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  • The Next Empire

    The Atlantic has a look at Africa and China’s interest in the continent’s resources, asking “Do China’s grand designs promise the transformation,at last, of a star-crossed continent? Or merely its exploitation?” – The Next Empire.

    I was about to embark on one of the world’s great train rides, a journey from this muggy Indian Ocean port city, the commercial capital of Tanzania, to the edge of the Zambian Copper Belt, deep in the heart of southern Africa. The official who’d sold me my ticket had seemed puzzled when I asked when the train would arrive at its final destination, and he refused to guess; in recent years, the 1,156-mile trip has been known to take anywhere from its originally scheduled two days to an entire week.

    The railroad—known as the Tazara line—was built by China in the early 1970s, at a cost of nearly $500 million, an extraordinary expenditure in the thick of the Cultural Revolution, and a symbol of Beijing’s determination to hold its own with Washington and Moscow in an era when Cold War competition over Africa raged fierce. At the time of its construction, it was the third-largest infrastructure project ever undertaken in Africa, after the Aswan Dam in Egypt and the Volta Dam in Ghana.

    Today the Tazara is a talisman of faded hopes and failed economic schemes, an old and unreliable railway with too few working locomotives. Only briefly a thriving commercial artery, it has been diminished by its own decay and by the roads and air routes that have sprung up around it. Maintenance costs have saddled Tanzania and Zambia with debts reportedly as high as $700 million in total, and the line now has only about 300 of the 2,000 wagons it needs to function normally, according to Zambian news reports.

    Yet the railway traces a path through a region where hopes have risen again, rekindled by a new sort of development also driven by China—and on an unprecedented scale. All across the continent, Chinese companies are signing deals that dwarf the old railroad project. The most heavily reported involve oil production; since the turn of the millennium, Chinese companies have muscled in on lucrative oil markets in places like Angola, Nigeria, Algeria, and Sudan. But oil is neither the largest nor the fastest-growing part of the story. Chinese firms are striking giant mining deals in places like Zambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and building what is being touted as the world’s largest iron mine in Gabon. They are prospecting for land on which to build huge agribusinesses. And to get these minerals and crops to market, they are building major new ports and thousands of miles of highway.

    In most of Africa’s capital cities and commercial centers, it’s hard to miss China’s new presence and influence. In Dar, one morning before my train trip, I made my way to the roof of my hotel for a bird’s-eye view of the city below. A British construction foreman, there to oversee the hotel’s expansion, pointed out the V-shaped port that the British navy had seized after a brief battle with the Germans early in the First World War. From there, the British-built portion of the city extended primly inland, along a handful of long avenues. For the most part, downtown Dar was built long ago, and its low-slung concrete buildings, long exposed to the moisture of the tropics, have taken on a musty shade of gray.

    “Do you see all the tall buildings coming up over there?” the foreman asked, a hint of envy in his voice as his arm described an arc along the waterfront that shimmered in the distance. “That’s the new Dar es Salaam, and most of it is Chinese-built.”


  • Northwest Under-the-Radar Deals: 11 Financings Worth $1 Million or Less in March

    Under the radar deals
    Erin Kutz wrote:

    When it came to startup investing in the Northwest last month, it was a bit of a give and take. Washington-based companies raised about $21 million across three deals, each worth more than $1 million, plummeting from the $53.5 million that companies pulled in across 10 such transactions in February.

    But the number of “under-the-radar” deals—what we call startup financings worth less than $1 million—more than doubled from February to March. We tracked 11 transactions under $1 million for the region last month, a jump from the five under-the-radar deals that area startups inked in February. The stats are courtesy of our partner CB Insights, a New York-based private company intelligence platform.

    The trend was not unique to the Northwest. Across the country, the list of smaller deals trumped their larger counterparts. The New England under-the-radar funding list for March was the longest we had seen all year, while Massachusetts companies pulled in the smallest amount of funding this year in the monthly list of bigger venture deals we reported on.

    In March, 10 Northwest under-the-radar financings went to companies in Washington, while one Portland, OR-based company nabbed some funding ($500,000 in equity for wind turbine maker Skyron Systems). Of the 11-transaction list, six deals were in equity and five were based in debt. The top deal was a $853,288 offering of equity, options, and warrants that went to Moseo, a Kirkland, WA-based company behind the website SeniorHomes.com, an online directory of elderly care information (which just changed its name last week).

    There are a few companies that, while not at the top of the list, are worth noting. We might not have included Mad Fiber, a Seattle-based maker of carbon bicycle wheels—except for the fact that it is working out of a former bakery, and using the ovens and freezers that previously played a role in constructing dough and pastries as part of its manufacturing process. (Now that’s innovation you can’t ignore.) HomePipe Networks, a Seattle company that pulled in $215,000 in debt-based funding, also struck my interest. It is making networking software that enables you to access content on your home computer anywhere, using your mobile phone. And there’s Fridge Door, a Seattle Web startup that’s too stealthy for a website at this point, but has what I think is a cool name.

    We saw a few names on the March under-the-radar list that are familiar to us. We wrote about online travel site Yapta when it raised a $2 million Series B round last June. In February, the Seattle-based company announced Kayak.com would be powering the flight search engine component of its website. Yapta showed up on our under-the-radar list with a $300,000 mixed offering of debt, options, and warrants. Also, Iverson Genetic Diagnostics reprised its spot on the under-the-radar list, with a $110,000 transaction of debt, options, and warrants in March. (The Bothell, WA-based company also made it on the February list with $341,000 in equity-based funding.)

    Check out the full list of under-the-radar transactions below:


    Moseo Kirkland, WA Providers of SeniorHomes.com, an online elderly care directory Equity* $853,288
    Playteau Seattle, WA A stealthy video game company Debt $620,000
    Skyron Systems Portland, OR A maker of vertical-axis wind turbines Equity $500,000
    Lightfleet Camas, WA A developer of multiprocessing computing systems that use light to speed up data flow Equity $375,000
    Fridge Door Seattle, WA A stealthy Web startup Equity $350,000
    Yapta Seattle, WA An online travel site that tracks airfare and hotel prices Debt* $300,000
    Headsprout Seattle, WA A maker of interactive learning programs Debt* $256,751
    Buuteeq Seattle, WA A provider of hosted digital marketing services for small and medium hotels Equity $249,999
    HomePipe Networks Seattle, WA A provider of mobile networking software allowing users to access information on their home computers Debt* $215,000
    Mad Fiber Seattle, WA A bicycle wheel maker operating out of a former bakery Equity $200,000
    Iverson Genetic Diagnostics Bothell, WA A developer of advanced genetic testing Debt* $110,000

    *includes options or warrants












  • Daylesford wind farm goes ahead

    The Age has an article on a community owned wind farm being built in Victoria – Daylesford wind farm goes ahead.

    AS big energy companies bemoan a lack of certainty to invest in new power plants, a central Victorian town last night celebrated a deal that will build Australia’s first community-owned wind farm.

    After five years of planning, contracts were signed yesterday to build the two-turbine Hepburn Community Wind Park at Leonards Hill, about 10 kilometres from Daylesford.

    According to the co-operative behind the project, it will generate 12,200 megawatt hours a year – significantly more than is needed to power the town’s 1887 homes.

    Hepburn Wind chairman Simon Holmes a Court said more than 1100 members had invested $7.5 million. Together with a $975,000 state government grant and the backing of Bendigo and Adelaide Bank, it was enough to sign a contract with German manufacturer REpower systems to build the $12.9 million farm.

    Mr Holmes a Court said the project was based on the Denmark model of small communities owning boutique wind farms. ”Most Australians want to see a meaningful response to the threat of climate change, but many aren’t sure what constructive role they can play,” he said.

    ”By pooling resources, [we] have developed a model for the low-carbon future that is both low cost – at least four times cheaper than rooftop solar photovoltaics – and brings a significant new business to town.”


  • Russo and Steele sues tent company over auction damage:

    Four months after its Scottsdale, Ariz., auction was disrupted by severe weather, Russo and Steele is suing tent company Tri-Rentals for damage caused when a tent collapsed on several hundred collector cars.

    In a statement released on Thursday, Russo and Steele said that it was forced to file suit against the rental company to protect its reputation.

    The auction firm says its lawsuit cites negligence, gross negligence, breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing. The statement does not say what Russo and Steele is seeking from the tent-rental company.

    Russo and Steele’s four-day auction was disrupted on its first night, Jan. 21, when severe weather swept through the Phoenix area with rain and high winds. Scottsdale’s Flood Planning Department had warned the auction house of a potential flooding hazard earlier that afternoon.

    According to auction firm’s statement, Tri-Rentals told Russo and Steele that it was reinforcing the tents at the auction site and said they were secure. The auction company also brought in industrial water pumps, ordered concrete barricades and arranged semis and trailers to act as wind blocks.

    Despite the precautions, two 800-foot-long tents came loose during the storm’s high winds. One tent was blown from its anchors onto a nearby freeway and the other tent collapsed onto cars entered in the auction.

    The damage prompted the Scottsdale fire department to close the auction grounds. The grounds were kept closed for two days, and the auction resumed that Sunday.

    For more


    An aerial shot shows two collapsed tents at the site of the Russo and Steele auction in Scottsdale Ariz.

    Source: Car news, reviews and auto show stories

  • Funkmaster Flex to give away customized Ford Fiesta on new MTV2 show

    2011 Ford Fiesta customized by Funkmaster Flex

    Funkmaster Flex night, Funkmaster Flex night, Funkmaster Flex night – we’re pretty sure you’ve heard that before if you listen to Hot-97. Well, you can probably enjoy that same sound in a new 2011 Ford Fiesta because the new FoMoCo compact is getting the hip-hop seal of approval courtesy of Funkmaster Flex himself.

    The car will appear on an episode of Celebrity Customizer Funkmaster Flex’s new TV show ‘Funk Flex Full Throttle’ which premiers on May 2 on MTV2. As a part of the show, one viewer will get to win the keys to a tricked out 2011 Ford Fiesta customized by Funkmaster Flex himself.

    Click here to get prices on the 2011 Ford Fiesta.

    “The Fiesta is definitely a vehicle that has major customization potential but also can stand on its own without having to do anything to it all,” said Funkmaster Flex. “Whoever wins this vehicle is going to be hitting the streets in a mean vehicle that has some serious technology on the inside. Ford really got it poppin’ with this vehicle and showed how you can take a small vehicle and push it to the next level.”

    For more information on ‘Funk Flex Full Throttle’ or for the chance to enter the giveaway, check out www.fordurban.com by July 2, 2010.

    Refresher: The 2011 Ford Fiesta is powered by a 1.6L DOHC 4-cylinder engine making 119-hp with a peak torque of 109 lb-ft. It is estimated to deliver best-in-class highway fuel economy of 40 mpg. Pricing for the 2011 Ford Fiesta starts at $13,320.

    2011 Ford Fiesta:

    2011 Ford Fiesta 2011 Ford Fiesta 2011 Ford Fiesta 2011 Ford Fiesta

    Press Release:

    FORD FIESTA KNOWS HIP-HOP, CELEBRITY CUSTOMIZER FUNKMASTER FLEX TRICKS OUT FORD’S NEWEST SMALL CAR

    * The all-new 2011 Ford Fiesta will star in an episode of Celebrity Customizer Funkmaster Flex’s new TV show ‘Funk Flex Full Throttle’ which premiers on May 2 on MTV2
    * As part of the show, one viewer to win the keys to a tricked out 2011 Ford Fiesta, customized by Funkmaster Flex
    * Filmed in Flex’s car shop, viewers will get to learn more about one of the biggest names in the car customization business and see other Ford vehicles customized by Flex including the 2010 Ford Taurus and 2010 Ford Fusion
    * On sale this summer, the Fiesta features a vibrant design, 15 class-exclusive technologies and is projected to deliver 40 mpg highway

    Dearborn, Mich., April 29, 2010 – The Ford Fiesta has been earning its street credibility since last year’s Fiesta Movement, but now Ford’s newest car is getting its Hip-Hop seal of approval by none other than Celebrity Customizer Funkmaster Flex. The Fiesta will appear in an episode of Flex’s new TV show, ‘Funk Flex Full Throttle’ which premiers this Sunday, May 2, at 2 p.m. EST on MTV2.

    The Fiesta will play a starring role in one of the show’s episodes as Funkmaster Flex puts his creative spin on the vehicle that has a strong following prior to its launch. As part of the partnership, one viewer will win the chance to take home the keys to the Fiesta customized by Flex as part of the Funk Flex Full Throttle Giveaway. The customization is set to include features such as a custom body kit, wheels, tires, lowering kit, a Funkmaster Flex signature two-tone paint job and a custom interior.

    “Ford has had a partnership with Funkmaster Flex that dates back to 2005 which allows us to become a part of Flex’s world and connect with today’s young urban consumers in a way that is most relevant to them,” said Crystal Worthem, manager, Multicultural Marketing. “Being able to incorporate the Fiesta into a show that will allow us to continue to highlight the customization potential of this vehicle by someone who is an authority when it comes to vehicle customization is exciting for us.”

    ‘Funk Flex Full Throttle’ is a high-adrenaline tour of music and car culture—the ultimate ride for fans who love to live in the fast lane. During each 30-minute episode, Funkmaster Flex will interview some of the hottest Hip-Hop artists with his signature raucous, familiar style. Flex will also give the artists and viewers a look at his latest car customization projects. Whether Flex is on location during Spring Break, checking out the latest products at the Ford booth during the New York Auto Show or just hanging out in his shop, ‘Funk Flex Full Throttle’ will be there to take viewers inside the Hip-Hop and car customization lifestyle. Entertainers set to make an appearance on the show include Juelz Santana, Fabolous, Mike Epps, Diddy, Swizz Beatz, Nicki Minaj, Jadakiss and Ludacris.

    “The Fiesta is definitely a vehicle that has major customization potential but also can stand on its own without having to do anything to it all,” said Funkmaster Flex. “Whoever wins this vehicle is going to be hitting the streets in a mean vehicle that has some serious technology on the inside. Ford really got it poppin’ with this vehicle and showed how you can take a small vehicle and push it to the next level.”

    2011 Ford Fiesta: A hit before leaving the gate

    Thanks to the success of the Fiesta Movement social media initiative – which has generated more than 6.2 million YouTube views, more than 750,000 Flickr views and nearly 4 million Twitter impressions – more than 125,000 people have already expressed an interest in the 2011 Ford Fiesta.

    Going on sale this summer, the all-new Fiesta features an expressive, vibrant design, sharp reflexes, and a global track record that will redefine U.S. small car customers’ expectations. Featuring class-leading technologies and a projected best-in-class highway fuel economy of
    40 mpg, Fiesta brings efficiency and convenience together in one package.

    It’s also designed to be versatile, personal and adaptable. In fact, Fiesta is delivers best-in-class convenience and connectivity with the segment-exclusive SYNC® voice-activated communications system, as well as an expressive color palette and available graphics.

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Does Lala’s Shut Down Mean Streaming iTunes Launch? [Apple]

    Reader Aaron Vader has sent us an email announcing that Lala.com will shut down on May 31. If you are a Lala user, your credits will be converted to iTunes credits. Does that mean that streaming iTunes.com would launch soon? More »







  • Comment on article from S. Fred Singer: Oh, Mann: Cuccinelli targets UVA papers in Climategate salvo by Courteney Stuart

    Article Tags: ClimateGate, Comment On Article, Fred Singer, Headline Story

    Image AttachmentI have submitted a Comment (which I rarely do) to The HOOK-
    Oh, Mann: Cuccinelli targets UVA papers in Climategate salvo

    “There is a good chance that Virginia’s Attorney-General Ken Cuccinelli will come up with the “smoking gun” — where other so-called investigations have only produced one whitewash after another.

    We know from the leaked e-mails of Climategate that Prof. Michael Mann was involved in the international conspiracy to “hide the decline” [in global temperatures], using what chief conspirator Dr Phil Jones refers to as “Mike [Mann]’s trick.” Now at last we may find out just how this was done.

    A lot is at stake here. If the recent warming is based on faked data, then all attempts to influence the climate by controlling the emissions of the so-called “pollutant” carbon dioxide are useless –and very costly. This includes the UN Climate Treaty, the Kyoto Protocol, the Waxman-Markey Cap & Trade (Tax) bill, the EPA “Endangerment Finding” based on the UN’s IPCC conclusion, and the upcoming Kerry-Lieberman-Graham bill in the US Senate.

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Q&A: Paul Saffo on the Future of Media and a New Era of Environmentalism

    Welcome to Circle of Blue Radio’s Series 5 in 15, where we’re asking global thought leaders 5 questions in 15 minutes, more or less. These are experts working in journalism, science, communication design, and water. I’m J. Carl Ganter. Today’s program is underwritten by Traverse Internet Law, tech savvy lawyers, representing internet and technology companies.

    Today we’re talking with Paul Saffo. He’s a man who lives in the future, and he maps and predicts society’s biggest transformations. Paul is a Futurist who teaches at Stanford University, and for the past 20 years has explored the dynamics of large-scale, long-term change. Paul, let’s talk first about the transforming media, how everyone get’s their news and participates in their community. What’s your media forecast?
    Paul Saffo: Well, you know, whenever we have a media shift like this, and you can go back 400 years to movable type: a period from 1450 to movable type’s invention by Herr Gensfleisch Gutenberg, to all this in 1501 for his modern book. We always have this drop in quality and hand ringing over what can we trust, and we forget 100 years ago newspapers were enormously unreliable, so we’re doing that now. We’re getting a mix of new voices, and we’re going to quickly discovery which ones are reliable and, more importantly, create the social indicators of which places you can trust. I’m an optimist about media. I think we’re going to come through this with more voices, more choices, and more reliability. You may not be able to trust specific outlets the way you once did, but it won’t matter because there will be a button where you can chase down authenticity.

    I’m an optimist about media. I think we’re going to come through this with more voices, more choices, and more reliability. You may not be able to trust specific outlets the way you once did, but it won’t matter because there will be a button where you can chase down authenticity.

    You talk a lot about censors, not censorship, but remote sensing capabilities, and we have major global challenges right now, and in a way we’ve lacked those censors. How will censors change our view of responding to these global challenges in both the mechanical sense and in our own personal sense?
    Paul Saffo: Well, this is a world where, at the data level–just a simple data collection–we’re moving from discreet episodic collection. So imagine we’re sampling water, and you check it once a week with an instrument–we’re shifting from discreet episodic measurement to continuous measurement: a continuous data feed on the status of things. Just in health alone, imagine if you’ve got a patient and you send him home, and you can do 7/24 monitoring of bodily vital functions–[it] completely changes how you can do medicine. The same is true for the environment. If we can monitor things 7/24 at fine levels of granularity, it’s going to change the way we think about environmental remediation, about purity water supplies, and the like. The fact is that the Internet, you know, is going to be an Internet of things, just as today once upon a time with the phone system [when] almost all of traffic on a phone system was voice conversations. Even before we went to the internet, voice conversation became less than half a percent of total volume. Today the web, the most visible part is people looking up information, people interacting with information. Hidden behind that are machines using the web. So the web is going to become an environment where maybe a fraction of one percent of the traffic is people interacting with things, and hidden behind that will be machines talking to other machines, sharing data coming off of vast sensor networks, and then occasionally telling us what’s going on.
    Well short term versus long term. We’ve been driven by a lot of short term returns. Now if we can monitor real time and even start to project what some of the long term implications will be of our decisions, that would seem to be a game changer for a lot of industries.
    Paul Saffo: We’re always victims of our own measurements. Part of the reason we got into the environmental crisis that we’ve gotten into is, as Paul Hawken has pointed out, we weren’t measuring the right things. Put it more simply, the problem is that the environment didn’t have its own accountants. Corporations had accountants, and individuals had accountants, but a river didn’t have an accountant. Now we’re talking, maybe a river needs an accountant so we can get that stuff on the balance sheet. All of this vast flood of information coming off of sensors is hopefully a good thing, but it’s not automatically a good thing. It’s going to depend on the sense making tools we build and are we using that data to look at the right measures. I do not doubt the human capability of taking all this wonderful new knowledge and putting it to some stupid disastrous civilization destroying purpose. I don’t think it will happen. I hope it won’t happen, but never underestimate the perversity of human nature to turn the long term into short term advantage.
    We talk a lot about the virtual world, the censors, the data, the measurements of trends and whatnot, but it seems that we get more and more distracted or just stuck behind our computers rather than rolling up our sleeves or our pant legs and wading into the mud to actually find out what’s going on out there. How do we maintain that connection, that human element?
    Paul Saffo: Sure, the question is does the web make us bystanders or engaged activists? Does it make us lean back or lean forward, or more importantly, get out of the chair and into the world? I would say on balance, it’s doing the latter. Conversations with people at a distance, if they go on long enough, lead to a trip to meet face to face. When you see a crisis up close and personally remotely, you want to do something to act on it. In that sense, the plan is becoming a much smaller space that people now really are concerned about things happening half way around because they can see it for themselves. It’s also becoming a much bigger, more rich place because we know all the details that we never imagined in the past. The technology is good, but above all, I would say the most important thing we need is really uncomfortable chairs so that people are not tempted to sit in their chair at a computer and look and watch and comment instead of getting out and acting and doing.
    Looking forward, what trends do you see in either environmental reporting or response in the next five years or so? I mean, we’re at a truly highly agitated point in history.
    Paul Saffo: One issue above all others matters in the environmental space. There’s a debate that’s just beginning around global climate change. We’ve already resolved, global climate change is happening. No question. Global climate change is anthropogenically caused, human caused. No question except for a couple of flatterers who still don’t believe it. Now the debate is what is our approach to solving it, and that’s going to be the single most contentious debate we have, and I see that as a debate between two camps, call one camp the druids, the other camp the engineers. I’m sympathetic to both. I’m a lifetime member of the Sierra Club, third generation. My grandmother knew John Muir, so I’m in favor in the environmental view. Also I teach at an engineering school at Standford. The difference between the two is that the druid position is we need to slow down, we need to lighten our touch on the planet, we need to go back to an earlier time when there was less damage being done to the environment. The engineers are saying no, no, we need to go faster into the future. We need to use this technology to solve the problems we’ve created. I’m kind of skeptical about both camps. We have UN reports that make it clear that’s really hard to be druid these days because we’ve got too many people. We need something like four or six Earths to support the human population on this planet today at its current level of affluence. The engineers, I’m glad they want to solve the problem, but I say, gee, it’s your inventions over the last 150 years that created the problem to begin with. That tension between the people saying go back, go back, and simplify, lighten our touch on the land, and the others saying go forward, go forward, and let’s intervene and let’s build, that’s an argument that makes me very nervous because I don’t think either side has the answer. The right answer is some fusion of the two. We have to go forward, but in my opinion we have to go forward really using deep principles of biomimetics and lessons from nature. The closest analogy I can think of that’s been said by some folks is the metaphor is gardening. It’s the respectful, diffident gardener who’s not creating some stupid exotic wild garden but a sensible, sustainable garden. We’ve screwed this planet up enough that we’re going to have to intervene, and we’re going to have to keep intervening. If we stop intervening, we’ll die, but let’s not create a planet that’s so dependent on our intervening that we have to spend the whole time keeping balls in the air.
    There’s always talk about silver bullets. As humans, we’re looking for that perfect answer, that drug, that cure-all. What’s your take?
    Paul Saffo: Silver bullets. The only term I hate more than silver bullets is the newest one, silver buckshot. This is a long term problem. We are facing deep, long term problems which have been decades in the making. It is moronic to then say, let’s look for the quick fix for something that took a couple of decades. That is just a way to get into deeper trouble. It is my hope that we would remove silver bullet and silver buckshot and all these other stupid short term terms from our vocabulary. What we have to think about is it took a long time to get into this. It’s going to take a long time to get out. It’s a sustained effort. There is no deus ex machina that’s going to drop down from the top of the stage that’s going to save us. This is going to take sustained careful work over many years. It’s a conversation with generations unborn. It’s not a quick fix.
    Thank you, Paul. We’ve been speaking with Paul Saffo, Futurist at Stanford University. To learn more about Paul’s work and other projects, be sure to tune in to Circle of Blue online at CircleofBlue.org.


    Our them is composed by Nadav Kahn, and Circle of Blue Radio is underwritten by Traverse Legal, PLC, internet attorneys specializing in trademark infringement litigation, copyright infringement litigation, patent litigation and patent prosecution. Join us gain for Circle of Blue Radio’s 5 in 15. I’m J. Carl Ganter.

  • Picasa Gets Twitter, Blogger and Buzz Share Buttons

    Photos are meant to be shared, by nature, so the multitude of services offering to help you share your pics with your friends is unsurprising. One of the most popular is Google’s Picasa. It allows you to store photo albums online and share the ones you want with the world or just specific friends. And, now, it’s even easier to sprea… (read more)

  • Obama raises $1 million at $30,400 per couple fund-raiser. Pool report

    Thursday evening pool report by Paul West, Baltimore Sun….

    At 7:25 p.m. the lower door of the South Portico opened and Malia Obama bounded out in sports attire, carrying a ball at best half the size of a soccer ball, and trailed by her mother with leashed dog in tow. They frolicked on the lawn for a minute or two, then sat on the side of a grassy knoll, waving, as the motorcade rolled past. Bo, sensing an opening, bolted for the moving limos. He obediently turned back almost immediately after being summoned by his young mistress, who ran the other way to the north side of the lawn, tossing her ball and rather quickly nabbing his leash.

    That was the best of it for the pool, now holding just off Pennsylvania Ave. in West End outside the luxe Columbia Condominiums, the former Columbia Hospital for Women (2400 block of L St. NW). Obama entered unseen and press coverage of the million-dollar Democratic Party fundraiser was rendered opaque, on the grounds that he is not making “formal remarks.”

    A DNC official provided the following table scrap, via email:
    The private dinner is at the home of Frank White, a local entrepreneur, early supporter of the President and a National Finance Committee member. The President will not be delivering remarks. Tickets for the dinner were a suggested donation of $30,400 per couple and the event is expected to raise a little over $1 million for the DNC.

    Paul West
    Baltimore Sun

  • Brad Pitt Peeved “Pathetic” Jennifer Aniston Popped Up On Cover Of Architectural Digest

    Brad Pitt has labeled his ex wife Jennifer Aniston “pathetic” after the screen sweetheart posed on the cover of his favorite magazine.

    A peeved Pitt has been fuming to friends that Jen has absolutely no interest in architecture and used to tease him about his nerdy obsession with buildings.

    “Brad thinks she is pathetic,” a source told US Weekly after Aniston appeared on the March 2010 cover of the magazine. “Brad feels this is all so desperate. It was a ploy to get his attention,” blabbed the insider.

    Pitt himself appeared on the cover of Architectural Digest in January 2009 .


  • “Commando” to be Remade; Pyrotechnics Experts and Stuntmen Start Salivating.

    Vin Diesel Can Eat It.

    Vin Diesel Can Eat It.

    The 1985 action classic (in my opinion, anyway) Commando, is getting the remake treatment, says Fox.  It’s being reworked by David Ayer, who wrote Training Day, so while it could be, you know, good, it is very unlikely to be as cool (unless they decide to include the 15-minute montage of Arnold loading guns).  While it is extremely unlikely that Arnold or Alyssa Milano will be reprising their roles, we all hold out hope that the fat, Australian Freddie Mercury look-alike will be returning, chain mail vest and all.

    His Agent Says He's Available

    His Agent Says He's Available

    This announcement follows news of the Predator sequel/reboot Predators, featuring Adrien Brody and Terminator: Salvation.  It looks like a whole new generation of moviegoers will be privy to the phenomenon that was Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 1980’s film career.   Without Arnold in any of the films.  Bizarre.

    Related posts:

    1. CNN.com Finds Six Words That Guarantee I Will Click on Their Link
    2. Apparently NFL Pre-Draft Questions Include: Is Your Mother a Whore?
    3. The 50 Best Restaurants in the World

  • AutoblogGreen for 04.30.10

    Sunk Gulf oil rig spilling up to 5,000 barrels of crude every day
    Going from “not bad” to worse.
    James Cameron attempts to terminate the oil and coal lobbies (on CNN)
    First Pandora, now Earth.
    China controls key ingredient for NiMH batteries, supply may run short as hybrids gain popularity
    They’re called lanthanides, and they’re kind of important.
    Other news:

    AutoblogGreen for 04.30.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 30 Apr 2010 06:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • National Arbor Day

    Picture of a weeping willow treeLast week our guest blogger, Erin Pierce, wrote about Making Every Day Earth Day. In keeping with the theme of doing good things for our planet and going green, my Friday blog is dedicated to trees. The last Friday in the month of April is designated as National Arbor Day.

    All around the country there are many schools and organizations carrying out tree planting activities. I remember, as a kid, my teacher had us plant a tree and write a report on our favorite tree. I wrote about the weeping willow in our backyard. My sisters and I used to climb all over that thing. I confess to playing “Tarzan.” I would swing from the vine-like branches doing my best jungle yell. Carol Burnett’s “Tarzan yell” was better, but I think I was a close second.

    Our lovely weeping willow began cracking and dying, so it had to be removed. The tree was large and it had to be cut down in sections. My dad did the cutting, but it was our job to hold the rope and pull when needed. Being a bit of a slacker, I wasn’t really holding the rope… actually, I think I was pretending to be a ballerina dancing around. A large branch broke and my sister, who was dutifully holding the rope, was dragged across the yard on her back as the branch came down. I thought that was the funniest thing, but my dad, who was nearly knocked off the ladder by the branch, did not. I got into big trouble. I held a grudge against all trees for awhile, but I eventually forgave them.

    If you like trees and/or are interested in participating in Arbor Day, here are some resources to check out:

    Throughout the country many schools encourage and educate children on the benefits of planting trees. To see what your state or city is doing for Arbor Day, go to USA.gov and search on Arbor Day and the name of your state.

  • A chance to earn an income in Myanmar

    Aye Lei Tun learns how Oxfam’s training is helping people affected by Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar to develop new skills and improve their income.

    Min Zaw, a mechanic in Nyaung Lan Village. Photo: Aye Lei Tun/Oxfam

    Min Zaw, a mechanic in Nyaung Lan Village. Photo: Aye Lei Tun/Oxfam

    “Incredible” was the word that 40-year-old Min Zaw uttered when asked about his current life after joining Oxfam’s occupational skill training in January last year.

    “It is quite incredible – the two-month program has really guaranteed a steady income for the rest of my life,” Min Zaw said, referring to the Machine Repair and Maintenance Training provided by Oxfam as part of its programmes for those whose livelihoods were destroyed or affected by Cyclone Nargis in 2008.

    Min Zaw was one of ten participants in a training programme which he confirmed has changed his life. Before Cyclone Nargis, Min Zaw sold maize, but when the cyclone devastated the agricultural sector, small traders such as Min Zaw were particularly hard hit. By increasing his skills, more work opportunities have opened up, allowing him to continue to earn an income, and to work from home so that he can now take care of his disabled daughter – a very important step for him.

    In the past, Min Zaw would go to his client’s house and check and repair only small machines. Now he can work at home because he has more customers and they are confident in his competence, so they approach him to repair larger machines as well. “This way, I can look after our daughter. Otherwise, my wife will be occupied with her while also taking care of our grocery shop, cooking, and other household works. Our life is getting better now.”

    Min Zaw already had basic knowledge about mechanical devices and repairs, but he believes the training has improved his skills and built up his confidence, which in turn has gained him trust from his customers.

    “I think the rate of work has increased after that. My customers are not only from our village, but also from other villages nearby. We earn at least 2,000 kyat (approx $2 US dollars) a day and at most 10,000 kyat ($10 US dollars).” Together with his wife’s income from the shop, they are doing quite well and can also afford medicines for his daughter, who has been mute since birth.

    Thuya, a mechanic in Kyone Dar Chuang Village. Photo: Aye Lei Tun/Oxfam

    Thuya, a mechanic in Kyone Dar Chuang Village. Photo: Aye Lei Tun/Oxfam

    Another participant, Thuya, 19, from Kyone Dar Chaung Village, also said he is more confident about his job since the training.

    “Before the training, I sold maize. I learned how to repair machines by watching other mechanics do their work, and became their assistant for minor repairs,” Thuya told Oxfam. “Now I have confidence to be a professional mechanic. Because of the training, I was able to really understand about machine repairs and how they work.”

    Nine months after the training, Thuya has found that the number of people asking him to work has significantly improved. He has started dreaming about the future: having his own business.

    For big repairs, Thuya makes at least 10,000 kyat (approx $10 US dollars), and 3,000 or 4,000 kyat ($3 or $4 US dollars) for smaller pieces. He usually repairs agricultural and fishery machinery. Thuya used to earn about 500 kyat ($5 US dollars) from selling maize.

    “I’ve earned about 150,000 kyat ($150 US dollars) already. I want to set up a welding business. For that, I think I need to invest about four or five lakhs (approx $400-$500 US dollars). I expect my dream will come true in two or three years,” he said with a smile.

    In pictures: rebuilding lives and livelihoods in Myanmar

    Emergencies: Myanmar cyclone

  • James Patrick Tressel vs. Wayne Woodrow Hayes

    It’s the off season and that means it’s the perfect time to ponder some ponderables. For instance, who’s regime at Ohio State was (is) better, Jim Tressel’s or Woody Hayes’?

    Ohio State football personified.

    Before we start, I want to make it clear that Woody Hayes is Ohio State football and he always will be. I am not challenging that. What I would like to compare is which period of Ohio State football was “better”, the Jim Tressel era or the Woody Hayes era.

    Another thing to get out of the way right now is that obviously the Jim Tressel era isn’t over yet. That only makes the issue more interesting as far as I’m concerned because it opens up the additional question: what does Jim Tressel need to do over his final seasons to surpass Woody Hayes?

    And there is little question that Tressel is entering his final seasons.

    The contender.

    Tressel recently signed a contract extension through the 2014 season. There is much speculation that it could be the last contract extension he signs (there was speculation that he would retire when his initial contract expired in 2012 too, so take it for what it’s worth).

    Even if Tressel does extend again, he has said he doesn’t see himself coaching as long as a Paterno or a Bowden, so I will say very roughly that he retires within the next ten years.

    That leaves us with two questions: how do the two coaches compare now? and what does Tressel need to do over the final years of his regime to clearly separate himself from the Godfather of Ohio State football.

    Let’s break it down. Ding! Ding! Ding!

    Overall Record

    Woody Hayes: 205-61-10 (.76087)

    Jim Tressel: 94-21 (.81739)

    Overall record is an obvious place to start.

    Right off the bat it is clear that Tressel just can’t compete with Hayes in terms of years coached or number of victories.

    The Shoe has been good to both coaches… or have the coaches been good to The Shoe?

    Woody’s 28 years at the helm and 205 victories are both the most in Ohio State history, and it isn’t even close.

    Tressel isn’t going to touch either one of those numbers.

    On the other hand, Tressel’s winning percentage is higher.

    In fact, Tressel’s winning percentage is the best of any coach in Ohio State history that lasted more than two seasons (Carroll C. Widdoes went 16-2 from 1944-1945).

    Two more years of 10 (or more) win seasons and Tressel’s moves into 2nd place for total number of victories (passing up Cooper at 111).

    Where does that leave us?

    The winning percentage angle is an advantage for Tressel, and it doesn’t look like the 10 win seasons are going to be ending anytime soon.

    Tressel will have the second most wins and the second longest tenure in the history of Ohio State football whenever he decides to hang up the whistle.

    That by itself doesn’t mean much since he will be second behind Woody. But combined with the higher winning percentage and I think it creates a compelling argument. Is that enough to put Tressel over the top? We will see.

    For now, 28 years, 205 victories. It is hard to see those number ever being broken or even approached.

    Woody Hayes is the king of tenure and victories at Ohio State, and he always will be.

    Tressel will most likely be the king of winning percentage and second in tenure and victories.

    Which one is more impressive?

    I will wait until the Tressel era is over before I come down with a final judgment on that one.

    Big Ten Record

    Woody Hayes: 152-37-7 (.80423)

    Jim Tressel: 59-13 (.81944)

    Once again this turns into a story of quality versus quantity, but in this case the quality is about the same.

    Owned.

    Tressel and Hayes both share about the same winning percentage, but Woody did it for a lot longer than Tressel has, so you gotta give the edge to Woody here, right?

    Then again, they didn’t call it the Big 2 when Woody coached for nothing. Similarly, Tressel takes some heat for dominating a “down” conference.

    Regardless, both coaches owned the Big Ten.

    Record Vs. Michigan

    Woody Hayes: 16-11-1

    Jim Tressel: 8-1

    Clearly Tressel has the edge here.

    While no one could match Woody’s hatred of that school up north or the intensity of the rivalry during the Ten Year War, Tressel has done a better job racking up rivalry wins.

    Chalk one up for the vest.

    Big Ten Championships

    Woody Hayes: 13

    Jim Tressel: 6

    At face value it looks like Woody has this one locked up with over twice as many Big Ten Championships as Tressel.

    Upon closer examination, however, you will see that Tressel’s 6 titles in 9 seasons is a bit more impressive than Woody’s 13 titles in 28 season… at least from a purely statistical perspective.

    It would be shocking if Tressel didn’t earn a few more of these before his time is over in Columbus, so I am going to give Tressel the slight edge here.

    Bowl Record

    Woody Hayes: 5-6

    Jim Tressel: 5-4

    You can’t really compare the two coaches in this area because of the restrictions on bowl game attendance that Woody faced which aren’t there today.

    At the same time, it is clear that Woody struggled a bit in bowl games.

    The last few years haven’t been so kind to Tressel either, but he still has a shot to turn that around (2010 Rose Bowl was a nice start).

    I will call this one a wash for now, with the distinct possibility that Tressel can separate himself in the coming years.

    National Championships

    Woody Hayes: 3 (5)

    Jim Tressel: 1

    With a few more of these Tressel's resume would be tough to beat.

    This is the major area that Woody is clearly better than Tressel as far as I’m concerned.

    At the same time, it is also the area that Tressel can make up the most ground over the next few seasons.

    Woody had championship seasons in 1954, 1957 and 1968 with two more kinda championship seasons that the school claims in 1961 and 1970.

    To this point, Tressel has 2002 and several misses in 2006 and 2007.

    While another national championship (or three) before Tressel retires will make this discussion worth having again, for now you have to conclude that with an untouchable number of wins, years coached, and an impressive 5 national championships, Woody Hayes is still the best coach in Ohio State football history.

    If the last years of the Tressel era go as well as I am hoping they will, the story may change.

    With a superb record against Michigan and an unbelievable run of Big Ten championships, another national title or two may make up for the fact that Woody coached for nearly twice as long as Tressel and racked up a lot more wins in the process.

    It should be fun to watch.

  • Iowa Wind Turbines





    This is a great story and it had little if anything to do with Washington.  If ever we need an example of the importance of locally supported leadership, this is it.  In a country with over fifty state governments it is possible to find real performers and innovators.
    I have recently argued that healthcare needs to be pushed down to the state level in order to introduce both competition and a counterweight to insurance company power. This demonstrates why.
    Every success breeds imitation.  That is why a seventy year old banking success in North Dakota is now in the process of been imitated in several other states.
    Iowa has made itself a leader in wind manufacturing and this industry has plenty of growth left in it in the midwest.
    Iowa: Land of Corn and Wind Turbines
    HERMAN K. TRABISH: APRIL 28, 2010
    How do you keep them on the farm? Give them jobs in turbine factories.
    Iowa ranks 30th among the 50 states in population and 23rd in square miles, but it is number two in wind — and it wants more.
    Iowa now has over 25,000 wind turbines and doubled its proportion of wind-generated electricity from 7% to 14% in 2009, the biggest jump in the U.S. Estimates put the current 2010 percentage of Iowa‘s electricity coming from wind above 17%.
    Because Iowa added 879 megawatts of new capacity last year (enough to power more than 200,000 homes), the state’s installed capacity is now second only to Texas. It has 3,670 megawatts of total installed capacity, enough electricity for 880,000 homes — in a state with only 3 million people. And it has over 14,000 megawatts of wind power awaiting approval.
    The state, known for its dairy farms and bucolic rolling cornfields, also became the leading provider of wind energy manufacturing jobs in 2009.
    The numbers reflect the payoff for Iowa‘s transformation from farm country to wind country: 2,300 direct manufacturing jobs, an estimated 5,000-to-10,000 direct and indirect jobs associated with wind, $175 million in major manufacturing facilities’ investments, 2009 annual property tax payments by wind project owners of $16.5 million, and 2009 annual lease payments to Iowa landowners of $11 million.
    Iowa has the seventh best wind energy potential in the U.S. going for it, but a lot of states that have even better wind potential are not yet reaping the bounty that Iowa is. So what’s driving the state’s success? A long history.
    In 1983, Iowa enacted its Alternate Energy Production law, essentially the first U.S. Renewable Electricity Standard (RES). The law required the state’s two regulated utilities to obtain 105 megawatts of renewable energy. The legislation lacked enforcement provisions, however, as did the 2001 voluntary mandate requiring the state to build 1,000 megawatts of wind capacity by 2010. But both were ahead of their time and pointed the way to today’s achievements.
    Earlier in this decade, the state’s agricultural sector was suffering when, according to Mike Kelley, the Corporate Environmental Health and Safety Manager for Upwind Solutions and a member of the Iowa Wind Energy Association Board, current Democratic Governor Chet Culver and his team saw the new opportunity in wind.
    “They saw the wind business beginning to grow, they saw the impact and the Governor and his team became very, very proactive in looking for manufacturers, even out of the country, ” Kelley said. “They really flew the flag of Iowa and what good Midwest values had to offer…and I attribute the growth from the manufacturing standpoint to some visionaries there in the state offices.”
    With many of its farms failing, Iowa had been losing jobs — and the people who needed them. The 200 Iowa companies servicing those manufacturers’ supply chains have added more than $50 million in new revenue every year. Five community colleges and other training institutions now offer wind-related training.
    Governor Culver now says Iowa is ready to become an energy exporter. The next questions are whether the production expansion can be sustained and how big Iowa‘s wind manufacturing industry can get.
    To sustain wind energy production growth, Iowa needs more and better transmission so it can export electricity. Kelley said he expects regulatory hurdles to be cleared and lines to be built in the near future.
    Greg Watkins, the Renewable Energy Planner in the Iowa Office of Energy Independence, says they also expect continued manufacturing growth.
    “This may not ramp up more towers in Iowa, but will stimulate the manufacturers here producing and exporting turbine components to other surrounding states and into Canada,” Watkins said.
    Added Joe Jongewaard, Project Manager with the Iowa Department of Economic Development: “We believe that there is a huge expansion in manufacturing capacity of wind generation equipment and that it’s going to happen somewhere in the world over the next 3 to 4 years…Iowa is positioned to get more than its share of that expansion. We believe that it’s reasonable to expect that 10,000 manufacturing jobs could be created in Iowa by the end of 2014.”
    Jongewaard says the state expects to attract more companies to create those jobs and that those companies will create more opportunity for existing and new supply chain manufacturers. The Governor’s office, Jongewaard said, has two project managers on staff who do nothing but work to attract wind manufacturers.
  • Cattail Update





    This is a quick catch up on Peggy’s efforts in the cattail development business.  Much has been learned and a good body of practice has arisen.
    It appears that the use of drained land is presently the most adaptable to husbandry needs for the ease of operation with equipment that exists.
    I would like to see a fodder field test.  The productivity is huge and it should give us excellent product for cattle.  If not, then we need to figure out why.
    It is noteworthy that the plants will drown if cropped long enough.  This makes paddy control effective and easy.
    Cattail Histhings
    April 2010
    Water Assurance Technology Energy Resources
    40 Sun Valley Dr., Spring Branch TX 78070
    FAX (830) 885-4827; Cell: (512) 757-4499
    Welcome Aboard Investigative Team: Thank you to the sincere and qualified respondents to the request for participants for our rhizome starch study.  Our team members have varied interests, backgrounds, locations and talents—extremely diverse and this is a GOOD thing!  We have closed our admittance because the cost of supplies, postage and time necessary to consolidate reports has limits.  Everyone will benefit from the trials.  Our collaborations are confidential at this time so that we can establish a working protocol among ourselves.  Various supplies are shared and everyone uses his own equipment.  We look forward to a shared educational experience supporting each other along the way.  Over the next several months we may post ideas from certain team members that may be willing to offer services or products to other cattail enthusiasts. 
    Discharge Permit NOT Required: A certified letter addressed to Peggy Korth as the Principle Investigator states that a discharge permit is NOT required to grow cattails as an agricultural field crop using community wastewater/ effluent as per our experimental outline in Otero County New Mexico.  Through the efforts of Sustainable Technology Systems, Inc. the Groundwater Bureau for the state of New Mexico has determined that a discharge permit is not necessary in Tularosa New Mexico on land designated to receive agricultural use of wastewater.  Special permitting often requires expensive protocols.  This letter is worth thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours of time and sets a precedent for projects elsewhere.
    The community project ‘Cattails to Ethanol” is supported by Sustainable Technology Systems, Inc (STS) and funded by the Otero County Commissioners.  The preliminary cattail evaluation study under the control and direction of STS includes professional consultation services from a number of expert specialists in related fields.  We expect to clone projects following proper due diligence.  WATER’s non-profit education and research objectives compliment the efforts by sending highlights to you, the several hundred cattail enthusiasts that subscribe to Cattail Histhings.   
    Congratulations Peggy. Great news!  MH reports…I’m working with a village in Ohio who would like to have their own sewer plant. The EPA says we can do this with little effort if we have a zero discharge plant. Since I want to grow cattails, sell ethanol and develop property in the village, it would be very synergistic to combine all. Do you have any data on water use, in addition to normal evaporation, cattails use to grow on a per acre? I can get the normal rainfall and evaporation data from the government, which is about equal for the area I’m working. So, the additional water usage is what I need to complete the rough estimate.  I plan to grow a 18 x 18 plot of cattails this summer to develop this data in Michigan , where I live. I’ll send you a copy of my results.  In this case zero discharge is zero effluent discharge into any local streams
    YES!  This is what WE NEED!  Thank you so very much for the email and finding out about your plans.  When you mention EPA does that mean your state agency?  Did they send you a written notice?  Do you already release effluent into agricultural land?  I look forward to learning about your results.  Thanks again for the email.

    Dialog Continues… I’m working through the local village and their contacts with the Ohio EPA and the OKI ( Ohio / Kentucky / Indiana) commission that controls the sewers systems in our area. A developer in the next township was able to get approval for a private system, bypassing the county controls, by installing a zero discharge / zero effluent to the local streams system. I’m hoping to do the same, by using cattails to use the effluent. Wastewater sludge, for use as fertilizer, is also available from local treatment plants and is being used by local farmers. I was looking for a cheap source of water and if it has any NPK included so much the better.

    No effluent discharge yet.  Correspondent question…Are there any papers available that indicated the amount of water used to grow cattails? A government sight, I found, indicates pond evaporate about the same as annual rainfall in the area of our Ohio farm, so I am trying to determine the additional amount used by growing cattails.  I’ll send data as I develop the information.
    PK on EPA—An Opinion: Every state’s EPA has different ideas.  Some are more liberal than others.  I was told that definitely I could NOT use sludge (even if approved for release) in a wet environment.  Well, our growing beds do NOT stay wet.  We do NOT keep a crown of water.  We periodically flood the land as is standard in agricultural release of effluent into the countryside where permitted.
    I do not quite understand the containment ideas that are proposed.  The location of our first trials, the land is naturally dry.  There is no regular run-off into streams.  Water does not percolate into the ground water which is 100 feet below.  The effluent is absorbed into the land and the plants take up the nitrogen as natural fertilizer.  The soil microbes are NOT regularly tested, yet dissipate nitrogen as a natural phenomenon.  Yet, we feel that the cattails will substantially lower the pathogenic microbial count even as they do in their natural habitat.  Remember we plant cattails as a field crop and not in a pond.
    Ponds Can Be Microbial Incubators: We found that if a pond is stagnant, no flowing water, then there is an increase in microbial content (pathogens included).  When the sun shines on still water, there is a tremendous incubation effect UNLESS that water is flowing.  The flow does not need to be extreme as in a river.  The flow can be gentle and still have significant microbial reduction in the presence of cattails and other combined botanicals.  It is assumed that a new thin growth will have more filtering effect than a dense mature stand.  The web of rhizome in hardened patches can restrict water flow.
    However, Ponds can CONQUER weeds in Cattail Field Crops.  Words of wisdom from our propagation specialist…  It takes effort to develop a field system that works. A rice paddy system, dry then wet then dry is a better fit for raising cattails as a starch field crop.  Weeds are the enemy with a dry production system cycle. Immersion (temporary POND or temporary standing water) can control weeds until a closed canopy is achieved (growth of stalks and leaves).  Once established cattails are mesic and not aquatic.  Then periodic flood irrigation after an established growth can maintain growth until harvest. 
    Native Plant Specialist: If your community project seeks expert consulting advice on planting your field, obtaining cattails, or any specialized propagation information, please phone.  The STS Ph.D. commercial growing associate specialist can give you a bid for services.
    Harvesting Equipment Scope and Scale: Size of the filed makes a great deal of difference in selecting harvesting equipment.  The harvest system used for cattails grown to be replanted or used in wetland development may be vastly different than harvesting equipment used to collect starch-rich rhizomes.  A proposed field production and harvest system for ethanol production is in a state of evolution.  .Relative small volume and high total plant value as a resale botanical is not the same as gathering rhizomes for starch conversion.  When you develop YOUR ideas, please let us know.  Perhaps we can help with a market for your products.  Let’s talk.
    The SECRET of a Sterilized Field:  Controlling weeds can be achieved through chemical fumigation.  Unknown factors support the commercial field crop growth of cattails.  Cattails grow well on methyl bromide sterilized ground. Past commercial crop failures have been when fumigation was NOT employed/ skipped. (Read the section on conquering weeds above to grow cattails without this sterilization step.)  This is a report.  Please add your comments so we can understand your successes as well.
    KB Asks: Can we plant from seed?
    Absolutely Yes! Those of you that have read the Cattails to Ethanol Vol. 1 know that there is only a two week difference in seed  from root growth in a pond environment.  I have observed that seeds planted too close together have a smaller production rate than seeds planted with space in-between.  A clump of seeds just doesn’t produce anything.  A single seed sprouts better.  This self-thinning is also witnessed in dense field crop growth.  This plant is SO smart that it does not crowd its neighbor.  We could learn something from this.  There is a lot to learn….
    All it takes is time and money to run lab tests.  Report on local findings as actual collected data during consulting trials validate progress.  Reaching into one’s back pocket to pay for confirmation of improvements provides due diligence information.   Collaborating improvement from our cattail enthusiasts provides a basis for universal understand of potential.  Peer-reviewed journals expect qualified scientific reporting.  Adequate compilation of data is necessary to publish new articles that can impact EPA and permitting authorities.  At this time only a scattering of reports fit our particular use.  Therefore, if anyone is gathering lab reports, we would be grateful to compare results.  Thank you for sharing!
    Project Protocols: Start with understanding your compliance needs.  EPA officers may assist in writing protocol or directing you to a group that has implemented successful botanical remediation.  Yet… you may not want to tip them off as to your concerns… because that could trigger their concerns.  Standard agricultural use effluent protocols, should be SAFE within standard operating procedures for community effluent.  Rains and increased population have triggered new problems.  Solutions are sometimes beyond the budgets of the residents or farms.  When our readers find acceptable standards, please document the authority and get back with us.  We need to support each other.
    Books Sold as Donations keep our non-profit organization active.  With steady work the non-profit remains minimally funded.  Two thirds of the annual budget come from my personal funds.  Significant grants require collaboration with large educational facilities.  Most universities demand 40 to 45% indirect costs to host a project and then the professor that serves as the principle investigator and his department get the lion’s share of the grant with minimal consideration to the origin of the initial idea even if I WRITE THE GRANT!  A better tact can be to target funds available to assist local governments make improvements.  Consider addendums to proposals such as microbial reports from local effluent test regimes.  Obtaining reasonable remediation charge for report numbers supports due diligence.
    Excellent Documentation is Stellar:  Rewrite field notes on a regular basis to form a legible and comprehensive review of what is being accomplished.  A weekly summary is often adequate if a daily rewrite is impractical.  Another documentation strategy is to outline highlights and ideas in your computer as soon as you can and then expand the explanation as time allows.
    Community Starts: This work flows through Sustainable Technology Systems, Inc., the group that recently completed the Otero County Cattail Evaluation Study.  We produced a 150 page book which is full of color photo pages of most of what we observed plus many pages of lab reports.  At this time I am working with New Mexico State University to garner funds to develop an educational program for farmers and communities through the non-profit channels.  The university people thought the recent study must have cost about $100,000 dollars.  Our actual cost was about $11,500 with the remaining $8,500 available for further study in that same arena assuming that I don’t ever get paid anything for my work.  And I do hope to get paid some day soon….
    Proposals Proofs: The importance of a well-written proposal cannot be over stressed.  That proposal should outline your steps.  It is wise to include charts of goals, timelines, and costs with good budget justification.  Your periodic reports should validate your accomplishments.  And I believe in an excellent summary ‘book’ to give to the officials as a reference will prove that they got more than their money’s worth.  Combined projects often offer a more well-rounded solution to the communities goals. Please let us know what you are doing.  It is always inspirational to hear about your progress.
    Information Powers Progress: BB Likes Links—The  link to our non-profit organization is www.waterC3.com.  However, if you have questions, please send them.  The web page, like the book was written several years ago.  Most new news and correspondence from the cattail people is sent via the newsletters, Cattail Histhings.  The newsletter gives me a way to highlight what is important and not repeat too many questions as a forum might do.  In this nascent development we need people willing to experiment and share their results.  Contributing information helps everyone and especially the person doing the trials.  Everyone appreciates the giving of information and sharing of experiences.   .
    CM Caring: I’m curious about the cattails being used to make ethanol, is it the root that has the starch?  How do they harvest them? 
    PK: A number of people on the newsletter list use a variety of harvesting methods.  I personally prefer the field-crop planting using a lifter shaker (potato harvester).
    DB: Anything new on the cattail front?  I see the name Peggy Korth in many searches for information on cattail ethanol, but instead of trying to read the reams of info you’ve put out there, I figure I can take a shortcut and ask you directly.  Are you still on the cattail bandwagon and how does it look going forward?
    PK: I did not see your name on my newsletter list.  How did you hear about me?  We seem to always have something new to report.  The reams of information continue with lots of publications… some more applicable to ‘your’ projects than others may be.  I wear many different hats and encourage people to take self-sufficiency steps both solo and as communities.  Farmers should most definitely be self-sufficient
    Scientific American Headlines: Breaking the Growth Habit Society can safeguard its future only by switching from reckless economic growth to smart maintenance of wealth and resources. 
    Checklist for Registration for Conventional Ethanol Production
    We, the small and mid-sized biofuels producers, are NOT conventional.  We do not produce the quantities the require RIN’s.  However, if you would like to have access to this very long and detailed explanation of the RFS2 compiled by the RFA team, please let me know.  (Those of you that assume that you will be in the million gallon-a-year production arena but have not taken the steps to hire and pay your environmental attorney need good compliance planning.  Small and mid-sized production just took another step in practical production reasonability.  EXEMPT!
    Keep Records anyway…  Now as a reasonable and prudent small and mid-sized producer, please keep accurate records of all phases of your project and processes.  These records become more valuable as biofuels become more available.  If a regulatory agency becomes obsessed with controlling the small and mid–sized producer, then we need to support each other with real information that goes beyond theory.  Too often regulatory and compliance people are not thorough in their research and evaluation of potential problems.  If there is a case report that is detrimental, we need to quickly support the other side of the equation so that there is no BAD REP being falsely being built.  Also, it should be made clear to the industry producers that we are not their competition.  Our work can actually build a better overall image as well as supporting the peripheral/ adjunctive uses and processes.
    CM Sharing a Joke: Thought I would share the link to this crazy machine with you http://dkenvironmental.com/aquamog-ccx-in-action-ripping-up-cattails.htm
    PK Gasps: Thanks for the entertainment, my friend.  The machine is not harvesting anything, but certainly disturbing the plants.  Any rhizome/ root fragment, or seed can re-grow the plant to maturity in one inch to two meters of water within two years.  One seed head has 300,000 seeds.  So this is an example of big boys with big toys that are not actually doing a whole lot of good.  If destruction is the goal, it would be better to cut the re-emerging plants six inches below the surface of water about three times in the following season.  Drowning is the best way to actually eliminate the cattails without the use of chemicals.  But it takes repeated cutting and not allowing the plants to emerge from the water.  After about three cuttings several inches below the water line, they usually die.
    What is happening in the video is a real waste of good biomass.  The green leaves make excellent animal fodder.  The stalks are superior in pulp and fiber than trees or most other plants.  The rhizomes (the white stuff floating in the water after being macerated) are reported to have 40% starch content.  Concerning the environment, a habitat works best with channels going through a dense growth to allow better flow patterns for animals, fish, and water remediation.
    What a trip!  Perhaps, some of our heavy duty equipment operators can use such a machine and the ideas to modify the equipment into a harvesting design.  Whoever thought up the equipment didn’t do his homework.  Mostly, when the machine is used as demonstrated, he has a perpetual job—sort of like mowing grass.
    Another Bad Idea for Culling Plants: There is a program in the Texas Rio Grande Valley to remove hydrilla from the resacas.  The work crew dredges the biomass and stacks it on the side of the drainage ditches.  Then the first rain washes the seeds replanting the seed berries that are be lying on the side of the ditch.  Within two years, the plants have repopulated to the same extent )depending on the weather).  We should use this biomass and the ditches as a crop and cropland.  During our cellulosic trials the hydrilla was the easiest to break down into glucose.  But… I do not have the time or the location to prove this in trials at this time.  Let me know if anyone wants to address this biomass.  It continually clogs the waterways in South Texas and other parts of the world.
    Investigate Sterilization and Sanitation Methods and Products:  On a small scale, it should be easier to clean our equipment than at the industrial sites.  Access and ease-of cleaning will help to control contaminants.  Abundant culprits await their chance to grow and thrive.  When meeting with Lynn Margalis—the famous microbiologist and author of 5 Kingdoms (among other publications), she stresses how colonies change to optimize their environment.  Providing basic nutrients should attract all kinds of multiplying organisms—including humans.
    Avoid Dings, Chips, and Scratches: Excellent cleaning of all vessels, utensils, and counter tops, are a must.  When possible sterilize everything you can reach.  Any ‘tool’ that has a nick in it can harbor bacteria/ spores.   Unless a plastic (Teflon) product is new, then it can be contaminated in small scratches or manufacturing flaws even if you think you scrubbed it.  Do NOT tap your utensil on your vessel to remove water.  The tap can ding the rim offering another place for microbes to hide.  .  Ultrasound is amazing at loosening microscopic particles in pores and dents and a requirement in medical sterilization processing.  Discount stores have inexpensive stainless steel implements that can serve your needs.  Dilute sodium hypochlorite (Clorox) is pretty good to sanitize surfaces, but cannot be introduced into the mash.  A long treatise on sanitization is under development.  Do not tap the top of your containers.  Any dip or nick will make a place for bacteria to hide.  Keep everything clean and SMOOTH.
    Quick, Easy and Effective Sanitizing: Most brew shops sell a rather benign oxygenating rinse/ dip.  As kind as the product is to your environment, it is a powerful antimicrobial.  The one that I use is Carlson’s Easy Clean.
    Stay in Touch: This has been a busy month organizing our summer trials, writing a grant proposal and planning our next steps.  Please email us and let us hear about your plans.
    Best wishes,
    Peggy
    Thank you for your support of our non-profit organization.  Water Assurance Technology Energy Resources forwards research and development of technologies to solve environmental problems in clean air, clean water, and clean energy.  WATER’s focus on education and outreach continues to bring public awareness to a better understanding of how each individual and community can work in concert to address positive impact for a better world.
    Books of Interest by Peggy G. Korth
    Bioenergy Terms Glossary—An in-depth compilation of industry terms for biofuels, biomass energy, and electrical generation.
    Small Scale Biofuels Production: Vol. 1, Cattails to EthanolA comprehensive selection of scientific papers, related narratives, pilot project study, and documents to address cattail fuel ethanol production and small flow remediation.
    Small Scale Biofuels Production: Vol. 2, Bioenergy BusinessThe only Education, Outreach, and Training guidebook for small scale bioenergy business visits performance standards, protocol, learning objectives, and other educationally related information that can be an integral part of building your company specific Standard Operating Procedure or grant funding submission.  The sections that address building your business plan and writing grants offer a comprehensive overview of common criteria.
    2008 and 2009 Cattail Histhings Newsletters—A compilation of reports from cattail enthusiasts, scientific and farm related advice, and cattail project related news.  Packed with useful information and growing like a weed, the latest issues include interchange of ideas and projects with cattail growers plus comments on current research and development.  Issues also highlight outreach and education with comments on government regulations, trials and successes.
    Cattails: A Contender if the Age of Biofuels Coming Soon through Sustainable Technology Systems, Inc.: Off-site project development consultation and strategic planning.
    Excellent References:
    Alcohol Fuel References:
    Biofuels Wiki http://www.biofuelswiki.org  (Search Cattail)
    http://gillesenergies.webs.com/ Simplicity in Applied Technology
    Dave Blume’s Site  http://www.alcoholcanbeagas.com/
    Basic distilling not related to alcohol fuel. (Distilling is distilling is distilling.)
    The Complete Distiller” sold by Amphora Society http://www.amphora-society.com/
    Water Assurance Technology Energy Resources
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  • Fiat’s new chairman says company doesn’t need other partners beyond Chrysler

    John Elkann – Fiat Chairman

    Fiat’s new chairman John Elkann said that the company ‘doesn’t need other partners’ beyond Chrysler Group, and that it is focused on turning Chrysler around. “We have a strong relationship with Chrysler and that is what we are actively working on,” said Elkann, 34, the grandson of former Fiat Chairman Giovanni Agnelli.

    The company said April 21 that it plans to separate its agricultural and truck-making units into a new body called Fiat industrial, and that it aims to double sales at Fiat Auto by 2014.

    Currently, Exor is the largest shareholder in both units, and intends to remain so, unless the dilution of their stakes meant growth. Elkann said that the company would rather be a smaller shareholder in a bigger Fiat than stifle growth by remaining the largest stakeholders.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Prize-Winning Enertia Team Begins Long Climb To Commercialize Clean, Portable Energy

    Matterhorn
    Howard Lovy wrote:

    University of Michigan business student Adam Carver says he is a “mountain climber at heart.”

    Maybe that’s why he’s going for two degrees at once. Last summer, he conquered the Matterhorn. Yes, the actual Matterhorn in Switzerland.

    This year, he set out for the foothills of a longer, perhaps even more ambitious journey-to bring to market what he considers breakthrough technology that could completely replace today’s electrochemical batteries in portable devices.

    And he is not a lone explorer. Together with colleagues Tzeno Galchev and Ethem Erkan Aktakka, both Ph.D. Fellows at U-M’s Center for Wireless Integrated Microsystems, the three recently picked up the top prize of $50,000 in the 2009-2010 DTE Clean Energy Prize business plan competition.

    Their project goes by the name of Enertia, and this prize could be the beginning of a long climb toward commercialization of a clean, renewable source of power. The invention is a device that can harvest energy from arbitrary vibrations in the environment, then run them through a little converter to general electric power.

    Carver, who is simultaneously working toward his MBA at Michigan’s Ross School of Business and a master’s degree from U-M’s Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise, set out specifically to look for a business project over at the engineering department. So, he went to an on-campus event that was open to entrepreneurs from the local community.

    “I really wanted to get involved in cleantech. And I had this feeling that the real breakthrough technology was coming out of the school of engineering,” Carver says.

    He immediately saw a great deal of possibility in Galchev’s and Aktakka’s project.

    “What really attracted me to the project was the compelling technology, itself-the idea that we can utilize this ambient energy around us in the form of tiny vibrations and make renewable power,” Carver says.

    “I felt that there was a very good environmental reason for this, there’s a very good economic reason, and it’s a scalable solution-that we will be able to reproduce, at high volume with quality assurance,” he says.

    Carver, 28, is talking like a true entrepreneur, anyway. He even has a target year of …Next Page »

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