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  • World Nuclear News

    2 April 2012

    REGULATION & SAFETY: Early returns to Fukushima
    Restrictions in sizeable parts of Fukushima’s evacuation area have been relaxed, enabling some residents to visit at will and work towards a permanent return. Two towns have opened, and a third will follow in two weeks’ time.

    NEW NUCLEAR: Regulator OKs the start of Summer
    Two AP1000 reactors at the VC Summer plant in South Carolina have been granted combined construction and operation licences, making them the second US new-build project to receive final regulatory go-ahead.

    CORPORATE: Xcel rethinks Prairie Island uprate plan
    US utility Xcel Energy has reduced the size and delayed the schedule of a planned uprate at its Prairie Island nuclear power plant in Minnesota following a reassessment of the project’s value to customers.

    NUCLEAR POLICIES: UK boosts nuclear liabilities
    The UK government is to substantially increase the cap on third party liabilities of nuclear plant operators in the event of an accident, bringing these into line with the 2004 amendments to the Paris and Brussels conventions.

    Copyright © 2012 World Nuclear Association, All rights reserved.
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  • Double Dissolutions ( Antony Green)

    Click the links below and find comments and questions to Antony Green.

    His replies are worth reading, He really knows what he does best.

    Double Dissolutions

    September 01, 2011

  • Overseas aid to Africa being outweighed by hefty costs of importing oil

    Overseas aid to Africa being outweighed by hefty costs of importing oil

    Sub-Saharan states need to move to renewable energy sources as $15bn in aid is outstripped by $18bn in oil imports, says IEA

    • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 1 April 2012 19.28 BST
    • Article history
    • A NIGERIAN CHILD IS SILHOUETTED AGAINST THE GAS FLARE AT UTOROGU SHELL FACILITY IN NIGERIA'S DELTA

      A child stands near a gas flare at the Utorogu facility in the Nigeria. Many poorer sub-Saharan countries are ‘running at standstill’ in development terms because they are paying too much of energy imports. Photograph: George Esiri/Reuters/Corbis

      Developing countries in Africa received less in overseas aid last year than they paid for oil imports, new figures show.

      Sub-Saharan Africa received about $15.6bn (£9.7bn) in overseas development aid last year, but this was outweighed by the $18bn cost of importing oil, according to the figures compiled by the International Energy Agency and seen by the Guardian.

      A decade of soaring oil prices has created huge problems for development efforts in countries whose attempts to industrialise have left them heavily dependent on fossil fuels. Even though overseas aid has increased, poor nations are effectively “running to stand still” in development terms, because they are paying so much for energy imports.

      With oil prices likely to remain high, the only answer is for developing countries to move to cleaner renewable sources of energy, Fatih Birol, chief economist at the IEA, told the Guardian.

      “If you diversify the sources of energy, that is a good thing and clean energy means using free, homegrown resources so that will bring down the import bills,” he said.

      When industrialised economies were developing, oil was the equivalent of $13 a barrel, but now developing countries must pay $120 to $130, noted Birol, which leaves developing countries “hamstrung” – so if more people are to be lifted out of poverty, clean energy must be an imperative.

      The data from the IEA, widely regarded as the gold standard for energy analysis, rang alarm bells for campaigners, and is likely to be closely examined by donor governments, which have not tended to prioritise clean energy in the past.

      A DFID spokesperson said: “The whole world is affected by rising oil prices, but no country can pull itself out of poverty until it has a decent and reliable energy service. British aid is helping to improve the health, education and welfare of millions of the poorest, including providing cleaner, greener energy such as solar power to help grow their economies. Renewable and efficient energy can reduce dependency on fossil fuels, as well as helping to create new jobs in emerging low carbon sectors.”

      Ruth Davis, chief policy adviser at Greenpeace UK, said: “People in poorer countries are being hit twice by the oil industry. They are the first to suffer the impacts of climate change, while their economies are blighted by the rising cost of imported fuel. Instead of giving taxpayer handouts to the fossil fuel industry through World Bank aid programmes and Export Credit Guarantee schemes, countries like the UK should be investing in renewable energy and energy efficiency projects in developing countries, which will improve access to energy for the poor and help build stronger economies.”

      While rapidly emerging economies such as China and India are forging ahead on wind and solar power, little has been invested in Africa. This is not because of a lack of renewable energy resources, but because private sector investors see the continent as a riskier proposition.

      Under the United Nations scheme to give poor countries access to low-carbon technology – the clean development mechanism – the lion’s share of the billions of investment has gone to China, followed by India and other big emerging economies, but a paltry sum has gone to build projects in Africa.

      Birol, one of the world’s foremost authorities on energy economics, added that the problem of oil addiction was compounded by distorting subsidies for fossil fuels, common in many developing countries. These subsidies will reach a record $630bn this year, according to the IEA’s latest data, which Birol said represented not only a market distortion that would exacerbate climate change, but a drain on the Treasuries of poor countries, which could better spend the money on social projects such as in education or health.

      Although such subsidies are supposed to protect poor people from the impact of rising energy prices, in fact they usually disproportionately benefit the better-off, and in some cases are hijacked by profiteers.

      Birol also warned that putting off renewable energy investment because of the financial crisis and recession was “a false economy”. Many countries have scaled back their investment in low-carbon energy – the UK, Spain and Germany have slashed support for renewables, for instance. But Birol’s analysis shows that for every $1 that countries do not spend on cleaner fuel, they will have to spend $4.3 within the next two decades to make up, for their reliance on fossil fuels.

      Developed countries are far from immune to the problems of oil dependence – Birol noted that last year’s bill to the EU for oil imports topped $500bn for the first time, and that these payouts were a substantial drain on European economic resources.

      “That is the equivalent of a Greek crisis – every year,” he warned.

  • About 10.000 workers oppose Boxing Day retail law.

    Monday, April 2 2012This is highly contraversial, Some may be willing to work and get the Holiday Penalty Loading.
    Major Grocery Chain Stores open on Boxing Day. It should be up to individual stores, whether or not they open. There is
    an injustice here.

     

     

    NSW Opposition Leader John Robertson, who accepted the petition on Monday, described the move as an insult to retail workers.

    All retailers in NSW will be allowed to open on Boxing Day under new trading laws to be introduced into parliament.

    Mr Robertson said the reforms meant workers would be forced to front up on Christmas to help stock stores.

    “This is probably one of the most vicious and nasty attacks that this government has perpetrated on working people in NSW,” he told protesters outside Parliament House on Monday.

    “It’s an attack on your right to spend time with your families.”

    Premier Barry O’Farrell last week said workers could not be forced to work on public holidays.

    But Mr Robertson says casual workers who say no to shifts on those days will have shifts cut or be let go.

    “Anyone who has worked in retail … knows that if you’re a casual if you just don’t turn up or say you’re unavailable suddenly the shifts just disappear and you have no job,” he said.

    “You can be forced to go to work on those days and it’s completely outrageous.”

    He said the government had gone back on its commitment to looking after families.

    “It’s an absolute insult to anyone who works in retail to now discover that Barry O’Farrell is playing lip-service to your opportunity to spend time with your families.”

    Retail industry worker Galadriel Cladwell said workers would feel pressured.

    “Casuals are afraid not to work on public holidays because they’re afraid the following week they’re not going to have any shifts,” she said.

    “And family in my book comes first all the way.”

    Mr Robertson said he would present the petition to the parliament once it reaches 10,000 signatures.

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  • New comparison of ocean temperatures reveals rise over the last century

    New comparison of ocean temperatures reveals rise over the last century

    Posted: 01 Apr 2012 10:53 AM PDT

    A new study contrasting ocean temperature readings of the 1870s with temperatures of the modern seas reveals an upward trend of global ocean warming spanning at least 100 years. The research shows a .33-degree Celsius (.59-degree Fahrenheit) average increase in the upper portions of the ocean to 700 meters (2,300 feet) depth. Modern data is derived from the international Argo program.
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  • Underwater volcanoes cause quakes

    News 6 new results for volcanoes
    Underwater volcanoes cause quakes
    SunLive
    The Kermadec Arc region is a 2500km-long chain of underwater volcanoes that stretches from White Island to Tonga. John says many of these volcanoes are active. “So it’s not surprising to see shallow earthquake activity there.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Sir Richard Branson Plans to Journey to the Center of the Earth
    Flavorwire
    In a charming faux press release, Sir Richard Branson has announced his plans for Virgin Volcanic, a massive ride-along drill that he intends to use to explore the world’s volcanoes — bringing Tom Hanks, Seth Green, Barbara Kopple and will.i.am along
    See all stories on this topic »
    Tom Hanks & Seth Green Going on Richard Branson’s ‘Virgin Volcanic’ Expedition?
    GossipCop
    Tom Hanks, Seth Green and will.i.am going to the inner depths of volcanoes? In a press release, Richard Branson announced that the three celebs would join him on a journey into the Earth’s core via his new Virgin Volcanic explorer.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Bald Peak eruption imminent, scientists say
    Newberg Graphic
    City and state officials ordered evacuation of the Newberg area Sunday morning after scientists predicted that Bald Peak, a mountain only recently discovered to be a volcano, will erupt within days, covering the Chehalem Valley in lava and ash.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Disasters and Dinosaurs
    BBC News
    Make model volcanoes and experiment with the patterns left by asteroids hitting the earth. A Shropshire council-run visitor centre, The Shropshire Hills Discovery Centre was opened in 2001 with the aim of Show more… acting as a ‘hub of wheel’,
    See all stories on this topic »

    BBC News
    Are you kidding? April Fools’ Day on the Internet
    msnbc.com
    Branson will “go on the first expedition along with Tom Hanks, Academy Award-winning actor and star of ‘Joe Versus the Volcano.’ ” The billionaire’s fascination with volcanoes started when he was a lad, having read Jules Verne’s “Journey to the Center
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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