Asian desert dust and city pollution is swirling in vast plumes across the Pacific to North America, interacting with storms and possibly spurring climate change, an airborne scientist said Tuesday.
Author: valeriu
Arctic Islands Invite Tourists To See Climate Woes
A remote chain of Arctic islands is advertising itself as a showcase of bad things to come from global warming.
Visitors to Svalbard can see reindeer, seals or polar bears in the Arctic, where U.N. scientists say warming is happening twice as fast as on the rest of the planet in what may be a portent of changes further south.
Senate Defeats Provision To Require Army Corps To Consider Climate Change
The Senate, after one of its first full debates on global warming, on Tuesday defeated a proposal requiring the Army Corps of Engineers to consider the impact of climate change in designing water resources projects.
Indonesia Counts Its Islands Before It Is Too Late
Indonesia has so many islands it has not been able to count them all and is having a hard time finding names for them. Officially there are about 17,000 islands, but that number may drop as one minister fears hundreds of islands might vanish because of rising sea levels from global warming.
We can’t let Autoblog have all the fun! Vespa has a Transformers connection.
Filed under: Etc.
Yes, I am looking forward to the live-action Transformers movie. I too was a child of the ’80s, watched all the shows and had all the toys. My brother and I must have watched the cartoon movie a hundred times at home. Am I worried about the new movie? Will Michael Bay mess with a good thing? Maybe, but I am definitely going to see it on opening day anyway. Perhaps even the midnight showing, depending on who I can get to go with me. Perhaps you have followed the coverage of the Transformers movie on Autoblog. Have you secretly been yearning to do the same on AutoblogGreen? Good news then! We love to talk about scooters around here, and Vespa apparently has some tie-in with the movie. According to this page on Vespa’s site, you can get a free ticket to see the movie if you test ride a Vespa. Well worth looking into, if you ask me.
[Source: Vespa USA]
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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.
Two Chevy Sequels go over 300 miles on real roads with hydrogen to spare
Filed under: Hydrogen, Chevrolet, GM, AutoblogGreen Exclusive
On May 15, 2007 General Motors conducted what is believed to be the longest continuous drive ever with hydrogen fuel cell vehicles on public roads. We started the day off at GM’s fuel cell research and development facility in Honeoye Falls New York with much of the staff of the facility on hand to send off the fleet of two Chevy Sequels and assorted support vehicles. Six members of the media were invited to participate in what was planned as a 300 mile drive starting at the facility near Rochester NY and finishing up at Lyndhurst Castle in Tarrytown.
The Sequel is a fuel concept that GM unveiled in mid-2006. It’s a crossover utility built on top of a skateboard type chassis that includes the fuel storage tanks, batteries, fuel cell stack, wheel motors and assorted control electronics. The original skateboard chassis concept in the form of the Autonomy concept several years ago was developed by a team led by Christopher Borroni-Bird who is the Director of Advanced Technology Vehicle Concepts for General Motors. Since the vehicles where first shown last year the control system has remained under continuous development by engineers trying to optimize the powertrain control strategy to maximize the range.
Continue reading about our Sequel adventure after the jump.
Gallery: Chevy Sequel 300 Mile Drive
The team set out from the research center shortly after 7:00am on a predefined route with a mix of driving conditions through upstate New York including about 55 miles of freeway driving. The route carried us past the Finger Lakes, through the Catskills including many small towns and included lots of hill climbing. The plan called for each of the six journalists to spend about 100 miles behind the wheel of one of the two vehicles to get a feel for how they work in real world conditions.
Both Sequels were filled with hydrogen that had been generated not far from Rochester in Niagara Falls using hydro-electric power from the falls so no fossil fuels were used to power them that day. Things mostly went according to plan although we did have a few glitches along the way. Each of the Sequels carried one journalist, one engineer and either GM Vice President Larry Burns or Sequel Chief Engineer Mohsen Shabana. The engineer in the back seat was equipped with a laptop to monitor all the vehicle’s vital signs which turned out to be good thing.
In order to ensure the safety of the fleet and the participants GM set some strict operating parameters. If anything got out of range the whole convoy would pull over immediately so the engineers could diagnose the problem. If they couldn’t sort it out within five minutes, the other half of the team would go on and the stranded vehicle would either catch up or get loaded on trailer that tracked our route.
During the course of the 300-mile drive we had to pull over unexpectedly three times. In each case the vehicles ultimately got back underway and in each case the reason for stopping was apparent high battery temperatures. The issue on the vehicle that stopped twice turned out to be a faulty sensor which was replaced but the battery temperature in the other Sequel actually did get a bit too high.
The Sequel engineering team
Aside from the that the vehicles performed flawlessly and actually got better than expected fuel economy. The Sequel, like the other fuel cell vehicles I’ve driven, behaved very normally which is particularly impressive given the drive-by-wire nature of the Sequel. The Sequel has four wheel steering with a rack in the front that has an actuator and two individual actuators on the rear wheels. The brakes have electrically actuated friction brakes with regenerative braking blended in and throughout the drive never exhibited any out the ordinary behavior.
The Sequel has the fourth-generation GM fuel cell technology which is the same type used in the upcoming fuel cell Equinox that will be part of the Project Driveway program this fall. At the recent Shanghai Motor Show GM unveiled a version of the Volt concept with the new fifth generation stack which doubles the power density of the stack in the Sequel. Even with the now-superseded fuel cell stack technology. the challenge was to cover a distance of at least 300 miles.
As it turned out both vehicles ran the full distance arriving at Lyndhurst Castle in Tarrytown New York eight and a half hours after leaving Honeoye Falls having covered a little over 302 miles. Each Sequel still had at least 1kg of hydrogen left in the tank which would have carried the vehicles over forty more miles. Considering the driving conditions with traffic jams, construction zones and air conditioning running almost the whole way on a day that ended at eighty degrees this is quite an achievement.
No one else is known to have gone this far under these conditions on a single tankful of hydrogen before. The only really technical issues that we encountered were elevated temperatures in the lithium ion batteries. The batteries used in the Sequels are air cooled but talking to Larry Burns when we were approaching the end of the trek, he indicated that it’s looking like liquid cooling is going to be required in order to achieve the robust thermal management that will be required for production applications.
At the finish line a clearly delighted Larry Burns spoke to the crowd of local schoolchildren and other onlookers who had awaited our arrival and told them this is just the beginning of the transformation of the automobile. He clearly believes in this technology because it will free us from dependency on oil. No matter what you think of hydrogen as an energy carrier, the fact is that a lot engineers and technicians have worked very hard for many years and achieved a lot. The Sequel is one of the most technologically advanced vehicles in the world and it works. Not all of the technology contained within these concepts will appear at the same time, but over time it will probably filter into the cars we all drive.
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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.
Right Hand Cuts Emissions, Left Hand Builds Coal Plants
If lawmakers on Capitol Hill want to cut carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions that cause global warming, they will have to face another giant to make real progress: A government program, hailing from the Depression era, that sends billions of dollars of low-interest loans to rural areas to build coal plants. The Rural Electrification Administration was created in 1935 by President Franklin Roosevelt to bring electricity to U.S. farms. The mission has been accomplished, but the money keeps coming.
Rural electric cooperatives ("co-ops") are nonprofit organizations that distribute electricity and are owned by their customers. There are more than 800 of them across the U.S., and more than 50 of them own a power plant. The co-ops plan to spend $35 billion to build old-fashioned coal plants over the next 10 years. A sobering reality check: That’s enough to offset all state and federal efforts to cut CO2 emissions over that time.
The Office of Management and Budget wants to end the loans for new power plants and limit the ones for transmission projects in the most remote areas. But the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association is a powerful lobby, and sent 3,000 members to Capitol Hill last week to keep the lending program rolling, arguing that the new coal plants are needed to keep energy cheap and reliable.
Glenn English, chief executive of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, pointed out that taxable utilities get tax breaks to encourage renewable energy projects and efficiency measures, but rural co-ops can’t. He wants Congress to give the nonprofit co-ops incentives too, like no-interest loans.
Besides political influence, co-ops often carry a lot of clout in their communities because they are more involved than just distributing electricity. English explained that one co-op reopened a gas station that went out of business. Another bought and kept open the local Dairy Queen.
Others argue that many of the co-ops shouldn’t qualify as rural anymore because of their expansion into densely populated zones, like Dallas-Fort Worth area and Atlanta. Additionally, the low-interest money they receive removes any incentive to promote energy efficiency or go after renewable resources. In fact, rural co-ops get on average 80 percent of their electricity from coal, compared to 50 percent with the rest of the country. Their energy demand is also growing at twice the national rate.
This is going to be a tough political issue for Congress to tackle. Both sides may have valid points, but the system must be restructured to be a more efficient process that emphasizes clean, renewable, local energy. If not, than all the state and federal goals, programs, and initiatives that aim to cut climate change emissions will be simply blown away.
Programul Cantemir: Sectiunea III – Cooperare/Culture to Share
Programul CANTEMIR s-a constituit în anul 2006, în baza procedurilor, criteriilor şi condiţiilor prevăzute de Legea nr. 350/2005, precum şi a Ordonanţei 9/1996, ca un program-pilot de finanţare a proiectelor culturale româneşti adresate mediului internaţional.
Pentru a fi eligibili, solicitanţii trebuie să fie:
– persoane juridice, fără scop patrimonial, înregistrate legal în România, care desfăşoară, conform actelor constitutive, activităţi culturale (asociaţii, fundaţii, instituţii publice de cultură finanţate din venituri extrabugetare şi din alocaţii de la bugetul de stat/bugete locale).
Proiectele trebuie să se înscrie într-unul sau mai multe dintre următoarele domenii: arte vizuale, arhitectură şi design, muzică, dans, teatru, film, literatură, patrimoniu cultural.
Milioane de oameni, milioane de copaci
“Milioane de oameni, milioane de copaci” este un program naţional de responsabilitate socială corporativă, care are ca scop promovarea activităţilor de voluntariat în cadrul companiilor, organizaţiilor şi a instituţiilor pentru plantarea de copaci sau alte plante în oraşe şi în împrejurimile acestora, conform calendarului anual de plantări, toamna şi primăvara.
Orice companie, organizaţie sau instituţie poate participa la program! Primăriile pot acorda avize asupra zonelor pe care le recomandă pentru plantări. Voluntari din cadrul companiei/organizaţiei vor planta copaci sau alte plante. Cei inscrisi in program vor achizitiona puietii/plantele din fonduri proprii, vor asigura instrumentele necesare plantării, transportul voluntarilor, invitarea la acţiuni comune de voluntariat a elevilor, studenţilor din oraşele în care îşi desfăşoară activitatea.
Rezultatele activităţilor de voluntariat vor fi listate pe site, astfel încât toţi participanţii înscrişi în concurs, vor intra automat în topul celor mai active companii care s-au implicat în efortul de a recrea mediul înconjurator din România, prin plantare de copaci sau alte plante. Toţi participanţii înscrişi în concurs vor primi Diplome de Merit, iar anual primii trei clasaţi. Vezi regulament concurs.
Programul Cantemir: Sectiunea II – Promovare/Culture to Go
Programul CANTEMIR s-a constituit în anul 2006, în baza procedurilor, criteriilor şi condiţiilor prevăzute de Legea nr. 350/2005, precum şi a Ordonanţei 9/1996, ca un program-pilot de finanţare a proiectelor culturale româneşti adresate mediului internaţional.
Pentru a fi eligibili, solicitanţii trebuie să fie:
Persoane juridice fără scop patrimonial, înregistrate legal în România, care desfăşoară, conform actelor constitutive, activităţi culturale (asociaţii, fundaţii sau instituţii publice de cultură finanţate din venituri extrabugetare şi din alocaţii de la bugetul de stat/bugete locale).