What if global warming / climate change has accelerated and is increasing exponentially faster than expected? Would anybody do anything differently – would any business change the amount of pollutants or the ways they are doing things? No, they probably would not do one thing differently.

UN chief calls for urgent action on climate change

Mon Aug 31, 2009 6:12pm EDT

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* U.N. chief, in Arctic, calls for urgent climate deal

* Arctic sea ice melting faster than ice elsewhere

* Some environmentalists say tipping point in Arctic reached

By Wojciech Moskwa

LONGYEARBYEN, Svalbard, Aug 31 (Reuters) – United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on world leaders on Monday to take urgent action to combat climate change for the sake of “the future of humanity.”

Ban, on a tour of Svalbard, the remote Norwegian-controlled Arctic archipelago, said the region might have no ice within 30 years if present climate trends persisted.

He is trying to drum up support for a comprehensive accord to limit emissions of greenhouse gases at a U.N. summit in Copenhagen in December. The accord will be a successor to the Kyoto Protocol which expires in 2012.

“I would like to draw the attention (of) the world, for urgent action to be taken at Copenhagen … We do not have much time to lose,” Ban told reporters aboard a Norwegian coastguard vessel.

Ban said he wants leaders “to agree a global deal that is comprehensive, equitable and balanced for the future of humanity and the future of planet Earth.”

[etc.]

http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSLV435421

***

global warming – maybe the Republican conservatives can pretend there aren’t really wildfires occurring – it is just a matter of political leaning, perspective and opinion – maybe those orange flames are really like global warming and climate change are, according to the views of Republican Party leadership – smog isn’t really air pollution, wildfires aren’t really happening and climate change is only a matter of opinion – yeah, right –

Knowing they probably can’t stop the bill in the House, Republicans are doing what they can to slow its progress — and to make the process as painful as possible for vulnerable Democrats.

A slew of Republican amendments has delayed committee consideration of the bill. During five hours of markup Tuesday, members made it through only two amendments; Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) said Republicans could offer about 400 amendments — 70 to 80 of which could require committee consideration.

My Note – that is a quote from this article in Politico which describes how the Republican Party is working overtime to defeat the bill focused on climate change measures – however, as much as that might now be in progress, when are the Republicans going to get in the business of creating solutions that will slow or halt global warming and climate change?

**

Barton has offered his own alternative to the Democrats’ bill, but supporters of the Waxman-Markey effort says his proposal contains the same sort of corporate giveaways the Republicans have accused the Democrats of providing.

“Joe Barton’s alternative energy bill is full of more handouts to big oil companies that made $650 billion in profits over the past eight years,” said Daniel J. Weiss, a climate director at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) said Republicans could offer about 400 amendments — 70 to 80 of which could require committee consideration.

[etc.]

“Business is not always going to be a good friend of the Republicans, and that needs to be reflected in our strategy,” said MWR Strategies President Michael McKenna, a Republican energy lobbyist. “The GOP business model is probably busted forever. It started to break apart on TARP, and it could permanently break apart on climate change.”

While the GOP tries to hold the line against a massive climate change bill, a number of major corporations — including Duke Energy, Johnson & Johnson and Shell Corp. — are backing cap-and-trade proposals by the United States Climate Action Partnership coalition, a group of environmental groups and businesses advocating legislation to reduce greenhouse gases.

U.S. CAP members include the Natural Resources Defense Council, General Electric, Ford Motor Company, and other environmental groups and Fortune 500 companies.

The GOP memo accuses USCAP members of “blatant rent-seeking.”

[ . . . ]

A climate change bill sponsored by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) is expected to clear Waxman’s committee this week. A number of Republican leaders, as well as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, have long argued that such cap-and-trade legislation would raise energy costs for consumers and do damage to an already fragile economy.

“House and Senate Republicans are clearly working together to develop the best strategy to defeat a national energy tax that will increase energy costs, raise taxes in the middle of a recession and drive good-paying jobs overseas,” said Michael Steel, spokesman for House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio). “The only constituency that’s important to us is … the American people.”

The GOP memo focuses on the Democrats’ work with USCAP, calling the group a collection of “polluters” who are “writing significant portions of the Waxman-Markey bill.” There’s no dispute that the group has worked closely with the Democrats; a source who attended a committee markup on the climate change bill Tuesday said that Waxman’s staff had reserved a front-row seat for the group.

[ etc. ]

Knowing they probably can’t stop the bill in the House, Republicans are doing what they can to slow its progress — and to make the process as painful as possible for vulnerable Democrats.

A slew of Republican amendments has delayed committee consideration of the bill. During five hours of markup Tuesday, members made it through only two amendments; Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) said Republicans could offer about 400 amendments — 70 to 80 of which could require committee consideration.

[more about climate change, global warming, cap and trade legislation, etc. - is available through UNESCO and the current climate change conference, but not in this news story which focuses on the Republicans' typical nasty behavior against changing anything . . . ] – my note

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0509/22734.html

[from - ]

Climate change: GOP turns on business to fight measure

***

Smokestack emissions rise into the air.

Senate Republicans have come up with a novel way to fight the climate change bill.
Photo: AP

Ice sculptures made from glacial meltwater at the Temple of Earth in Beijing mark the start of the 100-day countdown to the U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen
Lu Guang / Greenpeace International / EPA

Climate-Summit Agreement Still Far Off
By Bryan Walsh Monday, Aug. 31, 2009

But civil society has a role to play as well, by mobilizing the public to push politicians ahead. The Climate Group — a global nonprofit — is sponsoring events in the U.S. and China in the lead-up to Copenhagen, trying to build a wave of public support for more-ambitious carbon cuts. “This is the moment,” says Steve Howard, the Climate Group’s CEO. “If we lose this chance, we may not get it back.” That dripping sound could be our last opportunity to fix the climate.

See TIME’s video “Bill Clinton on the Environment.”

With little more than three months till the U.N. summit, however, things are in doubt. To be sure, the Obama Administration is pushing for a global-warming deal, and a cap-and-trade bill that was passed by the House and is now up for debate in the Senate would finally commit the U.S. to real carbon reductions. But under the new law — if it passes — U.S. emissions would fall only 13% from 1990 levels by 2020.

The European Union, meanwhile, has pledged to make cuts of 20% from 1990 levels by 2020, meaning there is still considerable daylight between what seems politically feasible in the U.S. and E.U. And while governments at last month’s G-8 meeting pledged to keep the global-temperature increase from climate change to 3.6°F (2°C) or less, that would require emissions cuts from developed nations of as much as 40% by 2020.

No leader in the world seems willing to go that far. “There’s no doubt we can and should be doing more,” says Meyer.

[etc.]

Quotes of the Day »

STEPHEN INCERTY, a California resident waiting at an L.A.-area evacuation center on Monday because of the wildfires that are devastating the area; about 12,000 homes are threatened
***
***

World Climate Conference-3
31 August to 4 September 2009, Geneva, Switzerland
World Climate Conference-3

* Treat her with love and respect

Director-General to address WCC-3; UNESCO is part of the International Organizing Committe and has organized several thematic events

UNESCO and its IOC are members of the International Organizing Committee of World Climate Conference-3 (WCC-3), which has its theme Climate prediction and information for decision-making: focusing on scientific advances in seasonal to interannual timescales, taking into account multi-decadal prediction . WCC-3 follows the first two World Climate Conferences; WCC-1 led to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the World Climate Programme and the World Climate Research Programme, while WCC-2 led to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Global Climate Observing System. UNESCO has long been involved in supporting all of these. WCC-3 is the largest gathering of scientists interested in climate change prior to UNFCCC’s COP 15 to be held December 2009.

UNESCO’s Director-General will speak at the High-level Segment of the Programme and UNESCO will also make a formal statement in the Opening Session.

The IOC is chairing the important Working Session on the Climate of Oceans and Coasts. The user-focused Session will address the special vulnerability of coastal regions to climate change and risk, by reviewing the coastal ocean information needs, and will discuss the capabilities of global ocean programmes to inform climate services, by making recommendations on how the ocean observing systems ought to be enhanced to best contribute to the urgent questions posed by science and policy.

WCC-3 will propose a strategy for developing climate services through establishing a Global Framework for Climate Services. One component of the Framework will be a new World Climate Services System (WCSS), which would be expected to develop and deliver sector- and user-targeted services, build capacity in developing countries and develop policies to support application of climate services for economic and societal benefit. It is on this outcome that UNESCO aims to focus. To this end, UNESCO has organized two fora and a side event which address aspects of the WCSS as well as the Framework, in addition to the working session previously mentioned.
UNESCO’s Natural Sciences Sector has organized, in collaboration with the International START Secretariat, a Capacity-building, Education and Training Forum. This Forum aims to elucidate the scope of a WCSS, lessons learned from previous and current efforts at developing capacity in meteorology, climate science, disaster risk reduction and for policy-makers and user-groups of climate information, and action points going forward.

UNESCO’s Division for Gender Equality in the Bureau of Strategic Planning has organized, in collaboration with partners FAO, GGCA, IUCN, UNDP, UNEP and WMO, a Forum on Gender and Climate Change. In order to be effective and meaningful, the new Framework needs to be closely linked to the needs and expectations of communities and societies at every level. This implies the need to understand the gender dimensions of climate change. The Forum will explore linkages between gender and climate issues, particularly in relation to the role of women as effective agents of change, and enhancing women’s capacities to address climate change.

Finally, the Water Sciences Division in the Natural Sciences Sector has organized a side event, Groundwater and Climate. It will contribute directly to the conference sub-themes of Climate impacts and adaptive strategies, and Advancing climate prediction and information science. Groundwater is not well represented in global climate models due to the difficulty of measurements and scarcity of data. Yet groundwater will play a major role in society’s ability to adapt to future change. It is imperative that dialogue between groundwater and climate scientists be improved at the global level.

Related links:
:: WCC-3 Website (More)

* Source:UNESCO SC
* 31-08-2009

http://portal.unesco.org/science/en/ev.php-URL_ID=7604&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html

***

Fire Weather

NOAA’s National Weather Service provides daily fire weather forecasts, fire weather warning products, and forecasts designed to assist wildland Fire Agencies’ assessment of fire danger every day of the year. Most NWS Weather Forecast Offices provide fire forecasts twice a day and provide warnings in close partnership with local, state and Federal fire control agencies. Every year, fire weather forecasting experts provide over 8,000 Red Flag Warnings and Fire Weather Watches for protection of the public and safety of fire fighters on the ground. Also, Weather Forecast Staff provide vital, site-specific spot forecasts for wildfire, prescribed fire projects, all-hazards incidents, marine incidents and search and rescue. Spot forecast requests have been increasing tremendously, with the NWS now providing over 19,000 Spots every year.

The National Weather Service has a cadre of around 70 meteorologist that are specially trained to go to wildfires and other incidents and give weather briefings and forecasts to the incident responders and command staff. The meteorologist’s forecasts ensure the safety of operations and allow responders to plan operations taking into account one of the most changeable aspects of an incident, the weather. This group, known as the Incident Meteorologists (IMETs), has been protecting the nation’s incident responders for nearly 90 years.

http://www.noaawatch.gov/themes/fire.php

***

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 31 (UPI) –
A wildfire north of Los Angeles doubled in size overnight, consuming structures and threatening homes from Acton to Atladena, California fire officials said.
[According to CNN, at 6.03 pm EDT - there are actually 8 wildfires in Calif. right now - the "station fire" in Angeles National Forest is simplest the largest of the eight - there are actually several other massive wildfires in the US right now also, in other states.]

***

2009 G-20 Pittsburgh summit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

G-20 Leaders’ Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy Information
Date September 24-25, 2009
Location Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Participants G-20 + Spain, the Netherlands, NEPAD, ASEAN, the EU, the UN, the World Bank, the IMF, the WTO and the FSF

The next G20 summit is due to take place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on September 24–25, 2009.[1] Announced shortly after the April 2009 G-20 London summit, U.S. President Barack Obama volunteered to host this summit, initially planning to hold it in New York City and coordinating it with the opening of the United Nations General Assembly. However, due to coordination issues, on May 28, 2009, the Obama Administration announced a change of venue to Pittsburgh in order to highlight the city’s economic recovery following the collapse of its manufacturing sector in the latter half of the 20th century. In response to the Global credit crisis, a G20 summit in one year was proposed shortly after the London summit in April 2009. The second G20 2009 summit will hopefully evaluate the measures taken in April 2009 in London and implement new policies which will stimulate the global economy.

Amongst the issues to be discussed is a proposal to radically reform the International Monetary Fund.[2] French President Nicholas Sarkozy also suggested that there would be an evaluation of measures already taken.[3]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_G-20_Pittsburgh_summit

***

http://www.pittsburghsummit.gov/

Official G20 Pittsburgh website

***

http://www.geomac.gov/

wildfire maps with current info from USGS

http://www.usgs.gov/hazards/wildfires/
Map illustration: caption below
This map shows locations that experienced wildlfires greater than 250 acres, from 1980 to 2003. Map not to scale. Sources: Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, National Park Service, and the USGS National Atlas
(Hi-res | Low-res)

***

Desertification
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea
Goat husbandry is common through the Norte Chico of Chile, however it produces severe erosion and desertification. Image from upper Limarí River

Desertification is the degradation of land in arid and dry sub-humid areas, resulting primarily from man-made activities[citation needed] and influenced by climatic variations. It is principally caused by overgrazing, overdrafting of groundwater and diversion of water from rivers for human consumption and industrial use, all of these processes fundamentally driven by overpopulation.

A major impact of desertification is biodiversity loss and loss of productive capacity, for example, by transition from land dominated by shrublands to non-native grasslands. In the semi-arid regions of southern California, many coastal sage scrub and chaparral ecosystems have been replaced by non-native, invasive grasses due to the shortening of fire return intervals. This can create a monoculture of annual grass that cannot support the wide range of animals once found in the original ecosystem. In Madagascar’s central highland plateau, 10% of the entire country has been lost to desertification due to slash and burn agriculture by indigenous peoples. In Africa, if current trends of soil degradation continue, the continent will be able to feed only 25% of its population by 2025, according to UNU’s Ghana-based Institute for Natural Resources in Africa.[1] Globally, desertification claims a Nebraska-sized area of productive capacity each year.[2]
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Causes
* 2 Prehistoric patterns
* 3 Historical and current desertification
* 4 Countering desertification
* 5 Mitigation concepts
* 6 Desertification and poverty
* 7 See also
* 8 References
* 9 Further reading
* 10 External links

[edit] Causes
Sand dunes advancing on Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania.

Desertification is induced by several factors, primarily anthropogenic causes, which began in the Holocene era and continue at the highest pace today. The primary reasons for desertification are overgrazing, over-cultivation, increased fire frequency, water impoundment, deforestation, overdrafting of groundwater, increased soil salinity, and global climate change.[3]

Deserts may be separated from surrounding, less arid areas by mountains and other contrasting landforms that reflect fundamental structural differences in the terrain. In other areas, desert fringes form a gradual transition from a dry to a more humid environment, making it more subtle to determine the desert border. These transition zones can have fragile, delicately balanced ecosystems. Desert fringes often are a mosaic of microclimates. Small pieces of wood support vegetation that picks up heat from the hot winds and protects the land from the prevailing winds. After rainfall the vegetated areas are distinctly cooler than the surroundings.

In these marginal areas activity centres may stress the ecosystem beyond its tolerance limit, resulting in degradation of the land. By pounding the soil with their hooves, livestock compact the substrate, increase the proportion of fine material, and reduce the percolation rate of the soil, thus encouraging erosion by wind and water. Grazing and collection of firewood reduce or eliminate plants that bind the soil and prevent erosion. All these come about due to the trend towards settling in one area instead of a nomadic culture.

Sand dunes can encroach on human habitats. Sand dunes move through a few different means, all of them assisted by wind. One way that dunes can move is through saltation, where sand particles skip along the ground like a rock thrown across a pond might skip across the water’s surface. When these skipping particles land, they may knock into other particles and cause them to skip as well. With slightly stronger winds, particles collide in mid-air, causing sheet flows. In a major dust storm, dunes may move tens of meters through such sheet flows. And like snow, sand avalanches, falling down the steep slopes of the dunes that face away from the winds, also moving the dunes forward.

It is a common misconception that droughts by themselves cause desertification. While drought is a contributing factor, the root causes are all related to man’s overexploitation of the environment.[3] Droughts are common in arid and semiarid lands, and well-managed lands can recover from drought when the rains return. Continued land abuse during droughts, however, increases land degradation. Increased population and livestock pressure on marginal lands has accelerated desertification. In some areas, nomads moving to less arid areas disrupt the local ecosystem and increase the rate of erosion of the land. Nomads typically try to escape the desert, but because of their land-use practices, they are bringing the desert with them.

Some arid and semi-arid lands can support crops, but additional pressure from greater populations or decreases in rainfall can lead to the few plants present disappearing. The soil becomes exposed to wind, causing soil particles to be deposited elsewhere. The top layer becomes eroded. With the removal of shade, rates of evaporation increase and salts become drawn up to the surface. This increases soil salinity which inhibits plant growth. The loss of plants causes less moisture to be retained in the area, which may change the climate pattern leading to lower rainfall.

This degradation of formerly productive land is a complex process. It involves multiple causes, and it proceeds at varying rates in different climates. Desertification may intensify a general climatic trend toward greater aridity, or it may initiate a change in local climate. Desertification does not occur in linear, easily mappable patterns. Deserts advance erratically, forming patches on their borders. Areas far from natural deserts can degrade quickly to barren soil, rock, or sand through poor land management. The presence of a nearby desert has no direct relationship to desertification. Unfortunately, an area undergoing desertification is brought to public attention only after the process is well under way. Often little data are available to indicate the previous state of the ecosystem or the rate of degradation.

Desertification is both an environmental and developmental problem. It affects local environments and populations’ ways of life. Its effects, however, have more global ramifications concerning biodiversity, climatic change and water resources. The degradation of terrain is directly linked to human activity and constitutes both one of the consequences of poor development and a major obstacle to the sustainable development of dryland zones.[4]

Combating desertification is complex and difficult, usually impossible without alteration of land management practises that led to the desertification. Over-exploitation of the land and climate variations can have identical impacts and be connected in feedbacks, which makes it very difficult to choose the right mitigation strategy. Investigating the historic desertification plays a special role since it allows better distinguishing of human and natural factors. In this context, recent research about historic desertification in Jordan questions the dominant role of man. It seems possible that current measures like reforestation projects cannot achieve their goals if global warming continues. Forests may die when it gets drier, and more frequent extreme events as testified in sediments from earlier periods could become a threat for agriculture, water supply, and infrastructure.

[edit] Prehistoric patterns

Desertification is a historic phenomenon; the world’s great deserts were formed by natural processes interacting over long intervals of time. During most of these times, deserts have grown and shrunk independent of human activities. Paleodeserts are large sand seas now inactive because they are stabilized by vegetation, some extending beyond the present margins of core deserts, such as the Sahara. Many deserts in western Asia arose because of an overpopulation of prehistoric species and subspecies during the late Cretaceous era.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

***

“Egan was a major Republican fundraiser.” - no amount of money could fix


Sources: Billionaire Egan commits suicide
Published: Aug. 29, 2009 at 8:09 PM

BOSTON, Aug. 29 (UPI) — Richard Egan, billionaire co-founder of EMC Corp. and former U. S. ambassador to Ireland, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Boston, police sources say.

Egan,. 73, was battling terminal cancer, a family statement said, as well as diabetes, emphysema and high blood pressure.

Police told The Boston Herald a nurse attending Egan heard a shotgun blast and called 911 at 12:32 p.m. Friday.

An engineer by training and a Marine Reservist during the Korean War, Egan was a major Republican fundraiser. He was often listed in Forbes magazine as one of the richest people in the world.

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/29/Sources-Billionaire-Egan-commits-suicide/UPI-93731251590949/

***

Israeli army tests unmanned supply carrier

Published: Aug. 31, 2009 at 8:32 AM

JERUSALEM, Aug. 31 (UPI) — A remote-control unmanned armored personnel carrier that can take supplies to troops will be used in future conflicts, army officials said in Israel.

The vehicle, given the temporary name Phoenix, was developed by the army’s logistics and technology department, working with Elbit Systems, Genius and Israel Defense Industries, Maariv said.

Plans are to use the vehicle to aid troops who may be stranded without food or ammunition.

Major General Dan Biton, head of the army’s logistics department, said the vehicle, which is being tested, can transport significant amounts of ammunition to troops.

The carrier, which runs on eight wheels, can maneuver in areas threatened by enemy gunfire without endangering soldiers’ lives, and can operate day or night in difficult terrain, Biton said.

United Press International

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/31/Israeli-army-tests-unmanned-supply-carrier/UPI-97901251721944/

***
My Note -
The use of remote controlled equipment like the one above seems a long-overdue intelligent use of technology and possibilities. If they could find a way to put out fires that way, among other things . . .
- cricketdiane
***

United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa is a Convention to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought through national action programs that incorporate long-term strategies supported by international cooperation and partnership arrangements.

The Convention, the only convention stemming from a direct recommendation of the Conference’s Agenda 21, was adopted in Paris on 17 June 1994 and entered into force in December 1996. It is the first and only internationally legally binding framework set up to address the problem of desertification. The Convention is based on the principles of participation, partnership and decentralization – the backbone of Good Governance and Sustainable Development. It now has 193 country Parties to the Convention, making it truly global in reach.

To help publicise the Convention, 2006 has been declared “International Year of Deserts and Desertification”.

opened for signatureOctober 14, 1994

entered into forceDecember 26, 1996

Contents

[hide]

// <![CDATA[
//

[edit] Country Parties

The UNCCD has 193 country Parties: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, The Bahamas, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belarus, Belgium, Belize, Benin, Bhutan, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Brunei Darussalam, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burma, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, the People’s Republic of China, Colombia, Comoros, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Denmark, Djibouti, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, European Union, Fiji, Finland, France, Gabon, The Gambia, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran, the Republic of Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kiribati, South Korea, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia[1], Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Marshall Islands, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico, Federated States of Micronesia, Moldova, Monaco, Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Nauru, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Niue, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Palau, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, San Marino, São Tomé and Príncipe, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Solomon Islands, Somalia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Thailand, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe

[edit] References

This article incorporates public domain material from the CIA World Factbook document “2003 edition”.
Full text available from: http://www.unccd.int/convention/text/convention.php

  • Rechkemmer, Andreas (2004): Postmodern Global Governance. The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlag.
  1. ^ Provisionally referred to as the “former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”; see Macedonia naming dispute.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Convention_to_Combat_Desertification

***

World Climate Conference 3 – August 31 – September 4, 2009 – Geneva, Switzerland – (Happening Right Now) – Wildfires, Climate Change, Desertification, Increasing Deserts, Water Table Depletion, Global Warming – G20 talk to them now – their meeting is September Pittsburgh

The IOC is chairing the important Working Session on the Climate of Oceans and Coasts.

World Climate Conference-3

31 August to 4 September 2009, Geneva, Switzerland

World Climate Conference-3

  • Treat her with love and respect

Director-General to address WCC-3; UNESCO is part of the International Organizing Committe and has organized several thematic events

UNESCO and its IOC are members of the International Organizing Committee of World Climate Conference-3 (WCC-3), which has its theme “Climate prediction and information for decision-making: focusing on scientific advances in seasonal to interannual timescales, taking into account multi-decadal prediction”. WCC-3 follows the first two World Climate Conferences; WCC-1 led to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the World Climate Programme and the World Climate Research Programme, while WCC-2 led to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Global Climate Observing System. UNESCO has long been involved in supporting all of these. WCC-3 is the largest gathering of scientists interested in climate change prior to UNFCCC’s COP 15 to be held December 2009.

UNESCO’s Director-General will speak at the High-level Segment of the Programme and UNESCO will also make a formal statement in the Opening Session.

The IOC is chairing the important Working Session on the Climate of Oceans and Coasts. The user-focused Session will address the special vulnerability of coastal regions to climate change and risk, by reviewing the coastal ocean information needs, and will discuss the capabilities of global ocean programmes to inform climate services, by making recommendations on how the ocean observing systems ought to be enhanced to best contribute to the urgent questions posed by science and policy.

WCC-3 will propose a strategy for developing climate services through establishing a Global Framework for Climate Services. One component of the Framework will be a new World Climate Services System (WCSS), which would be expected to develop and deliver sector- and user-targeted services, build capacity in developing countries and develop policies to support application of climate services for economic and societal benefit. It is on this outcome that UNESCO aims to focus.

To this end, UNESCO has organized two fora and a side event which address aspects of the WCSS as well as the Framework, in addition to the working session previously mentioned.

UNESCO’s Natural Sciences Sector has organized, in collaboration with the International START Secretariat, a Capacity-building, Education and Training Forum.  This Forum aims to elucidate the scope of a WCSS, lessons learned from previous and current efforts at developing capacity in meteorology, climate science, disaster risk reduction and for policy-makers and user-groups of climate information, and action points going forward.

UNESCO’s Division for Gender Equality in the Bureau of Strategic Planning has organized, in collaboration with partners FAO, GGCA, IUCN, UNDP, UNEP and WMO, a Forum on Gender and Climate Change. In order to be effective and meaningful, the new Framework needs to be closely linked to the needs and expectations of communities and societies at every level. This implies the need to understand the gender dimensions of climate change. The Forum will explore linkages between gender and climate issues, particularly in relation to the role of women as effective agents of change, and enhancing women’s capacities to address climate change.

Finally, the Water Sciences Division in the Natural Sciences Sector has organized a side event, Groundwater and Climate.  It will contribute directly to the conference sub-themes of Climate impacts and adaptive strategies, and Advancing climate prediction and information science.

Groundwater is not well represented in global climate models due to the difficulty of measurements and scarcity of data. Yet groundwater will play a major role in society’s ability to adapt to future change.  It is imperative that dialogue between groundwater and climate scientists be improved at the global level.

Related links:
::  WCC-3 Website (More)

<!–

–>

  • Source:UNESCO SC
  • 31-08-2009

http://portal.unesco.org/science/en/ev.php-URL_ID=7604&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html

***

News

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  • 31-08-2009
World Climate Conference-3
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  • 28-08-2009
Drs Pachauri, Stiglitz, Give Climate Briefings at UN Headquarters
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  • 28-08-2009
UNEP Reports on climate and financial markets
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  • 13-08-2009
Scientists tell the climate change story in Central Asia
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  • 07-08-2009
Indigenous knowledge of climate change impacts and adaptation
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  • 20-07-2009
UNESCO International Seminar on Climate Change Education
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  • 09-07-2009
Zimbabwean media benefit from climate change training
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  • 07-07-2009
A forum for indigenous peoples, small islands and vulnerable communities
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  • 01-06-2009
World Not Standing Still on Climate Change – UNFCCC Head
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  • 27-05-2009
Director-General Champions Climate-Neutral UNESCO
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  • 16-04-2009
Just Published by UNEP: Climate in Peril: a Popular Guide to the Latest IPCC Reports
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  • 13-03-2009
Confronting Climate Change in the Arctic
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  • 09-03-2009
Danish Government Enlivens Global Climate Change Debate Online
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Wildfire burns in Tonto National Forest

Published: Aug. 31, 2009 at 3:53 PM

Related Stories

* ‘Station’ fire doubles in size overnight
* 2 firefighters killed in Calif. wildfire
* Utah wildfire prompts evacuation
* Ore. town endangered by wildfire
* Calif. wildfires prompt state of emergency
* Fire smoke blankets Los Angeles Basin

PAYSON, Utah, Aug. 31 (UPI) — Two air tankers, a helicopter and 15 engines were fighting a 500-acre wildfire in the Tonto National Forest near Payson, Ariz., authorities said Monday.

Campers and residents of two subdivisions north of Payson were evacuated after the fire was reported spreading Sunday, forest information officer Tammy Pike said.

None of the fire was contained and the cause was unknown, she told the Arizona Republic in a story published Monday.

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/31/Wildfire-burns-in-Tonto-National-Forest/UPI-62561251748393/

***

Utah wildfire prompts evacuation

Published: Aug. 30, 2009 at 3:58 PM

Related Stories

* 2 firefighters killed in Calif. wildfire
* Wildfires cover Los Angeles in smoke
* Ore. town endangered by wildfire
* Calif. wildfires prompt state of emergency
* 2nd fire erupts in Angeles National Forest
* Wildfire burns in Angeles National Forest

NEW HARMONY, Utah, Aug. 30 (UPI) — Nearly 150 residents of New Harmony, Utah, left their homes Sunday in the face of a 10,000-acre wildfire, authorities say.

The Salt Lake Tribune said Washington County Search and Rescue team members prompted a voluntary evacuation in the Utah town Sunday as aerial crews attempted to contain the Mill Flat Fire through the use of fire retardant.

Sheriff Kirk Smith said local residents are being informed that firefighters will better be able to protect New Harmony homes if they take part in the voluntary evacuation.

The Mill Flat Fire has already consumed three homes and damaged three others, Washington County emergency services director Dean Cox said.

“The siding just melted off of one of the damaged houses,” Cox told the Tribune. No injuries have been reported to date.

Lighting started the wildfire on July 25, but the blaze was strengthened Saturday by strong winds in the New Harmony area.

The Tribune said firefighters are focusing their efforts on preventing the wildfire, which has also benefitted from hot dry conditions in the area, from damaging New Harmony properties.

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/30/Utah-wildfire-prompts-evacuation/UPI-10131251662303/

***

Wildfires cover Los Angeles in smoke

Published: Aug. 29, 2009 at 10:46 AM

Reaction: Wildfires rage through LA area

Related Stories

* Calif. wildfires prompt state of emergency
* Ore. town endangered by wildfire
* Calm, cool conditions temper B.C. fires
* Winds ease, give Greek firefighters break

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 29 (UPI) — Los Angeles residents were warned to avoid outdoor activities as thick smoke from four wildfires blanketed the region, authorities said.

The fires had burned nearly 10,000 acres and forced the evacuation of thousands as more than 2,700 firefighters and numerous air tankers and helicopters sought to keep the flames from sweeping up hillsides, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday.

The fires were skipping through steep, brush-filled canyons east and north of Los Angeles, the worst of the fires being the so-called Station Fire on the slopes of La Canada Flintridge, the Times reported.

Winds were calm, but air temperatures remained above 100 degrees, which trapped foul smoke in the San Gabriel and San Fernando valleys, health officials said. The triple-digit temperatures were expected to last through Sunday with the Station Fire just 5 percent contained as of late Friday.

“It’s going to be extremely dynamic,” said David Conklin, fire management officer for Angeles National Forest. “We’ve got a lot of work ahead of us.”

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/29/Wildfires-cover-Los-Angeles-in-smoke/UPI-78751251557196/

***

Utah wildfire burns 10,000 acres

Published: Aug. 31, 2009 at 3:04 PM

Related Stories

* Public warned about wildfires in B.C.
* Wildfires cover Los Angeles in smoke
* Calif. wildfires prompt state of emergency
* 20,000 asked to flee fiery Athens suburb
* Firefighters battling Ariz. wildfire

SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 31 (UPI) — A fast-moving fire burned nearly 9,000 acres overnight in Utah’s Pine Valley Mountain Wilderness Area, authorities said.

The fire, sparked by lightning July 25, had burned through 1,200 acres of mostly dead vegetation when it flared Saturday, the Salt Lake Tribune reported Monday.

“It came down (the) canyon like a fireball,” New Harmony City Councilman Dellas Imlay told the Tribune.

As of late Sunday, at least three homes had been destroyed and about 170 residents evacuated amid forecasts of high winds, hot temperatures and low humidity, the Tribune said.

“The siding just melted off one of the damaged houses,” said Dean Cox, Washington County emergency services director.

Smoke from the Mill Flat Fire could be seen throughout southwestern Utah, the Tribune reported.

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/31/Utah-wildfire-burns-10000-acres/UPI-66661251745468/

***

20,000 asked to flee fiery Athens suburb

Published: Aug. 23, 2009 at 12:01 PM

ATHENS, Greece, Aug. 23 (UPI) – Wildfires raging through Greece prompted rescue personnel Sunday to seek the evacuations of 20,000 people living in suburban Athens, officials said.

Panagiotis Vorias, mayor of the Athens suburb Agios Stefanos, said police there have been asked to help evacuate the city’s 20,000 residents as an uncontrolled fire burned on the northeastern edges of the Greek capital, CNN reported.

“They took the move as a precautionary measure because the fire there is raging out of control,” Vorias told CNN.

Citizen Protection Agency Chief Margaritas Mouzas said at least 1,000 had already fled their homes in Agios Stefanos, but about 10,000 people did not want to leave.

Officials said more than 600 firefighters fighting the wildfires cleared out two children’s hospitals and a senior citizens’ home in suburban Athens, as well as a monastery and some summer camps, CNN said.

Aircraft from Italy and France Sunday were to aid Greece in fighting the fires.The brush fires started late Friday in hot, dry weather and spread rapidly.

While no casualties had been reported, the fires were the worst since 2007, when nearly 70 people died, a regional Athens governor said.

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/23/20000-asked-to-flee-fiery-Athens-suburb/UPI-54771251025162/

***
California Today – wildfire raging
‘Station’ fire doubles in size overnight

Published: Aug. 31, 2009 at 1:06 PM

Firefighters walk along the crest of a hill as a wildfire moves towards Diamond Bar, California on November 16, 2008. Some 10,000 people fled as a wildfire described as the most devastating to hit Los Angeles in nearly half a century ripped through a city suburb on Saturday, officials said. (UPI Photo/Jim Ruymen)

Reaction: Wildfires rage through LA area

Related Stories

* Wildfires cover Los Angeles in smoke
* Calif. wildfires prompt state of emergency
* Northern Calif. fire evacuees return home
* Dry conditions feed California wildfires

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 31 (UPI) — A wildfire north of Los Angeles doubled in size overnight, consuming structures and threatening homes from Acton to Atladena, California fire officials said.

The Station fire, blamed for the deaths of two firefighters, is threatening the Mount Wilson Observatory and its communications towers, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday.

The fire raged on up to 85,000 acres overnight and destroyed more than 18 homes in Tugjunga Canyon and an unknown number of homes south of Acton.

Evacuations were under way as the blaze pushed forward in three directions, fire officials said.

While fire officials told the Times the blaze hasn’t burned to the top of Mount Wilson, they said the area was vulnerable. Firefighters were stationed at the observatory to protect the facility and its equipment from the encroaching flames.

“We are making progress. But it is very slow and very dangerous,” incident commander Mike Dietrich of the U.S. Forest Service said. “We have to wait for the fire to come to us.”

Two firefighters were killed Sunday when they drove off the side of a treacherous road in the Mount Gleason area, south of Acton, officials said.

More than 12,500 homes were threatened, and 6,600 were under mandatory evacuation orders as of Sunday night, the Times reported.

Fire officials said the blaze was about 5 percent contained, KTLA-TV, Los Angeles, reported. Officials said full containment may not be reached until Sept. 8.

Meanwhile, state fire officials said a wildfire in the Gold Country town of Auburn scorched scores of businesses and homes Sunday evening, the San Francisco Chronicle said.

Firefighters evacuated residents along several roads leading to Auburn, and sent an automated call to all homes within 7 miles of the blaze, requesting voluntary evacuations, the San Francisco newspaper said.

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/31/Station-fire-doubles-in-size-overnight/UPI-62451251723501/

***
National Fire Weather Website with US map showing current wildfires

http://fire.boi.noaa.gov/

**

http://www.geomac.gov/

Wildfire maps from USGS website link with current wildfires

http://www.noaawatch.gov/themes/fire.php

**

http://www.usgs.gov/hazards/wildfires/

Natural Hazards – Wildfires

Wildfires are a growing natural hazard in most regions of the United States, posing a threat to life and property, particularly where native ecosystems meet developed areas.

Map illustration: caption below
This map shows locations that experienced wildlfires greater than 250 acres, from 1980 to 2003. Map not to scale. Sources: Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, National Park Service, and the USGS National Atlas
(Hi-res | Low-res)

**

Fire Weather

NOAA’s National Weather Service provides daily fire weather forecasts, fire weather warning products, and forecasts designed to assist wildland Fire Agencies’ assessment of fire danger every day of the year. Most NWS Weather Forecast Offices provide fire forecasts twice a day and provide warnings in close partnership with local, state and Federal fire control agencies. Every year, fire weather forecasting experts provide over 8,000 Red Flag Warnings and Fire Weather Watches for protection of the public and safety of fire fighters on the ground. Also, Weather Forecast Staff provide vital, site-specific spot forecasts for wildfire, prescribed fire projects, all-hazards incidents, marine incidents and search and rescue. Spot forecast requests have been increasing tremendously, with the NWS now providing over 19,000 Spots every year.

The National Weather Service has a cadre of around 70 meteorologist that are specially trained to go to wildfires and other incidents and give weather briefings and forecasts to the incident responders and command staff. The meteorologist’s forecasts ensure the safety of operations and allow responders to plan operations taking into account one of the most changeable aspects of an incident, the weather. This group, known as the Incident Meteorologists (IMETs), has been protecting the nation’s incident responders for nearly 90 years.


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World Climate Conference 3

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USEFUL LINKS

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E-participation

WMO themes

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https://www.pittsburghg20.org/index.aspx

G20 Meeting – Pittsburgh, PA

View the full calendar of events


2009 G-20 Pittsburgh summit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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G-20 Leaders’ Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy
Information
Date September 24-25, 2009
Location Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Participants G-20 + Spain, the Netherlands, NEPAD, ASEAN, the EU, the UN, the World Bank, the IMF, the WTO and the FSF

The next G20 summit is due to take place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on September 24–25, 2009.[1] Announced shortly after the April 2009 G-20 London summit, U.S. President Barack Obama volunteered to host this summit, initially planning to hold it in New York City and coordinating it with the opening of the United Nations General Assembly. However, due to coordination issues, on May 28, 2009, the Obama Administration announced a change of venue to Pittsburgh in order to highlight the city’s economic recovery following the collapse of its manufacturing sector in the latter half of the 20th century. In response to the Global credit crisis, a G20 summit in one year was proposed shortly after the London summit in April 2009. The second G20 2009 summit will hopefully evaluate the measures taken in April 2009 in London and implement new policies which will stimulate the global economy.

Amongst the issues to be discussed is a proposal to radically reform the International Monetary Fund.[2] French President Nicholas Sarkozy also suggested that there would be an evaluation of measures already taken.[3]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_G-20_Pittsburgh_summit

http://www.pittsburghsummit.gov/

***

Desertification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea

Goat husbandry is common through the Norte Chico of Chile, however it produces severe erosion and desertification. Image from upper Limarí River

Desertification is the degradation of land in arid and dry sub-humid areas, resulting primarily from man-made activities[citation needed] and influenced by climatic variations. It is principally caused by overgrazing, overdrafting of groundwater and diversion of water from rivers for human consumption and industrial use, all of these processes fundamentally driven by overpopulation.

A major impact of desertification is biodiversity loss and loss of productive capacity, for example, by transition from land dominated by shrublands to non-native grasslands. In the semi-arid regions of southern California, many coastal sage scrub and chaparral ecosystems have been replaced by non-native, invasive grasses due to the shortening of fire return intervals. This can create a monoculture of annual grass that cannot support the wide range of animals once found in the original ecosystem. In Madagascar‘s central highland plateau, 10% of the entire country has been lost to desertification due to slash and burn agriculture by indigenous peoples. In Africa, if current trends of soil degradation continue, the continent will be able to feed only 25% of its population by 2025, according to UNU‘s Ghana-based Institute for Natural Resources in Africa.[1] Globally, desertification claims a Nebraska-sized area of productive capacity each year.[2]

Contents

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Causes

Sand dunes advancing on Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania.

Desertification is induced by several factors, primarily anthropogenic causes, which began in the Holocene era and continue at the highest pace today. The primary reasons for desertification are overgrazing, over-cultivation, increased fire frequency, water impoundment, deforestation, overdrafting of groundwater, increased soil salinity, and global climate change.[3]

Deserts may be separated from surrounding, less arid areas by mountains and other contrasting landforms that reflect fundamental structural differences in the terrain. In other areas, desert fringes form a gradual transition from a dry to a more humid environment, making it more subtle to determine the desert border. These transition zones can have fragile, delicately balanced ecosystems. Desert fringes often are a mosaic of microclimates. Small pieces of wood support vegetation that picks up heat from the hot winds and protects the land from the prevailing winds. After rainfall the vegetated areas are distinctly cooler than the surroundings.

In these marginal areas activity centres may stress the ecosystem beyond its tolerance limit, resulting in degradation of the land. By pounding the soil with their hooves, livestock compact the substrate, increase the proportion of fine material, and reduce the percolation rate of the soil, thus encouraging erosion by wind and water. Grazing and collection of firewood reduce or eliminate plants that bind the soil and prevent erosion. All these come about due to the trend towards settling in one area instead of a nomadic culture.

Sand dunes can encroach on human habitats. Sand dunes move through a few different means, all of them assisted by wind. One way that dunes can move is through saltation, where sand particles skip along the ground like a rock thrown across a pond might skip across the water’s surface. When these skipping particles land, they may knock into other particles and cause them to skip as well. With slightly stronger winds, particles collide in mid-air, causing sheet flows. In a major dust storm, dunes may move tens of meters through such sheet flows. And like snow, sand avalanches, falling down the steep slopes of the dunes that face away from the winds, also moving the dunes forward.

It is a common misconception that droughts by themselves cause desertification. While drought is a contributing factor, the root causes are all related to man’s overexploitation of the environment.[3] Droughts are common in arid and semiarid lands, and well-managed lands can recover from drought when the rains return. Continued land abuse during droughts, however, increases land degradation. Increased population and livestock pressure on marginal lands has accelerated desertification. In some areas, nomads moving to less arid areas disrupt the local ecosystem and increase the rate of erosion of the land. Nomads typically try to escape the desert, but because of their land-use practices, they are bringing the desert with them.

Some arid and semi-arid lands can support crops, but additional pressure from greater populations or decreases in rainfall can lead to the few plants present disappearing. The soil becomes exposed to wind, causing soil particles to be deposited elsewhere. The top layer becomes eroded. With the removal of shade, rates of evaporation increase and salts become drawn up to the surface. This increases soil salinity which inhibits plant growth. The loss of plants causes less moisture to be retained in the area, which may change the climate pattern leading to lower rainfall.

This degradation of formerly productive land is a complex process. It involves multiple causes, and it proceeds at varying rates in different climates. Desertification may intensify a general climatic trend toward greater aridity, or it may initiate a change in local climate. Desertification does not occur in linear, easily mappable patterns. Deserts advance erratically, forming patches on their borders. Areas far from natural deserts can degrade quickly to barren soil, rock, or sand through poor land management. The presence of a nearby desert has no direct relationship to desertification. Unfortunately, an area undergoing desertification is brought to public attention only after the process is well under way. Often little data are available to indicate the previous state of the ecosystem or the rate of degradation.

Desertification is both an environmental and developmental problem. It affects local environments and populations’ ways of life. Its effects, however, have more global ramifications concerning biodiversity, climatic change and water resources. The degradation of terrain is directly linked to human activity and constitutes both one of the consequences of poor development and a major obstacle to the sustainable development of dryland zones.[4]

Combating desertification is complex and difficult, usually impossible without alteration of land management practises that led to the desertification. Over-exploitation of the land and climate variations can have identical impacts and be connected in feedbacks, which makes it very difficult to choose the right mitigation strategy. Investigating the historic desertification plays a special role since it allows better distinguishing of human and natural factors. In this context, recent research about historic desertification in Jordan questions the dominant role of man. It seems possible that current measures like reforestation projects cannot achieve their goals if global warming continues. Forests may die when it gets drier, and more frequent extreme events as testified in sediments from earlier periods could become a threat for agriculture, water supply, and infrastructure.

Prehistoric patterns

Desertification is a historic phenomenon; the world’s great deserts were formed by natural processes interacting over long intervals of time. During most of these times, deserts have grown and shrunk independent of human activities. Paleodeserts are large sand seas now inactive because they are stabilized by vegetation, some extending beyond the present margins of core deserts, such as the Sahara. Many deserts in western Asia arose because of an overpopulation of prehistoric species and subspecies during the late Cretaceous era.

Dated fossil pollen indicates that today’s Sahara desert has been changing between desert and fertile savanna. Studies also show that prehistorically the advance and retreat of deserts tracked yearly rainfall, whereas a pattern of increasing amounts of desert began with human-driven activities of overgrazing and deforestation.

A chief difference of prehistoric versus present desertification is the much greater rate of desertification than in prehistoric and geologic time scales, due to anthropogenic influences.

Historical and current desertification

Overgrazing and to a lesser extent drought in the 1930s transformed parts of the Great Plains in the United States into the “Dust Bowl“. During that time, a considerable fraction of the plains population abandoned their homes to escape the unproductive lands. Improved agricultural and water management have prevented a disaster of the earlier magnitude from recurring, but desertification presently affects tens of millions of people with primary occurrence in the lesser developed countries.

Lake Chad in a 2001 satellite image, with the actual lake in blue. The lake has shrunk by 95% since the 1960s.[5]

Desertification is widespread in many areas of the People’s Republic of China. The populations of rural areas have increased since 1949 for economical reasons as more people have settled there. While there has been an increase in livestock, the land available for grazing has decreased. Also the importing of European cattle such as Friesian and Simmental, which have higher food intakes, has made things worse.[citation needed]

Human overpopulation is leading to destruction of tropical wet forests and tropical dry forests, due to widening practices of slash-and-burn and other methods of subsistence farming necessitated by famines in lesser developed countries.[citation needed] A sequel to the deforestation is typically large scale erosion, loss of soil nutrients and sometimes total desertification. Examples of this extreme outcome can be seen on Madagascar‘s central highland plateau, where about seven percent of the country’s total land mass has become barren, sterile land.

Overgrazing has made the Rio Puerco Basin of central New Mexico one of the most eroded river basins of the western United States and has increased the high sediment content of the river.[6] Overgrazing is also contributing to desertification in some parts of Chile, Ethiopia, Morocco and other countries. Overgrazing is also an issue with some regions of South Africa such as the Waterberg Massif, although restoration of native habitat and game has been pursued vigorously since about 1980.

Another example of desertification occurring is in the Sahel. The chief cause of desertification in the Sahel is slash-and-burn farming practised by an expanding human population.[7] The Sahara is expanding south at a rate of up to 48 kilometres per year.[8]

Ghana[9] and Nigeria currently experience desertification; in the latter, desertification overtakes about 1,355 square miles (3,510 km2) of land per year. The Central Asian countries, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, are also affected. More than 80% of Afghanistan‘s and Pakistan‘s land could be subject to soil erosion and desertification.[10] In Kazakhstan, nearly half of the cropland has been abandoned since 1980. In Iran, sand storms were said to have buried 124 villages in Sistan and Baluchestan Province in 2002, and they had to be abandoned. In Latin America, Mexico and Brazil are affected by desertification.[11]

Countering desertification

Trees are planted instead of sand fences to reduce sand accumulating in a UAE highway.

Desertification has been recognized as a major threat to biodiversity. Numerous countries have developed Biodiversity Action Plans to counter its effects, particularly in relation to the protection of endangered flora and fauna.[12][13]

A number of methods have been tried in order to reduce the rate of desertification and regain lost land; however, most measures treat symptoms of sand movement and do not address the root causes of land modification such as overgrazing, unsustainable farming (eg cattle farming) and deforestation. In developing countries under threat of desertification, many local people use trees for firewood and cooking which has increased the problem of land degradation and often even increased their poverty. In order to gain further supplies of fuel the local population add more pressure to the depleted forests; adding to the desertification process.

Techniques focus on two aspects: provisioning of water (eg by wells and energy intensive systems involving water pipes or over long distances) and fixating and hyper-fertilising soil.

Fixating the soil is often done through the use of shelter belts, woodlots and windbreaks. Windbreaks are made from trees and bushes and are used to reduce soil erosion and evapotranspiration. They were widely encouraged by development agencies from the middle of the 1980s in the Sahel area of Africa. Another approach is the spraying of petroleum or nano clay[14] over semi-arid cropland. This is often done in areas where either petroleum or nano clay is easily and cheaply obtainable (eg Iran). In both cases, the application of the material coats seedlings to prevent moisture loss and stop them being blown away.

Some soils (eg clay soils), due to lack of water can become consolidated rather than become too loose (as in the case of sandy soils). Some techniques as zaï or tillage are then used to still allow the planting of crops.[15]

The enriching of the soil and the restoration of its fertility is often done by a plants. Of these, the Leguminous plants which extract nitrogen from the air and fixes it in the soil, and food crops/trees as grains, barley, beans and dates are the most important.

When housing is foreseen in or near the reforestation area, organic waste material (eg hazelnut shells, bamboo, chicken manure, …) can be made into biochar or Terra preta nova by a pyrolysis unit. This substance may be used to enrich planting spaces for high-demanding crops.[16]

Finally, some approaches as stacking stones around the base of trees and artificial groove-digging also help in increasing the chance of local success of crop survival. Stacked stones help to collect morning dew and retain soil moisture. Artificial grooves are dug in the ground as to retain rainfall and trap wind-blown seeds. [17][18]

In order to solve the problem of cutting trees for personal energy requirements, solutions as Solar ovens and efficient wood burning cook stoves are being advocated as a means to relieving some of this pressure upon the environment; however, these techniques are generally prohibitively expense in the very regions where they are needed.

While desertification has received some publicity by the news media, most people are unaware of the extent of environmental degradation of productive lands and the expansion of deserts. In 1988 Ridley Nelson pointed out that desertification is a subtle and complex process of deterioration.

At the local level, individuals and governments can temporarily forestall desertification. Sand fences are used throughout the Middle East and the US, in the same way snow fences are used in the north. Placement of straw grids, each up to a square meter in area, will also decrease the surface wind velocity. Shrubs and trees planted within the grids are protected by the straw until they take root. However, some studies suggest that planting of trees depletes water supplies in the area.[19] In areas where some water is available for irrigation, shrubs planted on the lower one-third of a dune’s windward side will stabilize the dune. This vegetation decreases the wind velocity near the base of the dune and prevents much of the sand from moving. Higher velocity winds at the top of the dune level it off and trees can be planted atop these flattened surfaces.

Jojoba plantations, such as those shown, have played a role in combating edge effects of desertification in the Thar Desert, India.

Oases and farmlands in windy regions are often protected by the approach described above by planting tree fences or grass belts in order to reduce erosion and walking dunes. Also, small projects as oases often section their plot of land by placing a barrier of thorny bushes or other obstacles to keep grazing animals away from the food crops. Instead, they provide water provisioning (eg from a well, …) outside this barrier. They provide this service mainly to accommodate the animals of travelers (eg camels, …). Sand that manages to pass through the grass belts can be caught in strips of trees planted as wind breaks 50 to 100 meters apart adjacent to the belts. Small plots of trees may also be scattered inside oases to stabilize the area. On a much larger scale, a “Green Wall of China“, which will eventually stretch more than 5,700 kilometers in length, nearly as long as the Great Wall of China, is being planted in north-eastern China to protect “sandy lands” – deserts created by human activity.

There is another technique, which is controversial, that involves using livestock to rehabilitate land. This is based on the fact that many areas in the world which are heavily desertified were once grasslands and similar environments (the Sahara, areas in the USA that were affected by the Dust Bowl years[20]) and where substantial populations of large herbivores were once supported. By using livestock (which is contained within a portable fence so that they cannot wander away from the site) along with hay and seeds contained within, the land can be restored effectively, even on mine dumps.[21] In addition, people that hold livestock and that have a semi-nomadic livestyle (moving between fixed homes) such as nomadic pastoralists have significant interest in combating desertification of these areas.[22] Having these people to plant shelterbelts, windbreaks, trees or nitrogen-fixating crops in the vicinity of their homes would also help a lot.

Africa, with coordination from Senegal, has launched its own “green wall” project[23]. Trees will be planted on a 15 km wide land strip from Senegal to Djibouti. Aside from countering desert progression, the project is also aimed at creating new economic activities, especially thanks to tree products such as gum arabic [24]

More efficient use of existing water resources and control of salinization are other tools for mitigating arid lands. New ways are also being sought to find groundwater resources and to develop more effective ways of irrigating arid and semiarid lands. Research on the reclamation of deserts is also focusing on discovering proper crop rotation to protect fragile soil, on understanding how sand-fixing plants can be adapted to local environments, and on how overgrazing can be addressed. A proposal combining desert stabilization and renewable energy is Aerially Delivered Re-forestation and Erosion Control System[25]

Mitigation concepts

Sand fences can be used to control drifting of soil and sand and soil erosion.

A recent development is the Seawater Greenhouse and Seawater Forest. This proposal is to construct these devices on coastal deserts in order to create freshwater and grow food [26]

A similar approach is the Desert Rose concept [27]

These approaches are of widespread applicability, since the relative costs of pumping large quantities of seawater inland are low[28].

Another related concept is ADRECS – a system for rapidly delivering soil stabilisation and re forestation techniques coupled with renewable energy generation[29].

Desertification and poverty

Numerous authors underline the strong link between desertification and poverty. The proportion of poor people among populations is noticeably higher in dryland zones, especially among rural populations. This situation increases yet further as a function of land degradation because of the reduction in productivity, the precariousness of living conditions and difficulty of access to resources and opportunities.[30]

Decision-makers are highly reticent about investing in arid zones with low potential. This absence of investment contributes to the marginalisation of these zones.When unfavourable agro-climatic conditions are combined with an absence of infrastructure and access to markets, as well as poorly-adapted production techniques and an underfed and undereducated population, most such zones are excluded from development.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Africa may be able to feed only 25% of its population by 2025
  2. ^ Environmental failure: a case for a new green politics
  3. ^ a b E.O. Wilson, The Future of Life, 2001
  4. ^ a b Cornet A., 2002. Desertification and its relationship to the environment and development: a problem that affects us all. In: Ministère des Affaires étrangères/adpf, Johannesburg. World Summit on Sustainable Development. 2002. What is at stake? The contribution of scientists to the debate: 91-125..
  5. ^ Shrinking African Lake Offers Lesson on Finite Resources
  6. ^ “Desertification”, United States Geological Survey (1997)
  7. ^ “Desertification – a threat to the Sahel”, August 1994
  8. ^ Hunger is spreading in Africa
  9. ^ “Ghana: Threats of Desertification Must Be Taken Seriously”, Public Agenda (allAfrica.com), May 21, 2007.
  10. ^ Afghanistan: Environmental crisis looms as conflict goes on
  11. ^ Lester R. Brown, “The Earth Is Shrinking: Advancing Deserts and Rising Seas Squeezing Civilization”, Earth Policy Institute, November 15, 2006.
  12. ^ Techniques for Desert Reclamation by Andrew S. Goudie
  13. ^ Desert reclamation projects
  14. ^ Nano clay
  15. ^ Arid sandy soils becoming consolidated; zai-system
  16. ^ NGC Our good earth
  17. ^ Keita ID project ditches
  18. ^ Making of ditches against desertification
  19. ^ Planting trees may create deserts – earth – 29 July 2005 – New Scientist
  20. ^ http://managingwholes.com/desertification.htm
  21. ^ http://www.ecoresults.org/success_tiptons.html
  22. ^ Nomadic pastoralists and reforestation
  23. ^ IISD RS summary of the International Conference on Renewable Energy in Africa – 16-18 April 2008 – Dakar, Senegal
  24. ^ FAO
  25. ^ [ADRECS - Aerially Delivered Reforestation and Erosion Control
  26. ^ The Sahara Project a new source of freshwater food and energy
  27. ^ Desert Rose - Claverton Group Energy Conference, Bath October2008
  28. ^ http://www.claverton-energy.com/pipe-headloss-power-calculator-calculate-how-much-energy-to-pump-seawater-to-the-middle-of-the-sahara-or-gobi-desert-for-desalination-in-the-seawater-greenhouse-answer-not-a-lot.html claverton energy group article
  29. ^ http://www.claverton-energy.com/download/320/
  30. ^ Dobie, Ph. 2001.“Poverty and the drylands,” in Global Drylands Imperative, Challenge paper, Undp, Nairobi (Kenya) 16 p.
  • Batterbury, S.P.J. & A.Warren. 2001. Desertification. in N. Smelser & P. Baltes (eds.) International Encyclopædia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Elsevier Press. Pp. 3526-3529

Further reading

  • Benjaminsen, Tor A., and Gunvor Berge (2000). Timbuktu: myter, menneske, miljø. Oslo: Spartakus forlag
  • Lucke, Bernhard (2007): Demise of the Decapolis. Past and Present Desertification in the Context of Soil Development, Land Use, and Climate. Online at [1]
  • OUTGROWING THE EARTH: The Food Security Challenge in an Age of Falling Water Tables by Lester R. Brown
  • Geist, Helmut (2005) The Causes and Progression of Desertification, Abingdon: Ashgate
  • Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005) Desertification Synthesis Report
  • Reynolds, James F., and D. Mark Stafford Smith (ed.) (2002) Global Desertification – Do Humans Cause Deserts? Dahlem Workshop Report 88, Berlin: Dahlem University Press
  • Stock, Robert (1995). Africa South of the Sahara. New York: The Guilford Press
  • Barbault R., Cornet A., Jouzel J., Mégie G., Sachs I., Weber J. (2002). Johannesburg. World Summit on Sustainable Development. 2002. What is at stake? The contribution of scientists to the debate. Ministère des Affaires étrangères/adpf.

[edit] External links

News

This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Government document “http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/deserts/desertification/“.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

***

World Climate Conference 3 – August 31 – September 4, 2009

Geneva, Switzerland – (Happening Right Now)

Follow the Conference from wherever you are: watch the plenary sessions, listen to statements, read summaries, etc. More
***
My Note -
After years of Republicans, conservatives and business leaders using every form of propaganda to undermine the facts about global warming, here we are and whether it was opinion, rhetoric, politics or “framed” as something else – global warming and climate change are happening in the real world now.
- cricketdiane, 08-31-09
***

Solar Energy Grants are now available through Renewable Energy Labs – Reagan Republicans had cut the budget 90% or we would have alternative energy sources now – What were they thinking?

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from NREL)

National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Established 1977
Research Type Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy
Budget 328 Million (2009)[1]
Director Dan E. Arvizu
Staff 1,230
Location Golden, CO
Operating Agency Midwest Research Institute and Battelle Memorial Institute
Website www.nrel.gov

NREL – Golden, Colorado

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), located in Golden, Colorado, as part of the U.S. Department of Energy, is the United States‘ primary laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development.

Contents

History

Established in 1974, NREL began operating in 1977 as the Solar Energy Research Institute.

Under the Carter administration, it was the recipient of a rather large budget and its activities went beyond research and development in solar energy as it tried to popularize knowledge about already existing technologies, like passive solar amongst the population.

In the Reagan years that followed the budget was cut by some 90%, many people ‘reduced in force’ and the activities reduced to R&D.

In later years renewed interest in the energy problem improved the institute’s position. But funding has fluctuated.

In 2006 its funding had dropped to the point it was forced to lay off 32 workers [2] .

It was designated a national laboratory of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) in September 1991 and its name changed to NREL. Since its inception it has been operated under contract by the Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City, Missouri.[3]


NREL is the principal research laboratory for the DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) which provides the majority of its funding.

Other funding comes from DOE’s Office of Science and Office of Electricity Transmission and Distribution.

NREL’s areas of research and development expertise are:

  • Renewable electricity
  • Renewable fuels
  • Integrated energy systems
  • Strategic energy analysis[4]

Funding in 2009

For 2009 funding is broken down between its major groups.

  • Wind $33.9 million
  • Biofuels $35.4 million
  • Solar $72.4 million[5]

NREL’s Technology Transfer Office supports the practical deployment of technologies developed, and this often involves collaborative research projects and licensed technologies with public and private partners.

NREL’s innovative technologies have been recognized with 39 “R&D 100″ awards. The engineering and science behind these technology transfer successes and awards demonstrates NREL’s commitment to a sustainable energy future.[4]

Dr. Dan E. Arvizu became NREL’s eighth Laboratory Director in January 2005, and was previously an executive with CH2M HILL companies.

Solar cells

NREL PV R&D is performed under the National Center for Photovoltaics [6].

NREL tests and validates solar technologies.

The main research wind turbines at NREL

See also

References

  1. ^ Stimulus leaves NREL in cold
  2. ^ NREL to Lay Off 32 Staff, Budget Shortfall
  3. ^ MRI Quick Facts – mriresearch.org – Retrieved August 24, 2008
  4. ^ a b NREL Overview
  5. ^ Stimulus leaves NREL in cold
  6. ^ http://www.nrel.gov/pv/ncpv.html

External links

List of renewable energy organizations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of notable renewable energy organizations:

Associations

Research institutions

See also

Second generation

Second generation materials have been developed to address energy requirements and production costs of solar cells. Alternative manufacturing techniques such as vapour deposition, electroplating, and use of Ultrasonic Nozzles are advantageous as they reduce high temperature processing significantly. It is commonly accepted that as manufacturing techniques evolve production costs will be dominated by constituent material requirements,[7] whether this be a silicon substrate, or glass cover.

The most successful second generation materials have been cadmium telluride (CdTe), copper indium gallium selenide, amorphous silicon and micromorphous silicon.[6] These materials are applied in a thin film to a supporting substrate such as glass or ceramics, reducing material mass and therefore costs. These technologies do hold promise of higher conversion efficiencies, particularly CIGS-CIS, DSC and CdTe offers significantly cheaper production costs.

Among major manufacturers there is certainly a trend toward second generation technologies, however commercialisation of these technologies has proven difficult.[9] In 2007 First Solar produced 200 MW of CdTe solar cells making it the fifth largest producer of solar cells in 2007 and the first ever to reach the top 10 from production of second generation technologies alone.[9] Wurth Solar commercialised its CIGS technology in 2007 producing 15 MW. Nanosolar commercialised its CIGS technology in 2007 with a production capacity of 430 MW for 2008 in the USA and Germany.[10]Honda, also began to commercialize their CIGS base solar panel in 2008.

In 2007, CdTe production represented 8.9% of total market share, thin-film silicon 5.2% and CIGS 0.5%.[9]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell

**

My Note –

I started here because the thin film technology is more valuable to what is in my mind and then I thought it might be good to remember some of the other things found in the listing -

Third generation

Third generation technologies aim to enhance poor electrical performance of second generation (thin-film technologies) while maintaining very low production costs.

Current research is targeting conversion efficiencies of 30-60% while retaining low cost materials and manufacturing techniques.[7] They can exceed the theoretical solar conversion efficiency limit for a single energy threshold material, that was calculated in 1961 by Shockley and Queisser as 31% under 1 sun illumination and 40.8% under the maximal artificial concentration of sunlight (46,200 suns, which makes the latter limit more difficult to approach than the former).[11]

There are a few approaches to achieving these high efficiencies including the use of Multijunction photovoltaic cells, concentration of the incident spectrum, the use of thermal generation by UV light to enhance voltage or carrier collection, or the use of the infrared spectrum for night-time operation.

**

High efficiency cells

High efficiency solar cells are a class of solar cell that can generate more electricity per incident solar power unit (watt/watt). Much of the industry is focused on the most cost efficient technologies in terms of cost per generated power. The two main strategies to bring down the cost of photovoltaic electricity are increasing the efficiency (as many of the costs scale with the area occupied per unit of generated power), and decreasing the cost of the solar cells per generated unit of power. The latter approach might come at the expense of reduced efficiency, so the overall cost of the photovoltaic electricity does not necessarily decrease by decreasing the cost of the solar cells. The challenge of increasing the photovoltaic efficiency is thus of great interest, both from the academic and economic points of view.

Record efficiencies

Multiple junction solar cells

The record for multiple junction solar cells is disputed. Teams led by the University of Delaware, the Fraunhofer Institute, and NREL all claim the world record title at 42.8, 41.1, and 40.8 percent, respectively.[12][13][14] NREL claims that the other implementations have not been put under standardized tests and, in the case of the University of Delaware project, represents only hypothetical efficiencies of a panel that has not been fully assembled.[15] NREL claims it is one of only three laboratories in the world capable of conducting valid tests, although the Fraunhofer Institute is among those three facilities.

Thin film solar cells

In 2002, the highest reported efficiency for solar cells based on thin films of CdTe is 18%, which was achieved by research at Sheffield Hallam University, although this has not been confirmed by an external test laboratory[citation needed].

The US national renewable energy research facility NREL achieved an efficiency of 19.9% for the solar cells based on copper indium gallium selenide thin films, also known as CIGS. These CIGS films have been grown by physical vapour deposition in a three-stage co-evaporation process. In this process In, Ga and Se are evaporated in the first step; in the second step it is followed by Cu and Se co-evaporation and in the last step terminated by In, Ga and Se evaporation again

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell

****

Effect of physical size

The values of I0, RS, and RSH are dependent upon the physical size of the solar cell. In comparing otherwise identical cells, a cell with twice the surface area of another will, in principle, have double the I0 because it has twice the junction area across which current can leak. It will also have half the RS and RSH because it has twice the cross-sectional area through which current can flow. For this reason, the characteristic equation is frequently written in terms of current density, or current produced per unit cell area:

J = J_{L} - J_{0} \left\{\exp\left[\frac{q(V + J r_{S})}{nkT}\right] - 1\right\} - \frac{V + J r_{S}}{r_{SH}}

where

  • J = current density (amperes/cm2)
  • JL = photogenerated current density (amperes/cm2)
  • Jo= reverse saturation current density (amperes/cm2)
  • rS = specific series resistance (Ω-cm2)
  • rSH = specific shunt resistance (Ω-cm2)

This formulation has several advantages. One is that since cell characteristics are referenced to a common cross-sectional area they may be compared for cells of different physical dimensions. While this is of limited benefit in a manufacturing setting, where all cells tend to be the same size, it is useful in research and in comparing cells between manufacturers. Another advantage is that the density equation naturally scales the parameter values to similar orders of magnitude, which can make numerical extraction of them simpler and more accurate even with naive solution methods.

A practical limitation of this formulation is that as cell sizes shrink, certain parasitic effects grow in importance and can affect the extracted parameter values. For example, recombination and contamination of the junction tend to be greatest at the perimeter of the cell, so very small cells may exhibit higher values of J0 or lower values of rSH than larger cells that are otherwise identical. In such cases, comparisons between cells must be made cautiously and with these effects in mind.

[edit] Cell temperature

Effect of temperature on the current-voltage characteristics of a solar cell

Temperature affects the characteristic equation in two ways: directly, via T in the exponential term, and indirectly via its effect on I0. (Strictly speaking, temperature affects all of the terms, but these two far more significantly than the others.) While increasing T reduces the magnitude of the exponent in the characteristic equation, the value of I0 increases in proportion to exp(T). The net effect is to reduce VOC (the open-circuit Voltage) linearly with increasing temperature. The magnitude of this reduction is inversely proportional to VOC; that is, cells with higher values of VOC suffer smaller reductions in voltage with increasing temperature. For most crystalline silicon solar cells the reduction is about 0.50%/°C, though the rate for the highest-efficiency crystalline silicon cells is around 0.35%/°C. By way of comparison, the rate for amorphous silicon solar cells is 0.20-0.30%/°C, depending on how the cell is made.

The amount of photogenerated current IL increases slightly with increasing temperature because of an increase in the number of thermally generated carriers in the cell. This effect is slight, however: about 0.065%/°C for crystalline silicon cells and 0.09% for amorphous silicon cells.

The overall effect of temperature on cell efficiency can be computed using these factors in combination with the characteristic equation. However, since the change in voltage is much stronger than the change in current, the overall effect on efficiency tends to be similar to that on voltage. Most crystalline silicon solar cells decline in efficiency by 0.50%/°C and most amorphous cells decline by 0.15-0.25%/°C. The figure to the right shows I-V curves that might typically be seen for a crystalline silicon solar cell at various temperatures.

[edit] Series resistance

Effect of series resistance on the current-voltage characteristics of a solar cell

As series resistance increases, the voltage drop between the junction voltage and the terminal voltage becomes greater for the same flow of current. The result is that the current-controlled portion of the I-V curve begins to sag toward the origin, producing a significant decrease in the terminal voltage V and a slight reduction in ISC, the short-circuit current. Very high values of RS will also produce a significant reduction in ISC; in these regimes, series resistance dominates and the behavior of the solar cell resembles that of a resistor. These effects are shown for crystalline silicon solar cells in the I-V curves displayed in the figure to the right.

[etc. ]

Most solar cells, which are quite large compared to conventional diodes, well approximate an infinite plane and will usually exhibit near-ideal behavior under Standard Test Condition (n \approx 1). Under certain operating conditions, however, device operation may be dominated by recombination in the space-charge region. This is characterized by a significant increase in I0 as well as an increase in ideality factor to n \approx 2. The latter tends to increase solar cell output voltage while the former acts to erode it. The net effect, therefore, is a combination of the increase in voltage shown for increasing n in the figure to the right and the decrease in voltage shown for increasing I0 in the figure above. Typically, I0 is the more significant factor and the result is a reduction in voltage.

[edit] Solar cell efficiency factors

[edit] Energy conversion efficiency

Dust often accumulates on the glass of solar panels seen here as black dots.

A solar cell’s energy conversion efficiency (η, “eta”), is the percentage of power converted (from absorbed light to electrical energy) and collected, when a solar cell is connected to an electrical circuit. This term is calculated using the ratio of the maximum power point, Pm, divided by the input light irradiance (E, in W/m2) under standard test conditions (STC) and the surface area of the solar cell (Ac in m2).

\eta = \frac{P_{m}}{E \times A_c}

STC specifies a temperature of 25°C and an irradiance of 1000 W/m2 with an air mass 1.5 (AM1.5) spectrum. These correspond to the irradiance and spectrum of sunlight incident on a clear day upon a sun-facing 37°-tilted surface with the sun at an angle of 41.81° above the horizon.[21][22] This condition approximately represents solar noon near the spring and autumn equinoxes in the continental United States with surface of the cell aimed directly at the sun. Thus, under these conditions a solar cell of 12% efficiency with a 100 cm2 (0.01 m2) surface area can be expected to produce approximately 1.2 watts of power.

The losses of a solar cell may be broken down into reflectance losses, thermodynamic efficiency, recombination losses and resistive electrical loss. The overall efficiency is the product of each of these individual losses.

Due to the difficulty in measuring these parameters directly, other parameters are measured instead: Thermodynamic Efficiency, Quantum Efficiency, VOC ratio, and Fill Factor. Reflectance losses are a portion of the Quantum Efficiency under “External Quantum Efficiency”. Recombination losses make up a portion of the Quantum Efficiency, VOC ratio, and Fill Factor. Resistive losses are predominantly categorized under Fill Factor, but also make up minor portions of the Quantum Efficiency, VOC ratio.

[23]

[edit] Thermodynamic Efficiency Limit

Solar cells operate as quantum energy conversion devices, and are therefore subject to the “Thermodynamic Efficiency Limit”. Photons with an energy below the band gap of the absorber material cannot generate a hole-electron pair, and so their energy is not converted to useful output and only generates heat if absorbed. For photons with an energy above the band gap energy, only a fraction of the energy above the band gap can be converted to useful output. When a photon of greater energy is absorbed, the excess energy above the band gap is converted to kinetic energy of the carrier combination. The excess kinetic energy is converted to heat through phonon interactions as the kinetic energy of the carriers slows to equilibrium velocity.

Solar cells with multiple band gap absorber materials are able to more efficiently convert the solar spectrum. By using multiple band gaps, the solar spectrum may be broken down into smaller bins where the thermodynamic efficiency limit is higher for each bin.[24]

[edit] Quantum efficiency

As described above, when a photon is absorbed by a solar cell it can produce a pair of free charge carriers, i.e. an electron-hole pair. One of the carriers (the minority carrier) may then be able to reach the p-n junction and contribute to the current produced by the solar cell; such a carrier is said to be collected. Alternatively, the carrier may give up its energy and once again become bound to an atom within the solar cell without being collected; this process is then called recombination since one electron and one hole recombine and thereby annihilate the associated free charge. The carriers that recombine do not contribute to the generation of electrical current.

Quantum efficiency refers to the percentage of photons that are converted to electric current (i.e., collected carriers) when the cell is operated under short circuit conditions. External quantum efficiency (EQE) is the fraction of incident photons that are converted to electrical current, while internal quantum efficiency (IQE) is the fraction of absorbed photons that are converted to electrical current. Mathematically, internal quantum efficiency is related to external quantum efficiency by the reflectance (R) and the transmittance (T) of the solar cell by IQE = EQE / (1 − RT). Please note that for a thick bulk Si solar cell T is approximately zero and is therefore in practical cases often neglected.

Quantum efficiency should not be confused with energy conversion efficiency, as it does not convey information about the fraction of power that is converted by the solar cell. Furthermore, quantum efficiency is most usefully expressed as a spectral measurement (that is, as a function of photon wavelength or energy). Since some wavelengths are absorbed more effectively than others in most semiconductors, spectral measurements of quantum efficiency can yield valuable information about the quality of the semiconductor bulk and surfaces.

[edit] Maximum-power point

A solar cell may operate over a wide range of voltages (V) and currents (I). By increasing the resistive load on an irradiated cell continuously from zero (a short circuit) to a very high value (an open circuit) one can determine the maximum-power point, the point that maximizes V×I; that is, the load for which the cell can deliver maximum electrical power at that level of irradiation. (The output power is zero in both the short circuit and open circuit extremes).

A high quality, monocrystalline silicon solar cell, at 25 °C cell temperature, may produce 0.60 volts open-circuit (Voc). The cell temperature in full sunlight, even with 25 °C air temperature, will probably be close to 45 °C, reducing the open-circuit voltage to 0.55 volts per cell. The voltage drops modestly, with this type of cell, until the short-circuit current is approached (Isc). Maximum power (with 45 °C cell temperature) is typically produced with 75% to 80% of the open-circuit voltage (0.43 volts in this case) and 90% of the short-circuit current. This output can be up to 70% of the Voc x Isc product. The short-circuit current (Isc) from a cell is nearly proportional to the illumination, while the open-circuit voltage (Voc) may drop only 10% with a 80% drop in illumination. Lower-quality cells have a more rapid drop in voltage with increasing current and could produce only 1/2 Voc at 1/2 Isc. The usable power output could thus drop from 70% of the Voc x Isc product to 50% or even as little as 25%. Vendors who rate their solar cell “power” only as Voc x Isc, without giving load curves, can be seriously distorting their actual performance.

The maximum power point of a photovoltaic varies with incident illumination. For systems large enough to justify the extra expense, a maximum power point tracker tracks the instantaneous power by continually measuring the voltage and current (and hence, power transfer), and uses this information to dynamically adjust the load so the maximum power is always transferred, regardless of the variation in lighting.

[edit] Fill factor

Another defining term in the overall behavior of a solar cell is the fill factor (FF). This is the ratio of the maximum power point divided by the open circuit voltage (Voc) and the short circuit current (Isc):

FF = \frac{P_{m}}{V_{oc} \times I_{sc}} = \frac{\eta \times A_c \times E}{V_{oc} \times I_{sc}}.

The fill factor is directly affected by the values of the cells series and shunt resistance. Increasing the shunt resistance (Rsh) and decreasing the series resistance (Rs) will lead to higher fill factor, thus resulting in greater efficiency, and pushing the cells output power closer towards its theoretical maximum[25]

[edit] Comparison of energy conversion efficiencies

At this point, discussion of the different ways to calculate efficiency for space cells and terrestrial cells is necessary to alleviate confusion. In space, where there is no atmosphere, the spectrum of the sun is relatively unfiltered. However, on earth, with air filtering the incoming light, the solar spectrum changes. To account for the spectral differences, a system was devised to calculate this filtering effect. Simply, the filtering effect ranges from Air Mass 0 (AM0) in space, to approximately Air Mass 1.5 on earth. Multiplying the spectral differences by the quantum efficiency of the solar cell in question will yield the efficiency of the device. For example, a Silicon solar cell in space might have an efficiency of 14% at AM0, but have an efficiency of 16% on earth at AM 1.5. Terrestrial efficiencies typically are greater than space efficiencies.

Solar cell efficiencies vary from 6% for amorphous silicon-based solar cells to 40.7% with multiple-junction research lab cells and 42.8% with multiple dies assembled into a hybrid package.[26] Solar cell energy conversion efficiencies for commercially available multicrystalline Si solar cells are around 14-19%.[27] The highest efficiency cells have not always been the most economical — for example a 30% efficient multijunction cell based on exotic materials such as gallium arsenide or indium selenide and produced in low volume might well cost one hundred times as much as an 8% efficient amorphous silicon cell in mass production, while only delivering about four times the electrical power.

However, there is a way to “boost” solar power. By increasing the light intensity, typically photogenerated carriers are increased, resulting in increased efficiency by up to 15%. These so-called “concentrator systems” have only begun to become cost-competitive as a result of the development of high efficiency GaAs cells. The increase in intensity is typically accomplished by using concentrating optics. A typical concentrator system may use a light intensity 6-400 times the sun, and increase the efficiency of a one sun GaAs cell from 31% at AM 1.5 to 35%. See Solar_cell#Concentrating photovoltaics (CPV) below and Concentrating solar power (CSP).

A common method used to express economic costs of electricity-generating systems is to calculate a price per delivered kilowatt-hour (kWh). The solar cell efficiency in combination with the available irradiation has a major influence on the costs, but generally speaking the overall system efficiency is important. Using the commercially available solar cells (as of 2006) and system technology leads to system efficiencies between 5 and 19%. As of 2005, photovoltaic electricity generation costs ranged from ~0.60 US$/kWh (0.50 €/kWh) (central Europe) down to ~0.30 US$/kWh (0.25 €/kWh) in regions of high solar irradiation. This electricity is generally fed into the electrical grid on the customer’s side of the meter. The cost can be compared to prevailing retail electric pricing (as of 2005), which varied from between 0.04 and 0.50 US$/kWh worldwide. (Note: in addition to solar irradiance profiles, these costs/kwh calculations will vary depending on assumptions for years of useful life of a system. Most c-Si panels are warranted for 25 years and should see 35+ years of useful life.)

The chart at the right illustrates the various commercial large-area module energy conversion efficiencies and the best laboratory efficiencies obtained for various materials and technologies.

Reported timeline of solar cell energy conversion efficiencies (from National Renewable Energy Laboratory (USA)

Watts peak

Since solar cell output power depends on multiple factors, such as the sun‘s incidence angle, for comparison purposes between different cells and panels, the measure of watts peak (Wp) is used. It is the output power under these conditions known as STC. The standard test conditions imply an insolation (solar irradiance) of 1000 W/m2, a solar reference spectrum AM (airmass) of 1.5 and a cell temperature 25°C

Kennedy has died at 77 according to CNN

US Senator Edward Kennedy has died according to CNN just now.

**

Senator Edward Kennedy dies 2:05am ET

Senator Edward Kennedy, a towering figure in the Democratic Party who took the helm of one of America’s most fabled political families after two older brothers were assassinated, has died at age 77, his family said on Wednesday.  Full Article

(Reuters)

***

commentary on comments about the healthcare issue that seems to be going around

Now while I am a very understanding person and no offence meant to the person that write or believe the various commentaries heard on T.V, the Internet or newspapers. I believe they have every right to express their freedom of speech. However, that being said I want to point out a few things before my comment and then reserve the rest for after.

First of all, the health-care system they are trying to put in place is OPTIONAL. That means if you can afford some one else, then you get to. For those who can’t or like the benefits that the Gov’t is giving out then by all means thats your option as well, But every one will be treated the same. No matter what.

Secondly, I have read many bills not only this one, and I have to say that many of them are convoluted and double speech, its a loophole system that allows them to read it one way or another based on their opinion at the time.  Think of some of the statues that are made off of the same law that has been in place for years and then its being used in another way. One that you would have never thought of.

Finally, I want every one here to read my comments and think of every thing you have heard about the health-care bill. Whether you believe it, like it or agree with it. Think of everything. This will help you understand my comments at the end of the next paragraph better.

****

Before I hit this on Complete Health Care I want to put this in your mind. Did you know that the laws and bills that were put in place to keep another financial and economic collapse that caused the Great Depression were taken out of place or amended by the Republicans during the Clinton years.  Mainly because they got their think tanks to argue the actuality of what caused the Great Depression  and what nots. Allowing the bureaucrats to argue that since those actions, the same actions that put us in a major recession, didn’t cause or lead to the  Great Depression.

To make it even better , did you know that the same people that helped the cause of this mess , don’t want to be regulated, restricted or have to answer to any one on their actions. They want to continue to do what they have been doing and never mind the common people. Those common people are not their problem. Although, I want to  point this out. The common people are those that clean the houses, cook food in the restaurants or at some one else’s home, run the grocery store, keep the bathrooms in places clean, and many other things that most people take for granted. Its those people that are getting screwed in the health-care system, in the economy and in many other places because if they were worth anything then they would have a degree and have a higher paying job, one that offered benefits, paid vacation and all the other little things that careers have with them.

Alright on the the great Health-care debate.

Truth be told, the bill we see today will not be what they pass, buts its a good general idea. SO instead of talking in the what ifs we are going to talk about the what is and isn’t among other things in this. This is what I want to call a Common Sense debate. Okay, I have pointed out in other places that in the world wide health-care system and quaility of life we rank 37. Number one is France. There are places on that list that many people wouldn’t believe have a better ranking healthcare system then ours.  (http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html)

I am not saying that what they have is the best, only that its one option on the table and we can take from their model and make it our own. But when the US is ranked below a good portion of everywhere else in the world, then you know we are falling behind the times.

Secondly, I want to point out that not even ten years ago, the Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid and Veterans fund had a huge surplus. The following year they claimed it was going bankrupt. Think of this, politicians suddenly had extra money that they could funnel into their own pet projects. Such as an enclosed sky-walk to their cars or the wonderful golf course that you can’t enjoy, even though your tax money bought it. Even better, they built the marinas for their boats. They have spent money on things that they believe would benefit themselves. While they did that, many programs have been left empty, robbed or even closed.

You don’t believe me, look up the spending that the politicians do as they charge us for it. Yes, there are claims that there is a lotta pork in the bill, but there is a lotta pork in the overall spending they are allowed to do anyways. Politicians get free meals where none of us could afford to eat, the best office equipment and technology resources with the man power to operate them, transportation costs and even homes.

Now there is a wonderful rumor going around that the government will get to dictate what kind of care you will receive, the wait will be atrocious and you won’t get a choice on the doctors. What do you think your insurance company does? It dictates what kind of care you will receive based on how much money you can put in and how much they are willing to put out on your behalf. Please don’t get diagnosed with some blood disorder or cancer that could be construed as a pre-existing condition. Many insurers don’t cover those and if they do and you reach your life time coverage limits, what do you believe will happen then? They don’t pay for it, even if you need it to survive.

Many people already have to wait to see doctors, and medical perfessionals. Plus you have to go through a lot of read tape already. People die every day waiting for organ transplants, major surgeries, and various other things.  That is the reality of it now. The worst of it is that many people going into the hospital run a higher chance of catching some super bug, dying from an error, misdiagnoses, medical negligence or just plain unconscionable stupidity.

Did you know that most catheters are being reused or that the operating rooms are cleaned fully twice a day, once in the morning and once in the evening rather than between each surgery?  Most surgeries are schedule for the same day, meaning that the two doctors are on their feet all day which means that the first person scheduled probably gets the best care, if the surgeon isn’t hung over and the last ones can hope they don’t sew up anything in them.

I want to point out that many taxpayers already pay for illegal aliens, the homeless and the poor. They are using the ER as their primary care physicians and when they can’t pay the bill, it accesses the indigent funds and our taxes pay for it. Take a minute and think of this, do you know who builds your houses, maintain your streets and highways, picks your vegetables in the hot sun? Who mainly picks up your trash, or works in fast food restaurants washing dishes or any number of things that the middle class American workers aren’t willing to do? They do longer hours than most of us could stand, without the limits and other safeguards that we take for granted. Yet many people look down on them. As if they are stealing jobs that anyone would ever want. They are looking for a better life. The whole basis for America was that – a better life, free from oppression, starvation and cruelties. So, they send the little money they have back home, many people who are here legally do that and no one screams about it. They don’t pay taxes supposedly, but that isn’t possible in America since taxation has filled in so many excuses for taxing here, there and yonder.

Think of this. Many people have no health coverage, can’t afford coverage or lost their coverage. We already let the poor starve and fend for themselves because the elitist Republican conservatives think these people are not important. The right-wing fundamentalists believe the poor are not worth saving, protecting, or helping. Mainly they seem to believe this because of the convoluted reasoning that, “if the poor were valuable, then they wouldn’t be poor, now would they?” Another odd fact, we have the foodstamps program because we are only nine meals away from a revolution. Nine meals would be all it took before starvation sent people overboard and would bring the government down in its entirety. The thinking was that crumbs from the tables of everyone given to the poor would keep this from happening or they would’ve shown no mercy whatsoever.

The health care bill would help many people who cannot afford health insurance coverage. It would allow doctors who make more money when you are sick than when you are well, to become honest and reconsider their priorities in health care for you on the basis of health rather than profits. The medical society as a whole are profit driven now. Unsanctioned research goes on in hospitals and mental health facilities, and various other things that happen every day to increase the coffers of the doctors, administrators, pharmaceuticals, and various other health industries that get a cut of the profits. Why would they want someone else getting a piece of the pie as it has been, when they have had a monopoly on it? Why would they allow someone else to participate who would be charged to help regulate pricing, quality and over all care? With a change in that scenario, no longer would only those that could afford it get the “best” health care while excluding the majority in need of it. With change, every one would have an option at the best health care and that would mean a change in profit-driven health care and the current price gouging that everyone is suffering.

Ms.K

This my very last note that I think would be a great thinker. If every poor person decided to say screw you, I am not going to work today, what do you think would happen. I can guarantee that you or society as a whole would stop. you wouldn’t get your morning breakfast or coffee. More than likely those wonderful newspapers that every one enjoys reading wouldn’t be delivered or available and the trash among other things would sit on the streets fermenting in the hot afternoon sun. Among many other things that would make your day increadable hard with out those people being there.

Please think of that when you are cussing the little people of the country. whether its the moron that screwed up your order, the idiot that forgot to pick up your trash or the asshole who seemingly can’t understand a simple question. they are the foundation of a country, without them what would you have to do?  Take your garbage to the dump , fix  your own breakfast,lunch or dinner.  Maybe do more than your usual 2% of the work that makes this world and society as whole go forward.

ms. K

The growing desertification – global climate change and its causes – Sandstorms

NASA Satellites Unlock Secret to Northern India’s Vanishing Water

August 12, 2009

WASHINGTON — Using NASA satellite data, scientists have found that groundwater levels in northern India have been declining by as much as one foot per year over the past decade. Researchers concluded the loss is almost entirely due to human activity.

More than 26 cubic miles of groundwater disappeared from aquifers in areas of Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan and the nation’s capitol territory of Delhi, between 2002 and 2008. This is enough water to fill Lake Mead, the largest manmade reservoir in the United States, three times.

A team of hydrologists led by Matt Rodell of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., found that northern India’s underground water supply is being pumped and consumed by human activities, such as irrigating cropland, and is draining aquifers faster than natural processes can replenish them. The results of this research were published today in Nature.

The finding is based on data from NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), a pair of satellites that sense changes in Earth’s gravity field and associated mass distribution, including water masses stored above or below Earth’s surface. As the twin satellites orbit 300 miles above Earth’s surface, their positions change relative to each other in response to variations in the pull of gravity.

Changes in underground water masses affect gravity enough to provide a signal that can be measured by the GRACE spacecraft. After accounting for other mass variations, such changes in gravity are translated into an equivalent change in water.

“Using GRACE satellite observations, we can observe and monitor water storage changes in critical areas of the world, from one month to the next, without leaving our desks,” said study co-author Isabella Velicogna of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and the University of California, Irvine.

Groundwater comes from the natural percolation of precipitation and other surface waters down through Earth’s soil and rock, accumulating in cavities and layers of porous rock, gravel, sand or clay. Groundwater levels respond slowly to changes in weather and can take months or years to replenish once pumped for irrigation or other uses.

Data provided by India’s Ministry of Water Resources to the NASA-funded researchers suggested groundwater use across India was exceeding natural replenishment, but the regional rate of depletion was unknown. Rodell and colleagues analyzed six years of monthly GRACE data for northern India to produce a time series of water storage changes beneath the land surface.

“We don’t know the absolute volume of water in the northern Indian aquifers, but GRACE provides strong evidence that current rates of water extraction are not sustainable,” said Rodell. “The region has become dependent on irrigation to maximize agricultural productivity. If measures are not taken to ensure sustainable groundwater usage, the consequences for the 114 million residents of the region may include a collapse of agricultural output and severe shortages of potable water.”

Researchers examined data and models of soil moisture, lake and reservoir storage, vegetation and glaciers in the nearby Himalayas in order to confirm that the apparent groundwater trend was real. The loss is particularly alarming because it occurred when there were no unusual trends in rainfall. In fact, rainfall was slightly above normal for the period. The only influence they couldn’t rule out was human.

“For the first time, we can observe water use on land with no additional ground-based data collection,” said co-author James Famiglietti of the University of California, Irvine. “This is critical because in many developing countries, where hydrological data are both sparse and hard to access, space-based methods provide perhaps the only opportunity to assess changes in fresh water availability across large regions.”

GRACE is a partnership between NASA and the German Aerospace Center, DLR. The University of Texas Center for Space Research in Austin has overall GRACE mission responsibility. GRACE was launched in 2002.

For more information, please visit: http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/india_water.html

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov

Gretchen Cook-Anderson
NASA Earth Science News Team

##

Contact:

Steve Cole
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0918
stephen.e.cole@nasa.gov

Sarah DeWitt
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-0535
sarah.l.dewitt@nasa.gov

Alan Buis
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-0474
alan.buis@jpl.nasa.gov

This text derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2009/aug/HQ_09-185_India_water.html

***
table6.1

Table 6.1 – An overview of the major rivers in Central Asia originating in mountains and flowing through or to deserts and drylands -

Currently, the desert biome holds an average abundance of original species of 68 per cent.

[From - ]

http://www.unep.org/geo/gdoutlook/098.asp#table61

United Nations Environment Programme
UNEP – environment for development
Global Deserts Outlook

http://www.unep.org/geo/gdoutlook/

***

**

DESERT LANDFORMS

Looking at a satellite image of the whole earth it is easy to spot a series of conspicuous ochre, vegetation-barren areas that run parallel to the equator, in both the northern and southern hemispheres, along two East-West fringes at i5-35° latitude (Figure 1.1). They are the mid-latitude deserts of the world, lying some 2 000-4 000 km away from the equatorial rainforests. In the northern hemisphere, the succession of mid-latitude subtropical deserts is formed by (1) the Mojave, Sonoran, and Chihuahuan Deserts in North America, (i) the Sahara’s immense swathe in Northern Africa and the Somali-Ethiopian deserts in the Horn of Africa, and (3) the deserts of Asia, including the Arabian, Mesopotamian, Persian, and Thar deserts that stretch from West Asia into Pakistan and India, as well as the Central Asian deserts in Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and the Taklimakan and Gobi deserts in China and Mongolia. In the southern hemisphere, the chain is formed by (1) the Atacama, Puna, and Monte Deserts in South America, (i) the Namib and the Karoo in southern Africa, and (3) the vast expanse of the Australian deserts (Allan and others 1993, McGinnies and others 1977, Pipes 1998, Ricciuti 1996).

There are many criteria to define a desert but perhaps the most important one is aridity — the lack of water as the main factor limiting biological processes. One of the most common approaches to measure aridity is through an estimator called the Aridity Index, which is simply the ratio between mean annual precipitation (P) and mean annual potential evapotranspiration (PET, the amount of water that would be lost from water-saturated soil by plant transpiration and direct evaporation from the ground; Thornthwaite 1948). Arid and hyperarid regions have a P/PET ratio of less than 0.i0; that is, rainfall supplies less than i0 per cent of the amount of water needed to support optimum plant growth (UNEP 1997, FAO 2004). Aridity is highest in the Saharan and Chilean-Peruvian deserts, followed by the Arabian, East African, Gobi, Australian, and South African Deserts, and it is generally lower in the Thar and North American deserts. Although the aridity indices vary in the different deserts in the world, all of them fall within the arid and hyperarid categories (Table 1.1).

fig1.1.jpg
Fig. 1.1 – Vegetation – barren areas of the world

http://www.unep.org/geo/gdoutlook/016.asp#table11

fig1.3.gif – The desert biome defined by combined (three) criteria

http://www.unep.org/geo/gdoutlook/018.asp

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea - from wikipedia entry - Desertification

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea - from wikipedia entry - Desertification

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

Desertification

***

Kumtor Gold Mine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kumtor Gold Mine is an open-pit gold mining site in Issyk Kul Province of Kyrgyzstan located about 350 km (220 mi) southeast of the capital Bishkek and 80 km (50 mi) south of Lake Issyk-Kul near the border with China.

Kumtor is 100% owned by the Canadian mining company, Centerra Gold, through its wholly owned subsidiary, Kumtor Gold Company. The mine started operation in Q2 1997 and produced more than 5.8 million ounces (180,000 kg) of gold through the end of 2006.

Located in Tian Shan mountains at more than 4,000 m (14,000 ft) above sea level, Kumtor is the second-highest gold mining operation in the world after Yanacocha gold mine in Peru.

The mine was linked to a major environmental incident in 1998 when a truck carrying 1762 kg of sodium cyanide (a chemical used to dissolve gold from granulated ore the use of which is highly controversial) fell into the Barskaun River on the way to Kumtor.

External links

* Centerra Gold – Kumtor Gold Mine web page

Coordinates: 41°52?N 78°12?E? / ?41.867°N 78.2°E? / 41.867; 78.2
Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumtor_Gold_Mine
Categories: Geography of Kyrgyzstan | Economy of Kyrgyzstan | Gold mines in Kyrgyzstan | Issyk Kul Province | Economy of the Soviet Union | Surface mines in Kyrgyzstan

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumtor_Gold_Mine

***
Uranium Mining Kazakstan - Kazatomprom 2005 - 2010

Uranium Mining Kazakstan - Kazatomprom 2005 - 2010

***

The Central Asian countries, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, are also affected. More than 80% of Afghanistan’s and Pakistan’s land could be subject to soil erosion and desertification.[10]

In Kazakhstan, nearly half of the cropland has been abandoned since 1980. In Iran, sand storms were said to have buried 124 villages in Sistan and Baluchestan Province in 2002, and they had to be abandoned. In Latin America, Mexico and Brazil are affected by desertification.[11]

Globally, desertification claims a Nebraska-sized area of productive capacity each year.[2]

It is principally caused by overgrazing, overdrafting of groundwater and diversion of water from rivers for human consumption and industrial use, all of these processes fundamentally driven by overpopulation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

Desertification
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea
Goat husbandry is common through the Norte Chico of Chile, however it produces severe erosion and desertification. Image from upper Limarí River

Desertification is the degradation of land in arid and dry sub-humid areas, resulting primarily from man-made activities and influenced by climatic variations.

It is principally caused by overgrazing, overdrafting of groundwater and diversion of water from rivers for human consumption and industrial use, all of these processes fundamentally driven by overpopulation.

A major impact of desertification is biodiversity loss and loss of productive capacity, for example, by transition from land dominated by shrublands to non-native grasslands.

In the semi-arid regions of southern California, many coastal sage scrub and chaparral ecosystems have been replaced by non-native, invasive grasses due to the shortening of fire return intervals.

This can create a monoculture of annual grass that cannot support the wide range of animals once found in the original ecosystem.

In Madagascar’s central highland plateau, 10% of the entire country has been lost to desertification due to slash and burn agriculture by indigenous peoples. In Africa, if current trends of soil degradation continue, the continent will be able to feed only 25% of its population by 2025, according to UNU’s Ghana-based Institute for Natural Resources in Africa.[1] Globally, desertification claims a Nebraska-sized area of productive capacity each year.[2]

Causes
Sand dunes advancing on Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania.

Desertification is induced by several factors, primarily anthropogenic causes, which began in the Holocene era and continue at the highest pace today.

The primary reasons for desertification are overgrazing, over-cultivation, increased fire frequency, water impoundment, deforestation, overdrafting of groundwater, increased soil salinity, and global climate change.[3]

Deserts may be separated from surrounding, less arid areas by mountains and other contrasting landforms that reflect fundamental structural differences in the terrain. In other areas, desert fringes form a gradual transition from a dry to a more humid environment, making it more subtle to determine the desert border. These transition zones can have fragile, delicately balanced ecosystems.

Desert fringes often are a mosaic of microclimates. Small pieces of wood support vegetation that picks up heat from the hot winds and protects the land from the prevailing winds. After rainfall the vegetated areas are distinctly cooler than the surroundings.

In these marginal areas activity centres may stress the ecosystem beyond its tolerance limit, resulting in degradation of the land. By pounding the soil with their hooves, livestock compact the substrate, increase the proportion of fine material, and reduce the percolation rate of the soil, thus encouraging erosion by wind and water.

Grazing and collection of firewood reduce or eliminate plants that bind the soil and prevent erosion. All these come about due to the trend towards settling in one area instead of a nomadic culture.

Sand dunes can encroach on human habitats. Sand dunes move through a few different means, all of them assisted by wind. One way that dunes can move is through saltation, where sand particles skip along the ground like a rock thrown across a pond might skip across the water’s surface. When these skipping particles land, they may knock into other particles and cause them to skip as well.

With slightly stronger winds, particles collide in mid-air, causing sheet flows. In a major dust storm, dunes may move tens of meters through such sheet flows. And like snow, sand avalanches, falling down the steep slopes of the dunes that face away from the winds, also moving the dunes forward.

It is a common misconception that droughts by themselves cause desertification. While drought is a contributing factor, the root causes are all related to man’s overexploitation of the environment.[3] Droughts are common in arid and semiarid lands, and well-managed lands can recover from drought when the rains return.

Continued land abuse during droughts, however, increases land degradation. Increased population and livestock pressure on marginal lands has accelerated desertification. In some areas, nomads moving to less arid areas disrupt the local ecosystem and increase the rate of erosion of the land. Nomads typically try to escape the desert, but because of their land-use practices, they are bringing the desert with them.

Some arid and semi-arid lands can support crops, but additional pressure from greater populations or decreases in rainfall can lead to the few plants present disappearing. The soil becomes exposed to wind, causing soil particles to be deposited elsewhere. The top layer becomes eroded.

With the removal of shade, rates of evaporation increase and salts become drawn up to the surface. This increases soil salinity which inhibits plant growth. The loss of plants causes less moisture to be retained in the area, which may change the climate pattern leading to lower rainfall.

This degradation of formerly productive land is a complex process. It involves multiple causes, and it proceeds at varying rates in different climates. Desertification may intensify a general climatic trend toward greater aridity, or it may initiate a change in local climate. Desertification does not occur in linear, easily mappable patterns.

Deserts advance erratically, forming patches on their borders. Areas far from natural deserts can degrade quickly to barren soil, rock, or sand through poor land management. The presence of a nearby desert has no direct relationship to desertification.

Unfortunately, an area undergoing desertification is brought to public attention only after the process is well under way. Often little data are available to indicate the previous state of the ecosystem or the rate of degradation.

Desertification is both an environmental and developmental problem. It affects local environments and populations’ ways of life. Its effects, however, have more global ramifications concerning biodiversity, climatic change and water resources. The degradation of terrain is directly linked to human activity and constitutes both one of the consequences of poor development and a major obstacle to the sustainable development of dryland zones.[4]

Combating desertification is complex and difficult, usually impossible without alteration of land management practises that led to the desertification. Over-exploitation of the land and climate variations can have identical impacts and be connected in feedbacks, which makes it very difficult to choose the right mitigation strategy. Investigating the historic desertification plays a special role since it allows better distinguishing of human and natural factors.

In this context, recent research about historic desertification in Jordan questions the dominant role of man. It seems possible that current measures like reforestation projects cannot achieve their goals if global warming continues. Forests may die when it gets drier, and more frequent extreme events as testified in sediments from earlier periods could become a threat for agriculture, water supply, and infrastructure.

[etc. - includes a section on prehistoric desertification]

Historical and current desertification

Overgrazing and to a lesser extent drought in the 1930s transformed parts of the Great Plains in the United States into the  Dust Bowl . During that time, a considerable fraction of the plains population abandoned their homes to escape the unproductive lands. Improved agricultural and water management have prevented a disaster of the earlier magnitude from recurring, but desertification presently affects tens of millions of people with primary occurrence in the lesser developed countries.

Lake Chad in a 2001 satellite image, with the actual lake in blue. The lake has shrunk by 95% since the 1960s.[5]

Desertification is widespread in many areas of the People’s Republic of China. The populations of rural areas have increased since 1949 for economical reasons as more people have settled there. While there has been an increase in livestock, the land available for grazing has decreased. Also the importing of European cattle such as Friesian and Simmental, which have higher food intakes, has made things worse.[citation needed]

Human overpopulation is leading to destruction of tropical wet forests and tropical dry forests, due to widening practices of slash-and-burn and other methods of subsistence farming necessitated by famines in lesser developed countries.[citation needed] A sequel to the deforestation is typically large scale erosion, loss of soil nutrients and sometimes total desertification. Examples of this extreme outcome can be seen on Madagascar’s central highland plateau, where about seven percent of the country’s total land mass has become barren, sterile land.

Overgrazing has made the Rio Puerco Basin of central New Mexico one of the most eroded river basins of the western United States and has increased the high sediment content of the river.[6] Overgrazing is also contributing to desertification in some parts of Chile, Ethiopia, Morocco and other countries. Overgrazing is also an issue with some regions of South Africa such as the Waterberg Massif, although restoration of native habitat and game has been pursued vigorously since about 1980.

Another example of desertification occurring is in the Sahel. The chief cause of desertification in the Sahel is slash-and-burn farming practised by an expanding human population.[7] The Sahara is expanding south at a rate of up to 48 kilometres per year.[8]

Ghana[9] and Nigeria currently experience desertification; in the latter, desertification overtakes about 1,355 square miles (3,510 km2) of land per year.

The Central Asian countries, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, are also affected. More than 80% of Afghanistan’s and Pakistan’s land could be subject to soil erosion and desertification.[10]

In Kazakhstan, nearly half of the cropland has been abandoned since 1980.

In Iran, sand storms were said to have buried 124 villages in Sistan and Baluchestan Province in 2002, and they had to be abandoned. In Latin America, Mexico and Brazil are affected by desertification.[11]

Countering desertification

Trees are planted instead of sand fences to reduce sand accumulating in a UAE highway.

Desertification has been recognized as a major threat to biodiversity. Numerous countries have developed Biodiversity Action Plans to counter its effects, particularly in relation to the protection of endangered flora and fauna.[12][13]

A number of methods have been tried in order to reduce the rate of desertification and regain lost land; however, most measures treat symptoms of sand movement and do not address the root causes of land modification such as overgrazing, unsustainable farming (eg cattle farming) and deforestation. In developing countries under threat of desertification, many local people use trees for firewood and cooking which has increased the problem of land degradation and often even increased their poverty. In order to gain further supplies of fuel the local population add more pressure to the depleted forests; adding to the desertification process.

Techniques focus on two aspects: provisioning of water (eg by wells and energy intensive systems involving water pipes or over long distances) and fixating and hyper-fertilising soil.

Fixating the soil is often done through the use of shelter belts, woodlots and windbreaks. Windbreaks are made from trees and bushes and are used to reduce soil erosion and evapotranspiration. They were widely encouraged by development agencies from the middle of the 1980s in the Sahel area of Africa. Another approach is the spraying of petroleum or nano clay[14] over semi-arid cropland. This is often done in areas where either petroleum or nano clay is easily and cheaply obtainable (eg Iran). In both cases, the application of the material coats seedlings to prevent moisture loss and stop them being blown away.

Some soils (eg clay soils), due to lack of water can become consolidated rather than become too loose (as in the case of sandy soils). Some techniques as zaï or tillage are then used to still allow the planting of crops.[15]

The enriching of the soil and the restoration of its fertility is often done by a plants. Of these, the Leguminous plants which extract nitrogen from the air and fixes it in the soil, and food crops/trees as grains, barley, beans and dates are the most important.

When housing is foreseen in or near the reforestation area, organic waste material (eg hazelnut shells, bamboo, chicken manure, …) can be made into biochar or Terra preta nova by a pyrolysis unit. This substance may be used to enrich planting spaces for high-demanding crops.[16]

Finally, some approaches as stacking stones around the base of trees and artificial groove-digging also help in increasing the chance of local success of crop survival. Stacked stones help to collect morning dew and retain soil moisture. Artificial grooves are dug in the ground as to retain rainfall and trap wind-blown seeds. [17][18]

In order to solve the problem of cutting trees for personal energy requirements, solutions as Solar ovens and efficient wood burning cook stoves are being advocated as a means to relieving some of this pressure upon the environment; however, these techniques are generally prohibitively expense in the very regions where they are needed.

While desertification has received some publicity by the news media, most people are unaware of the extent of environmental degradation of productive lands and the expansion of deserts. In 1988 Ridley Nelson pointed out that desertification is a subtle and complex process of deterioration.

At the local level, individuals and governments can temporarily forestall desertification. Sand fences are used throughout the Middle East and the US, in the same way snow fences are used in the north. Placement of straw grids, each up to a square meter in area, will also decrease the surface wind velocity.

Shrubs and trees planted within the grids are protected by the straw until they take root. However, some studies suggest that planting of trees depletes water supplies in the area.[19] In areas where some water is available for irrigation, shrubs planted on the lower one-third of a dune’s windward side will stabilize the dune. This vegetation decreases the wind velocity near the base of the dune and prevents much of the sand from moving. Higher velocity winds at the top of the dune level it off and trees can be planted atop these flattened surfaces.
Jojoba plantations, such as those shown, have played a role in combating edge effects of desertification in the Thar Desert, India.

Oases and farmlands in windy regions are often protected by the approach described above by planting tree fences or grass belts in order to reduce erosion and walking dunes. Also, small projects as oases often section their plot of land by placing a barrier of thorny bushes or other obstacles to keep grazing animals away from the food crops. Instead, they provide water provisioning (eg from a well, …) outside this barrier. They provide this service mainly to accommodate the animals of travelers (eg camels, …).

Sand that manages to pass through the grass belts can be caught in strips of trees planted as wind breaks 50 to 100 meters apart adjacent to the belts. Small plots of trees may also be scattered inside oases to stabilize the area. On a much larger scale, a  Green Wall of China , which will eventually stretch more than 5,700 kilometers in length, nearly as long as the Great Wall of China, is being planted in north-eastern China to protect  sandy lands  – deserts created by human activity.

[ . . . ]

Africa, with coordination from Senegal, has launched its own  green wall  project[23]. Trees will be planted on a 15 km wide land strip from Senegal to Djibouti. Aside from countering desert progression, the project is also aimed at creating new economic activities, especially thanks to tree products such as gum arabic [24]

More efficient use of existing water resources and control of salinization are other tools for mitigating arid lands. New ways are also being sought to find groundwater resources and to develop more effective ways of irrigating arid and semiarid lands. Research on the reclamation of deserts is also focusing on discovering proper crop rotation to protect fragile soil, on understanding how sand-fixing plants can be adapted to local environments, and on how overgrazing can be addressed. A proposal combining desert stabilization and renewable energy is Aerially Delivered Re-forestation and Erosion Control System – [25]

Mitigation concepts

Sand fences can be used to control drifting of soil and sand and soil erosion.

A recent development is the Seawater Greenhouse and Seawater Forest. This proposal is to construct these devices on coastal deserts in order to create freshwater and grow food [26]

A similar approach is the Desert Rose concept [27]

These approaches are of widespread applicability, since the relative costs of pumping large quantities of seawater inland are low[28].

Another related concept is ADRECS – a system for rapidly delivering soil stabilisation and re forestation techniques coupled with renewable energy generation[29].

Desertification and poverty

Numerous authors underline the strong link between desertification and poverty. The proportion of poor people among populations is noticeably higher in dryland zones, especially among rural populations. This situation increases yet further as a function of land degradation because of the reduction in productivity, the precariousness of living conditions and difficulty of access to resources and opportunities.[30]

Decision-makers are highly reticent about investing in arid zones with low potential. This absence of investment contributes to the marginalisation of these zones.When unfavourable agro-climatic conditions are combined with an absence of infrastructure and access to markets, as well as poorly-adapted production techniques and an underfed and undereducated population, most such zones are excluded from development.[4]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

***

A comparison of desert areas – 1997, 2001, 2005 (and, it is now worse, 2009)

http://www.unep.org/geo/gdoutlook/018.asp#fig13

comparison of desertification from 1997 - 2001 - 2005 - from United Nations Environment Programme

comparison of desertification from 1997 - 2001 - 2005 - from United Nations Environment Programme

[From -]

United Nations Environment Programme
UNEP – environment for development
Global Deserts Outlook

http://www.unep.org/geo/gdoutlook/

***

(My Note – just on the other side of the desertification in Northern and Western China – )

Karakol
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karakol is located in Kyrgyzstan

Karakol (Kyrgyz), formerly Przhevalsk, is a city of about 75,000, near the eastern tip of Lake Issyk-Kul in Kyrgyzstan, about 150 kilometres (93 mi) from the Kyrgyzstan-China border and 380 kilometres (240 mi) from the capital Bishkek. It is the administrative capital of Issyk Kul Province. To the north, on highway A363, is Tyup and to the southwest Jeti-Ögüz resort.

Przhevalsky’s grave, a memorial park and a small museum dedicated to his and other Russian explorations in Central Asia are some 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) north of Karakol at Pristan Przhevalsky, overlooking the Mikhailovka inlet of Lake Issyk-Kul where the former Soviet torpedo testing facilities were located. Facilities themselves are still a closed, military area.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karakol

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Kyrgyzstan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kyrgyzstan , officially the Kyrgyz Republic, is a country in Central Asia. Landlocked and mountainous, it is bordered by Kazakhstan to the north, Uzbekistan to the west, Tajikistan to the southwest and China to the east. The ethnonym  Kyrgyz , after which the country is named, is thought to originally mean either  forty girls  or  forty tribes , presumably referring to the epic hero Manas who, as legend has it, unified forty tribes against the Khitans. The 40-ray sun on the flag of Kyrgyzstan symbolizes the forty tribes of Manas.[5]

[ . . . ]

On 3 February 2009, President Kurmanbek Bakiyev announced the imminent closure of the Manas Air Base, the only US military base remaining in Central Asia.[10] The closure was approved by Parliament on 19 February 2009 by 78-1 for the government-backed bill.[11]

Kyrgyzstan is among the twenty countries in the world with the highest perceived level of corruption: the 2008 Corruption Perception Index for Kyrgyzstan is 1.8 on a scale of 0 (most corrupt) to 10 (least corrupt).[12]

Kyrgyzstan is divided into seven provinces (sing. oblast (???????), pl. oblasttar (?????????)) administered by appointed governors. The capital, Bishkek, and the second large city Osh are administratively independent cities (shaar) with a status equal to a province.
Provinces of Kyrgyzstan

The provinces, and independent cities, are as follows:
1. Bishkek (city)
2. Batken
3. Chui
4. Jalal-Abad
5. Naryn
6. Osh (province)
7. Talas
8. Issyk-Kul
9. Osh (city)

Each province comprises a number of districts (raions), administered by government-appointed officials (akim). Rural communities (ay?l ökmötü), consisting of up to 20 small settlements, have their own elected mayors and councils.

Kyrgyzstan is a landlocked country in Central Asia, bordering Kazakhstan, China, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The mountainous region of the Tian Shan covers over 80% of the country (Kyrgyzstan is occasionally referred to as  the Switzerland of Central Asia , as a result),[13] with the remainder made up of valleys and basins. Lake Issyk-Kul in the north-western Tian Shan is the largest lake in Kyrgyzstan and the second largest mountain lake in the world after Titicaca. The highest peaks are in the Kakshaal-Too range, forming the Chinese border. Peak Jengish Chokusu, at 7,439 m (24,400 feet), is the highest point and is considered by geologists (though not mountaineers) to be the northernmost peak over 7,000 m (23,000 feet) in the world. Heavy snowfall in winter leads to spring floods which often cause serious damage downstream. The runoff from the mountains is also used for hydro-electricity.

The climate varies regionally. The south-western Fergana Valley is subtropical and extremely hot in summer, with temperatures reaching 40°C (104°F.) The northern foothills are temperate and the Tian Shan varies from dry continental to polar climate, depending on elevation. In the coldest areas temperatures are sub-zero for around 40 days in winter, and even some desert areas experience constant snowfall in this period.

Kyrgyzstan has significant deposits of metals including gold and rare earth metals. Due to the country’s predominantly mountainous terrain, less than 8% of the land is cultivated, and this is concentrated in the northern lowlands and the fringes of the Fergana Valley.

Bishkek in the north is the capital and largest city, with approximately 900,000 inhabitants (as of 2005). The second city is the ancient town of Osh, located in the Fergana Valley near the border with Uzbekistan. The principal river is the Kara Darya, which flows west through the Fergana Valley into Uzbekistan. Across the border in Uzbekistan it meets another major Kyrgyz river, the Naryn.

The confluence forms the Syr Darya, which originally flowed into the Aral Sea. At this time it no longer reaches the sea, as its water is withdrawn upstream to irrigate cotton fields in Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and southern Kazakhstan. The Chu River also briefly flows through Kyrgyzstan before entering Kazakhstan.

(see chart toward top of this post about rivers that have been diverted, dammed, are being dammed or almost totally used for irrigation or other human activities, commercial / industrial / mining uses, etc.)

Agriculture is an important sector of the economy in Kyrgyzstan (see agriculture in Kyrgyzstan). By the early 1990s, the private agricultural sector provided between one-third and one-half of some harvests. In 2002 agriculture accounted for 35.6% of GDP and about half of employment. Kyrgyzstan’s terrain is mountainous, which accommodates livestock raising, the largest agricultural activity, so the resulting wool, meat and dairy products are major commodities. Main crops include wheat, sugar beets, potatoes, cotton, tobacco, vegetables and fruit. As the prices of imported agrichemicals and petroleum are so high, much farming is being done by hand and by horse, as it was generations ago. Agricultural processing is a key component of the industrial economy as well as one of the most attractive sectors for foreign investment.

Kyrgyzstan is rich in mineral resources but has negligible petroleum and natural gas reserves; it imports petroleum and gas. Among its mineral reserves are substantial deposits of coal, gold, uranium, antimony and other valuable metals. Metallurgy is an important industry, and the government hopes to attract foreign investment in this field. The government has actively encouraged foreign involvement in extracting and processing gold. The country’s plentiful water resources and mountainous terrain enable it to produce and export large quantities of hydroelectric energy.

The principal exports are nonferrous metals and minerals, woolen goods and other agricultural products, electric energy and certain engineering goods. Imports include petroleum and natural gas, ferrous metals, chemicals, most machinery, wood and paper products, some foods and some construction materials. Its leading trade partners include Germany, Russia, China, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

Kyrgyzstan’s population is estimated at 5.2 million in 2007.[16] Of those, 34.4% are under the age of 15 and 6.2% are over the age of 65. The country is rural: only about one-third of Kyrgyzstan’s population live in urban areas. The average population density is 69 people per square mile (29 people per km²).

The Kyrgyz have historically been semi-nomadic herders, living in round tents called yurts and tending sheep, horses and yaks. This nomadic tradition continues to function seasonally (see transhumance) as herding families return to the high mountain pasture (or jailoo) in the summer.

[etc.]

Airports

At the end of the Soviet period there were about 50 airports and airstrips in Kyrgyzstan, many of them built primarily to serve military purposes in this border region so close to China. Only a few of them remain in service today.

* Manas International Airport near Bishkek is the main international airport, with services to Moscow, Tashkent, Almaty, Beijing, Urumqi, Istanbul, Baku, Delhi and London.
* Osh Airport is the main air terminal in the south of the country, with daily connections to Bishkek.
* Jalal-Abad Airport is linked to Bishkek by daily flights. The national flag carrier, Kyrgyzstan, operates flights on An-24 aircraft. During the summer months, a weekly flight links Jalal-Abad with the Issyk-Kul Region.
* Other facilities built during the Soviet era are either closed down, used only occasionally or restricted to military use (e.g., Kant Air Base near Bishkek, which is used by the Russian Air Force).

Waterways

Water transport exists only on Lake Issyk Kul, and has drastically shrunk since the end of the Soviet Union.

Ports and harbours

Balykchy (Ysyk-Kol or Rybach’ye), on Lake Issyk Kul.

[and more -]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyrgyzstan

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Issyk Kul
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lake Issyk-Kul
Lake Issyk-Kul – From space, September 1992
From space, September 1992
Coordinates     42°30?N 77°30?E? / ?42.5°N 77.5°E? / 42.5; 77.5Coordinates: 42°30?N 77°30?E? / ?42.5°N 77.5°E? / 42.5; 77.5
Lake type     Endorheic
Mountain lake
Monomictic
Primary  inflows     Glaciers
Primary  outflows     Evaporation
Catchment  area     15,844 square kilometers (6,117.4 sq mi)
Basin  countries     Kyrgyzstan
Max. length     182 kilometers (113 mi)
Max. width     60 kilometers (37 mi)
Surface area     6,236 square kilometers (2,407.7 sq mi)
Average depth     270 meters (886 ft)
Max. depth     668 meters (2,192 ft)
Water volume     1,738 km³ (416.97 mi³)
Shore  length1     688 kilometers (428 mi)
Surface  elevation     1,607 meters (5,272 ft)
Settlements     Cholpon-Ata, Karakol
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Issyk Kul (also Ysyk Köl, Issyk-Kol; Kyrgyz: ???? ???, Russian: ?????-????, Chinese: ??) is an endorheic lake in the northern Tian Shan mountains in eastern Kyrgyzstan. It is the tenth largest lake in the world by volume and the second largest saline lake after the Caspian Sea. Although it is surrounded by snow-capped peaks, it never freezes; hence its name, which means  warm lake  in the Kyrgyz language. The lake is a Ramsar site of globally significant biodiversity (Ramsar Site RDB Code 2KG001) and forms part of the Issyk-Kul Biosphere Reserve. It is also the site of an ancient metropolis 2500 years ago, and archaeological excavations are ongoing.[1]

Contents

* 1 Geography
* 2 Tourism
* 3 History
* 4 Fish
* 5 The Legend of its Creation
* 6 Russian Navy test site
* 7 Lakeside towns
* 8 References
* 9 External links

Geography
Southern shore of lake Issyk Kul
Map of Kyrgyzstan showing Issyk Kul in the north

Lake Issyk Kul has a length of 182 kilometers (113 mi), a width of up to 60 kilometers (37 mi), and covers an area of 6,236 square kilometers (2,407.7 sq mi). This makes it the second largest mountain lake in the world behind Lake Titicaca in South America. Located at an altitude of 1,607 meters (5,272 ft), it reaches 668 meters (2,192 ft) in depth.[2].

About 118 rivers and streams flow into the lake; the largest are Djyrgalan and Tyup. It is fed by springs, including many hot springs, and snow melt-off. The lake has no current outlet, but some hydrologists hypothesize[3] that, deep underground, lake water filters into the Chu River. The bottom of the lake contains the mineral monohydrocalcite: one of the few known lacustrine deposits.[4]

The lake’s southern shore is dominated by the ruggedly beautiful Tian Shan mountain range. The lake water has salinity of approx. 0.6%—compare to 3.5% salinity of typical seawater—and its level drops by approximately 5 cm per year.[5]

Administratively, the lake and the adjacent land are within Issyk Kul Province of Kyrgyzstan.

Tourism

During the Soviet era, the lake became a popular vacation resort, with numerous sanatoria, boarding houses and vacation homes along its northern shore, many concentrated in and around the town of Cholpon-Ata. These fell on hard times after the break-up of the USSR, but now hotel complexes are being refurbished and simple private bed-and-breakfast pensions are being established for a new generation of health and leisure visitors.

The city of Karakol (formerly Przhevalsk, after the Russian explorer Przhevalsky who died there) is the administrative seat of Issyk Kul Oblast (Province) of Kyrgyzstan. It is located near the eastern tip of the lake and is a good base for excursions into the surrounding area. Its small old core contains an impressive wooden mosque, built without metal nails by the Dungan people, and a wooden Orthodox church that was used as a stable during Soviet times (see state atheism).

History

Lake Issyk Kul was a stopover on the Silk Road, a land route for travelers from the Far East to Europe. Many historians believe that the lake was the point of origin for the Black Death that plagued Europe and Asia during the early and mid-14th century.[6] The lake’s status as a byway for travelers allowed the plague to spread across these continents via medieval merchants who unknowingly carried infested vermin along with them. A 14th century Armenian monastery was found on the northeastern shores of the lake by retracing the steps of a medieval map used by Venetian merchants on the Silk Road.

On the beach at Koshkol’

The lake level was some 8 metres (26 ft) lower in medieval times. Divers have found the remains of drowned settlements in shallow areas around the lake. In December 2007, a report was released by a team of Kyrgyz historians, led by Vladimir Ploskikh, vice president of the Kyrgyz Academy of Sciences, that archaeologists have discovered the remains of a 2500-year-old advanced civilization at the bottom of the Lake.

The data and artifacts obtained suggest that the ancient city was a metropolis in its time. The discovery consisted of formidable walls, some stretching for 500 metres (1,600 ft) as well as traces of a large city with an area of several square kilometers. Other findings included Scythian burial mounds eroded over the centuries by waves, as well as numerous well-preserved artifacts, including bronze battleaxes, arrowheads, self-sharpening daggers, objects discarded by smiths, casting molds, and a faceted gold bar that was a monetary unit of the time.

Articles identified as the world’s oldest extant coins were also found underwater with gold wire rings used as small change and a large hexahedral goldpiece.

Also found was a bronze cauldron with a level of craftsmanship that is today achieved by using an inert gas environment.[1][7][8]

Issyk Kul beach (2002)

Fish

The lake contains highly endemic fish biodiversity, and some of the species, including four endemics, are seriously endangered. In recent years catches of all species of fish have declined markedly, due to a combination of over-fishing, heavy predation by two of the introduced species, and the cessation of lake restocking with juvenile fish from hatcheries. At least four commercially targeted endemic fish species are sufficiently threatened to be included in the Red Book of the Kyrgyz Republic: Schmidt’s Dace (Leuciscus schmidti), Issyk-Kul Dace (Leuciscus bergi), Marinka (Schizothorax issyk-kuli), and Sheer or Naked Osman (Diptychus dybovskii). Seven other endemic species are almost certainly threatened as by-catch or are indirectly impacted by fishing activity and changes to the structure and balance of the lake’s fish population.

Sevan trout, a fish endemic to Lake Sevan in Armenia, was introduced into Issyk-Kul in the 1970s. While this fish is an endangered species in its  home  lake, it has a much better chance to survive in Lake Issyk-Kul where it has ravaged the indigenous species.

The Legend of its Creation

In pre-Islamic legend, the king of the Ossounes had donkey’s ears. He would hide them, and order each of his barbers killed to hide his secret. One barber yelled the secret into a well, but he didn’t cover the well after. The well water rose and flooded the kingdom. The kingdom is today under the waters of Issyk-Kul. This is how the lake was formed, according to the legend. Other legends say that four drowned cities lie at the bottom of the lake. Substantial archaeological finds indicating the presence of an advanced civilization in ancient times have been made in shallow waters of the lake.[8]

Russian Navy test site

During the Soviet period, the Soviet Navy operated an extensive facility at the lake’s eastern end, where submarine and torpedo technology was evaluated.[9]

In March 2008, Kyrgyz newspapers reported that 866 hectares (2,140 acres) around the Karabulan peninsula on the lake would be leased for an indefinite period to the Russian Navy, which is planning to establish new naval testing facilities as part of the 2007 bilateral Agreement on Friendship, Cooperation, Mutual Help, and Protection of Secret Materials. The Russian military will pay $4.5 million annually to lease the area.[10]

Issyk Kul at sundown (2002)

Lakeside towns

Towns and some villages around the lake, listed clockwise from the lake’s western tip:

* Balykchy (the railhead at the western end of the lake)
* Koshkol’
* Tamchy
* Cholpon-Ata (the capital of the north shore)
* Karakol (the provincial capital near the eastern end of the lake)
* Tyup
* Barskon

References
Geography portal
Search Wikimedia Commons     Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Issyk Kul

1. ^ a b ANI (2007-12-28).  Archaeologists discover remains of 2500-year-old advanced civilization in Russia . Yahoo  News. Archived from the original on 20080101. http://web.archive.org/web/20080101111204/http://in.news.yahoo.com/071228/139/6oy8j.html.
2. ^ International Lake Environment Committee Foundation
3. ^ V.V.Romanovsky,  Water level variations and water balance of Lake Issyk Kul , in Jean Klerkx, Beishen Imanackunov (2002), p.52
4. ^ Sapozhnikov DG, Tsvetkov AI (1959).  Precipitation of hydrous calcium carbonate on the bottom of Lake Issyk-Kul . Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 24: l3l-133.
5. ^ Lake Issyk-Kool
6. ^ The Silk Route – Channel 4
7. ^ Advanced Russian civilization found-Health/Sci-The Times of India
8. ^ a b Lukashov, Nikolai. Ancient Civilization Discovered at the Bottom of Lake Issyk Kul in the Kyrgyz Mountains. Ria Novosti. December 27, 2007. Accessed on: July 24, 2008.
9. ^ Kommersant-Vlast, ‘Vys Rossiya Armia’, 2005
10. ^ RFE/RL NEWSLINE Vol. 12, No. 51, Part I, 14 March 2008

External links

* Guide to Issyk Kul from the Spektator Magazine
* World Lake Database entry for Lake Issyk-Kul
* The Issyk-Kul Hollow at Natural Heritage Protection Fund
* Remains of ancient civilization discovered on the bottom of issyk-kul lake
* Photographs of Issyk-Kul sites
* Jean Klerkx, Beishen Imanackunov (eds.):  Lake Issyk-Kul: Its Natural Environment . Springer, 2002. ISBN 1402009003. (Searchable text on Google Books)
* Touristic information about Issyk Kul

List of seas
Antarctic Ocean
Amundsen Sea A Bass Strait A Bellingshausen Sea A Davis Sea A Great Australian Bight A Gulf Saint Vincent A Ross Sea A Scotia Sea A Spencer Gulf A Weddell Sea
Arctic Ocean
Amundsen Gulf A Baffin Bay A Barents Sea  A Beaufort Sea A Bering Sea A Chukchi Sea A East Siberian Sea A Greenland Sea A Hudson Bay A James Bay A Kara Sea A Kara Strait A Laptev Sea A Lincoln Sea A Prince Gustav Adolf Sea A Pechora Sea A White Sea
Atlantic Ocean
Adriatic Sea A Aegean Sea A Alboran Sea A Argentine Sea A Balearic Sea A Baltic Sea A Bay of Biscay A Bay of Bothnia A Bay of Campeche A Bay of Fundy A Black Sea A Bothnian Sea A Caribbean Sea A Celtic Sea A Central Baltic Sea A Chesapeake Bay A Davis Strait A Denmark Strait A English Channel A Gulf of Bothnia A Gulf of Finland A Gulf of Guinea A Gulf of Mexico A Gulf of Sidra A Gulf of St. Lawrence A Gulf of Venezuela A Ionian Sea A Labrador Sea A Ligurian Sea A Irish Sea A Marmara Sea A Mediterranean Sea A Myrtoan Sea A North Sea A Norwegian Sea A Sargasso Sea A Sea of Azov A Sea of Crete A Sea of the Hebrides A Thracian Sea A Tyrrhenian Sea
Indian Ocean
Andaman Sea A Arabian Sea A Bay of Bengal A Gulf of Aden A Gulf of Oman A Mozambique Channel A Persian Gulf A Red Sea A Timor Sea
Pacific Ocean
Arafura Sea A Banda Sea A Bering Sea A Bismarck Sea A Bohai Sea A Bohol Sea A Camotes Sea A Celebes Sea A Ceram Sea A Chilean Sea A Coral Sea A East China Sea A Flores Sea A Gulf of Alaska A Gulf of California A Gulf of Carpentaria A Gulf of Thailand A Halmahera Sea A Java Sea A Koro Sea A Molucca Sea A Philippine Sea A Savu Sea A Sea of Japan A Sea of Okhotsk A Seto Inland Sea A Sibuyan Sea A Solomon Sea A South China Sea A Sulu Sea A Tasman Sea A Visayan Sea A Yellow Sea
Landlocked seas
Aral Sea A Caspian Sea A Chott Melrhir A Dead Sea A Great Lakes A Great Salt Lake A Issyk Kul A Lake Balkhash A Lake Chad A Lake Chilwa A Lake Sevan A Lake Turkana A Lake Urmia A Lake Van A Namtso A Pyramid Lake A Qinghai Lake A Salton Sea A Tonlé Sap
Retrieved from  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issyk_Kul
Categories: Archaeological sites in Kyrgyzstan | Lakes of Kyrgyzstan | Endorheic lakes | Mountain lakes | Issyk Kul Province | Biosphere reserves of Kyrgyzstan | Ramsar sites in Kyrgyzstan | Sites along the Silk Road
Hidden categories: Articles containing Kyrgyz language text | Articles containing Russian language text | Articles containing Chinese language text

* This page was last modified on 17 August 2009 at 20:37.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issyk_Kul

***

In March 2008, Kyrgyz newspapers reported that 866 hectares (2,140 acres) around the Karabulan peninsula on the lake would be leased for an indefinite period to the Russian Navy, which is planning to establish new naval testing facilities as part of the 2007 bilateral Agreement on Friendship, Cooperation, Mutual Help, and Protection of Secret Materials. The Russian military will pay $4.5 million annually to lease the area.[10]

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Manas International Airport
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manas International Airport

IATA: FRU – ICAO: UAFM
Summary
Airport type     Joint (Civil and Military)
Location     Bishkek
Elevation AMSL     2,058 ft / 627 m
Coordinates     43°03?40.7?N 74°28?39.2?E? / ?43.061306°N 74.477556°E? / 43.061306; 74.477556Coordinates: 43°03?40.7?N 74°28?39.2?E? / ?43.061306°N 74.477556°E? / 43.061306; 74.477556
Runways
Direction     Length     Surface
ft     m
08/26     13,780     4,200     Concrete

Manas International Airport (IATA: FRU, ICAO: UAFM) is the main international airport in Kyrgyzstan located 25 km (16 mi) north-northwest of the capital Bishkek.

The airport is operational 24 hours and its ILS system is ICAO CAT 2. Fog can cause heavy delays especially for long haul flights.[1]

It is also the site of the Transit Center at Manas, formerly known as Manas Air Base, a US Air Force base supporting Operation Enduring Freedom and the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.

In 2007, 625,500 passengers passed through the airport, an increase of 21% over the previous year. 23,172 tonnes of cargo were also processed in 2007.

Contents

* 1 History
* 2 Airlines and destinations
* 3 Incidents and accidents
* 4 References
* 5 External links

History

The airport was constructed as a replacement for the old Bishkek airport that was located to the south of the city, and named after the Kyrgyz epic hero, Manas, at the suggestion of country’s most prominent writer and intellectual, Chinghiz Aitmatov. The first plane landed at Manas in October 1974, with Soviet Premier Alexey Kosygin on board. Aeroflot operated the airport’s first scheduled flight to Moscow-Domodedovo on 4 May 1975.

When Kyrgyzstan gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, the airport began a slow but steady decline as its infrastructure remained neglected for almost ten years and a sizable aircraft boneyard developed; approximately 60 derelict aircraft from the Soviet era, ranging in size from helicopters to full-sized airliners, were left in mothballs on the airport ramp at the Eastern end of the field.

With the beginning of Operation Enduring Freedom, the United States and its coalition partners immediately sought permission from the Kyrgyz government to use the airport as a military base for operations in Afghanistan. Coalition forces arrived in late December 2001 and immediately the airport saw unprecedented expansion of operations and facilities.[2]

The derelict aircraft were rolled into a pasture next to the ramp to make room for coalition aircraft, and large, semi-permanent hangars were constructed to house coalition fighter aircraft. Additionally, a Marsden Matting parking apron was built along the Eastern half of the runway, along with a large cargo depot and several aircraft maintenance facilities.

A tent city sprang up across the street from the passenger terminal, housing over 2,000 troops. The American forces christened the site  Ganci Air Base , after New York Fire Department chief Peter J. Ganci, Jr., who was killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks. It was later given the official name of Manas Air Base.

In 2004, a new parking ramp was added in front of the passenger terminal to make room for larger refueling and transport aircraft such as the KC-135 and C-17.

Around the same time the Kyrgyz government performed a major expansion and renovation of the passenger terminal, funded in part by the sizable landing fees paid by coalition forces. Several restaurants, gift shops, and barber shops sprang-up in the terminal catering to the deployed troops.

The airport terminal underwent renovation and redesign in 2007 [3].

Airlines and destinations
The following airlines have scheduled services from Manas International Airport Airlines  ?     Destinations
Aeroflot     Moscow-Sheremetyevo
Air Astana     Almaty
Anikay Air     Sharjah
bmi operated by Astraeus     Almaty, London-Heathrow
China Southern Airlines     Ürümqi
Iran Aseman Airlines     Mashhad, Tehran-Imam Khomeini
Itek Air     Moscow-Domodedovo, Ürümqi
Kyrgyzstan Airlines     Almaty, Delhi, Dubai, Dushanbe, Islamabad, Jalalabad, Kazarman, Kerben, Moscow-Domodedovo, Novosibirsk, Osh, Sharjah, Tashkent, Yekaterinburg
Rossiya     St Petersburg
S7 Airlines     Novosibirsk
Tajik Air     Dushanbe
Turkish Airlines     Istanbul-Atatürk
Uzbekistan Airways     Tashkent

Incidents and accidents

* In the predawn hours of 23 October, 2002, an IL-62 airliner operated by the Tretyakovo Air Transport Company crashed on takeoff after running off the end of the runway. There were no passengers aboard and all eleven crew members escaped, with only minor injuries. They were treated at the joint US Air Force and South Korean army clinic at Manas Air Base. The wreckage was bulldozed by Kyrgyz personnel and left at the site. Airport operations resumed before the crash site had finished smoldering.[4]

* In November 2004, a civilian Boeing 747 cargo transport took a wrong turn from the runway towards the new Marsden Matting fighter ramp. The jumbo jet was too large and heavy to taxi forward onto the taxiway and with no ability to move in reverse it was effectively stuck in place with its tail section blocking the runway. Airport operations were halted for several hours until a tractor could tow the 747 into a position from which it could taxi to the parking ramp.

* On 26 September, 2006, a Kyrgyzstan Airlines Tupolev Tu-154 aircraft taking off for Moscow-Domodedovo collided on the runway with a US Air Force KC-135 tanker that had just landed. The Tupolev, with 52 passengers and nine crew on board, lost part of its wing but was able to take off and return to make a safe landing with a 2.5m section of its wing missing. The KC-135, with three crew members and a cargo consisting entirely of highly-flammable jet fuel, caught fire and was destroyed. There were no injuries on either aircraft.[5]

* On 24 August, 2008 an Itek Air Boeing 737 heading to Tehran with 90 people aboard crashed 3 km from the airport, killing 68. Twenty-two people, including two crew members, survived the crash. According to an airport official, the crew had reported a technical problem on board and were returning to the airport when the plane went down.[6]

Main article: Iran Aseman Airlines Flight 6895

References

1. ^ A-Z World Airports Online – Manas International Airport
2. ^ Bishkek: A hub to the Far East
3. ^ Manas airport in Bishkek is completely modernised (in Russian)
4. ^ Airline Disaster Database: 23 Oct 2002
5. ^ Flight International, 3-9 October 2006
6. ^ . The crash is the worst ever aviation accident in Kyrgyzstan.68 die, 22 survive airliner crash in Kyrgyzstan

External links
Search Wikimedia Commons     Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Manas International Airport

* Manas International Airport (official site)
* Manas International Airport (globalsecurity.org)
* Accident history for FRU at Aviation Safety Network
* Airport information for UAFM at Great Circle Mapper. Source: DAFIF (effective Oct. 2006).
* Current weather for UAFM at NOAA/NWS
* Airport information for UAFM at World Aero Data. Data current as of October 2006.. Source: DAFIF.

Retrieved from  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manas_International_Airport
Categories: Airports in Kyrgyzstan | Airports built in the Soviet Union | Soviet Air Force bases | Chuy Province | Bishkek

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manas_International_Airport

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Issyk Kul Province
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates: 42°0?N 78°0?E? / ?42°N 78°E? / 42; 78
Issyk Kul Province
????-??? ???????
Country     Kyrgyzstan
Capital     Karakol
Area     43,100 km² (16,641 sq mi)
Population     450,700 (2005)
Density     10.5 /km² (27 /sq mi)
Governor     Emilbek Anapiyaev
ISO 3166-2     KG-Y
Issyk Kul at sundown

Issyk Kul Province (Kyrgyz: ????-??? ???????) is a province (oblast) of Kyrgyzstan. Its capital is Karakol. It is surrounded by Almaty Province, Kazakhstan( north), Chui Province (west), Naryn Province (southwest) and Xinjiang, China (southeast).

The north is dominated by the eye-shaped Lake Issyk Kul, with the Kungey Alatau mountains to the north and the Terskey Alatau to the south (‘sunny’ and ‘shady’ Alatau).

To the south is mountains and ‘jailoos’ (mountain meadows used for summer grazing). The far east contains the highest Tian Shan mountains with Khan Tengri.

Most of the population is around the lake, with Balykchy in the west and Karakol in the east. The railroad from the north ends at Balykchy. The main highway (A365) from Bishkek passes through Balykchy and into Naryn Province on its way to the Torugart Pass into China. Highway A363 circles the lake and A362 runs east from the lake into Kazakhstan.

The province, which resembles the Alps or Colorado, would be a major tourist destination were it not for its remoteness, underdeveloped infrastructure, and growing conflict between Kyrgyz nationalists and independence factions, which in December 2008 flared up again, killing 39 civilians. Currently, it is visited mostly by locals who use the soviet-era establishments around the lake and the more adventurous sort of international tourist.

There is a village by the name of Kyzyldzhildyz in this province. It’s name is hard enough to pronounce for foreigners to the language that the village’s mayor has offered a reward for any American that can pronounce  Kyzyldzhildyz .

Districts of Issyk Kul

Issyk Kul is divided administratively into 5 districts: [1]:
District     Capital
Ak-Suu District     Karakol
Jeti-Oguz District     Kyzyl-Suu
Tong District     Bokonbaev
Tup District     Tyup
Issyk Kul District     Cholpon-Ata

References

1. ^ Kyrgyzstan – ??????-???????? ???????
* Laurence Mitchell, Kyrgyzstan, Bradt Travel Guides, 2008

External links

* Guide to the region from the Spektator magazine
* (English) Karakol – Djeti-Oguz region in Central Tien-Shan
(Mountaineering reports and maps. Although the site is in English, with some web browsers you may need to set  Character Encoding  to  Cyrillic  in the  View  menu of your browser in order to get better display of the main page).

Search Wikimedia Commons     Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Issyk Kul Province

Oblastlar of Kyrgyzstan

Batken A Chuy A Issyk Kul A Jalal-Abad A Naryn A Osh A Talas
Flag of Kyrgyzstan
Stub icon     This Issyk-Kul province location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Retrieved from  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issyk_Kul_Province
Categories: Issyk Kul geography stubs | Issyk Kul Province | Provinces of Kyrgyzstan

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issyk_Kul_Province

200px-KyrgyzstanIssykKul.png

***

Kumtor Gold Mine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kumtor Gold Mine is an open-pit gold mining site in Issyk Kul Province of Kyrgyzstan located about 350 km (220 mi) southeast of the capital Bishkek and 80 km (50 mi) south of Lake Issyk-Kul near the border with China.

Kumtor is 100% owned by the Canadian mining company, Centerra Gold, through its wholly owned subsidiary, Kumtor Gold Company. The mine started operation in Q2 1997 and produced more than 5.8 million ounces (180,000 kg) of gold through the end of 2006.

Located in Tian Shan mountains at more than 4,000 m (14,000 ft) above sea level, Kumtor is the second-highest gold mining operation in the world after Yanacocha gold mine in Peru.

The mine was linked to a major environmental incident in 1998 when a truck carrying 1762 kg of sodium cyanide (a chemical used to dissolve gold from granulated ore the use of which is highly controversial) fell into the Barskaun River on the way to Kumtor.

External links

* Centerra Gold – Kumtor Gold Mine web page

Coordinates: 41°52?N 78°12?E? / ?41.867°N 78.2°E? / 41.867; 78.2
Retrieved from  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumtor_Gold_Mine
Categories: Geography of Kyrgyzstan | Economy of Kyrgyzstan | Gold mines in Kyrgyzstan | Issyk Kul Province | Economy of the Soviet Union | Surface mines in Kyrgyzstan

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumtor_Gold_Mine

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kazakhmap

khazakstan – 2008 – 69823
(from Encyclopedia Brittannica)

***

http://www.centerra.ca/properties/kumtor/

Overview

Kumtor equipment
Conveying mill feed from the crusher at Kumtor

Centerra owns 100% of the Kumtor gold mine through its wholly owned subsidiary Kumtor Gold Company. Kumtor is located in the Kyrgyz Republic, about 350 kilometres southeast of the capital Bishkek and about 60 kilometres north of the border with the Peoples Republic of China. It is the largest gold mine operated in Central Asia by a Western-based company, having produced more than 6 million ounces of gold between 1997 and the end of 2007. In 2008 gold production exceeded 556,000 ounces.

The Kumtor gold deposit is located in the southern Tien Shan Metallogenic Belt, a major suture that traverses Central Asia, from Uzbekistan in the west through Tajikistan and the Kyrgyz Republic into northwestern China, a distance of more than 1,500 kilometres. A number of important mesothermal-type gold deposits occur along this belt including Muruntau, Zarmitan, Jilau and Kumtor.

http://www.centerra.ca/properties/kumtor/production/

Production Charts of Ore mined

***

Overview

Boroo mine and mill complex
The Boroo mine and mill complex, about 110 kilometers northwest of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia

Centerra Gold has a 100% equity interest in Boroo, the first significant foreign investment for industrial development in Mongolia since 1979. Located 110 kilometers west-northwest of Ulaanbaatar, the country’s capital, Boroo began commercial production on March 1, 2004 and produced more than 245,000 ounces of gold (including gold produced during commissioning) by year-end.

The Boroo gold deposit is generally flat lying or sub-horizontal and extends over an area measuring 2.5 by 1.5 kilometres. Throughout the area, a series of mineralized zones occur up to 400 metres wide and typically average from 10 to 30 metres in thickness.

While Boroo is located in a relatively remote area of the world, it is well positioned with respect to existing infrastructure. The paved all-weather Ulaanbaatar – Irkutsk highway passes within three kilometers of the mine site. The main Trans-Mongolian railway, which links Ulaanbaatar with Irkutsk, Russia and Beijing, China, runs through Baruunkharaa, about 20 kilometers to the north of the mine site.

Boroo Technical Report (PDF 5.5 MB)
Download Acrobat Reader

http://www.centerra.ca/properties/boroo/

****

310px-Aralship2.jpg
Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

Desertification
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ship stranded by the retreat of the Aral Sea
Goat husbandry is common through the Norte Chico of Chile, however it produces severe erosion and desertification. Image from upper Limarí River

Desertification is the degradation of land in arid and dry sub-humid areas, resulting primarily from man-made activities and influenced by climatic variations. It is principally caused by overgrazing, overdrafting of groundwater and diversion of water from rivers for human consumption and industrial use, all of these processes fundamentally driven by overpopulation.

***

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/

Dust Storm in the Taklimakan Desert download large image (3 MB, JPEG)

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/view.php?id=39835

Dust plumes formed over the Taklimakan Desert in mid-August 2009. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image of the western half of the desert on August 15, 2009, on the third consecutive day of dust storm activity. Nearly opaque dust not only fills the western half of the Tarim Basin in which the Taklimakan Desert sits, but even pushes past the basin’s northwestern rim. From its western edge, the dust cloud forms a V shape that opens toward the east. The dust’s thickness may be slightly exaggerated in this image as this area has been observed near the edge of the satellite swath (where the satellite has to look through a longer path of the atmosphere to see the ground).

The Taklimakan Desert sits between the mountain ranges of the Tien Shan (or Tian Shan) in the north and the Kunlun Shan in the south. Far from any ocean, the desert experiences few, if any, effects of the rainy season of the Asian monsoon that waters other parts of the continent. Because the basin lacks drainage, any water that enters it can only evaporate away, leaving behind salt. The Taklimakan Desert qualifies as China’s biggest, hottest, and driest. It also qualifies as one of the world’s largest shifting sand deserts, with dunes reaching a height of up to 200 meters (656 feet).

  1. References

  2. World Wildlife Fund, McGinley, M. (2007). Taklimakan Desert. Encyclopedia of Earth. Accessed August 17, 2009.

NASA image courtesy MODIS Rapid Response Team, Goddard Space Flight Center. Caption by Michon Scott.

Instrument:
Terra – MODIS

***

http://www.pulitzercenter.org/openitem.cfm?id=1688

An interview with Sean Gallagher

The Beijinger

July 3, 2009

In April 2009, British photojournalist Sean Gallagher traveled 4000km through Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Gansu and Xinjiang documenting China’s struggle with desertification. An exhibit of “China’s Growing Sands” will be opening on July 4, at 6pm at Café Zarah, on 42 Gulou Dongdajie (8403 9807) and will run through August 5. The opening, which is open to all, will include a 15-minute multimedia presentation by Gallagher. The Beijinger asked Gallagher a few questions about his work:

[etc.]

What effect is desertification having on China and the world?

It is estimated that desertification affects 400 million people in China alone. These effects come in a myriad of forms including disappearing water, degraded grasslands, moving sands and environmental refugees. Sandstorms originating in China have been known to spread to the Korean Peninsula, Japan and even as far as the west coast of the United States. As former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said in a message on World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought in 2006, “Desertification is one of the most serious threats facing humanity.”

What causes it?
Desertification is not caused by one single factor. It is usually caused by a combination of factors including drought, deforestation, mis-use of water, inappropriate farming methods and climate change.

What is being done to combat it?
Desertification is not an issue that the authorities take lightly. Projects such as the planting of the “Great Green Wall”, a chain of trees thousands of kilometers in length, is currently taking place in the north of China. It is aimed at stabilizing soil and protecting the capital from seasonal sandstorms. Research is also being undertaken throughout China at places such as the Turpan Desert Botanical Garden and Shapotou Desert Research Center. Here, scientists are studying plants to find the best species to ‘fix’ sands and return land to a level of productivity. The main problem is that the task is huge and the affected areas are so large. It is estimated that nearly 20 percent of China is now classified as desert.

[ . . . ]

What does desertification mean for Beijing residents?
Sandstorms are the most visually obvious example of the effects of desertification in Beijing. However I don’t think the capital will ever become a desert per se. The idea of desertification conjures up images of huge sand dunes swallowing homes and lands. Whilst this does actually occur in places in China, the threat to Beijing of this is extremely small. The nearest desert to Beijing is in Tianmo, about 90 kilometers north of the city and it is a relatively small dune system. Desertification is about aridity and this is the main factor facing Beijing and the north of China. Drought in the north is a well-documented problem, and the immense project of channeling water from the south of the country continues to be a hot topic. The associated problems with drought include the impact to the agriculture industry and shortages of drinking water, which will have direct effects on the residents of Beijing.

http://www.pulitzercenter.org/openitem.cfm?id=1688

***

[From last year - 2008 ]

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/04/25/es.desertification/index.html

April 27, 2008 — Updated 0357 GMT (1157 HKT)

By Matt Ford
For CNN

Desertification: How to stop the shifting sands

These huge, sky-blackening dust storms sweep across Asia in March and April, bringing with them millions of tons of sand from inner Mongolia and depositing it in China and on across the Korean peninsula to Japan.

During the past few years the storms have grown in ferocity and scale, and they are at the vanguard of an advancing Gobi desert that threatens more than 400 million people in the Chinese provinces of Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia, Gansu, Ningxia and Shaanxi.

The economic toll has been estimated to cost the Chinese economy $6.5 billion per year. But desertification is not limited to China and it is fast becoming a serious global problem that will only be exacerbated by climate change.

[etc.]

***

Swallowed by Sand: China’s Billion-Dollar Battle Against Desertification

// By Karen Bennett on August 5, 2008
Location: Minqin County, China
Photo by Flickr user kenpower

It is estimated that desertification, a process of land degradation that occurs in dryland ecosystems due to overexploitation and land mismanagement, now costs China about $2-3 billion each year. China’s experience is not unique. In Africa, for example, worsening soil conditions could mean that the continent could only feed a quarter of its inhabitants by 2025.

Minqin County is one of the driest places in China, and it stands on the front line of China’s battle against desertification. Up until recently, Minqin acted as a natural barrier between the deserts and the rest of the country. But within the next decade, the Tengger and Badain Jaran deserts are expected to swallow Minqin county.

In Minqin’s “lake district” (named after a lake that dried up in 1957), 70% of the land has been lost to desertification or destroyed by the saline-alkaline soils that are produced by the overexploitation of groundwater. Additionally, violent sandstorms are a common occurrence, covering homes and roads in their wake. These sandstorms often spread to North and South Korea and have been linked to respiratory problems in California. At a rate of 10m per year, the encroachment of desert upon Minqin is fearsome, and government-led cultivation, deforestation, irrigation and reclamation are all being blamed.

Historically, Minqin County depended on the Shiyang River for its water needs. But in the late 1950s, government officials diverted the Shiyang river to construct the Hongyashan Reservoir in an effort to boost food production. As a result, Minqin County is now forced to rely on groundwater and water from the reservoir.

In 2004, the Hongyashan went completely dry and had to be refilled by emergency water diversions from the Yellow River. Groundwater resources are also drying up from overuse, wrecking the natural systems ability to provide ecosystem services such as soil formation. Groundwater levels are dropping by up to a meter each year, and best estimates predict that at this rate, groundwater will completely run out in 17 years. This overexploitation of groundwater, along with the insufficient re-supplying of surface water, has led to such serious water quality problems that the majority of water in Minqin is undrinkable. More than a million people are now facing a drinking water crisis.

Recently, the Chinese government has taken action to halt desertification in Minqin. Since 2001, they have spent nearly $9 billion trying to restore ecosystem services by planting forests, establishing desert vegetation and creating a 330-km belt of trees to manage the advancing desert. Unfortunately, a large portion of the vegetation has died, the belt of trees lays stranded by sand, and the desert now extends over 40,000 hectares of the county. The government has also been funding more than 30,000 farmers to leave their ancestral homes due to the encroaching desert. In Northern Minqin, entire villages have been abandoned.

Still, some people see reason for hope. Shi Shuzu, a resident of Songhe Village who is over 70 years old, has discovered methods to enable trees to survive in Minqin. After more than half a century of experimentation, Shi has established a patch of green land in Songhe Village – Minqin’s first in 10 years.
Topics:

* china
* ecosystem services
* water

http://www.wri.org/stories/2008/08/swallowed-sand-chinas-billion-dollar-battle-against-desertification

***

The [Aral Sea](http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=aral+sea&sl…), on the border of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, is a cautionary tale about how changes to ecosystems can have far-reaching impacts on the communities that depend on the services they provide.

In the early 1900s, the Aral Sea was the fourth largest inland lake in the world, providing a wealth of important [ecosystem services](node/2262) to communities, including fishing stocks and preservation of surrounding water and soil quality. The Aral Sea’s salinity and volume levels were held stable by inflows of freshwater from the Syr Darya river on the east and the Amu Darya river to the south.

In 1918, policymakers from the former Soviet Union decided to divert fresh water from the Syr Darya and the Amu Darya for irrigation. This was an essential part of their plans to increase cotton production, which they referred to as “white gold,” a major Soviet export. The Soviet decision makers knew that increased withdrawals from the rivers would shrink the Aral Sea to a residual brine lake. However, they believed that when the benefits of increased agricultural output were weighed against the ecosystem service benefits of the sea, the Aral’s desiccation was worthwhile.

The Soviet plan to maximize one ecosystem service—fresh water—at the cost of many others proceeded, and the 1930s saw the construction of a system of irrigation canals. Crop production rose as irrigated areas in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan jumped from 6.4 million acres to 15.9 million acres over two decades, employing millions of people in the region. But with its major inflows being diverted for irrigation, the Aral Sea began shrinking in the 1960s. By 2005, it had lost more than half of its surface area, exposing nearly 30,000 km2 of lake bed, and nearly three-quarters of its volume.

The formerly thriving fishing industry collapsed as the freshwater influx declined and salinity increased, leading to the disappearance of 60,000 jobs linked to the Aral Sea fishery. The dried up sea bed produced dust storms laden with chemicals and pesticides from the intensive agriculture occurring along the two rivers. This in turn led to increased air and water pollution levels, and crop damage as much as 1,000 km away. Cancers, respiratory diseases, anemia, miscarriages, and kidney and liver diseases soared in the region. Thousands of people were forced to abandon their homes as their livelihoods dried up and their health was threatened.

By 1987, the Aral Sea had split into two segments—the North Aral Sea in Kazakhstan, and the South Aral Sea, more or less in Uzbekistan. In 1995, the World Bank and Kazak government built a dam to prevent water in the northern section from flowing into the southern portion. Improvements were made to irrigation along the Syr Darya River, preserving more of the main water flow into the North Aral Sea. The plan has met with success; from 2005 to 2007, the surface area of the sea’s northern section expanded by over 800 square kilometers. As fish stocks have been reintroduced, the local economy is growing. The villages near the North Aral Sea now benefit from more of the ecosystem’s services; locals experience fewer sandstorms and more rain, which has improved the drinking water, air quality, and residents health.

Unfortunately, the much larger South Aral Sea is still shrinking. Uzbek leaders are unwilling to relinquish the primary water source for their cotton irrigation. Uzbekistan remains one of the world’s major cotton exporters, and thus the Amu Darya is still being diverted to irrigate the crops that sustain the lives of millions of people.

The Sudoche wetlands just south of the Aral have been successfully restored, leading to improved well-being for the local populations.1 Uzbekistan has recently announced plans to explore the dried-up Aral Sea bed for oil. It remains to be seen whether these developments will benefit the region as a whole.

  1. Slootweg, R. (2008). Valuation of ecosystem services in SEA – Aral Sea Wetland Restoration Strategy (draft).

Stopping the sandstorms

Jiang Gaoming

April 13, 2007

Beijing is choking as dust sweeps in from China’s arid, ecologically-degraded west. Jiang Gaoming investigates, and finds that efforts to restore the western grasslands are failing.

“Arid and semi-arid areas can only support one or two people per square kilometre. In China, population density in these areas is over 10 people per square kilometre.”

In Beijing, the weather forecast says that more sandstorms are on the way. The capital was hit by four sandstorms in March, and even Shanghai was recently smothered by dust clouds from the north. Television reports now describe these events as “sandy weather”, rather than “sandstorms”. But whatever you call them, they are becoming ever more frequent visitors to Beijing in springtime.

While everyone is cursing the weather, I find myself worrying: how many tonnes of soil are being lost? And how long will it be before there is nowhere in China for plants to take root? Academics argue to what extent these sandstorms are “imports” from Mongolia and the former Soviet Republics, or whether they are the “domestic” products of the arid deserts and damaged grasslands of China’s west. But either way, there is no denying the degree of environmental degradation in western China over the last three decades. Regardless of whether the capital’s weather comes from beyond its borders, China needs to put measures in place to restore the grasslands and reduce the risk of sandstorms.

Sixty billion yuan has been invested in projects to control the sandstorms that are hitting northeastern China. Tree-planting projects have also been running for 30 years across north China. But why haven’t they worked? And more importantly – what will?

To answer this question, let’s first consider the difference between trees and grass. Ecologists look at vegetation in terms of its quantity and the area it covers. In China’s deserts and grasslands, grass is by far the most common form of vegetation, followed by scrub and then trees. On the Xilinguole grasslands, for example, trees account for only 0.87% of the total vegetation. The current strategy – to plant trees to help with problems caused by a lack of grass – contradicts principles of ecological management. In fact, our repeated calls for change have now resulted in more attention being placed on scrub. Scientists agree that millions of years ago these areas were once covered with trees, but this is the distant past – no amount of spending will bring ancient forests back. In fact, grass is much more effective than trees at stopping sandstorms, and it does not need to be planted. Simply protect it, and it will grow. Trees use up groundwater, while grass uses only rainwater. Grass is denser and fixes the soil in place; it also keeps the ground moist by retaining precipitation, meaning there is no dust to blow away – something trees cannot do.

Secondly, we need to consider where we are focusing our sandstorm-control efforts. Currently, our work ends up being concentrated in areas that are easy to reach and monitor: regions that are accessible by road. Lots of money has been spent, with some good results. But nobody asks questions about the very remote, ecologically-degraded areas that are less accessible, but have more responsibility for sandstorms. I once asked a local forestry official why they were not using aerial sowing techniques to rehabilitate these areas. His answer was simple: “Who would notice?” Current schemes are designed to be seen by the officials who approve their funding. Do not get too excited by those recovered grasslands and forests you see alongside the highways; they only cover 10% of the total affected area. The other 90% causes the continuing sandstorms.

Thirdly, we need to look at the relationship between man and nature. Arid and semi-arid areas can only support one or two people per square kilometre. In China, population density in these areas is over 10 people per square kilometre. The original inhabitants were nomadic, and would move in search of grass and water, giving the grasslands a chance to recover. But now they have settled, increasing the pressure on the environment – and inevitably damaging it. Measures are needed to move this scattered population into towns and cities; funds for ecological management should be used to this end.

Fourthly, we must reconsider the relationship between ecological management and poverty relief. Sandstorms are caused by the consumption of grass by livestock, by the clearing of grasslands for crops and by deforestation. At present, sandstorm-control programmes have little regard for the lives of local people. The money that is being spent brings them scant benefit, and only helps the people that receive the funding directly. My rough calculations show that spending on major sandstorm control projects amounts to around 326 yuan (US$42) per mu (666.67 square metres). In the south of Inner Mongolia that works out to almost 500,000 yuan (around US$64,705) per household. If as little as one-tenth of that figure was actually spent on getting the locals to give up their livestock and plant trees, there would be no danger of sandstorms. And the locals would still end up better off – at present, none of this funding reaches them, and most struggle to earn 10,000 yuan (US$1,294) per year. In one part of Inner Mongolia, a fortune has been spent on restoring the grasslands, but no one can come up with the 10,000 yuan needed to retain it.

Finally, we need to ask questions about the relationship between China’s east and west. At present, much of China’s livestock is in the west, in ecologically-vulnerable areas such as Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and Tibet. Ideally, these animals would eat straw, which is a by-product of agriculture. But all of the straw is in the east, in provinces such as Shandong, Henan and Hebei, which have a far greater production capacity for animal fodder than the grasslands – 50 to 100 times greater, in fact. This holds back the development of livestock farming. Straw in the east is simply burnt off, while degraded ecosystems in the west struggle to support livestock. The largest source of income for the west is funding for reforestation and environmental protection projects, with highly marked-up animal products coming second. These products cost five to 10 times as much to produce than they would in agricultural areas with better conditions. China’s west should not develop its animal farming further, or sooner or later the grasslands will be grazed bare, leaving the rest of the country to pick up the bill for its recovery.

Can China stop the sandstorms? If we do not take heed, maybe not. Of course, it may not be too long before all the soil is blown away. That would put an end to the capital’s sandstorms, but it might also put an end to Beijing.


Jiang Gaoming is a professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Botany. He is also vice secretary-general of the UNESCO China-MAB (Man and the Biosphere) Committee and a member of the UNESCO MAB Urban Group.

Jiang Gaoming<br/>

Jiang Gaoming is a professor and Ph.D. tutor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Botany. He is also vice secretary-general of China Society of Biological Conservation and board member of China Environmental Culture Promotion Association. He is known for his concepts of “urban vegetation” and allowing damaged ecosystems to recover naturally.

Health Care Reform and for over 40% of our income going for taxes – there ought to be a better health care system among other things in the United States –

06/16/2009. USA Health Atlas. Try the report function by clicking on a State

The USA Hospitals Atlas let you explore hospital trends between 1999 to 2006. Several indicators like admissions, number of beds and ER visits are available. When you are on the map, click on to play a movie that shows the trend.

USA Health Atlas
http://www.geostat.ca/en/realisation/index.html

Geo-Stat Atlases demonstrate the ability of Géoclip to present cartographic data. Graduated color or proportional symbols, see the power and user friendliness of Géoclip for yourself. >>>

[from -]
http://www.geostat.ca/en/

The USA Hospitals Atlas let you explore hospital trends between 1999 to 2006. Several indicators like admissions, number of beds and ER visits are available. When you are on the map, click on to play a movie that shows the trend.

http://www.geostat.ca/en/realisation/index.html

Geoclip presents on its website a Continental USA Atlas by state and county. This Atlas presents many indicators (demography, education, employment, income, etc.).

***

My Response to a comment about the health care system and pharmaceuticals from the last few days -

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Rather than being intellectually lazy about this – the real problems with pharmaceuticals is not that the public can’t have a live interaction on a social networking site about them – it is that the drugs are being manufactured in a way that causes preventable complications with them and they are being mis-prescribed on top of that. Unless the companies making these drugs want to talk with customers in the way used car salesmen would when passing off a lemon – how about tackling the real problems in a way that would yield solutions that work?

One problem is that doctors are prescribing the exact same dosages regardless of weight, blood volume, liver health or capacity because of previous liver damage, age, sex, and regardless of other medications being given at the same time.

Since you are involved in IT and probably know a bunch of tech-head geeks, why don’t you design a fail-safe software that pharmacies and doctors / hospitals could use that would take known factors like those in the list above and flag prescription combinations that are lethal, dangerous or debilitating at the point of sale or at the point of diagnosis? That could be helpful and a much more valuable use of your specialized skill sets. The volume of blood for different age groups, sexes and dependent on specific health conditions could be found – there is certainly enough study of it by medical schools and morticians. Obviously, the same strength of dosage does not belong in the body of someone with poor circulation, elderly, generally sedate, and with only 50% liver function, as would be appropriate for someone much younger, male, active and with no liver damage. But, right now, many drugs are being given in the same dosages and strengths across various populations, even when a number of other drugs are already having to be processed by the liver, bloodstream and internal organs simultaneously.
.

And that is only one problem, but it would be a damn good start. And if you know anybody with enough brains and authority to make a decision about anything at the pharmaceutical companies, you might let them know that around 90% of the side effects in the last eight generations of drugs they’ve been producing are the direct result of a manufacturing process which could very well be changed. But, they probably already know that since they made the profit-driven choice of doing it that way. (The 90% figure does not include those side effects which are occurring as a result of poor diagnosis, drugs being mixed together in quantities and varieties that are dangerous, or as a result of drugs being administered which were wrong entirely or not needed in the first place – those are a whole separate category.)

The second problem that you might consider putting all this energy into successfully creating solutions to fix, is that when a patient has a known set of side effects that have occurred or are occurring as a result of taking a medication or combination of medications – the pharmacy ought to have a record of it. That ought to be able to be entered into the file of the pharmacy or pharmacist that is tracking those medications in their computer and it ought to automatically be emailed to someone intelligent enough to enter it into the patients’ file at the doctors’ office or at the nurses’ station at the hospital. And, an annoying alarm should be made that hits the cellphone of their doctor the moment that side effect is reported, whether it is not being able to take a shit or feeling dizzy or having nervousness and insomnia or nausea or shaking or incontinence or heart palpitations or sweating or whatever the side effect may be.
And – while you are at it – how about finding a way to get the jackasses’ names and affiliations published on the bills they’ve written who are working at pharmaceutical companies or being sponsored by pharmaceuticals or insurance companies, rather than having been elected to do that by the people of the United States. That is actually a project that I know a lot of people would pay to have available to them and then you can put it on social networking sites so it is easy to find and easy to understand whose work we’re having to suffer when that legislation or policy is put in place.

And, a quick little tech-head request – don’t ever assume that there is a legitimate condition that a medication treats, it isn’t realistic. Also, there are some specific things about pharmaceuticals and medical doctors generally in our lifetimes, that are absolutely true – first, they make money only if we stay sick or get sicker; second, they could’ve failed durn near every class in med school or college because they were hung-over, on drugs, sleeping, high or just not very good at it and we would have no way of knowing it; third, the ones who have a vested interest in our health and quality of life are each of us individually, – not them – they will be at the golf course enjoying tomorrow whether we are dead or are suffering by their hands or directly from their poor decisions for us; and fourth, not even an illegal drug dealer would poison the people they are selling their drugs to – but doctors, hospitals, nurses, pharmacists and pharmaceutical companies do not have the same level of direct accountability when they screw up, so there is nothing to prevent or dissuade them from doing just that.

- cricketdiane, 08-18-08

***

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Chocolate linked to stronger heart

Published: Aug. 14, 2009 at 10:29 AM
(UPI Photo Files)

STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Aug. 14 (UPI) — Chocolate eaters in a study of heart attack survivors had lower blood pressure and were less likely to die of heart disease, scientists in Sweden said.
Of the 1,169 patients studied, those who ate chocolate two or more times a week cut their risk of dying from heart disease nearly threefold compared to those who didn’t eat chocolate at all, said the study’s lead author, Dr. Imre Janszky of Karolinska Institute.

Jansky’s study also suggested antioxidants in cacao cut the risk of death from heart disease in healthy older men and post-menopausal women, The Local reported.

[etc.]

The research built upon earlier work which suggested a strong link between cocoa-based products and improvement in blood flow.

http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2009/08/14/Chocolate-linked-to-stronger-heart/UPI-30111250260157/

***

Army plans emotional resiliency training
Published: Aug. 18, 2009 at 12:57 AM

WASHINGTON, Aug. 18 (UPI) — The U.S. Army, in an effort to improve combat performance and stave off post-traumatic stress disorder, plans emotional resiliency training, officials said.

The $117 million program is an effort to transform a military culture that has generally considered talk of emotions to be so much hand-holding, a sign of weakness, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the U.S Army’s chief of staff told The New York Times in an interview.

[ . . . ]

The new program is to be introduced at two bases in October and phased in gradually, starting in basic training, but officials plan to require all 1.1 million of soldiers to take intensive training in emotional resiliency.

The program, designed to help people cope better with stressful conditions, is usually taught in weekly 90-minute classes. It seeks to defuse or expose common habits of thinking and flawed beliefs that may develop into anger, frustration and a tendency to assume the worst — such as, My wife didn’t answer the phone; she must be with someone else.

[etc.]

http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2009/08/18/Army-plans-emotional-resiliency-training/UPI-85351250571464/

***
Commentary: How insurance firms drive debate

* Story Highlights
* Wendell Potter: In my former job, I helped shape public opinion on health care
* He says insurance companies quietly seek to counter reform measures
* Potter: Industry worked to kill the Clinton health reform plan
* He says he didn’t want to be part of another effort to kill a health care plan

updated 11:16 a.m. EDT, Mon August 17, 2009

By Wendell Potter
Special to CNN

Editor’s note: Wendell Potter has served since May 2009 as senior fellow on health care at the Center for Media and Democracy, a nonprofit organization that says it seeks to expose corporate spin and government propaganda. After a 20-year career as a corporate public relations executive, Potter left his job last year as head of communications for one of the nation’s largest health insurers, CIGNA Corporation.
Ex-insurance company spokesman Wendell Potter says the industry seeks to drive the health care debate.

[ . . . ]

If the radio report had carried more of my remarks, he might have a better understanding of how the health insurance and its army of PR people are influencing his opinions and actions without his even knowing it.

Until I quit my job last year, I was one of the leaders of that army. I had a very successful career and was my company’s voice to the media and the public for several years.

It was my job to promote and defend the company’s reputation and to try to persuade reporters to write positive stories about the industry’s ideas on reform. During the last couple of years of my career, however, I became increasingly worried that the high-deductible plans insurers were beginning to push Americans into would force more and more of us into bankruptcy.

The higher I rose in the company, the more I learned about the tactics insurers use to dump policyholders when they get sick, in order to increase profits and to reward their Wall Street investors. I could not in good conscience continue serving as an industry mouthpiece. And I did not want to be part of yet another industry effort to kill meaningful reform.

I explained during the press conference with Rep. Slaughter how the industry funnels millions of its policyholders’ premiums to big public relations firms that provide talking points to conservative talk show hosts, business groups and politicians. I also described how the PR firms set up front groups, again using your premium dollars and mine, to scare people away from reform.

[ etc.]

The industry has been engaging in these kinds of tactics for many years, going back to its successful behind-the-scenes campaign to kill the Clinton reform plan.

A story in Friday’s New York Times about the origin of the absurdly false rumor that President Obama’s health care proposal would create government-sponsored death panels bears out what I have been saying.

The story notes that the rumor emanated from many of the same pundits and conservative media outlets that were central in defeating Bill Clinton’s health care proposal 16 years ago, including the editorial board of The Washington Times, the American Spectator magazine and Betsy McCaughey, whose 1994 health care critique made her a star of the conservative movement (and ultimately, the lieutenant governor of New York).

The big PR firms that work for the industry have close connections with those media outlets and stars in the conservative movement. One of their PR firms, which created and staffed a front group in the late ’90s to kill the proposed Patients’ Bill of Rights, launched a PR and advertising campaign in conservative media outlets to drum up opposition to the bill.

[ . . . ]

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/08/17/potter.health.insurance/index.html?imw=Y&iref=mpstoryemail

***

And just who is behind those commercials and advertisements we are seeing on tv against the health care reform and against health insurance reform -

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/08/17/health.care.ads/index.html?iref=newssearch

Who’s behind health care reform ad wars?

  • Story Highlights
  • More than $57 million has been spent on ads trying to influence health care debate
  • Ads span the political spectrum with some nonpartisan
  • Click on the ads to see the message and what groups are paying for them

//

updated 10:53 a.m. EDT, Mon August 17, 2009

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/08/17/health.care.ads/index.html?iref=newssearch

***

New Directions says there are more than 15,000 homeless vets in Los Angeles, the largest such population in the United States. Most of the vets are from the Vietnam War era. A small but growing number of veterans from Afghanistan and Iraq are starting to hit the streets.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/08/19/homeless.vets.newdirections/index.html

***

By August 2008, the total debt was $9.6 trillion.[25]

Budgeted net interest on the public debt was approximately $239 billion in fiscal years 2007 and 2008. This represented approximately 9.5% of government spending. Interest was the fourth largest single budgeted disbursement category, after defense, Social Security, and Medicare.[54]During 2007, the government also accrued a non-cash interest expense of $194 billion for intra-governmental debt, primarily the Social Security Trust Fund, for a total interest expense of $433 billion.[55] This accrued interest is added to the Social Security Trust Fund and therefore the national debt each year and will be paid to Social Security recipients in the future.

from wikipedia entry about the US budget (above and below) -

Since recommendations of the Greenspan Commission were adopted in the early 1980s, Social Security payroll taxes have exceeded benefit payments. In FY2008, Social Security received $180 billion more in payroll taxes and accrued more interest than it paid out in benefits. This annual surplus is credited to Social Security trust funds that hold special non-marketable Treasury securities. The Social Security surplus reduces the amount of U.S. Treasury borrowing from the public. The total balance of the trust funds was $2.4 trillion in 2008 and is estimated to reach $3.7 trillion by 2016. At that point, payments will exceed payroll tax revenues, resulting in the gradual reduction of the trust funds balance as the securities are redeemed against other types of government revenues. By 2037, according to some estimates, the trust funds will be exhausted. Under current law, Social Security payouts would be reduced by 24% at that time, as only payroll taxes are authorized to cover benefits.[11]

[ . . . ]

Understanding deficits and debt
Deficit and Debt Increases 2001-2008

The annual budget deficit is the difference between actual cash collections and outlays during a given fiscal year, which runs from October 1 to September 30. The national debt represents the outstanding obligations of the government at any given time, comprising both public and intra-governmental debt, which was $10.9 trillion as of March 1, 2009.[16] While the difference between the deficit and the annual change in debt has been small, some extraordinary actions taken in FY2008 and FY2009 (such as the federal conservatorship of the mortgage guarantee agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) have led to a divergence between the deficit and the increase in federal debt.

These differences can make it more challenging to determine how much the government actually spends relative to tax revenues. The increase in the national debt during a given year is a helpful measure to determine this amount. From FY 2003-2007, the national debt increased approximately $550 billion per year on average. For the first time in FY 2008, the U.S. added $1 trillion to the national debt.[17]In relative terms, from 2003-2007 the government spent roughly $1.20 for each $1.00 it collected in taxes.

Budgetary treatment of Social Security
Comparison of Deficits to Change in Debt 2008

Social Security payroll taxes and benefit payments, along with the net balance of the U.S. Postal Service are considered off-budget. Administrative costs of the Social Security Administration (SSA), however, are classified as on-budget. The total federal deficit is the sum of the on-budget deficit (or surplus) and the off-budget deficit (or surplus). Since FY1960, the federal government has run on-budget deficits except for FY1999 and FY2000, and total federal deficits except in FY1969 and FY1998-FY2001.[18] In large part because of Social Security surpluses, the total federal budget deficit is smaller than the on-budget deficit.

The surplus of Social Security payroll taxes over benefit payments is invested in special Treasury securities held by the Social Security Trust Fund. Social Security and other federal trust funds are part of the intergovernmental debt. The total federal debt is divided into intergovernmental debt and debt held by the public.

For example, in FY2008 an off-budget surplus of $183 billion reduced the on-budget deficit of $642 billion, resulting in a total federal deficit of $459 billion. Media often report the latter figure. The national debt increased by $1,035 billion between the end of FY2007 and the end of FY2008.[19]

[ . . . ]

2010 Budget: Total Debt $ and % to GDP

GDP is a measure of the total size and output of the economy. One measure of the debt burden is its size relative to GDP. In fiscal 2007, U.S. public debt was approximately $5 trillion (36.8 percent of GDP) and total debt was $9 trillion (65.5 percent of GDP.)[23] Public debt represents money owed to those holding government securities such as Treasury bills and bonds. Total debt includes intra-governmental debt, which includes amounts owed to the Social Security Trust Funds (about $2.2 trillion in FY 2007)[24] and Civil Service Retirement Funds. By August 2008, the total debt was $9.6 trillion.[25]

[etc.]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_federal_budget

***

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:U.S._Federal_Receipts_-_FY_2007.png

File:U.S. Federal Receipts - FY 2007.png
Size of this preview: 800 × 600 pixels

***

Taxation in the United States

Taxation in the United States is a complex system which may involve payment to at least four different levels of government and many methods of taxation. United States taxation includes local government, possibly including one or more of municipal, township, district and county governments. It also includes regional entities such as school and utility, and transit districts as well as including state and federal government.

The National Bureau of Economic Research has concluded that the combined federal, state, and local government average marginal tax rate for most workers to be about 40% of income.[1][2]

[plus social security (FICA) and unemployment insurance] ?

Each state also has its own tax system.

Typically there is a tax on real estate, usually called property taxes . Real estate taxes are often imposed on the value of real estate by reason of its ownership. For example, in Texas the real estate tax is imposed on the real estate and in particular on the owner of the real estate as of January 1 of each tax year. The tax is computed by applying a tax rate to the appraised value of the real estate as of the tax date. Some states like New York also have a real estate transfer tax.

There may be additional income taxes, sales taxes, and excise taxes (including use taxes). Taxable income for state purposes is usually based on federal taxable income with certain state specific adjustments. For example, some states tax municipal bond interest derived from other states that are otherwise exempt from federal income tax. Thus, this income must be added to the federal taxable income to compute the income amount for state income tax purposes. Oil and mineral producing states often impose a severance tax, similar to an excise tax in that tax is paid on the production of products, rather than on sales. Similarly, most New England states have yield taxes on timber/firewood cutting, payable as a percentage of the value cut, not the profit. Taxes on hotel rooms are common, and politically popular because the citizens will often approve such a tax while the taxpayers will come from other areas.

Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming do not levy an individual income tax. New Hampshire and Tennessee only tax interest and dividend income. Delaware, Oregon, Montana and New Hampshire have no state or local sales tax. Alaska has no state sales tax, but allows localities to collect their own sales taxes up to a state-specified maximum.

Many states also levy personal property taxes, which are annual taxes on the privilege of owning or possessing items of personal property within the boundaries of the state. Automobile and boat registration fees are a subset of this tax; however, most people are unaware that practically all personal property is also subject to personal property tax. Usually, household goods are exempt; but virtually all objects of value (including art) are covered, especially when regularly used or stored outside of the taxpayer’s household.

[etc.]

List of taxes

Taxes and fees imposed by federal, state or local laws.

* Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
* U.S. capital gains tax
* Corporate income tax
* U.S. estate tax
* U.S. excise tax (includes taxes on cigarettes and alcoholic beverages)
* U.S. federal income tax

* Federal unemployment tax (FUTA)
* FICA tax (includes Social Security tax and related programs)
* Gasoline tax
* Generation Skipping Tax
* Gift tax
* IRS penalties

* Local income tax
* Luxury taxes
* Property tax
* Real estate tax
* Recreational vehicle tax
* Rental car tax
* Resort tax (also known as Hotel/Motel tax, occupancy tax)
* Road usage taxes (Commercial Vehicle Operators)
* Sales tax and equivalent use tax

* School tax
* State income tax
* State unemployment tax (SUTA)
* Tariffs
* Telephone federal excise tax
* Vehicle sales tax
* Workers compensation tax

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_the_United_States

***

Agency chief reiterates support for public health care option

* Story Highlights
* NEW: Health and Human Services secretary: Absolutely nothing has changed
* Sen. Kent Conrad: Co-ops could cut costs but wouldn’t be chief way of doing so
* Rep. Anthony Weiner, another Dem, calls public option crucial, co-op idea weak
* Lawmakers divided over whether public option has votes to pass in Congress

NEW YORK (CNN) — The Obama administration is not backing away from its support for a public option as part of health care reform, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius stressed Tuesday.
We continue to support the public option, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said.

Here’s the bottom line: Absolutely nothing has changed, she said.

We continue to support the public option. That will help lower costs, give American consumers more choice and keep private insurers honest. If people have other ideas about how to accomplish these goals, we’ll look at those, too. But the public option is a very good way to do this.

She made her remarks during an address at a Medicare conference.

[etc.]

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/08/18/health.care/

***

2009 Congressional and Presidential Transition

[And a lot of other nifty stuff including -]

Topic Collections

[And - ]

4. Food and Drug Administration

Food and Drug Administration: FDA Faces Challenges Meeting Its Growing Medical Product Responsibilities and Should Develop Complete Estimates of Its Resource Needs
GAO-09-581, June 19, 2009

http://www.gao.gov/press/topten.html

[From Summary - ]

Summary

Twenty years ago, GAO reported that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was concerned that it lacked resources to fulfill its mission, which includes oversight of the safety and effectiveness of medical products–human drugs, biologics, and medical devices–marketed for sale in the United States.

Since then, FDA, GAO, and others have raised concerns regarding FDA’s ability to meet its oversight responsibilities. GAO was asked to review the resources supporting FDA’s medical product oversight responsibilities. GAO examined trends in (1) FDA’s funding and staffing resources for its medical product oversight responsibilities from fiscal years 1999 through 2008, and (2) FDA’s medical product oversight responsibilities during this same period.

GAO analyzed FDA data on the agency’s resources and workload, reviewed relevant federal laws, and interviewed FDA officials. GAO also examined more-detailed data on FDA’s fiscal year 2004 through 2008 resources and workload in four key areas, representing a range of FDA’s oversight responsibilities, both before and after a medical product is marketed in the United States.

Funding and staffing resources for FDA’s medical product programs increased between fiscal years 1999 and 2008, primarily as a result of increased user fees paid by industry, which are made available through appropriations acts to support the agency’s processes for reviewing new medical products. Total funding increased from about $562 million in fiscal year 1999 to about $1.2 billion in fiscal year 2008, with user fee funding accounting for more than half of this increase.

[My Note - so the pharmaceutical companies, and medical / health industry and manufacturers have been paying to get these reviews - hmmmm . . . now, isn't that a little cozy relationship?]

(etc.)

http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-581

***

The IMF is on the move, the Federal Reserve suggests they will stand pat although they are busy buying up failed securities in the background, the Boeing pipe dream plane stalls from something else, the FDIC continues to arrange for banks failing to buy banks that have failed and generally the news is that it is all okay now – they must be taking some good drugs or have lead in the water or something –

**
Colonial BancGroup, 4 other banks shut

WASHINGTON — Regulators on Friday shut down Colonial BancGroup Inc., a lender in real estate development, in the biggest U.S. bank failure this year, and also closed four banks in Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

The closures boosted to 77 the number of federally insured banks that have failed in 2009.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. was appointed receiver of the banks: Montgomery, Ala.-based Colonial, with about $25 billion in assets; Community Bank of Arizona, based in Phoenix; Union Bank, based in Gilbert, Ariz.; Community Bank of Nevada, based in Las Vegas; and Dwelling House Savings and Loan Association, located in Pittsburgh.

The FDIC approved the sale of Colonial’s $20 billion in deposits and about $22 billion of its assets to BB&T Corp., which is based in Winston-Salem, N.C. The failed bank’s 346 branches in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Nevada and Texas will reopen at the normal times starting on Saturday as offices of BB&T, the FDIC said.

[etc.]

The failure of Colonial is expected to cost the deposit insurance fund an estimated $2.8 billion.

The 77 bank failures nationwide this year compare with 25 last year and three in 2007.

[ . . . ]

The number of banks on the FDIC’s list of problem institutions leaped to 305 in the first quarter — the highest number since 1994 during the savings and loan crisis — from 252 in the fourth quarter. The FDIC expects U.S. bank failures to cost the insurance fund around $70 billion through 2013.

The May closing of struggling Florida thrift BankUnited FSB is expected to cost the insurance fund $4.9 billion, the second-largest hit since the financial crisis began. The costliest was the July 2008 seizure of big California lender IndyMac Bank, on which the insurance fund is estimated to have lost $10.7 billion.

The largest U.S. bank failure ever also came last year: Seattle-based thrift Washington Mutual Inc. fell in September, with about $307 billion in assets. It was acquired by JPMorgan Chase & Co. for $1.9 billion in a deal brokered by the FDIC.

[ . . . ]

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gg9RS-ZvzlfzrcnujKaEDMXrYyYgD9A323VG0

***

Yeah, obviously the economy is all fixed now . . .

- my note

***

It’s official: Colonial BancGroup fails

Bizjournals.comCrystal Jarvis‎29 minutes ago‎
Colonial BancGroup Inc., the third-largest state-chartered bank with $25 billion in assets, was seized by bank regulators Friday in the largest bank failure in Alabama history.

BB&T CFO: Colonial ‘Strategically And Financially Compelling’

***

And from the bloomberg bunch -

Fed Signals No Rush to Curtail Stimulus as Slump Ends (Update1)

By Scott Lanman

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg)

Sales at U.S. retailers unexpectedly fell 0.1 percent in July as a boost from the cash-for-clunkers automobile incentive program failed to overcome cuts in other spending, Commerce Department figures showed today.

The Fed reiterated the view from its June statement that the economy is “likely to remain weak for a time.” Efforts to revive the economy by the central bank and U.S. government should “contribute to a gradual resumption of sustainable economic growth,” policy makers said.

[ . . ]

“The Fed’s footprint in the $6.8 trillion market of outstanding Treasuries is smaller than in the market for agency mortgage-backed securities, where the central bank is buying $1.25 trillion from a pool of about $5 trillion. A sudden end to the Fed’s purchases of MBS could be especially “problematic” for that market, Dudley said in the interview.”

[etc.]

The commercial real estate industry, under pressure from falling property values and maturing loans, called last month for an extension of the TALF program. Tumbling property values have made it difficult for owners of commercial real estate to refinance $165 billion in mortgages this year.

The FOMC noted yesterday that consumer spending “remains constrained” by job losses, “sluggish income growth, lower housing wealth and tight credit.”

Policy makers “cite a lot of things to suggest we are not on an upward trajectory yet,” said Robert Eisenbeis, a former research director at the Atlanta Fed who’s now chief monetary economist at Cumberland Advisors in Vineland, New Jersey.

To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net; Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: August 13, 2009 11:19 EDT

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ae.3n4bOsQYc

***

My Note -

How does their analysis indicate the “slump ends”? Where do they read that in the numbers? I want to hope for the best, but I’m not going to pretend everything is hunkey-damn-dorey if it isn’t. How is that going to help any?

- my comment

***

http://www.fdic.gov/bank/individual/failed/banklist.html

Failed Bank List



The FDIC is often appointed as receiver for failed banks. This page contains useful information for the customers and vendors of these banks. This includes information on the acquiring bank (if applicable), how your accounts and loans are affected, and how vendors can file claims against the receivership. Failed Financial Institution Contact Search displays point of contact information related to failed banks.

This list includes banks which have failed since October 1, 2000.
// <![CDATA[
document.writeln("
Click arrows next to headers to sort in Ascending or Descending order.
");
// ]]>
Click arrows next to headers to sort in Ascending or Descending order.

Bank Name

City

State

CERT #

Closing Date

Updated Date

Colonial Bank Montgomery AL 9609 August 14, 2009 August 14, 2009
Union Bank, National Association Gilbert AZ 34485 August 14, 2009 August 14, 2009
Community Bank of Nevada Las Vegas NV 34043 August 14, 2009 August 14, 2009
Community Bank of Arizona Phoenix AZ 57645 August 14, 2009 August 14, 2009
Dwelling House Savings and Loan Association Pittsburgh PA 31559 August 14, 2009 August 14, 2009
Community First Bank Prineville OR 23268 August 7, 2009 August 11, 2009
Community National Bank of Sarasota County Venice FL 27183 August 7, 2009 August 11, 2009
First State Bank Sarasota FL 27364 August 7, 2009 August 11, 2009
First State Bank of Altus Altus OK 9873 July 31, 2009 August 10, 2009
Peoples Community Bank West Chester OH 32288 July 31, 2009 August 10, 2009
Integrity Bank Jupiter FL 57604 July 31, 2009 August 5, 2009
Mutual Bank Harvey IL 18659 July 31, 2009 August 10, 2009
First BankAmericano Elizabeth NJ 34270 July 31, 2009 August 10, 2009
Security Bank of Jones County Gray GA 8486 July 24, 2009 July 30, 2009
Waterford Village Bank Williamsville NY 58065 July 24, 2009 August 11, 2009
Security Bank of Houston County Perry GA 27048 July 24, 2009 July 30, 2009
Security Bank of Gwinnett County Suwanee GA 57346 July 24, 2009 July 30, 2009
Security Bank of North Metro Woodstock GA 57105 July 24, 2009 July 30, 2009
Security Bank of North Fulton Alpharetta GA 57430 July 24, 2009 July 30, 2009
Security Bank of Bibb County Macon GA 27367 July 24, 2009 July 30, 2009
First Piedmont Bank Winder GA 34594 July 17, 2009 August 11, 2009
BankFirst Sioux Falls SD 34103 July 17, 2009 July 23, 2009
Vineyard Bank Rancho Cucamonga CA 23556 July 17, 2009 August 11, 2009
Temecula Valley Bank Temecula CA 34341 July 17, 2009 August 11, 2009
Bank of Wyoming Thermopolis WY 22754 July 10, 2009 July 15, 2009
Elizabeth State Bank Elizabeth IL 9262 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
Rock River Bank Oregon IL 15302 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
First National Bank of Danville Danville IL 3644 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
Millennium State Bank of Texas Dallas TX 57667 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
Founders Bank Worth IL 18390 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
John Warner Bank Clinton IL 12093 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
First State Bank of Winchester Winchester IL 11710 July 2, 2009 August 11, 2009
Community Bank of West Georgia Villa Rica GA 57436 June 26, 2009 August 6, 2009
Neighborhood Community Bank Newnan GA 35285 June 26, 2009 August 6, 2009
Horizon Bank Pine City MN 9744 June 26, 2009 August 11, 2009
MetroPacific Bank Irvine CA 57893 June 26, 2009 August 6, 2009
Mirae Bank Los Angeles CA 57332 June 26, 2009 August 11, 2009
Southern Community Bank Fayetteville GA 35251 June 19, 2009 August 6, 2009
Cooperative Bank Wilmington NC 27837 June 19, 2009 August 6, 2009
First National Bank of Anthony Anthony KS 4614 June 19, 2009 August 6, 2009
Bank of Lincolnwood Lincolnwood IL 17309 June 5, 2009 August 6, 2009
Strategic Capital Bank Champaign IL 35175 May 22, 2009 August 6, 2009
Citizens National Bank Macomb IL 5757 May 22, 2009 August 6, 2009
BankUnited, FSB Coral Gables FL 32247 May 21, 2009 August 6, 2009
Westsound Bank Bremerton WA 34843 May 8, 2009 August 6, 2009
Silverton Bank, NA Atlanta GA 26535 May 1, 2009 August 6, 2009
Citizens Community Bank Ridgewood NJ 57563 May 1, 2009 August 6, 2009
America West Bank Layton UT 35461 May 1, 2009 August 6, 2009
American Southern Bank Kennesaw GA 57943 April 24, 2009 August 6, 2009
Michigan Heritage Bank Farmington Hills MI 34369 April 24, 2009 August 6, 2009
First Bank of Beverly Hills Calabasas CA 32069 April 24, 2009 August 6, 2009
First Bank of Idaho Ketchum ID 34396 April 24, 2009 August 6, 2009
American Sterling Bank Sugar Creek MO 8266 April 17, 2009 August 6, 2009
Great Basin Bank of Nevada Elko NV 33824 April 17, 2009 August 6, 2009
Cape Fear Bank Wilmington NC 34639 April 10, 2009 August 6, 2009
New Frontier Bank Greeley CO 34881 April 10, 2009 August 6, 2009
Omni National Bank Atlanta GA 22238 March 27, 2009 August 6, 2009
FirstCity Bank Stockbridge GA 18243 March 20, 2009 August 11, 2009
Colorado National Bank Colorado Springs CO 18896 March 20, 2009 August 6, 2009
TeamBank, NA Paola KS 4754 March 20, 2009 August 6, 2009
Freedom Bank of Georgia Commerce GA 57558 March 6, 2009 August 6, 2009
Security Savings Bank Henderson NV 34820 February 27, 2009 August 6, 2009
Heritage Community Bank Glenwood IL 20078 February 27, 2009 August 6, 2009
Silver Falls Bank Silverton OR 35399 February 20, 2009 August 6, 2009
Sherman County Bank Loup City NE 5431 February 13, 2009 August 6, 2009
Riverside Bank of the Gulf Coast Cape Coral FL 34563 February 13, 2009 August 6, 2009
Corn Belt Bank & Trust Co. Pittsfield IL 16500 February 13, 2009 August 6, 2009
Pinnacle Bank of Oregon Beaverton OR 57342 February 13, 2009 August 6, 2009
FirstBank Financial Services McDonough GA 57017 February 6, 2009 August 6, 2009
Alliance Bank Culver City CA 23124 February 6, 2009 August 6, 2009
County Bank Merced CA 22574 February 6, 2009 August 6, 2009
MagnetBank Salt Lake City UT 58001 January 30, 2009 August 6, 2009
Suburban FSB Crofton MD 30763 January 30, 2009 August 6, 2009
Ocala National Bank Ocala FL 26538 January 30, 2009 August 6, 2009
1st Centennial Bank Redlands CA 33025 January 23, 2009 August 6, 2009
National Bank of Commerce Berkeley IL 19733 January 16, 2009 August 6, 2009
Bank of Clark County Vancouver WA 34959 January 16, 2009 August 6, 2009
Haven Trust Bank Duluth GA 35379 December 12, 2008 August 6, 2009
Sanderson State Bank
En Español
Sanderson TX 11568 December 12, 2008 August 6, 2009
First Georgia Community Bank Jackson GA 34301 December 5, 2008 August 6, 2009
Community Bank Loganville GA 16490 November 21, 2008 August 6, 2009
Downey Savings & Loan Newport Beach CA 30968 November 21, 2008 August 6, 2009
PFF Bank & Trust Pomona CA 28344 November 21, 2008 August 6, 2009
Franklin Bank, SSB Houston TX 26870 November 7, 2008 August 6, 2009
Security Pacific Bank Los Angeles CA 23595 November 7, 2008 August 6, 2009
Freedom Bank Bradenton FL 57930 October 31, 2008 August 11, 2009
Alpha Bank & Trust Alpharetta GA 58241 October 24, 2008 August 11, 2009
Main Street Bank Northville MI 57654 October 10, 2008 August 6, 2009
Meridian Bank Eldred IL 13789 October 10, 2008 August 6, 2009
Washington Mutual Bank FSB Park City UT 32633 September 25, 2008 August 14, 2009
Washington Mutual Bank Henderson NV 32633 September 25, 2008 April 24, 2009
Ameribank Northfork WV 6782 September 19, 2008 August 6, 2009
Silver State Bank
En Español
Henderson NV 34194 September 5, 2008 August 6, 2009
Integrity Bank Alpharetta GA 35469 August 29, 2008 August 6, 2009
Columbian Bank & Trust Topeka KS 22728 August 22, 2008 August 6, 2009
First Priority Bank Bradenton FL 57523 August 1, 2008 August 6, 2009
First National Bank of Nevada Reno NV 27011 July 25, 2008 August 6, 2009
First Heritage Bank, NA Newport Beach CA 57961 July 25, 2008 August 6, 2009
IndyMac Bank Pasadena CA 29730 July 11, 2008 August 6, 2009
First Integrity Bank, NA Staples MN 12736 May 30, 2008 August 6, 2009
ANB Financial, NA Bentonville AR 33901 May 9, 2008 August 6, 2009
Hume Bank Hume MO 1971 March 7, 2008 August 6, 2009
Douglass National Bank Kansas City MO 24660 January 25, 2008 August 6, 2009

***

http://www.fdic.gov/bank/individual/failed/banklist.html

[And found on this page - ]

http://www.fdic.gov/bank/index.html


Research & Analysis
Access FDIC policy research and analysis of regional and national banking trends.

Bank Data & Statistics
Use searchable databases to find information on specific banks, their branches, and the industry.

My Note – But, the best one is over in the right-hand sidebar –

The Statistics on Banking is a quarterly publication that provides detailed aggregate financial information as well as key structural data (number of institutions and branches) for all FDIC-insured institutions.

In addition to standardized reports, a user has the ability to dynamically generate customized reports for analysis. For example, reports can be created that consist of any combination of single institutions or bank holding companies, standard peer groups of institutions, and custom peer groups of institutions and bank holding companies. For further details, please refer to SDI Home above.

Select one from each of the five categories below:

[etc.]

http://www2.fdic.gov/SDI/SOB/

***

It allows a search for all FDIC insured institutions by state and shows assets and liabilities from loans and securities to overall financial health of the institution. I would take it in perspective to the current economic climate but it gives some interesting insights to the overall financial situation of each state’s banking system.

- my note

***

Flaws halt work on Boeing 787 sections
Fri Aug 14, 2009 2:26pm EDT

By Kyle Peterson

CHICAGO (Reuters) – Boeing Co (BA.N) said on Friday an Italian supplier stopped production in June on two sections of its long-delayed 787 Dreamliner after structural flaws were found on fuselages.

[ . . . ]

Flaws were found on 23 airplanes, starting with the seventh in production, Gunter said. She said a solution has been designed and patches will be applied to all the planes built so far.

“They’re continuing to work on the barrels that they have already fabricated,” Gunter said.

“As we implement this change, we are not going to produce any new barrels until there is an engineering change that will keep the subsequent units from needing to be modified,” she said.

The revolutionary carbon-composite 787 airplane has been delayed repeatedly. On June 23, the same day as the Alenia Aeronautica production halt, Boeing announced another delay to the first test flight of the 787.

http://www.reuters.com/article/wtUSInvestingNews/idUSTRE57D1ST20090814

***

Considering things like the above story in the continuing saga of the Boeing pipe dream 787 – even real-time current numbers don’t mean anything is actually assured nor an appropriate projection in the economy / financial sector. – my comment

***

World Bank Development Research Programs

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Permanent URL for this page: http://go.worldbank.org/60DJQTKQC0

***

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Tremont Group Holdings, which lost more than $3 billion investing clients money with Ponzi mastermind Bernard Madoff, is set to auction most of its remaining hedge fund assets in the coming weeks, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

Portfolios recently valued at $420 million, including some hedge fund holdings, will be sold off through an auction managed by investment bank Duff & Phelps, the paper said.

Tremont wants to return as much money as possible to clients in its fund-of-hedge funds business. This unit had a small portion of its client money invested with Madoff, but news of the scandal and Tremont’s exposure last December sparked an exodus by investors.

[etc.]

Madoff feeder Tremont to auction fund assets: report
Fri Aug 14, 2009 4:48pm EDT

http://www.reuters.com/article/innovationNews/idUSTRE57D4LB20090814

Tremont is a unit of customer-owned Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

Tremont Group had invested more than half of its assets with Madoff’s firm, primarily through feeder funds that in turn invested solely with the fraudster.

The fund-of-funds unit, Tremont Capital Management, had $200 million out of a total $3 billion in assets before the Madoff fraud was exposed.

[ . . . ]

As of the second quarter, Tremont holdings included investments with Cerberus Capital Management, GoldenTree Asset Management, Perry Partners and Canyon Capital Advisors, among others.

(from Reuters article above)
(Reporting by Joseph A. Giannone; Editing by Bernard Orr)

http://www.reuters.com/article/innovationNews/idUSTRE57D4LB20090814

***

My Note – maybe they didn’t hear the cable news experts explain how everything is okay now and its back to business as usual based on the end of the slump news from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and other analysts . . .

Don’t they have any way to simply continue telling people how secure it is while gambling away their clients money like the rest of the Wall Street brokers, traders, bankers and hedge fund managers do and have done?

- “as it turns out . . . ” (maybe the name of a new soap opera that uses character references from the elite cream of the crop out of Harvard – since they are so good at knowing more of what works than reality can bear – just a thought.)

- cricketdiane, 08-15-09

***

***
I just made up this title and it is very appropriate -

The IMF is on the move, the Federal Reserve suggests they will stand pat although they are busy buying up failed securities in the background, the Boeing pipe dream plane stalls from something else, the FDIC continues to arrange for banks failing to buy banks that have failed and generally the news is that it is all okay now – they must be taking some good drugs or have lead in the water or something – “

Ah, to be paid as an analyst that has been as wrong as they’ve been and still get paid – no, never mind – that doesn’t work for me – that is a degree of insanity I don’t want to bear even though getting paid even after making critical errors as serious as theirs have been might not be too dire . . .

- cricketdiane, 08-15-09
***
I was going to add some other things I had found but, nah – it can wait until tomorrow, except for this -

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE57D45Z20090814

Space review panel says moon, Mars out of reach
Fri Aug 14, 2009 3:27pm EDT

By Irene Klotz

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) – The U.S. plan to return astronauts to the moon by 2020 will not happen without a big boost in NASA’s budget, leaving only the International Space Station as a viable target for the country’s human space program, according to a presidential review panel.

The Human Space Flight Plans committee, which presented its preliminary findings to the White House on Friday, concluded that a human mission to Mars currently would be too risky.

Developing new spaceships to replace the retiring space shuttle fleet and bigger rockets to reach the moon would require about $3 billion more per year, the panel headed by former Lockheed Martin chief Norm Augustine said.

[ . . .]

The committee said the new U.S. exploration initiative — aimed at landing astronauts on the moon by 2020 — is doomed because its 10-year, $108 billion budget has been shaved by about $30 billion.

“We can’t do this program in this budget,” said panel member Sally Ride, a former astronaut. “This budget is simply not friendly to exploration.”

[ . . . ]

The only human space program affordable under NASA’s existing budget is an enhanced space station, one that has a side benefit of seeding a commercial passenger-launch services market, said the panel, which completed a series of public meetings this week.

[etc.]

NASA currently has no funding in place after 2015 for the space station, a $100 billion project of 16 nations.

Construction of the station is scheduled to be finished next year after seven more flights of the space shuttle, which orbits 225 miles above the planet.

After the shuttles are retired, NASA plans to pay Russia to transport crews to the station. The panel’s recommendations include adding $2.5 billion into NASA’s budget between 2011 and 2014 for commercial launch services to the space station.

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE57D45Z20090814

***

So after everybody including China is on their way to manned mission to the moon and other space program missions – here we sit -

***

USA Health Care is number one – who told you that?

My Note -

The health care reform debate so far has been like having the makers of nuclear bombs at the table for disarmament talks – for understandable reasons – they will do all they can to undermine the success of those talks.

With the health care industry more dangerous than heart disease and cancer put together in the number of preventable deaths that are a direct result of their misogyny, incompetence, barbaric practices, profiteering, and mishandling of knowledge and expertise, who needs an enemy?

When we have beheld a common enemy, the citizens of the United States have joined to problem solve and correct the most intolerable and inhumane situations that have been instigated by the powerful, the corrupt, the overbearing, the perverse, the tyrannical, the unconscionable, and by those who would profiteer at the exceptional expense of all. We have stopped them. We have meted out justice to them and we have corrected their twisted concepts of how the world works.

When are we going to do that for these conservative right-wing corporate monstrosities that have been running our country and our lives into the ground for over a quarter of a century at the hands of their perverted reasoning and immoral application of the universal principles founding our nation?

While deeming themselves qualified to judge every last element of American life from sexuality and normalcy to acceptable uses of time and daylight and money, based on some picture show from the 1930′s glamorized by Hollywood’s elite, these monsters of the business community, right-wing politics, Christian fundamentalism, conservative Republican re-interpreters of freedom and democracy have managed to destroy just about everything they touched.

And so it goes and they still want more and more and more and more and more. When did they ever consider that they were above washing their own dishes and wiping their own asses or that they had the right to use all the resources we have put into our collective good as their own private party slush funds to serve them and no one else?

They certainly don’t mind the word socialism when it comes to covering the business losses from their extreme gambling addictions gone bad in the stock market, in bad corporate decisions to leverage against every last dollar or dime the corporation might make over the next twenty years or on the level of any number of other stupid financial gambling practices. Then, its our money to the rescue and not one Republican nor conservative excuse for a human being says that they shouldn’t be doing that with the taxpayers money more than a weak and playful, “oh, don’t do that . . . “ in the way a little kid would say it with a smirk on their face and a twinkle in their eyes.

That private party group of conservatives and right-wing business leadership needs a deluxe room out of town without a cellphone or a computer and no access to taxpayers money for awhile where they can re-evaluate their views of reality without anybody telling them what to think or how to think about it or what it means. And, that’s the truth.

- cricketdiane, 08-14-09

***

[and to repeat from my last post - ]

Excuse me but, the health industry as we currently have it – has killed more people and maimed more people than the devil himself.

The refusal to find a way to offer reasonable costs for health care has resulted in more inhumane cruelties than many wars that have been fought.

Health care, good care, good health and quality of life research wasn’t paid for by a few Christian fundamentalists or conservative talk show hosts or Republican business people – We, as American taxpayers covered the costs of that research, those breakthroughs, and that knowledge.

When did we decide that access to those tax funded benefits to society belonged only to a meager few who deemed themselves and their families more worthy of that care than the rest of us?

- cricketdiane

***

[And from the article in the Guardian UK which started my look at the ideas]

‘Evil and Orwellian’ – America’s right turns its fire on NHS

Datablog: How does the NHS compare to US healthcare?

guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 11 August 2009 21.00 BST

Andrew Clark in New York

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/11/nhs-united-states-republican-health

The National Health Service has become the butt of increasingly outlandish political attacks in the US as Republicans and conservative campaigners rail against Britain’s “socialist” system as part of a tussle to defeat Barack Obama’s proposals for broader government involvement in healthcare.

[ . . . ]

Slickly produced television advertisements trumpet the alleged failures of the NHS’s 61-year tradition of tax-funded healthcare. To the dismay of British healthcare professionals, US critics have accused the service of putting an “Orwellian” financial cap on the value on human life, of allowing elderly people to die untreated and, in one case, for driving a despairing dental patient to mend his teeth with superglue.

[ . . . ]

The degree of misinformation is causing dismay in NHS circles. Andrew Dillon, chief executive of the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice), pointed out that it was utterly false that Kennedy would be left untreated in Britain: “It is neither true nor is it anything you could extrapolate from anything we’ve ever recommended to the NHS.”

Others in the US have accused Obama of trying to set up “death panels” to decide who should live and who should die, along the lines of Nice, which determines the cost-effectiveness of NHS drugs.

One right-leaning group, Conservatives for Patients’ Rights, lists horror stories about British care on its website. An email widely circulated among US voters, of uncertain origin, claims that anyone over 59 in Britain is ineligible for treatment for heart disease.

[ etc.]

A $1.2m television advertising campaign bankrolled by the conservative Club for Growth displays images of the union flag and Big Ben while intoning a figure of $22,750. A voiceover says: “In England, government health officials have decided that’s how much six months of life is worth. If a medical treatment costs more, you’re out of luck.”

The number is based on a ratio of £30,000 a year used by Nice in its assessment of whether drugs provide value for money. Dillon said this was one of many variables in determining cost-effectiveness of medicines. He said of his body’s portrayal in the US: “It’s very disappointing and it’s not, obviously, the way in which Nice describes itself or the way in which we’re perceived in the UK even among those who are disappointed or upset by our decisions.”

The broader tone of the US healthcare debate has become increasingly bitter. The former vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin last week described president Obama’s proposals as “evil”, while the radio presenter Rush Limbaugh has compared a logo used for the White House’s reform plans to a Nazi swastika. Hecklers have disrupted town hall meetings called to discuss the health reform plans.

[ . . . ]

Defenders of Britain’s system point out that the UK spends less per head on healthcare but has a higher life expectancy than the US. The World Health Organisation ranks Britain’s healthcare as 18th in the world, while the US is in 37th place. The British Medical Association said a majority of Britain’s doctors have consistently supported public provision of healthcare. A spokeswoman said the association’s 140,000 members were skeptical about the US approach to medicine: “Doctors and the public here are appalled that there are so many people on the US who don’t have proper access to healthcare. It’s something we would find very, very shocking.”

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/11/nhs-united-states-republican-health

Now there are 923 comments – the first 715 included many personal stories of how people in the UK have experienced their health care system and some comments of people who have a range of experience with both the US, Canadian and UK systems of health care.

It is well worth reading through at least the numerous comments that reflect those experiences to know about it instead of repeating whatever came in some anonymous email rounded through fifty “forwarded to” addresses from who knows where . . .

- my note

***

My point is this -

Where people are actually discussing and relating their experiences with the health care system in the UK that is known to be socialized medical care, it is upfront about its frame of reference and where it has originated. These experiences can be considered as we work to change what is plainly broken in our health care system. Maybe some parts of these international systems can be used to make our decisions about what we want to have available to our nation and to every citizen in the way of health care and medical costs.

At least we could take an intelligent look at some of what works and what doesn’t – I mean, really – what do we want to live with for the near future as well as fifty years from now? Just remember that whatever is done will be undone before anyone can derive any benefit from it – that is how American politics of aristocratic right-wing business interests works. They claim it is free market capitalism, but in fact it isn’t because it excludes any and all from competing with them on a level playing field. That is just as they want it. And they will remake it into that at every turn, no matter what changes.

- cricketdiane, Cricket House Studios, 2009

***

Since socialized medical systems are kicking our butts in offering quality of care at a reasonable cost, it doesn’t mean that socialized medicine is the only way to do that. It does mean that we need to improve what we are doing to a huge extent. And that is a fact.

***
In rushing health-care reform, Obama has pushed democracy to the side – National Review Online – August 12

In the last few weeks, the debate over health care has taken an angry and contentious turn by any standard. Town-hall meetings and public rallies, not known for their docile tenor under normal circumstances, have been punctuated by unusually spirited opposition to Democrat proposals for sweeping reform. What began as a few isolated outbursts of [...]

Click to continue reading “In rushing health-care reform, Obama has pushed democracy to the side – National Review Online – August 12?
August 12th, 2009 | Category: Bible, Current Headlines, News, Prophecy, Religion | Leave a comment

(Note from Jan)

Our radio programming from August 8 is now posted at the link below. Guests include Caryl Matrisciana with her new film emphasizing Islamic infiltration into government and other high places. This is a silent jihad. Also, Jack Alnor cautions about some of today’s televangelists who are “fleecing” Christianity. Hear the disturbing sound bytes:

http://www.olivetreeviews.org/radio/mp3/

For podcasting information, [...]

Click to continue reading “(Note from Jan)”
August 12th, 2009 | Category: Bible, Current Headlines, News, Prophecy, Religion | Leave a comment

States Cut Aid to College Students as Demand Booms

Struggling with budget shortfalls that reach into the billions, several states are making deep cuts in college financial aid programs, including those that provide a vital source of cash for students who most need the money.

Click to continue reading “States Cut Aid to College Students as Demand Booms”
August 12th, 2009 | Tags: CNSNews | Category: Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The White House deal with Big Pharma undermines democracy

Aug. 10, 2009 | I’m a strong supporter of universal health insurance, and a fan of the Obama administration. But I’m appalled by the deal the White House has made with the pharmaceutical industry’s lobbying arm to buy their support.Last week, after bei…

Click to continue reading “The White House deal with Big Pharma undermines democracy”
August 12th, 2009 | Tags: Eagle Forum | Category: drug companies, health care refrom | Leave a comment

http://news.aberean.org/page/8

***

[And from the fact that the above Berean Bible Ministries site is one of many who are repeating the things from here - ]

http://www.christiannewswire.com/index.php?module=content&SectionID=2

The following use Christian Newswire to distribute their press releases.

Journalists in search of a particular news source are encouraged to visit their website. If you are unable to reach them through their website or if your deadline is quickly approaching, please call us at 202-546-0054 and we will provide you with their contact numbers.

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LifeTogether

Living Faith Christian Center

Loving You Ministries

Luis Palau Association

Marty Angelo Ministries

Mission Increase Foundation

Mission Solano

MOTE, Inc.

National Association of Evangelicals

National Day of Prayer

NeedHim Ministries

Neighborhood Church of Castro Valley

New Destiny Christian Center

New Life Church

NorthRidge Church

Novem Group Professional Coaching

Operation Renewed Hope

Operations Stephen’s Touch

Our Savior Lutheran Church

Pastor Miles McPherson

Paths Apart Productions

Paul Vieira

Paula White

Pennsylvania Pastors Network

PeoplePray.com

Prayer Central

PrayLive

Presbyterian Global Fellowship

Put God First Ministry

Rabbi Yehuda Levin

Rancho Bernardo Baptist Church

Reasons to Believe

Rest Ministries – HopeKeepers

Rev. Jerone Davison

Revival Town Ministries

Saddleback Church / Pastor Rick Warren

Set Free Indeed

Step By Step Ministries

T.D. Jakes Ministry Center / The Potter’s House

TechMission

Terry McIntosh Ministries, Inc.

The Freedom Team Prison Ministry

Trinity Chapel

Trinity Evangelical Free Church

Troops Need You

U. S. Capitol Bible Reading Marathon

Urban Prophet Ministries

Vineyard Christian Fellowship Boise

Vision Forum Ministries

visionSynergy

Voice in the Wilderness Ministries

Willow Creek Association

Without Walls International Church

Women of Faith

Word of Faith International Christian Center

World Missions Atlas Project

Music

A.M.TuneShop

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Capital Entertainment

Cheryl Peach

Christian Country Music Association

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Cross Movement Records

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Faith:REFINED

Gospel Music Channel

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Inspirational Country Music Awards

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TMinistries

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one2believe

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Tennessee Right to Life

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Public Relations

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Manning Selvage & Lee

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Max Borges Agency

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Minkus & Pearlman Public Relations

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Net Media Consultants

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repHIM.com

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SS+K

Strategic Internet Campaign Management, Inc.

Strictly Media

TC Public Relations

The B&B Media Group

The Catholic Company

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The Resource Agency

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TLW Public Relations

Trinity Road

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WDC Media

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Worldlink Media Consultants

Wragg & Casas

Publishing

Affirming Faith

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Anvil Publishers, Inc.

B&H Publishing Group

Baker Publishing Group

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BibleRhymes

Carrington Steele, Inc.

Cedar House Publishers

Church Executive

Crossway Books & Bibles

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D & K Publishing

Dominion Global Publishing

DotW

Dr. Pat M. Boone

Edwina Patterson / Redeeming the Time

El Paseo Publications

Elim Publishing

Encounter Books

EZRA Publications, Inc.

Faith Comes By Hearing

Faith-Based Solutions

FluidGenius.com

Fourth Day Press

Front Yard Press

Good Counsel Publications

Grupo Nelson

Hampton Roads Publishing

Harper Collins Publishers

HarperOne

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HisWillBeDone Productions

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Infinity Publishing

JAARS: Partners in Bible Translation

Jeannie Keneley

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Julian Publishing Group

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Logos Bible Software

Loneliness Defeated

New Engel Publishing

Olive Tree Ministries

One Way Cafe Press

Parsons Publishing House

PrayerShop Publishing

PublishAmerica

Regnery Publishing

RELEVANT Media Group

Remnant Publications

Rev. CJ Conner

Revival Nation Publishing

SelectiveHouse Publishers

SharedBook Inc.

SIL International

Simon & Schuster / Pocket Books

Solving Light Books

The Fellowship of St. James Publishing

The Writers Cafe Press

Thomas Nelson Publishers

Tree of Life Publishing

Values-Driven Family

VERVE Christian Publishing

Virgo Publishing

WaterBrook Press /Random House

WinePress Publishing

Wisdom’s Gate

WND Books

WordVerse

Writing for the Lord Ministries

Xlibris

Xulon Press

Your Daily Inspiring Word

Relief Organizations

Advocates For The Persecuted

Ambassadors For Peace

American Coptic Union

B’nai B’rith International

Bridge Ministries

Charity Navigators

Christian Solidarity Worldwide

Compassion International

Cure International

Empty Tomb, Inc.

Ephesus Saints, Inc.

Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity

Geneva Global

Genocide Intervention Network

Global Fast

India Partners

International Aid

Joy Junction

King Benevolent Fund

Lighthouse Missions

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service

Lutheran World Relief

Lynn and Foster Friess Family Foundation

Mercy Corps

One to One International

Pontifical Mission Societies

Save Darfur Coalition

Society of St. Vincent de Paul

Soles4Souls

The Compassionate Friends/USA

World Relief

World Vision

WorldServe Ministries

Sports

ESPN

FaithFitness Coaching

***

[And then, I started looking at what was coming from some of these places - ]

Westchester Institute
http://www.westchesterinstitute.net/

The Westchester Institute for Ethics and the Human Person

Recently Added

* Is There a Right to Healthcare?
* Obamacare and Conscience Protections in Healthcare
* Obamacare and Abortion
* A Disturbing Finding on the Abortion Front
* The New Guidelines for Stem Cell Research
* Ideology-Free Science?

“While we’re at it…”
July 21, 2009 9:00 am EST

The Westchester Institute’s new blog, While we’re at it… is now online.
A blog by the Fellows of the Westchester Institute for Ethics & the Human Person, dedicated to enriching the quality of contemporary moral discourse, and fostering sound prudential judgment in cultural and political matters.

Visit our blog by clicking here

Father Thomas Berg, LC
Is There a Right to Healthcare?

Sorting out a complex issue

By Father Thomas Berg

August 11, 2009
9:00 am EST

In a provocative op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal in late July, Theodore Dalrymple (the pen name of British physician Anthony Daniels) argued that there simply is no such thing as a fundamental right to healthcare. “Where does the right to health care come from?” asked Dalrymple. “Did it exist in, say, 250 B.C., or in A.D. 1750? If it did, how was it that our ancestors, who were no less intelligent than we, failed completely to notice it?”

…read more>

My Note – so I went and read what he had to say – which included this -

“So what about a fundamental human right to adequate healthcare? On that count, the U.S. Catholic bishops have been firm believers for decades. In a 1993 resolution on health care reform titled “A Framework for Comprehensive Health Care Reform” the bishops wrote:”

“Our approach to health care is shaped by a simple but fundamental principle: every person has a right to adequate health care. This right flows from the sanctity of human life and the dignity that belongs to all human persons, who are made in the image of God.”

The statement goes on to explain that the existence of this right was already affirmed in Pope John XXIII’s 1963 encyclical Pacem in Terris which reads:

Man has the right to live. He has the right to bodily integrity and to the means necessary for the proper development of life, particularly food, clothing, shelter, medical care, rest, and, finally, the necessary social services. In consequence, he has the right to be looked after in the event of ill-health… (n.11).

My Note -

But then, Father whatever used these statements to decry and denounce any “fundamental right to health care” in a twisted and perverse intellectual argument which is exactly the opposite of what these authorities said.

And then, I watched on CNN last night as Lou Dobbs repeated the same bull about there being no fundamental right to health care as if that were some basic sensible, moral Christian principle. Did he even check where any of that nonsense had been influenced or had originated and why those people would believe that way? – cricketdiane

***

National Review OnlineRead Father Thomas’s articles
on National Review Online:
http://www.westchesterinstitute.net/

“Theodore Dalrymple (the pen name of British physician Anthony Daniels)”

Anthony Daniels (psychiatrist)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anthony (A.M.) Daniels (born 1949) is a British writer and retired physician (prison doctor and psychiatrist), who generally uses the pen name Theodore Dalrymple. He has also used the pen name Edward Theberton[1] and two other pen names.[2] Before his retirement in 2005 he worked as a doctor and psychiatrist in a hospital and nearby prison in a slum area in Birmingham. His philosophical position is compassionate conservative .[3] He is a critic of liberal thinking and utopian thinking in general.

Life

Daniels has revealed in his writing that his father was a Communist businessman, while his Jewish mother was born in Germany and came to the United Kingdom as a refugee from the Nazi regime.[4]

“Daniels does not baulk at the use of the concept of evil. Numerous articles of his have evil in the title.” – found below

In 2005 he retired from England to move (with his wife) to France, where he plans to continue writing. His columns frequently appear in The Spectator as well as in City Journal, a magazine published by the Manhattan Institute.

He has worked in Zimbabwe (then known as Rhodesia), Tanzania, South Africa, Kiribati, the east end of London and central Birmingham (UK), amongst other places.
Regarding his pseudonym Theodore Dalrymple, Daniels says he chose a name that sounded suitably dyspeptic, that of a gouty old man looking out of the window of his London club, port in hand, lamenting the degenerating state of the world. [2]

Writing

Daniels has written extensively on culture, art, politics, education and medicine drawing upon his experience as a doctor and psychiatrist in Zimbabwe and Tanzania, and more recently at a prison and a public hospital in Birmingham, in central England. He has travelled to many countries in Africa, South America, Eastern Europe, and elsewhere.

In his commentary, Daniels frequently argues that the so-called progressive views prevalent within Western intellectual circles minimize the responsibility of individuals for their own actions and undermine traditional mores, contributing to the formation within rich countries of an underclass afflicted by endemic violence, criminality, sexually transmitted diseases, welfare dependency, and drug abuse.

He contends that the middle class abandonment of traditional cultural and behavioural aspirations has, by example, fostered routine incivility and ignorance among the poor. Although he is occasionally accused of being a pessimist and misanthrope, his defenders praise his persistently conservative philosophy, which they describe as being anti-ideological, sceptical, rational and empiricist.

Themes

Daniels’ writing has some recurring themes.[5]

* The cause of much contemporary misery in Western countries – criminality, domestic violence, drug addiction, aggressive youths, hooliganism, broken families – is the nihilistic, decadent and/or self-destructive behaviour of people who do not know how to live. Both the smoothing over of this behaviour, and the medicalization of the problems that emerge as a corollary of this behaviour, are forms of indifference. Someone has to tell those people, patiently and with understanding for the particulars of the case, that they have to live differently.[6]
* Poverty does not explain aggressive, criminal and self-destructive behaviour. In an African slum you will find among the very poor, living in dreadful circumstances, dignity and decency in abundance, which are painfully lacking in an average English suburb, although its inhabitants are much wealthier.[7]
* An attitude characterized by ‘gratefulness’ and ‘obligations towards others’ has been replaced, with awful consequences, by an awareness of rights, a sense of entitlement. The result is resentment as, naturally, those rights are violated by parents, authorities, bureaucracies and others in general.[8]
* Technocratic or bureaucratic solutions to the problems of mankind produce disasters in cases where the nature of man is the root cause of those problems.
* One of the things that makes Islam attractive to young westernized Muslim men, is the opportunity it gives them to dominate women.[9]
* It is a myth (its name is: cold turkey) that withdrawal symptoms of an opiate addiction (i.e. heroin) are virtually unbearable. It is hardly worse than flu.[10][11]
* Criminality is much more often the cause of drug addiction than its consequence.
* The ideology of the welfare state is used to diminish personal responsibility. Erosion of personal responsibility makes people dependent on institutions and favours the existence of a threatening and vulnerable underclass.
* Moral relativism can easily be a trick of an egotistical mind to silence the voice of conscience.[12]
* Multiculturalism and cultural relativism are at odds with common sense and statistical evidence.[13]
* The decline of civilised behaviour, such as: self-restraint, modesty, zeal, humility, irony, detachment, is a disaster for social and personal life.[14]
* The root cause of our contemporary cultural poverty is intellectual dishonesty. First, the intellectuals have destroyed the foundation of culture, and second, they refuse to acknowledge it by resorting to the caves of political correctness.
* Beyond and above all other nations in the world, Britain is the place where all the evils summarized above are most clearly manifest.[15]

References

1. ^ Website Skeptical Doctor. For an example of an article written by Edward Theberton, see: Black Marx (The Spectator, 5 juli 1986). The characteristic opening sentence of the article reads: If the people of Mozambique could eat slogans, they would be fat.
2. ^ a b Theodore Dalrymple. Where nobody knows your name. (Globe and Mail, Feb. 16, 2008).
3. ^ Profile published in the New York Sun, 2004.
4. ^ It was not a happy marriage; Daniels characterised his parents as having chose[n] to live in the most abject conflictual misery and created for themselves a kind of Hell on a small domestic scale . In his essay ‘What we have to lose’, in: Our Culture What’s Left of It, p. 158, Anthony Daniels wrote: (…) my mother was a refugee from Nazi Germany (…) She had left Germany when she was seventeen (…) .
5. ^ A good number of Daniels’ themes are discussed in the interview by Paul Belien with Daniels: ‘Dalrymple on Decadence, Europe, America and Islam’, in: The Brussels Journal, the Voice of Conservatism in Europe, 17 September 2006.
6. ^ Life at the bottom. The Worldview that makes the Underclass (passim).
7. ^ What is Poverty, City Journal, spring 1999.
8. ^ ‘The Law of Conservation of Righteous Indignation, and its Connection to the Expansion of Human Rights’, in: In Praise of Prejudice. The Necessity of Preconceived Ideas, p. 68 (chapter 17).
9. ^ When Islam Breaks Down, City Journal, Spring 2004.
10. ^ Cold turkey is no worse than flu New Statesman, 09 April 1999. See also: Romancing Opiates (passim).
11. ^ Addicted to lies: junking heroin is no worse than flu.
12. ^ ‘The Uses of Metaphysical Skepticism’, in: In Praise of Prejudice. The Necessity of Preconceived Ideas, p. 6 (chapter 2).
13. ^ Multiculturalism Starts Losing its Luster, City Journal, summer 2004.
14. ^ All our Pomp of Yesterday, City Journal, summer 1999.
15. ^ Not with a Bang but a Whimper (passim). Daniels does not baulk at the use of the concept of evil. Numerous articles of his have evil in the title.

Works

* Coups and Cocaine: Two Journeys in South America (1986)
* Fool or Physician: The Memoirs of a Sceptical Doctor (1987)
* Zanzibar to Timbuktu (1988)
* Sweet Waist of America: Journeys around Guatemala (1990)
* The Wilder Shores of Marx: Journeys in a Vanishing World (1991) (published in the U.S. as Utopias Elsewhere)
* Monrovia Mon Amour: A Visit to Liberia (1992)
* If Symptoms Persist: Anecdotes from a Doctor (1994)
* So Little Done: The Testament of a Serial Killer (1996)
* If Symptoms Still Persist (1996)
* Mass Listeria: The Meaning of Health Scares (1998)
* An Intelligent Person’s Guide to Medicine (2001)
* Life at the Bottom: The Worldview That Makes the Underclass (2001) ISBN 1566633826
* Violence, Disorder and Incivility in British Hospitals: The Case for Zero Tolerance (2002) ISBN 0907631975
* Our Culture, What’s Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses (2005) ISBN 1566636434
* Romancing Opiates: Pharmacological Lies And The Addiction Bureaucracy (2006) ISBN 1594030871 (published in the U.K. as Junk Medicine: Doctors, Lies and the Addiction Bureaucracy ISBN 1905641591)
* Making Bad Decisions. About the Way we Think of Social Problems (2006) (Dr. J. Tans Lecture 2006; published by Studium Generale Maastricht, The Netherlands. Lecture read on Wednesday 15 November 2006. ISBN 9789078769019)
* In Praise of Prejudice: The Necessity of Preconceived Ideas (2007) ISBN 1594032025
* Not With a Bang But a Whimper: The Politics and Culture of Decline (2008) ISBN 1566637953
* Second Opinion. A Doctor’s Notes from the Inner City (2009) ISBN 9781906308124

External links
Search Wikiquote Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Anthony Daniels (psychiatrist)

* The Skeptical Doctor (detailed biography, links to current writings, book reviews, speeches and interviews)
* Compassionate Conservative (profile published in the New York Sun, 2004)
* An interview with Theodore Dalrymple
* Diagnosis: decadence
* Violence, Disorder and Incivility in British Hospitals: The Case For Zero Tolerance (book published by the Social Affairs Unit, 2002)
[edit] Articles

* City Journal Articles by Theodore Dalrymple
* The Social Affairs Unit Articles by Theodore Dalrymple
* New English Review Articles by Theodore Dalrymple
* Spectator articles by Theodore Dalrymple
* Standpoint Articles by Anthony Daniels

Reviews

* Book review by Arthur Foulkes of Life at the Bottom
* Book review: Our Culture, What’s Left of It
* Lecture Review: Making Bad Decisions, About the way we think of social problems by Danya Chaikel for Crossroads. Lecture given in Maastricht, the Netherlands on 15 November 2006.

Multimedia

* An interview with Theodore Dalrymple about modern society for Dutch public television (video ca. 40 minutes)
* Audio podcast interview (.mp3 file, 24.1 MB, 52 min. 34 sec.) on CBC Ideas with Theodore Dalrymple by Paul Kennedy (< site: podcast.cbc.ca)
* Audio podcast interview (.mp3 file, 24.1 MB, 52 min. 34 sec.) on CBC Ideas with Theodore Dalrymple by Paul Kennedy (< site: goodreads.ca)

Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Daniels_(psychiatrist)
Categories: 1949 births | Living people | British conservatives | British political writers | English atheists | English psychiatrists | British psychiatrists | English journalists | English travel writers

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Daniels_(psychiatrist)

Scholars Forum

Robert GeorgeThe Scholars Forum moderated by Dr. Robert George, brings together a selection of the world’s leading ethicists, moral theologians, scientists and scholars from related fields to work together toward resolving some of the most difficult moral questions facing mankind. These invitation-only gatherings are designed to foster the highest degree of sustained and fruitful dialogue among those scholars most competent to resolve the ethical questions under discussion.

To date, the Westchester Institute has hosted seven such gatherings. To learn more about each Scholars Forum, please select the following links.

November 6-7, 2008
The Church’s Competence in Applying the Norms of Natural Law

April 10-11, 2008
When do we Die? Brain Death, Irreversible Circulatory Cessation, and the Debate over the End of Life.

May 16 – 18, 2007
On the Criteria for Determining the Totipotency of the Human Embryo

October 26 – 27, 2006
On De Facto Unions and Same Sex Marriage

March 2 – 3, 2006
On the Definition of ‘Human Embryo’ and the Criteria for Distinguishing the Human Embryo From Non-Embryonic Entities

November 3 -4, 2005
On the Morality of Condom use to Prevent the Spread of HIV

April 28 -29, 2005
On the Morality of Altered Nuclear Transfer

October 28-29, 2004
On the Morality of Heterologous Embryo Transfer

http://www.westchesterinstitute.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=193&Itemid=30

***

My Note -

It looks like there are a lot people who have been deciding to judge when life ends and the value of continued services to the elderly – there sits the actual “death panel” that Sarah Palin is fond of calling to the attention of the seniors citizens in America.

She neglected to mention that there were such people behind the scenes in the insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, Christian fundamental moralists, academic circles, big business statistics and demographics marketing executives and among the right-wing conservative Republican Party leadership who have already been making those decisions for all of us.

***