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Showing posts with label Pedestrian’s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pedestrian’s. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Donie's Ireland daily news BLOG Friday

Irish ambassador in London gets ready for President Micheal D’s Palace visit

 

Dan Mulhall sees promising future for Anglo-Irish relations as he awaits first State visit by Irish head of State. 

Each day in the central lobby of the Palace of Westminster, one that separates the House of Lords and the House of Commons, visitors crane upwards to see four mosaics.
Representing Saints Andrew, George, David and Patrick, the mosaics have browned with age and few will have noticed the name of Banba written above the head of St Patrick.
For Dan Mulhall, Ireland’s ambassador to Britain, however, the presence of Banba a member of the legendary Tuatha Dé Danann – highlights the complex heart of Anglo-Irish relations.
Fifteen years ago, Mulhall was based in Edinburgh, as it made its first steps after the devolution of power to Holyrood from Westminster.
There, he became friends with the late Seamus Heaney, agreeing with the latter’s view that the two countries were “linked and separated in various degrees by history and geography, language and culture”.
“Considering our convoluted connections, it seems strangely appropriate that this ancient Irish goddess should occupy this perch,” Mulhall mused recently.
For months, the Waterford-born diplomat has led preparations, at the Irish Embassy in London, for President Michael D Higgins’ State visit to Britain.
Often, it has been a job of explaining – to a British audience or to those internationals who have become intrigued – why the first State visit by an Irish head of State is only taking place now.
“For a long time relations between an independent Ireland and our nearest neighbour were burdened by a legacy of history,” he told journalists last week.
The four-day programme will reflect the “huge divide” that has been overcome in relations between Ireland and Britain, but one also that offers “a platform for the future”, he said.
During the visit, Mr Higgins will lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior at Westminster Abbey and inspect the colours of the Irish regiments disbanded when the Free State was founded.
“In the past we might not have seen that Ireland had any real connection with the first World War,” says Mulhall, noting the series of commemorations involving Irish ministers in recent years.
“It underlines our willingness yet again to see our past in its true colours and embrace our past without any reason to shy away from the fact that the Irish played such an important role,” he went on.
Since he moved to London from Berlin last year, Mulhall has spent time getting to know the Irish community, particularly those involved in a succession of Irish centres throughout Britain.
Last month, 350 Irish people were invited to Buckingham Palace for a reception that acted as the warm-up to President Higgins’ visit– one that is getting royal attention.
“It is a wonderful occasion for the Irish community in Britain; the biggest Irish community anywhere in the world outside Ireland,” said the diplomat on the night.
“They have made a huge contribution to Britain over the years. Many of the people here tonight have been here for 40, 50 or even 60 years,” he said.
The ties that bind are cultural too, says Mulhall, pointing to Mr Higgins’ visit to the Royal Shakespeare Company in Straford-upon-Avon and, later, Shakespeare’s birthplace.
“For the Irish, Shakespeare hardly counts as a foreign author; he has been part of our lives. Equally, here, people regard Irish authors as part of their own literary tradition,” he said.
Prone to quoting Heaney, Mulhall wondered, in a speech in Edinburgh some months ago, if Banba “was the goddess” the Derry poet had encountered “at the edge of centuries”.
“We are indeed at the edge of centuries on these islands, with centuries of contention behind us, significant centenaries upon us and, I think, a very positive vista ahead.
“This edge of centuries is a good place to be, a comfortable plateau rather than a threatening precipice. There are, of course, further uplands ahead of us.
“But we can be optimistic about our prospects. At the edge of centuries lies a friendly, cooperative, respectful partnership,” he said.

Pedestrians make up largest group of road users that die in Dublin from road accident's

 

Newly released stat's show two out of every five road fatalities in Dublin are pedestrians. 

Between 2008 and last year pedestrians accounted for 37 per cent of the 121 road deaths in Dublin, just a slightly higher proportion than drivers who made up 35 per cent of the total.
Almost two out of every five road fatalities in Dublin is a pedestrian according to newly released statistics, making them the single biggest group of road users to die in the capital.
The figures have been released by An Garda Síochána as part of their “Casualty Reduction Campaign” to run for the next two months.
“When we analyse the tragic year end figure(s), we can clearly see that pedestrians still remain the most vulnerable, even more so than drivers who traditionally figure higher in terms of fatal incidents,” said chief superintendent Aidan Reid, head of the city’s traffic corps.
Between 2008 and last year pedestrians accounted for 37 per cent of the 121 road deaths in Dublin, just a slightly higher proportion than drivers who made up 35 per cent of the total.
That represents 45 pedestrian deaths, as against 42 drivers, 18 passengers, 11 cyclists and five motorcyclists.
“This is not solely an enforcement issue. We must get drivers to slow down, particularly in 30 kilometre an hour and 50 kilometre an hour zones, but also appeal to pedestrians to ensure they do everything to remain safe on the roads,” said chief superintendent Reid.
“This is particularly relevant in relation to pedestrians who may have been drinking. Getting home safely is what everyone wants, so when our socialising be responsible.”
Figures also show that those struck by a vehicle travelling at around 60 kilometres an hour stand an 85 per cent chance of death.
Michael Rowland of the Road Safety Authority said: “Drivers need to play their part too by realising that in a collision with a pedestrian, regardless of who is at fault, the pedestrian will come off worse so it’s important to drive with your eyes wide open to possible danger and slow down.”

Eircom to send 30,000 customers backdated error bills

  

Direct debits not taken from bank accounts due to error in Bank system.

Thousands of Eircom customers will have to pay arrears of between €100 and €500 after an error in the company’s billing system resulted in direct debits not being collected.
Around 30,000 customers did not have some or all of their monthly payments taken from their bank accounts for phone broadband and TV services since January.
They received their bills as usual however, which incorrectly stated the direct debits had been paid.
Eircom’s director of corporate affairs Paul Bradley said around 4 per cent of their customers had been impacted.
He said most of those affected would owe around €100, but this could rise to around €500 for some customers whose payments had not been collected for a longer period of time.
He said two-thirds of affected customers had already been contacted. Their next bill will reflect the full amount owed, including arrears, which will be paid by direct debit.
Chairman of the Consumers’ Association of Ireland Michael Kilcoyne has called on Eircom to write off the outstanding debts.
“The customer arranged for the payment to be made, they gave them the facility to do it, and Eircom botched it up,” he said.
“There are many people living hand to mouth now, who won’t be able to afford this. It is totally unacceptable that Eircom would demand this money from them.”
Mr Bradley said Eircom would arrange a payments plan for customers who are not in a position to pay the outstanding amount with their next bill.
“If they have any difficulties whatsoever in terms of paying, we are asking them please to contact us. We will work with them in order to put a payment plan in place,” he said.
The error is believed to be related to the implementation of the Single Euro Payments Area (Sepa) payment integration initiative.
Customers with queries about the error can call a dedicated phone line on 1800 303 432, Monday to Friday 9am-8pm.

Identity fraud and cybercrime in Ireland cost firms over €600m

 

An increase in cybercrimes is costing Irish companies over €600m a year, according to a Grant Thornton new report.

Reports of data breaches are mounting in Ireland as both foreign and Irish criminals infiltrate business computer systems, according to a Grant Thornton business report.
Common crimes include identity fraud, online scams, cyber theft and cyber extortion.
Notifications of security breaches rose 36pc in 2012. Incidents are typically under-reported to the Data Protection Commissioner because companies fear a hit to their reputation should they disclose their security systems failed, according to Grant Thornton partner Mike Harris, who launched the company’s cybersecurity service.
SECURITY
Breaches since 2011 include attacks on Loyaltybuild, Eircom StudyHub and Recruit Ireland. Loyaltybuild suffered a breach of customer data and credit card information and had to invest €500,000 on security.
It is estimated that 55pc of cybercrime is by international organised crime gangs – typically operating in countries where regulation is weak.
Mr Harris said: “Our estimate of €630m is likely to be below the actual level given that many companies still do not report security breaches for fear of the reputational damage.”
He said Irish businesses should be focusing… on the ability to detect and react to data security breaches.
“It is not a question of if an Irish business will be subjected to an online attack, but a question of when,” he said.

Europe launches a satellite to monitor our planets natural disasters

   
The European Space Agency has successfully launched its Sentinel-1A satellite (above left), which is designed to monitor natural disasters such as floods and earthquakes.
Europe on Thursday launched the first satellite of its multi-billion-euro Copernicus Earth observation project that will supply valuable images in the event of natural disasters or even a plane crash.
The Sentinel-1a satellite, which blasted off into Earth’s orbit from Europe’s spaceport in French Guiana at 2102 GMT, will be used to monitor sea ice, oil spills and land use and to respond to emergencies such as floods and earthquakes.
The satellite, which carries a 12-metre-long (40-foot-long) radar antenna and has two 10 metre-long solar panels, is now orbiting the planet at 693 km (439 miles) above the earth.
The Copernicus project, for which the European Unionand the European Space Agency (ESA) have committed funding of around 8.4 billion euros ($11.5 billion) until 2020, is described by the ESA as the most ambitious earth observation programme to date.
Copernicus is designed to supply data that can help policymakers develop environmental legislation or react to emergencies such as natural disasters or humanitarian crises.
“The Sentinels will keep a watchful eye on our planet,” Thomas Reiter, ESA director of human spaceflight and operations and head of the ESA’s satellite control centre ESOC, said at the launch event in the German city of Darmstadt near Frankfurt, where ESOC is based.
The launch of the Copernicus project became especially urgent after Europe lost contact with its Earth observation satellite Envisat in 2012 after 10 years.
“The big step forward is that we can now cover every place on Earth every three to six days,” Volker Liebig, director of ESA’s Earth Observation programme, said ahead of the launch.
“This used to take much longer with Envisat. If you want to use images for disaster management support or to find a plane, then you want the images to be as fresh as possible.”
But he cautioned you would first need to know roughly where a plane had crashed, which is not the case with the missing Malaysian Airlines jet.
Chris Reynolds, director of the Irish Coast Guard in Dublin, said authorities needed more satellite images and data delivered as quickly as possible to catch “the bad guys”, such as people who purposely dump oil from their ships into the sea.
“At the moment, it’s very difficult to find out who has the data and to know what level of trust you can place in it,” he said at Thursday’s event.

Copernicus also offers new business opportunities.

Images can be downloaded free of charge, meaning companies can then use them to help deliver data to farmers on soil moisture or pest infestation, help oil companies decide where to drill new wells or make it easier for insurers to assess the risk of costly floods and fires.
Sentinel-1a, which will operate in tandem with a second satellite to be launched next year, Sentinel-1b, has high-tech instruments that will allow it to record radar images of Earth’s surface, even when the skies are cloudy or dark. As part of the Copernicus program, there will be 17 launches over the next decade.
Copernicus is one of the EU’s two flagship space programmes along with satellite-navigation initiative Galileo, which is meant to rival the dominant U.S. Global Positioning System, or GPS, Russia’s GLONASS and China’s new Beidou system.
The main suppliers for the first Sentinel are Italian-French venture Thales Alenia Space for the satellite and Airbus Defence and Space for the radar.

Ocean hidden under the frozen surface of the moon orbiting Saturn

 

Scientists measure the tiny gravitation pull exerted on satellite to predict what lies beneath the moon’s frozen surface

An ice encrusted moon of Saturn harbour’s a secret – a hidden ocean of liquid water. The Cassini satellite orbiting the giant ringed planet confirmed the huge body of water by studying the moon’s gravitational pull.
The moon Enceladus has proved something of a puzzle and a news maker since Cassini dropped into Saturnian orbit 10 years ago. Effectively Enceladus is a big ice-covered 500 km rock that attracted attention early as scientists wondered whether it might have liquid water underneath. Early pictures showed what have been described as the “tiger stripes” zig-zagging across the moon’s southern hemisphere. They looked very much like joints between giant ice floes.
Then in 2005 the probe detected jets of water vapour and ice emanating from the stripes, convincing scientists that there must be liquid water underneath. The question was how to prove it.
Years passed but observations continued and it was as a result of three Cassini fly-bys in April 2010 and May 2012 that the answer came. Scientists from Italy and the US were able to measure the tiny gravitation tug Enceladus exerted on the satellite and used this to predict what lies beneath the moon’s frozen surface.
The outer shell is ice 30 to 50km thick, but there is a small ocean of liquid water under part of the southern hemisphere, which must be the source of the water vapour jets, the scientists say in the current issue of the journal Science .
This was the first time that a geophysical method was used to understand the internal structure of Enceladus, says Prof David Stevenson, the Marvin L Goldberger Professor of Planetary Science at Caltech. “This is really the only way to learn about internal structure from remote sensing.”
It is assumed that the water stays wet rather than freezing solid because of the massive gravitational pull on the moon exerted by Saturn. The resultant orbital flexing generates heat that keeps the ice melted and probably drives the surface venting.
The Cassini Huygens mission is a joint enterprise involving the US, European and Italian space agencies. It includes the Cassini orbiter and also the Huygens lander that dropped onto the surface of another moon Titan back in 2005.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Donie's Ireland daily news BLOG

One in five People killed on Irish roads as Pedestrian’s
  

PEDESTRIAN SAFETY IS THEME FOR UN GLOBAL ROAD SAFETY WEEK (MAY 6TH TO 12TH), AS FIGURES REVEAL THAT 37 PEDESTRIANS DIED ON ROADS IN NORTH AND SOUTH IN 2012.

More than 5,000 pedestrians are killed on the world’s roads each week. To date this year 15 pedestrians have died on roads in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport Leo Varadkar said: “People have really embraced outdoor activities like walking and cycling. It’s healthy, it’s enjoyable and it’s a great alternative to the car. However, pedestrians also need to take great care on the roads, as they are among the most vulnerable road users.
Mr Noel Brett, Chief Executive, Road Safety Authority added: “Last year, 28 people or one in five of all people killed on our roads was a pedestrian. While this is a reduction of 40% on the previous year, it is a reminder to us all that we cannot become complacent. Tragically 11 pedestrians have died on the south’s roads in 2013. Therefore, I would like to ask all road users to redouble their efforts to make our roads safer and to help ensure we have a fatality free week to mark UN Global Road Safety Week.”
The RSA is supporting UN Global Road Safety Week through a series of radio ads which will be aired on local and national radio stations. Visit facebook.com/RSAIreland for more details.

‘Big Brother Josephine Feehily our software will find tax cheats, she says

  

The taxman is cracking down on tax cheats thanks to new ‘Big Brother’ computer software, Revenue Commissioners boss Josephine Feehily has revealed.

Ms Feehily told a Dail committee that tax officials can now trawl through reams of data, including bank accounts and mobile phone numbers, to spot cheats.
The trawl is currently focused on VAT but will be widened to income tax and other taxes next year.
Results could also be shared with the Department of Social Protection in 2014 to prevent welfare fraud.
Ms Feehily said a probe into specific sectors such as the the car industry to tackle EU-wide VAT abuses found 18 car traders here needed to be investigated more deeply. Two have already been prosecuted and one jailed.
Welfare: Turning to the property tax, Ms Feehily said Revenue planned to force PAYE workers evading the property tax to cough up within weeks of next month’s payment deadline. Revenue will begin deducting the property tax from PAYE workers’ pay cheques in July, she added.
People receiving occupational pensions will be next in the firing line followed by social welfare recipients.
The self-employed will be hit once they file annual returns in October and a surcharge could be applied. She said the tax office would make efforts to communicate with people before the tax is deducted.
About 80pc of all taxes are paid but Revenue says it expects compliance with the property tax to be higher.
Around 638,000 returns had been filed by yesterday morning or 40pc of the total figure. The deadline is three weeks away.
“We’re very pleased with this,” Ms Feehily told the Public Accounts Committee yesterday.
The fact that local authorities can raise or lower the property tax by as much as 15pc also got a lot of attention at the meeting. Local authorities can change the tax rate as early as 2015.
To collect the property tax, Revenue has been allocated a budget of €26m for 2013. Normally it is only allowed to spend 1pc of the overall value of a tax.
Since the Government estimates the property tax should generate around €500m a year, Revenue’s normal budget for this would be €5m a year.
However, it is permitted to bump this up to €10m for the first two years of the tax for start-up costs. It has already spent €9m this year, with postage a huge cost.

The HSE under the microscope for its expenditure and search for savings

   

PAUL MULHOLLAND REPORTS ON THE HSE’S RECENT APPEARANCE BEFORE THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE

The HSE was recently before the Public Accounts Committee to discuss the Controller and Auditor General’s report into the Executive’s 2011 financial statements, and also provide an update on its current financial situation.
The HSE’s gross expenditure in 2011 amounted to €13.9 billion. The outturn was approximately four per cent below the 2010 gross expenditure level and eight per cent below peak expenditure in 2009.
An additional €148 million through a Supplementary Estimate was required at the end of the year to balance its budget.
A total of €58 million was required due to a shortfall in funding in 2011 arising from a lower than anticipated uptake in the early retirement and voluntary redundancy schemes.
Some two-thirds of the additional provision was for increased spending on medical card schemes and community services. The outturn for these services was €2.58 billion, which was 6.8 per cent above the original Estimate for the year. The provisional outturn for 2012 indicates that spending in these areas continued to run ahead of the Estimate provision year, ending approximately nine per cent on the Estimate provision, which was one of the main reasons a Supplementary Estimate, amounting to a net €360 million, was also required.
Director General Designate of the HSE, Mr Tony O’Brien, told the PAC that developing a robust and fit-for-purpose financial system is a priority for both the HSE and the Department of Health. The Ogden review was commissioned by the Department of Health in May 2012 and was completed in July 2012. On the basis of the review and predicted continued financial deficits, further work was commissioned last year, and a report was completed in September 2012.
“The report highlighted the need to take immediate action to improve the financial management systems in health,” according to Mr O’Brien.
“A key priority for me on my appointment in August 2012 was to stabilise HSE finances and to implement the actions outlined in the second review, the PA review, commissioned by the Department. The engagement of PA by the HSE is one of the first steps in the financial reform of the health service which is a central element of the overall reform programme.
This work is well under way and is due to be completed in the coming weeks and will lay the foundations for further financial reform. The appointment of a new chief financial officer to the HSE is also central to driving forward the changes needed to develop the finance function in the context of the wider health reform programme including: Money-follows-the-patient and universal health insurance. The selection process to fill this post is currently underway and is due to be completed shortly.”
Sinn Féin Deputy Mary Lou McDonald questioned Mr O’Brien about how the HSE will achieve the €721 million in savings earmarked for this year in light of the fact that the Executive already had a deficit of €13 million at the end of February.
“A big proportion of these savings is attributable to changes in the cost of providing service by way of workforce-related matters,” Mr O’Brien said.
“The substantial other component relates to changes in the cost of providing schemes, which are the product of changes in eligibility and co-payment issues with some reductions in costs, particularly under the Irish Pharmaceutical Healthcare Association, IPHA, agreement, and a number of changes that we are pushing forward, for example, in the medicines management programme, which is designed to increase the number of lower-cost drugs that are prescribed as a proportion of the total.”
Mr O’Brien added that the HSE, in fact, had an €18 million surplus at the end of March. The figure takes account of a €25 million underspend on the capital side and an overspend of €7 million on the revenue side. Mr O’Brien said that the improvement in the financial position is due to a number of measures related to the Primary Care Reimbursement Service (PCRS), which is earmarked to deliver €323 million  savings this year.
“In this regard, however, I must caution that many of the challenges which relate to the saving targets … by their nature are timed to have their impact in the latter stages of the year,” he said.
“Some of those are already having a positive impact but the great proportion of them are not scheduled to have had an impact in the first quarter.”
Mr O’Brien expressed some concern about the impasse on Croke 2, through which €150 million in savings are due to be made. A further €106 million has also been specified as being related to pay and flexibility arrangements under Croke Park 1.
“Clearly, while the health service has proved to be an effective environment in which to extract flexibility issues in recent years under Croke Park 1, obviously I have some concern that, in the current environment, we would need to be certain of the industrial relations environment and the Croke Park 2 environment in order to be absolutely certain of delivery in that regard. However, for the present time, as the Deputy is aware, at a central Government level a process is now in place by central Government, which is designed to address the result of the Croke Park 2 ballots and until we know the outcome of that, it is difficult to be certain what will be the outturn in respect of those two issues.”
Deputy McDonald asked Mr O’Brien if the HSE had made contingency arrangements should these anticipated savings not arise. Mr O’Brien replied that the Government intends to deliver pay-related savings of that order and, therefore, it would be inappropriate for the HSE to begin examining other ways of reducing expenditure at that level because that would involve cuts in services.
“For the time being, it is not appropriate for the HSE to begin to consider alternative ways to leverage that kind of cost reduction,” according to Mr O’Brien.
“This is because first, this is not profiled until 1 July onwards or in other words is a second-half issue. Second, in the absence of measures that reduce our costs, it would be extremely challenging to begin to extract that level of saving from the direct provision of services. As it would have a highly negative effect on the provision of healthcare, for the time being it is appropriate for us to await the outcome of the process the Government has initiated.”

Connacht Gold to change brand name to Aurivo Co-operative

 

Chairman says time is right to invest in ‘new brand architecture’

Padraig Gibbons: “Today’s decision provides a new platform for innovation and growth

Connacht Gold will be renamed the Aurivo Co-operative Society after shareholders unanimously endorsed the change at a special general meeting in Claremorris yesterday.
Chairman Padraig Gibbons said the proposal followed discussions and market research over the past two years.
“With the growth in depth and breadth of our business in recent years, the board felt the time is now right to invest in new brand architecture. Today’s decision provides a new platform for innovation and growth which will benefit our businesses and the communities we serve,” said Mr Gibbons.
The co-operative’s 39 retail stores will be rebranded Homeland and Homeland Agri depending on the products available in the store. Animal feed will also be marketed under a new brand, Nutrias.
The rebranding will not affect the Connacht Gold dairy brands Donegal Creameries and the recently acquired Organic For Us brand.

Phone app tracks ladybird invasion

  

A NEW MOBILE PHONE APP WILL HELP PEOPLE MONITOR HARLEQUIN LADYBIRD NUMBERS

Scientists have launched a mobile phone app to monitor the impact of the invasive harlequin ladybird on the UK’s native species.
The free app, irecord ladybirds, was produced by scientists at the centre for ecology and hydrology working with the nature locator team at the University of Bristol.
it allows users to connect to the UK ladybird survey and input their own records of species across the country, which are used to track ladybird populations.
Data submitted to the survey, which launched in 1968, has already shown a decline in native species such as the two-spot ladybird in response to the arrival of the harlequin, which was first seen in England in 2003.
Conservationists hope the app will show whether native ladybird species will bounce back in 2013 and provide insight into the invasion process in the future.
Dr Helen Roy, from the UK ladybird survey, said: “i have been inspired by the number of people getting involved with the UK ladybird survey via email, online recording, twitter and traditional pen and paper – the observations they submit are invaluable.
“With the new app we now have a further opportunity to continue monitoring the harlequin ladybird alongside other species to further our understanding of the invasion process.”
More than 50,000 records, which are published online, have been submitted by members of the public since the survey’s launch in 1968. lower numbers of harlequin and native ladybirds were reported in 2012, though the number of records remained stable for the mildew-feeding orange ladybird.
Dave Kilbey, nature locator project manager at the university of Bristol, said: “smartphone apps like this one have the potential to transform the way we record and monitor wildlife populations owing to a combination of useful features such as GPS location fixing, help with making a correct identification and the ability to take and submit images with records.”
Each species has a distribution map and habitat information within the app, with photographs and a simple identification key also provided. information gathered by the survey is used by scientists to ascertain how wildlife is changing due to factors such as climate chance and the arrival of new species.

International Space Station is leaking ammonia but crew is safe

  

The International Space Station is leaking ammonia from its P6 truss structure but the crew is “in no danger,” NASA reported this week.

The Expedition 35 crew reported seeing “white flakes floating away from an area of the International Space Station’s P6 truss structure” on Thursday at around 11:30 a.m. Eastern, according to the space agency.
As of Thursday, NASA said that “the rate of the ammonia leaking from this section of the coolingsystem  has increased” but maintained that the “station continues to operate normally otherwise and the crew is in no danger.”
The leaking ammonia was coming from the same solar array cooling loop that sprung a leak last year. The ISS crew “attempted to troubleshoot” that leak on Nov. 1, 2012, according to NASA, which didn’t specify whether they had been successful.
“It is not yet known whether this increased ammonia flow is from the same leak, which at the time, was not visible,” the space agency said.
Mission Control and the ISS crew have apparently narrowed down the location of the leak but have not isolated its exact location. NASA said “[p]lans are being developed to reroute other power channels to maintain full operation of those and other systems normally controlled by the solar array that is cooled by this loop.”
NASA reported Thursday that its thermal control systems team was projecting a shutdown of the affected cooling loop in “about 48 hours” due to the leak.
“The team is looking at whether any additional imagery is needed to isolate the leak’s location,” the space agency said.