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Friday, April 29, 2011

The Case Against President Obama's Health Care Reform: A Primer for Nonlawyers

The Case Against President Obama's Health Care Reform: A Primer for Nonlawyers

by Robert A. Levy

Robert A. Levy is chairman of the Cato Institute. He is the author of Shakedown: How Corporations, Government, and Trial Lawyers Abuse the Judicial Process (2004) and coauthor of The Dirty Dozen: How 12 Supreme Court Cases Radically Expanded Government and Eroded Freedom (2008).


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Multiple challenges to President Obama's health care reform are percolating through the federal courts. Soon the Supreme Court will be asked to weigh in on perhaps the most important question of the post–New Deal era: Are there any remaining limits on the breadth and scope of federal power?

Reinforced by decades of Court decisions that have gutted the Framers' original conception of limited government, the Obama administration has embraced an unprecedented expansion of centralized control. This paper addresses the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which includes a mandate that individuals either purchase a government-prescribed health insurance policy or pay a penalty.

The Department of Health and Human Services has asserted three constitutional provisions as sources of authority for the mandate — the Taxing Power, the Commerce Clause, and the Necessary and Proper Clause. Each of those purported sources is deficient.

First, the penalty for not buying health insurance is not a tax. Even if the penalty were a tax, it would fail the constitutional requirements for income, excise, or direct taxes. Second, the power to regulate interstate commerce extends only to economic activities; it does not permit Congress to compel such activities in order to regulate them. Third, the mandate is not necessary; indeed, it is merely a means to circumvent problems that would not exist if not for PPACA itself. Nor is the mandate proper; it cannot be reconciled with the Framers' original design for a limited federal government of enumerated powers.

An essential aspect of liberty is the freedom not to participate. PPACA's directive that Americans buy an unwanted product from a private company debases individual liberty. And it's unconstitutional.

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Monday, April 11, 2011

Tactics Obama ‘Tried To Shove Down The Public’s Throat’

Tactics Obama 'Tried To Shove Down The Public's Throat'
Video

In addition to cheering on Donald Trump, last night Sarah Palin also weighed in on the budget deal and President Obama's role in the process. Palin thought Obama deserved no credit for the compromise and even thought his actions were "appalling" and "atrocious" since he used the funding of troops as a pawn in his political game.

Palin also suggested why the Tea Party should not be happy with the budget compromise:

"What the Tea Party wants is for government to be smaller and smarter. When you consider that we just saw an increase in government spending by about 28% and saw a little chip out of that to the tune of 1%, I would say that no the Tea Party and Americans in general who are concerned about the fiscal health of our country did not get what they wanted."

Palin urged for more drastic cuts to be made, saying that after national defense is fully funded, then everything should be on the table. And she hesitantly supported Republican Congressman Paul Ryan's budget proposal, but her hesitancy was only because she wished it could be more aggressive and accomplished quicker.

However, she was most fired up over the criticism from Democrats about the Tea Party, which she labeled as a distraction:

"It's very, very insulting what the administration and President Obama tried to shove down the American public's throat in terms of that rhetoric and the scare tactics and the chaos that would ensue – they tried to get people to believe if there was a partial shutdown."

Instead, Palin concluded Americans are much more intelligent than Democrats might think.

Watch the clip from Fox News below:Follow us on Twitter.


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Saturday, April 09, 2011

Free Audiobook: “Coaching a Winning Team”

Free Audiobook: "Coaching a Winning Team"

1 FREE Audiobook Credit RISK-FREE from Audible.com

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The digital audiobook Coaching a Winning Team, narrated by , has received an average rating of 2.62 stars on Audible.com. The title has a running length of 50 min. The audiobook was first released in December 1999 and a sample is available for download.

Audible.com's description of the audiobook is "Whether it be in basketball or in business, the key to building a successful team is to strengthen individual qualities and focus the team on a single goal. Tara VanDerveer, Director and Head Coach of Stanford's women's basketball team, has had a near-perfect record of 224 wins to 33 losses over the past 8 years and has led her team to 2 NCAA championships. In this speech, the candid and engaging storyteller shares the coaching methods that have helped her team triumph, as well as the pitfalls to avoid. Using honesty and positive reinforcement as the cornerstone of her process, VanDerveer explains how to maintain unity, stay focused on a goal, and build a winning team."

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To download Coaching a Winning Team or another title as a free audiobook, visit Audible.com

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Friday, April 08, 2011

PHOTO: Miley Cyrus Poses With BFF Gucci Mane


Credit: @mileycyrus

Just like peanut butter and jelly, ketchup and mustard, and Hall & Oates, another timeless combination we've come to know and love is Miley Cyrus and Gucci Mane. Just kidding! Completely, 100 percent kidding! This is one mash-up not even Girl Talk saw coming (Zing!).

From her recently reactivated Twitter account, Miley tweeted, "Don't mind me just showin off muahhh grill with @gucci1017 at the urrrport!" (That would be, "Here I am smiling with Gucci Mane's cover of SOURCE at the airport," for those of you that don't speak Cyrus.) Gotta say, Miley does a pretty accurate Gucci impression. For a second there we couldn't tell them apart.

But the copycat stuff better stop there, Miley! Not sure if you heard, but Gucci Mane recently got an ICE CREAM CONE tattooed ON HIS FACE. We know you've been into tattoos lately too, little missy, but just because your friends are jumping off a bridge, does that mean you're going to also?! Huh? Answer me, young lady!

OK, we're overreacting. We know Miley was just...bein' Miley. But seriously. NO FACE TATTOOS, GURL!

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Wednesday, April 06, 2011

LAWYERSCHILE: Silvio Berlusconi's trials

News analysis

Newsbook

Silvio Berlusconi's trials

Opening the Rubygate

Apr 6th 2011, 13:18 by The Economist online | ROME

IT COULD not have begun more discreetly. A trial heralded as the most sensational of any brought against Italy's much-prosecuted prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, opened this morning at a hearing lasting nine minutes and 50 seconds—and was promptly adjourned to May 31st.

Mr Berlusconi, who was not in court, is accused of two particularly squalid offences: paying an underage prostitute, and exploiting his position to cover it up. He denies any wrongdoing, and will doubtless have been heartened by what little emerged at today's hearing. The alleged prostitute is Karima el-Mahroug, known to some as Ruby Rubacuori ("Ruby Heartstealer"), the runaway daughter of a Moroccan immigrant who was under 18, the minimum age for prostitution in Italy, when she visited Mr Berlusconi's villa outside Milan last year.

Ms el-Mahroug's lawyer told the court that she would not be joining herself to the case or seeking damages from the prime minister. In fact, she denied she was a prostitute or that she had had sex with the 74-year-old Mr Berlusconi.

That was not the only good news for the embattled prime minister. Yesterday the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of parliament, resolved by a 12-vote majority to ask Italy's constitutional court to block the proceedings against him. Mr Berlusconi's supporters, who saw two more deputies join their ranks for the vote, maintain that the prosecutors ignored a ruling by parliament that the case should have been dealt with by a special court. (His opponents argue that jurisdiction is a matter for judges and note that the special court would have needed parliamentary approval to proceed.)

Today's adjournment may give the constitutional court time to decide. But it will also give the judges and prosecutors in Milan time to focus on a separate case, one Mr Berlusconi is said to fear more, in which he denies bribing a British lawyer, David Mills, to withhold testimony that could have led to his conviction in an earlier trial.

Since Mr Mills has already been found guilty (although his conviction was later quashed on a technicality), there is a real chance the prime minister could face the same verdict, and that the proceedings against him will be dispatched before they are timed out by a statute of limitations, as has happened in previous cases against him.

This, say critics, is why his government has resurrected a bill to put different sorts of time limits on trials and appeals. Drafted by Mr Berlusconi's lawyer, the bill is ostensibly intended to ginger up Italy's notoriously sluggish legal system. It has been approved by the Senate but not yet by the chamber. The body that oversees the judiciary says that if the law is enacted, between 10% and 40% of the defendants currently on trial in Italy could walk free. Mr Berlusconi's justice minister says the true figure is 1%.


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Rodrigo González Fernández
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Gary Hamel on the need to retool management

In a Wall Street Journal post, Gary Hamel argues that Management 1.0 no longer suffices and must make way for a new model for the future, Management 2.0.


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Friday, April 01, 2011

Barack Obama's energy policy

Barack Obama's energy policy

Recycled

Platitudes from the president

Mar 31st 2011 | WASHINGTON, DC | From The Economist print edition

FOR 40-odd years now, as Barack Obama lamented on March 30th, American politicians have banged on endlessly about the evils of America's dependence on imported oil, without doing very much about it. It was time, he declared, to change that, with a package of initiatives that would cut America's oil imports by a third within a decade, according to the White House's calculations. Unfortunately, however, Mr Obama's scheme seems doomed to go the same way as all the brave talk from his predecessors, not to mention his own rhetoric on the campaign trail.

Mr Obama's plan has four main strands: increasing domestic production of oil, boosting the use of biofuels and natural gas as substitutes, encouraging the spread of electric cars and making petrol-powered vehicles more efficient. He also chucked into the mix his "clean energy standard", a scheme to promote less polluting forms of electricity generation, even though it has nothing to do with oil imports (energy generation relies on coal, gas, nuclear or renewables, but not on oil, which is used almost exclusively for transport, heating and industry.)

None of this is new. The clean-energy standard was first wheeled out in Mr Obama's state-of-the-union speech in January, and is anyway only a rehashed version of a much older proposal to promote renewable energy, with nuclear power and natural gas bolted on to broaden its appeal. The administration was already working on a fresh series of ever more demanding fuel-efficiency standards for vehicles for when the current lot run out in 2016. Mr Obama had also previously pledged to nurture growth in domestic oil production, to counter Republican cries of "Drill, baby, drill."

As for biofuels, the government has been subsidising them for decades, and the Department of Energy is already lending money to the sort of high-tech but handout-dependent plants that the president says he wants more of. Even talk of encouraging natural-gas vehicles is nothing new: T. Boone Pickens, an irrepressible oilman who is now an apostle of gas and wind power, has buttonholed half of Congress, and anyone else who will listen, on the subject.

Worse, those parts of the president's plan that need congressional approval—the clean-energy standard, more subsidies, extra funding for research on whizz-bang energy technology—will never receive it. The Republicans who control the House are dead set against anything that smacks of greenery, not to mention anything that would add to spending at a time when they are trying to take an axe to it. They have already ruled out the president's signature energy policy: a cap-and-trade scheme to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. They are also trying to rein in the Environmental Protection Agency. The best the president can hope to do is hold the line, and preserve the EPA's existing authority over emissions. So it is hard to see his recycled list of proposals as anything more than a reassurance to the environmentally minded, and to Americans fretting about rising fuel prices, that the president feels their pain—unlike those nasty Republicans.


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Rodrigo González Fernández
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Thursday, March 24, 2011

Sarah Palin Flips Her Wig And Claims Iran Is Coming to Destroy The US

Sarah Palin Flips Her Wig And Claims Iran Is Coming to Destroy The US

March 24, 2011
By Jason Easley
 

Sarah Palin sat down with BFF Greta Van Susterin on Fox News to discuss her recent trip to Israel, but things took a turn into the bizarre when Palin claimed that Iran is coming to attack the United States, "Don't think that Ahmadinejad would stop at Israel, they'd be coming in our direction too, so it's in our best interest to protect Israel."

Here is the video from Media Matters:

While trying to criticize Obama's relationship with Israel, Palin showed her depth of understanding about the issue of Israeli settlements in occupied territory when she referred to the settlements as a zoning issue. Palin said, "President Obama was inappropriate to intervene in a zoning issue in Israel though. Let Israel decide their zoning issues themselves."

Just to make clear that this wasn't a slip of the tongue, Palin continued, "Build housing for the Jews in their homeland whether they are going to be allowed to or not, and no President Obama didn't want to see that allowance of the building of the structures. I would have taken an opposite approach, by the way, but Israel concession after concession, and Israel facing threat after threat. They deserve to know that America will be there to help secure."

Dominionists like Sarah Palin believe that all Jews must return and occupy Palestine. According to Theocracy Watch, "In order to fulfill Biblical prophecy, Dispensationalists have been working hard to ensure that the world's Jews return to Israel and occupy all of Palestine," so of course Palin would disagree with Obama on the settlements. She doesn't care about international law or the fact the Israeli settlements have been declared illegal. Palin is set to govern by the Bible not the Constitution

Palin then went all paranoid and claimed that after Iran wipes out Israel they will be coming for the US, "They're being surrounded now on all sides by enemies. They have to worry now about their peace agreements with Jordan and with Egypt, and they need to know that they've got the US, the superpower the leader of the free world, being on their side, knowing they will not be destroyed as Ahmadinejad the leaders in Iran want to see them wiped off the face of the Earth. Don't think that Ahmadinejad would stop at Israel, they'd be coming in our direction too, so it's in our best interest to protect Israel."

The fact that Sarah Palin thinks that the issue of Israeli settlements are a "zoning issue" that is the equivalent of getting a permit to put a new shed up in the backyard, or add a deck to the house should be enough to disqualify her from ever being taken seriously as a political candidate, but when she launched into her belief that Iran coming is to attack the United States, she jumped the fence of sanity and landed straight in a patch of bat s**t crazy.

For all the people who think that Obama is a warmonger for taking part in a UN humanitarian mission in Libya, maybe you better step back and take a look at what aching to replace Obama on the other side. Sarah Palin is willing to use Israel as a pretext to start a war with Iran, even though there is no evidence that Iran is planning or even has the capacity to execute an attack on the United States.

For those of you waiting for Sarah Palin's final fingernail to give way as she teeters off the cliff of sanity, today is your lucky day. Palin has always been small minded, disinterested, petty, vindictive, and paranoid, that was all just part of Sarah's charm, but she gave us a glimpse tonight into what a Palin run White House would look like, and it makes Dick Cheney look like world class diplomat.

Sarah Palin has finally lost it and gone full blown nutter. There really is no other way to describe the notion that Iran is going to wipe Israel off the map, and then set out to destroy the United States. Palin has skipped warmongering and going straight to her theocratic end of days/holy war/vision of how America should be governed.

Palin isn't just a Tina Fey sketch on SNL. She is a dangerous theocrat who would make the Bush administration look like constitutional secularists. As time has gone on Palin has been less able to keep her extremist beliefs covered up.

Many on the right have fantasized about war with Iran, but Sarah Palin is willing to use the Bible to make it real.


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Rodrigo González Fernández
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Friday, March 11, 2011

lawyerschile: How to build greener planes that airlines will actually want to fly

   

The aircraft of the future

Plane truths

How to build greener planes that airlines will actually want to fly

Mar 10th 2011 | CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, AND LONDON | From The Economist print edition

FRUSTRATING as air travel might be for the average punter, there is no let-up in demand. By 2014 the number of journeys made by individual passengers is expected to reach 3.3 billion, from 2.5 billion in 2009. In part, this is a consequence of the falling cost of flying: ticket prices have dropped by 60%, in real terms, over the past 40 years. But keeping prices low and finding more aircraft to cram all these people into is not the only thing the airline industry has to worry about. It must also clean up its act. Aviation is a small but growing contributor to global warming, responsible for 12% of the carbon dioxide emitted by means of transport. And even were that not so, fuel is one of airlines' biggest costs, so there is a strong incentive to burn less of it. In the case of fuel economy, then, virtue really is its own reward.

Not surprisingly, aircraft are already a lot more efficient than they used to be. The first Boeing 737 was launched in 1967 and could carry about 100 passengers 2,775km (1,725 miles). A modern version, the B737-800, can carry nearly twice as many passengers twice the distance, while burning 23% less fuel (48% less on a per-seat basis). More efficient turbofan engines, lighter structures, various aerodynamic tweaks and the development of sophisticated flight-management systems have brought about this improvement. The aircraft themselves, however, still look much like they always have done: a cigar-shaped fuselage with a big tail, powered by pod-like engines hanging from a pair of protruding wings. Some aircraft designers now believe that just about all the efficiency gains available have been wrung from this traditional shape, and that for a further big cut in fuel consumption a new type of airliner is needed.

Over the years, a number of radical redesigns have been proposed, but none has taken off. Aircraft shaped like giant flying wings, for instance, would be more efficient, but do not mesh with the realities of running an airline. Banks of seating as wide as those in cinemas would strand most passengers a long way from a window—or a door. Safety legislation requires that everyone can be evacuated in under 90 seconds from half the available exits. That would be tough in a flying wing. Moreover, aircraft design has co-evolved with airport infrastructure. Existing passenger gates, baggage-handling and aircraft-servicing arrangements are not well adapted to such novelty. And, on the level of pure comfort, a steep, banking turn in such a plane would give passengers at the edge of the aircraft an experience associated more with the fairground than with commercial aviation.

Reality check-in

Despite all these restrictions, two groups working on the future of aircraft have come up with designs that could meet the practical needs of the industry and still cut fuel consumption by half. These researchers, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Imperial College, London, rely largely on existing technologies for many of their designs.

If a B737-800 was morphed into the shape of one of the D-series of aircraft on which Mark Drela is experimenting in MIT's wind tunnel, then it would be about the same size, could fly the same routes and would carry a similar number of passengers. But the D8.1 version (which could be built conventionally, from aluminium) would use 49% less fuel. The D8.5 (similar, but constructed from composite materials expected to be available by 2035) would burn 71% less.

Dr Drela's D-series aircraft differ from existing ones in a number of ways. Instead of having a single, cylindrical fuselage they employ two partial cylinders joined together (see above). This provides additional lift. The nose of the aircraft slants upwards, bringing still further lift. This means the wings can be thinner, saving weight. The three engines are mounted at the rear, flush with the fuselage. Placing the engines here has a number of benefits, says Dr Drela—most notably, allowing the tail to be smaller. One reason for the tall, vertical tail on an airliner is to allow the pilot to compensate with the rudder for the yaw created when a wing-mounted engine fails. Mounting the engines at the back (a design popularised in the 1950s by Sud Aviation's Caravelle, but subsequently abandoned on large aircraft) means that yaw is much reduced, and with it the need for a large tail. The D-series's twin tails are, in total, 70% lighter than a 737's single one.

The rear of the fuselage is also sculpted to sweep air into the engines using a process known as boundary-layer ingestion. Frictional drag means the air closest to the surface of the fuselage moves more slowly than the rest. Ingesting this slower air allows an engine to burn its fuel more efficiently while generating the same amount of thrust. However, employing boundary-layer ingestion means the airflow into the engine is not uniform. The farther the air is from the fuselage, the faster it moves. That can produce undesirable stress on an engine's components.

Pratt & Whitney, an aircraft-engine maker involved in the MIT project, is trying to overcome that problem by redesigning and strengthening the components in a jet engine. The other approach is to fly more slowly, and thus put less strain on the components in the first place. As a consequence, the D8.1 would cruise at Mach 0.72 (seven-tenths of the speed of sound) and the D8.5 at Mach 0.74, compared with about Mach 0.79 for a B737-800. But Dr Drela says the D-series's wider fuselage would compensate for that. It permits an extra aisle, which makes boarding and alighting much faster than on a single-aisle B737. On short-haul routes the D-series would still have a faster gate-to-gate journey time than a 737.

Tail away

At Imperial College, Varnavas Serghides has come up with a number of designs for lighter planes with less drag that therefore need smaller engines that burn less fuel. One of these designs has a pair of jet engines mounted aft, but positioned over and above the wing. This aircraft has no tail fins at all (see below).

In the past doing without tail fins would have created an aircraft that is difficult to fly. But things have now changed. Mechanical systems have been replaced with electrically activated fly-by-wire controls that use computers to interpret the pilot's commands in the safest and most efficient way. Many military jets would now be impossible to fly if pilots had to rely on mechanical controls alone. So, as Dr Serghides explains, doing without the horizontal stabiliser and vertical tail is not such a radical step. Aircraft-control systems that use computers are capable of mixing the signals required to make the ailerons, flaps and other control surfaces on the wing act together to produce the same effects as the rudder and elevators on the tail would. Dr Serghides has flown his design in a simulator and says it handles well.

Improving airflow over the wings is also crucial. Laminar (in other words, smooth) flow is preferable to turbulent flow, since turbulence creates drag. An aerodynamically perfect wing would have laminar flow from its leading edge all the way to the rear. But wings are not perfect, and at some stage the air turns turbulent. As a result, roughly half the fuel required to maintain a level cruise is being burned to overcome the drag imposed by a turbulent boundary layer.

Understanding what causes the transition from laminar to turbulent flow requires massive mathematical and computing power. But if Dr Serghides's colleague Philip Hall and his team can work out the details, they should be able to design wings whose shape maintains laminar flow from front to back, and thus lowers fuel consumption.

Another engineer at Imperial, Dominic von Terzi, proposes to go even further than that. Instead of just redesigning the shapes of wings, he dreams of making them more active. This could be done with surfaces that change shape, or by using a system of holes and slots that can be opened and closed as appropriate to create suction that maintains laminar flow. Moreover, in some cases a pilot might wish to do the opposite and promote turbulent flow—for example, when slowing down. That might allow aircraft to do away with flaps altogether, saving yet more weight.

In an industry as regulated and risk-averse as aircraft building, introducing these changes will prove an uphill struggle. The gains in efficiency, though, make that struggle worth pursuing. Flying wings may never come to pass. But tailless, flapless, podless planes will probably land eventually at an airport near you.

http://www.economist.com/research/articlesBySubject/displayStory.cfm?story_id=18329444&subjectID=348924&fsrc=nwl
Fuente:www.lawyerschile.blogspot.com
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Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Emerging Markets Online is a market research and consulting services firm serving the needs of clients in biofuels, oil, gas, government, R&D, and economic development initiatives.

Emerging Markets Online
 
Emerging Markets Online is a market research and consulting services firm serving the needs of clients in biofuels, oil, gas, government, R&D, and economic development initiatives.

Algae 2020 Vol 2: Biofuels, Drop-In Fuels, Biochems & Market Forecasts
In February 2011, Emerging Markets released Algae 2020, Vol 2 updating the original 2009 study, including details on biofuels markets, profiles of leading algae biofuels-related companies, and an intro to biochems, bioplastics and co-products.
Algae 2020 Vol 2: Biofuels, Drop-In Fuels, Biochems & Market Forecasts


Summary, Table of Contents and Order Form ( PDF, 3MB)

Now Available! Global Algae Producers, Projects, Ventures, Technologies, Investors, and Market Forecasts

The Algae 2020 study is a fact-filled guide designed for investors, producers, entrepreneurs, governments, researchers, consultants and executives.  Algae 2020 provides a comprehensive roadmap for the commercialization of biofuels, drop-in fuels, biochems and biomass markets based on site visits with more than 40 organizations.

Algae 2020
provides detailed case studies of leading companies, projects, ventures, public-private partnerships, research labs, and provides a set of scenarios, business strategies, market forecasts and an outlook for algal biofuels and biomass product commercialization to the year 2020.

Excerpt from Algae 2020 Study: Top 11 Algae Investment & Market Trends for 2011 (pdf)

Press Release and Summary:
Algae Study Identifies Winners and Losers to 2020


2020 Roadmap for The Commercialization of Algal Biofuels, Drop-In Fuels, BioChems
Algae 2020 provides a roadmap for scaling up algae production, and market strategies for attracting investment, partnership, and production towards commercialization. The study highlights leading projects and algae producers headed toward commercialization via the production of algal-based drop in fuels - renewable diesel, drop-in fuels, aviation fuels, and a biomass focus on high-value products including: green plastics and chemicals from algal biopolymers, livestock and fish meal, omega 3s, and pharmaceutical applications.


click to enlarge sources: Emerging Markets Online - Consulting Services, Missing Link Technology



Algae Commercialization Outlook: From R&D to Pilot to Demonstration Phases

A key finding from the Algae 2020 study: algal biofuels have matured significantly in the last few years, moving from small research labs, to pilot projects, to small scale demonstration projects, and now to first-stage pre-commercial trials for CO2 capture in a handful of projects. Algae 2020 provides detailed case studies of leading companies, public-private partnerships, research labs, and provides a set of scenarios, business strategies and an outlook for algal biofuels commercialization to the year 2020.




Order Details, Table of Contents and Figures
For more information, visit the Algae 2020 executive summary and prospectus page


 
Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey, 2nd Edition


Summary & Order Form PDF

Market Survey, Feedstock Trends and Forecasts

Biodiesel 2020, second edition tracks the U.S. and global markets for biodiesel growth, details major feedstock trends, and provides analysis of biodiesel consumption and production trends. Europe, China, India and Brazil are also covered as case studies. Proprietary forecasts developed for this study are also used to produce 2020 "Scenarios" for the U.S., Europe, China, India and Brazil.

The widely acclaimed Biodiesel 2020 study has been featured in the Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, Business 2.0, Biodiesel magazine, Reuters TV, Fox News Energy Week, Biofuels International, Renewable Energy Access, The Futurist, and on Finland's TV network 'N" news

Biodiesel 2020, 2nd edition provides an update on the first study; further explores feedstock trends and provides detailed analysis of the current transition from 1st generation biodiesel markets to 2nd generation markets for biodiesel, renewable diesel and biomass to liquids for biodiesel projects.
 


click to enlarge


Biodiesel 2020, second edition
examines the trend towards lower cost multiple feedstocks, and provides analysis of emerging projects and markets for jatropha curcas, palm, soy, and rapeseed based biodiesel ventures in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. This study also reviews major projects in progress for lower-cost feedstocks from renewable diesel including tallow, used vegetable oil, yellow grease and waste recycling. Algae-based biodiesel projects are also reviewed in detail.

This study finds the global market for biodiesel is poised for explosive growth in the next ten years. Although Europe currently represents 80% of global biodiesel consumption and production, the U.S. is now ramping up production at a faster rate than Europe. With the arrival of 2nd generation biofuels and non food feedstocks jatropha, algae and municipal waste, it is possible Biodiesel could represent as much as 10% of all on-road diesel used in Brazil, Europe, China and India by the year 2020.

If governments continue to aggressively pursue 2nd generation biofuels research and development; enact investor-friendly tax incentives for production and blending; and help to promote research & development in new biodiesel feedstocks such as algae biodiesel, the prospects for achieving sustainable biodiesel markets may become realized faster than anticipated. Biodiesel 2020 finds that each of these variables will be essential to the eventual success of these targets.

Download a Summary & Order Form for Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey, 2nd Edition (PDF 4Mb)
 
 
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Rodrigo González Fernández
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 CEL: 93934521
Santiago- Chile
Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación  y consultoría en GERENCIA ADMINISTRACION PUBLICA -LIDERAZGO -  GESTION DEL CONOCIMIENTO - RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – COACHING EMPRESARIAL-ENERGIAS RENOVABLES   ,  asesorías a nivel nacional e  internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Presidente Piñera: “It is up to us to be prepared to give the Chilean people the guidance, early warning, assistance and protection they need”22 de febrero de 2011

Presidente Piñera: "It is up to us to be prepared to give the Chilean people the guidance, early warning, assistance and protection they need"

22 de febrero de 2011

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This morning, President Piñera signed legislation to create the National Civil Protection Agency, which will transform the current ONEMI into a new institution which is "modern, quick, vigilant, flexible and effective and which fulfills its task of anticipating, preventing, alerting, guiding, protecting and helping the Chilean people to deal with natural catastrophes," he said. He also officially inaugurated the new National Early Warning Center.

With regard to the reconstruction process in Chile, he said, "While some people insist on denying the facts and it annoys them to see a country getting back on its feet, I want to state in all seriousness that over 50% of what the earthquake and tsunami destroyed has now been rebuilt."

In fulfillment of a pledge made on the very morning of February 27, 2010, Sebastián Piñera, the President of Chile, accompanied by the Minister of the Interior and Public Safety, Rodrigo Hinzpeter, this morning signed legislation creating the National Civil Protection Agency.

Just a few days before the commemoration marking one year since the tragedy, the President said that on the day of the earthquake, "the National Emergency Office was not prepared and it only took a few seconds for the whole country to realize the extent of improvisation and confusion which reigned."

He emphasized that these changes are needed because "while we are not able to anticipate or avoid natural catastrophes, we can be prepared and have modern, quick, flexible and effective institutions which provide the Chilean people with the guidance, early warning, assistance and protection they need."

The key objective of the legislation is to give the National Emergency Office a new institutional structure with greater powers and resources. It is "a modern institution which draws from the best examples and practices from around the world; which is quick and flexible, able to react in time instead of when it is too late; which is vigilant and will always be prepared and effective, so it can fulfill its job of anticipating, preventing, alerting, guiding, protecting and helping the Chilean people to deal with natural catastrophes," he said.

With regard to the reconstruction process in Chile, President Piñera emphasized that "while some people insist on denying facts and it annoys them to see a country getting back on its feet, I want to state in all seriousness that over 50% of what the earthquake and tsunami destroyed has now been rebuilt. I'm talking about homes, schools, hospitals, bridges, ports, airports, canals, reservoirs, civil works, heritage works and also the heritage and infrastructure of our Armed Forces."

"However, rather than letting down our guard or becoming self-complacent, the fact that the other half still needs to be rebuilt means that we will redouble our efforts. We hope that during 2011, with the support and contribution of everyone in Chile, we will be able to rebuild almost all of that other half," he added.

The President used the opportunity to call for unity in commemorating the anniversary of the tragedy of February 27, saying, "I hope that all Chilean men and women, but most particularly those who have the honor of representing the people, will join together as one in remembering and commemorating those who died. I also hope that we will be more united than ever so that we can build a better Chile for all."

The President also took part in the ribbon-cutting ceremony to open the new National Early Warning Center. This has been equipped based recommendations from different international sources and includes various communication systems to ensure the reporting and transmission of emergency information (including HF and VHF systems, telephony and satellite Internet access in both the national and regional centers).


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Friday, February 18, 2011

Climate change

Climate change

Piecemeal possibilities

Paying attention to alternative ways of cooling the planet is a good idea; ignoring carbon emissions isn't

Feb 17th 2011 | From The Economist print edition

THE planet-wide industrial exhalation of previously fossilised carbon is not the only way that humans are changing the Earth's climate. There are other greenhouse gases, other atmospheric pollutants, the effects of cutting down forests, and more: together these things may contribute almost as much as carbon emissions to global warming. In the face of an international inability to put the sort of price on carbon use that would drive its emission down, an increasing number of policy wonks, and the politicians they advise, are taking a more serious look at these other factors as possible ways of controlling climate change.

Three things make these alternative approaches attractive by comparison. The first is that the emission of carbon dioxide is a fundamental part of today's industrial infrastructure. The same is not true for, say, HFC-134a, a gas with various industrial uses that delivers more than 1,000 times more warming than carbon dioxide, mass for mass. Something peripheral for which alternatives can be readily found is easier and cheaper to do without than something at the heart of industrial life.

Second, the benefits of reducing carbon-dioxide emissions can seem abstract and far-off. In contrast, reducing emissions of the sooty particles known as black carbon, which are given off by inefficient combustion in cooking fires and brick kilns, and by dodgy diesel engines, offers rapid, huge and tangible public-health benefits (see article). Controlling black carbon by giving poor people cleaner ways to burn various fuels could not only forestall a decade or two of global warming, it would also save hundreds of thousands of lives currently blighted by smoke and disease.

Third, equitable and efficient ways of reducing carbon emissions require new international agreements and new instruments of national policy. Putting these together has often proved difficult to the point of impossible: witness the UN climate talks. Sometimes the efforts have simply failed, as in America's cap-and-trade legislation. Acting on other warming agents will frequently be a more straightforward matter of adapting existing tools. For instance, HFC-134a and a whole family of related chemicals could be dealt with by extending the Montreal protocol created to protect the ozone layer from similar industrial gases. Similarly, black carbon can in many places be managed under existing clean-air regulations, as can some other climate-changing pollutants. True, the Obama administration is trying to tackle carbon dioxide in a similar way, by having the Environmental Protection Agency regulate emissions. But this, too, may fail, and even its proponents do not see it as a very attractive way forward.

Let the good be the friend of the better

As well as having charms that efforts to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions lack, these alternatives could also improve the content and prospects of other climate action. They allow people to meet in smaller venues than the vast UN shindigs. Imagine that success on some of these currently marginal climate issues came fairly quickly and easily. That could help build the trust, ambition and momentum needed to get further on deals to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions, and to find ways to finance the new energy infrastructures those reductions require, both through the UN process and by other means.

But these new types of climate action do not replace the need to reduce carbon emissions. Carbon-dioxide levels are still rising; the shadow of uncertainty and risk they cast into the future is getting deeper and longer. Carbon emitted today will continue to warm the planet for millennia, unless active measures to remove it from the atmosphere are undertaken at some later date. Reducing other short-lived sources of climate change while continuing to emit carbon will delay rises in temperature, but it will not stop them. Broadening climate action can supplement existing efforts on carbon and provide new suppleness to climate politics—both good things. But this does not change the imperative of decarbonisation.


Fuente:The Economist
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Rodrigo González Fernández
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 CEL: 93934521
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Thursday, February 17, 2011

MUJER CHILE: Former president of Chile to teach at Berkeley

Former president of Chile to teach at Berkeley

The former president of Chile will teach a number of seminars this year at UC Berkeley.

Michelle Bachelet, who is currently serving as the United Nations' undersecretary general for women's rights, will talk about the challenges she faced as the president of Chile and the issues she will address in her new position at the United Nations.

Her first seminar will be on Friday and it will be open both undergraduates and graduate students, according to UC Berkeley News.

"Michelle Bachelet is an exceptional political leader and a remarkable person," said Harley Shaiken, a UC Berkeley professor and chair of the Center for Latin American Studies.  "She reflects the values of UC Berkeley, and we are honored to have her as part of this community."

Bachelet is a pediatrician and epidemiologist. Her father was a general who died after Gen. Augusto Pinochet's 1973 coup. She was appointed in 2000 to the position of minister of health and later became the minister of defense. She was elected president of Chile in 2006.

Bachelet left the presidency in 2010. She is now spearheading a drive to raise $500 million for UN Women, created by the United Nations General Assembly in 2010 by pulling together four existing U.N. groups dealing with women's advancement.

The agency will focus on promoting the leadership of women in political and economic decision-making, ending violence against women, and creating a broader role for women in peacekeeping efforts,

Bachelet was president when an 8.8 magnitude earthquake struck Chile. More than 500 people died in the quake and its aftermath, including some who were struck by a tsunami after the quake. Bachelet is being sued for authorizing the government to lift the tsunami warning.

Read more about Bachelet's class here.


Fuente:http://www.berkeleyside.com/2011/02/17/former-president-of-chile-to-teach-at-berkeley/
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 CEL: 93934521
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Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación  y consultoría en GERENCIA ADMINISTRACION PUBLICA -LIDERAZGO -  GESTION DEL CONOCIMIENTO - RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – COACHING EMPRESARIAL-ENERGIAS RENOVABLES   ,  asesorías a nivel nacional e  internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

← Time to LeadMake room for mentoring!

Make room for mentoring!

Although National Mentoring Month has passed, conversation about the role of mentors is still very much top of mind this February.  Not only did Allison Jones and Rosetta Thurman host an online chat (hashtag: #ynpnchat) about how young nonprofit professionals can successfully acquire mentors, but the Harvard Business Review Best Practices blog discussed "Demystifying Mentoring", an article which outlines some common misperceptions associated with mentoring and offers some solid advice to those seeking some form of mentorship.

Within the discussion at the #ynpnchat with Rosetta and Allison, folks talked about how mentors are those people who always look out for your best interest, who serve as a sounding board when needed, and who invest in you and your future.  Chat participants reported having multiple mentors, with each relationship having its own structure and format.  Nonetheless, there was a clear recognition that maintaining mentoring relationships required some effort; however, it was clear the group felt the benefits of mentoring were well worth this effort.

This conversation dovetailed nicely with the "Demystifying Mentoring" article, which lifted up these four big myths of mentoring:

  1. "You have to find one perfect mentor" – People have different strengths and abilities, and so it makes sense that you would rely upon a multitude of people when seeking guidance and advice.  Get out of the habit of thinking of your mentor as one individual, and begin to develop relationships with a variety of individuals who will be equipped to meet all of your different needs over time.
  2. "Mentoring is a formal long-term relationship" – There is no minimum time commitment over a period of months years that qualifies a person as your mentor.  Rather, you can define your relationship in a way that works best for you.
  3. "Mentoring is for junior people" – Regardless of where you are in your career, you can benefit from having a mentor.  I would actually take this a step further, and note that mentoring does not necessarily necessitate an older person providing guidance to a younger or less-experienced person.  I believe mentoring can occur among peers, as well as from younger to older.  After all, we all bring our own unique perspectives to the table, and each has a special value!
  4. "Mentoring is something experienced people do out of the goodness of their hearts" – Mentoring needs to have direct benefits for both parties.  As a mentee, you need to make sure that you are fulfilling your end of the bargain, whatever that may be.

So in light of both of these discussions, here are my suggestions to you:

  • You should "Mr. Potato Head" your mentor.  You're not likely to find one person who is the perfect mentor for every situation, so solicit guidance from a collective of individuals.
  • Not unlike dating, some mentoring relationships will last a long time and some will fade out quickly.  So long as it has some tangible benefits for both the mentor and the mentee, the relationship will likely continue to grow.  When that is lost, it is time to let the relationship go.
  • Mentoring is not just reserved for those times when you are facing a challenging situation, or have to make a difficult career decision.  Great mentors can help you continuously grow and learn, and help to ensure you don't reach a point where you feel "stuck" in your work and life.  It is important to always reserve the time and create the space necessary for mentoring relationships.
  •  

    Given your own experiences with mentoring, what would you add?


    Fuente:
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    Rodrigo González Fernández
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     CEL: 93934521
    Santiago- Chile
    Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación  y consultoría en GERENCIA ADMINISTRACION PUBLICA -LIDERAZGO -  GESTION DEL CONOCIMIENTO - RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – COACHING EMPRESARIAL-ENERGIAS RENOVABLES   ,  asesorías a nivel nacional e  internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile