Author: admin

  • Italians gasp as rubbish burns

    The situation in Naples has been  exacerbated by a blockade of the city’s Pianuro refuse site by locals who fear mismanagement at the plant has already allowed the cancer-causing chemicals to be released into the environment.

    Italy’s Higher Health Institute has already found evidence of an increase cancer rates in the region.

    Alarms were also sounded by a report in medical journal The Lancet Oncology in 2004 that identified a "triangle of death" east of Naples where toxic waste was linked to a higher incidence of cancer, especially liver cancer.

    But experts at the Naples Cancer Institute warn that if people burn their own rubbish the situation will get far worse.

    In addition, Campania has the "eco-balls" scandal to contend with.

    Some rubbish is supposed to be sorted at the region’s Caivano treatment centre into solid and liquid waste, then compacted into "eco-balls", which are piled into a pyramid to be safely burned.

    But according to Antonio Marfella at the Naples Cancer Institute "these can’t be incinerated because the waste wasn’t sorted into solid and liquid. And if you let them decompose, they can produce a toxic liquid that can seep into the ground and enter the water system".

    Official figures say there are 400,000 tonnes of eco-balls like those at Caivano in the Naples region. It emerged this week that the plant had now run out of space,

    And as fears grow over the public health threat, the EU is set to intervene with huge fines, a spokeswoman for EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas warned last week.

    A "waste disposal state of emergency," was first decreed in the Naples region in 1994, and it has been renewed annually ever since.

    Fingers are mostly pointed at the Camorra and the crooked politicians in its pay. The crime syndicate is accused of sabotaging new refuge disposal contracts as it seeks to profit to the tune of £2bn a year with its own clandestine trade in waste disposal.

    Long-running disputes have seen refuse processing sites closed or blockaded. While over £1bn set aside for the construction of new ones has mysteriously vanished. Those that have been built have not worked properly.

    Italian environment minister Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio has said that the government had formed a new commission to finally sort out what he considered to be "one of Italy’s greatest scams".

    Mafia expert Professor Donato Masciandaro of Milan’s Bocconi University told the Telegraph: "If you’re not Italian, in fact if you’re not from Naples, it’s hard to understand how all this could have been allowed to happen. But the when there’s a major problem like this the mafia can make money out of it."

  • Ferocious Storm Punishes Northern California

    The storm, one of two predicted for the weekend, hit the Bay Area before dawn and knocked out power to about 1.2 million people from Central California to the Oregon border. With repair crews in some areas forced to retreat in the face of flying debris and tree limbs, Pacific Gas and Electric, Northern California’s chief utility, warned that some customers could be without electricity through the weekend.

    Forecasters promised punishing conditions for Southern California as well. Extremely heavy rain was expected there, raising the prospect of mudslides, particularly in areas stripped of vegetation by the wildfires of 2007. In expectation of such slides, The Associated Press reported, officials late Friday ordered the mandatory evacuation of about 1,000 homes in four Orange County canyons.

    Here to the north, conditions were already challenging. Several major Bay Area roads, including Highway 101 and Interstate 580, were closed for much of the day by airborne construction materials and overturned vehicles, including five trucks that flipped on the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, a major east-west thoroughfare spanning a northern finger of San Francisco Bay.

    A downed tree on the tracks stopped BART rail service in the Mission District of San Francisco, sending evacuated passengers into the rain or onto buses. Morning ferry services across the bay were canceled as docked boats rocked like rubber ducks in a bath.

    Scaffolding collapsed, breaking windows, taking down power lines and bringing electrically powered buses to a halt along at least one major San Francisco boulevard. People trying to make it to work dodged flying trash cans, orphaned umbrellas and dislocated newspaper vending machines.

    Dozens of flights were canceled at the San Francisco airport, where winds topped 65 miles an hour at midmorning, making for even more flight delays than cancellations. Harrowing whitecaps from the bay lapped at the foot of the runways.

    The most extreme conditions were about 200 miles to the east of San Francisco, in the Sierra Nevada, where the National Weather Service warned of blizzard and whiteout conditions and gusts of 160 miles per hour. Just hours into the storm, a 163-m.p.h. gust was reported on one mountaintop near Lake Tahoe.

    Power was sporadic in some mountain towns along Interstate 80 from Sacramento to Reno, Nev. Only the hardiest of trucks and tire-chained cars were crawling along that stretch Friday.

    Forecasters said trying to travel through the storm would be foolhardy.

    “It’s an exceptional storm,” said Rhett Milne, a Reno meteorologist with the Weather Service. “If you do get stranded, it’s a life-threatening situation.”

    The Weather Service said some upper elevations could get up to 10 feet of snow by the time the twin storms blow through at weekend’s close, and some ski resorts, visibility eliminated by blowing snow, had already shut their high-mountain lifts.

    Even in less exposed areas, daily routines were brought to a halt by wind and rain. In San Anselmo, a pleasant commuter town north of San Francisco, shops were closed, floodgates were in use, and merchandise was moved to higher shelves. A New Year’s Eve flood two years ago badly damaged some local businesses there, and sandbagging for this storm started Thursday night, said Lauren Gregory, an owner of Bloomworks, a flower shop.

    “It was really, really difficult for businesses to recover,” Ms. Gregory said of the earlier flood’s aftermath. “Most did, but they still haven’t really caught up financially and gotten out of debt. To go through that again would really be devastating.”

    Forecasters attributed the storm to a particularly violent collision of subtropical moisture and a blast of arctic air, and the same system also lashed areas farther north. At the Washington-Oregon border, the ocean entrance to the Columbia River was closed to ship traffic, as was the entrance to Tillamook Bay, in northwest Oregon, the Coast Guard said. Inland, the police closed stretches of Interstate 84 for several hours after high winds toppled tractor-trailers.

    In Washington, where December storms caused six deaths, meteorologists warned of more snow in the Cascade Mountains. Winds and unstable snow there would make conditions treacherous. Eight fatalities have already been attributed to avalanches in the state this fall and winter, making this the deadliest avalanche season in three decades, and forecasters weighed Friday whether to issue another avalanche warning.

    After several consecutive dry years, not everyone in California was unhappy about Friday’s storm. Hydrologists at the California Department of Water Resources said five inches of rain had already fallen in reservoirs in northern counties, and were hopeful that the storm might single-handedly make up for a dry November and below-average rainfall last month.

    And in parts of the ski-happy Sierras, where forecasters said snow could fall at a rate of several inches an hour for most of the weekend, resort operators were dreaming of a thick powder unlike any seen in the last couple of winters.

    “We’re always pretty well equipped for the weather — that’s why we love living here,” said Roy Moyer, general manager of the Tamarack Lodge and Resort, a cross-country center near Mammoth Lakes, Calif. “So bring it on.”

    Which the storm was busy doing. By midafternoon, some two feet of snow had fallen at Mammoth Lakes.

    Katie Hafner contributed reporting from San Anselmo, Calif., and William Yardley from Seattle.

  • The facts on population growth

    In an attempt to get a meaningul handle on this debate, the Ebono Institute offers the attached calculator to demonstrate what the relative impact of population growth and consumption rates are. Some of the assumptions are a little rough and ready but it graphically demonstrates the size of the impact from Europe, North America, Japan and Australasia despite its relatively low population and low population growth. China, India and Brazil are collected into the Developing column with the rest of the developed world listed as underdeveloped.

     To use the calculator, alter the numbers in the yellow boxes to see the impact of controlling population growth, growth in consumption of resources and the relative wealth between rich and poor.

    The green row demonstrates the total consumption for each region in 2020 and the pale apricot row demonstrates the factor by which current per capita consumption would be multiplied to acheive this result. The table given here indicates what is required to halve total resource consumption

    This simple and shocking demonstration will be the subject of a series of articles over the course of 2008.

    Other articles on Ebono:

    China, India and Brazil could double emissions

    China emissions increase inevitable

    US names China, India and Brazil as climate deal breakers  

     

  • China’s emission increase inevitable

    health and pollution > features > ‘china’s pollution increase is inevitable’

     

    ‘China’s pollution increase is inevitable’

    Posted: 25 May 2006


    Concentraded population

    Thus, Beijing and the neighbouring city of Tianjin combined have the population of Australia. Chonqing is one of the largest cities in the world. And China’s population is overwhelmingly concentrated on the eastern seaboard, with vast swathes of the inland practically depopulated. These clusters need to be serviced by gigantic power plants. China has 6GW power plants, while the biggest in the US is just 3GW. China also tends to have very large factories.

    In contrast, the US benefits from a much more dispersed population and can therefore operate smaller plants whose waste is more manageable.

    This explains the paradox that while the US is the biggest polluter in the world in absolute terms, it has much fewer pollution problems than China. Better technology and filtration also play a role.

    Air pollution China
    The World Bank estimates that air pollution causes nearly 170,000 deaths in China every year.

    Brock points out that the term pollution needs to be handled with care. Many people regard carbon dioxide (CO2) as a pollutant, but China has not classified it as such, and nor has any other country. CO2 is in fact merely the by-product of burning carbon and is in itself not in the least bit harmful to human health.

    However, CO2 has been identified as probably being responsible for global warming, since it traps warmth within the world’s atmosphere.

    Methane ignored

    One of the signs that the debate over the environment has been hopelessly politicised, according to Brock, is that methane (produced primarily by bovine flatulence) has 20 times the capacity of C02 for trapping heat. Yet so far there has been no movement to transfer cattle to a less ‘windy’ diet.

    What is undoubtedly harmful to humans is the carbon monoxide, mercury, sulphur and nitrous oxide that burning fossil fuels such as coal and oil emit. It’s these emissions that bring about the lung complaints and other ailments that can kill vulnerable old and young people in high levels.

    Techniques such as coal gasification can produce clean energy in both CO2 and health terms. Their usage becomes more feasible as oil prices go up, points out Brock.

    But Brock believes that large-scale pollution is inevitable. Causing mass to alter its state will always produce a by-product – otherwise known as pollution or waste.

    Tipping point

    “That’s simple physics, and is a process known as entropy. And China is producing so many goods of all kinds that the process will throw off enormous amounts of waste in absolute terms, even though the country is introducing strict and effective emission laws,” he says. This waste comes just as much from making a suit or building a factory as it does from fossil fuels.

    “It’s no good claiming to be green by buying a Toyota Prius or other environmentally-friendly car. The process of building a car actually produces a lot more CO2 than driving one,” points out Brock.

    Satellite image of thick layer of smog and smoke over China. July 11, 2002. © NASA
    Satellite image of thick layer of smog and smoke over China. July 11, 2002
    © NASA

    The choice for the Chinese government is simple: to reduce economic growth, and thereby standards of living, or to keep pressing ahead. Brock is probably right when he says that for the average Chinese citizen environmental issues come well below increasing his standard of living in terms of priorities.

    However, that could change if China saw a tipping point of the kind that characterised the rise of the environmental movement in the West, such as the terrible London smogs of the early 1960s, and the bursting into flames of the Love Canal in the Ohio Valley.

    Shifting cost

    “When it becomes clear that people’s living standards are being significantly affected by pollution, then people will step back and reconsider growth,” estimates Brock. While economists say that the pollution problem should, in principle, be solved by attributing ownership, this is quite hard to do with many kinds of pollution.

    Much of the existing CO2 in the atmosphere was put out by the Europeans and the US hundreds of years ago, since C02 takes thousands of years to disperse. Similarly, harmful fossil fuel particles in the atmosphere are hard to trace back to their generators. As a result, it’s tempting for countries intent on rapid growth to shift the cost of clearing up the waste to the victims, or indeed to later generations.

    Ultimately, Brock says, the problem will solve itself. Populations stabilise, as in Japan and Europe, standards of living peak, and absolute energy usage goes down. The question is whether the planet – and in particular China’s close neighbours – can survive the time that process will take to come to fruition.

    Source: Finance Asia reported by INS

  • China, India and Brazil could double gas emissions

    With world energy prices and climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions ballooning in tandem with a surge in energy demand from the hot economies of China, India and Brazil, the world has a major stake in the success of energy reduction efforts, particularly in those three countries, the experts said at the end of a our-year international project.

    Energy-Related CO2 Emissions Growth to 2030 (Reference Scenario. Source: International Energy Agency, Paris, 2004
    Energy-Related CO2 Emissions Growth to 2030 (Reference Scenario)
    Source: International Energy Agency, Paris, 2004

    Unlocking today’s potential savings requires simple, highly cost-effective renovation projects to identify and eliminate energy waste, they said. The keys are fostering corporate awareness, supporting catalyst energy efficiency practitioners and enlightening commercial banks to ease access to local financing for such projects.

    “Improving energy efficiency for existing buildings and other infrastructure could cut current energy consumption by 25 per cent or more in India, China and Brazil, amounting to millions of tonnes in reduced greenhouse gas emissions and hundreds of millions of dollars in energy savings,” says Robert Taylor, a World Bank Lead Energy Specialist and leader of the Three Country Energy Efficiency Project (3CEE).

    Conclusions from the project were captured at a conference in Paris on May 19-20, involving the project’s public and private sector partners. An executive summary of those conclusions will be published online on May 29.

    Despite the huge potential, it has been difficult to achieve investments on the ground so far, the project summary concludes.

    "Many energy efficiency projects quickly pay for themselves, with typical returns on investment of 20-40 per cent," says Chandra Govindarajalu, a senior World Bank environmental specialist. “Despite the demonstrated benefits, though, companies often cite other, more immediate investment and borrowing priorities. Meanwhile, commercial banks in these countries are generally unfamiliar with financing projects designed to achieve cost savings, rather than develop new product lines or other tangible assets.”

    Other roadblocks within companies include:

    • Lack of awareness/experience with newer efficient technologies;
    • High transaction costs for smaller sized projects that inhibit implementation;
    • High perceived risk by decision makers; and
    • A lack of combined technical and financial skills at finance institutions, preventing accurate appraisal and structuring of potential efficiency projects.

    Saving energy

    “Cutting energy waste is the cheapest, easiest, fastest way to solve many energy problems, improve the environment and enhance both energy security and economic development,” says Mr. Taylor. “What we must develop further are systems to tap huge potential energy savings through thousands of small projects scattered across China, India, Brazil, as well as smaller developing country economies,”

    He says the reluctance of companies to undertake energy retrofits is akin to that of countless millions worldwide who fail to buy energy efficient light bulbs for homes, despite proof that they save enough in utility bills to more than pay for themselves.

    “Even people who know the financial and environmental benefits of the bulbs may not buy and install them – it seems like such a small thing, why take the trouble? But from a national or global point of view, the potential savings add up to the electricity and pollution produced by many large power plants.

    “Imagine, however,” Taylor says, “if I offered to install the efficient bulbs and guaranteed they would pay for themselves in six months or your money refunded. Perhaps then you might then buy a package.

    “Rapidly developing countries such as China, India and Brazil need many people and consulting firms to do that same thing at the level of an industrial facility or apartment building, for example, to identify energy efficiencies across the board and exploit large-scale energy use reduction opportunities, and enlightened banks to finance them.”

    Such retrofits involve installing, for example, high efficiency lighting, air conditioners, boilers and waste heat recovery systems for commercial and public buildings, industrial plants and other facilities. Project costs (and profits) can be provided to energy service companies (ESCOs), which design and implement energy conservation projects, or participating banks, from a share of utility bill savings.

    "Money is available in these countries but can’t be accessed easily by energy conservation promoters and ESCOs. This is a big area for work in the future” says Mark Radka, Head of the UNEP Energy Branch, based in Paris. “It takes time and effort for local businesses, banks, governments and aid organizations to develop energy conservation delivery systems which work and which can be supported by the financial community.”

    While energy efficiency projects need to be customized to local circumstances and business practices, the project makes a host of recommendations, including:

    • Foster the growth of ESCOs;
    • Promote energy efficiency investments by local utilities; and
    • Develop special local bank lending arrangements to provide energy conservation financing.

    Initiated in 2001, the 3CEE Project has attempting to promote energy efficiency projects in China, India, Brazil by easing typical investment requirements of financial institutions.

    The project is a joint initiative of the World Bank, the UN Environment Programme’s Denmark-based Risoe Centre (URC), and partners in Brazil, China and India. The UN Foundation and the World Bank Energy Sector Management Assistance Program provided financial support, with complementary activities supported by the Asia Alternative Energy Program and the UK Department for International Development.

    “People worldwide have a vital interest in the success of this initiative to harness the power of the private sector to minimize the energy required for these three countries to realise their economic goals,” says Jyoti Painuly, Senior Energy Planner at the UNEP Risoe Centre on Energy, Climate and Sustainable Development.

    Juan Zak, a project team member at the UNEP RISOE Centre, added: “Accelerated polar ice melting is the latest indication that severe climate change may be upon us. The current 380 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere seem already too high. Roughly half of the global consumption of fossil fuels should be avoided if climate is to be stabilized. Using energy much more wisely is one of the very few feasible ways that, combined, would move the world towards this goal without economic disruption.”

    Top consumers

    The importance of improving energy efficiency in China, India and Brazil (with a combined 2.6 billion people, or almost 40 per cent of world population) is hard to overestimate.

    China, India and Brazil, already rank among the world’s top 10 energy consumers with astonishing economic growth rates nearing 10 per cent per year; they are on track to becoming the world’s major greenhouse gas emitters. Although today they emit just 10 per cent as much greenhouse gas per capita as North America, their national emissions are rising far faster.

    China’s emissions, for instance, are expected to double by 2020, in which case China will surpass the US as the leading source of climate-altering gases. By one estimate, the China power market will require an average 48 gigawatts of new capacity every year, equal to two-thirds of the UK’s total installed capacity.

    Global GDP is projected to more than double by 2030, 80 per cent of that growth accounted for by non-OECD countries, where current energy intensity of GDP (expressed as barrels of oil equivalent—BOE—per $1,000 of GDP) was approximately three times that of the OECD countries in 2005. Without gains in energy efficiency, such global GDP growth would raise daily global energy demand from 205 million BOE today to more than 500 million BOE by 2030.

    Much of that energy in India and China will be supplied by coal. China is both the world’s largest coal consumer and producer. While coal in China’s overall energy mix is projected to decline from 66 per cent in 2002 to 41 per cent in 2030, its total CO2 emissions are still projected to increase from 3307 Mt to 7144 Mt.

    India’s installed capacity for power generation has tripled over the last 20 years and now exceeds 101,000 MW. However, the total demand is expected to increase by another 3.5 times in the next two decades, even under a best-case scenario that envisions intensified efforts to modernize power plants, improve transmission and distribution efficiency, and adopt more efficient generation technologies.

    India’s soaring power demand will necessitate tripling installed generation capacity from 101,000 to 292,000 MW over the next two decades, much of it derived from poor quality coal. Similar demand increases are forecast for all fuels, and CO2 emissions are projected to increase from 1016 Mt to 2254 Mt by 2030.

    The 3CEE report notes that improvements in energy efficiency will bring China, India and other coal-dependent countries the important additional benefits of cleaner air, better health and other environmental improvements.

    Brazil’s growing emissions

    Brazil is the world’s 10th largest energy consumer, yet its fossil fuel CO2 intensity per unit of energy consumed is low due to widespread use of renewable energy from hydro electricity, ethanol and other biomass. However, Brazil’s overall energy intensity (measured as energy consumption per dollar of GDP) has been increasing.

    Fossil fuel intensity increased 18 per cent between 1990 and 2004, while electricity increased by 29 per cent. Brazil’s economic growth has been much slower than India’s or China’s over the past decade and projections are also much lower, hence projected energy supply increases are less dramatic – electricity consumption would increase 65 per cent (244 trillion kw/h) by 2015, assuming annual GDP growth of 4 per cent.

    The International Energy Agency projects an increase in Brazil CO2 emissions of 302 Mt to 665 Mt by 2030.

    “Energy efficiency in these three countries is a win-win strategy. It is one of the cleanest, cheapest and fastest ways to reduce carbon emissions,” says Timothy E. Wirth, President of the UN Foundation, which provided the project’s core funding.

    After some initial success with ESCOs in China, the 3 CEE project has now moved on to help China develop lending programmes in local banks for large-scale energy efficiency projects, to be financed in part by a $200 million World Bank loan.

    China has called for a "conservation society" and its commitment to a further 20 peer cent improvement in energy intensity over 2005 levels by 2010 and the project initiatives fit well with that objective. The topic of energy efficiency is now granted special attention (along with “energy development”) in all of China’s energy-related planning. The project report highlights potential savings as well in the industrial, construction and transportation sectors.

    Hopefully other countries will see that success and create a similar programs to meet their needs and apply it to other natural resource areas such as water where inefficiencies are equally high Mr Taylor says.

    New approaches

    India’s potential energy efficiency market is estimated at more than US $3.1 billion, which would produce a savings of 54 terawatt hours per year. To help realize this impressive potential, the Indian Government established a Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) and, the Bank says, a variety of commercial interests are beginning to pick up the energy efficiency business. But more support and financial backing is required.

    Brazil’s annual untapped energy savings potential is estimated at US$ 2.25 billion and many projects would enjoy an average payback of less than 30 months.

    Brazil’s has a strong national ESCO association (ABESCO)and is also among the few developing countries to have established a “wire charge,” which streams a small portion of power companies’ revenues into energy conservation. At the Paris meeting, the Brazilian Development Bank (BDNES) announced a new guarantee programme to assist ESCOs and accept 80 per cent of loan risks on accepted energy reduction projects.“

  • Rudd misleads Australia over whale watching program

    News Ltd this morning reported that the aircraft’s owner, Skytraders, had only late yesterday lodged an application with CASA to fly to the southern oceans, with an air safety spokesman saying that it would be a long process.

    "The process has started but it’s only just started and there will be a lot of issues that have got to be identified, discussed and addressed," CASA’s Peter Gibson said.

    Ministers Smith and Garrett yesterday attempted to quell concern over the issue, saying that there was ‘plenty of time’ before the Japanese returned from their mission, with the cull sometimes continuing into March.

    Despite the Government pledging to dispatch the mission within "a few days" of December 19, it appears planning was not in place at the time of the announcement.

    Shadow Environment Minister Greg Hunt said yesterday that the Government had misled the Australian people, and was sending the wrong message to the Japanese Government.

    "Sixteen days ago Mr Smith and Mr Garrett [said] within hours the ship would be on the high seas protecting the great whales," Mr Hunt said.

    "Hopefully… I’m sure one day they will get the ship on the seas and the plane in the air… the Japanese Prime Minister must be sitting back wondering…." he said.