Posts Tagged ‘water’


Sell My Car in Manhattan – Selling In “The City”

“Sell my car in Manhattan? No problem!” That’s true, if you know what you are doing. Maybe you’ve done it before and know the ropes. For those of you who may not and might feel a bit intimidated at the proposition, fear not. People less smart than you sell cars every day. But you being smarter than most, you’ll do everything right by making it easy for people to find out you have a car to sell at a fair, honest price. What more could anyone ask for?

If that got you to thinking “Hey, I can sell my car in Manhattan!”, then good. You’re ready to proceed to the next step. It’s a step that involves soap, water and a spray hose because it’s time to get the car clean enough to serve lunch on. Nobody likes a dirty, grungy car, especially someone looking to buy a car. Believe it or not, there are people who completely overlook this and then wonder why everybody that sees the car is suddenly not interested any longer. It’s a simple equation: A dirty car is a car that won’t sell. So make it sparkle.

“My car is clean and I’m ready to Sell my car in Manhattan!” Not quite. How much do you hope to sell it for? A better question: What can I really expect to sell it for? This is no small detail. There is no way to come up with an exact selling price. But you can come up with a price that is fair and can be a good start to begin negotiations. If the idea of haggling over price makes you uncomfortable, you have nothing to worry about if you know upfront what the absolute lowest price you’re willing to accept is. If you’ve done your pricing homework, you have figured that out already. By adding just a few hundred to your firm selling price, you give the buyer a little room to make a counter offer. It’s a good sales tactic.

“I know my price. Now I can sell my car in Manhattan.” True enough. All that’s left is to list your car where buyers will be looking. These days, that would be the online classified listings for Manhattan. And you can probably count on prospective buyers from all the boroughs taking a look to give you an even deeper pool of potential buyers. In a short time, you’ll be saying bye-bye to the old vehicle and hello to a handful of cash.

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Masdar City – a glimpse of the future

Solar power, magnetic cars and a green Big Brother. Does this experiment near Abu Dhabi work? Masdar City – in pictures

A dusty construction site on the edge of an Arabian desert is an unlikely place for a model of green living. But this is Masdar City, an $18bn (£11bn) Norman Foster-designed project where just a few hundred people are guinea pigs in the world’s most advanced laboratory for hi-tech environmental technology.

Here, residents live with driverless electric cars, shaded streets cooled by a huge wind tower and a Big Brother-style “green policeman” monitoring their energy use.

Conceived in 2006, phase one of the city is now complete after three years’ work and a spend of $1.4bn. The development, near Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates, consists of six main buildings, one street, 101 small apartments, a large electronic library, and the Masdar Institute .

This offshoot campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has 167 students and 43 academics, most of whom are from other countries, the US, Europe, Asia and elsewhere in the Middle East. On campus there is a bank, a sushi bar, canteen, organic food shop and a concrete basement where 10 driverless vehicles whiz people along the 800 metres from the entrance of the city to the institute.

Here are some of Masdar City’s other features. The 45-metre Teflon-coated wind tower shows citizens how much energy the community is using; argon gas insulates the rammed earth and steel walls; solar air-conditioning and desalination plants are being tested, as are thermal energy and “beam down” solar plants that use mirrors to concentrate the sun and heat water to generate electricity.

Phase two, due to be finished this year, will add 222 more apartments, and more streets and shops. An $800m HQ, which will house the new International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) , should be finished by 2013. By 2015, Masdar City is expected to have 7,000 residents and 12,000 people commuting from Abu Dhabi.

“It felt like culture shock,” Laura Stupin, a young American engineer and one of the first inhabitants of the city, wrote on her blog . “The buildings are beautiful here, and they look so different from anything I’ve ever seen, anywhere. I keep telling people that it feels like I’m living in a psychology experiment. Every time I flip a light switch in the living room and the faucet in the bathroom starts running, or I desperately push all the buttons on the stove to try to turn on a burner, I can’t help looking over my shoulder and wondering if there’s a scientist observing my behaviour and reactions in this strange environment.”

That’s because of the monitors, which analyse every human and mechanical action requiring electricity. Every machine the students use, every fridge door they open, or light they leave on, is recorded via an intelligent digital grid that senses and controls energy use and lets the power provider intervene. Showers turn off after a few minutes, sensors switch on fridges and lights. Temperature and water use can be centrally controlled.

“The city is a laboratory for the future,” says Martyn Potter, director of operations at the institute and dubbed the “green policeman”.

The Big Brother approach to cutting energy is likely to become the norm as computerised smart grids are rolled out in Europe and the US, he adds. “I want to know exactly how these buildings work. I can pinpoint who is using most energy and water, whether in an apartment or the academy. Certain students have been used to having the air conditioning on at 16C (61F), here it is 24C. Yes, they complain. But I have told them that’s how it is.”

Fred Moavenzadeh, head of the institute, and a Harvard professor, says: “The shock of having to conserve energy is part of the Masdar human experiment. We are living and experiencing what we are trying to … educate people about … We’re using roughly half the energy of a normal building of this size. We are producing no carbon because it’s all renewable. Our water consumption is less and our waste generation is relatively low.”

The plan was to make Masdar the world’s first zero-carbon city, but as the global “cleantech” market stalls in the recession, compromises are made. Foster planned to accommodate 50,000 residents and 40,000 commuters and the city was due be completed by 2016; now the final population will probably not exceed 40,000 and the completion date has been put at 2021 or 2025. The idea of a second Masdar City has been dropped; a $2.2bn hydrogen power project has been called off, as has a “thin film” solar manufacturing plant, intended for Abu Dhabi.

“The Masdar master plan is changing as the world economy changes,” says Dale Rollins, a former Shell executive, now Masdar’s chief operating officer. “It’s unfair to say that what was decided in 2006 will hold for ever more. The objectives have not changed but we have re-worked the master plan. The technology and the market has moved on. We say we can do it better and we can do it in less expensive ways.”

Foster’s vision was for Masdar’s streets to be pedestrian-only with pilotless vehicles running via magnets and fibre-optic cables. But this is now thought a white elephant. The rest of the city will be built on one floor, saving hundreds of millions of pounds. And people might move about in “golf buggy” taxis.

The master plan was to desalinate groundwater with solar energy, but for now water is piped in from one of Abu Dhabi’s gas-fired, high-energy, desalination plants. The revised plan no longer counts on-site energy generation as the only source of power. The idea of coveringA scheme for covering all roofs with solar panels was found to be more costly than a centralised power plant. Meanwhile, the photovoltaic panels outside the city are proving less efficient than expected because of dust storms and haze, which can cut solar insolation by 30% – the panels must be cleaned by hand.

People living in the city say they quickly get used to the technology but not the setting. “It’s quite a mind flip to be in such a strangely beautiful environment, then look out of a window and see flat dusty landscape stretching out to the horizon. It makes me feel like I’m living in a science fiction novel,” wrote Stupin. Green economy Ethical and green living Energy United Arab Emirates Ethical business Middle East Norman Foster John Vidal guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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New push for water deals with Turkey and Syria

BAGHDAD, Iraq (IRIN) – Iraq is renewing efforts to reach deals with Syria and Turkey to increase water levels on the River Euphrates which flows from these two countries into Iraq, and on which Iraq is heavily dependent for agriculture and electricity generation.

Turkey has tentatively agreed to increase water levels on the river to allow Iraq to reactivate the 400-megawatt Haditha hydroelectric power station, officials say.

The deal – set to be concluded in two months’ time – could be part of a wider agreement with Turkey to import 200 megawatts of electricity, said a spokesman of the Iraqi Electricity Ministry, Musaab Al-Mudaris.

An Iraqi delegation is heading to Syria later this week to try to strike a similar deal. In recent years water levels have steadily fallen on the Euphrates due to below-average rainfall and the construction of dams in Turkey and Syria.

Iraq produces about 7,500 megawatts a day – less than half of current demand – and low water levels on the Euphrates (and the Tigris) have forced some hydroelectricity plants to reduce output or close.

For many years Iraqi officials have been pressing Syria and Turkey to sign agreements specifying a fixed share of the water from these two rivers for Iraq, but no deal has been reached.

“Iraq could experience more (water-related) problems, complexities and challenges unless it gets its fair share of water… Iraq faces great challenges in maintaining its wetlands and agricultural land,” said Ali Al-Alak, the Cabinet general secretary.

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– Provided by Integrated Regional Information Networks.

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Study identifies top polluters in North America

Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Montreal, Quebec, Canada (AHN) – A report released Tuesday by the Commission for Environmental Cooperation identified the top industrial polluters in North America responsible for releasing more than 228 million kilograms of direct pollutants to surface waters.

The report said almost 75 percent of yearly toxic pollution released in the air, land and water came from just a few industrial sectors, including power plants, metal manufacturers and oil sands.

The remaining 28 percent came from 81 other industrial sector that emitted 5.7 billion kg. of toxic pollution in the continent. Aside from direct releases to water, another 133 million kg. of pollutants were transferred to sewage and wastewater treatment facilities.

Ninety percent of the toxic pollutants released to surface waters were made up of nitrate compounds and ammonia, which is linked with nutrient loading and marine dead zones in North American waters.

The report was based on analysis of pollutants from Canada, Mexico and the U.S. Canadian firms and facilities contributed 37 percent of the pollution in North America.

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NDP Candidate Laments Eastern Water Woes

Yesterday, National Development Party (NDP) Seabreeze candidate, Lindon Nairn, issued a brief statement on the water woes plaguing the area, standing in front of Water & Sewage Corporation’s head office on Thompson Boulevard.

“The residents of Seabreeze have been the victims of having non-potable water pumped into their homes by the Water & Sewage Corporation for more than a decade and the time has come to put an end to their nightmare,” he told reporters.

Mr. Nairn had a bottle of water and a water filer in his hand as he addressed reporters, both of which were rusty.

“We are advised by a physician that regular consumption of water containing a high rust content could lead to a number of health complications,” he said.

“Moreover, the clear evidence of the ground is that the residents of Seabreeze have suffered tremendous financial losses arising from having to frequently replace clothes, dishwashers, washing machines and plumbing fixtures as a result of this filthy water being pumped into their houses.”

He also explained that the water is unsafe to wash cars with and unfit to be given to pets to drink.

“Many of the residents of Seabreeze have resorted to constructing wells, which present untold health challenges,” Mr. Nairn said.

“We invite others who now represent and who seek to represent the residents of Seabreeze to join with us in demanding that the government brings relief to the fine people of Seabreeze by compensating them for damaged clothes and appliances and replacing 100 per cent of the metallic/corrosive water mains throughout the constituency.”

Mr. Nairn added that he is aware that the government is currently replacing the water mains on Robinson Road and Prince Charles Drive but noted that that “is simply not good enough.”

“The real problem is in the communities though the side streets and with the pipes leading directly to private properties,” he said.

“The people of Seabreeze are demanding of their government that a clear timetable be set for the same. We are assuring the residents of Seabreeze that we are going to address this problem.”

The Journal spoke with Seabreeze Member of Parliament, Carl Bethel, who said the government is addressing the problem as the road works in the area are specifically designed to improve water in the area.

Mr. Bethel also noted that new 24-inch water pipes are being laid in the area.

Mr. Nairn told the Journal that he has yet to speak to Minister of State for the Environment, Phenton Neymour, on the issue but he plans to do so at his earliest opportunity.

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Report: Alberta’s oil sands leaking contaminants in watershed

Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Calgary, Alberta, Canada (AHN) – A panel appointed by Alberta to review the conflicting water quality data from the oil sands in the province concluded that contaminants are leaking into the watershed.

The body also said that the government monitoring program is not adequate because it failed to gauge the impact of industrial development on the environment.

The creation of the panel was an offshoot of different water quality information by Alberta scientists and the team of University of Alberta ecologist David Schindler. The university team concluded the oil sands polluted the environment, while the government scientists said otherwise.

Schindler’s team said they traced hydrocarbons and heavy metals in Alberta’s land and water, which the group linked to industrial smokestack emission. They also warned the contaminants may be at levels deadly to marine life.

Alberta Environment Minister Rob Renner said the panel’s report will be used to redesign how the province would monitor the oil sands industry’s impact on land and water. However, Schindler cautioned it is now too late to get a true assessment of the negative impact of energy development projects in the province.

The panel recommended more comprehensive monitoring and scientific analysis for the oil sands industry. The body pointed out that although the industry-funded Regional Aquatics Monitoring Program of the Alberta government has many monitoring sites, the program has low sampling of oil that limits the province’s ability to accurately assess the impact of the oil sands operations.

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Improving yields key to boosting rice farmers’ livelihoods

IRIN Staff – IRIN IRIN Staff

AHERO, Kenya (IRIN) – After spending Ksh35,000 (US$437) on his 0.4 hectare rice plantation – preparing the land, paying for water, transplanting the rice and hiring casual labour – Vincent Opiyo hopes to make Ksh65,000 ($812) when he sells the rice, which takes about three months to mature.

“I expect to harvest 25 bags [50kg each] from this [land] but I know I could get more if I were to improve the yield,” Opiyo, 49, father of eight, told IRIN at the Ahero Rice Irrigation Scheme in Nyanza province.

In addition to the high costs of inputs, the farmers, who are “licensees” on trust land, struggle to access credit as they lack title deeds.

Were it not for what he earns working for the National Irrigation Board (NIB) – which runs the Ahero scheme – Opiyo would not meet the needs of his family from farming.

“Poverty is very high among many farmers under the Ahero scheme because they never make enough to cover needs such as school fees and payment for medicine when children fall sick; look at the structures we live in, most of them are semi-permanent,” Opiyo said.

“Many of us do not even own a cow or some goats. Our father managed to [send] us to school from the proceeds of his [1.6ha] of rice, but for us, his children, it is no longer enough.”

Low yields, better prospects

According to NIB, the average yield of Basmati rice at Ahero is 13-25 (75kg) bags per 0.4ha when it should be 20-30 bags; while the yield for Sindano rice is 15-30 bags, when it should be more than 30 bags.

At the start of operations in 1969, the Ahero Irrigation Scheme had 519 farmers, each with 1.6ha held on trust by the government. The farmers have since sub-divided their farms among their children but they are not allowed to sub-divide below 0.4ha or sell the land.

In 2009, a farmer-oriented funding arrangement, known as the Revolving Fund, was set up to support the farmers’ production and marketing efforts.

Jacob Ongere, a farmer at the Ahero scheme and an extension officer with the Ministry of Agriculture, told IRIN that with the Revolving Fund and the government’s Economic Stimulus Programme (ESP), things were now looking up.

“The profit that farmers are making is still way below average but we hope this will change with more funding and support in sectors such as marketing and capacity-building,” he said.

Through the Revolving Fund Office, Ongere said, the Ahero farmers hope to boost their livelihoods by “exploiting agronomical practices” to improve their yields – transplanting on time and using pesticides and fungicides.

He added: “The situation is so bad right now such that we are in the harvesting season but the majority of farmers with children who sat their primary school examinations last year cannot afford to take their children to secondary boarding schools. The best they can do is send them to day schools because the charges are lower.”

He urged the farmers to explore consolidation and adopt a group approach to reap better yields.

Devolving responsibility

Laban Kiplagat, senior NIB manager at Ahero, said NIB encouraged farmers to take greater responsibility of the scheme.

He said NIB was concentrating on its core business: “The NIB’s core activities include provision of water and maintenance of irrigation infrastructure as well as management of farmers’ organizations,” Kiplagat said.

“Therefore, the NIB would be offloading production, marketing and capacity-building so that farmers can manage themselves better.”

He said Nyanza had a potential to irrigate up to 200,000ha in its Lake Basin region.

Kiplagat said the farmers should embrace a culture of saving because “they tend to spend all they get from their harvests without proper planning for the high costs of operations – ploughing, water abstraction [pump-fed water supply] and tractors, which are costly to hire; and other inputs such as fertilizer and seed”.

Increasing cropping frequency would also help farmers increase their earnings, he said. “Currently many farmers plant the rice crop once a year, meaning the land is in use for only four months and then lies fallow for the other eight months.”

Kiplagat said NIB wanted to expand the scheme and to open up more swampy areas for irrigation.

“Under Vision 2030, some 40,000ha is expected to be put under irrigation per year, with the NIB having the responsibility of ensuring 30,000ha goes under irrigation,” he said. “We hope to do this by exploring the introduction of more crops, such as seed maize, cotton, as well as horticulture, for irrigation.”

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New Zealand quake survivors adapt to new miseries

In Christchurch, New Zealand, water and power supplies to thousands have been cut, and many people have been forced to sleep in their cars or tents as their unstable houses sway with the relentless aftershocks.

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Buffalo becomes second U.S. city to ban fracking

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Buffalo, NY, United States (AHN) – Buffalo became the second city in the nation on Tuesday to ban a method of natural gas drilling called fracking. The federal government the same day began its probe of how the drilling method affects drinking water.

The Buffalo city council voted unanimously to approve a proposal prohibiting hydraulic fracturing in the city, which is located on the Marcellus Shale, a massive land formation rich in natural gas reserves.

“Meaningful regulatory limitation and prohibitions concerning Marcellus Shale natural gas extraction, along with zoning and land use provisions, are barred because they conflict with certain legal powers claimed by resource extraction corporations,” the new ordinance states.

Fracking is a way of extracting natural gas by injecting chemicals underground at high pressure to fracture formations of shale and other rocks, thereby releasing trapped natural gas.

The process has been linked to contaminated tap water, watersheds, and surrounding air.

The ordinance passed in Buffalo also bans the disposal, storage or treatment of wastewater or other wastes produced in drilling. It comes after New York approved a state-wide moratorium on fracking in August. The moratorium ends in July.

The effects of fracking, particularly those of chemicals injected into the ground in the Marcellus Shale, have come under increasing scrutiny.

The city council in Pittsburgh, PA, unanimously voted in November to prohibit fracking.

The ban came five months after a blowout in Clearfield of a Marcellus Shale well that spewed natural gas and wastewater into the air, prompting the Federal Aviation Administration to restrict air space around the site. The well, owned by Texas-based EOG Resources, had leaked in the weeks before the blowout.

Congress has ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to investigate after lawmakers discovered that companies used more than 30 million gallons of diesel fuel in 19 states for fracking in spite of an industry pledge in 2003 to stop the use of diesel fuel.

The EPA regulates the use of diesel fuel for drilling operations under the Safe Drinking Water Act, and companies that use diesel fuel must first receive a permit from the agency.

The EPA on Tuesday released a draft of how it will study the effects of fracking on drinking water. The agency plans to examine the lifespan of water used in drilling, from acquisition to mixing, management of flowback and disposal.

The draft will be open for public comment next month. Results are expected by the end of next year.

“Natural gas plays a key role in our nation’s clean energy future and the process known as hydraulic fracturing is one way of accessing that vital resource,” the EPA said.

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Storm-triggered landslides block some major roads

GOVERNMENT CAMP, Ore. – A field of debris 100-feet wide broke loose in heavy rain and tumbled onto Highway 26 near Government Camp, forcing a partial closure of the roadway Monday.

The landslide is located about four miles east of the Highway 35 junction.

Witnesses said the debris field had thick mud, trees, and large rocks.

More: Check latest road closure updates

And this wasn’t the only landslide impacting road travel in Oregon. Elsewhere, debris forced the closure of Highway 6 at mileposts 6 and 49, just east of Tillamook. Other slides were blocking Highway 101 south of Rockaway Beach and about 16 miles north of Florence.

ODOT closed U.S. Highway 20, near Cascadia in central Oregon after a landslide brought about 150 cubic yards of mud, rock and debris into the road.

Landslides also closed sections of three southwest Washington highways, including State Route 14 near Cape Horn, State Route 411 near Hazel Dell Road in Kelso and State Route 508 at Bear Canyon.

Kyle Foreman, Grant County’s public information officer, said two people were injured when their cars were struck by a rockslide about two miles north of Soap Lake in Washington state. The rockslide also forced the closure of State Highway 17.

Latest: Portland weather alerts

Small landslides and flooding also closed Multnomah Falls trail. Forest Service Staff will reopen the trail and pedestrian tunnel when it is safe for public use.

Standing water on Highway 101 at Beerman Creek was more than 10 inches. The highway was open, but cars and mini vans were not allowed. Trucks were allowed through at 5 miles per hour.

Check: Traffic alerts

In Washington, a rockslide was blocked the roadway on SR 14 in both directions near Cape Horn for several hours, The Washington State Dept. of Transportation reported. SR 411 near Hazel Dell Road, in Kelso, and SR 508 at Bear Canyon were also closed in both directions.

The Portland Bureau of Transportation announced that SE 92nd Avenue was closed between SE Division Street and SE Powell Boulevard due to high water. The city was also prepared to close sections of SE Cherry Blossom Drive and SE 92nd Avenue.

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