Category: Energy

  • Panasonic and Sanyo Plan Storage Battery for the Home; Solar Applications

    panasonic storage batteryNow that Panasonic has officially acquired more than 50 percent of Sanyo, it is now Japan’s second largest electronic giant.   Panasonic and Sanyo have already test-manufactured a storage battery for home use, and Panasonic plans to accelerate the development of the storage battery, while planning to sell it together with a system that will enable households to check electricity usage on a home-based TV display.  Currently, solar batteries for home use and fuel cells can generate power, but they cannot store electricity.  This will be a great development for the residential solar industry.  Sanyo believes their storage battery will also have applications in automobile cells for eco-friendly cars such as hybrids or electric vehicles.

    [via physorg]

    Panasonic eco ideas is the Panasonic commitment to developing industry-leading energy conserving products.
    Panasonic manufactures the WhisperGreen vent fans which are 300 – 500% more energy efficient…Read more

  • Eco Tech: Scotland’s new wave energy plant to power 13,000 households

    wave energy

    Eco Factor: Wave energy power plant capable of generating 200MW of power.

    Scottish energy developer Pelamis has teamed up with European energy giant Vattenfall to develop a $100 million wave energy project off Scotland’s Shetland Islands. The new project, dubbed Aegir, will be able to generate 200MW of power, enough to provide renewable electricity to about 13,000 households per year.

    (more…)

  • Horrific Holiday Indulgences, Gourmet Airplane Food and More

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    Each morning, we dish out a few links we love. Just how much nutritional damage can Christmas day actually do? Research shows that kids tend to eat four times their recommended daily amount of calories. That’s 6,000 calories in one day, people. If … Read more

     

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  • Main Points of Copenhagen Accord, the Deal Negotiated at the UN Climate Talks in Copenhagen 2009

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    2009Dec19: Main points of the Copenhagen Accord, the deal reached between the US, China, India, Brazil and South Africa, at the UN Climate talks in Copenhagen: contains no reference to a legally binding agreement; contains no deadline for transforming the accord into a binding deal; recognizes need to limit global temperatures rising no more than 2C above pre-industrial levels; does not identify a year by which carbon emissions should peak; countries are asked to announce by 1 February 2009 their pledges for curbing carbon emissions by 2020; promises to deliver $30 billion of aid for developing nations over the next three years; outlines a goal of providing $100 billion a year by 2020 to help poor countries cope with the impacts of climate change; establishes a green climate fund which will support projects in developing countries related to mitigation, adaptation, capacity building and technology transfer; developing countries will submit national reports on their emissions pledges; and the implementation of the Copenhagen Accord will be reviewed by 2015 (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8422307.stm

    Read the Copenhagen Accord http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/ext/_auto/-/http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2009/cop15/eng/l07.pdf

    Image Description: COP15 logo. Credit: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark. Image Location: COP15 http://en.cop15.dk/about+cop15/logo Image Permission: Media may use the logo editorially in articles/stories on COP15.

  • Eco Tech: Bio Energy’s biomass plant to provide green energy to 50,000 homes

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    Eco Factor: Biomass plant to generate 49KW of green electrical power.

    Heatherwick Studio is designing a sustainable power plant that will run on biomass and generate up to 49MW of green electrical power. The project will be led by Bio Energy Investments and will be constructed on the banks of River Tees in Teesside.

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  • Why mad cow? Against cannibalism.

    It’s not yet freely available online, but the Scientific American Origins issue has a nice short summary of the origins of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, aka “Mad Cow disease”.
    Turns out Mad Cow is now thought to be related to President Jimmy Carter’s sweater. The first (prodromic) energy crisis led President Carter to wear a sweater in the chillier White House, and changed animal rendering from boiling to centrifugal separation. The centrifuges were kind to prions, so millions of cattle, uncounted small animals, and about 200 humans died a miserable death.
    The true root cause, however, was cannibalism. Rendered cows were largely fed to non-rendered cows.
    Eating one’s own species turns out to be quite unhealthy – despite the compatible food stock. Prions are therefore a de facto form of species-specific poison, and they would contribute to natural selection against conspecific cannibalism.
    Prions are presumably a relatively small contributor to the contra-cannibalism trend, but this is an odd upside to the otherwise blameworthy prion.
    Update: The 200 dead number will grow. Sadly.


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  • Decrease Your Carbon Footprint 2600% — With One Click

    Do you like to play with online tools? I do. I like environmental calculators. It’s fun to plug in a bunch of numbers and see what you come up with.

    Take environmental calculators offered by paper companies. Want to know how much you can green your print marketing just by making a simple switch? They’ll tell you. With a few clicks, they’ll tell you how much you can save in water, trees, landfill waste, BTUs of energy, and more simply by switching from virgin to a variety of other stocks with postconsumer waste (PCW) content.

    What’s incredible is how little it takes to make a huge difference. Simply by increasing your PCW content from, say, 10% to 25%, you can actually decrease your carbon footprint by thousands of percent. For example, using the environmental calculator from Wausau Paper (500 sheets of 8.5 x 11″ with 10% PCW content), I could save the following:

    Read more of this story »

  • So who flew to Copenhagen this week?

    I have a fond little memory from one of the early multi-candidate debates in the last US election campaign. It was on prime-time TV: there were still about a dozen or so candidates in the running, including Obama and Hillary Clinton, each was standing behind a podium, and as the topic of climate change came up they were asked en masse: “So, who didn’t fly here today in a private plane, raise your hand?” The delegates all sheepishly kept their hands down but one – I forget which – raised his. “I came in yesterday,” he explained. (laughter)

    So to the Copenhagen climate change summit, and all the luminaries and dignitaries and celebrities landing at København airport, many of them in private jets.

    copenhagen summit So who flew to Copenhagen this week?

    http://www.cph.dk/CPH/DK/MAIN

    This tells us something about the future, and what it says is: ‘needs must.’ What are they going to do, row a boat to Copenhagen? Scale that up and you have the real, actual future. People will fly. In fact the entire new global middle class of billions will fly. And they will heat their homes. And they will eat meat, and so on. And any even remotely democratic system that tries to take away this will be out on its ear.

    But we will of course move to cleaner, renewable, sustainable systems. How fast this happens depends essentially on money, which in turn depends on political will, which in turn depends on public concern. Money is required to fund new energy technology research, and — the core issue of Copenhagen this week — it is needed to buy off industrializing countries.

    There’s no doubt that climate change (manmade or not) is real, and a real danger. But when scientists and academics are worried about it that means little in terms of changes to human practices. When the public gets concerned — as they now are — we get the possibility of fundamental change. This is true of the future generally, not just climate and the environment.

    Between the public sentiment and the money lies political will. Essentially the political will of post-industrial economies on the one side, who find it politically easy, relatively, to pay the price of emissions constraints vs. that of developing economies which will be choked economically and therefore politically by those constraints.

    Inequality

    Correlating degrees warming with ecological and therefore social upheaval is important. But to think that is what the argument is about is to miss the point. The point is global inequality and its future, and how developing economies are not going to allow emissions constraints to further entrench it.

    The future goes always to the most powerful side. That’s what power is for: determining the future. The sides are both strong in this dispute, so this battle will not be won or lost in Copenhagen this week. We are still in its early stages. The effects of climate change are incremental (unlike, say, nuclear holocaust) meaning there is plenty of room for postponement even if the planet can’t and won’t ultimately take it. And those who would occupy the moral high ground have burned public and private jet fuel to be there to do it, and will no doubt indulge in a bit of Smørrebrød and Frikadeller too. Needs must.

    So expect the political clock to remain stuck as it has been for a while now, at ‘5 minutes to midnight,’ while the issue smolders slowly without definitive resolution — until technology advances get human energy, finally, off fossil fuels and the problem works its way out of environmental and human systems.

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  • Global CO2 Emissions From Fossil Fuels in 2008 Were 40% Higher Than Those in 1990

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    2009Dec15: Global CO2 emissions from fossil fuels in 2008 were 40% higher than those in 1990, according to The Copenhagen Diagnosis, a report that synthesizes climate science published since the 2007 IPCC report (The Copenhagen Diagnosis).

    Reference: The Copenhagen Diagnosis, 2009: Updating the world on the Latest Climate Science. I. Allison, N. L. Bindoff, R.A. Bindoff, R.A. Bindschadler, P.M. Cox, N. de Noblet, M.H. England, J.E. Francis, N. Gruber, A.M. Haywood, D.J. Karoly, G. Kaser, C. Le Quéré, T.M. Lenton, M.E. Mann, B.I. McNeil, A.J. Pitman, S. Rahmstorf, E. Rignot, H.J. Schellnhuber, S.H. Schneider, S.C. Sherwood, R.C.J. Somerville, K.Steffen, E.J. Steig, M. Visbeck, A.J. Weaver. The University of New South Wales Climate Change Research Centre (CCRC), Sydney, Australia, 60pp.

    Read the report at http://www.copenhagendiagnosis.org/executive_summary.html

    Image Description: (Fig 1) Global CO2 Emissions from Fossil Fuels. Figure from The Copenhagen Diagnosis, 2009 Figures. Image Location: The Copenhagen Diagnosis http://www.copenhagendiagnosis.org/download/default.html Image Permission: This work is copyrighted and unlicensed. However, it is believed that the use of this work to illustrate the subject in question, Where no free equivalent is available or could be created that would adequately give the same information, on Interlinked Challenges, hosted on servers in the United States by Michigan State University, qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law.

  • Different Ways to Look at Carbon Emissions – Total 2007 Emissions; Total 1751-2006 Emissions; 2007 Per Capita Emissions

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    2009Dec14: Different ways to look at carbon emissions (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8411768.stm

    Image Description: see case description. Data Sources: CDIAC, Potsdam Institute for Climate Change Research. Image created by BBC. Image Location: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8411768.stm Image Permission: This work is copyrighted and unlicensed. However, it is believed that the use of this work to illustrate the subject in question, Where no free equivalent is available or could be created that would adequately give the same information, on Interlinked Challenges, hosted on servers in the United States by Michigan State University, qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law.

  • Energy Efficiency is the Solution, Not Coal

    Climate change and what to do about it has been a contentious topic for some time now. Although Al Gore’s film, An Inconvenient Truth, did a terrific job of telling the story about the threat of global warming, too many people don’t believe they can or should do anything about it.

    A recent controversy comes from Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner’s new book, Superfreakonomics, where they posit that we should stop bothering with weaning ourselves off a fossil fuel economy. They quote Nathan Myhrvold, former CTO of Microsoft, as saying: “coal is so cheap that trying to generate electricity without it would be economic suicide, especially for developing countries.” And, “They [the environmentalists] want to divert a huge amount of economic value toward immediate and precipitous anti-carbon initiatives, without thinking things through. This will have a huge drag on the world economy.”

    But Myhrvold and others who believe we must use coal plants to produce energy are looking at the problem the wrong way. They see the problem as a supply-side problem: because the planet has more people, we need to find more energy to keep up with demand which means we need to build more power plants and drill more oil.

    Yet today, experts driving energy planning understand the problem is a demand-side problem: the reason we need so much energy is because we waste so much. This insight comes from recognizing that we aren’t looking for energy as an end-product, but for the services we get from it: warm water for our showers, light for our homes, the ability to get to where we need to go.

    Even better, by getting more out of the energy we use, we have more to invest elsewhere. Art Rosenfeld, winner of the Enrico Fermi award for his innovation and leadership regarding energy efficiency in California, says that through energy efficiency programs put in place in California between 1976 and 2004, California families saved over $1000 per year by not having to build new power plants.

    Amory Lovins, founder of Rocky Mountain Institute, has been preaching the benefits of energy efficiency for decades and he says that if the United States used energy as efficiently as the top ten states did 4 years ago, we would eliminate our need for 62.5% of the coal powered energy produced today.

    A big fallacy around energy conservation is that it has to be hard, expensive and, as former Vice President Dick Cheney said, dependent on someone’s personal commitment to using less energy. But realistically, using energy efficiently comes from regulation-driven product designs that deliver more for less. In the 1970s, California set rigorous energy usage targets for refrigerators and the result is that since 1975, refrigerators are 75% more energy efficient than they used to be.

    The biggest impediment to a more energy-efficient economy is the lack of a smart regulatory environment that creates the right market incentives to engage manufacturers and utilities in helping their customers save energy. After all, for an energy utility following the traditional profit model of charging their customers for the amount of energy they use, selling less hurts their bottom line.

    When a state doesn’t get the incentives right, utilities and their customers can find themselves working against each other. In October Ohio’s FirstEnergy sent CFLs (Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs) to their customers, and then charged them significantly more than the market price for the bulbs. FirstEnergy’s reason for charging more for the energy efficient lightbulbs was that they had to recoup what they would lose when their customers used less electricity. Other states which have had more success, have put in place regulations that “decouple” the profits from the amount of energy delivered, and divide the savings between the utility and its customers.

    Bottom line: we know how to make our American economy more energy efficient. And for the developing world this works better in providing enough energy for their needs than building more coal power plants.

    Of all the excuses for not strongly pursuing energy efficiency and alternative renewable energy resources, concerns about bankrupting our economy and condemning the poor to an energy-starved future by not exploiting coal has to be one of the dumbest.

    [I wrote this originally for the Commonweal Institute Progressive OPED program.]

  • Eco Architecture: In Harmony Veritas – A self-sufficient complex in harmony with nature

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    Eco Factor: Sustainable complex designed to be powered by renewable sources of energy.

    The world today needs sustainable buildings that are constructed using ecofriendly materials and generate on-site energy using renewable energy systems. Eco-minded designers Chanturia Angela and Ivanyuk Yuliya have designed a project that is based on ecological ways of getting energy for a small scientific complex.

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  • US EPA Authorized to Regulate Greenhouse Gases 2009

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    2009Dec7: United States EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson signs two distinct findings regarding greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act: First, current and projected concentrations of key greenhouse gases (CO2, methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulfur hexafluoride) in the atmosphere threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations. Second, the combined emissions of these greenhouse gases from new motor vehicles and new motor vehicle engines contribute to the greenhouse gas pollution which threatens public health and welfare (EPA endangerment findings). “These long-overdue findings cement 2009’s place in history as the year when the United States Government began addressing the challenge of greenhouse-gas pollution and seizing the opportunity of clean-energy reform,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson (EPA administrator’s speech).

    Reference: EPA Administrator’s speech http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/8d49f7ad4bbcf4ef852573590040b7f6/b6b7098bb1dfaf9a85257685005483d5!OpenDocument; EPA endangerment findings http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/endangerment.html

    Read EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson’s speech http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/8d49f7ad4bbcf4ef852573590040b7f6/b6b7098bb1dfaf9a85257685005483d5!OpenDocument

    Read the Press Release http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/bd4379a92ceceeac8525735900400c27/08d11a451131bca585257685005bf252!OpenDocument

    EU and UN reaction to announcement http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8400792.stm

    Image Description: Traffic on the southbound Harbor Freeway in Los Angeles. Photo by SameerKhan, 2005Aug. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Harbor_Fwy_Traffic.jpg Image Permission: This image has been released into the public domain by its author, SameerKhan. This applies worldwide.

  • India Announces That it Will Reduce its Carbon Emission Intensity by 20-25% by 2020 from 2005 Levels

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    2009Dec3: India announces that it will reduce its carbon emission intensity by 20-25% by 2020 from 2005 levels by doing the following: imposing mandatory fuel efficiency standards for all vehicles by December 2011; enacting a building code that encourages energy conservation; passing amendments to laws to reduce energy intensity of industrial activities; monitoring the state of the forests; and adopting clean coal technologies (The Times of India).

    Reference: The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Indias-2020-target-Reduce-emission-by-20-25/articleshow/5297073.cms

    Image Description: Hila Tea Estate, Jalpaiguri district, West Bengal, India. Photo by Rajibnandi, 2007June29. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tea_garden_in_dooars.jpg Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License. In short: you are free to share and make derivative works of the file under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it only under a license identical to this one. Official license.

  • 90% of Existing Solar Panels Last for 30 Years, Instead of Predicted 20 Years 2009

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    2009Nov30: 90% of existing solar panels last for 30 years, instead of the predicted 20 years, according to the independent EU Energy Institute (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8386460.stm

    Image Description: Green roof with Sedum plants and solar panels at The Green Shop, Bisley, Gloucestershire, UK. Photo by thingermejig, 2007Aug2. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bisley_Green_Shop_roof_3.jpg Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0 License.

  • Greening Your Business — For Free!

    Can you green your business for free? With the right qualifiers, you might. There is at least one company that will take a comprehensive look at your organization, project out the amount of money it can save on your electric bill by installing greener technologies, and outfit you — free — on a contingency basis and through performance contracts.

    Certainly, there are other companies offering similar services. For this reason, this post is not intended as an advertisement for this particular company, but I will use it as an illustration of this business model. If there are other companies offering savings-based energy services, please let me know and I’ll compile a list for a future post.

    Here’s how the process works:

    Read more of this story »

  • China Pledges to Reduce its Carbon Intensity by 40-45% by the Year 2020, Compared With 2005 Levels

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    2009Nov26: China pledges to reduce its carbon intensity (amount of CO2 emitted for each unit of GDP), by 40-45% by the year 2020, compared with 2005 levels (New York Times).

    Reference: New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/27/science/earth/27climate.html

    Image Description: Members of the audience applaud as President Barack Obama addresses the town hall meeting with future Chinese leaders at the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum in Shanghai, China. November 16, 2009. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza). Image Location: White House.gov http://www.whitehouse.gov/photos-and-video/photogallery/november-2009-photo-day Image Permission: This file is in the public domain because it was created by a U.S. government employee.

  • U.S. Pledges a 17% Cut in Emissions from 2005 Levels by 2020, 30% by 2025, 42% by 2030 and 83% by 2050

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    2009Nov25: The U.S. pledges a 17% cut in emissions from 2005 levels by 2020, 30% by 2025, 42% by 2030 and 83% by 2050 (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8378890.stm

    Read the White House press release http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/president-attend-copenhagen-climate-talks

    Image Description: President Barack Obama looks out over the Forbidden City in Beijing, China. November 17, 2009. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza). Image Location: White House.gov http://www.whitehouse.gov/photos-and-video/photogallery/november-2009-photo-day Image Permission: This file is in the public domain because it was created by a U.S. government employee.

  • Levi Strauss & Company, Mohawk Fine Papers, Pacific Gas & Electric, PNM Resources, Exelon, and Apple Resign from US Chamber of Commerce Because Chamber is Opposed to Climate Legislation 2009

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    2009Nov19: Levi Strauss & Company resigns from the United States Chamber of Commerce, because the chamber opposes the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions (New York Times).

    2009Oct20: Mohawk Fine Papers resigns from the United States Chamber of Commerce, because the chamber opposes the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions (WCAX.com).

    2009Oct5: Pacific Gas & Electric, PNM Resources, Exelon, and Apple resign from the United States Chamber of Commerce, because the chamber opposes the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions (New York Times. 2009). Catherine Novelli, Apple’s vice president of worldwide government affairs, in a letter to Thomas Donahue, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s president: “We strongly object to the chamber’s recent comments opposing the EPA’s effort to limit greenhouse gases…Apple supports regulating greenhouse gas emissions, and it is frustrating to find the chamber at odds with us in this effort.”

    Reference: New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/19/business/energy-environment/19CHAMBER.html; New York Times http://greeninc.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/05/apple-resignes-from-chamber-over-climate/; WCAX.com http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?S=11346386

    Read the letter [PDF] that PG&E chairman and CEO Peter Darbee sent to Thomas Donahue, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s president

    Read the letter [PDF] that Catherine Novelli, Apple’s vice president of worldwide government affairs, sent to Thomas Donahue, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s president

    Image Description: Levi Strauss & Company logo. Image Location: Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Levis_logo_ver.jpg; Pacific Gas and Electric Company logo. Image Location: Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pge_svg.svg; PNM logo. Image Location: Brands of the World http://www.brandsoftheworld.com/history/2001/05/26350.html; Exelon logo. Image Location: Your Industry News http://www.yourindustrynews.com/upload_images/Exelon_Corp_Logo_1.jpg; Apple logo. Image Location: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Apple-logo.png; Mohawk Fine Paper logo. Image Location: http://www.mohawkpaper.com/corporate Permission to use Images: These are logos from an organization, item, or event, and is protected by copyright and/or trademark. It is believed that the use of low-resolution images on Interlinked Challenges, hosted on servers in the United States by Michigan State University, of logos for certain uses involving identification and critical commentary may qualify as fair use under United States copyright law.

  • India Will Spend About $922 Million in the First of Three Phases of a New Solar Technologies Program 2009

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    2009Nov18: Prime Minister Singh’s government announces that it will spend about $922 million in the first of three phases of India’s new solar technologies program (New York Times).

    Reference: New York Times http://greeninc.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/20/india-to-invest-900-million-in-solar/?scp=1&sq=india%20solar%20power&st=cse

    Image Description: Heydarabad, Charminar, India. Photo by Rhaessner, 2003Feb. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Charminar.jpg Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License. In short: you are free to share and make derivative works of the file under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it only under a license identical to this one.