Archive of ‘World Affairs’

PetroSun announces successful site inspections for commercial production of Algae Biofuel

PetroSun recently announced that it was looking to China for algae biofuel production and today has announced that the proposed site for their commercial production of Algae Biofuel is satisfactory.

The Joint Venture visited potential algae farm system sites in YanCheng, Xiangshui County and New Zone Cixi, Zhejiang. The locations inspected meet all of the requirements for large scale commercial production of algae, biofuel processing and access to multiple markets. Shanghai Jun Ya Yan will represent the Joint Venture in the final negotiations with representatives of the aforementioned Economic Development Zones.

Things are moving along quite well.

Wisconsin and Germany form an alliance

Is it just me, or is it weird that Wisconsin’s Governor Jim Doyle signed a “memorandum of understanding” with the UK back in May and now he is forming alliances with Germany in order to fight climate change?

The statement says that both Doyle and German officials agree that climate change and fossil fuel dependence require immediate action. They say low-carbon technology and the reduction of greenhouse gasses must be pursued.

 

Doyle says he looks forward to strengthening Wisconsin and Germany’s combined efforts to confront climate change and energy policies.

 

In May, Doyle signed a memorandum of understanding with the United Kingdom on how to better address climate change issues.

Weird.

There may be some hope for the UK afterall

A little while ago, I wished that all the Environmentalists would emigrate from the US to the UK. Looking back on that statement, I feel I may have been a little too harsh; that is a fate that you shouldn’t wish on any country. Plus it seems that there are some reasonable people left in the UK. Take a look at this opinion piece in The Economist from a University of London Professor:

Your assertion that “global warming is happening faster than expected” exhibits a disturbing degree of cognitive dissonance (“Adapt or die”, September 13th). Since 1998 the world’s average surface temperature has exhibited no warming, according to all the main temperature records. The trend has been a combination of flatlining and cooling, with a marked plunge over the past year; many countries, including Australia, Canada, China and the United States, experienced severe winters.

 

Moreover, recent work demonstrates that the Earth’s temperature may stay roughly the same for at least a further decade through the impact of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation. In addition, the next 11-year cycle of solar storms—Solar Cycle 24—is late by more than two years. The sun is currently spotless, conditions that obtained during the “Dalton Minimum”, an especially cold period that lasted several decades starting from 1790 and which was implicated in the rout of Napoleon’s Grand Army during the retreat from Moscow in 1812.

 

Finally, one expert, Victor Manuel Velasco Herrera of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, has gone so far as to give warning that the Earth may enter a new “Little Ice Age” for up to 80 years because of decreases in solar activity. The immediate portents thus point in the direction of a cooling period.

Wow, Professor Philip Stott is my hero and you know what the best part of this is? Dr. Stott has a blog dealing with the fallacies of Global Warming! What a great guy.

Boring Sunday

There really isn’t anything going on today and I don’t feel like writing about nothing. Therefore, I’m just going to send you to Pajamas Media to read Frank J’s proposal on how we need to train our future presidents. Enjoy.

New South Wales to abandon biofuel mandates

It seems like everyone is beginning to abandon any biofuel mandate that could potentially lead to increases in food prices. Australia’s New South Wales joining in the trend by not implementing a mandate that would increase biofuel requirements to 10% by 2010.

NSW Premier Nathan Rees has ditched his predecessor’s commitment to introduce mandated levels of biodiesel in motor vehicles and boost ethanol levels from 2 per cent to 10 per cent.

 

In a setback for the biofuels industry, Mr Rees signalled yesterday that Morris Iemma’s mandate plans would not be implemented — putting himself at odds with Lands Minister Tony Kelly, who had insisted the Government backed the biofuels policy.

 

The about-face in NSW comes amid mounting evidence that biofuel mandates have contributed to growing world food shortages and rising prices.

There’s a bright side to everything

I don’t know if you saw this but it seems that a jury in Britain has decided that man made global warming is such a threat that is justifies breaking the law.

The threat of global warming is so great that campaigners were justified in causing more than £35,000 worth of damage to a coal-fired power station, a jury decided yesterday. In a verdict that will have shocked ministers and energy companies the jury at Maidstone Crown Court cleared six Greenpeace activists of criminal damage.

 

Jurors accepted defence arguments that the six had a “lawful excuse” to damage property at Kingsnorth power station in Kent to prevent even greater damage caused by climate change. The defence of “lawful excuse” under the Criminal Damage Act 1971 allows damage to be caused to property to prevent even greater damage – such as breaking down the door of a burning house to tackle a fire.

 

The not-guilty verdict, delivered after two days and greeted with cheers in the courtroom, raises the stakes for the most pressing issue on Britain’s green agenda and could encourage further direct action.

 

Kingsnorth was the centre for mass protests by climate camp activists last month. Last year, three protesters managed to paint Gordon Brown’s name on the plant’s chimney. Their handi-work cost £35,000 to remove.

My first response was anger and that thought that this would set a precedence for other acts like this in the future, but then it dawned on me. This happened in Britain which isn’t the United States. That means that for the Greens to get the same kind of treatment, they would have to go to Britain. All this led me to the conclusion that this ruling will lead to a massive exodus of Environmentalists to Britain (and more importantly, out of the United States).

 

Isn’t this wonderful? This Brits have given us a great gift: giving the Greens an incentive to leave our country (where it is illegal to do this kind of crap).

 

Thank you Britain, thanks for taking one for the team.

 

Oh and at the very least, I’m sure this ruling has helped the sign industry by spurring the energy plants into buying this sign.

 

H/T Drudge

Algae World ’08

Some of the key players in the algae biofuel realm are planning on attending the Algae World ’08 conference in Singapore this coming November. The newest addition to the list is CEO Riggs Eckelberry of OriginOil, a company currently develping a comercialization process of algae based fuels. The goal is to find a way to make algae a legitimate competitor of oil.
-
Read more here

Africa’s deal with the biofuel devil

It seems like some biofuel businesses are enviously eying Africa for land to support the western world’s thirst for alternative fuels. Some of their offers are quite ludicrous and sound almost like modern day Panama Canal deal (except  with the Africans reaping none of the benefits).

 

A little history, the reason we have a Panama Canal (and not the Nicaraguan Canal) was our Government decided to help stage a little revolution to create the newly formed (and friendly) Panamanian government that was willing to sell us the land we needed for the canal. This was all bought for $10 million (roughly $250 million, adjusted for inflation) with an annuity of $250,000. Was this wrong? Eh, from what I can tell it was a fairly bloodless revolution but I will let smarter people decide that. What I do know is that Panama got a fortune for letting us “exploit it” compared to what the African people will get.

 

Take a look at this (emphasis added):

The Tanzanian government has granted the British firm the use of 9,000 hectares (22,230 acres) of sparsely populated farmland, or enough land to cover about 12,000 soccer fields, for a period of 99 years—free of charge. In return, the company will invest about $20 million (€13 million) to build roads and schools, bringing a modicum of prosperity to the region.

 

Sun Biofuels is not alone. In fact, half a dozen other companies from the Netherlands, the United States, Sweden, Japan, Canada and Germany have already sent their scouts to Tanzania. Prokon, a German company known primarily for its wind turbines, has already begun growing jatropha curcas on a large scale. It expects to have 200,000 hectares (494,000 acres)—an area about the size of Luxembourg—under cultivation throughout Tanzania soon.

 

A gold rush mentality has taken hold—not just in East Africa but across the entire continent. In Ghana, the Norwegian firm Biofuel Africa has secured farming rights for 38,000 hectares (93,860 acres), and Sun Biofuels is also doing business in Ethiopia and Mozambique.

 

Kavango BioEnergy, a British company, plans to invest millions of euros in northern Namibia. Western companies are turning up in Malawi and Zambia, where they plan to produce diesel fuel and ethanol from jatropha curcas, palm oil or sugar cane. Foreign investors have their eye on 11 million hectares (27 million acres) in Mozambique—more than one-seventh of the country’s total area—for growing energy plants. The government in Ethiopia has even made 24 million hectares (59 million acres) available.

Now will this be a good thing? This could be the thing that Africa needs to set up some infrastructure. However, as you may already be aware, I’m wholeheartedly against any biofuel that takes agricultural land. Therefore, companies using this land, even if it is “only sparsely populated farmland,” is very disheartening. Combine this with the following paragraphs from the story and you will know why I am very skeptical of these investments.

In Tanzania, while there are hopes, there is also plenty of reason to be skeptical about promises that everything will improve. In April 2006, Sun Biofuels claimed that it had received formal approval for cultivation from 10 of the 11 affected villages. At that point, however, several communities were not even aware of the plans, while others had attached conditions to their consent. A village head complained, in writing, to the district administration that Sun Biofuels had cleared and marked off land without even contacting the village elders.

 

(…)

 

Seventy kilometers (43 miles) farther south, on the Rufiji River, thousands of residents are being forced to move to make way for the Swedish company Sekab’s plans to grow sugarcane, a highly water-intensive crop, on at least 9,000 hectares (22,230 acres) and then distill it into ethanol. Five thousand hectares (12,350 acres) have already been approved.

 

The river and the wetlands along its banks are the only source of drinking water for thousands of people, especially during the dry season. Sekab also plans to tap this reservoir to irrigate its plantations. Transparency? Nonexistent. Compensation? None whatsoever. Information? A scarce commodity. When residents attending an informational event asked about compensation payments, they were told curtly: “You will get what you are entitled to.

At this point of the story, I’m getting pretty mad to be honest. This is Africa people, a mostly third world continent, where things are about as corrupt as you can get. I have very little faith in the governments to uphold their ends of the agreements even if the companies plan on keep their promises.

 

But that is even besides the point, the real problem is why they plan on growing a crop like sugarcane in Africa. If I remember correctly, Africa is a fairly parched continent with a premium put on water. This brings up another issue I have with crop based biofueld: they use needed freshwater for crops or, in this case, drinking water even.

 

If you’re getting fairly mad by now, I can completely understand, but try to hold it together until after you read the next part.

But Brennan’s rosy predictions do not reflect opinions in East Africa. A study on energy plants in Tanzania, conducted by the German Agency for Technical Cooperation, lists a host of negative side effects. What is more, this is not the first time that white investors have promised prosperity for Tanzania.

 

With similarly enticing promises, small farmers were talked out of their land several decades ago to make way for coffee plantations. In the 1990s, foreign mining companies arrived in Tanzania to dig for gold. “They promised us jobs, new roads, new wells and schools,” says journalist Joseph Shayo. “And what happened? No schools, no wells and few jobs, which were low-paying jobs, to boot.” To make matters worse, large mining zones were fenced off and became inaccessible to the original residents.

 

In a recently published study on the “Biofuel Industry in Tanzania,” journalist Khoti Kamanga of the University of Dar es Salaam warns against the side effects of energy plantations. The population, Kamanga writes, is usually uninformed, while the cultivation of energy plants usually goes hand-in-hand with forced resettlement. According to Kamanga, it is very likely that ethanol production will also affect food prices in Tanzania, with the country’s dependency on food imports growing even further.

Alright, so we got companies having a history of breaking their promises, forced resettlement, and higher food prices. Wow, If you take away the food part, this could practically be what the American government did with the Native American tribes here: breaking treaties and forcing Native Americans on reservations.

 

Looks like Africa is following our example, just the wrong one.

 

A note: I’m not against businesses investing in Africa. The potential for these businesses to help change the quality of life in these thirdworld countries is definitely there. However, exploitation, what this sounds like, is completely unacceptable. In Africa, having access to land is essential. Depriving people of this is dispicabl.

Brazilians eye algae as fuel source

The Brazilians, who I need not remind you are the world leaders in sugar ethanol production, are looking into biofuel production from micro-algae. Interesting.
-
Click here for more

Central and Southeastern European Countries go Nuclear

While the world focuses on Iran and tries to block it from gaining nuclear capabilities, many other countries are looking into gaining nuclear power. At least nine central and southeastern European countries either have nuclear reactors or are planning on getting them soon. The reasons states for going nuclear range from reliability to energy independence. You can see the complete list with each county named here.