association.
The letter to Congress reveals the discouraging results of the latest survey of restaurant operators and warns about the possible dangers of some provisions of the government’s Build Back Better framework on the recovery of the restaurant industry.
The missive also asks Congress not to raise taxes on this sector, as the framework contemplates.
Most full- and limited-service operators say market conditions are worse now than three months ago, according to the association.
“Our nation’s restaurant recovery is officially moving in reverse,” said Sean Kennedy, executive vice president of the National Restaurant Association.
Roberto Gómez, the owner the Don Pepe restaurant in south Chicago, said that, besides prices, restaurant owners have seen a wage increase to $15 an hour.
“We’ve had to adjust our prices to take in the supply price hike and employee wage increase. It’s good for consumers to be aware of this new challenge we’re facing,” he said.
“La gente no quiere trabajar” is published in association with Negocios Now.
Edited by Melanie Slone and Kristen Butler
The post Pandemic And Economy Hit The Restaurant Industry Hard appeared first on Zenger News.

Researchers in Switzerland have discovered that a beautiful speckled white moth species survived being hundreds of miles from any similar moths since the last ice age, 12,000 years ago, by eating a plant too toxic for anything else to consume.
The moth eats the Alpine rose, from which it derives its name and whose toxicity drives other animals away.
The rare discovery was made by Peter Huemer, a butterfly researcher who has confirmed that the moths are of a previously unknown population.
The plants that the moth species once lived on died out in the area during the last ice age, and, instead, the new population appears to have learned to feed on the Alpine rose.

The caterpillars of the Alpine rose leaf-miner moth live by feeding on the leaves of the plant, which they burrow inside, according to a study published in the journal Alpine Entomology.
Huemer, who heads the Natural Sciences Department of the Tyrolean State Museum, said the discovery came about by chance. It was wellknown that the Alpine rose (Rhododendron ferrugineum) was toxic to animals and humans, and, therefore, it was never properly studied or even looked at by butterfly and moth researchers. The plant contains the moderately toxic substances arbutin, arecoline and rhodoxanthin.
While doing a survey of moths and butterflies in the village of Ardez, Switzerland, on July 29, Huemer made a brief stop and was amazed to find a caterpillar feasting inside one of the leaves of an Alpine rose. The fact that a moth population has developed to feed on it is all the more surprising given the harsh conditions more than 5,900 feet above sea level in the Swiss Alps, which are often covered in snow.
“The purely accidental sighting of the first caterpillar in an Alpine rose leaf was an absolute adrenaline rush, it was immediately clear that this must be an extraordinary species,” Huemer said in a statement issued by Tyrolean State Museum.

Following the discovery, Huemer and Swiss butterfly expert Juerg Schmid spent two weeks focusing on the region’s Alpine rose bushes and discovered what they described as a stable population of the moths that had completely escaped identification and classification.
Caterpillars and pupae were sought for documentation purposes in several excursions between the end of July and mid-August.
The moth lays an egg that, when it hatches, produces a larva that drills through the upper leaf skin into the leaf interior, which it then proceeds to eat. Because it lives inside the leaf, it escapes the harsh Alpine weather and predators and creates a tunnel in the thicker-than-average leaf, where it also leaves its feces.

The moths the researchers found belong to a species widespread in Northern Europe, northern Asia and North America, known as the swamp porst leaf-miner moth (Lyonetia ledi).
The wild rosemary leaf-miner moth lives in Northern Europe exclusively on wild rosemary (Rhododendron tomentosum) and bog-myrtle (a flowering plant in the family Myricaceae). However, these two typical shrubs of bogs are missing in the Alps.
That said, wild rosemary and the Alpine rose shared the Swiss habitat in earlier cold phases in the past in the high Alps.
It is, therefore, speculated that after the last glacial period and the melting of the glaciers, a transition of the caterpillar from wild rosemary to the Alpine rose as a source of food took place at the Swiss site.
The separation of the areas of both plants, caused in subsequent heat phases, inevitably led to the separation of the moths.
Edited by Richard Pretorius and Kristen Butler
The post That Moth Be A Record: Moth Species Survived 12,000 Years On Remote Mountain Peak appeared first on Zenger News.

“Gentefied’s” second season is now available on Netflix.
“Gentefied” tells the story of an undocumented grandfather and his three grandchildren, who will do everything they can to keep the family together. Boyle Heights, the Mexican-American neighborhood in the heart of California, serves as the setting for the series.
With a predominantly Hispanic cast, “Gentefied” explores issues central to the Latino experience in the United States, including immigration concerns, family values, and bilingualism.
The series also shows how new generations adapt to the contemporary world and how Latino communities fight against gentrification.
The show delves into the Hispanic cultural heritage and is not afraid to address such issues as racism and marginalization. But it does it with a Latino flavor and uses the family business — Mama Fina’s taco shop — as a backdrop.
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In the second season, the love life of Chris Morales (Carlos Santos) takes a turn.
Lidia (Annie Gonzalez) always needs to appear strong. But it is evident that there is trouble in paradise. Lidia and her baby daddy, Erik Morales (Joseph Julian Soria), are going through a rough patch. Can their baby keep them together?
But whatever is going on in their personal lives, they are all focused on how to stop the deportation of “Pops” (Joaquín Cosío).
The second season features new characters, including Ernesto Morales (Manuel Uriza) and Elizabeth Campos (Marisilda García).
Created by Marvin Lemus and Linda Yvette Chávez, the series had a successful first season, with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 92 percent. It is available on Netflix, too.
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In a promotional event, actress Julissa Calderón put into words the meaning the series has for the Latino community, “This is what it’s all about, places like this, shows like ‘Gentefied.’ … We are pushing the needle forward; we are pushing our people forward.”
“Gentefied’s” second season premiered on Nov. 10.
It is Time to Get Gentefied! is published in collaboration with LatinHeat Entertainment.
Edited by Gabriela Alejandra Olmos and Melanie Slone
The post Second Season Of ‘Gentefied’ Continues Showcasing Latino Stories appeared first on Zenger News.

WBC super bantamweight champion Brandon Figueroa is predicting a late-round knockout in Saturday’s 122-pound unification clash of unbeatens with WBO counterpart Stephen “Cool Boy Steph” Fulton, who specifically vows to KO “The Heartbreaker” in the ninth.
The switch-hitting Figueroa (22–0–1, 17 KOs) is seeking his third straight knockout and his 10th in 11 bouts. Meanwhile, Fulton (19–0, 8 KOs), pursues his ninth victory over an undefeated opponent at the Park Theater at Park MGM in Las Vegas on Showtime (10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT) in a Premier Boxing Champions event.
“I don’t think Stephen Fulton has faced anyone close to me. I hit hard, can deliver power as a left-hander or as a right-hander, and I’m always on top of you making sure you can’t catch your breath,” said Figueroa, who has advantages in height (5-foot-8 to 5-foot-6 and a half) and reach (72 inches to 70 and a half) over Fulton.
“I’ve fought fighters who are fast, slick and have power. I’ve always come out on top, and Stephen Fulton is no different. He will definitely feel my relentless pressure, body work and power. I feel like it will be a late-round stoppage against Fulton.”
Figueroa’s positive COVID-19 test earlier in the month postponed a previously scheduled bout with Fulton from Sept. 18.
“Everything is going well, and I’ve come back stronger than ever,” said Figueroa, 24, who is 9–0–1 (9 KOs) in his past 10 fights. “We are days away from this huge fight, and I feel like it’s going to be ‘Fight of the Year’. It’s going to steal the show. I’m coming with everything.”
Fulton, who is from Philadelphia, believes he’ll be able to exploit anything Figueroa offers.

“Figueroa is going to engage with me more than most of my past opponents have. Him fighting with the style he likes to use is going to bring out more of what I can do. Figueroa doesn’t use his range, he doesn’t use his height, so technically, I’ll be the bigger fighter, the taller fighter and the rangier fighter. He doesn’t know how to use those abilities that he has,” said Fulton, 27.
“He only has one way to fight. We’ll size each other up over the early rounds, and in the mid rounds, it will come down to who slows first. I see myself adjusting to his style and being victorious, and I feel like I can get the stoppage in around the ninth. I want to beat him convincingly, then follow this up with another unification fight toward being considered one of the best-ever super bantamweights.”
Figueroa’s last victory in May was a sensational seventh-round knockout of previously unbeaten Luis Nery of Mexico, a 26-year-old southpaw who entered at 31–0 (24 KOs) and whose WBC crown was added to Figueroa’s WBA version. In August, Figueroa was stripped after four defenses of the WBA crown he had earned via eighth-round knockout of Yonfrez Parejo in April 2019.
“Nery was spectacular in the 118-pound division and had the backing of Mexico. But I ended him in spectacular fashion after everyone doubted me,” said Figueroa, who finished Nery with a left uppercut to the solar plexus. “I broke Nery down and got him outta there. A lot of people underestimated me against [Luis] Nery, but my game plan was to go out there and dominate.”
Figueroa also owns stoppages in the third and 10th rounds over former titleholders Moises Flores (Jan. 2019) and Oscar Escandon (Sept. 2018), the former getting knocked out for the first time in his career.

“Some people say that I have terrible defense, yet I’m still undefeated,” Figueroa said. “I’m still knocking out world champions and former world champions. This will be no different. It’s going to be the same story as always.”
Nicknamed “The Heartbreaker” for his matinée idol features, Figueroa is two fights removed from a ferocious, split-draw with former champion Julio Ceja (November 2019), who was 4.5 pounds over the 122-pound limit.
“I feel like Fulton has fought guys who have been undefeated, but not the caliber of my opponents,” said Figueroa, of Weslaco, Texas. “They’re former world champions who have been in tough fights, which gives me more of an edge. I feel like I’m at the peak of my career, bringing that old-school mentality back where champions fight champions.”
Fulton was 13–0 (6 KOs) when he traveled to Northern Ireland to serve as principal sparring partner for two-division champion Carl Frampton in advance of “The Jackal’s” unanimous decision over Nonito Donaire in April 2018 for the WBO’s 126-pound interim crown.
Frampton tweeted a photo of himself and Fulton with their arms around each other and credited “Cool Boy Steph” for his “great work, talent and slickness” in advance of scoring a body-shot knockdown in the eighth round of a ninth-round TKO of previously undefeated 2012 Australian Olympic team captain Luke Jackson (16–1, 7 KOs) in August 2018.
“Going over there changed me as a fighter as far as my overall style and skill set,” said Fulton, whose subsequent bout was a ninth-round TKO of Jesus Ahumada (June 2018). “My movement, footwork, speed, punch output, punching power and shot selection have all improved.”

Fulton last fought in January, his unanimous decision dethroning previously unbeaten WBO titleholder Angelo Leo, who entered at 21–0 (9 KOs). At times during his fight with Leo, Fulton engaged toe to toe, winning battles on the inside based on his speed, accuracy, elusiveness and respectable power.
“They say, ‘we’re gonna rough him up, we’re gonna bang him out.’ I get into that. Put my back against the wall and see what I do,” Fulton said. “I like the negative comments about me, that I have pillow fists, no power, and I’m gonna get knocked out. Put my back against the wall and watch what I do.”
Leo had won a clash of unbeatens and the crown by unanimous decision in August 2020 over southpaw Tramaine Williams, a replacement after Fulton tested positive for COVID.
“During the COVID period I felt alone, got a little depressed at one point. I wanted to beat Leo by winning the vacant belt, but at the same time, I got to dethrone him to win it, which was just as satisfying. Figueroa’s a brawler using that pressure, wear-you-down type of style,” Fulton said.
“I highly believe in my intelligence, abilities, speed and power. Yes he’s undefeated, but I enjoy fighting undefeated fighters. We’ve been on this path for a long time, so I know he’ll be mentally worn down before I am. I can’t wait to get into the ring. I want to be the first to beat him and get it over with.”
Edited by Stan Chrapowicki and Kristen Butler
The post Unbeatens Brandon Figueroa, Stephen Fulton Say Their Title Unification Bout Will End In A Knockout appeared first on Zenger News.

By Brian Blum
An October oil spill off the coast of Huntington Beach, California, drove home the ongoing potential for ecological disasters stemming from leaky, malfunctioning, corroded and sometimes even sabotaged oil and gas pipelines.
The answer to preventing leaks and spills is constant monitoring. But keeping your eyes on your pipelines is expensive, time-consuming and, frankly, beyond human capabilities.
“The future belongs to the robot in the sky,” asserts Didi Horn, CEO of SkyX, an Israeli startup whose drones monitor real-world “assets” — pipelines, to be sure, but also railways, forests andwild-animal reserves — for signs of impending problems.
Consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) estimates the value of the global market for drone-powered business solutions like those from SkyX at $127 billion.
That enormous market potential has helped SkyX raise $25 million in two funding rounds, with more on the way, Horn told ISRAEL21c.
Current investors include Almond Tree Capital (Canada), DroneFund Japan and Tim Heely, CEO of drone manufacturer Vanilla Unmanned and chairman of the SkyX advisory board.
Leaks, bursts
Horn explains how monitoring worked in the pre-drone days and today.
“If you own a 1,000-kilometer pipeline, you’d send your guys out into the field or you’d fly a manned aircraft above it according to the calendar: ‘In June you go here, in July you go there.’ We allow pipeline flyovers on a weekly or even daily basis.”
Near real-time data provided by the drone enables operators to simply send a repair crew to the location most prone to be disrupted.
Disruption depends on what type of environment and what part of the world the pipeline is located in.
In developed regions, where pipelines mostly were built over the last century, leaks and bursts are the biggest issue.
In less developed countries such as those in Latin America, Africa and the Middle East, the biggest problem is oil theft.
“When I first heard about this problem, I imagined a guy with a bucket stealing the oil,” Horn said. “That’s not the case. They jack into the pipe, put in another pipe and lower the capacity so it doesn’t trigger the alarm.”
Undetected oil theft can go on for years.
SkyX to the rescue
Using advanced software algorithms and a variety of high-tech cameras, SkyX drones can identify problems before they turn nasty.
Is that a person or a car next to the pipeline? Is that a shadow or oil pooling on the ground?
SkyX’s SkyVision software labels what it sees so that the data sent to the customer is not just a raw image but something actionable.
Over time, the system gets smarter. Different regions have different sights to learn — flying over the Amazon produces a different data set than the desert, for example.
“After a couple of months with a customer, we can track 80 to 90 percent of the points of interest they care about,” Horn says.
SkyX has the advantage of being both a hardware and software company, Horn claims.
“Other companies might have great software or the best drones or the best cameras, but they don’t have the whole package designed and built in-house.”
SkyX’s drones have been granted three patents with another five patents pending. They are not necessarily the best on the market; rather, they are the best for the problems SkyX aims to address, Horn stresses.
For example, you wouldn’t use a SkyX drone to deliver packages from Amazon or to fire missiles from a military UAV.
Still, SkyX’s drone is impressive. It can fly up to 120 kph (74.5 miles) at 4,000 meters (13,123 feet), has a 100km (62-mile) range and will operate for 1.5 hours on its lithium-ion batteries. With strategically placed recharging stations, Horn says a SkyX drone could operate over a 1,000km (621-mile) distance.

What do you want to see?
SkyX doesn’t sell drones. It sells data as a service, Horn says.
“If a customer asks, ‘Can you bring a drone with thermal vision and an RGB camera?’ I will say, ‘Don’t tell me what to bring. Tell me what you want to see! People? Vehicles? Vegetation? Then I will fit you with the most advanced solution.’”
SkyX is currently operating in three countries. Although Horn isn’t at liberty to disclose clients, the company’s pilot customers include Denbury Onshore in Canada, E’Kabel in Latin America and apipeline operator in Mexico.
The Canadian trial monitored a 500km (311-mile) pipeline stretching between Ottawa and Toronto.
At one point, the drone discovered that a house under construction was straddling the underground pipeline. The owner was renovating his basement, Horn says, and didn’t realize that four feet underneath was a pipeline that delivered oil to Greater Toronto.
“That’s the sort of insight that could not be achieved by human inspection,” Horn says.
Providing intel
SkyX provides information and recommendations; taking action is up to the customer.
“If we see a leak expanding, we can say, ‘If you don’t take any action, this is what it will look like in two weeks.’ Now it’s up to the customer to decide what to do,” Horn explains.
Those recommendations are provided via SkyX’s customer interface, which displays annotated pictures over time, so the customer can see what’s changed.
That’s a far cry from what other asset monitoring companies provide — either the raw unannotated images or “a 600-page report,” Horn says.
“We wanted to provide a simple solution: Here’s where we see the problem, here’s where to find the historical imagery. We turn big data into smart data.”
Horn likens SkyX’s approach to wearable devices that tell you if your blood pressure is too high or your oxygen level is too low. The device doesn’t fix the problem or make you go to the doctor. But developers can build apps on top of that data to provide “actionable insights.”
And because the drone doesn’t fix the problem itself, the service enables operators to deploy staff wisely for better results. “It lets you know when to send the right people to the right places at the right time,” says Horn.

Surge of interest
COVID-19 caused asurge of interest in SkyX, Horn said. “Companies need to be more efficient and to reduce expenses.”
While many companies were already moving towards drones, “COVID pushed them to do the transformation faster than expected. There’s no reason to have a human-piloted airplane when you could have a robot in the sky,” Horn says.
SkyX has its R&D in Tel Aviv with offices in Canada and Texas. The company is active in Europe and North America but is looking to expand to Africa and the Middle East in 2022. SkyX employs 30 and is rapidly expanding. The company currently has a fleet of 37 drones. It takes about a month to build a new one.
SkyX drones can be controlled remotely. During the pilot period, a SkyX operator in Toronto flew a drone over a pipeline in Vancouver, some 3,500km (2,175 miles) away. The Mexico pilot was also controlled from Canada.
That’s not a possibility for the commercial rollout of the service — current regulations require line-of-sight visibility for drones — although Horn is hopeful that these regulations will change.
“They’re mainly concerned about a 14-year-old boy flying a hobby drone and getting too close the landing route of a 787,” Horn says. “They’re not yet thinking about companies flying autonomous drones on permanent routes that are far from other people.”
Horn is somewhat dismissive about delivery drones, even though Amazon, Walmart and most other big retailers are actively pursuing them. A trial in the Tel Aviv area in October saw drones deliver sushi and beer.
“What do I need that for?” he asks. “If I can already get food in 20 minutes or an Amazon delivery in New York in less than an hour, I don’t necessarily need a drone. But tackling real-world assets does not exist.To protect human beings on the planet, that’s not happening.”
Produced in association with Israel21C.
The post Can A Drone Prevent Disastrous Oil Spills? appeared first on Zenger News.

Federal data on storage levels of crude oil and refined petroleum products indicate a healthy economy, some analysts said.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration, part of the Energy Department, publishes weekly data on commercial storage levels of fossil fuels, including gasoline. Gains usually indicate that demand turned lower, while the opposite holds for declines in inventory.
For the week ending Nov. 19, the Energy Information Administration reported that commercial crude oil inventories increased by 1 million barrels, though total motor gasoline inventories declined by 600,000 barrels and distillates, a category that includes diesel, declined by 2 million barrels.
Tamas Varga, an analyst at London oil broker PVM, said demand looked supportive despite the higher level of inflation and the uptick in commodity prices. Total products supplied to the market during the reporting period, used as a barometer for demand, is close to 21 million barrels per day, which at the very least is near levels from before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020.
“If the EIA is a barometer of the U.S. economy, then the U.S. economy is in good health, at least this is what the demand figures imply,” he said, referring to the Energy Information Administration.
That’s in contrast to the latest survey of consumer sentiment from the University of Michigan, which found that inflation “combined with the absence of federal policies” to do anything about it are taking a toll on confidence.
“Consumers expressed less optimism in the November 2021 survey than any other time in the past decade about prospects for their own finances as well as for the overall economy,” the report read.
President Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Tuesday tried his hand at market control by announcing the government would release oil from strategic reserves in coordination with Asian and the U.K. economies. Most analysts said that would only have a temporary impact on crude oil and gasoline prices, which have been moving off from recent highs over the last few weeks.

However, the implied demand figure from total products supplied, as well as a report that showed consumer spending moved higher in October, paints another economic picture altogether.
That dichotomy was reflected in crude oil prices, which were hovering around even for most of the trading day on Wednesday. Tom Kloza, the president of the Oil Price Information Service, said that, at least for gasoline, trends may already be working in consumers’ favor.
“After this week, we really don’t see great demand until later in the first quarter 2022,” he said.
With COVID-19 vaccines readily available, U.S. travelers are expected to hit the road for the long Thanksgiving holiday. Many opted to stay home last year.
Elsewhere, Giovanni Staunovo, a commodities strategist for Swiss investment bank UBS, said there may be too many factors at play other than the Energy Information Administration report.

“Not sure the report matters so much, with market participants looking for new mobility restrictions in Europe and what OPEC+ does at their upcoming meeting,” he said.
Coping with an outbreak of new cases of COVID-19, many European nations have reimposed tight social restrictions as a preventative measure.
Some commentators have suggested OPEC+, the core members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and a handful of non-member states such as Russia, may decide to react to the coordinated decision to release oil from strategic reserves by standing firm with their conviction that the market doesn’t need more oil when they decide on output levels again next month.
Edited by Bryan Wilkes and Kristen Butler
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