Posts Tagged ‘global’

CyclingBuddy goes global

CyclingBuddy.com the totally FREE website that helps members find other members to cycle with are today celebrating their 2 month anniversary. The site already has over 2,300 cyclists signed up and rapidly gaining traction in other markets too.

CyclingBuddy was launched on the back of a very successful running equivalent (www.joggingbuddy.com) which already has members in 99 countries around the globe.

Its founder Tony Piedade, said “CyclingBuddy is developing into a great community of cyclists. Since the launch 2 months ago our members have already logged in excess of 80,000 miles and shared over 650 of their favourite cycling routes. I am very pleased that members overseas area already signing up too. We now have members in China, Australia, South Africa, USA, Canada and many european countries. Its early days, but very exciting”

Members who sign up to the site are able to also benefit from a number of neat features like planning a route, saving it and downloading the GPX files ready to be uploaded into a navigation product for the cyclist to follow. Members are also able to log all of their rides and keep track of their progress.

While it is still early days for CyclingBuddy.com, industry partners like Madison and Chain Reaction Cycles have already seen the potential and have secured a relationship with what promises to be the leading Social Networking website dedicated to cycling.

To sign up users should simply visit www.cyclingbuddy.com

For further information contact [email protected]

Custom Release Wire

New Report Global Industrial Control & Factory Automation Market…

Dallas, TX (PRWEB) April 29, 2012

According to a new market research report “Industrial Control & Factory Automation Market: Global Forecast & Analysis (2011 – 2016)”, the factory automation market is expected to reach $ 185.0 billion by 2016 at a CAGR of 7.58% from 2011 to 2016.

Browse 68 tables and in-depth TOC on “Industrial Controls (SCADA, PLC, DCS) & Factory Automation (Field Devices, MES, ERP) Market : Global Forecast & Analysis (2011 – 2016)”.

http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/factory-industrial-automation-sme-smb-market-541.html

Early buyers will receive 10% customization of reports.

The Industrial Control market is expected to grow from $ 120.0 billion in 2010 to $ 185.0 billion in 2016, at a CAGR of 7.58% from 2011 to 2016. The key companies with respect to factory automation include Siemens (Germany), ABB (Switzerland), Emerson Process Management (U.S.), Rockwell Automation (U.S.), Schneider Electric (France), Honeywell (U.S.), Omron (Japan), Yokogawa (Japan), and others.

Asia-Pacific is expected to grow at the highest rate due to increase in production activities in APAC, cheap labor, huge population base, and lucrative government policies. China is the growth engine for automation in Asia in spite of lower levels of plant automation. India too is gaining factory automation market shares worldwide.

The various subsets of automation include robotics, control systems, IT systems, and manufacturing execution systems (MES), all chiefly responsible for reducing human interaction in the process, thus, lowering labor and production costs, and increasing throughput or production output. The other common industry terms for the capabilities, components, and aspects of automation include human machine interface (allowing for system operator and human supervision), distributed control systems (DSC), SCADA, conveyor belts, conveyance systems, and programmable logic controllers (PLC). Robotics, particularly robotic arms, are common features in factory automation due to their precision, reduction in human labor costs, advantages in handling, and reduction of human risks and exposure to production hazards.

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Environment

The Charles Taylor Verdict: A Global Witness briefing on a dictator, blood diamonds and timber, and two countries in recovery

Download this briefing

Read the press release: Justice for Sierra Leone and Charles Taylor found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity 

On 26 April, the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) found former Liberian President and warlord Charles Taylor guilty of 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The Court, which sits in The Hague for this case only, found that Taylor played an instrumental role in Sierra Leone’s bloody 11 year civil war. The verdict is an historic one, sending a strong message to those in power bent on terrorising their people that they will be held to account. Taylor’s trial has focused attention on the pivotal role he played in Sierra Leone’s bloody diamond trade and has highlighted how natural resource looting finances armed conflict and human rights abuses internationally.

The Trial and the Verdict

The Special Court for Sierra Leone is a hybrid international-Sierra Leonean tribunal established to bring to justice those holding greatest responsibility for crimes committed during the country’s 1991-2002 civil war. In 2003, The Court’s prosecutor filed an 11 count indictment against Taylor, accusing him of war crimes, crimes against humanity and other serious violations of international humanitarian law, including pillage, murder, rape and the use of child soldiers.[i]

This trial has highlighted the role that natural resources, like Sierra Leone’s diamonds, play in funding conflicts.  In its verdict, the Court found that Charles Taylor had:

  • Received diamonds in exchange for arms and ammunition and was asked to ‘hold’ onto diamonds for RUF leader Foday Sankoh
  • Advised RUF military commander Sam Bockarie on gaining and retaining control over Sierra Leonean diamonds mines
  • Provided practical support to the RUF’s exploitation of the diamonds fields, for example through the provision of mechanical diggers and fuel
  • Facilitated the trade in Sierra Leonean diamonds by organising for them or enabling them to be smuggled through Liberia and on to international traders

On 26 April 2012, the Special Court of Sierra Leone, sitting for this case in The Hague, found Taylor guilty on all 11 charges and criminally responsible for aiding and abetting in crimes, including pillage, murder and rape committed during Sierra Leone’s bloody civil war. The Court will now hold a sentencing hearing to determine the duration of Taylor’s prison term, which he will serve in the UK.

The Sierra Leone Civil War and Charles Taylor

In 1991, the Sierra Leonean rebel group the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) invaded Sierra Leone from Liberia. The RUF, which was armed and supported by Charles Taylor,[ii] had the declared objective of  overthrowing Sierra Leone’s government, which had ruled Sierra Leone since 1968.

The RUF became notorious for its brutal tactics, including widespread sexual violence committed against women and children.[iii] The RUF also used child soldiers, many of whom were forcibly recruited, given drugs and used to commit atrocities.[iv] The RUF’s signature tactic was the amputation of limbs. Peace was eventually declared in January 2002.

According to the UN, Taylor provided the RUF with training, weapons and related material, logistical support, a staging ground for attacks and a safe haven for retreat.[v] Taylor also led rebel forces in – and later became president of – neighbouring Liberia, a country that experienced its own civil war between 1989 and 2003.

The role of diamonds

The Taylor trial highlights the role that natural resources play in funding and fuelling conflicts. Sierra Leone’s diamond fields were a principal military target for the RUF, which employed slave labour to mine diamonds for export.[vi] While in control of the sector, it was estimated that the RUF received annual revenues of between US$ 25 and US$ 125 million from diamond sales, “more than enough to sustain its military activities” according to the UN.[vii]

After diamond sanctions were imposed on Sierra Leone, the gems were smuggled to international markets through neighbouring Liberia where Taylor was president. In 1999 alone, official diamond exports from Liberia amounted to only US$ 900,000, yet official diamond imports into Belgium from Liberia amounted to US$ 270 million.[viii]

According to the UN, those smuggling diamonds were paid by Taylor and those at the highest levels of the Liberian Government were aware of the trade.[ix] Prosecution witnesses testifying at the Special Court gave evidence that Taylor personally received millions of dollars in Sierra Leonean diamonds.[x] In proceedings that were widely reported internationally Carole White – former agent to supermodel Naomi Campbell – testified that Campbell talked to Taylor at a 1997 dinner party in South Africa and that Taylor personally promised the supermodel a gift of diamonds. Campbell herself testified to receiving a few “dirty pebbles” the night after the dinner party, but said she did not know the source of the gift.[xi]

In 2001 in an effort to halt the smuggling, the UN imposed sanctions upon the export of diamonds from Liberia.

The role of timber

To compensate for the loss of diamond revenue caused by international sanctions, Taylor sold Liberia’s forests to logging companies – shifting his sources of financing from blood diamonds to conflict timber. Among those who received logging concessions during this period was international arms dealer Leonid Minin who, at the time of his arrest, was planning a large arms deal for Liberia.[xii] Also holding major concessions was Dutch national Gus Kouwenhoven, who ran the notorious Oriental Timber Corporation, which was involved in importing arms into Liberia and developed infrastructure that was used to transport weapons to Sierra Leone.[xiii]

By 2003, nearly half of all Liberia was allocated as logging concessions and it was reported that the timber industry accounted for over 20 percent of the country’s budget.[xiv] However, Global Witness investigations estimated that, in 2001, Liberia’s logging industry was producing over US$ 100 million in revenues that was not entering the country’s formal budget.[xv]

Charles Taylor must be held to account for his crimes during Liberia’s war

Taylor’s trial before the SCSL relates only to crimes he committed during Sierra Leone’s war. This trial cannot look at or hold him to account for crimes he committed against the people of Liberia.

Unfortunately, no tribunal has been established to hold accountable those who, like Taylor, committed atrocities during Liberia’s civil wars. Liberia’s wars, which lasted from 1989 to 2003, resulted in the deaths of 250,000 people and the displacement of 1.3 million.[xvi] In 2009, Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) issued its final report, recommending that the country establish its own hybrid international-Liberian war crimes court. To date, this recommendation, along with many others set out by the TRC, has not been adopted by the Liberian Government.

While not a substitute for a Liberian war crimes tribunal, it is important to note that two court actions have been brought outside Liberia against individuals who were involved in the country’s conflict. In 2009, a US court sentenced Taylor’s son, Charles ‘Chuckie’ Taylor, Jr to 97 years in prison for committing torture and other atrocities in Liberia between 1999 and 2003.[xvii] Chuckie Taylor headed Liberia’s elite government security force the Anti-Terrorist Unit during his father’s presidency.

In the Netherlands, Gus Kouwenhoven is currently on trial under Dutch law facing charges of war crimes and illegal arms trading relating to his logging and arms transport operations in Liberia.  

Sierra Leone’s natural resource sector today

Sierra Leone is currently at peace, but remains deeply scarred by its civil war. The country’s government is comparatively stable and has made some efforts to reform the country’s natural resource sectors, including the diamond sector. However, despite these efforts, very few of the country’s people have seen any benefit from Sierra Leone’s huge natural resource wealth.  

A lack of transparency has led to the allocation of contracts and concessions to questionable companies, making it unclear whether the country’s natural resource exploitation will really benefit the people. A recent oil find has also led to an influx of large petroleum companies; however there are reports that the oil contracts awarded are highly disadvantageous to the government[xviii] suggesting that once again Sierra Leone’s people may fail to benefit from wealth which is rightfully theirs.

The current situation in Liberia’s natural resource sector

Since the end of its conflict, Liberia has enjoyed several years of stability, and in November 2011, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was elected for a second term as the country’s president. Under her presidency, Liberia’s management of its natural resources has improved. Of particular note is the Liberian Government’s introduction, in 2009, of a landmark natural resource transparency law, which requires publication of all natural resource contracts and revenues.

However, much more needs to be done if the county’s resources are to become the driving force of economic growth, reconstruction and development that the government hopes for. Like Sierra Leone, Liberia has issued a number of oil concessions, and in February of this year, a commercial oil find was announced. As outlined in the 2011 report Curse or Cure by Global Witness and the Liberian Oil and Gas Initiative, Liberia’s oil sector has been characterised by corruption and mismanagement and in urgent need of reform.[xix] In recent months, the government has given positive signals that it is willing to undertake a reform programme; however it remains to be seen whether this will produce the benefits needed for the Liberian people.   

In the forestry sector, the Liberian Government has rushed to re-start industrial logging operations. In doing so, it has broken its own forestry laws and awarded contracts to companies that do not operate and consistently fail to pay their taxes on time.[xx] Additionally, it has recently come to light that the Government may have quietly allocated upwards of 2 million hectares in ‘Private Use Permits’, which can be used as logging concessions.[xxi] The combination of these opaque permits and Liberia’s formal logging contracts may cover over 3 million hectares; although the country is estimated to have only between 2.4 million and 3.4 million hectares of forest in total.[xxii]

At the same time, the Government has also issued massive plantation concessions without first consulting with or verifying the land ownership status of the tens of thousands of people who live in the concession areas. As this land begins to be cleared for the planting of palm oil trees, people are losing their farms and are beginning to fight back. In September of 2011, people affected by a plantation owned by Malaysian oil palm giant Sime Darby protested the encroaching operations, stating that their land was being taken.[xxiii] However, despite briefly shutting down its operations, Sime Darby has again begun clearing and planting and it remains unclear how the affected people and those living in other new, similarly massive plantations will live in the future.


[i] In full, the counts brought against Charles Taylor were: Acts of terrorism, Murder; Violence to life, in particular murder; Rape; Sexual slavery; Outrages against personal dignity; Violence to life, in particular cruel treatment;  Other inhumane acts; Conscripting child soldiers; Enslavement; and Pillage.

[ii] United Nations, “Report of the Panel of Experts appointed pursuant to Security Council resolution 1306 (2000) paragraph 19, in relation to Sierra Leone,” December 2000, para. 20, 182, 193.

[iii] Physicians for Human Rights, “War-Related Sexual Violence in Sierra Leone: A Population-Based Assessment,” June 2002, p. 2.

[iv] Human Rights Watch, “Sierra Leone: Landmark Convictions for Use of Child Soldiers,” 20 June 2007.

[v] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 20, 182, 193.

[vi] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 67, 69, 88.

[vii] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 1.

[viii] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 123.

[ix] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 23, 87.

[x] Special Court for Sierra Leone Office of the Prosecutor, “Prosecution Final Trial Brief,” 8 April 2011, para. 21.

[xii] United Nations, “Report of the Panel of Experts pursuant to Security Council resolution 1343 (2001) paragraph 19, concerning Liberia,” October 2001, para. 348.

[xiii] Global Witness, “Taylor-made: The Pivotal Role of Liberia’s Forests and Flag of Convenience in Regional Conflict,” September 2001, p. 8; United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 215. Kouwenhoven is currently on trial in the Netherlands facing charges of war crimes and illegal arms trading.

[xiv] United Nations, “Report of the Panel of Experts pursuant to paragraph 25 of Security Council resolution 1478 (2003) concerning Liberia,” July 2003, para. 32-33.

[xv] Global Witness, 2001, p.15.

[xvi] United Nations Commission on Human Rights, “Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and Follow-Up to the World Conference on Human Rights – Situation of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in Liberia,” E/CN.4/2004/5.

[xxi] Liberian Government Forestry Development Authority, “Report of the Board of Directors on the inquiry regarding the issuance of Private Use Permits,” 2012.

[xxii] Bayol, Nicholas; Chevalier, Jean François, “Current State of the Forest Cover in Liberia: Forest information critical to decision

making,” Forest Resources Management, contracted by the World Bank, July 2004,  p. 24.

Global Witness welcomes oil sector reforms by the Liberian Government

Recent pledges by the Liberian Government to enhance transparency and the involvement of civil society in its oil sector represent are a welcome step forward, says Global Witness today.

International interest in Liberia’s oil sector has increased in recent months after the Australian oil company African Petroleum announced it had found commercial oil off of Liberia’s coast. Other oil concessions have been awarded to major companies such as Chevron and Anadarko Petroleum, while last week Canadian Overseas Petroleum announced that the Liberian Government had approved the entry of ExxonMobil to an offshore concession – Block 13.

“With Liberia’s oil find and the involvement of large companies, it is possible that the sector could produce much needed revenue for the country,” said Jonathan Gant, a Policy Advisor with Global Witness. “But for Liberians to benefit from this oil rush the country has got to overcome a history of outdated laws, low capacity within the National Oil Company of Liberia (NOCAL) and corruption in the sector. In promising further transparency and involving civil society groups in drafting policy, the Government is moving towards reforms the oil sector so badly needs.”

One of the most significant developments came in February of this year, when NOCAL announced that it was committed to being transparent about the operations of oil companies and management of the money they are expected to generate. Adding further detail to this pledge, on 11 April NOCAL stated that it had submitted the agency’s current annual budget to the Liberian Legislature. Most recently, on 19 April NOCAL announced that it would commission an independent audit of its finances for the past three years and would “open up the books and put them in order.”

In another welcome move, the Liberian Government has begun including Liberian civil society organizations in discussions about reforms of the country’s oil laws and policy.

“Reforming Liberia’s oil sector will be hard and will take considerable time. Reforms will be successful if they are inclusive and if NOCAL embraces fiscal transparency,” said Gant. “We are optimistic that, if the Government continues down the reformist path it is now taking, Liberia’s citizens can reap the full benefits of the country’s oil wealth.”

/Ends

Contact:

Washington DC: Jonathan Gant at +1 202 525 2753 or [email protected]

Note to editors

In September 2011, Global Witness and the Liberian Oil and Gas Initiative published a report describing those steps necessary to reform Liberia’s oil sector, Cure or Cure: How Oil Can Boost or Break Liberia’s Post-War Recovery. A copy of this report is available at www.globalwitness.org/curse_or_cure/index.html.

Free Documentary Solves Global Debt Crisis in 48 Minutes

Venus, FL (PRWEB) April 15, 2012

This groundbreaking documentary not only identifies the root causes of many major global problems, but also recommends the steps that our species can take to solve such issues. ‘Paradise or Oblivion’ is available on the internet for free, in more than 24 different languages to ensure availability to all humans; race, colour or creed.

‘Paradise or Oblivion’ is the culmination of an astonishing 75+ years of research performed globally by what is now known as The Venus Project; founded and directed by Jacque Fresco and Roxanne Meadows.

Based largely on anthropology, the documentary also spans almost all scientific and economic fields of study in order to provide a comprehensive solution to the problems of planet Earth and its inhabitants.

The documentary is the next step towards TVP’s goal of an international motion picture, for which directors and scriptwriters are currently being considered.

The Venus Project is an organization that proposes a feasible plan of action for social change working towards a peaceful and sustainable global civilization. This scientific company operates out of a 21-acre research centre located in Venus, Florida.


Environment

GE Global Research To Partner With Livermore National Lab and Universities On Supercomputing Project

NISKAYUNA, N.Y.–()–GE Global Research has been selected by Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory (LLNL) to participate in an incubator program that will use
high-performance computing (HPC) in an effort to accelerate development
of next-generation fuel injectors for GE’s engine fleet. Global Research
will collaborate with Arizona State University (ASU) and Cornell
University on this project.

“Using the supercomputer, we will apply a methodology called Large Eddy
Simulation (LES) to model the fuel injector. The supercomputer will give
us a 360 degree view of the inside of the injector, so that we can
better understand the physics behind the design”

GE mechanical engineer Madhu Pai, from the Computational Combustion Lab
(ATMS) will have six months of dedicated access to a portion of the
Sierra supercomputer – one of the most powerful in the world – to study
the physics behind the working of the fuel injector to optimize its
design. Pai
discusses the importance of supercomputing in supporting these studies.

“Currently fuel injectors are designed after lengthy optimization
trials, partly because today’s fuel injectors have complex geometries
that challenge conventional wisdom on how these injectors work.
High-fidelity computer simulations can significantly reduce the number
of trials and can provide insight into why a fuel injector behaves the
way it does,” said Pai.

Scientists hope to gain a better understanding of critical unsteady
spray phenomena observed in fuel injectors used in today’s liquid-fueled
engines. These unsteady spray phenomena are sometimes inaccessible to
experimental measurements. Computer simulations can provide much needed
insight into the origin of the unsteadiness, but doing this requires
very powerful supercomputers to accurately capture the underlying
physics.

“Using the supercomputer, we will apply a methodology called Large Eddy
Simulation (LES) to model the fuel injector. The supercomputer will give
us a 360 degree view of the inside of the injector, so that we can
better understand the physics behind the design,” said Pai. “Having a
better understanding of how the fuel/air mixture combusts will help us
ultimately build more powerful engines that consume less fuel and have
lower emissions. HPC will ultimately help in reducing development time
and cost of the fuel injector.”

Aircraft fuel injectors are being studied in this trial, but successful
testing of this computer simulation methodology could yield new insights
that benefit other GE products, including the fuel injectors used in
locomotives and land-based gas turbines. The methodology can potentially
be applied to study nebulizers for aerosol delivery.

Access to LLNL’s supercomputing pilot program, known as “hpc4energy”,
was highly sought after. More than 30 companies applied; GE Global
Research was one of six selected. The goal of the program is to
facilitate more R&D engagement between the National Labs and energy
companies to help increase America’s economic competitiveness.

The supercomputing project will begin in April at the LLNL’s facility in
California.

Details on the LLNL incubator program are available at http://hpc4energy.org/incubator/.

About GE Global Research

GE Global Research is the hub of technology development for all of GE’s
businesses. Our scientists and engineers redefine what’s possible, drive
growth for our businesses and find answers to some of the world’s
toughest problems.

We innovate 24 hours a day, with sites in Niskayuna, New York;
Bangalore, India; Shanghai, China; Munich, Germany; and a fifth global
research facility to open in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2012. Visit GE
Global Research on the web at www.ge.com/research.
Connect with our technologists at http://edisonsdesk.com
and http://twitter.com/edisonsdesk.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=50232261&lang=en

Business Wire Environment News

Global Witness welcomes sentencing of international arms trafficker who used a global network of shell companies in his work

Today, the Southern District of New York sentenced Viktor Bout, also known as the Merchant of Death, to 25 years in prison, finally putting an end to his notorious career as a weapons trafficker. In November of last year, a jury convicted Bout on terrorism charges, including conspiring to kill Americans and conspiring to provide material support to terrorists.

While this case was narrowly focused on Bout’s conspiracy to sell weapons to the FARC in Colombia, it is effectively an indictment on his career as a gunrunner, fuelling conflict around the world and using shell companies to hide his activities as he did so. The U.S. Department of the Treasury has described Bout’s network as “one of the largest illicit arms-trafficking networks in the world.”

“Bout was able to hide his identity behind anonymous companies created in the U.S. and abroad to further his efforts to traffic weapons to conflict zones,” said Stefanie Ostfeld, Global Witness Policy Advisor. “He exploited the same loophole used by terrorists, corrupt dictators, drug traffickers and tax evaders to legally hide their identities to access the U.S. financial system.”

Bout used a global network of shell companies to advance his illicit activities. To date, twelve American shell companies, incorporated in Texas, Florida and Delaware, have been identified as linked to him.

Investigations continue to expose how easy it is for individuals to mask their identity behind U.S. shell companies so they can stash their ill-gotten gains in American banks or commit other crimes. Global Witness’ research has revealed that corrupt foreign politicians and pariah regimes such as Iran exploit the secrecy provided by anonymous American shell companies to access the U.S. financial system. A recent World Bank report found that the U.S. was the favorite destination of corrupt politicians trying to set up such shell companies.

Corporate secrecy fundamentally undermines U.S. laws to combat money laundering and tax evasion, as well as U.S. efforts to tackle global corruption. Congress has introduced a bill that would shed light on this problem by requiring companies to disclose their ultimate owners.

“Congress must pass the Incorporation Transparency and Law Enforcement Assistance Act, which would make it much harder for arms traffickers like Bout, and other criminals, to hide their identities and illicit activities behind U.S. shell companies. Once corrupt and other dirty money has been moved through an anonymous corporate vehicle into the financial system, it is much harder to track it down,” said Ostfeld.

/Ends

Contacts:

Washington, DC: Stefanie Ostfeld, +1 202 577 5858

Washington, DC:  Robert Palmer, +44 7545 645 406

Notes to editors

1. On August 2, 2011, Senators Levin and Grassley introduced the bipartisan Incorporation Transparency and Law Enforcement Assistance Act (S. 1483). Representatives Maloney, Lynch and Frank introduced a companion bill (H.R. 3416) on November 14, 2011. These bills would require companies to disclose information about the real people who own or control them (often called the “beneficial owners”) at the time they are created. Multiple law enforcement organizations including the Fraternal Order of Police and Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association have endorsed the bill. The Obama Administration, through the U.S. Open Government Partnership Action Plan and its Strategy to Combat Transnational Organized Crime, also supports legislation to stop states from allowing secretive shell companies to be set up.

Earth Hour Turns Five with Massive Global Celebration

TORONTO, ONTARIO–(Marketwire – March 31, 2012) - Canada and the world turned off the lights on Saturday night to celebrate the 5th anniversary of WWF’s Earth Hour.

Dubbed the “World’s largest campaign for the planet”, Earth Hour has grown in five short years from a local event in Sydney, Australia, to a global phenomenon that attracted 150 countries, over 6494 cities and global participants from all seven continents in 2012.

Earth Hour Across Canada

2012 saw the highest participation in Earth Hour yet, with 511 Canadian cities participating. Over 100,000 Canadians signed the Earth Hour Pledge on the WWF website, displaying their commitment to switch off for Earth Hour and fight climate change all year long.

TORONTO

Toronto was the first city to adopt Earth Hour after it was launched in Sydney, and the city’s passion for the planet was evident on Saturday night as hundreds turned out at The Distillery Historic District to join in a live performance of the newly minted Earth Hour Anthem “When the Lights Go Down” – Canada’s first ever crowd-sourced song, created just for Earth Hour. The song was created from thousands of lyrics submitted and voted on by Canadians from coast to coast to coast.

Click here to download video footage and images of Torontonians joining Choir! Choir! Choir! and composer Andrew Huang in the first live performance of “When the Lights Go Down”. Please note that video and images will be available for download as of 12pm on Sunday, April 1st.

MONTREAL

Montreal also celebrated with music – hundreds of Montrealers joined Minister Pierre Arcand and comedian Maxime Martin for an acoustic performance by the award-winning group Chinatown at the Esplanade de la Place des Arts.

VANCOUVER

The Vancouver Canucks showed the NHL’s support for Earth Hour with an in-game interactive feature between WWF’s Panda mascot and their own mascot, Fin, at Saturday’s game against the Calgary Flames.

Additional Images and b-roll from WWF’s Canadian media events are available; please contact Weiwei Su, [email protected].

Earth Hour Across the World

Images of global landmarks switching off their lights for Earth Hour are available at: http://earthhour.org/media-centre/images

Downloadable video footage of the global event are available at:
http://www.earthhour.org/media-centre/videos

Additional global highlights include:

  • The International Space Station – astronaut and Earth Hour Ambassador Andre Kuipers kept watch as countries across the globe turn out their lights for Earth Hour. See his photos from space here.
  • Italian pianist and composer Christian Calcatelli played an 8-hour live concert over the Internet after 5,000 people committed to taking up recycling.
  • Just five months after the end of the Libyan uprising, nineteen-year-old Mohammad Nattah organized Earth Hour in his town of Tripoli for the first time.

About WWF’s Earth Hour

WWF’s Earth Hour is an opportunity for individuals, businesses and communities around the globe to unite in a powerful call to action of hope for a better, healthier planet. In Canada, the AIR MILES® Reward Program and the Toronto Star are the national sponsors. As lead sponsors for WWF’s Earth Hour, AIR MILES and the Toronto Star will harness their incredible ability to engage employees and reach customers in spreading our message and encouraging individual action.

About our sponsors

With more than 10 million active AIR MILES accounts, the AIR MILES Reward Program has the ability to reach Canadians from coast-to-coast and inspire them to do their part for the planet every day.

As Canada’s largest newspaper, the Toronto Star is committed to reporting on and bringing awareness to environmental issues, such as climate change, that matter to Canadians.

About WWF

WWF is creating solutions to the most serious conservation challenges facing our planet, helping people and nature thrive. wwf.ca

Marketwire – Environment

Research and Markets: The Global Lead-Acid Battery Market to Grow at a CAGR of 3.1 Percent over the Period 2010-2014

DUBLIN–()–

Dublin – Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/2f8a437a/global_leadacid_b)
has announced the addition of the “Global
Lead-acid Battery Market 2011-2015″
report to their offering.

One of the key factors contributing to this market growth is the
emergence of absorbed glass mat lead-acid batteries. The Global
Lead-acid Battery market has also been witnessing increasing
investment in smart grid construction. However, the possibility of
explosion could pose a challenge to the growth of this market.

Key vendors dominating this market space include Johnson Controls,
Inc., Exide Technologies, GS Yuasa Corp., and EnerSys Inc.

Commenting on the report, an analyst from TechNavio’s Clean Tech team
said, “The governments of various countries have forecast that their
nationwide energy demands will double within the next decade. As a
result, various countries across the globe have started investing
large amounts of money in smart grid technology in order to meet the
huge demand for power by 2020. This increased investment in smart grid
technology is leading to the growth of the Global Lead-acid Battery
market. This is because lead-acid batteries can be used in vehicles
such as EVs, which is one of the major sectors in the Smart Grid
industry. Moreover, the usage of solar chargers for lead-acid
batteries in EVs enables distributed power generation.”

According to the report, another major technology that is in demand is
the EV. Investments of up to US$ 15 billion have been made in smart
grid electric vehicles trigger innovations in electric vehicle
technology. This is a major trend affecting the Global Lead-acid
Battery market.

The report also discusses that the lead-acid batteries are exposed to
risk of explosion, which is a drawback for the growth of this market.

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/2f8a437a/global_leadacid_b.

Business Wire Environment News

INVITATION – World’s first ‘Carbon Footprinting’ Gallery Hosted by the Carbon Trust Showcasing footprinting and carbon reduction achievements of leading global brands including, BT, Danone, Manchester United, Tesco and others

The Carbon Trust invites you to its first global Carbon Footprinting Gallery, featuring a small army of concrete jelly babies, a bubble machine, a piggy bank on wheels, and other intriguing exhibits.

Tom Delay, Chief Executive, Carbon Trust will be on-hand with other Carbon Trust footprinting experts, and spokespeople from brands participating in the Gallery, to take a fresh look at the carbon footprinting achievements of a variety of organisations who will be showcasing their carbon footprinting stories through the creative exhibits.

Carbon reduction is a journey for many brands and carbon footprinting is often a starting point from which organisations can identify and then work to reduce the most carbon intensive aspects of their supply chain. The insight provided by carbon footprinting can enable organisations to make significant changes to their supply chain processes, develop stronger relationships with suppliers, and improve communications with customers and employees. These changes can lead to innovation in product design, enhance organisational reputation, and result in significant cost savings.

The new exhibition will provoke debate and explore the carbon stories behind every day products and household brands. Please come along and be part of the conversation!

Drinks and light snacks will be served throughout the evening.

Monday 2nd April 2012, 18.00 – 21.00
The Future Gallery, Nr Leicester Square, London

The Gallery will be open to the public on Weds 4th April.

RSVP
Please let us know if you are interested in attending by 30 March 2012 by emailing [email protected] or calling +44207 592 1200. Spaces are limited.

http://www.carbontrust.com/
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