Climbers Club Tremadog guidebook review.

    Vector Buttress topo: Climbers Club/Don Sargeant©

    The latest Climbers Club guide to the ever popular Tremadog area continues the recent trend which has seen the CC produce a series of attractive, well received guides which more than match the recent glossy compendium guidebooks for north Wales, published by the club's commercial rivals. Author Steve Long has really pulled all the threads together and produced an aesthetically pleasing ,well researched and comprehensive guide to this beautiful part of South Snowdonia with editor Pete Sterling overseeing production.

    Like previous north Wales CC guides to Llanberis and Ogwen,Tremadog is a larger book...in actual size...than the last guide.I guess the trend has been away from climbers actually taking the guidebook on routes with them as in the old days and instead climbing harder single pitch routes or photocopying the relevant pages before heading for the cliff. Apart from the actual size of the book it is also just about 100 pages longer than the last Trem guidebook..Not least I imagine,because of the expansive use of photographs and illustrations which overall are striking in their quality.
    However,what really counts is what lies within....

    Tremadog continues the welcome introduction first seen with Llanberis, of a comprehensive historical section at the beginning of the guide.After the preamble which includes notes of conservation,transport,camping,ethics,parking etc-the book gets stuck into the history of climbing at Tremadog. Interspersed with the historical notes are comments from activists such as Joe Brown, Johnny Dawes, Mike Lewis and Eric Jones amongst many others. This personal overview really works well and apart from being fascinating in itself really helps sell the area to anyone who has yet to visit north Wales's sun belt !
    As to be expected with recent CC guides, when you actually arrive at the route descriptions they are comprehensively described and invariably set alongside sharp crag shots. Of course there is more to Tremadog than Tremadog ! The guidebook area stretches north and east towards the quiet hinterlands of Nantmor, Nant Gwynant and Aberglasllyn. Amongst these backwaters are crags and climbs which range from polished classics,vegetated esoterica to desperate pumpfests !
    Scattered across the quiet rolling lands are some of north Wales's most beautiful climbing venues.  The red rocks of Moel Dyniewyd,the lake side crags above Llyn Gwynant, the rugged little outcrops which sprinkle down from Cnicht and Moel Meirch and not forgetting the quiet crags which look out to sea beneath little Yr Arddu.
    Another new innovation which I liked was the personal favourites sections which were scattered throughout the chapters. Here local activists like Simon Panton, Mike Lewis and Mike Raine offer their own favourite climbs as suggestions. The first ascents section which is normally to be found at the rear of CC guidebooks has been done away with and instead,first ascent details are given beneath each individual climb. The guide offers a graded colour code on route catagories and symbols detail factors such as bird restrictions,a vegetated route,abseil approach etc.
    Overall this is first rate guidebook which has already stimulated my desire to return to an area which I have neglected in recent years. Job done !

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Climbers Club Tremadog guidebook review.


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Quicker Picker from Nether Wallop Trading – Product Review

    Review by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    IT'S IN THE BAG!

    The Quicker Picker from Nether Wallop Trading speeds up the picking of your apples and pears no end. Very much like the apple pickers of old but with a lower price tag and no sharp edges.

    You can reach those out-of-the-way apples, pears, plums, etc. without the need for a ladder. Ladders are dangerous in the wrong hands, as are chainsaws, and with many trees, like mine, for instance, a ladder could not even be used. Nowhere to lean it on to. Thus a picker such as this is the right thing to have, and just in time to get the apples off the tree.

    It's made from galvanised steel and has a cotton bag large enough to hold about a kilo of fruit (that's a bit over two pounds for those that work in old money) and soft enough to prevent bruising. One quick twist of the wrist and the fruit is in the bag!

    The only comment that I think I must make and problem that I have found is that the hooks holding the cotton bag, at least with the sample for test, were not put on properly. The information has been passed to the company and they will ensure that each and every picker is checked before dispatch.

    Easy-to-use on its own, the Quicker Picker can be fixed to a standard (2.5cm/1") broom handle or to a telescopic handle (not supplied) for extra length. Frame diameter: 10cm/4” and the bag is 22cm x 23.2cm (about 5”).

    I found that the thick plastic “launch tubes” of fireworks rockets make a good, sturdy and light handle.

    The Quicker Picker is available from Nether Wallop Trading Co. Ltd.

    RRP £12.50

    A great tool at what I think is a good price.

    © 2010

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Quicker Picker from Nether Wallop Trading – Product Review


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10:10:10 Global Day of Doing fast approaching

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Epsom, UK, 09/29: 10:10:10, that is to say October 10, 2010, 10:10's Global Day of Doing fast approaching. At the time of writing it is less than a fortnight before it will be upon us. Are you ready?

    10:10 has joined forces with international campaign group 350.org to coordinate 10:10:10, the biggest-ever day of positive action on climate change, on Sunday 10 October, 2010. From sumo wrestlers cycling to training in Japan to 10,000 schools planting trees in Croatia and Russia. From a carbon-cutting telethon on national TV in the Netherlands, to the president of the Maldives installing solar panels on his roof, events are already planned in over 140 countries.

    What are you doing?

    Across the world, thousands of people will take simple steps to reduce their emissions, cutting carbon and sending a powerful message to world leaders that people everywhere are ready to tackle climate change. You could mark 10:10:10 with a low-carbon Sunday lunch, make your home or workplace more efficient, or maybe try something extra-ambitious.

    Go on. It is good for you and the Planet.

    Cycling to work could also be an option and to walk the kids to school or use bicycles for that trip instead of overloading the roads with traffic by talking them that short distance by SUV, more often than not.

    Use the bicycle to go to the stores instead of the car. Replace the light bulbs in your home, the old incandescent ones, with CFLs or even LEDs. Make your home or office a slow home or office.

    Let's all make 10:10:10 a success.

    © 2010

    10:10:10 A GLOBAL DAY OF DOING from 10:10 on Vimeo.

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10:10:10 Global Day of Doing fast approaching


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Scottish salmon farmers killing 2000 seals a year

    Major retailers and animal welfare groups, including Sainsburys and the RSPCA, are to attempt to end the killing of seals by the salmon industry.

    Seals are a problem for fish farms as they can damage nets and release salmon, potentially damaging the wild populations.At present with no incentive to adopt non-lethal methods, shooting seals is still considered ‘cheapest and final’ solution for Scottish Salmon industry.

    Earlier this year the Scottish government announced a new licencing scheme which authorises the killing of seals to protect farmed fish, fisheries and fish farms. Campaigners warn the new scheme, which is planned to go live in early 2011, is just a disguise for a ‘nationwide culling system’ and is calling for alternative solutions.

    Andy Ottaway, from the Seal Protection Action Group (SPAG), says, killing seals is a ‘free for all’ in Scotland.

    ‘If you consider a seal a threat to fisheries, then you can kill it. A gun and a bullet solves the problem and it costs…virtually nothing,' he added.

    In the 1970s when the Conservation of Seals Act was passed, formal seal culling was stopped as a result of public protects, but SPAG suggests this just drove the killing underground and there is currently ‘no effective monitoring or enforcement’.

    There is an on-going dispute over the number being killed. The salmon industry claims 489 seals were shot in 2008, but Ottaway states, ‘we think that’s a very conservative figure; we believe…aquaculture is probably responsible for 2-2,500 seals being shot’ per year.

    A Salmon, Aquaculture and Seals Working Group, has now been set up to research alternative non-lethal measures to deter seals from harming the salmon, such as tougher nets, tensionsing and acoustic devises. Members of the group include Sainsbury’s, Freedom Food, the RSPCA, the Sea Mammal Research Unit, International Animal Rescue and Marine Harvest, who will all work together with SPAG.

    ‘If we can stick a man on the moon forty years ago surely we can keep a seal out of fish cage’, Ottaway states. However, while killing is still legal there is seems to be no real pressure on industry to adopt these more expensive non-lethal methods.

    Scott Landsburgh, Chief Executive, Scottish Salmon Producers' Organisation, said: 'Fish farmers believe that exclusion and deterrents form the most effective policy to manage seals that approach fish farms. However, one persistent rogue seal can cause enormous suffering and kill thousands of fish. The welfare of the fish is equally important.'

    Seal culling is a global problem. In Canada over 300,000 seal pups are slaughtered every year and in Namibia 90,000 are killed for skin, fur and meat. Otttaway states, there are ‘less grey seals in the world than African elephants’, and it is reported common seals are in ‘frightening decline’.
    The Ecologist

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Scottish salmon farmers killing 2000 seals a year


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Using salvaged materials in your garden

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Architectural salvage yards can be a great source of inspiration and materials to create a unique garden style, whether it's decorative elements like birdhouses or sundials or structural such as a trellis or pergola.

    However, you often do not have to go to such places even, and in some ways I would even advise against spending your hard earned money at the architectural salvage yards. Much of what you can use in the way of salvaged materials can be found deposited all around the place, whether parks and open spaces or the wider countryside.

    In a way, I guess, I am lucky that in my day-job I come across all manner of things abandoned and fly tipped that can be upcycled for use in the garden as planters and other uses.

    My primary object in my garden is the growing of food, with next year adding also some cut flowers to the story, and I am looking at growing everything as much as possible above grounds, as tending such growing areas is easier. I am not getting any younger, you know.

    As my gardening is for food growing primarily, bar the outside area of the house where I like to have some decorative planters, of sorts, which even include wheelbarrows, for plants and flowers to make the place look somewhat nice, I look for what can be used as planters, from bathtubs and old sinks, over builder's bags to old car tires.

    The latter if they are tubeless radial tires should never be used for planters for the growing of food of any kind. Steel belted radial tires contain cadmium which is a heavy metal and will be taken up by the food crops and thus by you eating those crops. It is an accumulative poison to the human system.

    Planters

    Urns, old stone watering troughs, terracotta pipes, and chimney flues (some of the old ones are really spectacular in design) make ideal planters and some can be used to make container water gardens. Old claw foot bathtubs and even the modern fiberglass ones can be transformed into planters and, if you wanted, into miniature ponds and water gardens, for decorative and wildlife purposes.

    Builder's bags, those one ton bags (and also half-ton and smaller still), made from woven polypropylene are very strong (they are made to hold heavy weights) and nowadays are no longer taken back by the suppliers. Thus they are destined for the landfill and you can do yourself and the environment a good turn by rescuing and repurposing then into planters.

    I find the best way top deal with those bags is to fold the sides down too half-height and then fill with soil. The latter, should it ever compact a little too much, is easy to loosen up again and with a little addition of soil enhancer, whether charcoal- or bracken-based, they will grow anything.

    Abandoned shopping carts, whether metal or plastic, as many are by now in the USA, make great movable garden planters. Line bottom and sides with rubble sacks or such like and then fill with soil and – bingo – a great planter that can be moved about if you need it to get more sun or less or have to clean underneath, etc.

    The shopping cart idea is not one of my original ones; I saw it at some of the community garden projects in the USA with vegetables growing in great abundance in them.

    In my day-job I keep finding such shopping carts abandoned at a more or less regular basis and up until the time that I took pity on them and began converting them into movable garden planters the council had to pay for having them removed. So now there is no need to trash them and I get a nice number of planters. The more the merrier.

    And this is by no means an exhaustive list as to what you could all use for platers. Some folks are using old white goods, washing machines, etc.

    Trellises

    A number of plants in your garden, both food and ornamental ones, like to grow on trellises, whether beans, squash, cucumbers, peas, or gourds, or ornamental plants, such as sweet peas, honeysuckle, etc.

    A trellis can be made from just about anything that vines can climb on. Decorative wrought iron gates and fence panels, orchard and library ladders, window frames, and old lampposts are just a few ideas.

    If you can happen to come across abandoned bicycles there too is trellis material there and all the frames that are no good that I have found – some bikes have been or are being rebuilt – and from which everything salvageable has been removed, will be thus employed.

    Being able to weld both steel and aluminum might be a handy skill to have and having the welder would be good too but there are other ways of making trellises and such out of old bicycle frames and wheels.

    Cold Frames

    Make a cold frame out of old windows. Not that difficult to build with a little thought and planning. Plans and ideas can be found all over the Internet for such small greenhouses. Bigger ones can also be built using old windows. For ideas look at the catalogs of some of the suppliers of such greenhouses. The small upright ones that look a little like a cupboard can certainly be recreated from windows.

    Tires

    Having mentioned tires earlier I shall revisit them here as a separate entity.

    Tires, whether car, van, truck or tractor, can all find uses in the garden though ideally not where they would come into contact with growing produce.

    However, they can be used to create a variety of landscapes, can be used as retaining walls for flower growing areas and so one.

    In addition to that they can even be made into interesting water features if one has the intent of doing so. Three slightly different sized tires, fixed together and sealed so as to avoid the water running inside, and then with a pipe in the center bringing up the water.

    We are here, primarily, talking about the bubbling brook kind of fountain rather than the geyser kind.

    I saw this done recently on the Saltex Exhibition though it was done to show the permeability of a road surfacing product rather than the water features themselves but... a very nice idea nevertheless.

    I am sure you can find many more used of salvaged materials in your garden if you but put your thinking cap on.

    © 2010

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Using salvaged materials in your garden


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Revealed...winners and losers in the UK's rush to wind

    The huge cost of the UK's 'rush to wind' has been revealed by the governments' energy think tank ' UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) who revealed this week that off shore wind farms in particular, produce electricity which per unit is 90% more expensive than conventional power sources and 50% more expensive than nuclear generated electricity. The costs of building offshore wind  farms such as the world's biggest offshore power plant at Thanet in the North Sea which officially opened last week, have doubled due to spiralling prices for steel and the drop in the value of the pound. 
    Independent energy experts have concluded that if the UK meets it's renewable energy targets more than two million households will be pushed into fuel poverty in the UK. The same panel advised that investment in simple domestic,industrial and local government energy conservation could dwarf wind power output and drastically reduce the number of families living in or about to fall into fuel poverty.
    The news is bound to lead to question over the government's policy of using wind power to meet its target to generate around a third of its electricity from renewables by 2020.
    Critics of the state's renewable energy policy such as writer Christopher Brooker was highly critical of the Thanet development which was developed utilising mainly non UK firms and labour. He stated.. 'Over the coming years we will be giving the wind farm's Swedish owners a total of £1.2 billion in subsidies. That same sum, invested now in a single nuclear power station, could yield a staggering 13 times more electricity, with much greater reliability.'
    The Swedish company which developed the world's biggest offshore wind farm,Vattenfall, confirmed that the development will provide just 21 permanent jobs...about the same number of jobs as an average high street branch of Macdonalds! On the basis of the subsidies Vattenfall are receiving each job is effectively costing UK taxpayers £3m per job per year.
    Energy companies involved in wind power production receive colossal subsidies through the system of Renewables Obligation Certificates (ROCs),  paid for by all UK householders through electricity bills. Electricity supply companies are obliged to buy offshore wind energy at three times its normal price, so that each megawatt hour of electricity receives a 200 per cent subsidy of £100.
    This means that the 75MW produced on average by Thanet will receive subsidies of £60 million a year, on top of the £30-40 million cost of the electricity itself. This is guaranteed for the turbines' estimated working life of 20 years, which means that the total subsidy over the next two decades will be some £1.2 billion.
    Great news for shareholders of the multi-national energy corporations and it's allies in Greenpeace/Friends of the Earth....not so good news for low income families about to fall into fuel poverty and the natural environment.

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Revealed...winners and losers in the UK's rush to wind


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Delaware Valley College Hosts Sustainability Symposium

    DOYLESTOWN, PA, September 2010 : Delaware Valley College will bring nationally known speakers and authors to campus when it hosts its 3-day symposium, Oct. 7-9, on issues around climate change, sustainability and our food systems.

    Called “The Precarious Alliance,” the symposium will explore ways to reduce and reverse environmental degradation, economic instability and social inequities.

    It begins off-campus Thursday evening, Oct. 7, with a screening of the film “Food Inc.” at the County Theater in Doylestown. Director and Producer Robert Kenner will be there to lead a discussion.

    Back on the Doylestown campus Friday and Saturday, the symposium will feature such experts as Michael Mandelbaum, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University and author of “The Ideas that Conquered the World.” His session is on how climate change is affecting our economy and the challenges of going green.

    Other speakers include Marion Nestle, Ph.D., New York University and author of “The Food Politics,” who will talk about our failing food system, and Sheila Watt-Cloutier, a Noble Peace Prize nominee who will address the topic of how to achieve a more sustainable world.

    Delaware Valley College is a private, multi-disciplinary college on 571 acres in Doylestown, Pa. Founded in 1896, it features individualized attention, small class sizes and an applied as well as a theoretical approach to learning. The college specializes in the life sciences and offers 27 undergraduate majors, two master’s
    programs and a wide variety of continuing education courses.

    For more information and to register for the symposium go to http://www.precariousalliance.org/.

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Delaware Valley College Hosts Sustainability Symposium


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Wind power breezes through 5GW mark

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    · 5 gigawatts of installed wind capacity in the UK

    · UK wind energy now providing enough electricity for close to 3 million homes

    · Delivery accelerates – 5th GW installed in less than 12 months

    The wind energy industry in the UK has recently been celebrating a milestone of 5GW of installed wind energy capacity, which is enough to supply close to 3 million homes with electricity on an annual basis.

    The 5GW landmark has been achieved by the commissioning of two major wind farm developments in September – Vattenfall’s 300 megawatt (MW) Thanet offshore wind farm, the world’s biggest, which comes on-stream today and the expansion of Fred.Olsen Renewables’ Crystal Rig 200MW onshore wind farm in the Scottish Borders in early September.

    RenewableUK Chief Executive Maria McCaffery MBE, said: “Five gigawatts is an important milestone for two reasons: it takes us within reach of our 2010 targets on renewable electricity, while proving that each successive gigawatt takes less and less time to deploy. Renewable energy generally and wind energy in particular is not alternative energy any longer - it is absolutely mainstream.”

    Øystein Løseth, President and CEO of Vattenfall, said: “Today we are proud to launch Thanet offshore wind farm, the world’s largest operating offshore wind farm. We are pleased that our investment is making a substantial contribution to the delivery of UK renewable energy objectives and to the Isle of Thanet economy. Vattenfall is working hard to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions from its operations, and projects like Thanet Offshore Wind Farm are a cornerstone of delivery.”

    Nick Emery, UK Managing Director for Fred.Olsen Renewables, said: “The opening of Crystal Rig II demonstrates that onshore projects can, and must, continue to make a major contribution in helping the UK meet its renewable energy targets. While Scottish and UK governments have provided the policy to facilitate development, Crystal Rig II demonstrates that large-scale projects onshore are only achievable through appropriate site selection and a robust consultation, project management and planning process. We are delighted that the opening of our flagship project helps the UK renewable energy sector mark this significant milestone.”

    The UK currently has nearly 18GW of wind capacity either consented, in construction or in the planning system in addition to 5GW in operation.

    Christoph Ehlers, Managing Director of Siemens Wind Power UK, who manufacture many of the turbines for the UK market said: "Reaching the 5GW milestone is a great achievement for the UK wind industry. Siemens is proud to have played a major part in this. The latest wind turbine installation at Crystal Rig II in Scotland brings our total capacity to well over the 2GW mark. We have helped lay the foundation for further contribution to the achievement of the UK's 2020 carbon reduction and energy security targets. We are very positive about the prospects for the industry."

    Maria McCaffery added: “Today’s developments are of tremendous significance for meeting our long term renewable energy targets. In 2002 the UK was generating around 2% of all electricity from renewables. We are now on the threshold of 10%, having increased outputs five fold. This demonstrates that, considering the current pipeline of projects, 2020 targets are realistic and achievable, provided the policies are in place.”

    In the Renewable Energy Strategy published in 2009, the Government outlined a scenario for the UK to reach around 30% of electricity from wind by 2020 in order to meet EU targets on reducing carbon emissions.

    The issue, as far as I am concerned. Is that we are still thinking gigantic wind farms rather than small wind which can be generated on every roof in the country the power of which will be in direct current and in the 12volts range which could then used to charge large lead-acid batteries to store the power for use later, so to speak.

    Wind farms of the current size and type create high voltage electricity which must be used immediately and when the wind is not blowing there is no production and no electricity.

    Small is beautiful should be the watchword here as well and our energy security, especially for a world after cheap oil, depends on wind and solar on every roof and small CHP plants on every city block.

    So far, however, neither the wind power folks nor the powers that be get the idea and the message as to how we need to do things in order for us to have an energy future. When the cheap oil is gone and renewables have to bring in every bit of electricity we will be in deep trouble if we do not have ways and means of storing the power for use when the wind does not blow or the sun has gone to bed.

    While it is admirable that the UK is more or less becoming a world leader in wind power generation from the huge turbines we must become the leader in small wind on every roof if we want to be able to make it.

    © 2010

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Wind power breezes through 5GW mark


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Third fatality on Longs Peak

    Keyhole Route: Long Peaks. Denver Davies©

    A third fatality on Longs Peak this summer makes this one of the deadliest years for the mountain.
    John M. Regan, a 57-year-old from Wichita, Kan, died on Saturday after falling about 300 feet from The Ledges on the Keyhole Route of Longs Peak. As summer conditions continue to fade, Rocky Mountain National Park on Sunday changed the rating of that path to technical, making it a climbing route -- not for hikers -- where safety equipment is needed.

    Longs Peak is considered one of the more dangerous 14,000-foot peaks in Colorado because of its long approach, high winds and narrow ledges.

    Jim Detterline, who worked as a ranger on Longs Peak for 20 years and has summitted the mountain 359 times, said there's no one reason why there have been so many deaths this year. But in general, he said, accidents can result from underestimating the difficulty of the climb, wearing the wrong footwear or simply having bad luck.

    "Longs Peak is a very serious mountain," said Detterline, 54, of Estes Park. "It does have some inherent hazards. People have died on Longs Peak who were at the top of their game in mountaineering. They were in the wrong place at the wrong time."
    He also noted that September's weather has extended the season, allowing more people to tackle the mountain. But in the past few days, he said, the conditions have changed thanks to snow above treeline, which melts and then freezes into black ice.

    "It's a different season up there," he said.He said he knows of two other fatal accidents that also happened on The Ledges, a very narrow stretch where the rock has been worn smooth, making it slick.

    Only two other years appear to have as many fatalities as this one, Detterline said.In 1999, three people died on Longs Peak, all from falls. In 2000, two died from falls and one was killed by a lightning strike. On average, one person is killed on Longs Peak each year. Most of the deaths are from falls.

    This year, the first person to die was a 29-year-old Rhode Island man, whose body was discovered in July by another hiker along the Keyhole Route. The man, Jeffrey R. Rosinski was thought to have fallen between 250 and 300 feet.In August, 26-year-old University of Colorado student Benjamin Russell Hebb fell 800 feet while climbing along the Broadway Ledge of the Longs Peak Diamond. Hebb, who lived in Broomfield, was an experienced climber.

    Dray Bullard, who works at Neptune Mountaineering in Boulder and last climbed the Longs Peak Diamond several years ago, said the mountain can be dangerous, depending on the route and weather. It's steep, windy and has spots were there's lots of loose rock, he said."Every time I've been up there, there always has been at least one close call," he said.But, Bullard said the risks are worth taking. "It's really awesome climbing," he said.
    Daily Camera

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Third fatality on Longs Peak


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World's largest wind farm opens off UK coast

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    LONDON – The world's largest offshore wind farm opened off the southeast coast of England on Thursday, as part of the British government's push to boost renewable energy.

    Swedish energy company Vattenfall, which constructed the wind farm, said the 100 turbines off the coast of Thanet could, at their peak, produce enough electricity a year to power the equivalent of more than 200,000 homes.

    The huge site on the North Sea, built seven miles off the coast, will boost the renewable energy now generated by the onshore and offshore wind turbines around the U.K.

    With the opening of the Thanet wind farm, Britain now has the capacity to produce 5 gigawatts of wind-powered energy – roughly the amount of energy needed to power all the homes in Scotland, Energy Secretary Chris Huhne said.

    Britain currently gets only 3% of its energy from renewable sources but is aiming for a target of 15% by 2020

    "We are an island nation and I firmly believe we should be harnessing our wind, wave and tidal resources to the maximum," Huhne said at a ceremony at sea as he officially opened the Thanet wind farm.

    Each Thanet turbine is up to 380 feet (115 meters) tall and the site is as large as 4,000 football fields. Vattenfall said its new farm could generate 300 megawatts of energy at full capacity, although critics note that wind power output can be intermittent and variable. The company said the farm is expected to operate for at least 25 years.

    Environmental group Friends of the Earth said Britain's record on renewable energy is still dismal and urged more investment in green energy projects.

    The group wants the British government to guarantee funding of at least £2 billion ($3.1 billion) a year for the Green Investment Bank, which aims to boost private-sector spending on low-carbon technology.

    The aim for 15% by 2020 of renewable power being used in the UK is all fine and good but the problem that I am foreseeing, and I am not alone there for the Industry Task Force on Peak Oil and Energy Security, headed amongst other by Richard Branson of Virgin, that we may be out of cheap oil by earlier than that date.

    This means that we MUST have a much higher target and one that is achievable not with the large turbines. Small wind and solar on every roof is a must.

    © 2010

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World's largest wind farm opens off UK coast


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Expectations Scaled Back for Cancún Climate Summit

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    WASHINGTON, DC: When, following months of hype, ministers and negotiating teams arrived in Copenhagen last December for a summit on climate change, the expectations for what could be accomplished were unrealistic, say some, and made the successes that did occur seem less important than they were, says the climate chief of Mexico, which will host this year’s successor to the Copenhagen summit.

    The expectations, however, had been raised by a great many of the government representatives attending Copenhagen in claiming what they were all prepared to do. In the end the, basically, did nada.

    Luis Alfonso de Alba says that he is doing what he can to ensure that the summit, starting in late November in Cancún, will avoid those expectation traps and instead focus on specific goals that can be accomplished and which can lay the groundwork for a more ambitious, legally binding treaty several years down the line. This might, in fact, be a good idea.

    "Before Copenhagen, most negotiators were aware that we were far from what was still being considered the goal – a legally binding outcome…but we still went to Copenhagen with the expectation of having that single treaty," de Alba told reporters Thursday in Washington. From the start, the Cancún process has been different, he said.

    How long before that legally binding treaty becomes a possibility?

    "Some countries are setting their sights on South Africa next year. Our view is that it will take longer than that," said Eliot Diringer, vice president for international strategies at the Pew Centre on Global Climate Change, which hosted de Alba’s briefing. "Generally I think we're seeing a greater sense of pragmatism within the negotiations and a recognition that we won't have a binding outcome this year."

    It is hoped that this more deliberative, pragmatic negotiation process will lead to decisions that can lay the institutional infrastructure for that global climate treaty somewhere in the future.

    "Waiting until after South Africa doesn’t mean there won’t be action," noted de Alba, saying he sees a number of concrete decisions that can be taken in Cancún that won’t be affected by a lack of a legally binding treaty.

    Hold a moment, folks! We do not have time to have another load of gabfests where a lot of hot air is being produced but nothing decided. And what even if something is decided? It then takes years and decades to implement that. Time is running out. Which part of “we have no time left” do they not understand?

    On the other hand, the end of cheap oil and the recently predicted end of cheap coal may just help us all and especially the Planet.

    Concrete goals

    The areas that de Alba is trying to emphasize as he leads Mexico’s preparations for hosting the summit are finance and transparency.

    "We’ve tried to bring down the general goals and then identify chapter by chapter what can be done," he said.

    Within that approach, he is defining success at Cancún as an agreement that confirms the commitments made in Copenhagen and allows negotiators to go home with specific action that can get done immediately. He emphasized that dealing with climate change requires steps and a time-line.

    One of those steps would be to ensure that the financial commitments of industrialized countries are fulfilled. To that end, the Dutch government, with assistance from Mexico and international organizations, has set up a website to track whether those countries are providing the money they said they would and where that money is going.

    The non-binding Copenhagen accord that came out of last year’s summit promised 30 billion dollars in so-called fast start financing to be provided to developing countries by richer countries between 2010 and 2012. This money would be both for mitigation – moving away from reliance on fossil fuels – and to assist with damage caused by climate-related disasters.

    A long-term financing mechanism is still needed, however, as well as the institutional framework that would be able to decide which projects in which countries that financing goes to.

    Even without a binding treaty, the "infrastructure" of a global climate system could be built up and countries could begin to get comfortable within that infrastructure, explained Diringer.

    "For us, a set of decisions in Cancún that begins to fill out the architecture would in fact be a significant success," he said, citing finance and transparency as the key issues. "If we can achieve agreement on them we can also make progress across the full suite of issues."

    Taking the reverse approach

    The move toward greater transparency, it is hoped, will increase the trust between countries and allow for stronger commitments and consensus at Cancún and future conferences.

    There has already been some progress in advancing this trust.

    De Alba cites Copenhagen’s success in fostering for the first time the recognition that everyone – even developing countries – shares responsibility for fighting climate change.

    But the fact that the only outcome was a non-binding agreement hashed out behind closed doors by a select few countries – and which then failed to be fully approved – means "the priority task is rebuilding trust and confidence", he said.

    With that in mind, he has, since Copenhagen, participated in consultations around the world in countries that felt their concerns were not necessarily taken into account in the Copenhagen accord.

    "The main focus of these consultations was rebuilding trust and creating a very inclusive process of negotiations and consultations that would be fully in line with the best practices of the U.N. and the multilateral system," de Alba explained.

    He says this approach could be seen as the reverse of that taken in the run-up to Copenhagen.

    "Before Copenhagen, the concentration was very much on the major emitters, and what we have been doing since January is going to the bottom and going from the bottom to the top – particularly to those countries that were not satisfied with the results of Copenhagen, that complained of not having been involved to the full extent in the process."

    Chief among those critics was Bolivia, which hosted its own World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in April. The meeting drew some 35,000 environmental activists from 125 nations, who called for the creation of a climate justice tribunal, with powers to prosecute persons or companies responsible for pollution, and for a thorough reform of the U.N. to allow countries that fail to live up to their greenhouse gas reduction commitments to be put on trial.

    "May the next meeting in Mexico not be in vain; may decisions be taken for the benefit of all people," Bolivian President Evo Morales said at the close of that summit.

    However, are the governments really serious of achieving anything? In all honesty, personally, I do not think so. They want to maintain the status quo and the business as usual model of the economy, etc. This is, though, not an option.

    The way things are going events more than likely will overtake the proceedings of all those gabfests that create more CO2 than some countries and thus force us all, individuals, families, and nations, to make the needed changes. The only problem is that it might come at a price, the price of hunger and darkness for some years. Look at what happened when Cuba faced it's own Peak Oil.

    Maybe that is the only way we will ever learn to do things. As far as I can I am preparing for the time after cheap oil and the best things there is already that I am not a car owner and -driver but just use my feet and a bicycle.

    © 2010

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Expectations Scaled Back for Cancún Climate Summit


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Kilimanjaro's vanishing ice due to tree felling

    AGGRESSIVE tree-felling on mount Kilimanjaro could be partly to blame for its vanishing ice cap.
    The ice on Kilimanjaro's summit has shrunk to just 15 per cent of its extent in 1912, leading campaigners to hold it up as a symbol of climate change. But other factors are also at play. For instance, the air at the summit is getting drier, reducing the snowfall that replenishes the ice and reflects solar radiation.
    Now Nicholas Pepin from the University of Portsmouth, UK, and colleagues say deforestation could be an important part of the puzzle. Between September 2004 and July 2008, the team took hourly humidity and temperature readings at 10 elevations on the mountain. These revealed that daytime heating generates a flow of warm, moist air up the mountainside (Global and Planetary Change, DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2010.08.001).
    Trees play an important role here by providing moisture through transpiration. Pepin suggests that extensive local deforestation in recent decades has likely reduced this flow of moisture, depleting the mountain's icy hood.

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Kilimanjaro's vanishing ice due to tree felling


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London Mayor announces London Green Fund

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, not to be confused with the Lord Mayor, recently announced proposals for a multi-million pound "London Green Fund" to boost London's low carbon economy, create jobs and tackle climate change. The fund is expected to progress energy efficiency measures to cut carbon across London, unlock savings on fuel bills. The resulting revenue will then pay off the loans to be ploughed back into the green fund.

    The fund aims to leverage millions of pounds of private investment, bolster energy and new waste technology initiatives and enable the development of carbon cutting infrastructure, at the scale required to meet the Mayor's 60 per cent carbon reduction target by 2025.

    Committed to provide an initial £4 million to develop and kick-start the fund, the Mayor intends to attract co-investment from a range of bodies, such as the EU, philanthropic funds, climate charities and the private sector. London Thames Gateway companies are likely to benefit from a whole host of new opportunities that will arise from the fund. Those operating in the retrofit market may also experience a significant boost if local public sector organisations such as NHS Trusts, universities and borough councils are allowed to use the fund to have their large building estates retrofitted.

    The London Development Agency (LDA) is currently developing a simple framework for organisations to replicate the energy efficiency programme that is currently being implemented in 100 Greater London Authority group buildings.

    The Mayor's green fund plans are contained in "Leading to a Greener London", detailing his environment and climate change priorities for London. The Mayor wants to improve Londoners' quality of life through an ambitious series of environmental improvements – tackling climate change, reducing pollution/improving air quality, consuming fewer resources and using resources more effectively – which also exploit the new opportunities coming from developing a low carbon economy.

    It is about time that we got things rolling but as to whether this is going to be any better than the Boris bikes is certainly a question. Far too much playing around is happening and half measures rather than tackling issues face on.

    While cycle hire schemes are a nice idea so far not a single one, whether in London or other cities around the globe, seems to have been a success.

    What we need really, instead of such schemes, is proper cycle paths in every part of our towns and cities and across most of the country in the way as they exist in many parts of the European mainland, with the Netherlands, Denmark and Germany in the lead.

    London's cycle super highway is also one of those half-baked ideas that seems to have been badly thought out for instead of separating the cyclists from the danger of the cars cyclists still have to negotiate serious traffic issues on those routes.

    One wanted to have a headline grabbing idea and gave birth to that baby, as so often, rather prematurely before the idea had been properly matured and researched.

    Yes, creating proper separated cycle lanes will cost money but it will prevent accidents and it will get many more people to cycle and thus reducing the amount of car journeys.

    © 2010

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London Mayor announces London Green Fund


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Energy Infrastructure Tops Bill at European Future Energy Forum this October

    World-class business leaders will be gathering for three days of intense discussions on the future of energy at the European Future Energy Forum in London, October 19-21, 2010. Top of the agenda will be European energy infrastructure and the changes we are going to see in the future to drastically cut emissions.

    Leading the discussion will be Philip Lowe, Director-General Energy, European Commission, Nick Winser, Executive Director, National Grid, Dr Chuan Zhang, Programme Manager, The Crown Estate and Fintan Slye, Operations Director, EirGrid all of whom are planning to deliver expert insight on infrastructure developments now and for the future. Ulrik Stridbæk, Manager of Regulatory Affairs, DONG Energy and Guy Nicholson, Head of Grid and Regulation, renewableUK are also expected to give their views on policy decisions that are needed to effect change in how we consume energy in Europe.

    A dedicated energy infrastructure conference stream will run on both day 2 and day 3 of the forum, October 20 and 21. The stream will look at smart grids, super grids, the challenges of integrating renewables in the grid, carbon capture storage and energy storage. Exciting speakers who will be presenting showcases include Kasper Lou, Senior Manager, Analysis and Regulatory Affairs, DONG Energy, Simon Bennett, CCS Project Network Manager, European Commission and Stephen Clarke, CEO, Applied Intellectual Capital.

    When asked about the smart grid, another high-anticipated speaker, Philippe Delorme, Strategy & Innovation Executive VP, Schneider Electric said: "The deployment of the smart grid and intelligent electrical distribution network should be done quickly, not only to respond to the demands of the new technology for network managers and operators but above all to take into account the expectations of the consumer as well as the new uses for energy that they are developing."

    Carbon Capture and Storage is viewed as an essential technology in the drive to reduce global carbon emissions, whilst maintaining the security of energy supply. This session brings together leading speakers to discuss the status of CCS as well as the progress on various industrial scale projects, while highlighting the current challenges and drivers for the industry.

    The CCS session will be chaired by Ed Crooks, Energy Editor, Financial Times and will include contributions from Prof Jim Skea OBE, Research Director, UK Energy Research Centre, Jeff Chapman, Chief Executive, UK Carbon Capture and Storage Association and Sam Nader, Director, Masdar Carbon.

    A session on the challenge of integrating renewables into the grid will offer expert insight into one of the leading issues facing renewable energy deployment. The session will look at the energy supply chain, the issue of intermittency and smart grids and interconnectors. Colin Henry, Business Development Manager – Smart Grid, Siemens Energy says: “The world is facing one of the biggest challenges it has ever faced with escalating climate change and the need to develop new low carbon energy supplies to replace fossil fuels. Smart Grid offers a long term sustainable solution to this challenge by creating the infrastructure to integrate and optimise our energy resources from distributed sources. It will enable us to meet the pressures placed on our rapidly expanding cities and ensure that we have reliable and sustainable sources of energy.”

    Energy storage will wind up the infrastructure stream of the European Future Energy Forum, looking at batteries, large-scale storage and super capacitors for heat, electricity and vehicles. Speakers include Andrew Haslett, Director Strategy Development, Energy Technologies Institute and Phil Barker, Chief Engineer, Hybrid and Electric Vehicles, Lotus Engineering and Garry Staunton, Technology Director, Carbon Trust Innovations.

    The European Future Energy Forum will cover all elements of future energy solutions including the highest level of decision making and investment and funding solutions to really make a difference. Other conference streams include renewable energy, eco-transport, future energy finance, green buildings and green cities. Plenary sessions on October 19 involve a world future energy leaders panel discussion on ‘Bridging the gap between developed and developing nations’ and a future energy movers and shakers panel discussion on ‘Where is the money coming from to fund the new energy revolution?’

    Alongside the conference, EFEF 2010 will feature a prestigious exhibition that will accommodate thousands of visitors and offer up to 200 of the region’s leading renewable energy suppliers, space to demonstrate solutions and business opportunities for the environmental technology market.

    The exhibition hall is also the meeting place for round table sessions, networking lunches, refreshment breaks and private business meetings. There are limited stands still available. See www.EuropeanFutureEnergyForum.com for further details and the full conference programme or contact the team on info@EuropeanFutureEnergyForum.com

    The European Future Energy Forum is an initiative developed with Masdar (Abu Dhabi’s multi-faceted, multi-billion dollar investment in the development and commercialisation of innovative technologies in renewable, alternative and sustainable energies) and part of the Future Energy Event series of events that includes the World Future Energy Summit held annually in Abu Dhabi.

    The first European Future Energy Forum was launched with great success in 2009 in Bilbao, Spain and saw 3,638 attendees from 43 countries worldwide attend. The format of the event is based on creating a vibrant environment where high-level debate can take place on through a large conference platform, as well as knowledge exchanging workshops, small round table discussions and international networking and business meetings.

    The content of EFEF2010 will cover:

    • European Policy

    • Investment and funding

    • Green buildings

    • Clean transport

    • Solar photovoltaic

    • Solar thermal

    • Wind

    • Biofuels

    • Ocean power

    • Geothermal

    • Waste to energy

    • Fuel cells

    • Carbon management

    • Environment strategy

    • Nuclear

    • Hydroelectric Power

    This event brings together businesses and organisations that have solutions and opportunities for the global renewable energy and environmental technology market with large international investors and government decision makers. For further information see www.EuropeanFutureEnergyForum.com

    UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) is the government organisation that helps UK-based companies succeed in the global economy. We also help overseas companies bring their high quality investment to the UK’s economy – acknowledged as Europe’s best place from which to succeed in global business. UKTI offers expertise and contacts through its extensive network of specialists in the UK, and in British embassies and other diplomatic offices around the world. We provide companies with the tools they require to be competitive on the world stage.

    For more information visit: www.uktradeinvest.gov.uk

    www.youtube.com/UKTIWeb

    http://blog.ukti.gov.uk

    www.flickr.com/ukti

    http://twitter.com/ukti

    The Masdar Initiative is Abu Dhabi’s multi-faceted, multi-billion dollar investment in the development and commercialisation of innovative technologies in renewable, alternative and sustainable energies as well as sustainable design.

    Masdar is driven by the Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (ADFEC), a wholly owned company of the government of Abu Dhabi through the Mubadala Development Company. In January 2008, Abu Dhabi announced it will invest $15 billion in Masdar, the largest single government investment of its kind.

    For more information about the Masdar Initiative, please visit www.masdaruae.com

    The European Future Energy Forum is a joint venture between Turret Middle East and Bilbao Exhibition Centre. Turret Middle East a leading organiser of events and foundation partner of the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre, launched the World Future Energy Summit and series of events with Masdar in 2007, before selling a share of the portfolio to Reed Exhibitions. For more information see www.turretme.com

    Bilbao Exhibition Centre was host to the first European Future Energy Forum and continues to be a major stakeholder in the organisation of the event. As well as being one of the most modern trade fair and congress venues in Europe, they also organise a number of leading events of international profile in various sectors. For more information see www.bec.eu

    Source: European Future Energy Forum

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Energy Infrastructure Tops Bill at European Future Energy Forum this October


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Bangladeshi/Nepalese team target unclimbed 'Friendship peak'

     DHAKA: A group of Bangladeshi and Nepali mountaineers will team up for a joint attempt to scale a previously unconquered Himalayan peak, the Bangladeshi team leader said today.

    The 12-member team will begin the expedition on October 3 and estimate that scaling the 6,257-metre (20,528-foot) peak — known locally as Chhekego — could take 21 days, said MA Muhit, the Bangladeshi team’s leader.
      “If we successfully scale the unclaimed or virgin peak, we plan to name it the Bangladesh-Nepal Friendship Peak,” he said.
    The mountain, which is on the Nepal-Tibet border northeast of Kathmandu, has not been formally named as no one has successfully scaled it, Muhit added. Five attempts have been made by European trekkers, the latest in 2009 by a Norwegian team, but all have failed due to technical difficulties, Muhit said. Nepal recognises 120 unclaimed peaks in its portion of the Himalayas, but mountaineers say there may be up to 400 more.

    Low-lying Bangladesh has few mountaineers, but public interest in climbing was given a boost when a Bangladeshi journalist, Musa Ibrahim, conquered Mount Everest in May.
    The Himalayan Times

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Bangladeshi/Nepalese team target unclimbed 'Friendship peak'


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Diamond Anniversary

    The Diamond

    Back in 1954, Boulder's Dale Johnson must have seemed like a madman.
    He was the first to seek permission from the National Park Service to climb the Diamond -- a 1,000-foot plaque of vertical granite on the northeast face of Longs Peak. At that time, 16 people had already lost their lives on the much easier facets of Longs, so the NPS viewed climbing the Diamond as lunacy. Additionally, the NPS had risked its personnel on dozens of rescues on technically easy terrain. It couldn't accept the possibility of rescuing crazy Diamond climbers, so the NPS banned all climbing attempts.
    Undeterred, Johnson continued to pester the NPS. He even summoned his own rescue team so as not to endanger the park service's. As he was denied, the lure of the forbidden Diamond became stronger. By 1960, the Diamond glinted as the most famous unclimbed wall in America.
    When the NPS finally acquiesced, Johnson immediately began preparing his attempt. But work obligations prevented an immediate assault for his partner, Ray Northcutt, who was in Montana for the summer. When Johnson learned that two California climbers -- Robert Kamps, an elementary school teacher, and David Rearick, a mathematics Ph.D. -- applied for a climbing permit, the race was on.
    Kamps and Rearick were fit from a month in Yosemite, and on July 27, 1960, they were granted permission for an August attempt on the Diamond. Three days later, Kamps, his wife, Bonnie, Rearick and friend Jack Laughlin trekked to the Chasm Lake Shelter.


    The following day, Kamps' and Rearick's own four-member support/rescue team arrived. They schlepped loads of gear up to Broadway, a ledge at the base of the Diamond, where they intended to sleep, but heavy rain drove them back to the shelter. In the 1961 "American Alpine Journal," Rearick wrote, "The grim aspect of the Diamond looming over us, veiled in clouds and weeping streams of water, did little for our morale."


    Monday, Aug. 1, dawned cold and windy, but clear. The pair boldly chose a crack system (later dubbed D1) splitting the center of the Diamond at its tallest point and began climbing at 9:30 a.m. A mix of free and aid climbing brought them one-third of the way up, but by 4 p.m. the weather threatened. They rappelled to their bivouac on Broadway.
    The next morning, they ascended fixed ropes back to their highpoint. One pitch higher, the rock quality deteriorated and the wall tipped backward. Rearick wrote, "For the next several hundred feet the climbing would be largely direct-aid, overhanging, and quite strenuous. The rope moved very slowly now through my hands as Bob labored upward." The wall was so steep that Kamps and Rearick climbed behind a narrow waterfall that gushed from the summit slopes.
    The team scaled four pitches that day but was caught by darkness well below the top. They spent the night of Aug. 2 two-thirds up the wall, without sleeping bags, sharing a ledge 2 feet wide and 7 feet long.
    Early the next morning, they cut all ties to the ground and prusiked back to their highpoint. Later that year, in "Trail and Timberline," Kamps wrote: " ... when we stepped into our prusik loops, and swung into space, retreat would be impossible." Higher up, as they neared the source of the cascade, they encountered "water, moss, and overhanging chockstones." Two pitches from the top, Kamps hung in slings to belay; ledges were non-existent. Rearick recalled, "A more exposed position is hard to imagine."
    On the 11th and last pitch, they squirmed up a cold, wet chimney. "At one point," wrote Rearick, "I remember doing a layback against a block of ice." Kamps and Rearick surmounted the Diamond at 1:15 p.m. on Aug. 3, 1960.
    Climbers never "conquer" a wall or a mountain. If they're lucky, they remain unconquered themselves. Fifty years ago, Bob Kamps and Dave Rearick -- who now lives in Boulder -- beat the odds, beat the locals and beat themselves up, arriving on top changed men.
    In the next half-century, many climbers will come and go, but the Diamond is forever.


    Bruce Miller climbing towards the upper crack on D1

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Diamond Anniversary


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Global warming heats up a renaissance of nuclear energy

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Global warming and the BP oil spill have helped rehabilitate nuclear energy in the eyes of the public – and even in the eyes of a fair number of environmentalists.

    Sorry, who, what? Environmentalist on the nuclear bandwagon? Apparently so. They even do not seem to realize that we cannot afford nuclear... However, they keep harping on, nowadays, about that nuclear-power does not give off CO2 and such emissions. Are they mad?

    Fine, so we have no CO2 emissions and other greenhouse gases but the radioactive waste is going to kill us and everything else. Great idea – NOT.

    In Germany the nuclear power stations have been given and extension of their lifetime by the government and you can bet your bottom dollar, aside from the power of the nuclear-power lobby, this is all to do with Peak Oil and the governments knowing more than they are prepared to tell the people.

    In the USA Dominion Energy Inc. is one of more than a dozen companies nationwide seeking licenses from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission to build and operate 22 new reactors. And it could just be that they are going to get those licenses too.

    The governments are scared out of their pants over the prospects of oil, and especially the cheap oil everything has been built upon, running out and are fighting for survival of the status quo.

    Dominion, and the industry as a whole, seem to be enjoying a nuclear renaissance in the minds of many, including, unfortunately, even supposed environmentalists. Global warming has energized the quest for clean, carbon-free energy that won't add to the greenhouse effect; and the BP oil spill has added to the distaste for fossil-fuel dependence. But we cannot, let me stress that again, afford nuclear-power and that for a number of reasons.

    They governments and the powers that be are all looking only to nuclear, it would seem. Why? Why not going hell for leather into renewable energy? The technologies are there. They all need only a little help here and there but the help is rather given to oil, coal and nuclear.

    More than likely the reason that they are in bed with the fossil fuel and nuclear industries is the fact that that is where much of the campaigning monies come from and much of the monies to run their political parties.

    Public and political acceptance of nuclear power as a logical large-scale alternative to fossil fuel is higher than it has been in a generation. Once mainly associated with mishaps like Three Mile Island and Chernobyl – not to mention bumbling nuclear plant worker Homer Simpson – the energy source now has support from 62 percent of Americans, a Gallup Poll found in March. That's the highest since Gallup began asking about the topic in 1994.

    Even former foes like Stewart Brand, founder of the Whole Earth Catalog and an alternative-energy crusader, and Mark Udall, a member of the Udall family Democratic political dynasty that has stewarded natural resources, are rethinking the nuclear energy option. They're influenced more by the immediately tangible environmental consequences of greenhouse gases than by possible radiation disasters.

    Nevertheless, many environmentalists disagree, and are disappointed at having to reopen a battle they thought was won long ago. They still have concerns about nuclear-power safety, but also have advanced another: The plants take too long to build (up to a decade) and are too costly ($14 billion for two proposed Georgia plants) to make much difference in the next two decades, when they contend it is most crucial to combat global warming.

    Environment America, a federation of green groups, stated in a recent report that energy efficiency and renewable sources such as wind, solar, and geothermal can do the job faster and cheaper. The report estimates that building 100 new reactors would require a $600 billion investment – but that same amount invested in other carbon-free technologies could cut at least twice as much carbon pollution by 2030.

    No new nuclear plants have been constructed in the United States in the past three decades. The expense of building them drove some utilities into bankruptcy in the 1970s and '80s, causing Wall Street to become wary about lending start-up capital for new ones.

    As an alternative to building such behemoths, some in the industry have been investigating the concept of smaller nuclear plants, dubbed "backyard nukes." The modular plants – some as small as a refrigerator – would be buried underground and could generate more than 25 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 20,000 homes.

    I would suggest that we listen to Environment America and others who know that nuclear is not – let me repeat that NOT – an option, not even for a decade. It is not only the danger from accidents but the serious ongoing danger of radiation from the nuclear waste.

    Nuclear is NOT the option, regardless what the general public is being made to believe and regardless also whether or not some misguided “environmentalists” are now, suddenly, pro-nuclear. Who paid them?

    © 2010

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Global warming heats up a renaissance of nuclear energy


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Greensumption going mad

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    It just is not stopping, the total madness of greensumption, the replacement of ordinary consumption.

    Time and again we have bamboo advertised by green vendors as “green”, “environmentally friendly”, etc., when it is neither and we still have the totally useless “Eco-Button” being sold at around $18. Folks, that thing does what your PC's sleep function does, no more.

    And these are but a few of the things that are going on and I don't know whether I should scream or just shoot a few merchants (no, I am not actually contemplating that as I am rather short of ammo).

    I have yet to find a green trader who is not on the same bandwagon as all stores; that of trying to get people to spend, spend, and spend even more, though in this case on “green” products.

    It does seem to matter not as to who the merchant is, they are all up to the same; namely that of screwing the green consumer.

    The mindset of the high street has also filtered through, lock, stock and barrel, to the green corridor, and the same tactics are being employed.

    I could name trader after vendor and online store but won't do that, for the moment at least. It could come to that at some other time though for we are getting too far down the road by now.

    Had we not wanted to do away with that kind of consumerism and the economy of more, more and more when the green movement started?

    As far as I can remember, and I think I can remember further, it would seem, than many of the greenies in the movement now, that is what our aim was. Shame it all went down the tube.

    We must get back on track and sort the green movement out and smother greensumption now before it gets completely out of control and becomes but a green version of consumption and consumerism.

    Or is it too late already?

    Personally I am rather concerned, nay scared, that in fact it may be, as the green consumerism seems to be rolling along like an avalanche with no one being able to stop it.

    Don't get me wrong. I do like all the efforts of recycling this and that and even to such an extent that they are salable products but there are so many products that are given green credentials which they do not deserve, and bamboo, whether flooring or clothing, is one of them.

    Also I have a problem with the likes of the “beltlace” (recycled product), which is little more than a piece of old rope and a few offcuts of wood, painted, selling for £75 and the “recycled bottle vase”, which is no more than a simple wine bottle wrapped with colored cotton string (something Hippie kids did in the early 70's), selling for £35. And this is but a small collection where greensumption is going stupid. Then again should greensumption have ever started?

    © 2010

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Greensumption going mad


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Rambling as an artistic statement.

    Simon English:Portrait of the artist as a rambler.G Robinson

    When Simon English concluded a 5,000-mile ramble through the hills and dales of England in 1971, he thought a once in a lifetime adventure had reached its end. But the 61-year-old has now repeated the epic excursion almost 40 years later, retracing his steps along a route he planned by drawing the word England on a map.He has taken fresh photographs of 75 points along the route that he captured on his original journey, creating a fascinating record of the sweeping changes to the English landscape in recent decades.

    Fields have become car parks and roads, hedgerows have grown or been cut down, trees have been destroyed by new diseases and farms have been forced to diversify. The father-of-two spent three months retracing the original route spelling out the word England from Cumbria to Southampton. The route is 275 miles long and 40 miles wide, with 10 miles between each point.He said: "It was very interesting going back to all these places that I had been to as a young man and it was lovely to see how they had changed.

    "Every point has a different story to tell. In some places a rotten tree stump was still there after 40 years, but in others a once healthy tree had completely disappeared and was now a pile of sawdust."In many cases the hedges had grown much bigger and taller, but I was also surprised by how some places had hardly changed in four decades."

    Mr English, a conceptual artist who lives in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, first spent the summer of 1971 hitchhiking along the route with friends.Then a student at Leeds College of Art, he drew the word England in large letters on a map and worked out the exact grid references he would need to visit to trace the word on foot.The route spanned 20 of the then 41 English counties and Mr English spent two months travelling from Hadrian's Wall in the north of England to the south coast, using maps to navigate his way to remote fields and farms, towns and tracks.

    At each stop he took one black and white photograph using a Pentax camera and one colour picture using 35mm colour slide film. He also left tiny St George's Crosses on tree trunks, gateposts and pylons at every point.

    "As I retrace my steps I'm very impressed by the young man who did it originally," Mr English said."I had to rely on maps to find each place and I'd sleep under a hedge, then hitchhike to the next point. "I was actually surprisingly accurate and there are only two points I seem to have put in slightly the wrong place originally so it was harder to find them again."

    Mr English, who now lives with his wife Wendy and has two daughters, aged 24 and 21, used GPS, virtual cartography and a digital camera to retrace his original journey.The rambler revisted his original 75 places as part of The Re-Enchantment, a year long arts project produced by artevents, a production agency in London.

    The Telegraph

Post Title

Rambling as an artistic statement.


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/09/rambling-as-artistic-statement.html


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World Habitat Day October 4, 2010

    The United Nations has designated the first Monday in October as annual World Habitat Day.

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    On October 4, 2010, in recognition of World Habitat Day, Habitat for Humanity will try to raise awareness of the need for improved shelter and will highlight Habitat’s priorities: the worldwide connection between human health and housing, and, in the United States, neighborhood revitalization. These themes echo the United Nations’ chosen theme for 2010 for events in the host city of Shanghai, China and the rest of the world: “Better City, Better Life.”

    Every week, more than a million people are born in, or move to, cities in the developing world. As a result, the urban population of developing countries will double from 2 billion to 4 billion in the next 30 years. (Kissick, et al: 2006)

    It can be estimated that, due to Peak Oil and other issues, in the future even more people will be moving into towns and cities simply because living in the sprawling suburbs and commuting to work miles and miles will no longer be feasible.

    By the year 2030, an additional 3 billion people, about 40 percent of the world’s population, will need access to housing. This translates into a demand for 96,150 new affordable units every day and 4,000 every hour. (UN-HABITAT: 2005)

    Habitat for Humanity hopes that by raising awareness and advocating for universal decent housing we can dismantle and alter the systems that allow for poverty housing and make an affordable, decent place to live a reality for all.

    Habitat for Humanity World Habitat Day events

    Around the world, many Habitat for Humanity local offices have organized World Habitat Day events.

    Habitat for Humanity’s 27th annual Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Work Project is a World Habitat Day event this year. It will be held on October 4 – 8 in six cities in the United States.

    Held in a different location each year, Habitat’s Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter Work Project is an annual, internationally-recognized week of building that brings attention to the need for simple, decent and affordable housing.

    This year, the Carters will work alongside volunteers in Washington, D.C.; Baltimore and Annapolis, Md.; Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.; and Birmingham, Ala. to build, rehabilitate and improve 86 homes.

    Health and housing

    Habitat’s World Habitat Day efforts will focus on the link between housing and health, for example, through the release of the 2011 Shelter Report, which focuses on the need for more research on the connections between healthy homes and healthy families around the world.

    Housing, according to many studies, improves health

    • The number of low-income families who lack safe and affordable housing is related to the number of children who suffer from asthma, viral infections, anemia, stunted growth and other health problems. About 21,000 children have stunted growth attributable to the lack of stable housing; 10,000 children between the ages of 4 and 9 are hospitalized for asthma attacks each year because of cockroach infestation at home; and more than 180 children die each year in house fires attributable to faulty heating and electrical equipment. (Sandel, et al: 1999)

    • Children younger than 5 living in Habitat for Humanity houses in Malawi showed a 44 percent reduction in malaria, respiratory or gastrointestinal diseases compared with children living in traditional houses.

    • Children in poor housing have increased risk of viral or bacterial infections and a greater chance of suffering mental health and behavioral problems. (Harker: 2006)

    • Housing deprivation leads to an average of 25 percent greater risk of disability or severe ill health across a person’s life span. Those who suffer housing deprivation as children are more likely to suffer ill health in adulthood, even if they live in non-deprived conditions later in life. (Marsh, et al.: 2000)

    Housing has a positive impact on children

    • Children of homeowners are more likely to stay in school (by 7 to 9 percent), and daughters of homeowners are less likely to have children by age 18 (by 2 to 4 percent). (Green and White: 1996)

    • Owning a home leads to a higher-quality home environment, improved test scores in children (9 percent in math and 7 percent in reading), and reduced behavioral problems (by 3 percent). (Haurin, Parcel, and Haurin: 2002)

    • Children who live in poor housing have lower educational attainment and a greater likelihood of being impoverished and unemployed as adults. (Harker: 2006)

    Neighborhood revitalization

    In the United States, Habitat for Humanity will also focus on neighborhood revitalization. In a broad effort to help communities fulfill their aspirations, Habitat will expand its housing programs to include repairing more homes, rehabbing more vacant homes, and improving the energy-efficiency of homes. Habitat will work with partners to provide holistic improvements in a community.

    Housing strengthens communities, and this is a number of ways:

    • Homeowners are more likely to know their U.S. representative (by 10 percent) and school board head by name (by 9 percent), and are more likely to vote in local elections (by 15 percent) and work to solve local problems (by 6 percent). (DiPasquale and Glaeser: 1998)

    • Homeowners are more likely to be satisfied with their homes and neighborhoods, and are more likely to volunteer in civic and political activities. (Rohe, Van Zandt, and McCarthy: 2000)

    • Resident ownership is strongly related to better building security and quality, and to lower levels of crime. (Saegert and Winkel: 1998)

    It must be said that home-ownership, in my experience, is not always the necessary thing for the above; just having an affordable home in itself does all those things. This can be seen from places where more people rent than own homes and still are all happy and well, in a way.

    Home-ownership is not the key but, as I said, access to safe and affordable homes, whether rented or owned. The individual house in the suburbs is not sustainable and never really has been if commuting to work over long distance is part of the equation as well.

    That will mean that we need new different homes in towns and cities, whether owned by the occupants or rented at a fair and affordable rate, so that people can, as they will have to, be able to live in walking or cycling distance from their places of work.

    It would be good if Habitat for Humanity could also look at this and how this need can be fulfilled.

    © 2010


Post Title

World Habitat Day October 4, 2010


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/09/world-habitat-day-october-4-2010.html


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Consumerism, a Serious Addiction

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Over the last half a century and a little more we, in the developed world, have fallen prey to a serious addiction, aside from that to oil, the addiction to consumerism, of always wanting more, more and still more.

    In America this started, more or less, in the years immediately after World War Two, and really took hold in the 1950s and Western Europe began to follow this trend – for we started to copy everything American to our detriment by that time whether this be consumerism or McDonald's fast “food” restaurants – in the later 1960s to mid-1970s and we all became hooked and especially here the governments, to the growth model.

    Economic growth and “Spend, Baby, spend!” became the mantra and it is still the same today; even worse maybe. It is an attitude that we cannot continue to support as it is simply unsustainable but then again it has been thus from the very beginning.

    Frugality seems to have gone out of the window and when people try to be frugal and live more or less outside the consumer culture they are being likened by governments to terrorists because they do not do their bit to get the economy growing. This is total and utter madness.

    We must get some sense back into our lives, as individuals, families and nations, and fight against this addiction which we have been drawn into by advertising and our governments even.

    Consumerism is more dangerous to the Planet than any amount of so-called overpopulation.

    While the population bomb is not healthy either our constant pursuit of more and more and yet still more seriously put everything in danger of collapse.

    More and more energy has to be used to bring to the majority of the developed world – and to some extent now also of the emerging countries – the dream, for that is all that it is, of prosperity by having more than the neighbor, and much of it on credit.

    We exploit the Earth in order to have more gadgets, more this and more that, and all of those things only last a few years when we need new ones because they are broken or obsolete and that if they even make is thus far and we do not want new ones already six month to a year down the road. This is just an unsustainable way of living and doing things.

    Things and the amount of them do not provide happiness, and this is a proven fact and despite the fact that many of the plain people knew that already the governments had to conduct an expensive study to find this out. Not that they are going to tell the world now, for they want us to continue to buy more, and more and still more in order to “stimulate the economy”. Maybe the economy needs a good strong coffee. I find coffee stimulating.

    The economy worked well in the old days when goods were made to last and often items, in fact more often than not, were passed on as heirlooms to other people, such as children and grandchildren, and this time is not really all that long ago. No one then seemed to be concerned about the growth of the economy and told people to spend, spend and spend to buy more, and more and still more.

    In fact savings were encouraged, as putting money by for a rainy day and to save for things that people wanted. No one – or rarely – ever thought of buying anything on credit in whichever way. People saved for something that they wanted and then went and paid the entire sum, in cash.

    What has happened to us?

    © 2010

Post Title

Consumerism, a Serious Addiction


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/09/consumerism-serious-addiction.html


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