From the Economist

Our American endorsement Which one? America could do better than Barack Obama; sadly, Mitt Romney does not fit the bill Nov 3rd 2012 | from the print edition FOUR years ago, The Economist endorsed Barack Obama for the White House with enthusiasm. So did millions of voters. Next week Americans will trudge to the polls far less hopefully. So (in spirit at least) will this London-based newspaper. Having endured a miserably negative campaign, the world’s most powerful country now has a much more difficult decision to make than it faced four years ago. That is in large part because of the woeful nature of Mr Obama’s campaign. A man who once personified hope and centrism set a new low by unleashing attacks on Mitt Romney even before the first Republican primary. Yet elections are about choosing somebody to run a country. And this choice turns on two questions: how good a president has Mr Obama been, especially on the main issues of the economy and foreign policy? And can America really trust the ever-changing Mitt Romney to do a better job? On that basis, the Democrat narrowly deserves to be re-elected. In this section »Which one? Olympian depths Out of the basket No place like home Reprints Related topics The White House 2012 Election Elections and voting American presidential election Politics The changeling Mr Obama’s first term has been patchy. On the economy, the most powerful argument in his favour is simply that he stopped it all being a lot worse. America was in a downward economic spiral when he took over, with its banks and carmakers in deep trouble and unemployment rising at the rate of 800,000 a month. His responses—an aggressive stimulus, bailing out General Motors and Chrysler, putting the banks through a sensible stress test and forcing them to raise capital (so that they are now in much better shape than their European peers)—helped avert a Depression. That is a hard message to sell on the doorstep when growth is sluggish and jobs scarce; but it will win Mr Obama some plaudits from history, and it does from us too. Two other things count, on balance, in his favour. One is foreign policy, where he was also left with a daunting inheritance. Mr Obama has refocused George Bush’s “war on terror” more squarely on terrorists, killing Osama bin Laden, stepping up drone strikes (perhaps too liberally, see article) and retreating from Iraq and Afghanistan (in both cases too quickly for our taste). After a shaky start with China, American diplomacy has made a necessary “pivot” towards Asia. By contrast, with both the Israeli-Palestinian dispute and his “reset” with Russia, he overreached and underdelivered. Iran has continued its worrying crawl towards nuclear weapons. All these problems could have been anticipated. The Arab spring could not. Here Mr Obama can point to the ousting of tyrants in Egypt and Libya, but he has followed events rather than shaping them, nowhere more so than with the current carnage in Syria. Compared with, say, George Bush senior, who handled the end of the cold war, this aloof, disengaged man is no master diplomat; set beside the younger Bush, however, Mr Obama has been a safe pair of hands. Explore our interactive guide to the 2012 presidential election See how America’s voting system works Read our in-depth election briefing Full coverage of the 2012 presidential election The other qualified achievement is health reform. Even to a newspaper with no love for big government, the fact that over 40m people had no health coverage in a country as rich as America was a scandal. “Obamacare” will correct that, but Mr Obama did very little to deal with the system’s other flaw—its huge and unaffordable costs. He surrendered too much control to left-wing Democrats in Congress. As with the gargantuan Dodd-Frank reform of Wall Street, Obamacare has generated a tangle of red tape—and left business to deal with it all. It is here that our doubts about Mr Obama set in. No administration in many decades has had such a poor appreciation of commerce. Previous Democrats, notably Bill Clinton, raised taxes, but still understood capitalism. Bashing business seems second nature to many of the people around Mr Obama. If he has appointed some decent people to his cabinet—Hillary Clinton at the State Department, Arne Duncan at education and Tim Geithner at the Treasury—the White House itself has too often seemed insular and left-leaning. The obstructive Republicans in Congress have certainly been a convenient excuse for many of the president’s failures, but he must also shoulder some blame. Mr Obama spends regrettably little time buttering up people who disagree with him; of the 104 rounds of golf the president has played in office, only one was with a Republican congressman. Above all, Mr Obama has shown no readiness to tackle the main domestic issue confronting the next president: America cannot continue to tax like a small government but spend like a big one. Mr Obama came into office promising to end “our chronic avoidance of tough decisions” on reforming its finances—and then retreated fast, as he did on climate change and on immigration. Disgracefully, he ignored the suggestions of the bipartisan Bowles-Simpson deficit commission that he himself set up. More tellingly, he has failed to lay out a credible plan for what he will do in the next four years. Virtually his entire campaign has been spent attacking Mr Romney, usually for his wealth and success in business. Many a Mitt makes a muddle Mr Obama’s shortcomings have left ample room for a pragmatic Republican, especially one who could balance the books and overhaul government. Such a candidate briefly flickered across television screens in the first presidential debate. This newspaper would vote for that Mitt Romney, just as it would for the Romney who ran Democratic Massachusetts in a bipartisan way (even pioneering the blueprint for Obamacare). The problem is that there are a lot of Romneys and they have committed themselves to a lot of dangerous things. Take foreign policy. In the debates Mr Romney stuck closely to the president on almost every issue. But elsewhere he has repeatedly taken a more bellicose line. In some cases, such as Syria and Russia (see article), this newspaper would welcome a more robust position. But Mr Romney seems too ready to bomb Iran, too uncritically supportive of Israel and cruelly wrong in his belief in “the Palestinians not wanting to see peace”. The bellicosity could start on the first day of his presidency, when he has vowed to list China as a currency manipulator—a pointless provocation to its new leadership that could easily degenerate into a trade war. Or take reducing the deficit and reforming American government. Here there is more to like about Mr Romney. He generally believes in the smaller state we would rather see; he would slash red tape and his running-mate, Paul Ryan, has dared to broach much-needed entitlement reform. Yet far from being the voice of fiscal prudence, Mr Romney wants to start with huge tax cuts (which will disproportionately favour the wealthy), while dramatically increasing defence spending. Together those measures would add $7 trillion to the ten-year deficit. He would balance the books through eliminating loopholes (a good idea, but he will not specify which ones) and through savage cuts to programmes that help America’s poor (a bad idea, which will increase inequality still further). At least Mr Obama, although he distanced himself from Bowles-Simpson, has made it clear that any long-term solution has to involve both entitlement reform and tax rises. Mr Romney is still in the cloud-cuckoo-land of thinking you can do it entirely through spending cuts: the Republican even rejected a ratio of ten parts spending cuts to one part tax rises. Backing business is important, but getting the macroeconomics right matters far more. Mr Romney’s more sensible supporters explain his fiscal policies away as necessary rubbish, concocted to persuade the fanatics who vote in the Republican primaries: the great flipflopper, they maintain, does not mean a word of it. Of course, he knows in current circumstances no sane person would really push defence spending, projected to fall below 3% of GDP, to 4%; of course President Romney would strike a deal that raises overall tax revenues, even if he cuts tax rates. You’d better believe him However, even if you accept that Romneynomics may be more numerate in practice than it is in theory, it is far harder to imagine that he will reverse course entirely. When politicians get elected they tend to do quite a lot of the things they promised during their campaigns. François Hollande, France’s famously pliable new president, was supposed to be too pragmatic to introduce a 75% top tax rate, yet he is steaming ahead with his plan. We weren’t fooled by the French left; we see no reason why the American right will be more flexible. Mr Romney, like Mr Hollande, will have his party at his back—and a long record of pandering to them. Indeed, the extremism of his party is Mr Romney’s greatest handicap. The Democrats have their implacable fringe too: look at the teachers’ unions. But the Republicans have become a party of Torquemadas, forcing representatives to sign pledges never to raise taxes, to dump the chairman of the Federal Reserve and to embrace an ever more Southern-fried approach to social policy. Under President Romney, new conservative Supreme Court justices would try to overturn Roe v Wade, returning abortion policy to the states. The rights of immigrants (who have hardly had a good deal under Mr Obama) and gays (who have) would also come under threat. This newspaper yearns for the more tolerant conservatism of Ronald Reagan, where “small government” meant keeping the state out of people’s bedrooms as well as out of their businesses. Mr Romney shows no sign of wanting to revive it. The devil we know We very much hope that whichever of these men wins office will prove our pessimism wrong. Once in the White House, maybe the Romney of the mind will become reality, cracking bipartisan deals to reshape American government, with his vice-president keeping the headbangers in the Republican Party in line. A re-elected President Obama might learn from his mistakes, clean up the White House, listen to the odd businessman and secure a legacy happier than the one he would leave after a single term. Both men have it in them to be their better selves; but the sad fact is that neither candidate has campaigned as if that is his plan. As a result, this election offers American voters an unedifying choice. Many of The Economist’s readers, especially those who run businesses in America, may well conclude that nothing could be worse than another four years of Mr Obama. We beg to differ. For all his businesslike intentions, Mr Romney has an economic plan that works only if you don’t believe most of what he says. That is not a convincing pitch for a chief executive. And for all his shortcomings, Mr Obama has dragged America’s economy back from the brink of disaster, and has made a decent fist of foreign policy. So this newspaper would stick with the devil it knows, and re-elect him. Read more: Full coverage of the 2012 presidential election

More Cyber Attacks

This is becoming increasingly serious!

 

GMT Luke Johnson 02 November 2012 20:51 GMT US giant Occidental Petroleum said it suffered “a cyber attack” in 2009 and 2010 but said the incident had no impact on the company’s operations. Oxy said in a section of its third-quarter filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission titled “Risk Factors” that it does not believe its risks have changed materially. The company said it made the disclosure “given the growing concerns over cyber attacks”. “In 2009 and 2010, Occidental experienced a cyber attack on its email system, which had no effect on its operations, financial systems or reputation,” the filing said. The SEC last year issued details on when publicly traded companies should report hacking incidents. “Cyber attacks on businesses have escalated in recent years. Occidental relies on electronic systems and networks to control and manage its oil and gas, chemicals and pipeline operations and has multiple layers of security to mitigate risks of cyber attack,” the filing said. “If, however, Occidental were to experience an attack and its security measures failed, the potential consequences to its businesses and the communities in which it operates could be significant.” The energy industry has been a growing target of cyber attacks in recent years. The US Department of Homeland Security issued a warning in May that hackers had been targeting gas-transportation infrastructure since December and that operators were at risk. In April, Iran’s oil facilities were hit by attacks as well. A report this year by computer-security firm McAfee found that cyber espionage was on the rise, with Chinese hackers stealing field data and cutting-edge technology from energy companies around the world since at least 2009. Last year, leading computer-security firm McAfee issued a report on an incident dubbed Night Dragon in which Chinese hackers broke into the computer systems of five multinational oil and gas companies to steal bidding plans and other critical proprietary information.

New Source of Nuclear Fuel

Boron: A New Nuclear Fuel Which Holds Far More Energy than Originally Thought

By Brian Westenhaus| Thu, 01 November 2012 00:10 | 1

Benefit From the Latest Energy Trends and Investment Opportunities before the mainstream media and investing public are aware they even exist. The Free Oilprice.com Energy Intelligence Report gives you this and much more. Click here to find out more.

Tri-Alpha Energy has allowed a bit of its research out into the world with a 79 page pdf document rich in background, results of the efforts early research, and a surprise about how the potential fuel, Boron (pB11) would react in a fusion reaction.  Hat tip to Brian Wang’s Next Big Future.

Tri-Alpha’s position is, “We want to know the energy and location of every outgoing alpha particle.”  This is important because in a pB11 reaction the harvest is high energy Helium that can be used to directly generate electricity.

The news from Tri-Alpha is the discovery of two high-energy α-particles (alphas) – that will have a huge impact on pB11 fueled reactor designs because the alphas are much easier to extract and convert more efficiently into electricity.

This is quite significant news and powerful information that may apply to the other two leading pB11 fueled efforts, the Lerner Focus Fusion effort and the Bussard Wiffle Ball work.

Tri-Alpha Early Reactor
Tri-Alpha Early Reactor Artist’s Rendering.

At Tri-Alpha the work hinges on whether or not the reaction confinement will work at levels need to trigger the reaction.  The whole idea as with the others is to capture enough of the containment and collected energy as fission/fusion by-products.

Why “fission/fusion” or more like “fusion/fission” you might ask . . .

The function in the fusion is a proton is driven into a boron atom making it a carbon atom in a very highly energized state.  The new carbon atom is proton/neutron unbalanced making it inherently unstable and so flies apart.  Actually the carbon atom can’t last long, it’s quite excited what with nucleons, quarks and other subatomic particles way over energized it simply comes apart, fissions, into helium atoms that also hold extreme energies that can be shed into electrical circuits.

What’s left is a new boron, missing some of its nucleus and unstable it too flies apart into lower energy helium as well.

Dr. Lerner, leader of the Focus Fusion effort straightens this out with, “I think to the vast majority of nuclear physicists, fission is a process produced by the interaction of neutrons—neutral particles—and nuclei, while fusion is a process produced by the interaction of charged nuclei with each other. The names, like many names in physics and elsewhere, have historical origins . . . Since pB11 is produced by the interactions of charged nuclei, everyone would call it fusion, even though the final nuclei are smaller than one of the initial nuclei.”

Note that the difference is in the nuclear reaction – fusion takes an energy input from the proton and fission responds to the neutron.

The pB11 in fusion idea has been around over 75 years with three primary particles.   Not long after the two alpha idea was confirmed.   Over the decades experimenters and theoreticians accepted the two alpha scenario with one high energy and one low energy.

But Tri-Alpha has a huge advantage with the march of technology adding up to today.  The better equipment plus Tri-Alpha’s research questions found a much better answer.

Everyone interested in power from fusion has to know what Tri-Alpha is asking – what is the absolute number of alphas?

The Tri-Alpha answer is one primary alpha from the first incidence with the proton and two more from the carbon atom when it’s reduced back to a Boron 8.

Back in 1933 Lord Rutherford thought was that 3 equal alphas would result.  In 1936 with 300 keV power Dee and Gilbert found 2 highly energized alphas and a third low energy one.  Tri-Alpha is up to 0.675 MeV power and confirms Dee and Gilbert – although not quite as expected.

The news is based on a much more thorough understanding of what takes place.  Tri-Alpha, and now everyone else, can see a boron fusion yields a quick high-energy alpha and the boron 8 that also has a high-energy alpha.

That recheck of the physics is causing a redesign of the Tri-Alpha reactor.

The news may well cause a rethink at Lerner’s Focus Fusion and perhaps even at the Bussard Wiffle Ball effort.  There’s more power in that pB11 fuel than everyone has been thinking.  Except for perhaps Dr. Robert Bussard.

By. Brian Westenhaus

Source: Tri-Alpha Energy Comes Out With Boron Fuel News

Finding the Silver Lining

For Builders, the Storm Is Good for Business

Christopher Capozziello for The New York Times
Doug Palmieri of Palmieri Construction in Middlefield, Conn., says he will be busy clearing property and rebuilding for affected homeowners. More Photos »
By CATHERINE RAMPELL and SHAILA DEWAN
Published: October 31, 2012

Bad news for hurricane-ravaged homeowners is good news for at least one contingent: construction companies and the army of workers they plan to hire, many of whom have been idled and ailing from the housing bust for nearly half a decade.
Multimedia

Photographs
A Region Battered and Hurting
INTERACTIVE FEATURE: Storm Aftermath: Live Updates
Related

New York Region Faces Rescues, Looting and a Rising Death Toll (November 1, 2012)

Christopher Capozziello for The New York Times
Mayara Goncalves, owner of Queiroga Construction in Bridgeport, Conn. More Photos »
Two days into the destruction from Hurricane Sandy, phones were ringing nonstop at Garden State Public Adjusters in Marlton, N.J., ProStar Residential Disaster Cleanup in Milford, Conn., and other businesses along the Eastern Seaboard. Construction crews cannot get into many of the affected areas yet, because of flooded streets, detours and debris. Even so, customers were lining up, begging for help to pluck branches out of windows, suck water from basements and living rooms, and rebuild damaged roofs and homes.

It is an exercise many contractors had been through before.

“I always look forward to a natural disaster,” said Doug Palmieri, owner of Palmieri Construction in Middlefield, Conn. “The last two storms we had around here, the snow we had included, helped out the contracting business quite a bit.”

Construction companies and insurance adjusters that are newer or less known have begun circling waterlogged neighborhoods in their cars and trucks and distributing fliers, handshakes and condolences.

“I drove around with my truck and a couple of people stopped me and asked me for a business card,” said Mayara Goncalves, owner of Queiroga Construction in Bridgeport, Conn. “Unfortunately for everyone else, it’s going to be good for us.”

The five-person Queiroga Construction is hoping to meet demand with longer hours and subcontractors. Many construction companies along the East Coast, though, say they expect to hire, although the magnitude of the work and the number of additional laborers are still to be determined.

“There is going to be so much manpower required, and we are already spread so thin,” said Bill O’Connell, president of Elite Public Adjusters, which runs both an insurance adjustment company and a restoration and construction business in North Wildwood, N.J. He expects at least a million dollars of work from this storm. “I’m a little worried about being overwhelmed. The phones are ringing off the hook and we won’t be able to get to a lot of people.”

Some companies expressed concern about finding enough workers quickly, given that the slowdown in construction over the last few years has caused workers to seek their fortunes elsewhere.

“Over the course of the recession, 60 to 75 percent of construction workers left the area because there was no work to keep them busy,” said Pat Broom, owner of Phoenix Restoration, a 15-year-old company in Kill Devil Hills, N.C., on the Outer Banks. “That’s the first thing we worried about this morning when we got in: Where do we get the people?”

Even in areas where people are desperate for work, some companies say they have trouble finding workers with the skills and motivation for hard physical labor.

“The challenge is going to be finding help,” said John Scotti of Scotti Brothers Custom Home Renovation in Cumberland County, N.J. “The phone doesn’t stop ringing with people looking for jobs, and then you bring them in and they don’t want to work. The only ones that want to work are those who are here illegally.”

Businesses are hoping that the burst of construction work will draw back workers to their areas. Last year, the rebuilding efforts from Hurricane Irene attracted construction workers and insurance adjusters from as far away as Texas.

So far, though, companies said they have been inundated with more calls for work than job applicants. Some expect workers to start flowing into affected areas later this week when transportation returns to normal.

While some pleas for service are coming in steadily and urgently, it will probably take a while for the bulk of the construction jobs to get going in earnest.

First, the areas need to dry out sufficiently for crews to begin work, which could take days to weeks. After Tropical Storm Ernesto in 2006, said Ms. Broom of Phoenix Restoration in the Outer Banks, it took two weeks for the standing water to dry in some areas. In the meantime, septic systems overflowed and bacteria festered, making the jobs more complicated and expensive.

Many homeowners are also waiting for insurance companies to come through with money or at least an assessment, a process that can take days or months.

“Especially with the way the economy is, people don’t have money just sitting in the bank to pay for a $20,000 or $30,000 job,” said Victor Rosado, owner of Professional Home Builders in Milford, Conn. And often, people struggle to come up with the costs that insurance does not cover.

“No one’s ever whole after something like this,” Mr. Rosado said. “They tend to think that the insurance company will come in and make everything whole, but that never happens.”

He said that money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency may help hasten the pace of reconstruction, since President Obama authorized federal aid for parts of the country struck by the storm.

The other reason reconstruction may drag on over the next year is that many of the affected areas — like the Jersey Shore or the Outer Banks — are vacation areas, and the vacation season is over. Some owners have started calling construction companies and claims adjusters to survey the damage. Others are hundreds of miles away and out of touch.

Even those in the affected area or somewhere nearby may not have power and are having difficulty contacting contractors, insurance companies and other services.

While construction companies and their new hires may profit from the destruction, homeowners and companies are out billions of dollars for their physical damages and lost business hours, which can ripple through local economies. But one longer-term benefit might be new building stock that is better than what was swept away, as was the case in rebuilding along the Outer Banks in North Carolina after previous storms.

“When government authorities facilitate rebuilding quickly and effectively, the process of economic renewal, in many tangible ways, can leave communities better off than before,” said Peter Morici, an economics professor at the Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland.

He estimated that the economic losses from Sandy would be $35 billion to $45 billion, but that economic benefits from reconstruction and its ripple effects would total about $27 billion to $36 billion, not including gains of about $10 billion “from a more modern and productive capital stock.”

Lithium Ion battery news

Revolutionary Improvement Increases Lithium Ion Battery Capacity by 300%

By Brian Westenhaus| Tue, 30 October 2012 23:43 | 0

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California Lithium Battery (CLB), a finalist in Department of Energy’s 2012 Start Up America’s Next Top Energy Innovator challenge, has announced the record-setting performance of its new lithium-ion battery anode.

Called the “GEN3” the anode is a silicon graphene composite material engineered with Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) over the past eight months.  Independent test results in full cell lithium-ion batteries indicate the new GEN3 anode material, used with advanced cathode and electrolyte materials, increases energy density by a stunning 3 times and specific anode capacity by an astonishing 4 times over existing lithium-ion batteries.

The new performance level comes from a new lithium battery anode material for use with advanced cathode and electrolyte materials.  The press release performance characteristic quotes are an energy density of 525WH/Kg and specific anode capacity of 1,250mAh/g.

The performance quotes compare to today’s common commercial offerings at a density of between 100-180WH/kg and a specific anode capacity of 325mAh/g.

An understandably pumped CLB CEO, Phil Roberts, said, “This equates to more than a 300% improvement in lithium ion battery capacity and an estimated 70% reduction in lifetime cost for batteries used in consumer electronics, EVs, and grid-scale energy storage.”  Taken as quoted, this would be a massive shift in electrical storage costs for the better.

The CLB business model is underway fast-tracking the commercialization of its GEN3 breakthrough battery anode material. Over the next two years the firm plans to produce and sell its silicon-graphene anode material to global battery and electric vehicle manufacturers and start U.S. based production of a limited quantity of specialized batteries for high-end applications.

Related Article: Solar Roadways: Powering the World of Tomorrow

Roberts expounds with, “We believe that our new advanced silicon graphene anode composite material is so good in terms of specific capacity and extended cycle life that it will become a graphite anode ‘drop-in’ replacement material for anodes in most lithium ion batteries over the next 2-3 years.”

If that proves true – a revolution is at hand.

CLB thinks its transformational technology will change the way lithium ion battery power is produced, managed, and stored, especially if it can lead to lithium ion batteries being produced for under $175/kWh.  The firm believes that could directly compete with the cost of energy from fossil fueled power generation.  These two ideas will be exciting tests over time.

Silicon Graphene Composite
ANL’s Silicon Graphene Composite Graphic. Click image for the largest view. Image credit: Argonne National Laboratory.

Technically speaking the new GEN3 battery material’s foundation is the use of the breakthrough ANL silicon graphene process that stabilizes the use of silicon in a lithium battery anode. Although silicon absorbs lithium ten times better than any other anode materials it rapidly deteriorates during charge/discharge cycles. CLB has worked at ANL and other facilities over the past year to develop this new anode material to work in a full lithium-ion battery cell with multiple cathode and electrolyte materials.  It seems the research will take about a third of the silicon potential to commercialization now.

Related Article: New Fuel Cell Catalyst Offers Very Cheap Alternative to Platinum

The superior results of the development program at ANL leads CLB to believe that this advanced anode material could eventually replace conventional graphite based anode materials used in most lithium-ion batteries manufactured today. This new composite anode material is suitable for use in combination with a variety of existing and new lithium-ion batteries cathode and electrolyte materials that will help dramatically improve overall battery performance and lower the lithium-ion batteries cycle cost.

The firm’s press release asserts the cost cycle will effectively store electricity at a cost competitive with energy produced from fossil fuels.  Its implied pretty clearly within the context of the press release that competition to gasoline for internal combustion engines is just what the company means.

On the business front the interest is in the success of CLB, a joint venture between California-based CALiB Power and Ionex Energy Storage Systems, as a portfolio start-up company headquartered at the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator that was started by The City of Los Angeles and the LA Department of Water and Power in just the last year.  CLB naturally plans to set up silicon graphene anode material and lithium ion battery manufacturing operations in the Los Angeles area.  How the manufacturing plan proceeds will be based on interest in its advanced Li-ion battery material from U.S. and international customers.

If it all works out we should be seeing GEN3 battery offerings pretty soon.  One hopes so, if only to cut costs and reduce weights of the personal electronics.  It will take a while longer to crack the electric vehicle market – but the cost projections are very enticing.

By. Brian Westenhaus

Source: The Lithium Ion Battery May Be Having a Revolution

Offshore Wind Farm

World’s Largest Offshore Windfarm Produces its First Electricity

By Joao Peixe| Mon, 29 October 2012 21:46 | 0

 

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The first phase of the London Array, the world’s largest offshore windfarm, has started to produce electricity for the first time.

The project will see 175 turbines installed 12 miles off the coast of Kent and Essex, providing a capacity of 630 megawatts, enough to supply power to more than 470,000 homes. So far 151 turbines have been successfully installed since construction began in March 2011.

The second phase will increase that capacity to 870MW, although the plans have had to be resubmitted after the first set were deemed to cover too large an area and could have had a negative impact on local birdlife.

Benj Sykes, the wind UK country manager at Dong Energy, the largest investor in the project, said that “being able to efficiently develop large offshore windfarms and harvest the scale advantages in both construction and operation is an important element in our continuous efforts to bring down the costs of energy of offshore wind.”

Related Article: Rural Alaska Shows us the Way for Wind Energy Installations

The second largest stake in the project is owned by E.ON, and Tony Cocker the CEO, commented that “we firmly believe that electricity from renewable sources has a vital part to play in helping us deliver energy in a way that is sustainable, affordable and secure and this is why we are aiming to reduce the costs of offshore wind by 40% by 2015.”

The London Array is owned by Dong Energy (50%), E.ON (30%), and Masdar of Abu Dhabi (20%).

By. Joao Peixe of Oilprice.com

We Need Some Leadership and We Need it Now

Backroom Dealing Will Save Us From the Fiscal Cliff. Hopefully.

By | Breakout – 3 hours ago

Most Americans have been working on the assumption that Congress has to be bluffing about the Fiscal Cliff because there’s no way on earth even the most daft of political hacks would be foolish enough to destroy the U.S. economy through pig-headed obstinance and mindless sucking up to extreme fringes on either side of the political aisle. (See Related: Fiscal Cliff: “Major Market Meltdown” Expected If Congress Does Nothing, Says Steven Rattner)

At least that was the thinking until about a month ago. With the election nearing and neither sign showing any sign of budging, concern has climbed from punditry to the corner office. Over 80 CEOs of a campaign called “Fix the Debt” are calling for DC to stop bickering along party lines and get serious about putting the U.S. on a sustainable path. (See Related: CEOs Launch Campaign to Get Congress to Finally Fix the Deficit)

Is the movement just political posturing by the quintessential members of the 1% or an expression of genuine concern? Mark Lehmann, president of JMP Securities thinks it’s the latter. “They’re angry and I don’t blame them,” he states.

The CEOs are ticked and concerned but they aren’t entirely closing up shop. Lehmann says it’s incremental spending on new projects and initiatives that is getting frozen, not core operations. “They’re not stopping business; phones are getting picked up, people are on airplanes,” he explains.

Lehmann still believes a compromise will be reached. Compromise means that taxes are going higher and spending will be cut. We’re all just going to have to deal with that basic fact then hammer out some details. He thinks there’s haggling going on behind the scenes as each side strives to avoid going down in history as the group that plunged the U.S. into a financial crisis because they couldn’t agree. (See Related: Market Looks Bad in 2013 No Matter Who Wins Says Hirsch)

Breakout viewers might remember that the same type of backroom dealing was going on during the debt ceiling debate to no avail. That was then, this is now and the deadline is real. “This is the final time”, says Lehmann. “We can’t wait any further.”

A Big Mistake

Free exchange

Economics

Fiscal policy

A supposedly fun thing we shouldn’t have done

Oct 25th 2012, 16:27 by R.A. | WASHINGTON

IN 2008 and 2009, leaders across advanced economies did a pretty good job cooperating to prevent a global financial meltdown and survive a global recession. In 2010, they surveyed the scene, pronounced the crisis safely in remission, and set about cleaning up the resulting fiscal mess. Gross government debt-to-GDP ratios rose from 74% to 101% from 2007 to 2010. There was just one problem with this strategy, as this week’s Free exchange column explains: it was not an ideal time for sweeping fiscal consolidation:

In their 2010 analysis IMF economists reckoned that governments cutting deficits by 1% of GDP could expect a short-run hit to GDP growth of about half a percentage point: a multiplier of about 0.5.

This view was predicated on the idea that other factors can offset the blow from budget cuts. Spending cuts may “crowd in” private-sector activity: if governments are using up scarce capital and labour then austerity creates room for private firms to expand. In open economies, austerity’s bite can be passed on to other countries through reduced imports. Most important of all, monetary policy can act as a counterweight to fiscal policy. Spending cuts that threaten to drag growth below a desired level should prompt monetary easing, limiting the multiplier.

What that means is that austerity may hurt much more at some times than others. In a 2010 paper Alan Auerbach and Yuriy Gorodnichenko of the University of California, Berkeley argued that the fiscal multiplier may be negative during booms, meaning that spending cuts actually raise growth. In recessions, by contrast, it could be as high as 2.5. A study by Lawrence Christiano, Martin Eichenbaum and Sergio Rebelo of Northwestern University suggested that although the multiplier may hover at around 1 normally, it could rise to more than 3 when interest rates fall to near zero, leaving the central bank with less room to act.

The timing of post-crisis austerity could hardly have been less auspicious. First, with many economies cutting budgets at once, the impact of austerity on growth couldn’t easily be deflected elsewhere. That is a big problem in the euro zone where trade links are tight and countries are unable to devalue their currencies. Second, whereas cuts in government spending might normally be expected to free up resources for private use, that mattered far less when unemployment and saving were high. Third, with borrowing costs already at rock bottom in safe havens like Britain and America, there was less room for them to fall further to offset the impact of austerity on demand. Finally, as many interest rates neared zero, monetary-policy action had less scope.

The most recent World Economic Outlook contained the punchline: fiscal multipliers since 2009 seem to have been significantly larger than previously assumed. In a box in the WEO, IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard and staff economist Daniel Leigh looked at 2010 vintage forecasts and found that planned fiscal cuts of 1% of GDP generally led the IMF to overestimate an economy’s subsequent growth by roughly one percentage point. The fiscal multiplier seemed to be in the 0.9 to 1.7 range rather than the previously estimated 0.5.

Critics have challenged the IMF’s conclusions as insufficiently robust; the Financial Times‘ Chris Giles ran his own regression and reportedly found that dropping Greece from the sample left the findings statistically insignificant. While I appreciate his effort, I don’t find it particularly convincing. Mr Blanchard and Mr Leigh ran their own battery of robustness tests, and found that excluding several different subsets of outliers—including economies on IMF programmes—did not affect significance. The relationship remained robust to inclusion of other control variables (like initial debt stock and the incidence of banking crises) and to broadening the sample. My strong suspicion is that further rigorous testing is underway and is likely to support the initial findings.

Moreover, the result is consistent with other key research results on the impact of cuts in environments like the present. Frankly, given the behaviour of governments and central banks over the past two years it would be truly bizarre not to observe fairly substantial fiscal multipliers.

And that is the key point: policymakers suffered from a striking lack of perspective in opting to pursue broad austerity* beginning in 2010. It was clear at the time that some economies needed to begin cutting debts immediately and that lots of economies would need to bring debt down eventually. But a look at global conditions should have indicated that the normal cushions against fiscal cuts were weaker than normal or absent. And so the decision by countries not facing immediate market pressure to start cutting alongside those that were seriously undermined the consolidation efforts of economies in truly dire straits and threatened recovery.

At the same time, central banks seriously underestimated the impact of a broad pivot to austerity and their own role in raising fiscal multipliers. A look at prevailing market conditions and the wholesale move toward deficit reduction across the advanced world should have convinced central banks that aggressively expansionary policy was likely to be necessary and was much less likely to carry inflationary risks.

The result was a process of fiscal consolidation that was more economically painful and dangerous and less successful than it needed to be. The past two years simply didn’t need to be as economically difficult as they have been.

 

* The broad move toward austerity is real, despite what you may have heard. Cyclically-adjusted deficits across advanced economies declined from 5.9% of GDP to 4.3% from 2010 to 2012, including a drop of 1.9 percentage points in America, 2.6 percentage points in the euro area, and 2.7 percentage points in Britain. Japan is the sole outlier among major advanced economies.

Election News

THE NEW YORKER ONLINE ONLY

« The Ohio CampaignMainSandy’s Hour »
OCTOBER 28, 2012
THE SANDY ELECTION?
POSTED BY AMY DAVIDSON

[Updated]

How historic a storm might Hurricane Sandy be? In New York City, the subways and buses have stopped running at 7 P.M., along with Metro North and the Long Island Rail Road. Schools are closed, and so is the stock market. Sandy is sprawling and scary, a storm, we are told, that cost many lives—it already has killed dozens in the Caribbean. People are making preparations along much of the East Coast, from North Carolina to New England, and inland through Pennsylvania. That brings one close to Ohio, and to the heart of a Presidential campaign that Sandy is already affecting.

Will this be known as the Sandy Election? A storm, in some ways, is the epitome of randomness—the best tracking can’t say exactly which way the wind will blow, or why. The science of storm tracking shares some of the inexactness of polling, with an attempt to sample the moment and try to guess where it’s all headed next. Storm systems are, in a way, the ultimate undecided voters. But one can offer, if not answer, some questions about how Sandy might change the race:

Will Sandy change the candidates’ priorities? Mitt Romney, NBC reported, cancelled all of his events in Virginia, and Obama is headed to Florida while he still can, rather than when he wanted to. Politico has a list of cancelled campaign events. If the candidates could treat the skies like one big open subway system, they could run, in the next week, exactly to where the polls tell them. Now they can’t. It might mean that they have to leave Virginia and Florida be, and see how they can make the best use of their time out West.

Will Sandy change the campaigns’ rhetoric? It is hard to make an attack ad feel right in the best of circumstances: even less so when people lose their lives or homes. President Obama may have to act and look like a President on top of this, when he would rather be out looking like a fighter. Mitt Romney can’t appear entirely insensitive to people who are vulnerable and may need immediate help. It may be interesting to see how anti-government tones may be modulated at a moment when its emergency role is immediate and obvious. This might also be the moment when there is finally a conversation in the campaign about climate change, which has been the great unmentionable. (Campaigns are probably already researching votes and positions on the funding of various agencies and programs.) The Times noted that “More than 60,000 National Guard troops in nine states were ready to assist the local authorities.”

Did the campaign just end? Sandy is already dominating news broadcasts—Meet the Press was preempted in New York—and certain states, including battleground states like Virginia, will have other things to worry about. It may prove to be hard, in the media and public-conversation space that is left, to change the trajectory of the campaign. We may, in many respects, be locked down where we are. The question is whether Romney or Obama benefits the most from that, and in which states. Romney’s post-first-debate momentum was slowing, but Ohio has been getting tight. Obama has emphasized early voting; Romney, heavy advertising in the last days. Get out the vote efforts may need to be reconfigured around closed roads. And what are the rules for absentee ballots if you’re evacuated? The disruption of phone lines may also wreak havoc with polling.

Is Sandy the ultimate vote-suppressor? The election is nine days away, but this is not a trivial concern. Sandy is a strange and lurking storm—or storms embedded in each other—that meteorologists are saying could dwell in spots for a while, raining, raining, and raining. Maybe people will care less about turning out if they are cleaning up after the storm. Maybe they will have a harder time getting to the polls because of the effects of flooding or other damage. There could also be power outages that keep people from voting. The general view is that low turnout hurts Democrats—see Jane Mayer for more on that—but that assumes the normal range of reasons for staying away from the polls, not the extraordinary and selective barriers blown in by a storm. Who will Sandy hurt or help? Which way will the wind blow?

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Mitt is Getting Desperate

Mitt Romney Gets Desperate in Ohio
—By Kevin Drum| Sun Oct. 28, 2012 12:04 PM PDT
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Last Thursday, Mitt Romney told a group of Ohio autoworkers that Chrysler was planning to move Jeep production to China. Chrysler very quickly explained the real story: they’re thinking about opening new plants in China to sell Jeeps into the Chinese market. No American plants are going to be shuttered.

But the Romney campaign decided none of this mattered. They want to win Ohio, so they’re running ads that say this:

Obama took GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy, and sold Chrysler to Italians who are going to build Jeeps in China. Mitt Romney will fight for every American job.

Technically, every word of this is true. Obama did force GM and Chrysler through a managed bankruptcy. Fiat did end up buying Chrysler. And Chrysler is thinking about building Jeeps in China. But remember my three-part test to judge how deceptive a statement is?

What was the speaker trying to imply?
What would it take to state things accurately?
How much would accuracy damage the speaker’s point?
On this scale, Romney’s ad rates about 9 out of 10 on the deceptiveness scale. He’s obviously trying to imply that American jobs will be shipped overseas; stating things accurately would require wholesale revisions; and doing so would completely destroy Romney’s point. But he doesn’t care. He’s got an election to win, and if scaring Ohio autoworkers is what it takes, then that’s what it takes. It’s truly nauseating.

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