Archive for July 23rd, 2010

Jul
23

General Electric raises dividend

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General Electric raises dividend

US conglomerate General Electric (GE) has said it is raising its quarterly dividend by 20% because of its improving financial performance.
The payout will rise by 2 cents to 0.12 (0.08) per share.
GE slashed its dividend by 68% from 0.31 to 0.10 in February 2009 to conserve cash during the downturn.
GE also said it would start buying its own shares again, after suspending its share buyback programme in September 2008. Shares in GE rose 3.3% to 15.71.
The company had previously said it would not increase its dividend until 2011.
But chief executive Jeff Immelt said GE could make the move earlier than anticipated because of “continued strong cash generation, recovery at GE Capital, and solid underlying performance in our industrial businesses through the first half of 2010″.
The new dividend will be payable on 25 October to shareholders who own stock at the close of business on 20 September.
Last week, GE reported a 16% rise in quarterly profits, its first growth in net income since late 2007.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

Precious legal case is dismissed

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Precious legal case is dismissed

A lawsuit in the US between two film companies over the rights to the Oscar-winning movie Precious has been dismissed.
Lionsgate Films and The Weinstein Company sued each other in 2009 over rights to distribute the film.
Matthew Gershman, a lawyer for Lionsgate, said the case had been “amicably resolved”. A spokesman for Weinstein was not available to comment.
The movie was based on the 1996 novel Push: Based on a Novel by Sapphire.
It was first shown at the Sundance film festival in January, 2009.
Harvey Weinstein claimed he bought the rights to the film at the event, but sales agent John Sloss later announced he had sold it to Lionsgate.
The dispute led to four separate legal cases on both coasts of the US.
Weinstein's case lost some its steam last September, when a judge in New York said the movie mogul's late-night negotiations at Sundance never amounted to a valid copyright transfer.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, that ruling encouraged Lionsgate to move for a summary judgment in the Los Angeles case – which eventually led to a settlement and dismissal.
In the meantime, the film was released to the public, taking 62.8m (41m) at the global box office.
Actress Mo'Nique and screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher also won Oscars for their roles in the drama.
The film, which tells the story of Harlem teenager Precious, who is illiterate and expecting her second child, was nominated in four other categories, including a best actress nod for breakout star Gabourey Sidibe.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

ExUS judge pleads guilty to child prison scam

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ExUS judge pleads guilty to child prison scam

Former Pennsylvania judge Michael Conahan has pleaded guilty to a racketeering conspiracy charge for helping put juvenile defendants behind bars in exchange for bribes.
He is accused along with former judge Mark Ciavarella of taking 2.8m (1.8m) from a profit-making detention centres. Mr Ciavarella denies wrongdoing.
The two pleaded guilty last year but a federal judge tossed out part of the plea agreement for being too lenient.
Conahan faces up to 20 years in jail.
US District Judge Edwin Kosik rejected the 87-month jail term set out last year in Conahan's agreement. Under that deal, the former judge would have been able to back out if he was dissatisfied with his sentence.
Judge Kosik has accepted Conahan's current plea agreement with prosecutors, which has no such get-out clause.
Prosecutors in a federal court in Scranton, Pennsylvania, said Conahan had closed a county-owned juvenile detention centre in 2002, just before signing an agreement to use a for-profit centre.
Prosecutors say Mr Ciavarella, a former juvenile court judge, then allegedly worked with Mr Conahan to ensure a constant flow of detainees.
The two men were originally charged in early 2009 with accepting money from the builder and owner of a for-profit detention centre that housed county juveniles in exchange for giving children longer, harsher sentences.
A spokeswoman for the non-profit Juvenile Law Center alleges that Mr Ciavarella gave excessively harsh sentences to 1,000-2,000 juveniles between 2003 and 2006.
Some of the children were shackled, denied lawyers, and pulled from their homes for offences which included stealing change from cars and failure to appear as witnesses.
The indictment was part of a larger probe into corruption in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, which has so far implicated more than 20 others.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

US Senate will not pass a full climate bill

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US Senate will not pass a full climate bill

The US Senate will not pass a full climate bill in its current session, majority leader Harry Reid has said.
Mr Reid acknowledged on Thursday that Democrats pushing for a bill could not muster the required number of votes.
Instead, he plans to introduce more limited legislation that would boost energy efficiency in vehicles and crack down on offshore oil exploration.
The news is a major blow to prospects of achieving a new global deal on climate change through the UN talks.
Some advocates of climate legislation in the US have criticised President Barack Obama for failing to take a strong lead on the issue, despite campaign promises.
In June 2009, the House of Representatives passed a bill that would cap emissions from most sectors of the economy and establish a nationwide carbon market.
A similar bill was introduced into the Senate last September, but did not receive enough backing; and weaker versions have suffered a similar fate.
On Thursday, Mr Reid acknowledged legislation was not going anywhere.
“We know where we are – we know that we don't have the votes,” he said.
The Democrats hold 59 of the 100 Senate seats. But some Democrats fearful of the economic impacts of cap-and-trade legislation have joined the minority Republicans in opposition to the bill.
US legislation is key to tying up a new global agreement on climate change – the agreement that governments promised in 2007 they would deliver at last year's Copenhagen summit, but did not.
“It is very important to have the US in any agreement, as it constitutes 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions,” said John Lanchbery, principal climate change adviser at the UK's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and a seasoned observer of UN negotiations.
“And it's in the position where it has to have some domestic legislation before it will put anything forward internationally,” he told BBC News.In 1997, President Clinton signed the Kyoto Protocol. But with the Senate vehemently opposed, the US did not ratify the treaty.
Many US politicians have said they will not travel down the same road again.
Yet many developing countries demand a strong US pledge before they will contemplate major curbs on their own emissions.
“They want the US to move, and they think it isn't offering anything substantial; so it is very important internationally,” said Mr Lanchbery.
Carol Browner, director of the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy, said Mr Obama would support Mr Reid's decision.
“Obviously, everyone is disappointed that we do not yet have an agreement on comprehensive legislation,” she said.
US-based environment groups have so far backed Mr Obama in public, despite private frustrations that he has not given a strong lead since taking office.
But some are now questioning his record.
“We really need the president to take the lead and tell us what bill he's going to support,” Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund, told Rolling Stone magazine.
“If he doesn't do that, then everything he's done so far will lead to nothing.”
Mr Reid indicated he would introduce fuel efficiency and oil exploration measures next week.
He said he had not given up hope of bringing a more comprehensive bill back later this year.
But with mid-term elections due in November and Mr Obama struggling for approval on issues such as the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the mathematics of Senate votes may be even worse for the bill's proponents by then.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

Montreal port labour lockout looks set to end

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Montreal port labour lockout looks set to end

The port of Montreal is expected to reopen on Saturday morning after dock workers and shipping firms reached a tentative deal on pay and conditions.
The port shut on Monday when shippers locked out about 850 workers after labour talks broke down.
The longshoremen's union is to vote on Friday on the labour deal, and work is expected to resume on Saturday.
The port of Montreal connects the North American industrial heartland to Europe and beyond.
But it was quiet for most of the past week after the Maritime Employers Association locked out dock workers it said were using “pressure tactics”, like work slowdowns, to protest against anticipated cuts in pay.
At issue was the shippers' effort to end pay to dock workers who were on call but not at port.
Details of the proposed agreement were unavailable on Friday morning, but the MEA, which represents shipping concerns, said the union had agreed to end “pressure tactics” and that the two sides would resume negotiations in October.
Longshoremen's union president Daniel Tremblay said the workers had obtained “very good” conditions and urged members to ratify the deal, the Globe and Mail newspaper reported.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

McDonalds sees profits rise 12%

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McDonalds sees profits rise 12%

Fast food giant McDonald's has reported a 12% rise in profits between April and May compared to the same period last year, as sales continued to rise.
Net profit came in at 1.23bn (783m), up from 1.1bn a year earlier. Revenue rose 5% to 5.95bn.
The profit figure was slightly above analysts' expectations.
Global like-for-like sales, which strip out the impact of sales at restaurants opened in the past 12 months, rose by 4.8%.
“McDonald's second quarter reflects strong top-line and bottom-line results with each area of the world generating higher comparable sales, traffic and profits,” said chief executive Jim Skinner.
“As we begin the third quarter, our momentum continues with July global comparable sales trending in-line with or better than second quarter sales.”

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

Workers at BP spill site get ready for evacuation

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Workers at BP spill site get ready for evacuation

Workers on ships at the site of the Gulf of Mexico BP oil spill are making final preparations to leave as Tropical Storm Bonnie nears.
But incident commander Adm Thad Allen has allowed the well to remain capped while the site is evacuated.
Ships running the remote-operated vehicles monitoring the sea bed for signs of problems will be the last to leave the site and the first to return.
Relief well work has been suspended for at least 10-12 days, BP says.
Bonnie is the second named storm of the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season, with wind speeds of 40mph (65km/h), the US National Hurricane Center says.
It is heading west-northwest at about 19mph (30km/h) . It will pass over southern Florida on Friday and then across the Gulf of Mexico. It could be at the spill site by early on Saturday.
It has already caused flooding in Haiti, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic and is moving north-west over the Bahamas.
Preparations are already under way in Louisiana with an emergency declaration by Governor Bobby Jindal.
The work on permanently stopping the oil will be delayed.
But vessels were being positioned in a way that would allow crews “to promptly re-start oil mitigation efforts as soon as the storm passes”, he added.
A “packer” – a plug used during storms – has been placed in the relief well to stabilise it while workers leave the site.
Adm Allen has said there is increasing confidence that the damaged well – closed with a new cap – can be left shut and unmonitored for several days.
The damaged well was closed off eight days ago while tests were being carried out to see if there are weaknesses in the well or ruptures in the sea bed.
Senior BP official Doug Suttles has said a week with no new leakage had improved the situation on the surface, with skimmers picking up vastly reduced quantities of oil.
Skimming has gone from 25,000 barrels of oil a day before the cap was put on to just 56 barrels on Wednesday.
The government is to reopen one-third of the closed Gulf fishing areas, as oil has not been observed for 30 days.
Earlier, US President Barack Obama announced he would take his family on holiday to Florida's Gulf Coast for the weekend of 14 August.
BP executive Kent Wells said on Thursday the oil giant had been given permission to begin preparing for “static” kill – pumping mud into the top of the well through the new cap – which is being viewed as an intermediate measure.
BP is awaiting final approval from Adm Allen on whether to move forward with the process.
Eleven workers on the BP-leased rig were killed when the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded on 20 April and the oil has caused one of America's worst environmental disasters.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

Fords profits hit $2.6bn in three months as sales rise

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Fords profits hit $2.6bn in three months as sales rise

Ford surprised Wall Street with a 2.6bn profit in the last quarter as it continued to take sales from rivals.
America's number two carmaker saw sales growing at almost double the overall pace of the industry, in a sign that it has turned the corner.
Announcing its fifth straight quarterly profit, the once debt-laden company said it was on track to remain profitable in 2010.
Meanwhile, Germany's Volkswagen said sales rose 16% in the first half.
In the three months to the end of June, Ford's revenue rose to 31.3bn from 27.2bn a year earlier, more than analysts' forecast of 29.8bn.
Car sales in the first six months of 2010 rose 28%, almost double the industry pace.
Ford's chief executive Alan Mulally said in that it was a “very strong second quarter… and we are ahead of where we thought we would be despite the still-challenging business conditions.”
In the grey market ahead of Wall Street's opening, Ford shares were trading up 2.6%
Europe's largest carmaker, Volkswagen, also enjoyed a good start to 2010.
The 16% rise in first-half sales was driven by strong demand in China, up 45.7% to 950,300 vehicles, and the US, up 29.2% to 175,300.
Volkswagen sold a total of 3.58 million cars in the first six months of the year.
“We are also optimistic as regards the full year and expect to perform better than the overall market,” the company's sales chief Christian Klingler said.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

Conrad Black to hear bail conditions in Chicago court

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Conrad Black to hear bail conditions in Chicago court

Share this page Conrad Black to hear bail conditions in Chicago court Canadian-born media baron Conrad Black is due in court in Chicago on Friday where a judge will set the conditions of his release from prison.
Black, a British peer, was released from a Florida prison on Wednesday after serving more than two years.
He was freed on 2m (1.3m) bond pending an appeal against a conviction for fraud and obstructing justice.
A federal judge in Chicago has ordered him not to leave the country, but he has said he wants to return to Canada.
Black was freed following a US Supreme Court decision that rejected as unconstitutionally vague the law used to prosecute him for fraud.
The former Hollinger International executive was convicted in 2007 of defrauding investors of 6.1m by paying himself a tax-free bonus from the sale of newspaper assets without the approval of the company's board.
He was also convicted of obstructing justice after being recorded on videotape removing documents from his office in Toronto after US regulators had informed him he was under investigation.
He was sentenced to six and a half years in prison.

Source:BBC

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Jul
23

Bone turnover link to diabetes

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Bone turnover link to diabetes

The skeleton has a key role in regulating blood sugar and may be the underlying cause of diabetes in some people, say US researchers.
A study in mice found that the breakdown of old bone to make way for new bone growth also helps to keep a healthy level of glucose in the blood.
A hormone called osteocalcin seems to be the link, it showed.

  • The Columbia team, writing in Cell, say the findings may lead to better drugs to help control Type 2 diabetes.
    Study leader Dr Gerard Karsenty, from Columbia University Medical Center, had already done work showing osteocalcin, which is released by bone, can regulate glucose levels.
    It switches on the production of insulin in the pancreas which in turn improves the ability of other cells to take in glucose from the blood.
    But in the latest study, he found that osteocalcin only works when bone is being broken down during its natural turnover.
    Further tests on osteocalcin and glucose levels in a small group of patients with a genetic defect in their bone turnover supported the initial findings in mice.
    Type 2 diabetes is the most common form of the condition and is caused when the body no longer properly responds to insulin leading to out of control blood sugar.
    The results suggest that for some people, diabetes may be triggered by changes in the skeleton.
    Also drugs designed to stimulate this link between bone and insulin may lead to better treatments for type 2 diabetes, he adds.
    One important consequence of the finding is that bone-strengthening drugs used in conditions such as osteoporosis may interfere with this process and cause problems with blood sugar.
    “This research has important implications for both diabetes and osteoporosis patients,” he said.
    “First, this research shows that osteocalcin is involved in diabetes onset
    “Secondly, bone may become a new target in the treatment of type 2 diabetes as it appears to contribute strongly to glucose intolerance
    “And finally, osteocalcin could become a treatment for type 2 diabetes.”
    Dr Victoria King, head of research at Diabetes UK, said: “The research is interesting and this area of investigation could open up the possibility of more targets for drugs to treat or prevent type 2 diabetes.”
    But she warned the research was in the very early stages.
    “What we do know at this stage is that lifestyle changes such as maintaining a healthy weight, eating a balanced diet and being more physically active can help to reduce your risk of developing type 2 diabetes, and can also help people diagnosed with the condition to manage it more effectively.”

    Source:BBC

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    Jul
    23

    MacAskill will not attend US hearing on bomber release

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    MacAskill will not attend US hearing on bomber release

    Scottish ministers and officials will not attend a US Senate hearing about the release of the Lockerbie bomber.
    The foreign relations committee wanted Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill and the Scottish Prison Service's medical chief, Dr Andrew Fraser, to be present.
    Senators have also invited Westminster former justice secretary Jack Straw.
    BP chief executive Tony Hayward has been asked to attend after allegations that Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi's release was linked to an oil deal.
    It was reported that former UK prime minister Tony Blair had been invited to the hearing, but the Senate committee has apologised that a draft letter to Mr Blair was published in error. A committee spokesman has since said Mr Blair will not be invited to appear.
    Mr Straw said: “Before coming to any decision as to whether to accept this invitation, I shall be consulting Gordon Brown, as prime minister at the time, and seeking the advice of the Foreign Office.”
    A BP spokesman said: “We have received the invitation and we are considering it.”

  • Jack Straw, former justice secretary – He said: “Before coming to any decision to accept, I shall consult Gordon Brown, as prime minister at the time, and seek the advice of the Foreign Office.”
  • Tony Hayward, BP chief executive – A BP spokesman said: “We have received the invitation and we are considering it.”
  • Kenny MacAskill, Scottish Justice Secretary (declined invite) – A Scottish government spokesperson said: “Scottish ministers and public officials are accountable within the Scottish Parliament system – that is the constitutional basis of our democracies.”
  • Dr Andrew Fraser, Scottish Prison Service's medical chief (declined invite) – A Scottish government spokesperson said it would be happy to supply further written evidence to the US Senate.
    A spokesperson for the Scottish government confirmed that the invite to Mr MacAskill and Dr Fraser had been turned down.
    The Senate hoped the two men would testify on Capitol Hill on 29 July.
    The spokesperson added: “Since the Lockerbie atrocity in 1988, all matters regarding the investigation, prosecution and compassionate release decision have been conducted according to the jurisdiction and laws of Scotland.
    “Clearly, the Senate Committee has responsibility to scrutinise decisions taken within the US system, and Scottish ministers and public officials are accountable within the Scottish Parliament system. That is the constitutional basis of our democracies.
    “The Scottish Parliament's justice committee has already undertaken a full inquiry into the decision on compassionate release, and the Westminster Scottish affairs committee has also examined the issue in terms of the formal inter-governmental relations that exist within the UK. That is right and proper.”
    The spokesperson also said the Scottish government would be happy to supply further written evidence to the US Senate.
    Meanwhile, the UN's observer at the trial of the Lockerbie bomber has said the circumstances surrounding the case may never be fully uncovered.
    Dr Hans Kochler, who saw Megrahi convicted at Camp Zeist in the Netherlands in 2001, said he was not convinced of the Libyan's guilt.
    The 58-year-old was jailed for life for the bombing which killed 270 people, most of them Americans.
    US senators want his release in 2009 on compassionate grounds to be examined.
    The former international observer agreed there should be an investigation, not only into the release but also the wider issues of the Lockerbie inquiry, trial and appeal.
    He told BBC's Newsnight Scotland: “Why, for instance, has the appeal – which was ongoing last year – been dropped by Mr Megrahi?
    “Another question would be why did the secretary of state for justice take that unprecedented step and visit the Libyan prisoner in a Scottish jail for a private meeting, after that prisoner had applied for compassionate release?”
    Dr Kochler said there was never any question of Mr MacAskill believing there had been a miscarriage of justice in the case, but questioned what was discussed at the meeting between the two at Greenock Prison on 4 August last year.
    He pointed out that Megrahi dropped his appeal against his conviction on 12 August.
    “The issue is not one of innocence or guilt,” he said.
    “The minister has repeatedly made clear that he fully trusts the judgement of the Scottish courts.
    “He has certainly discussed matters which he did not disclose in public. He must have had a very compelling reason to meet that prisoner in private.”
    When asked if the truth of the circumstances would ever be uncovered, Dr Kochler said: “I'm very sceptical.
    “We do not know the truth about the Lockerbie tragedy.”The question that still remains is what the second appeal would have resulted in, what decision would the second appeal court have finally made if the proceedings were not aborted.”
    In 2007 the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission – which examines possible miscarriages of justice – granted Megrahi a second appeal.
    It subsequently emerged he was suffering from terminal cancer.
    His second appeal got under way last year but shortly afterwards applications were made for both his transfer to a Libyan jail and release on compassionate grounds.
    Megrahi did not have to drop his appeal in order to be released compassionately.
    The SCCRC has spent the past six months trying to get details of the abandoned appeal made public, but none of the people and organisations involved – the Crown Office, Foreign Office, police authorities, Megrahi and his legal team – have given unqualified consent to the release of the documents.
    Mr Kochler told Newsnight Scotland: “I am not convinced that the Libyan convict, the only person who was convicted in this case, is guilty as charged.
    “For that reason I would have hoped that the SCCRC's report would have been taken more seriously and that the appeal would have been allowed to continue in the interests of justice.”

    Source:BBC

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    Jul
    23

    Boulder stumbles on the path to going green

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    Boulder stumbles on the path to going green

    More than six months after President Barack Obama promised delegates to the climate change talks in Copenhagen that the United States would pass sweeping energy legislation, little has changed.
    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says he wants Democrats to chart a way forward during a meeting on Thursday, but it is doubtful even modest proposals can get anywhere in Congress before November's mid-term elections.
    In the meantime, the city of Boulder, in Colorado, is busy setting an example.
    Elissa Guralnick, a self-confessed “liberal lefty”, is doing her bit.
    At a cost of several thousand dollars, she is insulating her loft, replacing appliances and tackling draughty windows.
    A white plastic pipe rattles as chemically-treated cellulose is pumped into her attic from a truck parked outside.
    “I like the fact that Boulder is as green a community as it can be,” says Ms Guralnick, who teaches literature at the University of Colorado.
    “I like the fact that it's forward-looking, and even new-agey.”
    Boulder certainly feels very green. The Rocky Mountains rise up right behind the city. A babbling mountain creek runs through the town. There are lots of beautiful green spaces. Cycle paths run everywhere and the town is, well, littered with recycling bins.
    At the twice-weekly farmers' market, where shoppers come for organic produce and fine cheese, city employees offer advice on the “energy vampires” (electric appliances) bumping up their home utility bills.
    Responsible members of the city's 100,000 population can rent a “kill-a-watt” meter from the local library.
    But for all the solar panels arrayed on the roof of the municipal building on the corner of Broadway and Canyon, the roar of traffic tells a different story.
    The people of Boulder are just as wedded to their cars as they are anywhere else in America.
    The city has tried hard to try to get people to use public transport. But the buses crossing this busy intersection are all virtually empty.”Changing behaviour at a community level is not easy and it doesn't happen at a rapid pace,” admits Jonathan Koehn, Boulder's regional sustainability co-ordinator, during a tour of some of the city's green initiatives.
    For all the subsidised home energy audits, publicity campaigns and the nation's first carbon tax at 21 (14) per household, the city has discovered that it is actually quite difficult to motivate people.
    “We've come to realise that we can put the programmes in place,” Mr Koehn says, “but you can't make people take advantage.”
    Mr Koehn says Boulder is “re-tooling” its programmes to try to take account of what motivates people.
    Using a mixture of city funds and federal stimulus money, a programme known as “Two Techs in a Truck” will send technicians into homes and businesses to implement energy-saving measures.
    The idea is to make it as easy as possible for people to do the right thing.
    Boulder wants to reduce its carbon emissions by an impressive 80% by 2020, based on 2005 levels. But the city's dependence on fossil fuel, and the fact that it seems to be prospering, despite the recession, mean that so far the target looks overly ambitious.
    The city says its emissions have gone down for the past three years, but not by much.Outside the Valmont power plant, owned by Xcel Energy, vast piles of coal bear witness to the limits of Boulder's ambitions.
    Some 64% of its electricity is produced by coal. Thanks to its own hydroelectric facilities, the city's renewable mix accounts for 15% (5% more than Colorado as a whole). Natural gas makes up the remaining 21%.
    Mr Koehn says the plant symbolises Boulder's challenge.
    “We have embarked on this journey to be as sustainable as we can and reduce our emissions as quickly… as we can. Yet the majority of our energy still comes from burning this coal.”
    In a bid to take greater control of Boulder's energy sources, the city council will decide on 3 August whether to sign another 20-year agreement with Xcel or embark on the process of becoming a municipal utility.
    It's a complex, risky move which has not been made anywhere in the US since 2005, and not in Colorado since 1923.
    Roger Pielke, professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado, says there is a limit to how green a city can become, left to its own devices.
    “It turns out that Boulder is showing how very difficult that task is, even in a community as enlightened and forward thinking as Boulder,” he says.
    A real breakthrough, Prof Pielke says, depends on change at national and international levels.
    “At some point we will have to commit the massive amounts of resources into technological innovation that we need to fundamentally change our energy system.”
    But Boulder's mayor, Susan Osborne, is undaunted.
    “It is our city's primary goal,” she says. “It's the number one focus of our city council. It infiltrates everything we do.”
    Come back in five years, Ms Osborne says.
    “I think it will be amazing.”

    Source:BBC

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    Jul
    23

    Mapping US drone and Islamic militant attacks in Pakistan

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    Mapping US drone and Islamic militant attacks in Pakistan

    Missile attacks by US drones in Pakistan's tribal areas have more than trebled under the Obama administration, research by the BBC Urdu service shows.
    Compared with 25 drone strikes between January 2008 and January 2009, there were at least 87 such attacks between President Obama taking office on 20 January 2009 and the end of June 2010.
    More than 700 people have been killed in such attacks under Mr Obama, compared with slightly fewer than 200 from under his predecessor, George W Bush.
    The militant backlash over the same period has been even more violent. Extremists have struck more than 140 times in various Pakistani locations, killing more than 1,700 people and injuring hundreds more, the BBC research shows.
    Location
    No of Deaths
    Peshawar
    362
    Lahore
    253
    Khyber
    120
    Rawalpindi
    98
    Lakki Marwat
    93
    Kohat
    91
    Dera Ismail Khan
    77
    Lower Dir
    75
    Karachi
    69
    Dera Ghazi Khan
    50
    Source: BBC Urdu service. Data from Jan 2009 to June 2010
    While attacks by militants cannot be described as direct retaliation for drone strikes, they are firmly part of the battle the US and Pakistani authorities are fighting against radical Islam's operational bases in Pakistan.
    Over the same 18-month period, many more than 2,500 people have died in offensives by the Pakistani army and fighting between troops and militants. Exact figures are impossible to obtain.
    Places such as Swat and South Waziristan which have seen offensives by the Pakistani military are virtually closed to independent media and other groups.
    The increased frequency of drone strikes follows a reported shift in US policy to extend its drone operations. It has moved from targeting al-Qaeda suspects to including Pakistani Taliban who are believed to be providing a haven for al-Qaeda leaders and operatives.
    The bulk of these attacks have been in North Waziristan, with neighbouring South Waziristan the next main target.
    While more than 700 people have died in these attacks, positive identification of the victims, either by Pakistani or US authorities, has been made in fewer than a dozen instances.
    Province
    No of deaths
    South Waziristan
    279
    North Waziristan
    386
    Bajaur
    14
    Bannu
    5
    Orakzai
    8
    Kurram
    54
    Source: BBC Urdu service. Data from Jan 2009 to June 2010
    There have been notable successes for the Americans and Pakistanis, including the killing of Taliban militant leader Baitullah Mehsud last August and several people described as senior al-Qaeda leaders.
    The data collected by the BBC Urdu service shows militant attacks dipping when Mehsud was killed and then peaking last autumn when Pakistani troops launched the South Waziristan offensive. Drone attacks reached a high when the operation was declared over and the Pakistani army refused to push on into North Waziristan as the US government wanted it to.
    Pakistan has consistently argued that drone attacks are hindering rather than helping with the battle against extremism, saying they fuel public anger against the government and the US and boost support for militants.
    On the other hand, the US, which does not routinely confirm drone operations, has always implied there is a tacit understanding between the two countries over the attacks.
    The CIA declined to comment for this story.
    The Taliban say drone attacks make them more determined to fight, but admit that they have disrupted their operations.
    This data was compiled between January 2009 and July 2010 by the BBC Urdu service. It is based on reports from BBC World Service correspondents working in Northern Pakistan and the tribal areas.

    Source:BBC

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