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  • 20m Pounds wave energy competition unveiled

    £20m wave energy competition unveiled

    The prize money will be shared between two winners, who will develop the first wave and tidal devices to sit in array formation

    • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 5 April 2012 15.47 BST
    • Article history
    • Pelamis renewable energy wave power generator,

      Marine energy companies such as Pelamis, the manufacturer of this wave ‘snake’, could win a share of a new £20m government prize announced on Thursday. Photograph: Pelamis

      Companies making devices that generate renewable energy from the ebb and flow of tides and waves around the UK could win a share of a new £20m government prize announced on Thursday.

      It is hoped the scheme, the Marine Energy Array Demonstrator (Mead), will encourage growth in the industry, which has been struggling to create a commercially viable projects. Ministers believe wave and tidal power could in the future generate up to 20% of Britain’s energy needs and create 10,000 jobs in the sector.

      The energy and climate change minister, Greg Barker, claimed Mead would help move the industry into the next stage of development. “This will take us one vital step closer to realising our ambitions of generating electricity from the waves and tides, powering homes and businesses across the whole of the UK with clean, green electricity,” he said.

      The prize money will be shared between two winners, who will develop the first wave and tidal devices to sit in array formation – much like clusters of wind turbines create a windfarm.

      Pelamis, a leading wave technology company based in Scotland, said it intended to enter the competition. A spokesperson for the Scottish-based company said: “The prize will provide much needed capital support to the industry. The increasing activity and utility support demonstrates a real excitement within the sector as the technology matures towards commercial deployments.”

      As an island situated in choppy waters, Britain is well placed to become a world leader in wave and tidal technology. Of the eight full scale prototype devices installed around the world, seven are in UK waters, and about half of the world’s leading marine technology companies are based here. But there is a growing fear that Britain will lose its early lead in the race to harness the power of the sea.

      In February MPs called on the government to increase their support of wind and wave technology, claiming the UK could be overtaken by competing countries if it did not continue to provide subsidies and support to the industry.

      The funding was welcomed by the UK’s professional body for the renewable wind and marine industry, RenewableUK. David Krohn, the organisation’s wave and tidal development manager, said: “The marine energy industry has the potential to allow us to generate clean electricity using the inexhaustible power of the sea. The Mead scheme will help kickstart the industry.”

      Yet Krohn claimed more money would still be needed if marine technology was to reach its full potential. “Our research shows that £120m of capital support is required to overcome barriers to commercial development and unlock our share of this global industry,” he said. “It is important to recognise that this is only the beginning of the road to building marine energy into a fully commercial industry.”

      Pelamis agreed further support was needed. “To truly support marine renewables through to commercialisation will require project investors to be able to access substantially larger amounts of Government support over the coming years.”

      Companies can enter the competition online via the Decc website. The closing date for applications is 1 June 2012.

  • Science daily: Earth Science News

    ScienceDaily: Earth Science News


    Copper chains: Earth’s deep-seated hold on copper revealed

    Posted: 05 Apr 2012 12:29 PM PDT

    Earth is clingy when it comes to copper. Nature conspires at scales both large and small — from the realms of tectonic plates down to molecular bonds — to keep most of Earth’s copper buried dozens of miles below ground. A new study gives new insight into the way continents form and could help locate new sources of copper.

    Satellite observes rapid ice shelf disintegration in Antarctic

    Posted: 05 Apr 2012 04:51 AM PDT

    As ESA’s Envisat satellite continues to observe the rapid retreat of one of Antarctica’s ice shelves due to climate warming. One of the satellite’s first observations following its launch on 1 March 2002 was of break-up of a main section of the Larsen B ice shelf in Antarctica – when 3200 sq km of ice disintegrated within a few days due to mechanical instabilities of the ice masses triggered by climate warming.

    Rising CO2 levels linked to global warming during last deglaciation

    Posted: 04 Apr 2012 10:37 AM PDT

    Many scientists have long suspected that rising levels of carbon dioxide and the global warming that ended the last Ice Age were somehow linked, but establishing a clear cause-and-effect relationship between CO2 and global warming from the geologic record has remained difficult. A new study identifies this relationship and provides compelling evidence that rising CO2 caused much of the global warming.
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  • ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News

    ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News


    Potential for a ‘moderate’ New England ‘red tide’ in 2012

    Posted: 05 Apr 2012 10:16 AM PDT

    New England is expected to experience a “moderate” regional “red tide” this spring and summer, report scientists working in the Gulf of Maine to study the toxic algae that causes the bloom. The algae in the water pose no direct threat to human beings, however the toxins they produce can accumulate in filter-feeding organisms such as mussels and clams — which can cause paralytic shellfish poisoning in humans who consume them.
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  • Not-so-tender tale of Govt hatred and paranoia

    Not-so-tender tale of Govt hatred and paranoia

    Updated April 05, 2012 15:16:39

    A democratic society is something of a collective-outsourcing system. We outsource decisions on national matters to elected representatives because it’s the easiest way to get it done; also, it means that someone else has to give speeches on Harmony Day and eat those horrible rubber-chicken lunches, for either of which very few of us would have the stomach, truth be told.

    Two quite incredible failures in this system have this week been verified.

    First, the confirmation that the affairs of the Health Services Union and its former national secretary Craig Thomson has now officially become a Kafka novel.

    Fair Work Australia has completed its four-year investigation and has produced a 1,100-page document that no-one may read, implicating four individuals whom no-one may name. It describes several hundred offences, some of which may be criminal, of which no police officer in Australia may formally be apprised. Instead the report was supplied to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, who instantly declared the report’s thousand-plus pages more or less useless for the purposes of any prosecution.

    Could Fair Work Australia possibly have foreseen this? After nearly $1 million worth of advice from the Australian Government Solicitor’s office, you’d have hoped so. Fair Work Australia has agreed, mind, that it could have been sharper with the whole thing. It’s now hired KPMG to investigate why its own investigation took so long.

    Everyone knows that when faced with a choice between conspiracy and incompetence, the best explanation is usually incompetence, but in this case we are now dealing with some pretty special incompetence.

    As of this week, conspiracy is now the more obvious conclusion.

    The second failure, articulated this week by the Commonwealth Auditor-General, is scarier – possibly in this case because we’re actually allowed to read the report.

    The auditor’s account of how the Government dealt with the contract for running the Australia Network (our overseas broadcaster) is one of the most incredible reports of its kind I’ve ever read.

    I know what you’re thinking: Audit reports. Pretty low bar for thrills. But if you get a chance, have a look here – the tale of the Cabinet’s repeated refusal to accept the advice of even its most senior public servants is truly extraordinary.

    The muffing of tender processes is nothing new for governments; ask any Coalition MP to tell the story of what happened when the Howard government tried outsourcing all of its IT capabilities at the beginning of this century.

    But the Australia Network story is different, because it’s much more than just a routine tale of administrative incompetence or ideological overshoot. Rather, it’s an allegory – an uncomfortably direct one – about the war between Kevin Rudd and his cabinet colleagues. And if you’ve ever doubted that personality and personal relationships are central to the way decisions are made in government, then read the auditor’s account, and doubt no longer.

    The tale starts in 2009, when Stephen Conroy – the Communications Minister, and probably the minister in the Rudd government who enjoyed the single worst relations with the then prime minister, if you had to pick one – took a submission to cabinet recommending that the contract for running the Australia Network be handed permanently to the ABC. Cabinet made no decision.

    In November 2010, after Mr Rudd had been decommissioned by his colleagues and appointed to the foreign ministry, he argued in Cabinet for a different arrangement – that a 10-year contract for running the network, valued at $223 million – be put out to competitive tender. At the time, Cabinet members were extremely wary of Mr Rudd, being convinced that he had poisoned the recent election campaign by leaking against his successor, Julia Gillard. They were additionally concerned that Mr Rudd would use the Australia Network contract to curry favour with News Limited, whose part-owned broadcaster Sky would most certainly be a bidder. But the urge toward appeasement was still strong. They agreed to Mr Rudd’s suggestion.

    But they didn’t really decide on any ground rules about who exactly would make the final decision. Mr Rudd appointed his own departmental secretary, former ASIO chief and ambassador Dennis Richardson, to convene a panel with representatives supplied by the departments of Julia Gillard, Wayne Swan, Stephen Conroy and Penny Wong.

    Two bidders applied – the ABC, of course, and Sky.

    On January 25 the following year – 2011 – Julia Gillard wrote to Mr Rudd directing that the final decision on the tender would be one for the Cabinet. In May, the panel agreed that Sky’s was the best bid but several weeks of pfaffing-about ensued, in light of the fact that no agreement really existed about whose job it was to make the final decision.

    In June, Mr Rudd was called to bring a submission to Cabinet on the matter. His department argued – and this was an argument supported by Ms Gillard’s own department – that it wasn’t really possible for the entire Cabinet to be the approved decision-maker on the tender.

    The Cabinet’s response was to amend the tender process retrospectively, issuing new terms on July 8. The ministers decided to add new criteria reflecting some of the significant international geopolitical rearrangements that had occurred – pro-democracy revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa, for instance. They installed Stephen Conroy as the final decision-maker. And they specifically empowered Minister Conroy to overturn the recommendations of the expert panel, if he so chose.

    This is all a bit strange. If your formal reason for amending the process is that international diplomacy has become more important because of the Arab Spring, then why would your corollary decision be to take the decision away from the department that is expert in such matters, and give it to the cable guy?

    And in any case, as the report points out with classic auditorial understatement, “the Australia Network does not currently broadcast to the Middle East or North Africa, and the (tender process) did not specify an expansion to these regions as a requirement of the new contract”.

    While all this was happening, by the way, every Tom, Dick and his dog in the public service appears to have been given a copy of the expert panel’s recommendations and the vying parties’ bids, despite the fact that the confidential tender round was still open.

    When the panel reported back on August 30 that the Sky bid still provided better value for money on the new criteria, Minister Conroy tried another tack, asking that parallel negotiations be conducted with both parties, stalling a decision further.

    And in November, he went further, calling off the tender process entirely “with the agreement of the Government” on the grounds that there had been “significant leaks” of confidential information to the media. (Which is hardly surprising, given the number of copies knocking around.)

    In the course of 12 months, in other words, the Cabinet went from endorsing an open tender process all the way through frustrating it, twisting it, distorting it and finally arrived at the idea of aborting it entirely, thus messily reversing the first decision. Why would a group of rational people behave so irrationally?

    The answer is that the Australia Network became a proxy for the Cabinet’s feelings about News Limited and about Kevin Rudd, whom many suspected to be cosying up to News. The more it looked like Mr Rudd was angling for Sky to win the bid, the more determined the Cabinet became to thwart his wishes.

    Having begun by appeasing Mr Rudd, they ended by throwing everything they had at him, breaking all manner of bureaucratic conventions in their deep and persistent paranoia. By February this year, of course, it all came spewing out publicly; the parabolic arc of the Cabinet’s sentiments toward Mr Rudd – from fear to rage – found its sulphuric and highly public conclusion when minister after minister went on television to rail against their former leader for being a dysfunctional bossy-boots and all-round nasty person.

    Dysfunctional? Well, the Auditor-General’s report doesn’t use that word exactly, but it’s pretty clear if you read between the lines that the Australia Network process was a screaming fiasco. So bad, in fact, that the auditor actually published details of cabinet discussions and submissions in the report, presumably because without them you’d never believe the yarn.

    The real damage in the whole affair is not the outcome. It’s not a disaster that the national broadcaster continues to offer the service, just as it would not have been a disaster had Sky prevailed.

    The real damage is that we now know just how far government ministers are prepared to go, and how absolutely they are prepared to ignore the structures erected to give some order to their decision-making, if their hatred and paranoia is strong enough.

    And that’s an outsourcing failure, if ever there was one.

    Annabel Crabb is the ABC’s chief online political writer. View her full profile here.

    Topics:broadcasting, information-and-communication, federal-government, government-and-politics

    First posted April 05, 2012 15:15:08

  • Climate Change News NY TIMES

    Alert Name: CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS
    April 6, 2012 Compiled: 1:13 AM

    By THOMAS LOVEJOY (NYT)

    Human ingenuity is up to the challenge of saving the Earth, but we need to act now.

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    You received this e-mail because you signed up for NYTimes.com’s My Alerts tool. As a member of the TRUSTe privacy program, we are committed to protecting your privacy.

  • Antartic ice shelves melting rapidly

    Antarctic ice shelves melting rapidly

    Updated: 10:53, Friday April 6, 2012

    The European Space Agency has released new satellite images of Antarctic ice shelves melting at alarming rates.

    The Larsen shelves are thick floating mats of ice that run along the eastern side of the Antarctic peninsula.

    Over the last 17 years, Larsen B has shrunk from 11, 500 square kilometres, to its present 1,600 square kilometres.

    The Larsen A shelf completely disintegrated in 1995.

    Experts say climate change in the region is to blame.