Height |
118cm |
Material |
100% TPE with Skeleton |
Height(No Head) |
102cm |
Waist |
38m |
Upper Breast |
70cm |
Hips |
84cm |
Lower Breast |
53cm |
Shoulder |
24cm |
Arm |
45/42cm |
Leg |
60/57cm |
Vaginal depth |
17cm |
Anal depth |
15cm |
Oral depth |
12cm |
Hand |
16cm |
Net Weight |
23kgs |
Feet |
21cm |
Gross Weight |
30kgs |
Carton size |
110*36*26cm |
Applications:Popular used in Medical/Model/Sex Education/Adult Store |
Sound impossible? So does the alternative. A team of international researchers reported this week that human beings are “on our way to the potential collapse of natural and socioeconomic systems and a world with unbearable heat and shortages of food and freshwater,” in the words of an Oregon State University scientist who was one of the study’s lead authors.Pregnant Sex Doll
For cities and states looking to lead the world to a safer climate, that means there’s no such thing as moving too fast.
“I do worry that to get to these 2030, 2035 goals, these 2028 goals — we are perhaps behind right now,” said Mary Leslie, president of the Los Angeles Business Council and board chair of the agency overseeing California’s main electric grid.Sex Doll Anal
“This is a pretty radical deal we’re talking about,” she said at a Wednesday event announcing the new road map.
upplying power to tens of millions of cars, trucks and household appliances — plus all the stuff we already use electricity for — will require building loads of solar panels, wind turbines and other climate-friendly energy. The biggest chunk of that power will almost certainly come from faraway solar and wind farms, which can produce electricity at a lower cost than rooftop solar.
But there’s still huge potential for rooftop solar, which can help cities stay powered when wildfires or other disruptions batter the larger electric grid — an increasingly common problem as the climate crisis screws around with global weather systems.Plush Sex Doll
The new road map estimates Los Angeles County will need nearly 12,000 gigawatt-hours of new energy supplies a year come 2028, to power the many additional electric cars and appliances envisioned by its authors. The document sets targets for getting all of that energy from solar panels on houses and apartment buildings, as well as “community solar” facilities that serve renters who can’t install or can’t afford their own panels.
That would be a big deal, if it happens.
The road map also calls for a “virtual power plant” that would bring together rooftop solar panels, electric-vehicle batteries and stand-alone batteries in household garages to relieve stress on the power grid — especially during summer heat waves that are getting worse with climate change and making it harder to keep the lights on as families crank up the air conditioning.
That would be a big deal, too.
Already, the city of Los Angeles has 665 megawatts of local solar power, according to Nancy Sutley, deputy mayor for energy and sustainability. That’s more than any other U.S. city, and puts L.A. in a strong position to keep leading the way.
“The future is alive and well here in Los Angeles,” Sutley said at Wednesday’s event.
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