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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on December 4th, 2007
Professor Antonio D’Avila presented results from his Green Tech Environmental Technology Laboratory that at UFRJ has now 200 patents and since 2005 is involved in a biodiesel plant — Agropalma. Professor Giuseppe Vasopollo from the University of Salento at Lecce, Italy, enlarged on the ecological foot-printing of a generation for Sustainability with Green Chemistry and Clean Chemistry as promoted now by Italy. They work on capturing CO2 with chemicals and work since 1993 by the Italian INCA consortium that involves now 30 universities and predated the ACS and IUPAC (International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry) involvement. He pointed out that erosion is created by buildings, bridges, roads, dams, strip-burning, inadequate agricultural practices. He wants to see Green Chemistry and Sustainable Development being seen as one subject - something that was then picked up at the roundtable. Professor Claudio Oller Nascimento, from the University of Sao Paulo works on photochemical treatment of wastewater on the Restoration of the Cubatao area that was one of the most polluted areas of the world. Professor Bernd Engels from Wuerzburg, Germany, presented Green Chemistry from a theoretical physicist’s point of view. Professor Rita Hoyos spoke about work at Cordoba, Argentina, and Dr. Lucas Leite from EMBRAPA and Dr. Regis Lima Verde from CENEA, on enlarging Biomass Future Supplies as in turning biomass into carbohydrates that can be developed further. Tropical developing countries have more land availability and higher yields, but technology is in the north. They also complained of the higher subsidies in the north that work to the detriment of the marketability of the products of the south and to clear distortion also from an environmental point of view. The reality is that basically, the world production of biofuels is still centered only on Brazil and the US. Biofuels are starting in Europe but Europe is dependent on imports. The world use of biomass is 10.5% of energy use, but in Brazil it is 26.7%. Problems arise when there is no concern in the survival of the forests. The BIOREFINERY CONCEPT is when we produce food and fuel in the process using the biofuel feedstock. Dr. Jennifer Young from the American Chemical Society Washington Headquarters, Green Chemistry Institute, presented the US summer school programs to students announcing the 2008 program in Colorado and a meeting June 24-26, 2008 in Washington DC. They are also promoting in US Congress a Green Chemistry Research and Development Act. There is already a Green Chemistry Initiative in California, and a Massachusetts Toxic Reduction Initiative. Michigan has an Executive Directive in place since June 2006. EPA still thinks in terms of voluntarism. Dr. Alberto Oliveira Fontes Jr. presented the Petrobras interest in bio-ethanol and bio-diesel. They are building ships for exporting these materials. Professor Carioca, Professor Vasapollo and Dr. Selma Mazes spoke of the production of Cardinal from cashew nuts and building a whole series of products from this first material. Then Professor Ami Ben-Amotz from the Weizman Institute in Israel presented a very attractive new type of ocean-side-agriculture - the production of Bio-fuels from Algae. This topic has hit finally the National Geographic Magazine in the October 2007 issue. Professor Ben-Amotz is also director of a Japanese owned industrial plant in the sea of Eilat, that uses Dr. Ben-Amotz patents to manufacture food supplements produced by algae. His Dunaliella algae prosper in very salty water and they absorb CO2. Dr. Ben-Amotz was able to convince the management of a coal-fired power plant to open two holes in the exhaust chimney of the plant in order to channel some of the CO2 to his pond with algae and found that the system works. He does not say that this can solve all the problems with CO2 emissions, but it surely can become a way to capture some of this CO2 in a recycling scheme. From the algae he can produce bio-diesel. Professor Adrian Pohlit from INPA in Manaus, Amazonia, followed by Professor Ney Pereira Jr, spoke of Biopharmaceuticals. and Professor Roberto Rossi from Cordoba spoke on Stanum organic compounds. Professor Vasif Harsici from The Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey spoke of biodegradable bio-polymers and Dr. Alberto Oliveira Fontes Jr. made a second presentation on uses of oils by Petrobras. They got involved in the oil production from nuts in the Amazonas region because it is not allowed to grow sugar cane in those areas. He mentioned that the production of plastic materials takes only 4% of the global use of petroleum. Professor Eduardo Fallabella, also from Petrobras, spoke of the production of liquid fuels via gasification processes - a way that is well known and can be viewed as a future use of biomass. Professor Horst Friedrich, from the German Aerospace Program, spoke on Motor Vehicles and their use of biofuels, and Professor Emilio La Rovere from UFRJ enlarged on biodiesel production including social aspects. Professor Paulo Carvalho, from UFC in Fortaleza spoke on the production of dielectric oils for the needs of transformers - a clear success story that saves on mineral oils. He was followed by a presentation of Professor Luiz Horta Nogueira from Bello Horizonte, Minas Gerais, on Bioenergy trends in Brazil in general - talking of boilers and other uses. Professor Rainer Jonas, of the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research in Braunschweig, Germany, spoke on polylactic acid, a biodegradable biopolymer. Here I had the opportunity to speak on Sustainability in General - the title was “Global Sustainability” which I redirected to “Sustainability Requires Significantly Decreased Dependence on Fossil Fuels - and Nuclear Power Is Of No Help Either.” My statement started by saying that the “How” has been presented by the previous speakers and I intend to deal with the “Why” in order to strengthen their hands. I used my half hour in order to pick points that in term of policy did not seem to me to have been presented sharp enough in the two and a half days that went on prior to my talk. I said that Climate is an energy issue - energy is an infrastructure issue thus climate is an infrastructure issue. We have to change the way we think about energy. I explained the balance between sunlight and earthlight that when disturbed by decreased capacity of energy being returned to space because of the Green-House Gasses Effect, we get global warming. But we get also global warming without CO2 emission when we bring out energy stored in the atom - in using nuclear power as an energy supply. Thus even without emitting cO2, nuclear power is sort of a fossil fuel as it releases energy to the atmosphere that was stored underground. I explained the system of the Biorefinery concept as something that can commercialize corn by selling every component except the “squealing of the pig.” A bio-refinery is thus not a petroleum refinery that uses bioethanol and biodiesel - something that I seemed to have heard in one of the exchanges. Further, the valorization of the co-products decreases also the food versus fuel dilemma because, like in the case of soy-beans, the material left after the extraction of the oil for biodiesel, is a high protein valuable food supplement - that in many cases is just what is needed - so the fuel was obtained in a process that produced the food we wanted - and this negates much of the contrived food versus fuel issue. I touched on the issue of peak oil and on the fact that renewable energy and alternate fuels are imperative. Thus the idea that Green Chemistry is tied to Sustainability is the way to go - further, we must incorporate also clean chemistry as part of the Green concept because aspects like creating energy systems that conserve energy or decrease the need for energy by increasing efficiency, are environmentally desirable or “green” even if not involving green plant matter. After all, even Professor Ami Ben-Amotz algae are not always green. I managed also to include policy issues related to subsidization of agricultural commodity production by taking land out of production. Thus there is a potential here to make the connection between farm policy and energy policy while finding both the farmland and the money needed to create new fuel. This is specially important in highly subsidized French agriculture and the Polish agriculture in its integration with the EU. There were several further points, and I was gratified hearing some echo of what I said in the few remaining presentations. Thus, Dr. Norbert Keutgen from the University of Bonn, Germany, Institute of Crop science and Resource Conservation (INRES) spoke about Photosynthesis and Bio-productivity on Bio-energy Yields, and Dr. Flavio do Couto Cavalcanti from OXITENO of Sao Paulo on Oil Chemistry. Their presentations included farm policy aspects. Dr.Hamilton Moss from CEPEL, which is the Alternative Energy and Environment Center of Research into Electric Energy belonging to ElectroBras, and his partners from UFC/CENEA, Professors Carvalho and Filho, spoke on the obvious Alternative Electricity - all renewables. We were reminded of the fact that the State of Ceara has some excellent sites for wind-power. Obviously also a lot of sun. Professor Nei Pereira from UFRJ spoke on Lignocellulosics Biorefinery Context and Professors Cesar Abreu and Henrique Baudel from the Federal University of Pernambuco at Recife, spoke on Chemical and Biofuels from Lignocellulosics. Professor Claudio Mota from UFRJ spoke on New Products and Processes from Glycerol - A Renewable Feedstock for The Chemical Industry. The Concluding remarks were that the concept of Green Chemicals is new in Brazil and the intent is to cooperate with ACS and IUPAC. The Brazilians are creating now RBQV which is the National Network for Green Chemistry with its headquarters in Fortaleza. They have already 9 Member States from Brazil, 31 Institutions with a total of 111 National Participants. They Will integrate the Chico Mendes Institute into the Network as there is a Social Aspect to all of this in Ceara over 50% of the population are below the poverty level.
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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on November 12th, 2007 http://environment.independent.co.uk/cli… This is from The Reporter for The Independent, Gideon Long, Directly From The Chilean Military Outpost, The Eduardo Frei Base, That Is A Bone Of Contention Between 2 or 3 Sovereign UN Member States, November 12, 2007. As Said, in Order To Get There The UN Secretary-General Will Have Traveled 12,000 miles and No Word Yet If His Trip Was Covered With Emission Off-Sets. “UN chief visits scientists in Antarctica for global warming fact-finding tour,” writes Gideon Long, but when we were there two years ago we visited baracks of the military that were decorated inside still with Photos of General Pinochet. At the Asia Society diner we wrote about, Mr. Ban was talking about an ECO-FACT-FINDING MISSION. On Antarctica, scientists told Mr Ban of the changes they have witnessed on the continent’s peninsula, the finger of land that reaches out from the South Pole towards the southern tip of South America. “The temperature increase here over the last 50 years has been up to 10 times the global average,” said Gino Casassa, a Chilean expert and member of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which won this year’s Nobel Peace Prize. In early 2002, Larsen B, an ice shelf about 10 times the size of the Isle of Wight, peeled away from the continent and crashed into the sea. “Nobody believed that Larsen B … could collapse in a matter of weeks,” Mr Casassa said. From the Chilean base Mr Ban hopped into a snowmobile and dropped in on his compatriots at South Korea’s King Sejong research station, where another retreating glacier is being monitored. Mr Ban flew yesterday to Brazil, where he was due to see the effects of logging and burning on the Amazon rainforest. The secretary general and his entourage will have clocked up about 17,000 air miles by the time they get back to New York. ———- The Reuters Reporting by Juan Jose Lagorio From Eduardo Frei Base: U.N.’s Ban says global warming is “an emergency.” EDUARDO FREI BASE, Antarctica, Nov 10 (Reuters) - With prehistoric Antarctic ice sheets melting beneath his feet, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for urgent political action to tackle global warming. The Antarctic Peninsula has warmed faster than anywhere else on Earth in the last 50 years, making the continent a fitting destination for Ban, who has made climate change a priority since he took office earlier this year. “I need a political answer. This is an emergency and for emergency situations we need emergency action,” he said during Friday’s visit to three scientific bases on the barren continent, where temperatures are their highest in about 1,800 years. Antarctica’s ice sheets are nearly 1.5 miles (2.5 km) thick on average — five times the height of the Taipei 101 tower, the world’s tallest building. But scientists say they are already showing signs of climate change. Satellite images show the West Antarctic ice sheet is thinning and may even collapse in the future, causing sea levels to rise. “All we’ve seen has been very impressive and beautiful, extraordinarily beautiful,” he told reporters. “But at the same time it’s disturbing. We’ve seen … the melting of glaciers.” Ban is preparing for a U.N. climate change conference in Bali, Indonesia, in December, which is expected to kick off talks on a new accord to curb carbon emissions after the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012. Ban has focused strongly on the environment and held a climate change summit at the United Nations on the eve of the annual General Assembly gathering of world leaders. On Saturday, he is expected to continue his South American tour at Chilean national park Torres del Paine, where Andean glaciers are also being affected by global warming. He will then visit Brazil, a leading force in developing biofuels from crops as an alternative to fossil fuels. Fears about climate change have fueled a boom in biofuels. Despite the controversy of diverting food crops into fuel production, Ban has said alternative energy sources are vital to addressing climate change. (( helen.popper at reuters.com; +54 911 4198 3488; Reuters Messaging: helen.popper.reuters.com@reuters.net)) ### |
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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on November 11th, 2007 nbsp;http://www.cenea.org.br/bwgc/index.php 1st Brazilian Workshop on Green Chemistry, Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil, November 18-21, 2007. MAIN PURPOSES: • To install officially the Brazilian Network on Green Chemistry; • To increase the national and international level of knowledge, cooperation and participation of researchers’ centers and private companies, to develop Green Chemistry, Environmental Chemistry, and Chemistry for Sustainability in Brazil. • To generate technical subsidies for the establishment of government policies on Green Chemistry; • To promote international exchange programs; • To implement the Brazilian School on Green Chemistry to spread the sustainability concepts at graduate, post-graduate and technical courses for the industries; Within this context the Brazilian Network proposes to be the institutional element to strengthen the national effort aiming to increase technological innovations at companies, research institutes and academia. Honorary President: Senator Inácio Arruda
Since then, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) and the “Consorzio Interuniversitario “La Chimica per l’Ambiente” (INCA), have promoted the publication of a book series and scientific meetings on Green Chemistry. In 2004, these two institutions published the 11th volume of that book series, entitled “Quimica Verde en Latino America” in order to promote the development of regional studies. Within this context, the Brazilian Network on Green Chemistry is promoting the first Brazilian Workshop on Green Chemistry expecting to congregate our scientific and technological experiences in a book which will express our concern, awareness and actions to protect Nature, future generations and the tropical environment, which is, certainly the richest one in biodiversity in the planet. Finally, we welcome and sincerely thank our guest speakers, collaborators, colleagues and sponsors for joining us in this noble cause. Prof. José O. B. Carioca Biodiversity and Innovative Programs in Brazil Cardanol Separation from CNSL: Problems and Perspectives Alternative Energy and Environment Brazilian Network on Green Chemistry Fine Chemicals from CNSL Environmental Chemistry GC - European Vision Green Dielectric Oils Global Sustainability Italian Vision on GC Bio-products and Bio-fuels from Algae Environmental Biotechnology Brazilian School on GC Biopharmacos Synthesis The Role of Photosynthesis and Environmental Catalysis R & D in Phytotherapics Oil Chemistry New Products and Processes from Glycerol Ionic Liquids: Applications Potential Newtrends for Chemical Industry Theoretical Chemistry Phytochemistry in Amazonia Bioenergy trends in Brazil Argentine Program on GC Bio-polymers Lignocellulosic: Biorefinary Context Green Chemistry Program in United States Biofuels:International trends Climates changing and Brazilian regions Amazonia Forest and Sustainability GTL, BTL and DME Alternative Fuels Chemical and Biofuels from Lignocellulosics Biomass Future Based Supply Biofuels and alternative fuels in Europe Round Table Round Table Workshop Conclusions November, 18th; Sunday, 19.00 - 21.00 hours - Opening Section & Cocktail - Evening Program About Othon Palace Fortaleza: Address OTHON PALACE FORTALEZA ### |
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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on October 31st, 2007 Next week, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will fly to Buenos Aires, Argentina for an official visit, and then to Santiago, Chile to attend the Ibero-American Summit, was announced October 30, 2007 at the UN. Then, to help the secretary-general prepare for negotiations in December on a new international deal to tackle global warming, his spokesperson, Ms. Montas, said, that Mr. Ban will visit Chile, Antarctica, Brazil seemingly for pupose of climate change tourism, and end up eventually in Valencia, Spain, where scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will release a new report on Nov. 17. As we know, the U.N. climate panel, that is the official IPCCC, shared this year’s Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice-President Al Gore. The IPCCC final report to be released in Valencia November 17, 2007, will set the stage for the annual U.N. climate conference on the Indonesian island of Bali in December that is tasked to start discussing a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol to the UNFCC to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, which expires in 2012. Clinching a deal on new mandatory, deeper emissions reductions will likely take several years of intense and difficult negotiations and common knowledge is that if the negotiations do not get their start in Bali there will be no proposal ready for the 2009 meeting in Copenhagen - the target date for clenching an agreement that will make it possible to have actions prepared that can then kick in in 2012. Montas said the secretary-general will visit Punta Arenas, Chile, “whose residents live with a hole in the ozone layer” and Chile’s Torres del Paine National Park, where glaciers have been affected by climate change. We have been to these places and this is great tourism that will also show the UNSG interest in furthering actions to slow down global warming and to provide for further steps on the ozone hole subject - after all seeing by yourself, and hearing complaints on location, will sharpen further his views on these subjects. He will fly to Antarctica where he will be briefed by scientists at research stations, and then to Brazil where he plans to visit an ethanol plant and meet researchers and indigenous people living in the Amazon region, she said. The secretary-general will wrap up his Latin American trip to the ABC countries of the LA cone, with an official visit to Brazil’s capital - Brasilia - and then fly to Valencia for the release of the report by the U.N. climate scientists, Montas said. As we expect ourselves to be in Brazil starting November 17, 2007, we will be in good position to report then what the Brazilians, and the other Latin Americans of the South American Cone region, will say of the UNSG’s visit to their area. ———— The official announcement about the Valencia November 12-17, 2007 meeting: Ban Ki-moon to attend IPCC press conference in Valencia on 17 November. The Secretary General of the United Nations, Mr. Ban Ki-moon, will participate The “Synthesis Report” is the final part of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report TO THOSE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING AT THE MEDIA EVENTS - LET US WORN YOU THAT UNLESS YOU ARE BLESSED BY THE UN MEDIA ACCREDITATION OFFICE OF THE UN DPI IN NEW YORK - YOUR CHANCE TO GET IN IS ZERO - AND SOME FOLKS THERE MAKE IT THEIR BUSINESS TO WEED OUT SUCH MEDIA THAT IS SPECIFIC FOR TOPICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE. SO, IF YOU ARE REALLY INTERESTED IN THE SUBJECT, AND YOU MAY HAVE HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE READING YOUR WEBSITE, YOU DO NOT QUALIFY UNLESS SOME COMMERCIAL MEDIA OUTLET HAS RECOGNIZED YOUR ACTIVITIES AND ASKED FOR YOU TO BE ACCREDITED AT THE UN. Just to make sure we are not misunderstood - we believe the Valencia conclusive meeting is important, and the material that will be released will be brought to the attention of the media outlets by the European governments. We also believe that the EU and others will continue to promote the main ideas in the report - that global warming is man-made and that we will thus have to learn to live within the frame of an emissions’ budget; this until three years from now - the incoming US Administration will bring the US back to a leadership position in matters of global warming. ### |
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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on April 17th, 2007 THE HOLLOW EARTH AND THE POLES by David Standish History of Exploration Dinner Lecture presented by the Thoresen Foundation
We loved this invitation from the first moment we saw it - this after having been busy all day with the UN Security Council’s Open Debate on Energy, Security, and Climate. Considering that Climate Change involves the melting of the polar ice caps I found the ideas of officer Symmes quite engaging - the poles as entrance to new found inner lands - not bad at all - it beats looking for colonies in outer space! We hope the Explorers Club is going to serve drinks only after the lecture, rather than before it! Thoresen Foundation Dinner Lecture on the History of Exploration SYMMES’ HOLES: THE HOLLOW EARTH AND THE POLES by David Standish Date: Wednesday, April 18, 2007
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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on April 12th, 2007 International Clean-Energy Partnership Adds 20th Member: Vietnam. The Methane to Markets Partnership marked a major milestone this week as Vietnam Vietnam joins a growing number of Asian countries that are actively More than 500 public- and private-sector organizations from around the world In addition to Vietnam, Methane to Markets Partner countries include Argentina, Australia, Information on the Methane to Markets Partnership: ### |
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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on April 1st, 2007 Alaska to Tierra Del Fuego on French Fry Grease - it smells terrible but works and saves petroleum. And this is NOT an April Fool’s Day Story! USHUAIA, Argentina, as per Hilary Burke from Reuters - “Nine months after they set off from Alaska to spread the gospel of biofuels, Seth Warren and Tyler Bradt completed their journey on Sunday at the end of Highway 3, which dead-ends at the southern tip of South America.” Along the way, the twenty-something buddies made hundreds of stops on two continents, to ask for people’s used frying oil and animal fat, which powered their truck. The folks have been also in New York to show that it works, at an outdoor show ouside the Lincoln Center. Their tour, and the Australians’ proving that we can exist nicely with less light, were a set of two good examples this april 1st - of some that are not your common fools. This is perhaps the start of grass-roots for a “SAVE THE PLANET AND US TOO” movement.
“No, they think it’s super funny,” Bradt responded, standing beside the small Japanese fire truck that covered about 21,000 miles (34,000 km) since July 2006. “People out in the world right now are starving for other sources of energy. With the (high) prices of petroleum, I’d say the economic benefits are astounding,” Warren said. “People need fuel for their lifestyles and this trip right here is just an example of how we fuel our lifestyle.” They fueled up with palm oil in Colombia and Ecuador and soy oil in Bolivia and Chile. The idea is to find alternatives to burning fossil fuels, which release gases like carbon dioxide that are linked to global warming. “How do I feel being at the end of the world? Well, in all honesty, it feels like just the beginning,” he said. |























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