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Politics : Rat's Nest - Chronicles of Collapse -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mannie who wrote (8028)7/3/2008 1:56:01 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24229
 
High tech to low, world's green methods are many


SIEBEN LINDEN, Germany (CNN) -- Straw and clay are the building materials of choice for a few dozen ecologically minded people in the eastern German village of Sieben Linden.

Cleverly insulated homes in part of Freiburg, Germany, use a fraction of the energy consumed in average homes.

1 of 3 A continent away, the Chinese government plans to transform a rural area of 100,000 people into a city of 400,000 that would run largely on renewable energy.

From the simplest methods to the most technologically advanced, the strategies employed around the world to be more environmentally friendly and reduce reliance on fossil fuels are as varied as the people that inhabit the planet.

One city garnering international attention is Freiburg, in southern Germany. Its use of solar panels and other forms of renewable energy draws tourists interested in taking green ideas to their hometowns.

A Freiburg neighborhood, the Schlierberg Solar Village, consists of solar-powered abodes insulated in such a way that they use only 10 percent of the energy consumed in average homes. Solar-Fabrik, a producer of solar panels, has a sun-powered factory in Freiburg. Watch how Freiburg uses solar energy »

Jerome Barrier recently visited to get tips for his home in France.

"You have sustainable development housing estates, you have ... design centers [and] research centers," Barrier said. "In two days, you can see all the technologies and, I would say, all the tricks that we can implement where we come from."

Solar power accounts for only 2 percent of Freiburg's energy supply. Still, many see the city as a pioneer in solar technology. The local soccer club, SC Freiburg, runs its stadium largely with solar energy and power converted from wood chips.

People who use solar panels to power their homes sometimes produce more energy than they use. In Germany, such unused power is transferred to the local utility, which buys it from the homeowners at a government-subsidized rate. iReport.com: How are you going green?


Strong demand for solar technology in Germany has contributed to a global shortage of a key panel component -- silicon -- making solar technology more expensive. Freiburg's mayor, Dieter Salomon, said solar power isn't necessarily the best energy choice.

"It's a symbol, it's not the big shot," he said. "I think the future of photovoltaic [solar energy] will be in the less developed countries."

Sieben Linden, the village in eastern Germany, mixes high- and low-tech approaches. Some of its roughly 100 residents live in homes built with little more than clay, wood and straw.

Straw bales coated with clay are put inside the homes' walls. The insulation reduces the need for powered heating and cooling, making the houses much more energy efficient than homes made with standard building materials, according to village resident Martin Schlegel. Watch home construction in the village »

"The energy you save by [using straw] is sufficient to heat this house 12 years, compared to a house built with normal modern materials," he said.

Those who worry about the straw easily catching fire should think again, Schlegel said. He said that because the bales are tightly packed, they don't ignite quickly.

"[Burning] a sheet of paper -- it is very easy. But try to light a telephone book," he said, comparing the bales to the book.

Straw-bale construction was used in Nebraska in the 19th century. The villagers of Sieben Linden take a more technological approach, fitting their homes with solar panels.

"Environmentally sound living always involves high tech," villager Werner Dyck said. "The solar panels are high tech, and we have computers to make them even more efficient to manage our energy needs."

In China, government and Western developers plan to convert the rural area of Wanzhuang, near Beijing, into an "ecocity" -- one of the nation's first.

The plan, according to United Kingdom-based developer Arup, is to have the city running largely on renewable energy by 2020. Watch an explanation of developers' plans »

A tram system will be introduced to reduce residents' reliance on cars. About 300,000 more people will move to the area, which is now known for its pear orchards and is now home to 100,000 people.

The orchards will be preserved, and schools, offices and shops will be placed in a manner to reduce travel needs, developers say.

Critics may note that the effort wouldn't be significant for China, citing estimates it opens a new coal power plant every week, emitting more environmentally damaging carbon.

Peter Head, an Arup architect, said the ecocity project is valuable.

"If China doesn't pursue this modernization process using ecocities, its economic growth will become uneconomic," he said.

In the Middle East, the emirate of Abu Dhabi -- a major oil producer -- is spending $15 billion to make itself an epicenter of green technology.

Part of its plans include building a 2-square-mile eco-community -- called Masdar -- over the next 10 years. Air cooling alone is quite an energy-consuming task in the sunny Persian Gulf emirate, but developers say the city can be run on energy from the sun, wind and biofuels refined from plants and waste. Watch an explanation of the Masdar plan »

Water will be purified by solar power and recycled from the sea for both consumption and farming. About 40,000 people will live there, and another 50,000 will work there, organizers say.

Abu Dhabi's green ambitions don't end with the city. It has persuaded the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to create the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, a graduate school and research institute focused exclusively on renewable energy.

Abu Dhabi wants to position itself as a global center for harnessing new fuels for a time when oil won't be as plentiful.

"It's no longer the issue of pumping oil out of the ground. It's the issue of competing globally for the same issues, and for that, they need highly trained people," MIT professor Fred Moavenzadeh said.
cnn.com



To: Mannie who wrote (8028)7/7/2008 5:13:22 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 24229
 

Blackouts put fish business in poorhouse

( Mannie..We've gotta start thinking about how we are gonna power the wells and schools; this is why I've been pushing you. M )

Recurring blackouts have cut production at some Mekong Delta fisheries over 60 percent as the country’s power shortage continues to hinder development.

Nguyen Dinh Huan, deputy general director of the An Giang Fisheries Import and Export Joint Stock Company (Agifish), said production at the company’s cold store plants had been halted by power cuts many times over the past several days.

There are days when the company processes nearly 100 tons of tra catfish, only a third of its normal daily capacity, he said.

Large quantities of fish died before being processed for export, which the company then had to sell on the domestic market at a loss of VND10,000 per kilogram, he said.

Doan Toi, general director of Nam Viet Export Joint Stock Company in An Giang Province, said more than 10,000 workers at the company had lost 15 percent of their usual wages as the power outages had cut their working hours sharply.

“We understand that there’s a power shortage all over the country, but with our chronic outages lately, it’ll take a very long time before we can purchase and process all the fish breeders are producing,” he said.

Other fishery companies at the Tra Noc Industrial Zone in Can Tho City’s Binh Thuy District, the region’s economic hub, are complaining about the power cuts.

Nguyen Phuong, a manager of Thien Ma Company, said outages often lasted the whole day and tons of the company’s fish had been left to die without the electricity needed to cool their tanks.

“Power cuts have forced us to reduce production to 50-60 percent of our normal capacity,” he said.

“Thus, we cannot buy enough fish to fulfill our contracts with fish breeders,” he said.

The company had installed an electric generator, but the machine could only meet 80 percent of the firm’s electricity needs, he said.

Do Ngoc Tai, deputy general director of Kim Anh Seafood Processing Company, said his company in Soc Trang Province had begun running a dynamo generator that consumed some 200 liters of diesel fuel every hour and had driven electricity costs up three times higher than before the power problems.

In a recent proposal to Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai, the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers asked that the government take urgent measures to ensure a sufficient power supply for Mekong Delta fisheries.

The Deputy Prime Minister then asked power suppliers to speed up the construction of electricity power plants and facilities to solve the problem.

Source: Tuoi Tre

thanhniennews.com