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Hans De Keulenaer

Emirates International Investment Company reveals ambitious Dhs1.8bn plan to establish ... - 0 views

  • As part of its strategy to broaden its international presence and develop its business units, the Emirates International Investment Company (EIIC) has announced ambitious plans to build six hi-tech factories in the UAE, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), Algeria, Romania and Vietnam, at a value of Dhs1.8bn.
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    Emirates International Investment Company reveals ambitious Dhs1.8bn plan to establish six hi-tech cable factories globally
Sergio Ferreira

The Gyroscopic Electric Uno Bike - 0 views

  • The gyro tells the ECU how much to accelerate and that in turn delivers the proper amount of current to the electric motors, one for each wheel.
Wade Ren

Demographic projections and trade implications - 0 views

  •   To summarize the raw numbers, China’s population is expected to grow from 1.32 billion today to 1.46 billion in 2030, after which it will decline slowly, to around 1.42 billion in 2050.  Its working population is currently around 840 million.  This component of the population will rise in the next ten years to around 910 million and then will decline quite rapidly to around 790 million by 2050.
  • The graph below shows the composition of China’s population by age group.  Needless to say the most dramatic change is the explosive growth of the over-65 population, followed by the decline in the share of the young.  Another way of understanding this is to note that China’s median age basically climbs over this period from 24 to 45 (which, by the way, may have favorable consequence for long-term political stability).
  • I don’t have the figures yet from before 1990, but looking at other sources I would guess that China’s working population grew by about 2% or more annually during the 1970s and 1980s.  In the 1990s, as the table indicates, the growth rate of the working population slowed to 1.72%, declining further in the current decade to around 1.42% on average.  The number of working Chinese keeps growing until around the middle of the next decade, and then begins to decline by about half a percent a year.
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  • All this has important implications both for nominal growth rates and per capita growth rates in the next few decades.  For one thing, a country’s GDP growth rate can be expressed as a factor of the growth rate of its working population and the growth rate of average productivity per worker.  As the growth rate of the working population swings from positive to negative – by a little more than 2%, depending on what periods you compare – this will have a commensurate impact on Chinese GDP growth rates, i.e. all other things being equal (which of course they are not).  China’s equilibrium growth rate should be about 2% lower than the equilibrium growth rate of the past two or three decades.
  •  This implies that over the last three decades China has had a demographic bias towards trade surpluses (working population, a proxy for production, grew faster than total population, a proxy for consumption), but over the next three decades it is likely to have a demographic bias towards trade deficits.  
  • Three years ago I argued in a Wall Street Journal OpEd piece that because of the aging and declining populations of Europe and Japan (and to a lesser extent China and Russia), compared to the growing population and relatively stable age distribution in the US, it was not unreasonable for the former countries to run large current account surpluses with the US since they would need the accumulated claims against the US to pay for the current account deficits they would need to run to manage their demographic adjustments.  This is why I have never been terribly worried about the sustainability of the US trade deficit.  In the next decade it is likely that demographic changes will create pressures to reverse those US trade deficits.
Colin Bennett

Could Robots Recycle For Us? | EcoGeek - 0 views

  • We all recycle...when it's convenient. But there are a ton of inefficiencies in the recycling process.
Glycon Garcia

ENN: Climate change 'will cost Andes US$30 billion' - 0 views

shared by Glycon Garcia on 23 May 08 - Cached
  • Climate change could cost Andean countries US$30 billion per year by 2025, according to a study.The study was commissioned by the Andean Community of Nations and carried out by the Peruvian University of the Pacific, with the support of specialists from Bolivia, Colombia and Ecuador.
Sergio Ferreira

Berlusconi returning to nuclear energy - 0 views

  • A return to nuclear power can no longer be avoided…only nuclear power plants allow for the large scale production of energy, in a safe way and at competitive costs while respecting the environment
Sergio Ferreira

European Nuclear Energy Forum mtg in Prague - 0 views

  • European Nuclear Energy Forum benefits from an increasing interest from the EU Member States' governments, many Members of the European Parliament representing different political groups, the Economic and Social Committee, and main actors from the nuclear industry, power utilities, energy intensive consumers, finance sector and civil society.
Hans De Keulenaer

New High-Capacity Electricity Conductor Regarded As Most Technologically Significant Pr... - 0 views

  • BC Transmission Corporation (BCTC), the transmission system operator for the province of British Columbia, is the first Canadian utility to install 3M’s light-weight, high-capacity electricity conductor, 3M Aluminum Conductor Composite Reinforced (ACCR). 3M ACCR can carry twice the current of conventional steel-core conductors of the same diameter, without requiring larger towers, even across long spans.
Glycon Garcia

ENN: Pioneers show Americans how to live "off-grid" - 0 views

shared by Glycon Garcia on 26 May 08 - Cached
  • BISBEE, Ariz (Reuters) - With energy prices going through the roof, an alternative lifestyle powered by solar panels and wind turbines has suddenly become more appealing to some. For architect Todd Bogatay, it has been reality for years.
Glycon Garcia

Energias Alternativas e Renováveis: Brasil pode ser grande exportador de pain... - 0 views

  • A riqueza de recursos naturais no Brasil pode fazer do país um grande exportador de painéis solares. É o que acredita Hamilton Moss, do Centro de Pesquisas em Energia Elétrica (Cepel). Segundo ele, o grande gargalo da indústria de painéis solares atualmente é o fornecimento de silício, matéria-prima utilizada na fabricação das placas.
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    Brazil could be a big exporter for solar painels as the bigger producer of silicon in the world.
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    This is something to monitor as it could be a significant development for the region.
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    Colin, you are right. It could be important for Brazil and the region in the near future.
Jon Barnes

China's Appetite for Copper is Undiminshed - 0 views

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    Chinese copper and copper alloy semis production has continued to surge in the first quarter of 2008 according to the Chinese National Bureau of Statistics. Production expanded by 24.6% year-on-year to 1.787 million tonnes compared to 1.432 million tonnes in the same period of 2007. Production in March totalled 643,000 tonnes a 15.9% rise from the 555,000 tonnes of copper semis manufactured in the same month of 2007. Total production last year was 6.626 million tonnes. The latest numbers demonstrate China's growing appetite for both refined and scrap copper even at extremely high price levels. However, recent reports suggest that the rate of growth will moderate in April.
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    Copper semis production still growing strongly up 25% yoy in Q1 2008
Glycon Garcia

UN-run carbon trading mechanism questioned amidst allegations of corruption | Environme... - 0 views

  • Discredited strategy Increasing allegations of corruption and profiteering are raising serious questions about the UN-run carbon trading mechanism aimed at cutting pollution and rewarding clean technologies, writes Patrick McCully, executive director of US thinktank International Rivers
Hans De Keulenaer

Property boom fuels smart home growth | Dubai Property - 0 views

  • As the real estate sector in Dubai booms, so do associated businesses. One sector currently enjoying good growth on the back of the property frenzy is high-end consumer electronics, particularly for top of the range entertainment systems and smart homes.
Jon Barnes

Two new scrap recycling/dismantling projects in China - 0 views

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    In late-May, two further large metal recycling projects have been announced in China as the country seeks to satisfy its burgeoning need for scrap metal given its shortfall in mineral resources. The Wuzhou Resource Recycling project has been approved to be constructed in Cangwu county in Guangxi province. The total investment in the project is 15bn Yuan. The construction is planned to cover an area of 667 hectares, divided into three stages, and will eventually create 40,000 new jobs. Separately, the Zhonghong recycling industrial park in Shenyang, Liaoning province has been completed and is to open in early June. The industrial park covers an area of 3 square kilometres and has cost 5bn Yuan to develop. It will create 10,000 employment opportunities and has dismantling capacity of 1 million metric tonnes per year.
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    China to boost scrap recovery for smelters and fabricators
Susanna Keung

Japan Produces Less Copper Tube This Year - 0 views

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    It is believed that a cash crunch is reducing orders in the Chinese power sector, which accounts for 60% of the country's copper demand. Analysts predicted strong copper demand in H1 as the country was eager to repair the damages to power networks caused by the heavy snow in the early part of the year. However, repairs have so far mainly been made to aluminium and fibre-optic cables. Cash flow problems at copper rod and wire plants have occurred following the government's tight credit policy and high copper prices. Some 30% of copper wirerod production capacity is being reported idle. The cash shortages have also delayed copper buying from active copper fabricators, further dampening consumption of the metal. China, a net importer of copper, exported 31,000 tonnes of refined copper in April, up 227% year-on-year, with the possibility that the country might have been re-exporting the metal since late February. China's General Administration of Customs reported that 14,000 tonnes were exported to South Korea, six times that from the same period last year. This perhaps confirms that traders were re-exporting copper it has imported to LME-approved warehouses to take advantage of the discount between Shanghai and LME copper prices.
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    Neans focuses on "priority markets"
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    In the past few days world leading cablemaker Nexans has announced one acquisition, one new joint venture and one asset disposal. On the 30th May, Nexans acquired Intercond a leading Italian manufacturer of special cables for industrial equipment and subsea applications. The company had sales of €90m and employs 150. "This [€90m] acquisition fits totally in the Group's strategy by increasing the proportion of its business in high value-added special cables", said Gerard Hauser, Chairman and CEO of Nexans. On the 2nd June, Nexans released a press report confirming that it has formed a joint venture to create a wire and cable plant in Qatar, the country's first manufacturing facility. Qatar International Cable Company (QICC) is owned 29% by Nexans with the balance being owned by Special Projects Company and Al Neama Industrial Co. The new plant in the industrial city of Mesaleed, 40km from Doha, and will employ 210 people. By the end of 2009 it will begin manufacturing low and medium voltage cables for buildings and energy infrastructure as well as special cables for the oil and gas industry. This JV will generate sales of $150m per year by 2010 at current copper prices. Finally, Nexans confirmed that it has completed the pre-announced sale of its copper telecom cable plant at Santander in Spain to the British company B3 Cable Solutions for €17m. These three actions continue to refocus the group's strategy on priority market segments.
Colin Bennett

Illegal European scrap dealers cause fierce competition | Environment | Reuters - 0 views

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    "The problem with illegal dealers is growing, it's enormous now because of high metal prices," said Bjorn Grufman, President of Eurometrec, the European federation of scrap dealers.
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    Trends
Hans De Keulenaer

Environmental Capital - WSJ.com : Fish Juice: N.J. Fisherman Angling To Develop Offshor... - 0 views

  • File this one under if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. A group of commercial fishermen wants to get in on the rush to build offshore wind farms to generate electricity. It’s an interesting about face for the fishing industry, which has traditionally fought offshore industrialization – other than their own floating seafood factories, that is. The effort is attracting attention in New Jersey, where the state is looking to provide grants for a pilot offshore wind farm.
Glycon Garcia

ENN: OPINION: China's Wind Power Development Exceeds Expectations - 0 views

  • A recent boom in Chinese wind power development has surpassed the government's original target and forced policymakers to set a new goal that might still be too modest.
Glycon Garcia

Utility Business Model Report Released by SEPA - 0 views

  • The Solar Electric Power Association (SEPA) presents its latest industry research reports, Utility Solar Business Models: Emerging Utility Strategies & Innovation. As solar electricity moves into boardrooms and executive meetings across the United States, leading utilities begin to make concrete decisions for major solar deployment. This report provides a compendium of emerging utility innovations that will provide valuable information both across utility departments and into upper management. A copy of the full report can be downloaded from the SEPA website at www.solarelectricpower.org.
Glycon Garcia

ENN: Electricity from the exhaust pipe - 0 views

shared by Glycon Garcia on 04 Jun 08 - Cached
  • Researchers are working on a thermoelectric generator that converts the heat from car exhaust fumes into electricity. The module feeds the energy into the car’s electronic systems. This cuts fuel consumption and helps reduce the CO2 emissions from motor vehicles.
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