Friday, August 2, 2013

Sold! First Parcels Auctioned For Future Offshore Wind Farms

The offshore wind farm in the North Sea near Borkum, Germany, is nearly complete. The Riffgat facility, seen here on June 23, includes 30 turbines, each with a generating capacity of 3.6 megawatts.

David Hecker/Getty Images

A Rhode Island company was the highest bidder in the federal government's first-ever auction for the right to build an offshore wind farm.

After 11 rounds, Deepwater Wind outbid two other companies for two patches of ocean off the coasts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The winning bid was $3.8 million.

The Rhode Island and Massachusetts Wind Energy Area covers more than 250 square miles about 10.5 miles south of the Rhode Island coastline. The area is divided into two lease areas.

Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

The Rhode Island and Massachusetts Wind Energy Area covers more than 250 square miles about 10.5 miles south of the Rhode Island coastline. The area is divided into two lease areas.

Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

Not as many companies participated in the bidding as was expected, but industry representatives and government officials heralded the outcome as a sign that offshore wind power is on its way.

"This sale marks a really historic moment in the clean energy future of this country," said Tommy Beaudreau, director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which is part of the Interior Department.

The United States has no offshore wind farms, but some industry experts say the fact that there was competition for these leases shows that despite all the setbacks, the offshore wind industry might soon take off.

"The resource is too big to be ignored for very much longer," says Todd Griset, an attorney who advises clients on ocean energy projects.

However, the two most prominent would-be wind projects ? Cape Wind, off the coast of Massachusetts' Cape Cod, and NRG Bluewater Wind off Delaware ? have met one setback after another. The Delaware project is on hold and the Massachusetts one is snarled in litigation.

The winner of Wednesday's auction secures the sole right to develop the 165,000 acre lease area. But there is no guarantee it will actually install wind turbines.

"When they win a lease from us, they then basically have what I consider a dinner reservation," says Maureen Bornholdt, who oversees offshore renewable energy projects for the federal Interior Department.

Winning companies will have four years to design a project and study its environmental effects.

It probably will take at least five years before any wind turbines will be erected for these projects, according to Jim Lanard, the president of the Offshore Wind Development Coalition.

Another auction is scheduled for Sept. 4 for a possible wind project off the coast of Virginia, and Bornholdt says more auctions are in the works for patches of ocean off the coasts of of Maryland, Massachusetts and New Jersey.

Some environmental groups cheered the auctions as a sign that the country is moving toward cleaner energy.

"Responsibly harnessing the power of the wind blowing off our coasts is critical for cutting pollution and re-powering America with clean, renewable energy," said Courtney Abrams of Environment America.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/08/01/207308203/sold-first-parcels-auctioned-for-future-offshore-wind-farms?ft=1&f=1007

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Obama open to making changes to surveillance, lawmakers say

By Mark Felsenthal and Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Thursday told lawmakers he is open to changing controversial surveillance programs in order to restore public confidence and provide assurance the government is not violating citizens' privacy, participants at the meeting said.

"We understand the American people really do need to know what's going on now and what's going on in the past and get the right kind of assurances that their privacy has not been breached," said Senator Saxby Chambliss, who attended the meeting.

"We've got to figure out ways to make the program more transparent," he said.

Since former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed widespread government collection of phone and Internet records, a debate has erupted over how far the government should be allowed to go in monitoring its citizens' communications to protect the country from attacks.

Opposition to government surveillance has created an unlikely alliance of libertarian Republicans and some Democrats in Congress. The House of Representatives last week narrowly defeated an amendment to a spending bill that would have limited the NSA's scope to collect electronic information.

Obama met at the White House with Chambliss and other lawmakers who sit on the intelligence and judiciary committees. These included Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, who has been a skeptic of the NSA data collection program, and Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee on which Chambliss is the top Republican.

Also present were Representative Mike Rogers, who chairs the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, and Representative Dutch Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the panel.

The White House said the president had called the meeting to discuss the surveillance program and "to hear from some of the programs' most prominent critics and defenders."

The intelligence committee leaders said in a joint statement they intend to work through August on proposals to increase transparency and protect privacy in counterterrorism programs.

At the White House, the discussion focused on the need to amend, but not necessarily abolish, the surveillance program, and to explain its merits to those who worry it is an invasion of privacy, Chambliss told reporters.

"We don't know what type of changes we're going to make," he said. "But the president was very amenable for providing the right kind of leadership to ensure that we get together and that we do the right thing."

The chairman of the House Judiciary panel, Republican Bob Goodlatte, who was also at the meeting, said he plans to hold hearings to ensure that the surveillance does not infringe on civil liberties.

"I stressed to the president that Congress must ensure that the laws we have enacted are executed in a manner that is consistent with congressional intent and that protects both our national security and our civil liberties," he said in a statement.

A small group of senators unveiled two bills before the White House meeting on Thursday seeking to alter the surveillance programs.

One measure would create a new "special advocate" position who could argue in a court that operates in secret to make decisions on government surveillance requests, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

The other would change the way judges are appointed to the FISA courts to ensure that the court represents a broad spectrum of political views.

(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal and Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-open-making-changes-surveillance-lawmakers-010729604.html

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Ghana Business News ? GAEC seeks funds to expand its ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Dr Kenneth Danso, Director, Biotechnology and Nuclear Agriculture Research Institute (BNARI) of GAEC, made the call during a lecture on the topic: ?GAEC's Contribution to Sustainable Agricultural Development and Food ...

Source: http://www.ghanabusinessnews.com/2013/07/31/gaec-seeks-funds-to-expand-its-agricultural-research/

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The Daily Roundup for 07.31.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours -- all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/31/the-daily-roundup-for-07-31-2013/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Security News Headlines - Yahoo! News

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Source: http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/security

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Rev. Jesse Jackson calls Florida ?Selma of our time?; Gov. Rick Scott calls for apology

It didn?t take long for Florida?s Republican leaders to lash out following comments made Tuesday by the Rev. Jesse Jackson during his visit with the Dream Defenders protest group at the Capitol.

Gov. Rick Scott asked that Jackson apologize for calling Florida the ?Selma of our time? and ?the Apartheid State.?

?Jesse Jackson owes every Floridian an apology for his reckless and divisive comments,? Scott said in a statement Wednesday. ?It is unfortunate that he would come to Florida to insult Floridians and divide our state at a time when we are striving for unity and healing. Floridians are a strong, resilient people. We are fortunate to live in a great state where all Floridians enjoy opportunities to get a great job and world-class education.?

Jackson, like the Dream Defenders, wants Florida to revisit the ?stand your ground? law that was passed in 2005. Scott has said he supports the law and won?t call a special session to address it.

Jackson said Florida?s post-Trayvon Martin environment is ?toxic.?

? 'Stand your ground? laws must end,? Jackson told reporters. ?The manipulation of African-Americans here is disgraceful.?

?We?ve seen Southern governors before change their minds,? Jackson said Tuesday. ?Wallace said we couldn?t go to the University of Alabama. He had to change his mind.?

Wallace is a reference to former Alabama Gov. George Wallace, who in 1963 famously stood in the door of Foster Auditorium at the University of Alabama to block the entry of two black students. In the late 1970s, he apologized to black leaders for his stance on segregation. In his final term as governor in 1983-1987, Wallace made a record number of black appointments.

Florida House Speaker Will Weatherford reacted strongly as well. He objected to Jackson?s comparison of Scott to Wallace. On Tuesday night, Weatherford tweeted: Rev. Jackson?s latest comments about @FLGovScott went too far. I am embarrassed for him and his irresponsible statement.

It was retweeted 15 times, including once by Lenny Curry, chairman of the Republican Party of Florida.

Jackson, meanwhile, was gone by early Wednesday to catch a flight. He slept on the floor of the Capitol on Tuesday night as part of the Dream Defenders? sit-in.

?He was telling different stories and correlating what?s going on right now in the movement that we?re creating with movements and moments that he?s been part of,? said the Dream Defenders? Steve Parjett. ?He?s committed to continuing to help us and continuing to provide support.?

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/31/3533728/rev-jesse-jackson-calls-florida.html

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SHARE if the national debt MUST go down! http://bit.ly/11uxXdH

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