Category: News

  • Power the Future: Harnessing energy from the sun-baked deserts

    solar plant_1_ckhop_69

    With fossil fuel reserves depleting at a rate not many would have imagined in the past, the oil of the 21st century is definitely not what’s buried deep within the earth, but it’s something that falls on the surface as sunshine. Some researchers opine that the earth receives more energy from the sun in just one hour than the world uses in a whole year. The technology to harness the energy already exists and does hold a promise to better the environmental condition of the planet.

    Why deserts:

    Of all the places where solar panels, both photovoltaic and solar thermal, can be installed, deserts do offer better possibilities. The benefits of creating massive solar projects in deserts include:

    • Ample Space:

    sahara space

    Since deserts like the Sahara are mostly barren, the place can easily be used to install solar projects. A research carried out by Greenpeace along with several other groups deduced that deserts are potent enough to meet up to 25 percent of the world’s electricity demands by 2050. In the Sahara desert, with less cloud cover and a better solar angle, one can obtain closer to 83 W/m². The unpopulated area of the Sahara desert is over 9 million km², which if covered with solar panels would provide 750 terawatts of renewable electrical power. The Earth’s current energy consumption is around 13.5TW at any given moment

    • Dry Climate:

    dry desert

    With little to no rain, deserts usually remain hot and sunny, making these places ideal for solar energy generation. The sunny climate is suited for both photovoltaic solar installations and solar thermal installations.

    • Jobs:

    sahara desert tribals

    Besides combating climate change, desert-based power plants would create jobs and improve the economic development of the local communities. Moreover, since there isn’t much use for the land, local residents and environmentalists are pleased with the solar prospect.

    Limitations of desert solar power:

    Overshadowing the advantages there are a few limitations of desert-based solar power.

    • Extremely hot climate:

    sun on desert

    The average temperature of the Sahara desert is about 30 degrees Celsius. Variations may also be huge from over 50 degrees Celsius during the day during summers to below zero degrees Celsius at night in winter. This hot temperature makes solar photovoltaic panels less efficient in converting sunlight into electricity.

    • Dust:

    windy desert

    Winds in these areas will blast solar panels with dense dust, which will reduce the efficiency of both the mirrors used in case of solar thermal installations and the photovoltaic modules used in solar PV installations.

    • Transmission:

    transmission

    Energy generated in deserts will be used in completely different parts of the world. Some percentage of the electricity generated will be lost during transmission.

    • Cost Barrier:

    money

    Electricity produced by even the cheapest solar technology works out at $160/MWh. Moreover, transmitting electricity to distant regions will further increase the cost of electricity, which finally will have be paid by consumers who currently get electricity at rates well below $1/watt.

    • Lack of water:

    water in desert

    While deserts have plenty of sun, they lack another less obvious but equally indispensable resource for a solar thermal power plant – water. Water is the cooling agent for both photovoltaic and solar thermal installations, without which the plants would be overheated and their efficiency will significantly be reduced.

    Some proposals:

    • Solar Energy System in California Desert:

    rice solar energy

    Rice Solar Energy is planning a solar energy installation in an uninhabited part of eastern Riverside County, California. The system will rely on 4.4 million gallons of melted salt placed in a 538-foot tower. Mirrors around the tower reflect sunlight onto it, heating the salt to such great temperatures that it retains a useful amount of heat seven hours after sundown.

    • Mojave Solar Park:

    ibn_iq4dq

    The Mojave Solar Park is a solar thermal power facility currently contracted to be constructed in the Mojave Desert in California. The facility is being constructed by Solel Inc. and is designed to have a capacity of 553MW. Upon completion it will become the world’s largest solar collection facility both in capacity and land size.

    • $70 Billion Solar Installation for Europe:

    dr

    Dr. Anthony Patt, a research scholar at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria, estimates that if a fraction of the Sahara, probably the size of a small country, be covered with solar panels, the energy generated would be sufficient to power all of Europe. Dry climate and the high-intensity of the sun’s rays will benefit the $70 billion installation, making it a highly-efficient venture.

    • Desertec Foundation 100GW Project:

    solar plant_2_uhckx_69

    This project, promoted by Desertec Foundation, will be built by 20 blue chip German companies, and will be able to generate a whopping 100GW of concentrating solar power. Unlike other solar power plants, which are usually built on a single location, this massive plant would be scattered throughout politically stable countries in northern Africa. The collective output of the plant would be 80 times larger than a similar plant being planned for the Mojave Desert. The power output would be transported across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe on high-voltage DC lines that will finally supply 15% of the energy demand.

    • BrightSource Energy Solar Project:

    brightsource energy_1_rbxhl_69

    BrightSource Energy’s solar project has received a $1.37 billion loan from the U.S. government and will include the construction of three solar thermal plants in the Mojave Desert. The plants, which are being claimed to make the world’s largest solar energy complex, are expected to generate up to 400MW of renewable electric power, which will be enough to power up to 140,000 homes.

    • Sahara Forest Project:

    sahara forest project_1

    The Sahara Forest Project is a renewable solar energy “oasis” slated to be built in 2010. Experts are examining arid sites in Australia, the U.S., the Middle East and Africa that could support the facility. The Sahara Forest Project is a holistic approach for creation of local jobs, food, water and energy, utilizing relatively simple solutions mimicking design and principles from nature.

    Space-based solar as an alternative:

    space solar

    The space-based solar power concept is just as attractive as projects being proposed for arid regions. There is no air in space, so the collecting surfaces would receive much more intense sunlight, unaffected by weather. In geostationary orbit, an SPS (solar power satellite) would be illuminated over 99% of the time; such an SPS would be in Earth’s shadow on only a few days at the spring and fall equinoxes; and even then for a maximum of 75 minutes late at night when power demands are at their lowest. Power harvested in space can be transported to earth using microwaves or laser radiation.

    space solar project_1_a1mks_69

    California’s state legislators have already given a green light to a space-based solar project. California’s biggest energy utility company PG&E has announced that they would purchase 200MW of solar power that will be beamed from space by 2016.

    space solar_zkiwh_69

    Moreover, Japan is also planning a $21 billion space solar project that will be capable of generating 1GW of power. The project will be developed by Mitsubishi Electric Corp. and IHI Corp. and will make use of a four square kilometer array of solar panels stationed 36,000km above the surface of earth.

  • Broadband the newest beat for Insight News

    When we started Blandin on Broadband a few years ago I spent a lot of time beating the bushes for anything related to broadband. I was lucky if I could find a dozen or so legitimately broadband-focused stories a month. Well, that has certainly changed. Now there are single days when I could report on a dozen broadband stories. I’ve noted this to myself often – but today I saw evidence that it’s not just that I’m looking for broadband in all the right places.

    This week Insight News introduced their latest hire…

    Ivan B. Phifer this week joins McFarlane Media as a technology reporter supporting efforts to expand broadband awareness and utilization in communities of color. Phifer’s work will appear in newspapers serving African and African American, Latino, Asian and American Indian communities.

    The newspapers are members of Minnesota Multicultural Media Consortium, which, in partnership with University of Minnesota’s innovative Urban Research and Outreach Engagement Center (UROC), and the U’s Office for Business and Community Economic Development, have created a network of community public computer centers (PCC) that provide jobs, training and access to high speed internet technology.

    I happened upon the article while looking at Bernadine Joselyn’s notes from the TISP meeting earlier this week. (Those notes will appear on this blog later today.) I think it’s exciting that they’ve hired someone to focus on broadband. I look forward to reading future stories. Heck, maybe we can even share notes.

  • Obama Heading Back To Gulf To Make It Look Like He’s Doing Something About The Oil Disaster

    President Barack Hussein Obama

    By STEVEN R. HURST, Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama returns to the Gulf of Mexico coast Friday, insisting he’s in charge of efforts to shut down what is now estimated as the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

    Still Obama has admitted the U.S. government doesn’t have the technology or expertise and must rely on oil giant BP. It could be late Friday or over the weekend before BP knows if its latest experimental effort has succeeded in stopping the undersea gusher of oil.

    Obama was to attend a briefing Friday at the U.S. Coast Guard Station in Grand Isle, La., by Adm. Thad Allen, who is overseeing the response to the spill. It would be his second visit to the region since the disaster began with an April 20 explosion at the drilling rig Deepwater Horizon that killed 11 workers.

    Obama seized ownership Thursday of what he called a “tremendous catastrophe,” after weeks of loveallowing Cabinet members take the public lead as the crippled BP PLC well spewed millions of gallons (liters) of crude oil into the Gulf from nearly a mile (1,500 meters) below the surface.

    “I take responsibility. It is my job to make sure that everything is done to shut this down,” Obama declared at a White House news conference dominated by the spill.

    For everyone, the stakes grew even higher Thursday as government scientists said the oil has been flowing at a rate 2 1/2 to five times higher than what BP and the U.S. Coast Guard initially estimated.

    Two teams of scientists calculated the well has been spewing between 504,000 gallons (1.9 million liters) and more than 1 million gallons (3.8 million liters) a day. Even using the most conservative estimate, that means about 18 million gallons (68 million liters) have spilled so far. In the worst-case scenario, 39 million gallons (148 million liters) have leaked.

    Even at the lowest estimate, the Gulf spill has far surpassed the size of the previous largest U.S. oil spill, the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster, in which a tanker ran aground in Alaska, spilling nearly 11 million gallons (42 million liters).

    BP PLC insisted its “top kill” attempt to plug the gusher was progressing as planned, though the company acknowledged drilling mud was escaping from the broken pipe along with the leaking crude.

    “The fact that we had a bunch of mud going up the riser isn’t ideal but it’s not necessarily indicative of a problem,” spokesman Tom Mueller said.

    Early Thursday, officials said the process was going well, but later in the day they announced pumping had been suspended 16 hours earlier. BP did not characterize the suspension as a setback, and Eric Smith, associate director of the Tulane Energy Institute, said the move did not indicate the top kill had failed.

    “The good news is that they pumped in up to 65 barrels a minute and the thing didn’t blow apart,” Smith said. “It’s taken the most pressure it needs to see and it’s held together.”

    A top kill has never been attempted before so deep underwater. If the procedure works, BP will inject cement into the well to seal it permanently. If it doesn’t, the company has a number of backup plans. Either way, crews will continue to drill two relief wells, considered the only surefire way to stop the leak.

    In another troubling discovery, marine scientists said they have spotted a huge new plume of what they believe to be oil deep beneath the Gulf, stretching 22 miles (35 kilometers) from the leaking well head northeast toward Mobile Bay, Alabama. They fear it could have resulted from using chemicals a mile below the surface to break up the oil.

    Obama, meanwhile, has been under mounting criticism — even from members of his own Democratic Party — for seeming aloof to what could be the biggest environmental tragedy in U.S. history.

    Asked about inevitable comparisons between his administration’s handling of the disaster with his predecessor’s response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which flooded New Orleans and other areas, Obama said: “I’ll leave it to you guys to make those comparisons. … What I’m thinking about is how do you solve the problem?”

    Comparisons to former President George W. Bush’s paltry response to the devastating storm have come mainly from opposition Republicans.

    “I’m confident people are going to look back and say this administration was on top of what was an unprecedented crisis,” he said. “We’ve got to get it right.”

    Obama is struggling for high ground in the political wars raging in the months before the November congressional elections, where his Democratic majorities in both House and Senate are in danger.

    He has passed through bruising legislative sessions and took a notable battering from Republicans as he pushed through health care overhaul. Now he’s struggling to keep congressional Democrats focused on financial regulatory reform while trying to smooth the Senate confirmation of his second Supreme Court nominee.

    The president, who campaigned on a promise to change the way Washington does business, blasted a “scandalously close relationship” he said has persisted between Big Oil and government regulators.

    Conceding that “people are going to be frustrated” until the well is capped, Obama said he would use the full force of the federal government to extract damages from BP.

    “We will demand they pay every dime they owe for the damage they’ve done and the painful losses they’ve caused,” Obama said.

    He spoke shortly after the head of the troubled agency that oversees offshore drilling resigned under pressure. The departure of Minerals Management Service Director Elizabeth Birnbaum was announced just before Obama’s news conference began.

    While making clear he was leading the response, Obama acknowledged some things could have been better handled.

    He said his administration didn’t act with “sufficient urgency” prior to the spill to clean up the Minerals Management Service, accused of corruption and poor regulation of drilling rigs and wells.

    While Obama defended calling for an expansion of offshore drilling prior to the spill, he said he “was wrong” to believe that oil companies were prepared to respond to worst-case oil spills.

    Obama also said the administration took too long to make its own measurements of the size of the spill, and didn’t push BP hard enough early on to release underwater footage of the gusher.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:


  • Sorry, But Spain’s Razor Thin Austerity Vote ‘Victory’ Will Soon Prove Itself A Failure

    Spain Fail Bull

    Spain just barely passed a 15 billion euro austerity plan yesterday, by a single vote. The results were 169 votes for the passage, with 168 votes against. There were also 13 abstentions.

    Technically, this austerity plan is now a go, but was the razor thin victory margin essentially a failure?

    Problem is, Spain doesn’t just need to pass its austerity package, but it will need to implement it as well.

    Given enormous visible opposition as shown by the extremely tight vote, we should expect substantial public push back which could prevent the measures from actually happening.

    For example, the New York Times has already reported that the nation’s two largest unions have announced that they’ll strike should austerity measures be ‘hurtful’ of labor market rules. Which means they’ll strike for sure. Civil servants are also expected to strike next month, angered by cuts to their wages.

    The tight vote makes actual implementation of the passed measures doubtful.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Se confirma introducción de nuevo motor V8 para Range Rover

    Range Rover confirma introduccion de nuevo motor

    Una carta enviada de forma anónima a World Car Fans indica que el Range Rover 2011 renovará su potencia con un nuevo corazón turbodiésel de 4.4 L, al parecer la información tenía que distribuirse de forma exclusiva entre los concesionarios alemanes del coche.

    Sin embargo gracias a los datos filtrados podemos precisar el precio del futuro todoterreno, pues se menciona que el nuevo motor incrementa el coste del modelo actual a 88.900 euros. Por lo tanto los clientes deseosos de adquirir un nuevo SUV deberán añadir a su presupuesto aproximadamente 3.000 euros.

    El nuevo modelo será presentado en sociedad el 01 de Julio en Londres, de esta forma se aprovechará la celebración por el 40 aniversario de la marca y para mantener el interés de los usuarios se brindarán detalles del Discovery, Freelander y Range Rover Sport el 05 de Agosto.

    Los cuatro modelos iniciarán su gira de exhibición en el Salón de Moscú el 28 de Agosto y unos días después deberían estar disponibles en los concesionarios alemanes con el nuevo motor que produce 308 CV y hasta 700 Nm de par motor.

    Dicha potencia será enviada a las ruedas a través de un sistema de transmisión de 8 velocidades; estas características le permitirán acelerar de 0-100 km en 7.6 segundos y alcanzar una velocidad máxima de 208 km/h. Además la tasa de consumo despierta bastante interés (10.2L/100km), así como el nivel de emisiones que ha disminuido un 10%.

    El modelo con el motor V8 de 5.0L seguirá disponible en el mercado y se comercializará con las características actuales pero su precio se incrementará unos 500 euros con respecto a la versión 2010.

    Vía | World Car Fans



  • Hayley Williams Topless Twitpic

    Paramore vocalist Hayley Williams is creating a big buzz over twitter because her topless photo has been allegedly uploaded to twitpic.

    Hayley William’s nude photo was already removed but many people have already seen it. Her pose in the photo was like staring seductively into the camera, and was tweeted out to her 600,000+ followers of Twitter Thursday. The twitpic quickly got over 5,000 views before being removed, going completely viral. Some people downloaded it so it’s still in the web.

    Many of her fans commented on her topless photo saying “WTF,” “OMG,” or “R U Crazy!?” Then she claims that her account was hacked, she tweeted, “well… my night just changed drastically. got hacked.”

    But many people do not believe that her account was really hacked. There are possibilities that she uploaded the wrong photo or she meant to send it in a direct message. Or maybe it’s some kind of publicity stunt?

    What do you think? Was she hacked or was it a trick to boost her publicity? Let us know in the comments.

    Related posts:

    1. Paul Pierce’s Twitter Account Hacked
    2. Don’t play with Obama’s Twitter Account
    3. Justin Bieber Tweets ‘Ladies Cool Down’ As Kim Kardashian Receive Threats

  • World’s Tallest Married Couple Also Own iPads [Ipad]

    And lo, the iPad went on sale internationally—but not before the record-holding world’s tallest married couple made an appearance at the London Apple store, dressed in full wedding attire. Publicity stunt? Your guess is as good as mine. More »










    SkyscraperDubaiUnited StatesArtsArchitecture

  • Add-ons Don’t Require a Restart with Jetpack SDK 0.4 for Firefox

    Mozilla has released the fourth update to the recently launched Jetpack SDK. Four new high-level APIs have been introduced in Jetpack SDK 0.4 and several other bigger features. Some of the APIs and changes planned for the 0.4 release have been deferred to the upcoming Jetpack SDK 0.5, scheduled to come about a month from now.
    read more)

  • Motorola Launching Two Droid Phones In July With Verizon [Android]

    It’s no secret that the Droid Shadow will be sold exclusively with Verizon Wireless as soon as next month, but the WSJ is reporting that another Motorola smartphone will also be added to Verizon’s shelves in July. More »










    DroidMotorolaAndroidSmartphoneVerizon Wireless

  • Learn the Basics of Flying: You Wouldn’t Know When You’ll Need It

    First thing that you will need to know about the airplane is it’s parts. An airplane is more than a propeller, a wing and an engine.

    The body of airplane is called the fuselage, which holds the pilot and the passengers, along with the baggage.

    The empannage is the tail of the airplane and it consists of horizontal and vertical stabilizers. The horizontal and vertical stabilizer and parts of the wing are movable to provide the pilot means to control the airplane.

    The Basics on how to control an Airplane. Generally, the different movements of your controls would cause the corresponding movements in the airplane.

    Pulling the control wheel towards you will raise the elevator, which in turn would force the tail down and nose up. Doing this will serve more lift than gravity and in turn will let the airplane climb. To help produce the extra lift the air needs to climb, add additional power from the engine. You will need to use the throttle control.

    Pushing away the throttle control wheel away from you would lower the elevator, forcing the nose down and tail up. This reduces the the lift and gravity makes the airplane descend.

    The rudder pedals control the movement of the plane in the same way as the rudder of a boat. Pushing the right rudder pedal produces movement to the right likewise the left pedal produces same movement to the left.

    Turning the control wheel enables you to raise or lower either the right or left wing which enables the plane to turn faster than using only the rudder.

    These are the basics of flying an airplane. Remember that if you are not an expert, do not fly an airplane without professional help. Unless, of course, if unexpected events would need of it.

    Related posts:

    1. Indonesia: Passenger Plane Skids Off
    2. Air India plane crash: 166 people on board, 7 survive
    3. Accident Again with Toyota

  • The luxury of health care in Armenia

    Oxfam’s free health screenings are saving lives in the poor parts of Armenia. Caroline Berger talks to the women who have benefited from the programme.

    Naiza Stepanyan, beneficery of Oxfam's health scheme. Photo: Caroline Berger/Oxfam

    Naiza Stepanyan, beneficery of Oxfam’s health scheme. Photo: Caroline Berger/Oxfam

    Our Armenian taxi driver stares into his coffee cup, an old custom of fortune telling, and muses for a moment on the fate-shaped coffee grounds. His twinkling eyes predict “you will have good fortune”. Fate was as kind to self-assured Naira, who offers us another cup of Turkish coffee at the rural family health clinic. She smiles, “if I hadn’t taken part in Oxfam’s health screenings then I wouldn’t be here today.”

    Five years ago after the birth of her first child, Naira began feeling pain.

    “Everyone told me it was normal but our family doctor pushed me to attend the free screenings,” Naira tells me, explaining that the diagnosis showed she had early stages of cervical cancer. “I felt like my world was falling apart.” A diagnosis of cervical cancer can mean a lifetime sentence of infertility. Luckily for Naira, the cancer was caught early and she is now healthy with three children.

    But there is still a long way to go before Armenia can replace the rose-tinted glasses of a time when healthcare was taken for granted. For many, life behind the Iron Curtain of the Soviet Union was not only an era that lacked freedom; it was also an era that promised and delivered free healthcare for all. Nearly two decades after gaining independence up to 100,000 people are living below the poverty line without basic regular healthcare. In the remote communities of Armenia, over 5,000 poor people rely on Oxfam’s health programme.

    Chances of cancer reduced by 90%

    Breast and cervical cancer are the biggest killers of women in Armenia. For Naira and others in this remote community, Oxfam’s free health screenings are a lifeline. Because these communities are isolated and poverty stricken, many people cannot afford to visit the nearest doctor, based several miles away from the village. Yet for many, regular check ups at the gynaecologist and screenings can mean the difference between life and death. Karine Alekhanyan, the local family doctor, who trained with Oxfam, proudly tells me, “since the introduction of regular screenings in our villages, the chances of developing invasive cancer has been reduced by 90%”. And soon village members will begin receiving lifesaving SMS messages informing them of the next free local screenings.

    Hasmik Khachatiyan, undergoing a regular check up at the clinic in Yerevan. Photo: Caroline Berger/Oxfam

    Hasmik Khachatiyan, undergoing a regular check up at the clinic in Yerevan. Photo: Caroline Berger/Oxfam

    Here in this mountainous village close to the landlocked border of Azerbaijan there are more tales of triumphs over tragedy. 23-year-old Hasmik’s radiant smile is testament to her courage and determination to overcome the fight against cancer. Mother of two young sons, Hasmik was diagnosed with breast cancer after a routine screening. At just 20, Hasmik was faced with an impossible decision – to undergo traumatic surgery or risk the malignant cancer spreading. Oxfam supported Hasmik to attend the mammography centre in Yerevan and, as a result, she underwent lifesaving surgery. She tells me, “If these services weren’t here, then I wouldn’t be alive.”

    Lobbying for quality healthcare

    While the battle against cancer may be prevailing in this remote community, affordable and quality healthcare is still a luxury for most poor Armenians. Ongoing corruption at government level continues to hamper people’s basic health rights, and many residents of this quiet mountainous village have paid large sums of money for surgery that should be free of charge. Hasmik quietly tells me, “I paid $300 (US dollars) for surgery.” The local health ombudsman, Tamara, continues, “people are afraid to speak out for their rights.”

    Tamara, together with Oxfam and its partner Support to Communities, is working with women like Hasmik to raise their voices and lobby the government to ensure a fair health system for all. Huge milestones on the road to free healthcare have already been achieved. This year, our lobbying activities culminated with a successful national hearing at parliament to dispute budget cuts in maternal and child healthcare. And, at least on paper, if not yet in practice, the Armenian government has committed itself to establishing a national scheme that would lead to universal access to basic healthcare services. However, there is still a long road ahead before women like Hasmik and Naira begin to see tangible changes in their poor rural communities.

    I refill my coffee cup and stare into the murky shapes formed by the grounds. The patterns form a fate shaped star – I hope it means that the future of these brave and resilient women is filled with good fortune.

    Where we work: Armenia

    Issues we work on: health

  • Parking Lots to Parks: Designing Livable Cities

    In the guest post below, Lester R. Brown of the Earth Policy Institute discusses transforming our cities into more sustainable and more livable places. (Subheadings and pictures added.)

    by Lester R. Brown

    As I was being driven through Tel Aviv from my hotel to a conference center in 1998, I could not help but note the overwhelming presence of cars and parking lots. It was obvious that Tel Aviv, expanding from a small settlement a half-century ago to a city of some 3 million today, had evolved during the automobile era. It occurred to me that the ratio of parks to parking lots may be the best indicator of the livability of a city—an indication of whether the city is designed for people or for cars.

    Tel Aviv is not the world’s only fast-growing city. Urbanization is the second dominant demographic trend of our time, after population growth itself. In 1900, some 150 million people lived in cities. By 2000, it was 2.8 billion people, a 19-fold increase. Now more than half of us live in cities—making humans, for the first time, an urban species.

    (more…)

  • U-Va. goes to court to fight Cuccinelli’s subpoena of ex-professor’s documents by Rosalind S. Helderman, Washington Post

    Article Tags: Mann Made Climate Change

    RICHMOND — Virginia’s flagship university went to court Thursday to fight an effort by Virginia Attorney Gen. Ken Cuccinelli II (R) to get documents from a former climate scientist at the school, an unusual confrontation that will test the bounds of academic freedom and result in the college facing down its own lawyer in court.

    In a motion filed in Charlottesville, the University of Virginia argued that Cuccinelli’s subpoena for papers and e-mail from global warming researcher Michael Mann exceeds the attorney general’s authority under state law and intrudes on the rights of professors to pursue academic inquiry free from political pressure.

    Cuccinelli, a vocal skeptic of global warming who is suing the Environmental Protection Agency over the issue, has said he is investigating whether Mann committed fraud by knowingly skewing data as he sought publicly funded grants for his research. Mann left U-Va. in 2005 and now works at Penn State.

    Mann’s case has been embraced by academics across the country, who wrote numerous letters encouraging the university founded by Thomas Jefferson to resist the attorney general. The university’s governing board — whose members were appointed by former governors Mark R. Warner and Timothy M. Kaine, both Democrats — had first signaled that it would likely comply with the April order but then hired a major Washington law firm and prepared to take action.

    University President John T. Casteen III said in a statement that Cuccinelli’s order had “sent a chill through the Commonwealth’s colleges and universities.”

    Source: washingtonpost.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • China, Oil and Lithium: Beijing to mass produce electric cars TNR.v, CZX.v, RM.v, LMR.v, LI.v, WLC.v, F, BYDDY, NSANY, DAI, RNO, GM, HEV, AONE, LUN.to

    After groundbreaking Toyota move with Tesla, Daimler is pushing its way into Electric Cars mass market and in Asian market with BYD. Companies have announced a few cooperation ideas before and now it is the time is for the bold action and they are establishing a J/V. Auto Majors are buying time in Electric Car market battle field. Nissan is a clear leader on the pricing side for EV now and GM Volt will be first to market with Range Extender model alongside with BYD. Toyota has lost its time on Soft Hybrid side and Daimler was very cautious with its engagement in Electric Cars as well. Daimler has made an impressive Electric show at Frankfurt Motor Show last year, but real things were among Hybrids and Smart Electric to test the grounds with small town car. This concept model above was still at the prototype level at that time. Now BYD will get premium auto brand, safety and mass production technology and Daimler will get access to batteries, low cost production base and the market.


    Competition for Oil is heating up and aggressive move by China into Electric Cars leaves no other options for US than to follow. In order to keep power China needs gradually improve standard of living, it will bring upside pressure on labor cost. Electrification will not only provide Energy Security to China, but will significantly reduce the cost of its transportation element and provide another opportunity to stay among low cost producers. Situation is completely different to U.S. – they have capital to invest in Electric Mobility CAPEX now and rip the rewards of lower cash cost on transportation side later. We will refer you to the Economics of Electric Cars.
    Recent Ash Cloud events in Europe brought a very sobering sense of the feeling to be grounded. It is amazing how many things are taking for granted. This time it is Ash Cloud – what will happen with oil above 150?
    Electric Cars is the only commercially viable technology today to sustain mobility world wide with rising Oil prices. Lithium is at the heart of Green Mobility revolution – it is an industry adopted standard for batteries and billions of dollars are invested into battery technology and upcoming by the end of this year Electric Cars on a mass market scale. This Bull market is still very young – only a year or so from the beginning after the crash of 2008.”

    The Malay Mail:

    Submitted by amir azree on Friday, May 28th, 2010
    Friday, May 28th, 2010 11:04:00

    ENVIRONMENT FRIENDLY: The BYD Auto on show at the company’s factory in Shenzhen
    FRANKFURT: Chinese auto group BYD (Build Your Dreams) and German luxury car maker Daimler announced yesterday a joint venture to mass produce an electric car in China. A new research and development group to be called Shenzhen BYD Daimler New Technology Company will get an initial investment of around US$87 million (RM286m), a Daimler statement said. “We are well-placed with our new joint venture to make the most of China’s enormous potential in electromobility,” Daimler chairman Dieter Zetsche said. Daimler is to bring “knowhow in vehicle architecture and security” to the venture , while BYD will contribute “its competence in batteries and propulsion systems for electric vehicles,” the statement added. The world’s oldest automaker and one of the youngest aim to market the vehicle under a new jointly-owned brand, joining forces to target China’s fast expanding urban market. Around 16 million autos are currently sold across the country each year. Launched just seven years ago, BYD Auto now claims to be the sixth biggest car maker in China and its future plans are focused on electric or hybrid vehicles, building on the experience of its battery-making parent group. The Chinese firm, in which US billionaire Warren Buffett holds a stake of 10 per cent, has already begun to sell its electric E6 model as a taxi in the southern city of Shenzhen and aims to distribute the car in Europe next year.”
  • EVs mass market: $10k Electric car tax break proposed TNR.v, CZX.v, RM.v, LMR.v, WLC.v, LI.v, CLQ.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, NSANY, BYDDY, F, GM,

    DetNews.com:
    Chevy Volt, Nissan Leaf buyers in select cities would get $10K incentive under Senate plan
    David Shepardson / The Detroit News
    Washington — Buyers of the Chevrolet Volt and Nissan Leaf would be eligible for a $10,000 federal tax credit in some cities under a $10 billion Senate plan to boost electric vehicles.
    House and Senate members on Thursday released similar plans intended to make electric vehicles more than niche models.
    The House version would spend $6.6 billion, dedicating $800 million to five “deployment communities” to speed 700,000 plug-in vehicles into use and establish recharging networks. A Senate version would spend about $10 billion and grant $250 million to up to 15 communities.

    The Senate version would extend the current $7,500 tax credit for 200,000 plug-in vehicles per manufacturer to 300,000. And it would boost the credit to $10,000 in those 15 communities.
    That would further reduce the cost of the Volt, which will get up to 40 miles on a charge, and the fully electric Nissan Leaf, which will get up to 100 miles.
    General Motors spokesman Greg Martin praised the bills.
    “We appreciate Congress’ foresight and interest in electric vehicles,” he said. “With the Chevrolet Volt just months away from the showroom, we believe the timing is right to start working on policies that can accelerate early consumer adoption of advanced electric vehicle technologies.”
    Electric vehicles enjoy widespread support across the political spectrum.
    “Republicans and Democrats agree that electrifying our cars and trucks is the single best way to reduce our dependence on oil,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., one of the sponsors.
    Both bills would set aside billions more for research into batteries, research and tax credits.
    The Senate bill also would create a $10 million prize for the first manufacturer of a battery that can get 500 miles on a charge.
    Congressional aides have spent several months writing the bills. Members cited the recent Gulf oil spill as a factor in the urgent need to shift vehicles from oil to electric power.
    Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., noted that the United States has 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves but consumes 25 percent of the world’s oil.
    “This isn’t a question of if, but when,” Markey said, adding the bill would speed up the widespread use of electric vehicles. “It will drive the creation of jobs, domestic manufacturing and homegrown innovation.”
    The Senate bill would require that one of the 15 deployment communities be a rural area of fewer than 125,000 people and would “reflect diverse populations” and geography.
    The Senate bill sets aside another $2 billion for grants and cost sharing — local communities would have to provide 20 percent of the funding.
    Communities and their business and utility partners would have to apply for inclusion.

  • Senior Business Development Associate

    UK – Bristol, Acre Resources

    My Client is an integrated sustainability solutions provider strategically focused on solving the energy carbon equation. Their goal is to design, develop and deliver the solutions that will meet their clients’ needs on the journey towards a sustainable future.

    With expertise across the sustainability space and by employing a partnership approach, the organisation is able to offer their clients an integrated solution to carbon management.

    As Senior Business Development Associate you will actively seek out and engage new customers, offering the organisation’s solutions to a wider audience. Your focus will be on the development of long term client relationships, understanding their needs and translating these into viable sustainability solutions. The ability to identify and proactively approach organisations across a wide variety of sectors will be of paramount importance in your role as Senior Business Development Associate.

    In addition you will be expected to:

    • Identify business opportunities, working with the service area leaders to define strategy and approach
    • Successfully win new business, developing the sales proposition and presenting added value to the customer
    • Manage the ongoing interaction with the customer
    • Qualify customer needs, identifying opportunities and translating these needs into solutions
    • Play a key part in the design and implementation of service level agreements, aligning customer needs to the service offering

    The successful candidate will have a proven track record of business development/sales activity delivery in an energy or low carbon related environment.

    Further skills and experience required:

    • Background in the sustainable energy or the building/facilities management sectors. Be familiar with and demonstrate an awareness of key industry players
    • Demonstrate the ability to make persuasive and professional presentations, with a track record in closing and securing deals
    • Familiar with the process of selling to large customers, dealing and liaising with senior management and key decision makers
    • Proven success undertaking business development activity in a consultancy sales environment
    • Excellent communication and influencing skills
    • Evidence of a strong commitment to environmental and social causes of concern

    If you have a background in business development, are passionate about the environment, and have the energy to succeed then please apply.

    We thank all applicants who respond, but only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

  • Society to review climate message by Roger Harrabin, BBC News

    Article Tags: BBC

    article image

    The UK’s Royal Society is reviewing its public statements on climate change after 43 Fellows complained that it had oversimplified its messages

    They said the communications did not properly distinguish between what was widely agreed on climate science and what is not fully understood.

    The society’s ruling council has responded by setting up a panel to produce a consensus document.

    The panel should report in July and the report is to be published in September.

    Source: news.bbc.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Nintendo Investigating Foxconn Conditions [Foxconn]

    Contrary to a lot of reports, more than just Apple’s products are made at Foxconn’s Shenzhen factories. Nintendo, whose Wii and other products are made there, has announced it shall be investigating the working and living conditions of the factory workers in light of the suicides. [MarketWatch via Kotaku] More »










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