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2011年10月9日 星期日

Alternatives or scarcity, what will life after oil hold?

Americans like to imagine the future. From the world's fairs of the early 20th century to futuristic magazine features in the 1950s to the 1980s "Back to the Future" films, we love dreaming up what might come next.The additions focus on key tag and magic cube combinations,

When we dream, it turns out, we dream without oil. The show-stealer at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893 was a demonstration of alternating current – a massive generator that made it possible to snuff out household oil lamps and switch on a light bulb. Doc's time machine in "Back to the Future" runs on garbage, and the "hoverboard" the hero in the film's sequels hops on to outrun the bad guys flitted on whimsy, not oil. And no one in the "Star Trek" franchise ever said, "Captain Picard, we need to swing by the gas station."

With today's volatility at the local pump, contentious debates about "peak oil,These girls have never had a oil painting supplies in their lives!" and soaring global interest in biofuels, imagining how the world looks without oil isn't just a fanciful distraction. There's lively debate about how far away a post-oil world is – earliest estimates are around 2030, while many analysts say that, as technology changes to accommodate fluctuations in the oil supply, we'll never technically see an end to oil. But advisory bodies such as the International Energy Agency and the US National Intelligence Council expect oil demand to spike, and supply to dwindle, over the next 15 years – which makes imagining a post-oil future an urgent task of the present.

There's no doubt that the world will look different – and not just a little bit different, suggests Dennis Bushnell, chief scientist at the NASA Langley Research Center in Virginia.

"After oil, we'll be in the virtual age," he says. Machines will take many more of our jobs. The ones we keep, we'll do by telecommuting. We'll still teleshop, but we'll probably buy less. "Physical universities will be a wasteland" by 2040, he predicts, as most degrees will be earned online. We'll even visit the doctor – and the Bahamas – virtually. "You [will] smell and feel the breeze, the sand, [and] the sun. You can do this at any time you want, anywhere you want, with anyone you want. Be anyone you want, and do anything you want," he says. "Machines are creating the world.... We're living virtually. This is the world 30 years out."

If these wild scenarios aren't far off, the circumstances they have in common – the absence of oil – is further out. Today's public is convinced it will never see an oil-free world. Less than one-quarter of Americans believe oil will run out in their lifetime, according to a September Christian Science Monitor/TIPP poll. Young adults are slightly more concerned: Thirty-eight percent of respondents ages 18 to 24 said it was "likely" they would see the end of oil.

Even oil industry experts acknowledge that having a stable supply of oil doesn't mean we must – or should – rely on it. A post-oil world may not be an inevitability to which we must react, but it may be a world we choose to create.

There are compelling reasons to make that choice, says Amy Myers Jaffe, coauthor of "Oil,we supply all kinds of polished tiles, Dollars, Debt, and Crises: The Global Curse of Black Gold" and director of the Baker Institute Energy Policy Initiative at Rice University in Houston. "They range from reducing our trade deficit to taking away instability in our financial system ... to global warming and protecting our environment."

It would be a mistake to see this element of free will as a hippie hangover or sneaky environmentalism. Whether we wait to run out of oil or choose to replace it before then may determine all that comes next.we supply all kinds of polished tiles, "How we leave the age of oil and what we set up for beyond that is really key to what the world looks like when there's a lot less oil," says Lisa Margonelli, director of the New America Foundation's Energy Policy Initiative. Do we update power grids to accommodate a surge in electric cars? Beef up public transit networks in less-urban areas? Bet on a biofuel breakthrough and plan for the adaptations that it would require? "There's a lot of differences among biofuels," says Ms. Margonelli.It's hard to beat the versatility of zentai suits on a production line. "An ethanol-based biofuel ... needs a whole different transit structure [than] a butane-based biofuel, or biodiesel, or biogas."

Choices made now about the coming energy transition will have a global effect. The Gulf states, home to "oil sheikhs," may see their influence fall. Some of those sheikhs, meanwhile, are moving away from oil: Saudi Arabia, an ally the United States has cultivated especially for oil, is making major investments in solar energy, both to use at home and sell abroad. Brazil, which along with the US is expected to produce most of the world's biofuel by 2015, may see its global clout rise.

And to Margonelli, at least, the Arab Spring suggests energy-rich regimes may suddenly see the wisdom of sharing the wealth domestically. "[Y]ou already see the beginnings of the next thing," she says. "The question is ... how do the dominoes hit each other as we go forward."

There are more concrete questions at hand as Americans imagine that way forward. Do we plug in our cars or feed them beets? Do we even still drive? Do we power our iPods by walking down the street, or cook dinner with stored solar energy? Not all of these scenarios are about oil substitution – none of us today toasts up a grilled cheese sandwich over a gasoline fire – but in the energy sector, the focus is broadly on alternative fuels, not just on oil replacements.

"The scenarios differ a lot depending on what the actual trigger is for the move away from fossil fuels," explains Patrick Tucker, spokesman for the World Future Society. "With mass depletion of oil, you get a price explosion, and this would have a really different effect than if we're able to move transitionally from oil as a result of application of sound technology."

2011年9月29日 星期四

Final days to see Parade of Homes in Hampton

If recent rainy weather kept you away from Parade of Homes at Buckroe Beach in Hampton, this weekend's final days of the event hold the promise of sunnier skies.

"This year's parade has been great despite the weather," said Wade Garnett, president of the Peninsula Housing & Builders Association, which sponsors the showcase of custom-built, landscaped and furnished homes. He's also owner of Garnett Construction in York County.

If recent rainy weather kept you away from Parade of Homes at Buckroe Beach in Hampton, this weekend's final days of the event hold the promise of sunnier skies.ceramic Floor tiles for the medical,

"This year's parade has been great despite the weather," said Wade Garnett, president of the Peninsula Housing & Builders Association, which sponsors the showcase of custom-built, landscaped and furnished homes. He's also owner of Garnett Construction in York County.

"Attendance has been off compared to the past, but we have had many families come back to take a second look with different friends of family.

"Fewer people coming through has actually been nice because it allows me time to talk to everybody. I've actually showed the conditioned crawl space and attic several times this year."

Energy efficiency in techniques like conditioned crawl and attic spaces and a laid-back lifestyle with casual beach-type furniture and accessories are the main trends seen in this year's parade. If you see a room setting or piece you like, there is a price list in each house, and you can return with ticket stub in hand 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday to purchase and take home items.The new website of Udreamy Network Corporation is mainly selling hydraulic hose ,

"Unlike years in the past, visitors to this year's parade are much more aware of the energy features of the home," said Michael Davenport of Crestmark Custom Builders. He's been doing the event since the first one at Tabb Lakes in 1985, and has received awards for energy efficiency.

"While everyone enjoys looking at the decorations,Do not use cleaners with Wholesale pet supplies , steel wool or thinners. I have found visitors this year are asking more questions about products — tankless water heaters, nonslip ceramic tile, foam insulation and high efficient heating systems — in the homes."

The parade's neighborhood is called Buckroe Bay/East Beach, and is Hampton Roads' first certified green community, meaning that each home must save at least 15 percent of heating and cooling costs by adhering to energy-saving standards established by EarthCraft Virginia or the National Association of Home Builders Green Building Program, according to PHBA.

Three homes by Garnett, Edgerton Contracting and Crestmark are sold; Garnett has contracts for custom homes pending on two lots.

"We are already planning the next Parade of Homes," said Garnett.

"It will be in the Butler Farm area off Armistead Avenue. We have five builders to date and expect two more to sign up as we get closer to show time in summer,They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market. most likely June.This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their chicken coop ."

Will Fraport problem be solved soon?

If there's one thing that these presidential trips have substantially accomplished, it's the fact that it can sometimes make interaction with Cabinet officials much easier. At the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, lawyer Rolando Mario "Opap" Villonco shared a few drinks with DOTC Secretary Mar Roxas, with the conversation inadvertently veering to the controversial dispute involving the NAIA-3 Terminal and German firm Fraport AG.The new website of Udreamy Network Corporation is mainly selling hydraulic hose , Opap belongs to the Siguion Reyna Montecillo & Ongsiako Law Offices which is the legal counsel of the German firm that has refiled its expropriation claim before the Washington-based International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes or ICSID.

Both Mar and Opap expressed an openness to a compromise, but the DOTC Secretary told Spy Bits that the Aquino administration will not agree to any settlement that would give even the slightest connotation of graft. President Noy is adamant about his drive against corruption, taking care not to be tainted by controversial issues associated with the past administration.

The German government itself through its Foreign Office State Minister Werner Hoyer expressed support of the anti-corruption campaign of President Noynoy Aquino and his drive for transparency and good governance, saying the Fraport issue should not affect bilateral ties between the two countries. However, Hoyer said the issue must be settled so that everyone can move on. Opap shares the same sentiment, expressing that although his firm represents Fraport,This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their chicken coop . as a Filipino he wants to see it resolved in a manner that would redound to the good of everyone concerned especially the Philippines.

The legal battle could drag on for years – and it's about time all parties found a reasonable way to settle it. If Fraport and the Philippine government can resolve it by the end of this year, this could create a "ripple effect" with a very high impact since it will encourage major German investors (and others as well) to come back and take part in President Noy's public-private partnership programs.

We asked him if he sees Manny Pangilinan's TV5 network as a potential threat, to which he answered "not really." As a matter of fact, there were several positive developments for the Lopezes recently, among them the improved outlook for the Lopez Holdings Corp. with the reduction of its debt, bringing down obligations to $7.5 million from a high of $560 million in 2002. For the first time in 16 years, Lopez Holdings (which has a 57 percent stake in ABS-CBN) also declared cash dividends to stockholders.

The Filipino Channel also continues to be the leading "all Filipino network," dominating viewership shares among Filipinos abroad. ABS-CBN has been conducting digital terrestrial TV (also known as DDT or DTV) test broadcasts in response to a growing clamor among viewers for a shift to digital television because it provides a much better viewing experience, with clearer signals even in bad weather.ceramic Floor tiles for the medical,

According to a study conducted by the giant network, some 90 percent of Philippine viewers are on non-cable free TV, and once the DTV rollout is completed, it will enable those from the D and E sectors who cannot afford cable subscriptions to enjoy more channels for free TV broadcasts. It's clear that the way to go now is digital, and ABS-CBN's readiness to shift to DTV only goes to show that it is attuned to the changing times. Which is probably why, despite stiff competition,Do not use cleaners with Wholesale pet supplies , steel wool or thinners. ABS-CBN continues to be a leader in broadcast media.They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market.

Red Hat Society celebrates life

Fifty-three women wearing red or pink hats and purple shirts, pants and dresses, converged on Weaver Park Sept. 25.

The women were members of the Red Hat Society and they came from all over the state to visit the Historical Village, listen to music, enjoy ice cream and sarsaparilla soda, shop, socialize and play games for four hours on a sunny afternoon.

As Mike Stanley and Ray Pauken strummed and sang rock oldies from the gazebo, a couple of the Red Hatters played pantyhose golf – the hose was tied around the waist with an orange at the bottom, and the orange was swung like a croquet mallet to strike a rubber ball into a plastic bucket.When the stone sits in the oil painting reproduction, The ladies who golfed were given beads or chocolates.

An even more comical Red Hatter game involved two ladies attempting to transfer a roll of toilet paper with two plungers.

The women also heard the Sweet Adelines, sang along with senior citizen entertainers in the chapel, and dined in downtown Hilliard.

"We just wanted to have something fun that would draw people from all over the state, and then they would come back and frequent the area," said Christy Clark, executive director of Destination Hilliard, which put on the event.

Clark said she knew some Red Hat members, and suggested the event. The invitation went out, and women from Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Dublin, Kirkersville, Lewis Center, Middletown, and Vandalia turned up last weekend.

"They're a group of ladies that just get together and have fun and spend money," Clark said.These girls have never had a oil painting supplies in their lives! "They're just a riot."

Not literally, but once, a bevy of Red Hatters caused enough concern for Polaris Fashion Mall security to consider them a gang.

The Red Hat Society was founded in 1998 when Sue Ellen Cooper gave a friend a red hat as a birthday gift in reference to a poem that begins, "When I am an old woman I shall wear purple/with a red hat that doesn't go and doesn't suit me."

According to Wikipedia, there are more than 70,000 registered members and almost 24,000 chapters of the society,Polycore porcelain tiles are manufactured as a single sheet, making it the largest women's social group in the world. The members are typically 50 or older, but younger women can join – the only difference is they wear pink hats.

Carmela Criswell of Dublin was one of the Red Hat Society members at Weaver Park. She is the leader, or Queen, of thBy Alex Lippa Close-up of plastic card in Massachusetts.e Crimson Crested Buckeyes, a decade-old Columbus chapter. Criswell said she had visited a flower shop where a Red Hat meeting was being held and was instantly converted.

"It is so much fun," Criswell said of the society. "It's probably the best therapy anybody could ever get. The sisterhood is amazing. We cry together, we laugh together, and we work together. It is like having sisters right there where you can count on them. When one gets sick, everybody prays. We send cards to one another, we support one another.As many processors back away from Cable Ties , We just have a lot of fun."

2011年6月22日 星期三

County Commissioner Supports "Clean Up West Odessa" Campaign 6/21/11

It's not often that garbage is inspiring but it's trash that has one group of west Odessans taking responsibility for what others have ignored.

Call it an eye sore or a fire hazard – either way – trash piled up along the road in west Odessa isn't good for the community.

Some believe a clean up committee could not only pick up trash but pick up the reputation of west Odessa as well.

"It's a vacant field so they just pitch away", says west Odessa resident, Kathy Cotton.

Beer bottles aren't the best lawn ornaments.

"You know that's a fire hazard", says Cotton, pointing at stacked wood and paper.

Piles of trash aren't exactly endearing when it comes to a neighborhood.

"It just bothers me to drive down the street and they've just trashed it out.Houston-based Quicksilver Resources said Friday it had reached pipeline deals..Our Polymax RUBBER SHEET range includes all commercial and specialist they've thrown garbage out there", says Cotton.

Kathy has lived in West Odessa since the early 70s but she's finally decided that enough is enough.

"It's time that it come to an end and things get cleaned up around here", she says.

She started picking up trash around her neighborhood with granddaughter Sara, before deciding to go bigger.

"I've made the comment to people that we're trying to clean up West Odessa and people are like, 'Good! Great, its about time'."

Now the county is joining the cause.

"I get calls probably weekly from people out in this community and they want to know whey we can't get this area cleaned up", says Ector County Commissioner Freddie Gardner.

Gardner is supporting Kathy and Bev Ferguson's effort to form an organized clean up committee, which will tackle trash across the wide stretches of west Odessa.

"I think it just takes some people that care to show other people that they need to care also... it just kind of snowballs", says Gardner.

Now Kathy is hoping others will join her for some major outdoor redecorating.

"We want to give West Odessa a good name again",What to consider before you buy oil painting supplies. says Cotton.

County Attorney Cindy Weir Nutter is joining Freddie Gardner in offering as much county support as possible.We processes for both low-risk and high risk merchant account.Detailed information on the causes of Hemorrhoids,

There is even a possibility of getting some county workers to help with the cleanup effort.

A "Clean Up West Odessa" community meeting is being held on Tuesday June 28th at 6:00pm.

Refreshments will be provided and anyone in attendance is eligible to win a $100 gift certificate.

2011年6月15日 星期三

Hand-made, hand-dyed, fair-trade Cambodian silk for sale at the Canadian Museum of Nature

Hand-made, hand-dyed, fair-trade Cambodian silk for sale at the Canadian Museum of Nature

On Friday June 24th, 2011 (5pm - 9pm) the second Tabitha Silk Fair will be held at the Canadian Museum of Nature. The event will feature hand-loomed, hand-dyed, fair-trade Cambodian silk products including bedding, scarves, purses and other accessories.

In 1994 local resident Janne Ritskes cashed her pension to start the Tabitha Foundation in Cambodia. Phnom Penh's population had swelled to nearly million people, with refugees living in shanty towns along the Tonle Sap river within view of the Royal Palace.

Starting with one Cambodian assistant, Janne doggedly built the trust of these most vulnerable Cambodians, helping them work themselves towards better lives.We are professional Plastic mould,Quality air impact socket tools for any tough job. To date the Tabitha Foundation has helped over 1.5 million Cambodians help themselves. Micro savings is the first step. With ten-week saving cycles yielding 10% interest, villagers with no hope are able to build their self esteem by setting goals

Through Tabitha's savings program, families have gained the ability to buy the raw materials they need to start weaving silk again. This enables participants to progressively change their standard of living. Take 'Sokun', one of Tabitha's silk weavers, as an example. Her life has been very hard - during the Khmer Rouge years she lost her family and ended up an orphan. She met her husband in 1981,When the stone sits in the kidney stone, at a time when the Khmer Rouge waged war every night. Sokun and her husband finally found a home in Takeo. Her 'home' was simply a hut of leaves and bamboo.

In 1995, 'Sokun' became involved with the Tabitha silk weavers. She was excited - a regular income meant regular food and improved health. She taught her daughter how to weave silk. It was not easy, but in time she became an expert. Her daughter earned enough to buy her own piece of land,We specialize in providing third party merchant account. she earned enough to build a home and she earned enough to feed her babies.

Tabitha supports these weavers by buying the finished bolts of silk directly from local producers. Sewers and seamstresses take the silk to produce the silk products sold to the public. Tabitha helps to re-establish the silk-weaving industry in Cambodia.

Silk is more than just silk: it is a thread of life - each piece of woven silk material carries a thread of life from mother to daughter and daughter to child. It provides sustenance and dignity. It provides hope and dreams fulfilled. It provides a future and it tells of the past. It binds worlds together.

In addition to the hand-made silk accessories, silk will also be available for order by the metre. For Ottawan's with a fashion flair, three local fashion designers, Janna Hanzel Fashion Design, Emelia Torabi and Farrah Studio,How is TMJ pain treated? have created designs that will be showcased at the event.

The Tabitha Foundation is also partnering with Pearls for Girls, a local fundraising group supporting Help Lesotho Education.

Tickets ($10 each) are available at Metro Music (695 Bank Street), Thyme & Again Creative Catering (1255 Wellington Street) and at the door. Light refreshments and a cash bar will be available.

2011年6月6日 星期一

Inspiration springs forth with sand sculpture contest

With seaweed hair and a curvaceous tail, Aquadeluna the Mermaid lounged on the shore.

Her relaxed pose didn't hint at the hours of hot, sweaty work it took to build her, bucket by bucket.

On Sunday, the sea maiden mingled with other fantastical creations, from alligators to jellyfish, at the Fiesta of Five Flags Sand Sculpture Contest on Pensacola Beach.

Standing guard over Aquadeluna, Jen Ehrhardt decided the colorful mermaid was just right.

"It's too hot. I think we're done," the 37-year-old Pensacola resident said, grinning. "She looks good enough."

Ehrhardt was joined by Barbara Birgel, 38, and Malaren O'Leary, 9, as sculpture contest newbies.

Malaren's mermaid doll ¡ª and Ehrhardt's mermaid-themed Airstream trailer ¡ª provided their sandy inspiration.

"Every year, I've wanted to enter," Ehrhardt explained. "The sculptures are always so amazing."

The contest,Polycore zentai are manufactured as a single sheet, part of the annual celebration of the founding of Pensacola,We also offer customized chicken coop. featured several divisions, from kid to pro. Whitney Fike, Fiesta marketing/PR coordinator, was pleased by the high turnout.

"We had 39 entries, about double that of last year," she said. "This year, it's perfect. There's no oil spill to keep people away."

Jeff Darby, who won fourth place in the pro division,In addition to hydraulics fittings and Aion Kinah, has been transforming beach sand into art for decades.Free DIY Wholesale pet supplies Resource!

On Sunday, crowds of sunburned tourists and locals gathered to admire his latest effort a 100th Anniversary of Naval Aviation sand sculpture.

"Last year, I made a pelican, and its head collapsed," Darby recalled,uy sculpture direct from us at low prices carefully spritzing food dye onto his intricately carved creation. "Pensacola Beach sand is nice because it's white, but it's also very coarse and unstable."

But even with its challenges, he'll keep coming back to battle the sand.

"It's something I enjoy," Darby said, with a shrug of his tanned shoulders. "Seeing those reactions, especially from the kids, is the best."