Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Energy watchdog is ?failing? consumers

Ofgem 'failing' consumers
Watchdog criticised as ?toothless? by committee of MPs (Picture: PA)

Regulator Ofgem is ?failing consumers? by not taking action to ensure energy profits are transparent, according to MPs.

The Energy and Climate Change Committee (ECCC) report said Ofgem was ?failing consumers by not taking all possible steps to improve openness?.

The committee of MPs criticised Ofgem for having a ?relatively light touch approach and for not fully implementing the recommendations of the accountants it commissioned to improve how energy companies report their profits?.

It said profits made by the ?big six? E.On, SSE, British Gas, Npower, EDF and Scottish Power are ?not excessive? at a time of rising energy costs.

But it added: ?Greater transparency is urgently needed to reassure consumers that high energy prices are not fuelling excessive profits.?

?Ofgem needs to use its teeth a bit more and force the energy companies to do everything they can to prove that they are squeaky clean when it comes to making and reporting their profits,? said committee member John Robertson.

The watchdog said energy suppliers had been ?poor at communicating with their customers??and must be more transparent to?ensure customers do not feel they are paying excessive amounts for their energy,

?Ofgem has made energy companies produce yearly financial statements, which have been reviewed twice by independent accountants and found to be fit for purpose,? said Ofgem?s senior partner for markets, Rachel Fletcher.

Source: http://metro.co.uk/2013/07/29/energy-watchdog-is-failing-consumers-3902255/

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Ford : Mustang Convertible 1965 Ford Mustang Convertible F Code V8 289 PROJECT CAR - NO RESERVE

Price:

$ 100

Make: Ford
Model: Mustang
Condition: Used
Mileage: 99999
Engine: 289
Location: 21640, Henderson, Maryland
#VIN: 5F08F******

Seller's Notes:

WINNING BIDDER HAS NEVER CONTACTED ME - ITEM IS BEING RE-LISTED. PLEASE BE SERIOUS - THANK YOU. 1965 FORD MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE - THIS IS A PARTS OR PROECT CAR. I DO NOT HAVE A TITLE TO THIS CAR -- NO TITLE -- BILL OF SALE ONLY. APPEARS TO HAVE THE ORIGINAL 289 MOTOR. CAR HAS HAD FLOORS REPAIRED IN THE PAST. TRUNK HAS BEEN OVERLAYED WITH NEW METAL. CAR WILL NEED A COMPLETE RESTORATION, FRAME RAILS ARE VERY GOOD, REAR RAILS HAVE A FEW SMALL SPOTS BUT NOTHING SERIOUS, INNER SHOCK TOWERS LOOK REALLY ...

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Source: http://cars.i-newswire.com/car-detail/mustang/Ford-Mustang-Convertible-1965-Ford-Mustang_141024867337.html

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Friday, July 26, 2013

New techniques use lasers, LEDs, and optics to 'see' under the skin

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Scientists report on new non-invasive optical techniques using lasers, light-emitting diodes, and spectroscopic methods to probe and render images from beneath the surface of the skin. The technologies have a wide variety of medical and cosmetic applications such as treating burns, identifying cancer, and speeding the healing of wounds.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/8QoZfUfS3fM/130725104958.htm

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Religion in the American Family in the 1950s ? Justin Taylor

For the majority of us, our knowledge of the American family in the 1950s is almost entirely mediated through popular culture. It?s sometimes hard to understand how the idyllic home life of the Baby Boomers in the 1950s turned into the counter-cultural revolution of the 1960s, though if we know the economy of the gospel, we know that moralism is often the mother of?licentiousness.

We still find Christians today, however, pining for the supposed golden age of the 1950s.

D. G. Hart, reviewing Mary Eberstadt?s How the West Really Lost God, makes a helpful point on the religious life of American families in the 1950s:

That post-war family may now be forever tarnished by such maudlin television shows as ?Leave It to Beaver? or ?Ozzie and Harriet.? Even if those network families did not depict accurately the virtues of white, middle-class, suburban families (who never seemed to go to church), the Christianity of the 1950?s that blessed those families is not one that Eberstadt should use to support her case. For Protestants it was a time of neo-orthodoxy lite?more Niebuhr than Barth?when the American way of life (freedom and democracy)?not faith and repentance or word and sacrament?was synonymous with Protestantism. The situation among Roman Catholics was better but not by much. As Roman Catholics (in the United States at least) left behind their ghettos for suburban parishes, they assimilated American norms in ways that prepared the way for Vatican II?s engagement with the modern world, a posture that significantly undercut rationales for becoming a priest, nun, or monk. Of course, the families of the 1950?s were as responsible for increasing membership in conservative as in liberal churches. But in the case of liberal Christian families, domestic ties could not withstand the baby-boomers loss of faith.

. . .?If the family ever becomes more important to the conservative Protestant wing of ?family values? voters than the gospel and the Christian ministry, then what happened to 1950?s churches and families could well be the fate of Christian defenders of the family.

Copyright ? 2013 by the author listed above. Used by permission.

Source: http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justintaylor/2013/07/23/religion-in-the-american-family-in-the-1950s/

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Japan plant admits radioactive water leaked to sea

A Japanese utility has said its crippled Fukushima nuclear plant is likely to have leaked contaminated water into sea, acknowledging for the first time a problem long suspected by experts.

Experts have suspected a continuous leak since the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was ravaged by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. had previously denied contaminated water reached the sea, despite spikes in radiation levels in underground and sea water samples taken at the plant. Japan's nuclear watchdog said two weeks ago a leak was highly suspected, ordering TEPCO to examine the problem.

TEPCO said Monday the leak has stayed near the plant inside the bay.

TEPCO is struggling to manage leaks of water used to cool the wrecked reactors, a risk hampering the plant's decommissioning efforts.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/22/3513683/japan-plant-admits-radioactive.html

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Japan's Line Passes 200M Global Downloads Of Its Messaging App But Still Isn't Reporting Monthly Actives

Line downloads growthLine continues its apparent growth tear. The mobile messaging app that's extremely popular in its home market of Japan has announced it's passed the 200 million global registered users mark, some two years after launching. Line passed 100 million users back in January. It should be noted that the 200 million figure is not monthly active users but rather refers to app downloads.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/5TDiVf3ErHs/

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Monday, July 22, 2013

NFL Communications - NFL Launches Legends Program for Former ...

WARRICK DUNN, CHAD PENNINGTON and ROD WOODSON among 19 Former Players to Serve as Legends

The National Football League today launched its Legends Program, the newest step in a series of programs designed to help former NFL players connect with each other, their former teams and the NFL.

Nineteen former players, including two Hall of Famers, form the first class of NFL Legends who will participate in this multi-faceted program developed by NFL Player Engagement and the league?s Marketing Department.? The Legends will develop, foster and manage national and local alumni relations to deepen the relationship and communication between the league office, teams and former players.? They also will participate in the league?s calendar events and fan platforms as additional ways to remain connected to the game.

NFL Commissioner ROGER GOODELL and NFL Senior Vice President of Player Engagement TROY VINCENT kicked off the program on Monday, the first of two days of training at the NFL office in New York City.

?Based on our peer-to-peer model, the Legends Program will reach out to our former players, and let them know that their contribution to the game we love is appreciated and their voice is welcome,? said Vincent. ?We are a brotherhood, a family. We need to strengthen our relationships across the generations of our alumni, stay connected, and continue to contribute to this game and to each other.?

The Legends Program is built on a peer-to-peer model used in other NFL Player Engagement programs, fostering deeper relationships between generations of NFL players.? Legends commit to a three-year term during which they will work to connect the 32 teams and the league with more former players.? Legends will work closely with existing club-designated alumni directors, communicate with groups representing former players, and help develop and participate in team and league events.

For the complete release, click here

Source: http://nflcommunications.com/2013/07/22/nfl-launches-legends-program-for-former-players/

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Samsung Joins Apple, Google And Microsoft With First Global Developer Conference October 27-29

Screen Shot 2013-07-22 at 9.38.37 AMSamsung has built itself into a consumer electronics giant to rival some of the biggest and baddest, and now it's following the example of some of its lofty peers and announcing its first annual developers conference, which will take place in San Francisco at the West St. Francis Hotel in Union Square between October 27 and the 29.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/HY6ZYTdbiP4/

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54 reported dead in central China earthquake

China Daily via Reuters

A man gives water to an injured woman after an earthquake hit Minxian county in China's Gansu province on Monday.

By M. Alex Johnson, Staff Writer, NBC News

A 5.9-magnitude earthquake struck central China on Monday, reportedly killing at least 54 people and collapsing many homes.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake hit in Gansu province about 8 miles east of Chabu at 7:45 a.m. Beijing time (7:45 p.m. ET Sunday). The USGS recorded it at 6 miles deep and said it caused shaking in a rural region where the infrastructure isn't seismically resistant.

State news agency Xinhua said the death toll had risen to 54, citing municipal officials. It put the number of people seriously injured at 296. Earlier official statements put the death toll at 22.?

Photos posted on Chinese social media showed roads on the sides of riverbanks that had subsided and farmhouses reduced to piles of red bricks, Reuters reported.

The official China Meteorological Administration warned that heavy rain was possible in southeastern Gansu province Monday night and into Tuesday. It said the rain could hamper rescue efforts and urged residents to be alert to flash flooding in areas damaged by the earthquake.

Bing Maps

About 5,600 residential buildings were damaged, the Beijing-based China Daily newspaper reported Monday afternoon. Some train service was suspended, and hundreds of armed police were mobilized to repair a damaged part of the main highway linking Lanzhou, the provincial capital, to Minxian county, it reported.

Xinhua said the quake was felt in the neighboring cities of Dingxi, Longnan and Tianshui, as well as Lanzhou, more than 100 miles away. About 19,000 people live in the area that was subject to the strongest shaking, it said.

The quake was followed an hour and a half later by a 5.6-magnitude quake at about the same depth,?the USGS reported.

Based on the history of earthquakes of this size in rural China, there could be "significant casualties," the USGS said.

Gansu abuts Sichuan province, where a 6.6 quake in April killed 164 people and injured more than 6,700, China's worst quake in three years.

NBC News' Li Le, Sarah Burke and Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2efc17ea/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C220C1960A25120E540Ereported0Edead0Ein0Ecentral0Echina0Eearthquake0Dlite/story01.htm

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Jobs boost as Glenrath factory gets go-ahead

Published: 21 Jul 2013 09:000 comments

PLANS for a new egg processing plant near Eddleston have been given the go-ahead by Scottish Borders Council.

Up to 30 jobs will be created by the Glenrath expansion close to its Millennium Farm.

The full application for a 1.9 hectare site in a disused quarry adjacent to the A703 was passed by the local authority's planning department under delegated powers.

Neither the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency or Scottish Natural Heritage opposed the new factory.

And the council received no individual objections from nearby residents.

The expansion is seen as yet another step forward for a company which was started by John and Catherine Campbell as a farm diversity project in the 1960s, and is now Europe's largest egg provider.

A spokesman for Glenrath said: "Glenrath Farms Limited have identified a need to supply Scottish produced pasteurised liquid egg products to the food manufacturing industry.

The company are ideally placed to do this at their Millennium Farm site, as the site contains the company's egg grading and packing facilities.

"Eggs from the farm can be transported directly to the adjacent proposed egg processing facility without the need for transport on the road network."

The 80 metre long factory will be hidden from passing traffic by the existing landscape as well as additional planting.

Work is expected to start at Millennium Farm later this year.

Source: http://www.bordertelegraph.com/news/roundup/articles/2013/07/21/465086-jobs-boost-as-glenrath-factory-gets-goahead/

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Cruz, Paul address religious leaders in Des Moines

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) ? Two Republican senators on Friday were courting a group that could wield powerful influence over the outcome of the state's 2016 GOP presidential caucuses: Iowa's evangelical pastors.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, a conservative who rocketed to GOP stardom last year with a primary win over one of Texas' most powerful Republicans, privately addressed the conservative American Renewal Project on Friday morning in his first trip to Iowa.

"Pastors in Iowa and across the country are critical leaders, and pastors have a responsibility to speak up for their convictions," Cruz said after the speech. "I am honored to have the opportunity to visit with pastors who are speaking the truth about the enormous challenges this nation faces."

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, the son of former 2012 presidential candidate, Texas Rep. Ron Paul, also spoke at the gathering around midday Friday.

"I think the Republican Party base is people who go to church. If you poll people and ask them if they go to church, maybe 60 percent of them vote Republican," Paul said after the event.

Cruz also headlined a small state Republican fundraiser at lunchtime, while Paul ? who visited Iowa in the spring ? was set to have a closed-door evening meeting with Latino and African American ministers from around the country. Before that session, Paul said the GOP needs to do a better job of outreach to diversify membership.

"I think if you ask people generically about issues, I think you'll find that a significant number of African-Americans as well as Hispanics are in favor of a lot of Republican positions," said Paul, who was joined by Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus for the meeting. "We just need to get beyond whatever it is that is preventing people from considering voting for the Republican party."

But some Republicans, such as Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., see the two tea party favorites having limited appeal to voters, not only threatening GOP aspirations of winning back the White House but the party itself. A top Republican on the House Homeland Security Committee, King said Friday that he, too, was considering a presidential bid in 2016.

King said the fledgling field of Republican presidential candidates ? Paul and Cruz included ? were not talking about strong national defense or reaching out to the "old Reagan coalition" of working-class voters, such as construction workers, police officers and firefighters. He specifically cited Paul's filibuster in March to warn against the threat of unmanned drone attacks against U.S. citizens on American soil.

"Both of them endanger us winning nationally and also, more important than that, they hurt our national defense," King said. "The fact that they're out in Iowa, that they right now are setting the tone of the national debate, I think is harmful to the Republican Party, and in the long-run, despite their good intentions, I think it's harmful to the country, harmful to our national defense."

Cruz gave a measured response to King's statements.

"I don't know Mr. King. He is certainly entitled to his opinions," the freshman senator said. "I'm going to keep my focus not on politics but on the substance."

During a feisty lunchtime speech to Iowa state party faithful, Cruz said he wanted to abolish the Internal Revenue Service and defund President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.

"The way we get this done is the American people stand together. Stop talking, start acting," Cruz said.

Paul, meanwhile, said he favored a strong national defense but thought some Republicans were too eager to go to war.

"(Former President Ronald) Reagan talks about a reluctance to go to war. That's a historic position of the Republican Party and I think I represent the Reagan tradition of peace through strength, not war through strength," he said.

Wooing evangelical ministers could be key to a Republican victory in the Iowa caucuses, the nation's first presidential nominating event. Cruz, Paul, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum ? the 2012 caucus winner ? all could appeal to the Christian conservative bloc of the party in 2016. None has declared his candidacy yet.

Political experts agreed that the ministers have yet to zero-in on a candidate, and a desire after eight years to put a candidate in the White House more in line with their views might push conservative Christians to consider whether they could live with someone who's more moderate.

"Evangelicals, they are looking. Social conservatives, they are looking," said Chip Saltsman, who was former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee's campaign manager in 2008. "They want to be on a winning team."

__

Associated Press writers Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines and Ken Thomas in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cruz-paul-address-religious-leaders-des-moines-200000488.html

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Singapore, Dubai, London preferred by Indians buying property overseas

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Source: news.in.msn.com --- Saturday, July 20, 2013
Those looking for properties abroad include business owners, professional property investors, mid-to-top level company management and high networth individuals ...

Source: http://news.in.msn.com/business/article.aspx?cp-documentid=253410087

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POPSUGAR Shout Out: Whitney Port, Wedding Shoes, Beauty Best-Sellers, Diabetic Cookbooks & More!

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.fabsugar.com.au/POPSUGAR-Celebrity-Fashion-Beauty-Health-Whitney-Port-31007184

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Briton kidnapped near Nigeria's Lagos airport

In this photo taken on Monday, Feb. 4, 2013 passengers lineup to check in for an Air France flight at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, Nigeria. A British national has been kidnapped near Lagos international airport, in Nigeria's commercial capital, the British Consulate-General reported Friday, July 19, 2013. Spokesman Wale Adebayo says diplomats are working with Nigerian authorities on this week's kidnapping. He said he could give no other information because of the "sensitive nature" of the issue. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

In this photo taken on Monday, Feb. 4, 2013 passengers lineup to check in for an Air France flight at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, Nigeria. A British national has been kidnapped near Lagos international airport, in Nigeria's commercial capital, the British Consulate-General reported Friday, July 19, 2013. Spokesman Wale Adebayo says diplomats are working with Nigerian authorities on this week's kidnapping. He said he could give no other information because of the "sensitive nature" of the issue. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

In this photo taken on Monday, Feb. 4, 2013 passengers and passerby are seen at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, Nigeria. A British national has been kidnapped near Lagos international airport, in Nigeria's commercial capital, the British Consulate-General reported Friday, July 19, 2013. Spokesman Wale Adebayo says diplomats are working with Nigerian authorities on this week's kidnapping. He said he could give no other information because of the "sensitive nature" of the issue. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) ? A British national has been kidnapped near Lagos international airport, in Nigeria's commercial capital, the British Consulate-General reported Friday.

Diplomats are working with Nigerian authorities on the kidnapping, which took place earlier this week, said consulate spokesman Wale Adebayo.

The person was kidnapped shortly after leaving the international terminal, said a British statement.

Adebayo would not say what day it occurred or give any other information, citing the "sensitive nature" of the issue.

The U.S. Embassy in Nigeria sent an alert about the kidnapping, saying it "urges all U.S. citizens living and traveling in Nigeria to take extra precautions for your personal security and safety" because of the "high threat of kidnapping of expatriates country-wide."

The embassy advised U.S citizens to be particularly vigilant around church and other places of worship, locations where crowds gather, government facilities and areas frequented by foreigners because of an ongoing threat from Islamic extremists operating mainly in northeast Nigeria, where there is a 2-month-old state of emergency.

Kidnappings for ransom are relatively common in oil-rich Nigeria ? both of foreigners and wealthy Nigerians.

The 3-year-old son of a state legislator and four Chinese nationals in two different states all have been reported kidnapped this month.

Some cases are not reported because of fears for the safety of the hostages.

Most are released unharmed after ransoms have been paid, though people have been injured and killed if they resist.

Risk analysts Drum Cussac have reported "a noticeable upsurge" in the number of kidnappings in the southwest of Nigeria including Lagos.

"Foreign nationals were targeted in the affluent Lagos areas of Ikoyi, Victoria Island and Epe-Lekki, sparking speculation that organized criminal gangs have renewed their focus on the city's upscale districts given their relatively permissive security environments," the consultancy said.

The latest piracy statistics from the London-based International Maritime Bureau also reported an increase in kidnappings of the crew of hijacked ships off the coast of Nigeria and the rest of the Gulf of Guinea.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-19-Nigeria-Britain-Kidnapping/id-dca0229809a7472695570dff50651aec

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Friday, July 19, 2013

COMIC-CON 2013: Harrison Ford Talks Ender?s Game

Harrison Ford?s as close as you get to royalty around these parts, so there was little doubt he was the main attraction on this first day of Comic-Con ? surprisingly only his second trip to the annual San Diego geekathon*. He was in town to talk about Ender?s Game, the upcoming adaptation of Orson Scott Card?s ?very, very clever boy goes to war? novel, and his first trip into outer space since Han Solo danced to an Ewok band.

So how does his Colonel Hyrum Graff, the gruff commander who pushes child genius Ender Wiggin to his limits to help fight Earth?s war against alien ?buggers?, compare with the legendary Mr Solo?

?They?re nothing alike,? he said at the Ender?s Game press conference. ?Graff?s a very complex character that is charged with an awesome responsibility who recruits and trains the young Ender Wiggin, and really this construction of the story faces a lot of moral issues that are involved in using young people for warfare and the complex moral issues are really part of Graff?s story. Ender doesn?t really face so much the issues of morality until the end of the film when he knows what?s happened to him, but Graff is aware of his moral responsibilities all though his part of the story. I think the book deals with a lot of very complex issues of social responsibility and the moral issues that one faces when one is part of a military establishment. I was just delighted to be involved in a film with such high ambition and such talented people involved. I think Graff is a much more complex character than Han Solo ? which doesn?t mean that I regret Han Solo.?

? Ender?s Game: Harrison Ford Stars In Two New Viral Clips

The question of Card?s controversial views on gay marriage ? his anti-gay marriage standpoint has led to calls for a boycott of the movie ? was also raised. ?You say the question is for me? I?m so grateful,? said Ford with perfect dry comic timing before saying: ?I think none of Mr Card?s concerns regarding the issue of gay marriage are part of the thematics of this film, and he has written something, I think, that is of value to us all to consider moral responsibilities. I think his views outside of those that we deal with in this film are not an issue for me to deal with, so I have really no opinion of that issue. I am aware of his statements admitting that the question of gay marriage is a battle that he lost, and he admits that he lost it. I think we all know that we have all won, that humanity has won, and I think that?s the end of the story.?

* His first, trivia fans, was for Cowboys And Aliens.

Ender?s Game is released in the UK by Entertainment One on Friday 25 October.

Source: http://www.sfx.co.uk/2013/07/19/comic-con-2013-harrison-ford-talks-enders-game/

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Further Sensitivity Analysis of Hypothetical Policies to Limit Energy-Related Carbon Dioxide Emissions

Supplement to the Annual Energy Outlook 2013 ? Release date: July 18, 2013


Executive Summary

The Annual Energy Outlook 2013 (AEO2013) included several alternative cases in which hypothetical carbon dioxide (CO2) emission fees were imposed on fossil fuel consumers on an economy-wide basis. The fees start at $10, $15, and $25 per metric ton of CO2 in 2014 and rise at 5 percent per year thereafter. The AEO2013 cases illustrate the impact of policies that might place an implicit or explicit value on CO2 emissions from fuel combustion.

Feedback from EIA customers suggested an interest in additional sensitivity runs that explore variations of such policies, including cases in which a value is placed only on CO2 emissions from electric power facilities rather than on an economy-wide basis, and cases with alternative treatment of the potential revenues associated with the fees. This analysis examines the impacts of fees placed only on the emissions from electric power facilities starting at $10, $20 and $30 per metric ton of CO2 in 2014 and rising 5 percent or 7.5 percent per year thereafter. It also examines the impacts of returning the potential revenues associated with the fees to consumers versus using it for deficit reduction or returning it to businesses. And finally, two cap-and-trade policies with a 50 percent electricity sector emission reduction target are compared to the fee cases. The important questions examined include:

  • How sensitive are the electricity generation mix and electricity prices to variations in the level and growth of values placed on CO2 emissions from that sector?
  • How does the response to an economy-wide CO2 fee compare to one imposed on the electricity sector alone?
  • How do cases with CO2 fees on the electric sector compare to ones in which a cap on emissions is imposed through a tradable allowance program?
  • How would the cost and CO2 fees of such a policy be influenced by the flexibility of an alternative to submit emissions offsets for up to 20 percent of the emission allowance?

Key findings:

  • The electricity sector is very responsive to the imposition of CO2 fees. Across the four fee trajectories examined, electricity sector CO2 emissions are between 28 and 60 percent below the 2005 level in 2025 and 35 and 89 percent below the 2005 level in 2040.
  • The emissions reductions are achieved through large reductions in coal use offset by increases in natural gas (particularly early on), nuclear and renewable fuel use, as well as by reductions in overall electricity use.
    • With a CO2 fee starting at $10 per metric ton in 2014 and rising 5 percent per year, coal generation is 24 percent below the Reference case level in 2025 and 37 percent below it in 2040, when it accounts for 23 percent of overall electricity generation. In all of the other CO2 fee cases, coal generation falls to 10 percent to 29 percent of total generation by 2025 and, except for one case, less than 10 percent of total generation by 2040.
    • Natural gas-fired generation surges in the early years after a fee is imposed, but tends to return towards or below Reference case levels between 2030 and 2040. In 2025, natural gas-fired generation ranges from 10 percent to 39 percent above the Reference case level in the four CO2 fee cases. However, by 2040 this range falls to between 14 percent below the Reference case level and 5 percent above the Reference case level.
    • Renewable and nuclear generation becomes particularly important over time as large numbers of new plants are brought on line as coal plants retire. In 2025, renewable generation in the CO2 fee cases is between 21 percent and 46 percent above the Reference case level. By 2040 the increase ranges from 41 percent to 71 percent above the Reference case level. Relative to the Reference case, nuclear generation is between 0 percent and 12 percent higher in 2025 and 20 to 105 percent higher in 2040 the CO2 fee cases.
  • The change in the generation mix and emission fees in the CO2 fee cases leads to higher electricity prices. In 2025 electricity prices are 12 percent to 34 percent higher than in the Reference case, while in 2040 they are 14 percent to 28 percent higher. There are significant differences in Reference case electricity prices and electricity price impacts across regions.
  • The imposition of an economy-wide CO2 fee rather than an electricity sector CO2 fee results in only slightly larger emissions reductions, but provides significantly greater fee revenues and has a larger economic impact. In two $20 fee cases that differ only in their coverage, the reduction in total energy-related CO2 emissions differs by a little over a 1-percentage-point by 2040.
  • The results in cap and trade cases targeting a 50 percent electricity sector emissions reduction by 2040 are most similar to fee cases with a starting level of $10 in 2014. However, allowance prices in the cap and trade cases are zero until after 2020 even though utilities make plant retirement decisions that reduce emissions prior to that date in anticipation of higher future allowance prices.
  • The imposition of CO2 fees or allowance costs slows economic growth, but estimated economic impacts are sensitive to decisions on how to apply the revenue that is provided.
    • When the CO2 fees are first imposed there is a shock to the economy that reduces the level of gross domestic product (GDP) relative to the Reference case by between 0.3 percent to 1.2 percent in 2020, which is generally the peak impact year. In real 2005 chain weighted dollar terms, projected GDP, which is $16,863 billion in the Reference case, ranges from $16,664 billion to $16,807 billion in 2020 in the CO2 fee cases. By 2040, the reduction in the level of GDP relative to the Reference case ranges from 0.2 to 0.4 percent in the electricity sector CO2 fee cases. Projected 2040 GDP, which is $27,282 billion in the Reference case, ranges from $27,171 billion to $27,236 billion in the electricity sector CO2 fee cases.
    • The same impacts can also be considered in terms of changes in the annual average projected rate of economic growth over the 2014 to 2040 period. In the CO2 fee cases, the annual average rate of economic growth, which is 2.54 percent in the reference case, is reduced by between 0.0023 to 0.0124 percentage points.
    • Returning the fee related revenue through business tax adjustments tends to reduce the impact of the policy compared with the two other alternatives considered: consumer rebates or deficit reduction. When the fee-related revenue is returned through business tax rebates, total GDP nearly returns to the Reference case level by 2040.

Introduction

The Annual Energy Outlook 2013 (AEO2013) included several alternative cases in which hypothetical carbon dioxide (CO2) emission fees were imposed on fossil fuel consumers on an economy-wide basis. The fees start at $10, $15, and $25 per metric ton of CO2 in 2014 and rise at 5 percent per year thereafter. The AEO2013 cases illustrate the impact of policies that might place an implicit or explicit value on CO2 emissions from fuel combustion.

Feedback from EIA customers suggested an interest in additional sensitivity runs that explore variations of such policies, including cases in which a value is placed only on CO2 emissions from electric power facilities rather than on an economy-wide basis. This report presents results of a set of additional CO2 policy cases and compares them to a reference case that reflects the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) enacted at the start of 2013. That law, among other things, extended several provisions for tax credits to the energy sector.
The cases included in this report are presented in Table 1. The cases are designed to answer several questions:

  • How sensitive is the electricity sector to variations in the level and growth of values placed on CO2 emissions from that sector? Three cases are included with per-metric ton fees starting at $10, $20, and $30 (2011 dollars) in 2014 growing at 5 percent per year in real (inflation-adjusted) terms, and another case with per-metric ton fees starting at $10 in 2014 and growing at 7.5 percent per year.
  • How does the response to an economy-wide CO2 fee compare to one imposed on the electricity sector alone? How do emissions reductions compare in the two cases and what is the relative impact on the economy? A case with a $20 per metric ton fee growing at 5 percent a year imposed economy-wide is compared to a case with the same fees imposed on the electricity sector only.
  • How do cases with CO2 fees on the electric sector compare to ones in which a cap on emissions is imposed through a tradable allowance program? A market-based cap on emissions effectively imposes an incremental, opportunity cost on emitting CO2 through a requirement to submit allowances for emissions. These marginal cost incentives are largely equivalent to those imposed through a CO2 fee on emissions, such that either approach could be used to provide the same emissions reductions with roughly the same effects over time. In particular, what CO2 fees, or equivalent allowances prices, would be required each year to gradually cut annual CO2 emissions in the electricity sector by half the 2012 level by 2040? The 50-percent electricity cap-and-trade case illustrates this scenario.
  • How would the cost and CO2 fees of such a policy be influenced by the flexibility of an alternative to submit emissions offsets for up to 20 percent of the emission allowance requirement? An electricity cap-and-trade case with offsets illustrates that variation to the cap-and-trade scenario.
  • How does the use of revenues from carbon fees affect economic impacts? How would the economic impacts change if carbon fees were used to reduce the deficit rather than returning the fee revenue to consumers through tax rebates? How would the impacts change if carbon fee revenue was rebated to reduce corporate taxes on a revenue neutral basis?

The cases presented in this report were prepared using the National Energy Modeling System, generally as configured for AEO2013; however, as indicated above, an updated Reference case was prepared with assumptions modified to reflect ATRA. The sensitivity cases listed in Table 1 differ from the updated Reference case only by the settings indicated.

Findings

A CO2 fee provides an economic incentive to reduce emissions through its effects on energy-related investment decisions, choice of fuels, and other market responses. Generally, the higher the fee and faster its rate of growth over time, the greater the emission reduction response. CO2 fees impose an incremental cost of using fuels that is proportional to the carbon content of the fuel, so that a given fee has greater incremental impact on coal than natural gas.

When the fees are applied across the economy, the effect on delivered (fee-inclusive) energy prices is directly reflected in all uses of fossil fuels. When applied only in the electricity sector, the higher delivered cost of fossil fuels to power producers results in higher electricity prices. Responses in the power sector also change the overall demand for each of the fossil fuels, which can affect the prices paid by consumers who use these fuels directly.

A summary of results for selected cases that demonstrate the range of CO2 reductions and economic impacts examined is provided in Tables 2 and 3. Full results for the case are available through the Interactive Table Viewer.

CO2 fees

The CO2 fees considered in the fee cases developed in this report start at $10, $20 and $30 per metric ton of CO2 in 2014 and grow at either 5 or 7.5 percent per year over time (Figure 1). By 2040 they range between $36 and $107 per metric ton of CO2. The allowance prices in the cap-and-trade cases are generally much lower, particularly in the near term, than the fees in the four fee cases (Figure 2). In both of the cap-and-trade cases the emissions target is set to 50 percent below the 2012 level by 2040. The target is assumed to decline linearly from the emission level in 2012 to the final target in 2040. Both cap-and-trade cases assume no banking of allowances, but one allows offsets to be used for up to 20 percent of their covered emissions as a compliance option, while the other does not. The assumed offsets reflect a potential program to allow non-covered entities to register either reductions in non-CO2 greenhouse gases or increases in carbon sequestration through changes in forestry and agriculture practices. While the supply of offsets is uncertain, they have the potential to lower compliance costs significantly. In the cap-and-trade case with offsets, the estimated allowance price in 2033 is less than half the price in the cap-and-trade without offsets case.

In all cases, covered entities are assumed to be aware of future allowance prices and CO2 fees, so investment decisions take current-year and future-year CO2 fee or allowance values into account. This foresight assumption leads to an interesting outcome, particularly in the cap-and-trade cases. In those cases, simulated allowances prices in the first few years were driven to zero based on forward-looking investment behavior by coal plant owners. In anticipation of future allowance prices that would eventually make many of their coal plants uneconomical, they retire some of their coal plants earlier to avoid the interim costs of upgrading them to meet environmental regulations that take effect in 2016.1 These coal plant retirements cause emissions over the 2014 to 2020 period to fall below the assumed caps even though allowance prices do not rise above $1 per metric ton CO2 until after 2020.

CO2 emissions

The electricity sector exhibits a strong response to CO2 fees by altering investment and operating decisions to reduce emissions, while electricity consumers react to higher prices by cutting their demand for electricity. Emissions decline rapidly in the first three years after introduction of the carbon fees, 2014-2016, as power companies initially react to the emissions fees by retiring coal plants rather than investing in them to bring them into compliance with upcoming environmental regulations (Figure 3).  This leads to an increase in natural gas use.  Emissions reductions continue after 2016, but at a slower pace. The magnitude of the CO2 emissions response is strongly related to the CO2 fee levels assumed, particularly in the early years, but reductions from the Reference case occur throughout the projection. By 2040, energy-related CO2 emissions in the electricity sector are less than half the 2005 level in three of the four CO2 fee cases. The $30 fee case induces an emission reduction in the electricity sector of 89 percent from 2005 levels by 2040.

In the two cap-and-trade cases, the emission target in 2040 was assumed to be half the 2012 level, or about 57 percent below the 2005 level (Figure 4). Some over-compliance or excess emissions reductions occur in the first five years. Again, the anticipation of future allowance prices drives some retirement and investment decisions, leading to greater emissions reductions than required in the early years of the projections. The difference in CO2 emissions shown between the two cap-and-trade cases reflects the quantity of offsets used in the case with offsets.  The effect on CO2-equivalent greenhouse gas emissions in the two cases would be essentially the same, but reductions in the offsets case include non-CO2 emissions reductions in non-covered sectors, as well as increases in carbon sequestration in agriculture and forestry. No energy-related CO2 offsets were simulated from the non-covered sectors, as might be allowed under an electricity-only cap-and-trade offset policy. Comparing the emissions reductions in the cap-and-trade cases to those in the fee cases shows that the two $10 fee cases produce emissions reductions most similar to the 50 percent reduction target called for in the cap-and-trade cases.

The change in total U.S. energy-related CO2 emissions in 2040 relative to 2005 emissions ranges from 18 percent to 39 percent across the fee cases (Figure 5), lower than the 35 percent to 89 percent reductions seen in the power sector alone. This difference reflects the fact that in 2011, the electricity sector accounted for about 40 percent of total U.S. energy-related CO2 emissions.

One interesting finding in this analysis is shown in Figure 6, comparing energy-related CO2 emissions in two $20 fee cases that differ only in their coverage. In one case, only the electricity sector is covered, while in the other, all energy-related CO2 emissions throughout the economy are covered. The total CO2 emissions in the economy-wide coverage case are only slightly lower than in the electricity sector coverage case, and in both cases, the emissions reductions are almost entirely attributable to electricity sector actions. By 2040, there is only a little over a 1-percentage-point difference in the total emissions reduction from the 2005 level.

Many factors including changing fuel prices and slowing energy demand growth contribute to the relatively small emissions reductions seen in the fee cases outside of the electricity sector. Recent changes in energy regulations may be a particularly important factor. For example, the Reference case incorporates the recently-extended fuel economy and tailpipe emission standards for light-duty vehicles. The rulings mandate increasingly stringent improvements in CO2 emissions and fuel economy between 2017 and 2025. As a result, the Reference case projects a 16-percent reduction in CO2 emissions from all light-duty vehicles between 2011 and 2025. Since these standards lead to technology adoption for fuel economy in excess of what might otherwise occur, increases in gasoline prices from a CO2 fee have limited incremental effect on consumer or manufacturer decisions to adopt fuel-saving technology. In addition, any increases in driving costs from CO2 fees on gasoline would be tempered by the high fuel economy of the vehicle fleet already in place to meet the fuel economy standards.

Generation by fuel

The imposition of CO2 fees or allowance prices on the power sector has significant impacts on the mix of fuels used to generate electricity. The fees raise the cost of using fossil fuels, making it more economical to use less carbon intensive fuels or technologies that capture and store the CO2. Among the fuels used to generate electricity, coal is most impacted by the imposition of a CO2 fee (Figure 7), particularly when the fee starts above $10 per metric ton of CO2 or rises more rapidly than 5 percent per year. When the CO2 fee starts at $10 per metric ton and rises 5 percent per year, coal generation falls below the Reference case levels, but it continues to account for a significant share of overall electricity generation. In this case, coal generation is 24 percent below the Reference case level in 2025 and 37 percent below it in 2040, when it accounts for 23 percent of overall electricity generation. In all of the other CO2 fee cases, coal generation falls to 10 percent to 29 percent of total generation by 2025 and, except for one case, less than 10 percent of total generation by 2040. In the case where the CO2 fee starts at $10 per metric ton and rises 5 percent per year, just over one-third (36 percent) of existing coal capacity is retired by 2040 while in the other fee cases more than 75 percent of current coal capacity is retired by then.

The implications for natural-fired generation differ significantly from those for coal (Figure 8). When the CO2 fee is first imposed, power plant owners retire a large amount of existing coal capacity rather than make investments to bring it into compliance with upcoming environmental regulations. Since companies know that the CO2 fees will rise over time, they take this into account in their environmental retrofit investment decisions and, in many cases, choose not to go forward with them. This leads to a sharp increase in natural gas-fired generation to replace the power formerly supplied by existing coal plants. Over time, however, as the CO2 fees continue to increase, non-emitting sources like new renewable and nuclear plants become increasingly attractive. As these new zero-CO2 emitting plants are brought on line, the generation contribution from natural gas-fired plants falls towards or below Reference case levels, particularly in the higher fee cases. In 2025, natural gas-fired generation ranges from 10 percent to 39 percent above the Reference case level in the CO2 fee cases. However, by 2040 this range falls to between 14 percent below the Reference case level and 5 percent above the Reference case level in the CO2 fee cases. A portion of the natural gas generation in the later years in the CO2 fee cases, particularly in the $30 fee case, comes from new natural gas plants with carbon capture and storage equipment.

Similar to natural gas, renewable generation shows strong growth in the early years when the CO2 fees are first imposed (Figure 9). However, unlike natural gas, the increase above Reference case levels continues to grow over time as new renewable capacity is added. In 2025, renewable generation in the CO2 fee cases is between 21 percent and 46 percent above the Reference case level. By 2040 the increase ranges from 40 percent to 71 percent above the Reference case level. The share of total generation accounted for by renewables ranges from 25 percent to 31 percent in 2040 in the CO2 fee cases, much higher than the 17 percent share achieved in the Reference case. Among the specific renewable sources, wind, solar, biomass and geothermal all contribute to the increase in renewable generation in the CO2 fee cases, but their relative contribution varies from case to case, particularly for biomass. Biomass can be burned in dedicated plants and co-fired along with other fuels like coal. In the $10 CO2 fee cases, it becomes attractive to reduce coal use through increased co-firing of biomass and this leads to a large overall increase in biomass generation.  In the higher CO2 fee cases, however, most coal capacity is eventually retired, reducing the opportunity for co-firing.  Large increases in wind and solar capacity occur in the CO2 fee cases. In the Reference case, wind capacity increases from 46 gigawatts in 2011 to 101 gigawatts in 2040. In the CO2 fee cases, wind capacity ranges from 154 to 220 gigawatts in 2040. The pattern is similar for solar. In the Reference case, solar capacity increases from 5 gigawatts in 2011 to 44 gigawatts in 2040, but in the CO2 fee cases, capacity ranges from 60 to 152 gigawatts in 2040.

Nuclear generation, like renewable generation, increases in all of the CO2 fee cases, but its growth occurs later, mostly after 2025 and 2030 (Figure 10). The development timeline for new nuclear capacity is generally longer than for other capacity types. Relative to the Reference case, nuclear generation ranges from unchanged to 12 percent higher in 2025 in the CO2 fee cases. By 2040, the increase in nuclear generation relative to the Reference case grows to from 20 percent to 105 percent higher in the CO2 fee cases. While not entirely unprecedented, the rate of nuclear expansion seen in the $20 and $30 fee cases rivals or exceeds the rate of expansion seen between 1970 and 1990 in the United States, and it may be challenging to repeat that rate of growth again. For example, in the $30 fee case, 135 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity are added between 2015 and 2040, substantially exceeding the 90-plus gigawatts of nuclear capacity that was added between 1970 and 1995.

Electricity prices

The imposition of CO2 fees leads to higher fossil fuel and electricity prices, and slower economic growth, but the impacts vary significantly with the level of the fees imposed, the uses of the fee revenue and the coverage of the program. Across the CO2 fee cases, electricity prices are 12 percent to 34 percent higher than in the Reference case in 2025 and 14 percent to 28 percent higher in 2040 (Figure 11). The percentage changes and the electricity prices shown in Figure 11 are average delivered prices to all consumers, including homes, commercial buildings, and industrial facilities.

The CO2 fees raise the cost of using fossil fuels to generate electricity. For example, in 2025, the cost of coal to power plants without carbon capture and storage equipment is $2.69 per million Btu in the Reference case, but it is $3.70 in the $10 fee case, $4.85 in the $20 fee case and $6.01 in the $30 fee case. The cost of using coal increases even further by 2040, ranging from $6.33 to $12.30 per million Btu in the CO2 fee cases versus $3.20 in the Reference case. The impacts on natural gas prices are smaller than those for coal because of its lower carbon content, but they are still significant. The cost of using natural gas for power generation in 2040 ranges from $9.94 to $13.31 per million Btu in the CO2 fee cases versus $8.33 in the Reference case.

While CO2 fees raise electricity prices through their impact on generation costs, they do not affect electricity distribution costs, which typically constitute a larger share of the electricity price for residential consumers than for industrial consumers, who typically pay lower overall prices. Therefore, in each of the CO2 fee cases, the percentage increase in residential electricity prices tends to be significantly smaller than the percentage increase in industrial electricity prices.

Current electricity prices, as well as projected electricity prices in the Reference case and the change in electricity prices in the CO2 fee and cap-and-trade cases considered in the paper, vary significantly across U.S. regions. Table 4 shows actual 2011 regional prices and projected reference and alternative case prices in 2025. Table 5 displays the same for 2011 and 2040 in the CO2 fee cases, while Figure 16 displays the regions.

Economic Impacts

The higher consumer electricity prices (and higher consumer fossil fuel prices when the coverage extends beyond the electricity sector) in the CO2 fee cases tend to slow economic growth.  Figures 12 and 13 display the economic impacts in alternative ways. Figure 12 shows total U.S gross domestic product (GDP) in the Reference case and the four CO2 fee cases. As shown, the impacts are hard to discern, the thickness of the lines in the figure obscure them.

Figure 13 displays the same information in a different way, showing the percentage change in GDP in the CO2 fee cases relative to GDP in the Reference case. Initially as the CO2 fees are first imposed there is a shock to the economy leading to a reduction in GDP of 0.3 percent to 1.2 percent in 2020, which is generally the peak impact year. In real 2005 chain-weighted dollar terms, projected GDP, which is $16,863 billion in the Reference case, ranges from $16,664 billion to $16,807 billion in 2020 in the CO2 fee cases. Over time, the impacts fall as the economy adjusts, the power sector converts to lower emitting sources and consumers spend the revenue associated with the fees that is rebated to them. By 2040, the reduction in GDP relative to the Reference case in the CO2 fee cases ranges from 0.2 to 0.4 percent. Projected 2040 GDP, which is $27,282 billion in the Reference case, ranges from $27,171 billion to $27,236 billion in the electricity sector CO2 fee cases. Figure 14 shows the same information for the cap-and-trade cases and illustrates that their economic impacts are similar to those in the two $10 fee cases.

The impacts in the alternative cases can also be considered in terms of changes in the annual average projected rate of economic growth over the 2011 to 2040 period. In the CO2 fee cases, the annual average rate of economic growth, which is 2.51 percent in the reference case, is reduced by between 0.006 to 0.014 percentage points.

In all of the fee cases, industrial and employment impacts tend to follow GDP changes, with energy-intensive industries experiencing higher percentage changes from Reference case levels compared to all of manufacturing and overall industry as well.

While the fee level is important in estimating the potential economic impact of the program, other important factors include how the revenue associated with the CO2 fees is used and the coverage of the program. In most of the cases discussed in this report it is assumed that all the fee revenue is rebated to consumers. Other options include using the fee revenue to reduce the deficit or returning it to businesses through lower business taxes.

In general, using the fee revenue for deficit reduction rather than rebating it to consumers, leads to a larger adverse impact on the GDP in the near term. This occurs because personal consumption, a major portion of GDP, is much lower when the fee revenue is not returned. Conversely, when the fee revenue is returned to businesses, the economy tends to be better off because businesses increase their investments that lead to greater productivity and economic growth. As shown, when the revenue is returned through business tax rebates, total GDP nearly returns to the Reference case level by 2040. However, personal consumption remains lower when the revenue is returned to businesses rather than consumers.

?

Footnote

1 Section 112 of the Clean Air Act Toxic Standards (MATS). Compliance with MATS is expected to require all coal plants to add emission control equipment, such as flue gas desulfurization and dry sorbent injection by 2016, or to be retired.

Source: http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/aeo/supplement/co2/

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Obama's unlikely climate change partner: China

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama has stumbled on an unusual partner in his quest to combat climate change: China.

The world's two biggest emitters of heat-trapping greenhouse gases are finding common cause in efforts to reduce global warming, cooperation the U.S. says could clear the way for other developing nations like India and Brazil to get on board, too.

Skeptics question whether either nation will follow through on lofty aspirations. Still, the budding agreements are allowing the two rivals to present a positive front at a time when tensions are running high over espionage, alleged cybertheft and American fugitive Edward Snowden.

Last week, top American and Chinese officials announced new joint initiatives, including cutting emissions from heavy-duty vehicles and upping energy efficiency of buildings, transport and industry. They also agreed to team up on large-scale experiments with "carbon capture" ? technology to isolate carbon dioxide from power plant emissions so it can be safely stored. Lack of commercially viable technology has been a major barrier to making plants cleaner in the U.S. and abroad.

A month earlier, Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping (shee jihn-peeng) met in the California desert for a summit aimed at forging closer ties. The sole concrete achievement was a deal to phase out hydrofluorocarbons, a potent greenhouse gas used in refrigerators and air conditioners.

"This is a priority for the president and for me," Vice President Joe Biden said Thursday during a speech on Asian relations, specifically mentioning the accord with China. "The impact of climate change also has an impact as growth as well as security."

The world's most populous country, China has long been perceived globally as an unabashed polluter but has started to change its tone. In 2007 China's notoriously pragmatic and economy-focused government called, in a national strategic document, for an "ecological civilization," reflecting a move toward balancing environmental protection with development.

China's environmental imperatives are clear: suffocating smog in Beijing, rising sea levels and polluted water and soil that can stifle development. Already vying with the U.S. as the world's largest manufacturer, China looks at policies that constrain industry growth differently than other, largely agricultural developing nations in Africa or Asia.

Beijing may also see renewable and clean energy as a growing global fad and want to ensure they're not left out. In 2010, China's government spent more than $30 billion subsidizing its solar panel industry, U.S. energy officials said. And the U.S. shale natural gas boom is attracting major Chinese investment, too.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington didn't respond to a request for comment.

For Obama, jumpstarting the global climate change effort is a key to his second-term agenda and his legacy. Reducing U.S. greenhouse gases will only go so far. Mounting emissions planetwide could blunt the impact of what Obama does at home.

That's where China could play a critical role.

"China is a huge weight in the global system," said Jonathan Pershing, the Energy Department's top climate official and a former U.S. climate negotiator, in an interview. "It has a developing country framework, so other developing countries say, 'Certainly if China can do it, we can do it, too.'"

Although China is unlikely to actively nudge other nations, the overriding U.S. concern is that China not spoil global agreements that would otherwise proceed, Pershing said. That's because climate accords tend to be governed by consensus. Such a phenomenon was on display in 2009, when China was accused of wrecking a stronger agreement in Copenhagen over its resistance to specific emissions limits.

The upbeat tone on climate comes as a series of disputes have complicated Obama's attempts to improve relations with China and strengthen U.S. influence in Asia.

Washington has complained loudly to Beijing about cyberhacking and intellectual property. The White House also says bilateral relations were dealt a serious blow by China's refusal to extradite Snowden, the National Security Agency leaker, before he fled Hong Kong. At the same time, Snowden's revelations about U.S. surveillance emboldened Chinese officials to argue Obama's complaints about cybersecurity are hypocritical.

And China's growing investment and influence in sub-Saharan Africa, where it's surpassed the U.S. as the largest trading partner, were on display last month as Obama traveled the continent.

"There are pressures on the U.S. and China to do something about global warming, and it happens to fit in with the idea of expanding cooperation to try to contain and hopefully reverse the growing strategic rivalry," said a former U.S. Ambassador to China, J. Stapleton Roy.

The White House hopes that political pressure from China's expanding middle class may spur China to further action.

It remains to be seen whether the cooperation on climate will extend much beyond diplomatic niceties. After all, the U.S. and China have at times made similar pronouncements, said Elizabeth Economy, director of Asia studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

"There are many, many good ideas that simply don't come to fruition," Economy said. "There are reasons why it hasn't worked very well in the past. As far as I can see, those same reasons exist today."

___

AP Business Writer Joe McDonald in Beijing contributed to this report.

___

Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter: http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obamas-unlikely-climate-change-partner-china-220534738.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

UnitedHealth second-quarter profit rises, beats expectations

By Caroline Humer

(Reuters) - UnitedHealth Group Inc on Thursday reported a bigger-than-expected rise in second-quarter net income as it enrolled more people in private and government-paid health insurance plans and sold more health technology systems.

UnitedHealth reported net income of $1.44 billion, or $1.40 per share, compared with $1.34 billion, or $1.27 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts on average had expected earnings of $1.25 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Revenue rose to $30.4 billion. Analysts had expected $30.5 billion.

The quarterly results come as the company, the largest U.S. health insurer and the first to report earnings for the period, prepares for more changes stemming from President Barack Obama's healthcare law, the Affordable Care Act.

Next year, the government will expand the Medicaid program for the poor in many states, and state-based health exchanges will start selling subsidized insurance to individuals. About 7 million people are expected to sign up for insurance next year.

UnitedHealth raised the low end of its 2013 outlook by 10 cents a share to $5.35 while keeping the high end at $5.50. Analysts had forecast $5.44.

While this quarter was strong, the forecast likely reflects pressure on profitability in insurance plans like private Medicare that are paid for by the government, which is cutting how much its pays for healthcare services, one analyst said.

"Changes in margin mix in the business, likely the (Medicare Advantage) and TriCare (military) segments, suggest that margin pressures still abound," CRT Capital analyst Sheryl Skolnick said in a research note.

UnitedHealth said the number of people enrolled in its insurance plans, including through small businesses, large corporations, the military, Medicare for the elderly, and Medicaid, was 89.2 million at the end of June, up from 86 million at the end of March.

The company said it had spent 81.5 percent of its premiums on medical claims during the quarter, an increase of 20 basis points from a year earlier.

The health reform law, known as Obamacare, sets targets for this ratio. It has also required many insurance plans to include more free preventative services.

Even so, insurers have benefited from Americans' reduced use of medical services over the past several years, a trend Skolnick said appeared to have continued this quarter.

Operating earnings were flat in the company's insurance business and increased in the Optum health technology unit, the UnitedHealth said.

(Reporting by Caroline Humer; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/unitedhealth-reports-higher-second-quarter-profit-101602796.html

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Google Maps 2.0 arrive sur iOS, l'iPad ? l'honneur

Une semaine apr?s le d?ploiement de Google Maps 7.0 pour Android, c'est d?sormais iOS qui b?n?ficie d'une mise ? jour. L'OS d'Apple est servi d'une mani?re relativement proche, et b?n?ficie d?sormais du support de l'iPad.

Google Maps 2.0 pour iOS dispose donc ? son tour d'une refonte de son interface, mais ?galement de l'affichage du trafic en temps r?el, avec l'affichage des alertes accidents. L'application dispose aussi, d?sormais, de l'affichage des cartes d'interieur, une fonction pr?sente depuis longtemps sur Android mais dont la jeune version iOS ?tait priv?e.


L'autre ajout de cette mise ? jour, c'est le support des grands ?crans, permettant ? l'application de s'afficher de mani?re optimis?e sur iPad et iPad mini : une nouveaut? r?clam?e par les utilisateurs des tablettes d'Apple depuis la disponibilit? de l'app, propos?e en alternative ? Plans. La mise ? jour est d'ores et d?j? disponible sur l'App Store d'Apple.

Pour aller plus loin en vid?o :


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phoenixjp/~3/405uhNOANkU/actualite-572822-google-maps-2-ios-ipad-honneur.html

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Irish potato famine-causing pathogen even more virulent now

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The plant pathogen that caused the Irish potato famine in the 1840s lives on today with a different genetic blueprint and an even larger arsenal of weaponry to harm and kill plants.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/2UJYMBXT4os/130718101339.htm

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

New study: Arctic ice melt may be natural event, no consensus on ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Climategate · Reference Pages ... The findings, published in Nature Geoscience, underscore the need for continuous satellite monitoring of the ice sheets to better identify and predict melting and the corresponding sea-level rise. .... Cosmic rays, Curious things, Current News, Desertification, Disaster, disinvitation, Drought, Durban Climate Conference, dust storms, Earth, Earthquakes, Economy-health, Education, Educational opportunity, Emergence, Energy, ENSO ...

Source: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/07/16/new-study-arctic-ice-melt-may-be-natural-event-no-consensus-on-cause/

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Internet Sharing OSX to Windows problem.





Internet Sharing OSX to Windows problem.


I am trying to share my wifi from my macbook pro to my gaming windows pc through an ethernet cable.

I havent done this for a few months but it always worked flawlessly in the past. It wont share via bluetooth or with other devices by ethernet either.

I can share files between the two and the macbook can go on the internet.

Why won't my PC get an internet connection?

Is there a way to reset my macbook's internet settings perhaps? I have been running "Server.app" since my last successful setup. It is uninstalled now though.

__________________
13" MacBook Pro, 2.3 GHz, 8GB RAM, 10.8.4 ; Power Mac G5, 2.0 GHz, 2.5GB RAM, 10.5.8 ; Macintosh 512Ke ; 16GB iPhone 4s; 8GB iPod Touch 2G ; Airport Extreme 5G ; 23" Cinema Display

Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1610846&goto=newpost

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Watch the Gymnast Bot Land a Quadruple Backflip

We've seen this bot before. Just this past March, we witnessed it stick a near impossible landing. And now it's stuck a quadruple backflip, which by all accounts appears to be it sixteenth feat of heroism. What can't this little guy do? Nothing.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/watch-the-gymnast-bot-land-a-quadruple-backflip-799326060

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