Archive

Archive for October 19th, 2009

Climate concerns turn city’s smell into cash cow

October 19th, 2009 No comments

The smell of manure hangs over Greeley as it has for half a century.

These days it’s more than just a potent reminder of the region’s agricultural roots and the hundreds of thousands of cattle raised on the city’s outskirts.

The stench smells like an opportunity.

Investors are lining up to support a planned clean energy park that eventually will convert some of the methane gas released from the manure piles into power for a cheese factory and other businesses. JBS, which runs two of the largest feed yards and the local slaughterhouse, is testing a new technology that heats the cattle excrement and turns it into energy.

“What once used to be a waste stream that was just a byproduct … they are now recognizing has value,” said Bruce Biggi, the economic development coordinator for the city of Greeley, which received an $82,000 grant from the governor’s energy office this year for the park.

The idea is to lure new business to the area with what Biggi likes to call its renewable natural gas — the endless supply of methane from cheap manure.

By reducing the amount of the potent greenhouse gas released into the air, the projects also potentially could turn cow dung into dollars, if a climate bill before Congress becomes law.

“Agriculture and agribusiness is what Greeley is all about,” Biggi said. “We needed to take that strong traditional economic base and … merge it with emerging renewable energy and technology.”

Waste may be the new energy crop in these parts. But elsewhere, communities are looking anew at power sources such as the sun and wind that may exist in their own backyards.

The shift is being driven partly by legislation in Congress that would reduce the gases linked to global warming.

The legislation, experts acknowledge, would do little to stem the heating up of the planet if other countries don’t take similar action.

Should President Barack Obama sign the bill, it would put a price on each ton of carbon dioxide released. That would drive up the cost of polluting fossil fuels such as oil and natural gas and lead to investment in cleaner sources of energy.

Getting into the game now — like JBS and the investors eyeing Greeley’s energy park are doing — could potentially reap profits: selling credits generated by reducing greenhouse gases now into the emissions-trading market the bill would create.

That market could prove lucrative for projects that reduce methane, which is 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide when it comes to trapping heat in the earth’s atmosphere.

The fear in Greeley, and elsewhere, is what else the legislation would change.

In the city and surrounding Weld County, the worry is it would raise energy and fertilizer costs for farmers. They need to pump water to irrigate their crops and rely on cheap manure — the same manure that will be tapped for energy — when high natural gas prices drive up the cost of fertilizer.

For the oil and gas industry, which produces more oil in Weld County than any other in the state, a shift to cleaner sources of energy could take away good-paying jobs. And it’s not clear whether all those will be replaced by the new green jobs that supporters are banking on.

“I can’t think of another place in the country like Weld County, where all the various interests are at play,” said John Christiansen, a spokesman for Anadarko Petroleum Corp., which produces oil and gas from 4,600 wells in the county. Many are on fields planted with feed corn, which also is being used to produce ethanol for gasoline locally.

The confluence of different interests has made Weld County a frequent stop for members of Congress interested in how climate legislation is playing outside of Washington. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., Rep. Betsy Markey, D-Colo., and House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson, D-Minn., all made visits over the summer.

“Our rural communities aren’t sold on this yet, there is a lot of uncertainty. But I think in the long run it will stabilize energy prices,” Markey said in an interview.

Markey voted for the climate bill when it passed the House in June. Her vote could play a role in her re-election race next year in the largely Republican district.

On an August afternoon, Markey and three other members of the state’s congressional delegation were singled out for their climate bill vote. A billboard covered with signatures and topped with the words “Shame on you!” stood at the entrance of the lunchtime event, organized by the American Petroleum Institute. The event drew about 600 people to a cavernous exhibit hall outside of Greeley for a pep rally opposing the legislation. API is a Washington, D.C.-based lobbying organization for the oil and gas industry.

“Why would we do anything to drive up their cost of doing business? It makes no sense,” local radio host Amy Oliver Cooke told the crowd. Many wore shirts that said, “Congress, Don’t Take Away my Job.”

“I can’t afford the legislation and neither can you,” she said.

David Eckhardt, a fourth-generation Weld County farmer, is struggling with the math. Despite meeting with Bennet and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Eckhardt remains skeptical of an Agriculture Department’s analysis of the House climate bill that says farmers stand to make more money from trapping carbon in their soil and crops than they will pay out in higher energy prices.

“I know my fuel will go up, I know my chemicals will go up. And the question that was asked at the meeting we had with them was how much? And their answer was not as much as you think it will,” said Eckhardt. “That’s not an answer.”

For Eckhardt, a climate law could change what crops he plants.

For JBS, which operates a feedlot down the road from his farm, changes are already afoot.

Fattening the tens of thousands of cattle the company slaughters annually at its Greeley headquarters requires flaking with steam the corn it receives from farmers. That can get expensive because it relies on traditional natural gas, which in recent years has been subject to price swings.

In 2006, with gas prices peaking, Tom McDonald, the environmental affairs manager for JBS Swift’s cattle-feeding operation Five Rivers, started looking for ways not to waste the cows’ waste any longer.

At one of the company’s largest feedlots in Weld County, some of the manure that used to be raked up from the pens and stockpiled is now being fed into a manure gasifier. The apparatus, which looks like an extra large pizza oven, bakes the excrement, extracting the gases which in turn feed the fire. The heat generated can power the feedlots’ boiler, reducing the company’s natural gas consumption.

Eventually, McDonald says it could supply all the power the facility needs to make its corn flakes.

It would also help with global warming because the process converts methane into the less efficient heat-trapper carbon dioxide.

“These ideas had been kicked around for years and been dismissed because they weren’t economical,” said McDonald. “Well now the economics are coming in line and these systems actually have a payback are looking very promising.”

JBS: http://www.jbsswift.com/

City of Greeley: http://www.greeleygov.com/

Senate Environment and Public Works Committee: http://tinyurl.com/ybcmypo

House Energy and Commerce Committee: http://tinyurl.com/ph52vs

Information on the House-passed bill, H.R. 2454, and the Senate bill, S. 1733, can be found at http://thomas.loc.gov/

Categories: article Tags:

CIT Group amends debt restructuring offer

October 19th, 2009 No comments

CIT Group Inc., a major lender to small and midsize businesses that has struggled under mounting losses and tight credit availability, has amended its debt restructuring offer to enlist more bondholder support.

The troubled New York-based lender had launched the restructuring effort Oct. 1 with the hope that it will trim at least $5.7 billion from its near-term debt. It is also asking bondholders to approve a prepackaged reorganization plan in case it is forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

The company said in a statement late Friday that the debt exchange changes have the backing of its board and a steering committee of bondholders. Spokesman Curt Ritter declined additional comment on Saturday.

CIT Group’s losses have been mounting as its borrowing costs have outstripped its income amid the credit crunch. It has received $2.3 billion in federal bailout money last fall and a $3 billion emergency loan in July from some of its largest bondholders.

Its customers range from Dunkin’ Donuts franchisees to department store operator Dillards Inc. It is also a short-term financier to about 2,000 vendors that supply merchandise to 300,000 stores, according to the National Retail Federation.

Some economists say the company’s collapse could hurt a U.S. economy struggling to recover from recession.

CIT Group said the amended restructuring plan includes a mechanism to accelerate repayment of new notes and the shortening of maturities by six months for all new notes and junior credit facilities.

It also includes an increased amount of equity offered to subordinated debt holders and notes maturing after 2018 that had not been solicited.

The exchange offers will expire Oct. 29, except for the additional notes maturing after 2018.

CIT had $54.09 billion in outstanding long-term borrowings as of June 30, including $13.85 billion due by June 30, 2010.

“Over the last two weeks, we have continued to work constructively with the steering committee and believe that these amendments will further build bondholder support for our restructuring plan,” CIT Group Chairman and CEO Jeffrey Peek said in the statement.

He said the company “will reduce the uncertainty around our business” through either completing the debt exchange offers or an expedited in-court restructuring.

On Tuesday, the company announced that Peek, 62, will resign at the end of the year. He has been with CIT Group since 2003.

Categories: article Tags:

Iraq approves oil deal with BP-led consortium

October 19th, 2009 No comments

The Iraqi government said Saturday it has approved a contract with a British-Chinese consortium to develop a prized oil field in southern Iraq, a significant achievement for a country that has struggled to attract foreign investors despite its vast natural resource wealth.

The deal was the only one to emerge from a disappointing bidding round in June offering development rights for six oil and two gas fields. It was Iraq’s first such bidding process in over three decades, but foreign firms felt the prices set by the government were too low given continued violence in the country and disputes over natural resource control.

But things have been looking up in recent days for Iraq’s hope to use increased oil revenue to recover from years of war and sanctions. Earlier in the week, three international consortiums agreed to meet the Iraqi government’s price to develop oil fields in the country.

Even more important is the Iraqi Cabinet’s approval of the bid by Britain’s BP PLC and its Chinese partner CNPC to develop the 17.8 billion barrel Rumaila field near Iraq’s southern city of Basra. The deal was approved late Friday, Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told The Associated Press, without providing further details.

According to the agreement, BP will hold a 38 percent stake in the venture and CNPC will have a 37 percent share. Iraq’s State Oil Marketing Organization will control the rest.

“It is a very important event … very promising for Iraq,” said Samuel Ciszuk, an energy analyst with the London-based IHS Global Insight. “The huge incremental this project alone could bring in a relatively short period of time … is very important.”

Iraq has the world’s third-largest known oil reserves, and crude exports are the country’s most important source of revenue. But Iraq’s current daily output of 2.4 million barrels is far below the country’s potential.

Iraq’s oil industry has been hampered by years of devastating wars, crippling sanctions and sabotage attacks by insurgents after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. In addition, Iraq’s oil law, governing natural resources and regulating foreign investment, has been stalled in parliament since 2007, prompting international companies to stay away.

The Rumaila deal is the second major one struck by CNPC in postwar Iraq. Last year, CNPC signed a $3 billion deal to develop the al-Ahdab oil field in southern Iraq.

The deal also marks the return of BP to Iraq after the British oil giant and other Western companies were pushed out following the nationalization of the oil industry in the 1970s.

Daily production from the Rumaila field is at about 1 million barrels a day. BP’s targeted production for the oil field is 2.85 million barrels a day within seven years.

The BP-CNPC consortium originally bid to take $3.99 per barrel produced, but later slashed the offer to the $2 per barrel payment sought by the Iraqi Oil Ministry. The competing bid in June was from a consortium led by U.S. giant Exxon Mobil, which refused to amend its offer of $4.80 per barrel.

Earlier this week, Iraq’s oil minister Hussain al-Shahristani said the ministry was revisiting the June bidding after three international oil consortiums submitted revised offers and accepted Iraq’s terms for developing two oil fields in southern Iraq.

The two deals could be signed within with two weeks, al-Shahristani said.

A consortium led by Italy’s Eni has agreed to develop Basra’s 4.1 billion barrel Zubair oil field for $2 per barrel produced based on a target production level of about 1.1 million barrels per day.

Two other consortiums, one led by Russia’s Lukoil and ConocoPhilips, and the other by Exxon Mobil with Royal Dutch Shell, are competing to develop the 8.6 billion barrel West Qurna Stage 1 oil field in Basra for $1.90 per barrel.

The Lukoil-led consortium’s targeted production is 1.5 million barrels a day, while the other consortium’s targeted production is 2.1 million barrels a day, al-Shahristani said.

Italy’s Eni had previously bid $4.80 per barrel to develop the field, while the Lukoil consortium submitted an earlier bid of $6.49 per barrel and the Exxon Mobil-led consortium was asking for $4 per barrel.

Zubair is currently producing about 230,000 barrels per day, while West Qurna Stage 1 is producing about 280,000 barrels a day. Al-Shahristani said that the three fields’ combined output would exceed 6 million barrels a day in six years with a total direct investment from these firms expected to be about $100 billion.

The second bidding round is scheduled for December. Forty-five international oil companies are set to bid for 10 oil projects on offer.

The overall fall in oil prices since last year has forced the government to slash spending plans for this year from $79 billion to $58.6 billion. The oil sector represents about 65 percent of Iraq’s gross domestic product and its revenues account for 95 percent of Iraq’s earnings.

Categories: article Tags:

“ฟ้าหญิงจุฬาภรณฯ”ตรัสถึง”ในหลวง”ทรงปลอดภัยแล้ว

October 19th, 2009 No comments

วันที่ 16 ตุลาคม พ.ศ.2552 เวลา 14.00 น. ตามเวลาท้องถิ่นสหพันธ์สาธารณรัฐเยอรมนี สมเด็จพระเจ้าลูกเธอเจ้าฟ้าจุฬาภรณวลัยลักษณ์ อัครราชกุมารี พระราชทานพระวโรกาสให้นายจริยวัฒน์ สันตะบุตร เอกอัครราชทูต ณ กรุงเบอร์ลิน ข้าราชการและเจ้าหน้าที่สถานกงสุลใหญ่ ณ นคร


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

กทม.ทุ่มงบฯ กว่า 300 ล.สร้างแนวเขื่อนกั้นน้ำ

October 19th, 2009 No comments

ม.ร.ว.สุขุมพันธุ์ บริพัตร ผู้ว่าราชการกรุงเทพมหานคร ลงพื้นที่ตรวจระดับแม่น้ำเจ้าพระยาบริเวณถนนทรงวาด เขตสัมพันธวงศ์ เพื่อเตรียมรับมือน้ำทะเลหนุนสูงสุดระหว่างวันที่ 18 - 20 ตุลาคมนี้ ม.ร.ว.สุขุมพันธุ์ กล่าวว่า กรุงเทพมหานครได้เตรียมรับมือสถานการณ์ดังก


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

ผบ.สส.ตรวจความพร้อมสถานที่ประชุมอาเซียน ลั่น!!ห้ามผู้ชุมนุมเข้าพื้นที่เด็ดขาด

October 19th, 2009 No comments

พล.อ.ทรงกิตติ จักกาบาตร์ ผู้บัญชาการทหารสูงสุด เดินทางไปตรวจความพร้อมมาตรการดูแลรักษาความปลอดภัยสถานที่จัดประชุมสุดยอดอาเซียน ที่ อ.ชะอำ จ.เพชรบุรี และ อ.หัวหิน จ.ประจวบคีรีขันธ์ โดยใช้มาตรการรักษาความปลอดภัยสูงสุด มีเจ้าหน้าที่รวม 18,000 นาย คอยปฏิบัต


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

ก.ม.ม.ยืนยันประสานพันธมิตรฯ สอบทุจริต รบ.ทุกโครงการ

October 19th, 2009 No comments

วันนี้ (18 ต.ค.) พรรคการเมืองใหม่เริ่มมีความเคลื่อนไหวในการตรวจสอบการทุจริตของรัฐบาล โดยนายสำราญ รอดเพชร ว่าที่โฆษกพรรคฯ ระบุว่า จะประสานกับพันธมิตรประชาชนเพื่อประชาธิปไตยตรวจสอบในทุกโครงการ เพื่อปกป้องผลประโยชน์ของประชาชน


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

“ในหลวง”เสวย-ทรงพระบรรทมได้ดี พระปรอทลดลง

October 19th, 2009 No comments

แถลงการณ์สำนักพระราชวัง เรื่อง พระบาทสมเด็จพระเจ้าอยู่หัวฯ เสด็จพระราชดำเนินมาประทับ ณ โรงพยาบาลศิริราช ฉบับที่ 29วันนี้ คณะแพทย์ผู้ถวายการรักษาพระบาทสมเด็จพระเจ้าอยู่หัวฯ ได้รายงานว่า พระอาการโดยทั่วไปดี พระปรอท (ไข้) ลดลง เสวยพระกระยาหารและทรงพระบ


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

“คุณชาย”เปิดงานเทศกาลกินเจตลาดสวนหลวง พร้อมโชว์ฝีมือผัดหมี่มงคล

October 19th, 2009 No comments

ม.ร.ว.สุขุมพันธุ์ บริพัตร ผู้ว่าราชการกรุงเทพมหานคร เป็นประธานเปิดงาน “เทศกาลกินเจ อิ่มบุญ อิ่มใจ ได้สุขภาพ” ครั้งที่ 8 ที่ตลาดสวนหลวง เขตปทุมวัน โดยมีคณะผู้บริหารกรุงเทพมหานครและประชาชนร่วมงานจำนวนมาก ทั้งนี้ ภายหลังการเปิดงาน ผู้ว่าราชการกรุงเทพมหา


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

แม่ฮ่องสอนเร่งสร้างทางเบี่ยงชั่วคราว หลังดินยุบตัว-ถนนขาด

October 19th, 2009 No comments

นายกำธร ถาวรสถิตย์ ผู้ว่าราชการจังหวัดแม่ฮ่องสอน เปิดเผยว่า หลังจากที่ได้เดินทางไปตรวจสอบบริเวณทางหลวงสาย 108 แม่สะเรียง-เชียงใหม่ บริเวณกิโลเมตรที่ 89-90 ซึ่งดินเกิดยุบตัว ส่งผลให้เส้นทางการจราจรขาดเป็นระยะทางยาว 100 เมตร ลึกประมาณ 30-40 เมตร ห่างจากอ


Author : Thserv News Master
Read More…
 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:
[coconut oil for hair]  [how to make hair grow faster]  [how to prevent hair loss