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Our Letter to President Obama

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Our Letter to President Obama

Posted 22 August 2014 in

National

The Fuels America coalition is taking its case directly to President Obama today in a full page advertisement in the Martha’s Vineyard Gazette, a weekly newspaper broadly distributed across the island. In this open letter to the President, America’s leading biofuel producers are alerting the President how a proposal by his administration — if it is not fixed — will inadvertently cause investment in advanced biofuels like cellulosic ethanol to shift to China and Brazil, undermining his effort to tackle climate change.

As you enjoy some rest this week, we wanted to share some important news about advanced biofuels.

First, the good news: in no small part due to your efforts to transition America to a clean energy future, we are launching four large, commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol plants. Using groundbreaking technology developed by America’s most innovative companies, these four facilities will convert agricultural residue into the lowest-carbon motor fuel in the world.

Now, the bad news: the companies and investors looking to deploy the next wave of cellulosic ethanol facilities have put U.S. investment on hold because the EPA is proposing to dramatically change how the Renewable Fuel Standard works.

EPA’s proposal doesn’t just cut the amount of renewable fuel in the gasoline supply. It fundamentally changes how the annual targets are calculated. Instead of basing the targets on our industry’s ability to produce and deliver fuel, the proposal would allow the targets to be reduced if the oil industry refuses to make renewable fuels available to the consumer. Oil companies largely control retail fueling infrastructure through a complex maze of contracts with distributors that often restrict the sale of alternatives.

As designed, the Renewable Fuel Standard attracted U.S. investment because it changed this dynamic. If the program moving forward reflects rather than mitigates the oil industry’s unwillingness to market renewable fuel, the policy will cease to be effective and drive our industry overseas.

That’s why just increasing the biofuels volumes this year or next will not solve the problem. The solution must preserve the original structure of the program, incentivizing oil companies to provide fuel choice to the American consumer and support the retail infrastructure to sell more renewable fuel.

You have always been a strong champion of advanced biofuels and we know it is not your intent to undercut investment. It’s not too late to get the final rule right, so together we can make the United States the leader in producing the cleanest fuels in the world.

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Our Letter to President Obama

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How The US Helped ISIS Grow Into a Monster

Mother Jones

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This story first appeared on the TomDispatch website. This essay is excerpted from the first chapter of Patrick Cockburn’s new book, The Jihadis Return: ISIS and the New Sunni Uprising, with special thanks to his publisher, OR Books. The first section is a new introduction written for TomDispatch.

There are extraordinary elements in the present US policy in Iraq and Syria that are attracting surprisingly little attention. In Iraq, the US is carrying out air strikes and sending in advisers and trainers to help beat back the advance of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (better known as ISIS) on the Kurdish capital, Erbil. The US would presumably do the same if ISIS surrounds or attacks Baghdad. But in Syria, Washington’s policy is the exact opposite: there the main opponent of ISIS is the Syrian government and the Syrian Kurds in their northern enclaves. Both are under attack from ISIS, which has taken about a third of the country, including most of its oil and gas production facilities.

But US, Western European, Saudi, and Arab Gulf policy is to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, which happens to be the policy of ISIS and other jihadis in Syria. If Assad goes, then ISIS will be the beneficiary, since it is either defeating or absorbing the rest of the Syrian armed opposition. There is a pretense in Washington and elsewhere that there exists a “moderate” Syrian opposition being helped by the US, Qatar, Turkey, and the Saudis. It is, however, weak and getting more so by the day. Soon the new caliphate may stretch from the Iranian border to the Mediterranean and the only force that can possibly stop this from happening is the Syrian army.

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How The US Helped ISIS Grow Into a Monster

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US Sent Thousands of Sailors to Help With Fukushima. Did Radiation Make Them Sick?

Mother Jones

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This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. The article was reported by the Guardian’s Suzanne Goldenberg, and the video was produced by Climate Desk’s James West.

The first time it occurred to James Jackson that there could be lasting damage from his US Navy service during Japan’s tsunami and nuclear disaster came when his eldest son, Darius, was diagnosed with leukemia.

Darius, now 15, spent a month in hospital in early 2013, soon after his diagnosis. “I thought I was going to have to bury him,” Jackson recalled. The teenager who aspired to play college basketball now has a catheter in his chest and is too frail to run the length of the court.

Jackson, a navy information technologist, was stationed with his family at Yokosuka, Japan, when an earthquake and tsunami knocked out the cooling systems at the Fukushima nuclear plant in March 2011, causing a triple meltdown.

He acknowledges he can’t know for sure why Darius got leukemia—but Jackson remains convinced there is a connection to the radiation escape from the Fukushima disaster and he blames the Japanese electric company, Tepco.

On 25 August, a district court judge in San Diego will decide whether the Jacksons—and around 110 other US navy sailors and marines—can proceed with a $1 billion lawsuit that accuses Tepco of failing to avoid the accident and of lying about the levels of radiation from the stricken reactors, putting US personnel at risk.

“I don’t think the navy or the United States government would have let us stay there in the region. They would have gotten us out of there probably within the first 48, or 72 hours if they knew then what they know now,” Jackson said. “The issue is that we have this large company, this large enterprise, feeding the Japanese government and the rest of the world bad information. They could have come to the forefront and said: ‘hey we need help’, instead of trying to put a blanket over it.”

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US Sent Thousands of Sailors to Help With Fukushima. Did Radiation Make Them Sick?

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Devo’s "The Men Who Make the Music" is Hilarious and Unsettling

Mother Jones

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Devo
The Men Who Make the Music plus Butch Devo and the Sundance Gig
MVD Visual

Best known, perhaps, for the giddy 1980 smash, “Whip It,” Devo was much more than the disposable New Wave novelty act that hit implied, as this enticing DVD proves. Mixing high concepts and low humor, the Ohio-bred band specialized in raucous punk-electronica drenched in pessimism and misanthropy, and delivered the goods with an irresistible, wild-eyed spirit, attracting support from the likes of David Bowie and Neil Young. The Men Who Make the Music draws primarily from Devo’s groundbreaking ’70s work, with raucous live footage and the still-amazing (if extremely low-budget) videos that preceded their major-label deal. Nearly four decades on, the clips for “Jocko Homo” and their savage deconstruction of the Stones’ “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” are both hilarious and unsettling, while testifying to the band’s keen visual sense and absurdist flair. Capturing a live show at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival, Butch Devo and the Sundance Gig doesn’t break any new ground, but it’s still entertaining.

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Devo’s "The Men Who Make the Music" is Hilarious and Unsettling

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The Seven Decisions – Andy Andrews

READ GREEN WITH E-BOOKS

The Seven Decisions

Understanding the Keys to Personal Success

Andy Andrews

Genre: Self-Improvement

Price: $12.99

Publish Date: May 6, 2014

Publisher: Thomas Nelson

Seller: HarperCollins


Just one of these decisions can alter the course of a person’s life.  What if you decided to master all seven? In this revised and repackaged version of Mastering the Seven Decisions, master storyteller and life coach Andy Andrews has fast-forwarded the concept of success and what it takes to make it stick.  Seeking out what separates the ordinary life from the extraordinary, Andrews has spent much of his life dissecting countless biographies and spending time with some of the most successful people on the planet in an effort to understand the principles that propel them toward greatness.  The result: seven simple principles that – when applied consistently- render extraordinary lives. Through his entertaining, down-to-earth style, Andrews introduces these principles and offers all the tools necessary to make lasting changes in your life. The consistent application of   the Seven Decisions brings about what can only be called miracles: What was once labeled “impossible” actualizes.  Opportunities that once eluded you are now attracted to you.  Dysfunctional relationships transform into harmonious ones.  Life, which was once a struggle, now becomes an exciting adventure! Praise for Andy Andrews “I read everything he writes again and again. Andy Andrews is, quite simply, my favorite author.” —Margaret Kelly, CEO, RE/MAX “Andy Andrews’s words—both written and spoken—are a significant and enduring presence in the lives of our Squadron Commanders around the world.” —Lt. Gen. Michael W. Wooley, USAF Commander, Air Force Special Operations Command “If Andy Andrews lived in England, the queen would have knighted him by now. Andy’s books— all of his books—are just that good!” —Louie Anderson, comedian and actor “Andy Andrews’s encouragement and motivation have inspired AdvoCare leaders to take the next step forward in their businesses. His insight and wisdom are appreciated, and The Seven Decisions is a must-read book!” —Richard Wright, president and CEO, AdvoCare “Andy Andrews has done it again. This book will inspire you, touch your heart and soul, and change you in every way you desire!” —Don Hobbs, chairman and cofounder, Hobbs &amp; Herder Advertising

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The Seven Decisions – Andy Andrews

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"Ex-Gay" Conversion Therapy Group Rebrands, Stresses "Rights of Clients"

Mother Jones

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As the “ex-gay therapy” movement suffers major legal and legislative blows, one of its leading proponents has undergone a major rebranding effort.

On Wednesday, in a bizarre, décolletage-heavy, news-style video, the National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH)—the professional organization for conversion therapists—reestablished itself as the Alliance for Therapeutic Choice and Scientific Integrity (ATCSI). In what it calls a “major expansion of our mission,” ATCSI claims it will continue “preserving the right of individuals to obtain the services of a therapist who honors their values, advocating for integrity and objectivity in social science research, and ensuring that competent licensed, professional assistance is available for persons who experience unwanted homosexual (same-sex) attractions.”

NARTH’s makeover, along with a similar rebranding effort by Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays (PFOX), comes in response to growing national opposition to conversion therapy. ATCSI’s new website says the group has become “increasingly involved in legal and professional efforts to defend the rights of clients to pursue change-oriented psychological care as well as the rights of licensed mental health professionals.”

Jews Offering New Alternatives for Healing (JONAH), another ex-gay therapy organization run by former NARTH Board Member (and convicted fraudster) Arthur Abba Goldberg, is currently being sued for a different kind of fraud—accepting money but failing to deliver on the conversion promised.

Meanwhile, California and New Jersey‘s bans on ex-gay therapy for minors have held up in court. Michigan may be next to pass a similar bill. Many conversion therapy groups have shut down in recent years, including Love in Action, Evergreen International, Love Won Out, and Exodus International; The latter’s president issued an apologetic open letter to the LGBT community last summer. In July, nine remorseful former leaders in the ex-gay therapy movement penned a joint letter condemning ex-gay therapy as an “ineffective and harmful” practice that “reinforces internalized homophobia, anxiety, guilt, and depression.”

Conversion therapy, which is discredited by the American Psychological Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Medical Association, and the American Counseling Association, has been shown to increase risks of suicide, depression, drug abuse, and HIV/STDs. Its damaging effects have led to the creation of “ex-ex-gay” survivor groups.

Despite this growing tide of opposition, ex-gay therapy is not a thing of the past. Proposed youth bans similar to California’s and New Jersey’s have failed to pass in Virginia, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, Washington, Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin, Hawaii and Rhode Island. The Republican Party of Texas even endorses the practice in its draft 2014 platform.

In a press release regarding NARTH’s makeover, LGBT activist nonprofit Truth Wins Out (TWO) warns “not to be fooled” by the “cynical branding effort,” calling the group’s literature “anti-gay hate speech wrapped in medical language.” TWO Executive Director Wayne Besen calls ATCSI “the same old swine peddling junk science to desperate and vulnerable people.”

TWO’s press release also points out some of NARTH’s stranger recommendations: The group has encouraged clients to increase their manliness by drinking Gatorade and calling their friends “dude.”

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"Ex-Gay" Conversion Therapy Group Rebrands, Stresses "Rights of Clients"

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Westerners Are Flocking to Iraq’s Top Terror Group—and There Seems to Be Very Little We Can Do About It

Mother Jones

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In May, Moner Mohammed Abusalha, a 22-year-old American who had joined Jabhat al-Nusra, an Al-Qaeda-allied group in Syria, drove a bomb-laden truck into a restaurant in the northern province of Idlib, killing dozens.* Before carrying out this suicide bombing, the New York Times reported last week, Abusalha had briefly returned home to his native Florida. Abusalha’s story underscores a mounting concern among Western national security officials, for though he detonated his truck bomb in Syria he could have easily struck within the US. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s Islamic State, the Sunni extremist group that has seized control of a swath of territory in Syria and northern Iraq, has enlisted thousands of fundamentalist volunteers from Germany, France, the Netherlands, Australia, the US, and elsewhere. Counterterrorism officials fear that jihadists like Abusalha, holding European Union or US passports, can all too easily return to their home countries and possibly import terrorism. US officials, says former New Jersey Gov. Tom Kean, who co-chaired the 9/11 Commission, are “scared, really scared.” FBI Director James Comey recently told reporters that the threat of Westerners with European Union and US passports joining the Islamic State “keeps me up at night” and that he believes another wave of September 11-style attacks are a possibility. Attorney General Eric Holder told ABC News, “in some ways, it’s more frightening than anything I’ve seen as attorney general.”

Recruits have flocked to Baghdadi’s cause from places such as Austria, where in April, two girls, 15 and 16 years old, left their homes in Vienna and flew to Adana, Turkey, leaving notes saying they had “chosen the right path”—that is, they were likely trying to join up with the Islamic State. A month earlier, a young Austrian man, now a foot soldier in Baghdadi’s crusade, posted footage online of Islamic State fighters obliterating a Shia mosque in the Syrian city of Raqqa, according to Der Standard. All told, about 100 young Austrians have left the country to answer Baghdadi’s call for jihadist recruits.

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Westerners Are Flocking to Iraq’s Top Terror Group—and There Seems to Be Very Little We Can Do About It

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How Our Jeans Are Damaging the Rivers Around Us

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How Our Jeans Are Damaging the Rivers Around Us

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This 28-Year-Old Knows Which Artists You’ll Be Listening To 6 Months From Now

Mother Jones

It was 8 p.m. on a Tuesday evening and the Chapel, a popular San Francisco venue, was already starting to fill. Young hipsters elbowed past the fogeys idling in back to stake out a prime spot on the floor. As soon as St. Paul and the Broken Bones hit the stage, though, the diverse crowd was transformed into a seamless sea of screaming fans, singing and swaying to the Birmingham, Alabama, band’s modern take on the soul sounds of yesteryear.

St. Paul’s rise has been unusually meteoric for a band that didn’t even exist until a year and a half ago. True, frontman Paul Janeway charms audiences between songs and delivers dance moves just awkward enough to be cool. And with Jesse Phillips on bass, Browan Lollar on guitar, Allen Branstetter on trumpet, Andrew Lee on drums, Ben Griner on trombone and tuba, and the well-known Al Gamble on keys, these guys know how to work a crowd. Even so, it was their first official tour, and here they were selling out weeknight shows on the other end of the country.

St. Paul and the Broken Bones do the tourist thing. stpaulandthebrokenbones/Instagram

It all happened with lightning speed. In March, just after the release of their debut album, Half the City, St. Paul played at a South by Southwest showcase in Austin, Texas. A few days later, Rolling Stone proclaimed them one of the “48 Best Things” at the festival. Then came a review in the Guardian and an NPR story, followed by performances on CBS This Morning: Saturday and The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. Soon their album was No. 56 on the Billboard 200. “I think we are all genuinely surprised. We were just, we were taken aback by it,” Janeway told me. “It has been crazy. It has been a little—weird.”

Alex White could have predicted it. Actually, he did. White, 28, is the co-founder of a company called Next Big Sound (“Making data useful”), which, as its name and slogan imply, uses computer algorithms to determine which musical acts are about to take off.

Launched in 2009, and widely consulted by the mainstream music industry, the company crunches consumption data from social media and music-streaming sites, tracks buzz on Facebook, Twitter, Soundcloud, and YouTube, and collects private sales figures from clients and partners to inform its predictions. Its engineers and analysts—some of whom hail from data positions at Microsoft, the New York Yankees (think Moneyball), and the Department of Defense—compile everything into a ranking system.

The company’s Social 50 chart lists the internet’s most talked-about acts—the Beyoncé’s of the world—while its Next Big Sound chart lists the hottest up-and-comers. St. Paul and the Broken Bones, as it happens, showed up at the top of the latter chart about a week before its March SXSW showcase. “I learned that we were number one on something,” Janeway recalls with a full-bodied laugh. “And I thought, ‘Oh! We are number one on something!'”

The guys didn’t think much of it, but it may well have kicked open some big doors for the band. Next Big Sound, first conceived by White when he was an undergraduate at Northwestern, now provides data for 70 percent of the music industry. Competitors have followed its lead, looking to cash in on social media metrics, but NBS’s paid subscribers range from the world’s biggest labels and distributors to hordes of individual artists and managers. The company is growing as quickly as some of the acts it lists. According to White, it’s on track to double its revenues this year.

White, who had worked previously with Universal Music Group, spotted his opportunity in the late aughts, as a new crop of music-steaming sites sprung up and CD sales continued to tank. “I think that everyone feels like they are very far behind in terms of their understanding and grasp of how to market successfully and analytically in this new world,” he says. “To boil it down, change has been the only constant over the last five years.”

What he was selling, really, was confidence. “We are making these predictions and drawing a line in the sand, saying these are the artists that are going to do really well,” Alec Zopf, one of the company’s software engineers, told me.

The various metrics are entered into a complex algorithm that quantifies an artist’s fan growth and social interactions to determine who is resonating most with their audiences. It’s not purely objective. The inputs are weighted according to analysts’ knowledge of industry trends and historic patterns of artistic success. “It is sort of a mix of art and science,” Zopf explains, one that combines calculation, curation, and strategic analysis.

But somewhere along the line, Next Big Sound has become something more than a data-cruncher for music marketers. In true Heisenbergian fashion, its algorithms have begun to affect outcomes by changing the way labels track artists and make decisions. In short, the company is becoming a hitmaker itself. “Measurement is never neutral,” notes Nancy Baym, who studies social media metrics at Microsoft Research and has authored several papers on the topic. “The way you measure things shapes the way you think about what you’re measuring. It shapes the way you approach it. It shapes the kinds of materials that you create.”

White acknowledges as much. He often hears from managers and artists who have been approached with record deals, publishing contracts, and higher tiers of management after appearing on his company’s charts. “I think there is sort of a feedback mechanism that has started.”

“In some ways it helps shape trends more than it helps predict them,” says Jason Feinberg, the VP of digital strategy for Epitaph Records, one of America’s biggest indie labels, who has been using Next Big Sound for years. “I don’t think any of these tools have really gotten far enough along to predict much.” Feinberg says he mostly uses the platform to see how artists are doing in particular regions, or to answer specific questions: Say a band’s numbers “spike out of nowhere where we weren’t doing a heavy marketing campaign, or there wasn’t a TV appearance, anything like that,” he says. “Looking for what causes that is often something these tools can show you.”

Baym points out that search engines and social media can be gamed—likes and follows are easily purchased. Next Big Sound’s data analysts are well aware of it, says engineer Zopf. They scour the data for irregularities and do their best to weed out any phony fans. They also regularly tweak the magic formula to account for what’s hot in social media—and what’s not. SoundCloud, for instance, has gained clout in the algorithm recently, whereas MySpace (remember MySpace?) continues to languish.

There are other pitfalls, though, to relying on social media buzz and other online interactions to identify consumer trends. “You have to think about who is participating in those systems in the first place,” Baym says. “There are a lot more people lurking and not ‘liking,’ and not actively discussing things at any given time. So it is always going to be kind of skewed, because you are not tapping who is singing along really loud in their car.”

The data also tends to be slanted toward those genres whose fans are most active on the internet, such as EDM (electronic dance music), which is consumed and shared almost entirely online, especially in Europe. “The less that a genre has consumers that interact online and are able to be measured, the less effective the software is,” White concedes. “Classical and jazz, we have strong coverage of those artists, but there isn’t a lot of volume on YouTube and Spotify.”

Sachin Doshi, the head of development and analysis at Spotify, concurs: “Our genre spectrum is a little bit different than the average across the population,” he says. “When Spotify is growing in a particular market, we get early adopters first. Things like EDM over-index, especially early on.”

And, of course, younger audiences are the most inclined to engage online, regardless of genre. “Watching a video, looking at a photo, listening to a song—simple engagement is starting to happen across all demographics,” says Epitaph’s Feinberg. “But when it comes to heavy engagement—entering contests, creating content, things like that—certainly younger demographics.”

This makes Next Big Sound attractive to corporate clients outside of the music industry who are eager to tap into the youth market—NBS signed its first Fortune 50 brand deal last fall and is ramping up that end of the business. “Brands recognize that it is a great way to attract their target customer,” White says. “I think it’s a great opportunity for our existing customers to measure and engage and work with artists that really resonate in the marketplace.”

Yet “there is a downside to the belief that the data is a crystal ball, or that by having this data we suddenly now can learn things that we have never known before,” Feinberg says. “As much as I am a believer in this, I think the downside is when people rely too heavily on it for something they don’t know, or jump to conclusions based on just a small subset of data.”

To be sure, labels that channel their investments toward artists with social media savvy run the risk of putting sales tactics ahead of talent. Mike King, a marketing lecturer at the online branch of Berklee College of Music in Boston, told me he would like to see labels use the data to help great acts move up organically, as opposed to shoving the chosen few down our throats from on high. “The goal will be the right consumer hearing about the right music through the right outlets at the right time,” he says. “I am hoping that marketers can interpret the data and say, ‘Here is where the core fans are for this particular artist, and we are going to reach out with the right content on the right platform.'”

Feinberg agrees, adding that the data needs to be interpreted by people who understand the artistic landscape. “You can’t just look at it and make decisions based on it,” he says. “You have to mix it in with all the other data you have, as well as all the expertise of the people in the room. Then you have something useful.”

Either way, these sorts of metrics are only going to become more common throughout the business world. “It will always be flawed, especially in culture industries, and there will be conflicts between the sense that these are really helpful predictors because they do provide some economic security, supposedly,” Baym says. “On the other hand, there’s the people who are saying you are taking all the art out of it.”

St. Paul and the Broken Bones is just happy to be playing for an enthusiastic audience, which stomps its feet and chants for more even after the band’s third encore. It’s late, though, and the lads have a long drive to Los Angeles ahead. Before leaving the stage, each member takes a bow. One snaps a picture of the cheering crowd for the band’s Instagram. Fans demand attention, after all, and St. Paul is happy to oblige.The internet and social media is the best thing that has happened, because it is the judge. It tells you; the people are going to tell you,” Janeway says. “That puts it back into the people’s hands a little bit.”

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This 28-Year-Old Knows Which Artists You’ll Be Listening To 6 Months From Now

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New shipping channel will carry natural gas through the Arctic

A gassy, icy concoction

New shipping channel will carry natural gas through the Arctic

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Most people think the thinning of the sea ice at the top of the world is a bad thing. But not shipping and fossil fuel interests.

Shipping companies this week announced that they would use icebreakers to carve a new Arctic shipping route to help them deliver natural gas from a processing plant in western Siberia to customers in Japan and China. The Wall Street Journal reports:

Once virtually impassable, the Arctic Ocean is now attracting interest as a shipping route because global warming has reduced the ice cover within the Arctic Circle. More ships have been plying the northern route between Europe and Asia, which is roughly 40% shorter than the conventional path through the Suez Canal.

Last year, 71 ships crossed the Arctic Ocean between Europe and Asia, compared with four in 2010, according to Japan’s transportation ministry.

Mitsui O.S.K. characterized its planned route as the first regular service linking Europe and Asia via the Arctic, although it will operate the Arctic route only during the warmer months of the year.

“The shorter distance would be good for buyers, by cutting shipping costs and reducing other risks,” said Yu Nagatomi, an economist at Tokyo’s Institute of Energy Economics.

A truly less risky approach, of course, would be leaving the fossil fuels in the ground and off the ocean’s surface. But, hey, $.


Source
Shipping Firms to Add Arctic LNG Route, The Wall Street Journal

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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New shipping channel will carry natural gas through the Arctic

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