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  • Criticizing Netanyahu, Barak on Iran is a dangerous luxury Israel can’t afford Haaretz (blog)

    Criticizing Netanyahu, Barak on Iran is a dangerous luxury Israel can’t afford
    Haaretz (blog)
    The critics should look no further than the US to see what consequences can ensue. By David B. Rivkin, Jr. | May.14, 2012 | 9:16 PM Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran Photo by AP While the Israeli political scene is no stranger to strident criticisms
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  • Ruthless RailCorp reforms planned as middle management axed

     

    Transport

    Ruthless RailCorp reforms planned as middle management axed

    3
    Railcorp

    The state government plans to sack thousands from RailCorp / Pic: Stephen Cooper Source: The Daily Telegraph

    THOUSANDS of RailCorp jobs will be axed in the biggest reform to the rail network in a generation.

    Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian is today expected to announce the axing of 20 per cent of the rail system’s middle management – or 750 jobs – in the first tranche of a RailCorp reform process.

    The axings are the precursor to much bigger cuts, with a recent Booz consultancy report into RailCorp recommending 3000 to 4500 of RailCorp’s 15,000 jobs be slashed.

    The action could result in the first rail strikes in years.

    Under the changes RailCorp will be broken up into two organisations – Sydney Trains and NSW Trains – and 750 bureaucrats will be given voluntary redundancies.

    It is understood the minister this morning called together staff and unions to brief them on the government’s plans.

    Further cuts are expected when the government negotiates an enterprise bargaining agreement it has with the unions which the former Labor government put in place until 2014. Under that agreement, the minister is not permitted to summarily sack staff.

    The changes come after the government found RailCorp had four times as many senior bureaucrats for the size of its workforce than the former RTA and 20 times the Department of Education.

    The government is also putting RailCorp cleaning services under new management and will tell the unions to lift their game unless they want the cleaning services privatised.

    Under existing rules, cleaning staff can only remove graffiti from some sections inside trains – the entrance way, floors and walls – but are prevented from cleaning the main areas of the carriage.

    That cleaning must be carried out separately by maintenance workers. The rules mean ceilings, doors and floors of most of our trains can have ugly graffiti on them for up to 58 days at a time.

    “We are expecting a brawl with rail unions,” a senior government source said.

    “We need decisive action because RailCorp in its current form is financially unsustainable. It costs $10 million a day to run, with costs rising three times as fast as the number of passenger journeys.”

    Reformers including former rail boss Vince Graham have for two decades been urging an axe be taken to RailCorp to break the grip of unions.

    Under the changes, two new specialist organisations will be formed to focus on the specific needs of Sydney and intercity/country customers.

    Sydney Trains will serve Sydney customers. NSW Trains will serve intercity and regional customers who travel longer distances and need comfortable services with on-board facilities. The changes to the new organisations will take 12 to 18 months to implement.

    From July 1, responsibility for construction and major projects will be transferred to Transport for NSW. Also from July 1, a new customer services division will be established. A specialist unit will be formed to attack graffiti and rubbish on trains and stations.

     

  • A Look at the Major Forces Shaping our Future

    A Look at the Major Forces Shaping our Future

    Posted: 13 May 2012 06:42 AM PDT

    While waiting to see how the Iranian nuclear confrontation and the various Eurozone crises sort themselves out, there is time to step back and look at the interaction of the major forces that will shape our future. While the problems of oil depletion are already upon us, shrinking resources are only a part of global dynamics currently. There are at least six major forces moving civilization in the world today: 1) population growth: 2) economic growth; 3) political stability; 4) technological innovation; and more recently 5) resource depletion and…

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    Duel Fuel Vehicles that can Run on Gasoline or Natural Gas

    Posted: 13 May 2012 06:40 AM PDT

    Not flex fuel – dual fuel.  Flex fuel is a system that can use similar fuels in the same system such as pure gasoline to 85% ethanol.  Dual fuel will use two different fuels that will feed two systems.  Sounds expensive, but natural gas at such low prices is driving a market. Natural gas prices range from $1.49 to $2.59 in Colorado, Wyoming and Utah.  This is far less than gasoline. Honda builds a Civic Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) sedan and has been selling a few of these natural gas vehicles in select markets for years.…

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    Saudi Arabia Plan $109 Billion Solar Energy Project to Reduce Oil Consumption

    Posted: 13 May 2012 06:37 AM PDT

    If Saudi Arabia doesn’t develop an efficient, renewable energy infrastructure soon, it could burn 850 million barrels of oil each year until 2030; 30% of its total production. As the largest oil producer in the world it has no fear of running out, but it represents a huge portion of potential revenue that would be lost. Currently the Middle Eastern nation only boasts 3 megawatts of solar power, less than Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria and the United Arab Emirates. In order to avoid this fate Saudi Arabia is seeking investors to back its…

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    Japan and Russia to Build Natural Gas Pipeline?

    Posted: 13 May 2012 06:36 AM PDT

    Following the Fukushima nuclear disaster Japan has closed down all of its nuclear power plants and instead has to produce its energy by different means. This has caused it to increase its imports of fossil fuels; something it cannot afford to do for long. Currently Japan ships liquefied natural gas from Sakhalin in Russia, but LNG is expensive; a better, more affordable solution must be found. Seiji Maehara, the former Japanese Foreign Minister, recently visited the offices of the Russian gas giant, Gazprom, where he announced that Russia and Japan…

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    The US, China, and India Risk Severe Water Shortages

    Posted: 13 May 2012 06:34 AM PDT

    Research by the risk analysts Maplecroft has found that three global superpowers have vast regions that are at risk of drought as an unsustainable rate of water use is outstripping supply. The US, China, and India risk negative impacts on businesses and agriculture which could undermine economic growth. “Of the 168 countries covered by the newly released Water Stress Index, India, China and the US rank 34, 50 and 61 respectively in the list, while Middle-Eastern and North African nations make up the top 10.” Businessgreen.com The lack…

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  • Scientists find a way to bring down cost of producing ‘artificial leaf’

    Scientists find a way to bring down cost of producing ‘artificial leaf’

    Use of cheaper materials overcomes major obstacle for technology heralded as fuel cells of the future

    An artificial leaf  design by Nocera

    An artificial leaf design by Nocera replaces costly platinum with a cheap nickel-molybdenum-zinc compound. Photograph: ACS

    The most efficient way to turn sunlight into energy has existed for around 400m years: photosynthesis. Scientists have been attempting to replicate this in artificial leaves for some time and have now taken a step forward by replacing expensive materials with cheaper ones.

    This is significant, because while artificial leaves could be the fuel cells of the future, production costs remain a major issue. One of the biggest obstacles to artificial photosynthesis has been that scientists could only replicate it with a costly platinum catalyst. Now Danial Norcera at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) says his team has found a way to replace it with a cheap nickel-molybdenum-zinc compound. This puts him one step closer to his goal of finding an inexpensive, portable source of renewable energy for developing countries.

    Artificial leaves – recently profiled by the New Yorker – resemble a thin playing card, described by MIT as a “silicon solar cell with different catalytic materials bonded onto its two sides”. Covered with water and placed in sunlight, it splits hydrogen and water, mimicking photosynthesis.

    In a real leaf, the hydrogen is then combined with CO2 from the atmosphere to make sugars, cell walls and other organic matter. In the artificial version, scientists use the hydrogen in fuel cells to make electricity or else combine it with CO2 to make fuels such as methanol. This could be used in car engines, much as ethanol biofuels are used today and would provide a carbon-neutral source of power.

    “I’ve got to say that the Norcera system is very good – it’s probably at the moment the best in the world, but there are other alternative approaches and many places are working on it,” said Jim Barber, a biologist at Imperial College London.

    Barber is part of another team researching artificial photosynthesis. His project uses iron oxide, or rust, as a cheap material to absorb light and serve as a semi-conductor. “The sun is the only energy source available to us of sufficient magnitude to satisfy our needs. That’s why it’s so important to continue to develop the research and development. The Nocera work is a giant leap forward towards this goal of capturing sunlight and storing it as a fuel,” Barber explained.

    Artificial leaves would also fill some of the gaps left by other renewable energy technology. They could be used in arid regions where hydropower is unfeasible, they take up less space than solar panels and don’t require a battery to store energy.

    According to Barber, if artificial photosynthesis systems could use around 10% of the sunlight falling on them, they would only need to cover 0.16% of the Earth’s surface to satisfy a global energy consumption rate of 20 terawatts, the amount it is predicted that the world will need in 2030.

    Norcera may be one of the first researchers to commercialise his technology: Wired reported that he signed a deal with the Tata group to build a small power generator the size of a refrigerator.

  • Growing the grunt: developing green biofuels for Australia

    Growing the grunt: developing green biofuels for Australia
    RenewEconomy
    Biofuels are not new, but many of the technologies are, and interest in renewable, sustainable biofuels has recently been rising due to worry about peak oil and price pressures, vulnerability of energy supplies, dependence on imports, and greenhouse
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  • Government opens up petroleum acreages

    Government opens up petroleum acreages

    AAPUpdated May 14, 2012, 5:20 pm

    The federal government has opened up 27 new offshore petroleum acreages across nine basins in Commonwealth waters off five states.

    Resources Minister Martin Ferguson said the 2012 acreage release included large frontier basins suited to exploration programs with numerous targets, along with smaller blocks of high prospective acreage in mature areas.

    “The high level of early stakeholder participation led to multiple nominations for many of these areas, which are located in a range of water depths and vary in size and exploration history,” he said.

    “The available acreage is supported by data and analysis by Geoscience Australia and all exploration and development activities will be subject to comprehensive assessment.”

    The minister announced the release in Adelaide at the industry conference on Monday, saying the exploration release would help maintain energy security and economic growth in Australia’s petroleum sector.

    “Today’s acreage release will allow offshore petroleum explorers to seek a larger role in an energy revolution, with a high probability of ongoing major petroleum discoveries in Australia, and more than 40 sedimentary basins yet to be fully explored.”

    The acreages are in waters off Western Australia, the Northern Territory, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania.

    Greens senator Rachel Siewert said the exploration leases impinged on several important marine areas around Australia.

    “They impinge on areas proposed for sanctuaries under the marine planning processes underway,” she told reporters in Canberra.

    Senator Siewert said it was appalling that the federal government had two systems – one for the granting of licences and the other for establishing marine sanctuaries – simultaneously.

    “The resource boom will override sensible environmental decision making,” she said.

    “It’s crazy to have these separate processes.”

    The Pew Environment group said one of the areas was in the Great Australian Bight – already protected by a marine park and home to more than 29 species of whales.

    “The strong currents also means that any oil spills would directly hit Kangaroo Island, as well as the Eyre and York Peninsulas,” Pew said in a statement.

    A second area, off the coast of Robe, would hit the rock lobster fishing industry in the region, the group said.