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Human

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  1. I've never seen hillary desperate before. You have to admit, no matter which way it goes? It's not a boring election season. Even the democrat party is nervous. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/politics/5487294.html Jan. 25, 2008, 11:01PM Campaign notebook Clinton wants to restore all of Florida's delegates From wire reports WASHINGTON — In a bit of political theater, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and the Florida Democratic Party clamored to restore convention delegates that had been stripped by the national party. At stake: 185 delegates in a state where Clinton leads almost 2-to-1. The presidential candidate said Friday — just four days before Florida's primary — that she wants the convention delegates from Florida and Michigan reinstated. The national party eliminated all the delegates from those states — more than 350 in all — because they broke party rules against holding their primaries before Feb. 5. All the major Democratic candidates also made pledges not to campaign in those states before their primaries. Clinton could claim most of the Michigan delegates because she won that state's primary after the other major candidates pulled their names from the ballot. Sen. Barack Obama's campaign manager accused Clinton of pandering. One Florida senator endorses McCain ... Florida Sen. Mel Martinez endorsed John McCain on Friday, a move likely to give the Republican presidential candidate a crucial boost with the state's Cuban-Americans just days before the primary. "I understand that he is ready on Day One to lead this nation, and I would trust the future and the security of this nation to this man," Martinez said in his introduction of McCain at the Latin Builders Association. He added: "I would not endorse someone that I didn't have total confidence is going to be (Fidel) Castro's worst nightmare." The decision is a blow to Rudy Giuliani, the former New York mayor in a close fight with McCain for support of voters in the Cuban-American community. It also is a setback for Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor in a close race against McCain. Martinez, a Republican who was born in Cuba, emigrated to the United States as a teenager and is popular in Miami's Little Havana neighborhood. It remains to be seen whether Martinez's endorsement will translate into votes given that a significant percentage of voters already have cast absentee and early ballots — many before Giuliani's drop in the state. ... And the other will endorse Clinton Florida Sen. Bill Nelson plans to endorse Hillary Rodham Clinton, a major gain for the Democratic presidential candidate in a state that's at odds with the national party over its primary date yet remains a swing state in November's general election. Nelson is slated to make the endorsement on Tuesday, the same day as the primary, according to senior Democrats close to Clinton who spoke on condition of anonymity because the formal announcement has not yet been made.
  2. I wonder when all of this will back fire on Iran? ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.azadiradio.org/en/news/2008/01/...541BB006C35.ASP Iranian Land Mines Found In Taliban Commander's House PRAGUE, January 25, 2008 (RFE/RL) -- Weapons made in Iran -- or that have passed through Iran -- continue to turn up in the hands of Taliban fighters in western Afghanistan. Afghan authorities say they have discovered a weapons cache in western Afghanistan containing 130 land mines of different types that appear to have been imported from Iran. The cache includes about 40 sophisticated remote-controlled mines. It was discovered in Farah Province near the Iranian border. Farah's provincial police chief, General Khailbaz Sherzai, told RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan today that the cache was found in the house of a Taliban commander named Mullah Abdul Ghani. "We discovered a cache containing a large collection of land mines -- antipersonnel and antitank mines -- in the Anardara District of Farah Province [near the border with Iran.] They were recently brought from Iran and the man who was responsible for that has escaped. We completely destroyed the cache and the room it was contained in." The find is the latest in a series of caches of weapons that the U.S. military, NATO, or the Afghan government have confirmed were either made in Iran or transported through Iran to Taliban militants. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has said Afghan officials have no evidence linking the Iranian government to such weapons shipments. Last June, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said there is no evidence confirming a direct role by the Iranian government in smuggling weapons to the Taliban. Gates has said the Taliban might be using funds from the opium trade to purchase weapons from criminal groups. But Gates also has said the large quantity of Iranian-made weapons being discovered in Afghanistan makes it difficult to believe that the weapons are being smuggled without the knowledge of Iranian authorities. In September, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said Washington also had complained to Beijing about Chinese weapons shipped to Iran that appear to be turning up in Afghanistan in the hands of Taliban fighters. Independent analysts agree that it would be difficult to smuggle the volume of weapons now being found in western Afghanistan without the knowledge of some senior official in Tehran. Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani journalist and author of the book "Taliban," says he has no doubt that the Iranian government has been channeling money and weapons to various elements in Afghanistan -- including the Taliban -- for the last several years. "They have long-running relations with many of the commanders and small-time warlords in western Afghanistan. I think Iran is playing all sides in the Afghan conflict,” Rashid said. “If the Iranians are convinced that the Americans are undermining them through western Afghanistan, then it is very likely that these agents of theirs have been activated." Alex Vatanka, the Washington-based Iran analyst for Jane's Information Group, says recent discoveries in Afghanistan of several large caches of Chinese and Iranian-made weapons suggest Tehran has had at least an indirect role in supplying Taliban militants. "Whether the government or somebody in Iran could be buying arms from China and, without Tehran's knowledge, ship it over to Afghanistan -- on that volume of weapons, I find that extremely unlikely. I can only see that happening if somebody pretty senior and in an influential political position in the country decided to facilitate that without letting everybody in the system know about it. But they still would have to be involved somewhere in the state machinery." Vatanka also says he doesn't think drug traffickers in eastern Iran are capable of sending so many weapons to Taliban fighters in Afghanistan without at least tacit approval from Iranian government officials. (RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan contributed to this feature.)
  3. And Chavez is still at it. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.miamiherald.com/news/americas/story/388403.html CHAVEZ'S GRAND CRUSADE Chávez works on U.S. image In an apparent effort to directly reach Americans, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez is helping the poor and lobbying grass-roots groups. Posted on Tue, Jan. 22, 2008 BY PABLO BACHELET pbachelet@MiamiHerald.com WASHINGTON -- When the Venezuelan Embassy and CITGO recently launched the Washington leg of their discounted heating-oil program for America's poor, President Hugo Chávez's publicity machine went into high gear. The launch was held in the modest home of Safronia Holland, a black woman described by CITGO as a ''67-year-old grandmother struggling . . . with rising energy costs.'' Children waved Venezuelan flags, and Venezuelan diplomats beamed. There was food -- and lots of media. While Chávez regularly rails against U.S. ''imperialism,'' he is also spending upwards of $70 million to improve his image in the United States, from Washington to Alaska. His embassy, among Washington's busiest, works with dozens of groups that favor his left-wing ''Bolivarian'' revolution. And his discount heating-oil program has benefited tens of thousands of America's poor. Indeed, no Latin American country in recent history has invested so much money and effort in shaping U.S. perceptions of its government, largely negative as a result of Chávez's anti-Bush rhetoric, his friendship with Cuba and Iran, and doubts about his commitment to democracy. Chávez's oil-fueled ''revolution'' has made him beloved or despised in his own country, boosted his standing as mentor of leftist Latin American leaders like Bolivia's Evo Morales and Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega -- and provided the resources to lobby for grass-roots support in the United States. ''I wouldn't say he's anti-American. He is clearly, however, anti-U.S. hegemony,'' said Kenneth Roberts, who teaches Latin American affairs at Cornell University. ``He has this strategic vision of redistributing power in world affairs. He has a stronger vision of that than any other leader we've seen in this generation.'' True to Chávez's populist ways, he has been trying to reach the American people directly, rather than the traditional way of lobbying U.S. Congress members. A draft of the Venezuelan foreign ministry's budget for 2008 requests $193 million to ''intensify'' Venezuela's actions worldwide. That does not include salaries for diplomats and other routine expenditures. SPREADING THE WORD The document, obtained by El Nuevo Herald, says that in the United States, the ministry wants to encourage exchanges with social movements, spread the word on Venezuela through alternative media, step up its support of the ''excluded sectors of U.S. society,'' and promote ``groups in solidarity with the Bolivarian revolution.'' Such pro-Chávez groups remain small, however. A Venezuela Solidarity Network screening Dec. 1 in Washington of a documentary on Chávez's victory in a 2004 recall referendum drew fewer than a dozen people. The first pro-Chávez groups in the United States sprang up in 2002, when the Bush administration faced accusations -- strongly denied -- that it had backed a coup against Chávez that year. Today, three networks remain active, often led and supported by Americans involved in a broad range of left-of-center activities. Chuck Kaufman, a veteran of the opposition to U.S. policies in Nicaragua in the 1980s, set up the Washington-based Venezuela Solidarity Network while Alan Woods, editor of the publication In Defense of Marxism, founded the Minneapolis-based group Hands Off Venezuela. Kaufman says he has branches in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco and Houston and 2,000 e-mail contacts for his ''emergency response network,'' which alerts activists to possible U.S. government actions against Chávez. Venezuela Solidarity Network's East region coordinator, Banbose Shango, says he supports several Havana causes, including Free the Five, a campaign seeking the release of Cuban intelligence agents convicted in Miami and serving prison terms. Then there are the U.S. versions of the pro-Chávez volunteer groups known as Bolivarian Circles. They coordinate only loosely among one another, making it hard to determine how many are active. William Camacaro, who heads the one in New York, says they exist in many major urban centers, including Houston, Los Angeles, Boston and Chicago. There is also a circle in Miami. ''We're trying to contain the propaganda that exists in the mainstream media against the Venezuelan government,'' Camacaro said. Venezuelan Ambassador Bernardo Alvarez, who travels often around the country pitching Chávez's policies, also argues that the lobbying is mostly defensive because Chávez foes would like to see sterner, Cuba-style U.S. sanctions imposed on Venezuela. The Bush administration has ended most forms of aid and weapons sales to Venezuela, saying its government has refused to cooperate on issues like drug trafficking and terrorism. ''Ours is a government with an alternative vision that has been demonized,'' Alvarez told The Miami Herald. ``Unfortunately, we must coexist with an administration -- parts of an administration -- that after the . . . Sept. 11 events revived the Cold War in its most brutal form.'' Alvarez has also been busy promoting the subsidized heating-oil program for America's poor, handled by the Boston-based nonprofit Citizens Energy and CITGO, a unit of the state-run Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA), which owns several U.S. refineries and franchises 8,000 U.S. gas stations. Calling it the largest social program ever run by an oil firm, CITGO distributed 66 million gallons of heating oil last winter and hopes to double that volume this winter, reaching 220,000 U.S. households. Citizens Energy calculates that each household could save $320 per winter. CITGO, which does not operate in Alaska, has also donated more than $5 million to Alaskan American Indian organizations -- the estimated cost of 100 gallons each for about 12,000 households. In addition, the company donated $3.3 million to community groups in the South Bronx, and Alvarez says similar donations are in the works elsewhere. All of this gives Chávez a big U.S. footprint, reaching homes in 23 states, plus about 200 Indian tribes. The program even garnered recognition from Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman, who told the Reuters news agency that he wished ``more companies did it.'' But CITGO's links to Chávez have also spurred scattered calls to boycott its gas stations, including one billboard put up by a local businessman in Alabama -- with a photo of Chávez holding up a CITGO logo -- that read, ''Don't buy gas from this ass.'' Some Alaskans have refused CITGO's aid. Citizens Energy founder Joseph P. Kennedy, son of former Sen. Robert Kennedy, was unapologetic about teaming up with Chávez during the launch at Holland's home last month. The U.S. government, he said, regularly deals with countries accused of human-rights abuses, like China and Saudi Arabia. ''I don't hear anybody going after these other countries for the policies they practice,'' he said. ``I would just ask you to be fair and reasonable.'' Chávez has not totally shunned traditional lobbying. Four years ago, the embassy hired Patton Boggs, a powerful Washington lobby group, but the arrangement lasted only a few months. Alvarez declined to go into details. And according to filings with the Foreign Agents Registration unit of the Department of Justice, between 2004 and early 2007, the embassy paid $3,000 to $15,000 a month to Segundo Mercado-Lloréns, a member of the Discalced Carmelite Friars turned lobbyist for labor unions, to build up its internal lobbying capabilities, including training for Venezuelan diplomats. Much of the lobbying legwork falls on the Venezuela Information Office, set up in 2004 as a semi-autonomous embassy outreach unit. The embassy spent a little more than $1 million on that office in the year ending Aug. 31, 2007, according to Department of Justice filings. The office employs a handful of activists who are paid $30,000 to $60,000 a year. According to the office's logs for the year ending last August, the group made 342 contacts with nongovernmental organizations, via e-mail, phone or in person, with journalists, local officials, academics and students. Many journalists received e-mails ''suggesting ideas for balanced reporting.'' The office also asks activists to complain against alleged newspaper biases. One 2006 e-mail complained of the ''extreme hostility toward Venezuela'' by The Washington Post and provided a link to ''make your voice heard'' at the newspaper. Similar alerts targeted The Miami Herald, The Denver Post and other media. The Venezuelan unit contacted only eight offices in the U.S. Congress, where Chávez appears to have few friends. EFFORTS PRAISED During a visit to Caracas, Rep. William Delahunt, D-Mass., who participated in a group of U.S. and Venezuelan lawmakers created around 2003 to ease bilateral tensions, endorsed Chávez's efforts to free hostages held by Colombian rebels and said relations between the countries require ``mutual respect.'' Rep. José Serrano, D-N.Y., praised Chávez for his aid to America's poor after the Venezuelan president traveled in past years to the Bronx and Harlem to launch his heating-oil program.But most mainstream liberal groups, like MoveOn.org, ignore Chávez, and a resolution passed by the Senate condemning Chávez's decision last year to shut down an opposition TV station was backed by Sens. Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and Christopher Dodd. Ambassador Alvarez nevertheless says he has made some headway. "We've been able to gradually contain the most right-wing elements," he said, "who were out to get a congressional condemnation."
  4. The never ending power struggle. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.chinadaily.comspam/world/2008-01...ent_6413085.htm Syria imposes food blockade on Lebanon: paper (Xinhua) Updated: 2008-01-22 20:15 Beirut -- Syria has imposed a blockade of food supplies on Lebanon, local newspaper An Nahar reported Tuesday. The report, citing information received by Lebanese authorities, said Syrian customs authorities informed all border checkpoints of their decision to prevent trucks and vehicles carrying food supplies from crossing into Lebanon as of 6 pm (1600 GMT) Monday. An Nahar said Lebanese authorities had no "explanation to Damascus' surprise decision," but hinted that the siege might coincide with Monday nights' protests in Beirut. On Monday night, angry demonstrators blocked traffic with burning rubber tires in three districts of Beirut to protest against repeated power failures in Lebanese political arena. Lebanese army patrols dispersed them with no casualties caused. On January 11, Syrian tightened its control by strict inspection procedures on the Abboudieh-Dabbousieh border crossing between Lebanon and Syria, leading to long queue of cargo trucks, said the report. The crisis worsened the following day with the number of stranded trucks reaching 200, it added. However, a source at the public works and transportation ministry was quoted as saying that there was "no border crisis with Syria."
  5. Mapping the Growth of Older America Demographics William H. Frey, Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program The Brookings Institution http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/...aphics_frey.pdf
  6. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-01/...ent_7422396.htm Profile: Guatemala's new president Alvaro Colom Caballeros www.chinaviewspam 2008-01-15 07:06:53 MEXICO CITY, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- Alvaro Colom, a 57-year-old industrial engineer and textile businessman, was sworn in on Monday as Guatemala's president for a 4-year term at a ceremony at the Miguel Angel Asturias National Theatre in central Guatemala City, according to news reaching here. During his election campaign, he promised to promote free markets and reduce inequality focusing on the following areas -- fighting poverty and crime via social spending, generating jobs via investment promotion, and purging the police and the courts of corruption. He has also publicly stated that broad dialogue between political parties is essential to overcome the nation's social and economic backwardness that has continued despite the 1996 end of a30-year armed conflict, in which government-backed paramilitary forces fought guerrillas. Born in Guatemala City on June 15, 1951, he earned his University of San Carlos industrial engineering degree in just three years, before starting a textile business. He also led the nation's export association from 1977 to 1990. In 1991, he became deputy economy minister and then director of the National Peace Fund (Fonapaz), which administrated international aid pledged as part of the process to end the Guatemala's civil war. Under Colom's leadership, Fonapaz helped repatriate and resettle at least 40,000 Guatemalan refugees who had fled to Mexico to escape Guatemala's political violence. Before last year's win, Colom had campaigned for the presidency on two separate occasions. In 1999, he won third place as the candidate for the Guatemalan Revolutionary Unity Party, the political wing of the demobilized guerrillas. In 2003, he came second representing the UNE, a party he founded, losing to Oscar Berger. He finally won the presidency on Nov. 4 last year with a narrow lead over Otto Perez Molina, a former general representing the right win Patriotic Party. Colom is married to businesswoman Sandra Torres, his second wife. They have three children. He practices traditional Maya religion. Editor: Wang Yan
  7. On Super Tuesday that when we will all know who will be who in the game. Out of the 24 states in play, only 19 will be holding elections for both parties. Of course the odds on favorite will be on the democrat side? Hillary, and on the republican side? Even I don't know yet. For me! I sure hope to god it aint McCain. It would really break my heart if I had to make the case for McCain.
  8. What I'm wondering is? Who is going to get the Honors of being the First Cockroach Exterminator in Space? ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://en.rianspammer/science/20080117/97179313.html Cosmic cockroaches faster developers, Russian scientists say 15:39 | 17/ 01/ 2008 VORONEZH, January 17 (RIA Novosti) - Cockroaches conceived in space onboard the Russian Foton-M bio satellite have developed faster and become hardier than 'terrestrial' ones, a research supervisor said on Thursday. The research team has been monitoring the cockroaches since they were born in October. The scientists established that their limbs and bodies grew faster. "What is more, we have found out that the creatures... run faster than ordinary cockroaches, and are much more energetic and resilient," Dmitry Atyakshin said. Cockroaches, as well as other types of insects, can give birth several times after one impregnation, and the cockroaches that conceived during the bio-satellite's September 14-26 flight have since given birth to their second and third batches of offspring. "The second and third batches did not show these peculiarities of growth and physiology," the scientist noted. 'Ordinary' cockroaches are already known for their extraordinary resilience. Some species can last almost an hour without oxygen or a month without food, and are able to withstand high doses of radiation. The September 14-26 flight was part of an ongoing experiment into the effects of space flight by the Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP). The creatures were sealed in special containers, and a video camera filmed them during the flight.
  9. Well! After this good news, I am now going to go and bake a carrot cake now. How people can eat the junk food that's premade? I will never understand. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.roanoke.com/politics/wb/147356 Bill to end 'abusive driver' fees advances After working through versions of the repeal bill, the Senate's courts panel sends it on to the finance panel. By Mason Adams (804) 697-1584 RICHMOND -- Legislation to repeal the unpopular "abusive driver" fees received unanimous support from a Senate panel on Wednesday, but the discussion preceding the vote was anything but harmonious. The Senate Courts of Justice Committee combined 10 similar bills to repeal the unpopular fees before voting to approve and send the merged legislation to the Finance Committee for consideration. Little more than an hour after the vote, however, former committee chairman Sen. Ken Stolle, R-Virginia Beach, issued a statement bashing committee Democrats for rejecting an amendment that would have moved the bill's effective date forward. Democrats said during the hour-plus discussion that preceded the bill's passage that the amendment could be added during any point in the process. Adding it prematurely, they argued, could contribute to the bill's demise in the House of Delegates, despite widespread support for repeal in that chamber. The partisan split on the committee was even more apparent during discussion on the following bill, which would repeal the fees while also increasing the state gasoline tax from 17.5 cents to 20 cents. That measure, sponsored by Sen. Phillip Puckett, D-Russell County, was approved on an 8-5 vote along party lines, with Democrats for it and Republicans against. It, too, will go to the Finance Committee. Despite the acrimony, there was universal support on the committee for the idea of repealing the abusive driver fees, which were passed last year and took effect in July. "I've never experienced the outcry from the public that I heard on this bill," said Sen. Edd Houck, D-Spotsylvania County, who sponsored one of the repeal bills. Sen. Charles Colgan, D-Manassas, who sponsored an identical bill to Houck's, likewise told the committee that he doesn't "believe the General Assembly has any alternative but to repeal this legislation." Houck talked about the case of an elderly Roanoke County woman who ran a stoplight and was subsequently charged with reckless driving, which qualified for the abusive driving fees. The fee, Houck said, would amount to more than her monthly Social Security check. "That told me we made a mistake," Houck said. That reckless driving charge, filed against Mary Minter, was dismissed Wednesday. Committee members took more than an hour to work out differences between two versions of the repeal bill. One version offered a refund plus interest to those Virginians who had already paid abuser fees, while the other did not offer that refund. "I'd love to give these people their money back -- and a tax cut," said Sen. Ken Cuccinelli, R-Fairfax County, who sponsored one of the nonrefund bills. "But ... we've never done that before that I know of, in terms of going back and returning money like this." After a staff member told the committee the General Assembly could not reverse a court order to collect the fees, however, the committee voted to remove the refund clause from all the bills. The Finance Committee will consider both Puckett's bill, with the tax increase, and the merged bill that offers repeal of the abuser fees without replacing that revenue. Sen. Majority Leader Richard Saslaw estimated that $4.8 million has already been collected from fees administered since July.
  10. From the articles written, one can conclude that the real reason is North Korea. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- U.S. to send delegation to meet close aides of S. Korean president-elect next month http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2...000700315F.HTML WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 (Yonhap) -- The United States plans to send a delegation to South Korea early next month to establish ties with President-elect Lee Myung-bak's transition team, officials here said Wednesday. South Korea, in turn, will send a group of working-level members of the transition team to Washington later in January, they said. The conservative opposition party candidate won the South Korean presidential election by a landslide Wednesday on campaign pledges of less generous dealings with nuclear-armed North Korea, closer ties with the United States and business-friendly policies to help boost South Korea's sagging economy. The officials also said the U.S. is most likely to have George H. W. Bush, father of current President George W. Bush and a former president himself, lead its delegation that will attend Lee's inauguration on Feb. 25 in Seoul. Both President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice are scheduled to travel to Africa at that time, and Vice President Dick Cheney needs to be in Washington during the president's absence. "We would like to start engaging the close members to President-elect Lee Myung-bak," said one official who deals closely with Korean affairs, speaking on condition of anonymity. The U.S. delegation would be comprised mainly of deputy assistant secretary-level officials from the defense, state and commerce departments, he said. The idea is to set up a network as soon as possible and start working immediately on both short and long-term bilateral issues, according to the official. The initial plan was to invite the South Korean transition team to Washington, but the U.S. decided to send its delegation first to directly engage more senior aides to Lee, the official said. Seoul had explained that its team going to the U.S. would be more working-level, he said. ldm@yna.co.kr (END) http://www.japantoday.com/jp/news/425289 Rice expected to visit Japan in late February Thursday, January 17, 2008 at 06:54 EST WASHINGTON — U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to visit Japan in late February to hold talks with Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura, sources close to U.S.-Japan relations said Wednesday. Rice and the Japanese government leaders are expected to discuss North Korea's denuclearization and the realignment of U.S. forces in Japan. Rice is scheduled to visit South Korea to attend President-elect Lee Myung Bank's inauguration ceremony slated for Feb 25. Arrangements are now being made for her to visit Japan and China as well on that occasion, the sources said. http://www.japantoday.com/jp/news/425078 Japan, S Korea to build new ties Wednesday, January 16, 2008 at 06:52 EST TOKYO — South Korean President-elect Lee Myung Bak's special envoy Lee Sang Deuk and Japanese Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura agreed Tuesday to build "new Japan-South Korea relations" and resume annual reciprocal visits by the two countries' leaders soon, Komura said. "The Feb 21 presidential inauguration ceremony would provide one possibility," Komura said when asked by reporters to specify when the shuttle diplomacy will restart. "The president-elect has also said he wants to visit Japan soon."
  11. Mr. King's dream was MEANT for ALL. Not just one group, or two or even three. Please people!! Let's all work TOGETHER. PLEASE, NO MORE OLD POLITICS. For if you "the General Public" wish to continue OLD POLITICS? Believe you me "We can play this game Till the END OF TIME ITSELF". ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/D/1951-1975/mlk/dream.htm Declaration of Independence This note was a promise that all people, yes, black men as well as white men, and Latino’s, Asians, Arabs, Disabled, Women would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
  12. The democrats mantra "Pull Out of Iraq" is no longer working. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=234233 Iraq lets Baathists go back to work, U.S. pleased Move should help heal Sunni-Shi'ite rift Mussab Al-Khairalla, Reuters Published: Saturday, January 12, 2008 BAGHDAD -- Iraq's parliament voted on Saturday to let thousands of members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party return to government jobs, winning praise from Washington for achieving a benchmark step toward reconciling warring sects. The law is the first of a series of measures that Washington has long been pressing the Shi'ite Islamist-led government to pass in an effort to draw the minority Sunni Arab community that held sway under Saddam closer into the political process. "This law preserves the rights of the Iraqi people after the crimes committed by the Baath Party while also benefiting the innocent members of the party. This law provides a balance," Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said. Washington had introduced "de-Baathification" when it administered Iraq in 2003-04, but later acknowledged that the measures went too far and asked Iraqi leaders to ease them. "It's an important step toward reconciliation. It's an important sign that the leaders of that country understand that they must work together to meet the aspirations of the Iraqi people," U.S. President George W. Bush said. He was speaking in Bahrain, where he is holding talks with leaders as part of a Middle East tour. Iraq's failure to pass the bill last year had been seen as one of the main signs that political progress toward reconciliation was stalled even as security improved. The United Nations envoy in Baghdad, Staffan de Mistura, told Reuters: "This is good news and a right step in the long overdue direction towards national reconciliation. It is important that this process is as inclusive as possible." The law is part of a wider effort to end a political deadlock that saw the main Sunni Arab bloc pull out of Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government last August. "The law has been passed. We see it as a very good sign of progress and it will greatly benefit Baathists. It was passed smoothly and opposition was small," said Rasheed al-Azzawi, a Sunni member of the committee which helped draft it. Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, the cabinet's senior Kurd, hinted at deeper political changes ahead. Boycotts by Sunnis and others had "undermined the government's ability to cope with challenges" and it was time for a shake-up, he told Reuters in an interview in the Kurdish city Sulaimaniya. "Improvements in security will not last without a serious review of the makeup of the government," Mr. Salih said. "The Kurdish Alliance is calling for dramatic, serious reforms of the government. Otherwise the results could be catastrophic." The Accountability and Justice bill replaces an existing law that Sunni leaders had complained amounted to collective punishment against their sect. Thousands of Baath party members, many of them Sunni Arabs, were fired from government jobs after Saddam was toppled in the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, fuelling a long-running insurgency against Iraq's new Shi'ite rulers and U.S. forces. Shi'ite and Kurdish leaders were reluctant to reward people they blamed for persecuting them under Saddam's regime. The new law will allow thousands of former party members to apply for reinstatement in the civil service and military. A smaller group of more senior members will still be banned but can now receive their state pensions. Victims of repression under Saddam can sue Baath party members for compensation. Some Shi'ite lawmakers said the new law was too lax and some Sunnis said it was still too severe, but a majority backed its main provisions in drawn-out, article-by-article voting. Mr. Bush, who met his Iraq ambassador and top military commander during a visit to neighbouring Kuwait on Saturday, said a strategy of sending nearly 30,000 additional troops to the country in 2007 had proven a success. "Iraq is now a different place from one year ago. Much hard work remains, but levels of violence are significantly reduced. Hope is returning to Baghdad, and hope is returning to towns and villages throughout the country," Mr. Bush said. He acknowledged that until last year "our strategy simply wasn't working". Reuters © 2008
  13. Yeah!! You saw the topic correctly, and this one even scares me. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.roanoke.com/editorials/commentary/wb/146020 Uranium mining: Can it be done safely? Walter Coles, Sr. Coles lives in Chatham and is the chairman of Virginia Uranium Inc. The Orange County Board of Supervisors recently passed a resolution to "support a continued moratorium" on uranium mining in Virginia. Its concern: Natural resources could be at risk, and "until it can be done without threat to our water supply and agricultural products," no mining should proceed. We at Virginia Uranium agree completely. But it invites an important question -- can uranium mining be done safely? We believe it can be and that it is an important ingredient in realizing the energy independence goals outlined in the Virginia Energy Plan. We also believe that an independent study authorized by the General Assembly is needed for unbiased answers that Virginians deserve to know. Frankly, if uranium mining cannot be done safely, the issue is over and done with. No one at Virginia Uranium is interested in creating unsafe conditions for the air, water, land, agricultural products and, most important, people and animals in Virginia. If mining can't be done safely, the price to our community is too high, period. But if it can be mined, millions of dollars in potential benefits will become available for regional roads, schools, recreation and public services. Mining pays back to its communities in very measurable ways: n Hundreds of jobs with salaries two to three times the state average that can't be outsourced to China, India or Mexico. n Special mining taxes for schools and roads totaling millions of dollars. n New businesses, such as shopping and restaurants, that result from increased cash flow in the community. n Conservation easements protecting land for agriculture purposes in perpetuity. n Surety bonds to control the impact on the land and restore it to its approximate original contours when mining is complete. n Substantial corporate tax revenue to fund additional projects. If it can be done safely. Examples given by Orange County Planning Commissioner Bill Speiden from his Western travels in the 1970s paint a pretty damning picture. In a race to keep up during the Cold War, uranium ore was mined with little regulation or concern for the environment. Industrial residue was dumped into open piles, into lakes, and, in some cases, used as roadbeds and construction fill and were left unattended when mining ceased. Communities are still paying the price for that negligence. Today, mining technology and federal regulations governing mining are light-years beyond methods used 25 years ago. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, 240,000 workers were employed in mining in 2006, with an injury rate lower than workers in the retail industry. Uranium mining is done safely in many areas because sophisticated monitoring systems, impenetrable synthetic fabrics, knowledge of tailings' chemistry and improved underground containment fields have made it safer than many of our local landfills -- and far more closely inspected. The Coles Hill deposit in Pittsylvania County is estimated to be the largest known untapped uranium deposit in the United States. My family has lived on and farmed Coles Hill in Eastern Pittsylvania County since the 1780s. We believe that this company is best run by and for the benefit of Virginians. And we're in no hurry; after two centuries we're not about to make any rash decisions that will jeopardize this land or our community. But this country faces an energy crisis. Perhaps nuclear energy will emerge as a clean, low-cost answer to these problems, since solar and wind alone cannot create the baseload we need. Our deposit is estimated to equal approximately 7.4 billion barrels of oil -- a giant step toward energy independence and security. So where does that leave us? We need to give serious consideration for how uranium can be mined safely to benefit the citizens of Virginia and ultimately the nation. It's an issue we hope the Virginia General Assembly will tackle in the upcoming session, and in order to save the cost to taxpayers, we've offered to fund the study without strings to control the outcome in any way. We hope the legislature will select a prestigious educational institution or perhaps the National Academy of Science. Please feel free to contact our company to learn more, and even more important, write your legislator to support further investigation. An unbiased, independent study could address the question of whether this deposit can be mined safely. Ultimately, it's the only question that matters.
  14. This is but one of the dangers' that I've been trying to convey to ALL of you about the democrats quest for power "No Matter What". The Middle East WILL Go Nuclear , because the democrats made the case for it. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gDm3Kq...h_kVXI8gG_A2rDA Egypt names site of first nuclear reactor 11 hours ago CAIRO (AFP) — Egypt's first nuclear reactor will be built at Dabba on the Mediterranean coast west of the main port of Alexandria, Electricity and Power Minister Hassan Younis said on Thursday. The site, 160 kilometres (100 miles) west of Alexandria, "meets all the safety conditions and the requirements of operating an electricity generating nuclear plant," Younis said in a statement. Egypt's nuclear stations authority "started measures and studies on Dabba which was chosen as a site for constructing the first nuclear station for peaceful purposes," it said. Younis said that his ministry had worked out a draft bill to be put to parliament in March that sets a legal framework for cooperation with the UN's nuclear watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency "until 2030." "The Egyptian programme is transparent and certified by the international community and the IAEA," said Younis. Last October, President Hosni Mubarak announced the beginning of a national plan for setting up nuclear plants for peaceful usage. Egypt initiated a nuclear energy programme in the 1970s but abandoned it in 1986 after the Chernobyl disaster.
  15. These could be served at a party. Just don't tell them what's in them. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.bradenton.com/331/story/307769.html Panama City jellyfish getting popular in China By TONY BRIDGES The News Herald Somewhere in China right now, there's a cannonball jellyfish from the waters off Panama City just waiting to be eaten. Shrimpers trying to stay afloat during the off season have been scooping them out of the gulf by the thousands since September. The gelatinous masses have turned out to be a profitable commodity on the Asian market, once they are processed into crispy protein wafers. "Cannonball is a whole new business to us," said 68-year-old shrimp boat operator Steve Davis. "We used to run from them when we were shrimping because they would fill up the nets. Now we run to 'em." The Panama City operation is run by Roger Newton, owner of Gulf Jellyfish Inc. He was on the dock at the St. Andrews Marina recently, watching crews unload their cannonball catch. He said he has been in the business about seven years, more of them good than not. The cannonballs, rounded, non-stinging jellyfish that can grow to nearly a foot wide, start showing up around September and usually stay about three months, though he never can be certain, Newton said. "If I could play God, I wouldn't be in the fish business," he said. Davis, from Apalachicola, said the cannonballs seem to move west along the gulf in the fall, with the shrimpers following them from Port St. Joe to Panama City. After 40 years of catching shrimp, he still is learning his way around jellyfish, Davis said. "What we know about them wouldn't fill but about half a page in a one-page book," he said, with a wry grin. But what he does know is that they are a good way to make money, especially at a time when Asian imports are keeping wholesale shrimp prices low. A day's work and about $70 in fuel can bring in $1,000 worth of jellyfish, he said. Two trawlers were busy netting cannonball in the bay within sight of the marina, while another boat was tied up to the dock to unload. A large vacuum hose sucked the jellyfish off the boats sunken deck and delivered them to a conveyor belt, where a crewman with a shovel scooped them into plastic bins. Though they don't sting, they are slimy, and their mucus-like covering will cause a burning sensation if it gets in your eyes, Davis said. "You can't hardly pick them up. We were going to call that man that's got the dirtiest jobs on television," he said, refering to the Discovery Channel's Mike Rowe. Another worker with a forklift loaded the bins into a pair of waiting tractor-trailers. The jellyfish go to a processing plant in Georgia, where they are dried out, and the salt is removed. Then, they are packed into 50,000-pound containers for shipping to China and Japan, Newton said. He retrieved a plastic bag from his truck to show to curious visitors. Inside were three yellowish wafers about 5 inches across. "They're all protein and taste like whatever you put on them," he said. According to the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the dried jellyfish are popular in Asia as salad toppers, or with cooked vegetables. A four-ounce serving contains 30 calories, eight grams of protein and 120 milligrams of sodium. Researchers also believe the jellyfish might be useful in fighting certain types of arthritis because of the collagen they contain. Information from: The News Herald, http://www.newsherald.com
  16. WOW, we are even running out of helium. Okay! I am at a loss for words on this one. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.purchasing.com/article/CA651119...ndustryid=48381 Helium shortage leads to price increases Industrial users report price increases and short supply By Dave Hannon -- Purchasing, 12/10/2007 11:57:00 AM A shortage of helium supply in the U.S. and other markets has producers pushing for price increases. According to news reports, many of the worlds 16 helium extraction plants are not running at full capacity and the supply shortages don’t just impact the local party stores filling balloons. A recent story in the Wall Street Journal points out that scientific research has rapidly multiplied the uses of helium in the past 50 years. It is needed to make semiconductors, flat-panel displays, fiber optics and to operate magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, scans and welding machines. “U.S. helium demand is up more than 80% in the past two decades, and is growing at more than 20% annually in developing regions such as Asia,” the Journal reports. In a recent story in the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer, Gary Pielak, a UNC Chapel Hill chemist who uses helium to cool nuclear magnetic resonance equipment, said he spends $6.60 for a liter of liquid helium that cost $4.50 two years ago. "If we don't have helium our magnets don't stay cold." he said. "And if our magnets don't stay cold they don't remain superconducting. And if they don't remain superconducting, well, we are out of business." One-third of the world’s supply comes from the U.S. Federal Helium Reserve outside Amarillo, Texas. The reserve is finite, however, and some estimates say it will run out in a decade, cutting off a major percentage of the world’s helium supply. Leslie Theiss, manager of that reserve, told the Chicago Tribune recently, “We’re pedaling as fast as we can here, but we just can’t produce enough. One-third of the world’s helium comes from our little place here. That’s kind of frightening.” Industrial gas supplier Praxair issued a 15-30% helium price increase for 2008 in response to “escalating energy, logistics, and other operational costs as well as current supply/demand imbalances” according to a company statement. Praxair also issued a 10-20% price increase for nitrogen, oxygen, argon, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide in 2008.
  17. Even though we will have our political fights in 2008. Still! Happy New Years' to all. May the Galaxy in your life MAKE you twirl in delight. :)
  18. Well! here is one that REALLY is for the children. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20071...434/1006/SPORTS Little $188 laptops a big hit in a Peruvian village BY FRANK BAJAK AP TECHNOLOGY WRITER ARAHUAY, Peru -- Doubts about whether poor, rural children really can benefit from quirky little computers evaporate as quickly as the morning dew in this hilltop Andean village, where 50 primary school children got machines from the One Laptop Per Child project six months ago. These offspring of peasant families whose monthly earnings rarely exceed the cost of one of the $188 laptops -- people who can ill afford pencil and paper much less books -- can't get enough of their XO laptops. At breakfast, they are already powering up the combination library/videocam/audio recorder/music maker/drawing kits. At night, they are dozing off in front of them -- if they have managed to keep older siblings from waylaying the coveted machines. "It's really the kind of conditions that we designed for," Walter Bender, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology spinoff, said of this agrarian backwater up a precarious dirt road. Founded in 2005 by former MIT Media Lab director Nicholas Negroponte, the One Laptop program has retreated from early boasts that developing-world governments would snap up millions of the pint-sized laptops at $100 each. In a backhanded tribute, One Laptop now faces homegrown competitors everywhere from Brazil to India -- and a full-court press from Intel Corp.'s more power-hungry Classmate. But no competitor approaches the XO in innovation. It is hard drive-free, runs on the Linux operating system and stretches wireless networks with "mesh" technology that lets each computer in a village relay data to the others. Mass production began last month and Negroponte, brother of U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, says he expects at least 1.5 million machines to be sold by next November. Even that would be far less than Negroponte originally envisioned. The higher-than-initially-advertised price and a lack of the Windows operating system, still being tested for the XO, have dissuaded many potential government buyers. Peru made the single biggest order to date -- more than 272,000 machines -- in its quest to turn around a primary education system that the World Economic Forum recently ranked last among 131 countries surveyed. Uruguay was the No. 2 buyer of the laptops, inking a contract for 100,000. Negroponte said 150,000 more laptops will get shipped to countries including Rwanda, Mongolia, Haiti, and Afghanistan in early 2008 through "Give One, Get One," a U.S.-based promotion ending Dec. 31 in which you buy a pair of laptops for $399 and donate one or both. Feeding young ambitions The children of Arahuay prove One Laptop's transformative conceit: that you can revolutionize education and democratize the Internet by giving a simple, durable, power-stingy but feature-packed laptop to the world's poorest children. "Some tell me that they don't want to be like their parents, working in the fields," first-grade teacher Erica Velasco says of her pupils. She had just sent them to the Internet to seek out photos of invertebrates. Antony, 12, wants to become an accountant. Alex, 7, aspires to be a lawyer. Kevin, 9, wants to play trumpet. Saida, 10, is already a promising videographer, judging from her artful recording of the town's recent Fiesta de la Virgen. "What they work with most is the (built-in) camera. They love to record," says Maria Antonieta Mendoza, an Education Ministry psychologist studying the Arahuay pilot to devise strategies for the big rollout when the new school year begins in March. Before the laptops, the only cameras the children at Santiago Apostol school saw in this population-800 hamlet arrived with tourists who visit for festivals or to see local Inca ruins. Arahuay's lone industry is agriculture. Surrounding fields yield avocados, mangoes, potatoes, corn, alfalfa and cherimoya. Many adults share only weekends with their children, spending the work week in fields many hours' walk from town and relying on charities to help keep their families nourished. When they finish school, young people tend to abandon the village. Peru's head of educational technology, Oscar Becerra, is betting the One Laptop program can reverse this rural exodus to the squalor of Lima's shantytowns four hours away. It's the best answer yet to "a global crisis of education" in which curricula have no relevance, he said. "If we make education pertinent, something the student enjoys, then it won't matter if the classroom's walls are straw or the students are sitting on fruit boxes." Indeed, Arahuay's elementary school population rose by 10 when families learned the laptop pilot was coming, said Guillermo Lazo, the school's director. The XOs that Peru is buying will be distributed to pupils in 9,000 elementary schools from the Pacific to the Amazon basin where a single teacher serves all grades, Becerra said. Although Peru boasts thousands of rural satellite downlinks that provide Internet access, only about 4,000 of the schools getting XOs will be connected, said Becerra. Negroponte says One Laptop is committed to helping Peru overcome that hurdle. Without Internet access, he believes, the program is incomplete. Concerns about program Teachers will get 21/2 days of training on the laptops, Becerra said. Each machine will initially be loaded with about 100 copyright-free books. Where applicable, texts in native languages will be included, he added. The machines will also have a chat function that will let children make faraway friends over the Internet. Critics of the rollout have two key concerns. The first is the ability of teachers -- poorly trained and equipped to begin with -- to cope with profoundly disruptive technology. Eduardo Villanueva, a communications professor at Lima's Catholic University, fears "a general disruption of the educational system that will manifest itself in the students overwhelming the teachers." To counter that fear, Becerra said the government is offering $150 grants to qualifying teachers toward the purchase of conventional laptops, for which it is also arranging low-interest loans. The second big concern is maintenance. For every 100 units it will distribute to students, Peru is buying one extra for parts. But there is no tech support program. Students and teachers will have to do it. "What you want is for the kids to do the repairs," said Negroponte, who believes such tinkering is itself a valuable lesson. "I think the kids can repair 95 percent of the laptops." Tech support is nevertheless a serious issue in many countries, Negroponte acknowledged in a phone interview. One Laptop is currently bidding on a contract with Brazil's government that Negroponte says demanded unrealistically onerous support requirements. The XO machines are water resistant, rugged and designed to last five years. They have no fan so they won't suck up dust, are built to withstand drops from more than four feet and can absorb power spikes typical of places with irregular electricity. Mendoza, the psychologist, is overjoyed that the program stipulates that children get ownership of the laptops. Take Kevin, the aspiring trumpet player. Sitting in his dirt-floor kitchen as his mother cooks lunch, he draws a soccer field on his XO, then erases it. Kevin plays a song by "Caliente," his favorite combo, that he recorded off Arahuay's single TV channel. He shows a reporter photos he took of him with his 3-year-old brother. A bare light bulb hangs by a wire from the ceiling. A hen bobs around the floor. There are no books in this two-room house. Kevin's parents did not get past the sixth grade. Indeed, the laptop project also has adults in its sights. Parents in Arahuay are asking Mendoza, the visiting psychologist, what the Internet can do for them. Among them is Charito Arrendondo, 39, who sheds brief tears of joy when a reporter asks what the laptop belonging to ruddy-cheeked Miluska -- the youngest of her six children -- has meant to her. Miluska's father, it turns out, abandoned the family when she was 1. "We never imagined having a computer," said Arrendondo, a cook. Is she afraid to use the laptop, as is typical of many Arahuay parents, about half of whom are illiterate? "No, I like it. Sometimes when I'm alone and the kids are not around I turn it on and poke around." Arrendondo likes to play checkers on the laptop. "It's also got chess, which I sort of know," she said, pausing briefly. "I'm going to learn." Last modified: December 25. 2007 12:00AM
  19. Enjoy the read. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.china.orgspam/english/environment/236955.htm The State Council Information Office published on Wednesday a white paper entitled China's Energy Conditions and Policies. The document, composed of eight chapters, points out that China, as an irreplaceable component of the world energy market, plays an increasingly important role in maintaining global energy security. The full text of the white paper follows: China's Energy Conditions and Policies Preface I. Current Situation of Energy Development II. Strategy and Goals of Energy Development III. All-round Promotion of Energy Conservation IV. Improving the Energy Supply Capacity V. Accelerating the Progress of Energy Technologies VI. Coordinating Energy and Environment Development VII. Deepening Energy System Reform VIII. Strengthening International Cooperation in the Field of Energy Conclusion Preface Energy is an essential material basis for human survival and development. Over the entire history of mankind, each and every significant step in the progress of human civilization has been accompanied by energy innovations and substitutions. The development and utilization of energy has enormously boosted the development of the world economy and human society. Over more than 100 years in the past, developed countries have completed their industrialization, consuming an enormous quantity of natural resources, especially energy resources, in the process. Today, some developing countries are ushering in their own era of industrialization, and an increase of energy consumption is inevitable for their economic and social development. China is the largest developing country in the world, and developing its economy and eliminating poverty will, for a long time to come, remain the main tasks for the Chinese government and the Chinese people. Since the late 1970s, China, as the fastest growing developing country, has scored brilliant achievements in its economy and society that have attracted worldwide attention, successfully blazed the trail of socialism with Chinese characteristics, and made significant contributions to world development and prosperity. China is now the world's second-largest energy producer and consumer. The sustained growth of energy supply has provided an important support for the country's economic growth and social progress, while the rapid expansion of energy consumption has created a vast scope for the global energy market. As an irreplaceable component of the world energy market, China plays an increasingly important role in maintaining global energy security. Guided by the Scientific Outlook on Development, the Chinese government is accelerating its development of a modern energy industry, taking resource conservation and environmental protection as two basic state policies, giving prominence to building a resource-conserving and environment-friendly society in the course of its industrialization and modernization, striving to enhance its capability for sustainable development and making China an innovative country, so as to make greater contributions to the world's economy and prosperity. I. Current Situation of Energy Development Energy resources are the basis of energy development. Since New China was founded in 1949, it has made constant endeavors in energy resources prospecting, and conducted several resources assessments. China's energy resources have the following characteristics: -- Energy resources abound. China boasts fairly rich fossil energy resources, dominated by coal. By 2006, the reserves of coal stood at 1,034.5 billion tons, and the remaining verified reserves exploitable accounted for 13 percent of the world total, ranking China third in the world. The verified reserves of oil and natural gas are relatively small, while oil shale, coal-bed gas and other unconventional fossil energy resources have huge potential for exploitation. China also boasts fairly abundant renewable energy resources. In 2006, the theoretical reserves of hydropower resources were equal to 6,190 billion kwh, and the economically exploitable annual power output was 1,760 billion kwh, equivalent to 12 percent of global hydropower resources, ranking the country first in the world. -- China's per-capita average of energy resources is very low. China has a large population, resulting in a low per-capita average of energy resources in the world. The per-capita average of both coal and hydropower resources is 50 percent of the world's average, while the per-capita average of both oil and natural gas resources is only about one-fifteenth of the world's average. The per-capita average of arable land is less than 30 percent of the world's average, which has hindered the development of biomass energy. -- The distribution of energy resources is imbalanced. China's energy resources are scattered widely across the country, but the distribution is uneven. Coal is found mainly in the north and the northwest, hydropower in the southwest, and oil and natural gas in the eastern, central and western regions and along the coast. But, the consumers of energy resources are mainly in the southeast coastal areas, where the economy is the most developed. Such a great difference of location between the producers and the consumers has led to the following basic framework of China's energy flow: large-scale transportation over long distances of coal and oil from the north to the south, and transmission of natural gas and electricity from the west to the east. -- The development of energy resources is fairly difficult. Compared with other parts of the world, China faces severe geological difficulties in tapping its coal resources, and has to get most of its coal by underground mining, as only a small amount can be mined by opencast methods. Oil and gas resources are located in areas with complex geological conditions and at great depths, so advanced and expensive prospecting and tapping techniques are required. Untapped hydropower resources are mostly located in the high mountains and deep valleys of the southwest, far from the centers of consumption, entailing technical difficulties and high costs. Unconventional energy resources are insufficiently prospected, their development is neither economical nor competitive. Since the reform and opening-up policies were introduced in China in the late 1970s, the country's energy industry has witnessed swift growth and made great contributions to the sustained and rapid growth of the national economy, with the following demonstrations: -- The energy supply capability has been remarkably enhanced. Thanks to the efforts made over the past few decades, China has built an energy supply framework with coal as the main energy resource and electricity as the focus, featuring an overall development of oil, gas and renewable resources. A fairly complete energy supply system is now by and large in place. China has built a group of extra-large coalmines each with an annual output of over ten million tons. In 2006, the output of primary energy equaled 2.21 billion tons of standard coal, ranking second in the world. Of this, raw coal accounted for 2.37 billion tons, ranking first in the world. Daqing, Shengli, Liaohe, Tarim and other large oilfields have been successively built as oil production bases, and the output of crude oil has increased steadily, ranking China the world's fifth-largest oil producer in 2006, with 185 million tons in that year. The output of natural gas ballooned from 14.3 billion cu m in 1980 to 58.6 billion cu m in 2006. The proportion of commercial renewable energy in the structure of primary energy keeps rising. The electricity sector also reported speedy growth in 2006. The installed capacity reached 622 million kw, and the amount of power generated was 2,870 billion kwh, both ranking second in the world. A comprehensive energy transportation system has been developed quickly, with the transport capacity notably improved. Special railways transporting coal from the west to the east and relevant coal ports, and pipelines transporting oil from the north to the south and conveying natural gas from the west to the east have all been built. Now, the power generated in the west can be carried to the east, and the regional power grids have all been connected up. -- Energy-saving effects are conspicuous. During the period 1980-2006, China's energy consumption increased by 5.6 percent annually, boosting the 9.8-percent annual growth of the national economy. Calculated at 2005 constant prices, the energy consumption for every 10,000 yuan of GDP dropped from 3.39 tons of standard coal in 1980 to 1.21 tons in 2006, making the annual energy-saving rate 3.9 percent, putting an end to the rising trend of per-unit GDP energy consumption. The comprehensive utilization efficiency in the processing, conversion, storage and end-use of energy was 33 percent in 2006, up eight percentage points over 1980. Per-unit product energy consumption has dropped noticeably, and the gaps between the overall energy consumption, the net energy consumption rate of electricity generation for steel and cement production as well as synthetic ammonia produced by plants with an annual output of 300,000 tons or more and the international levels are narrowing. -- The consumption structure has been optimized. China is the world's second-largest energy consumer. In 2006, its total consumption of primary energy was 2.46 billion tons of standard coal. China pays great attention to improving its energy consumption structure. The proportion of coal in primary energy consumption decreased from 72.2 percent in 1980 to 69.4 percent in 2006, and that of other forms of energy rose from 27.8 percent to 30.6 percent, with that of renewable energy and nuclear power rising from 4.0 percent to 7.2 percent. The shares of oil and gas have increased. The end-use energy consumption structure is noticeably optimized, and the proportion of coal converted into power increased from 20.7 percent to 49.6 percent. More commercial energy and clean energy are being used in people's daily life. -- The scientific and technological level has been rapidly enhanced. China has scored conspicuous scientific and technological achievements relating to energy. The fundamental research findings, represented by the "continental hydrocarbon generation theory and its application," have greatly promoted the development of the scientific theory of oil geology. A fairly complete system of exploration and development technologies has taken shape in the oil and gas industry, with prospecting and development techniques in geologically complicated regions and the recovery ratio of oilfields leading the world. Large coalmines of the world's advanced level have been built, and the totally mechanized mining of key coalmines has been noticeably improved. In the power industry, advanced generating technology and units with large capacity and high parameters are widely used, and the designing, engineering and equipment manufacturing of hydraulic power plants have reached the world's advanced level. China is now able to independently design and build million-kw pressurized water reactors, and has made outstanding breakthroughs in the development of high-temperature gas-cooled reactors and fast-neutron-breeder reactors. The technologies to deal with pollution such as flue gas desulphurization (FGD) and renewable energy development and utilization are quickly being improved. Models of ¡À500 kv DC and 750 kv AC electricity transmission projects have been completed and put into operation, and pilot ¡À800 kv DC and 1,000 kv AC extra-high-voltage electricity transmission projects are under way. -- Progress has been made in environmental protection. The Chinese government sets great store by environmental protection, and has made it a fundamental state policy to strengthen environmental protection. Public awareness of environmental protection has been raised. After the 1992 UN Conference on the Environment and Development, China worked out its "21st Century Agenda," and has reinforced environmental protection in an all-round way through legislative and economic means, making positive progress in this regard. China's energy policies give priority to the reduction and rehabilitation of environmental damage and pollution resulting from energy development and utilization. In 2006, coal-fueled generating units reported a nearly 100-percent installation rate of dust-cleaning facilities and a nearly 100-percent discharge of waste water up to relevant standards. The amount of smoke and dust discharged in 2006 was almost the same as that in 1980, and the dust emission per-unit electricity had decreased by 90 percent. The installation capacity of thermal power units with FGD built and put into operation in 2006 totaled 104 million kw, exceeding the combined total of the previous 10 years. Such thermal power units accounted for only 2 percent of all thermal power units in 2000, but the proportion had risen to 30 percent by 2006. -- The environment of energy market is gradually improved. The environment of China's energy market is gradually improved, and the reform in the energy industry is proceeding steadily. Breakthroughs have been made in restructuring energy enterprises, and a modern enterprise system has by and large taken shape. The investors are diversified, energy investment is growing rapidly, and the market is expanding. Market competition has been introduced into the production and distribution of coal. In the power industry, government administrative functions and enterprises' management have been separated, so has power production from power transmission, and supervisory organizations have also been established. In the oil and gas industry, the upstream and downstream sectors have been integrated, so have the domestic and international trades. Energy pricing reform has been constantly deepened, and the pricing mechanism has been improved continuously. Along with China's rapid economic development and the acceleration of industrialization and urbanization, the demand for energy keeps increasing, and the construction of a stable, economical, clean and safe energy supply system faces the following challenges: -- Prominent resources restraint and low energy efficiency. China's relative dearth of high-quality energy resources hinders its supply capability; its imbalanced distribution makes it difficult to secure a continued and steady supply; and the extensive pattern of economic growth, irrational energy structure, unsatisfactory energy technology and relatively poor management have resulted in higher energy consumption per-unit GDP and for the major energy-consuming products than the average level of major energy-consuming countries, thus further intensifying the energy supply-demand contradiction. Consequently, an increase solely in supply is hard to meet the rising demand for energy. -- Increasing environmental pressure caused by the consumption of energy, mostly coal. Coal is the main energy consumed in China, and the energy structure with coal playing the main role will remain unchanged for a long time to come. The relatively backward methods of coal production and consumption have intensified the pressure on environmental protection. Coal consumption has been the main cause of smoke pollution in China, as well as the main source of greenhouse gas. As the number of motor vehicles climbs, the air pollution in some cities is becoming a mixture of coal smoke and exhaust gas. If this situation continues, the ecological environment will face even greater pressure. -- Incomplete market system and emergency response capability yet to be enhanced. China's energy market system is yet to be completed, as the energy pricing mechanism fails to fully reflect the scarcity of resources, its supply and demand, and the environmental cost. Order in energy exploration and development must be further standardized, and the energy supervisory system improved. Coal production safety is far from satisfactory, the structure of power grids is not rational, the oil reserves are not sufficient, and an effective emergency pre-warning system is yet to be improved and consolidated to deal with energy supply breakdowns and other major unexpected emergencies. II. Strategy and Goals of Energy Development China's energy development emphasizes thrift, cleanness and safety. Believing that development is the only way for its survival, China solves problems emerging in the process of advance through development and reform. To this end, it is applying the Scientific Outlook on Development, persevering in putting people first, changing its concept of development, making innovations in the mode of development, and improving the quality of development. It strives for high scientific and technological content, low resource consumption, minimum of environmental pollution, good economic returns, and guaranteed safety in energy development, so as to realize the coordinated and sustained development of all energy resources to the fullest possible extent. China's energy development is based on the principle of relying on domestic resources and the basic state policy of opening to the outside world. The country is striving to ensure a stable supply of energy with a steady increase in domestic energy production and promote the common development of energy around the world. China's energy development will bring more opportunities for other countries and expand the global market, and make positive contributions to the world's energy security and stability. The basic themes of China's energy strategy are giving priority to thrift, relying on domestic resources, encouraging diverse patterns of development, relying on science and technology, protecting the environment, and increasing international cooperation for mutual benefit. It strives to build a stable, economical, clean and safe energy supply system, so as to support the sustained economic and social development with sustained energy development. -- Giving priority to thrift. China has made resource-conservation a basic state policy, and stresses both developing and saving, with priority given to saving. For this, it is actively changing the pattern of economic growth, adjusting the industrial structure, encouraging research and development of energy-saving technologies, popularizing energy-saving products, improving energy management expertise, improving energy-saving legislation and standards, and enhancing energy efficiency. -- Relying on domestic resources. China mainly relies on itself to increase the supply of energy, and tries to satisfy the rising market demand by way of steadily expanding the domestic supply of reliable energy resources. -- Encouraging diverse patterns of development. China will continue to develop its coal resources in an orderly way, spur the power industry, speed up oil and natural gas exploration, encourage coal bed gas tapping, boost hydroelectric power and other renewable energy resources, actively promote nuclear power development, develop substitute energy resources in a scientific way, optimize its energy structure, realize supplementation between multiple energy resources, and guarantee a steady supply of energy. -- Relying on science and technology. China fully relies on science and technology to enhance its ability for independent innovation and its ability to digest and improve imported technologies, tackle technological bottlenecks in energy development, improve key technologies and the manufacturing level of key equipment, seek new ways for energy development and utilization, and redouble the strength for further development. -- Protecting the environment. China has set the goal of building a resource-conserving, environment-friendly society, and is endeavoring to coordinate energy development with environmental protection. It endeavors to make the two promote each other for sustainable development. -- Cooperation for mutual benefit. China works sincerely and pragmatically with international energy organizations and other countries on the principle of equality, mutual benefit and win-win to improve the mechanism, expand the fields of cooperation and safeguard international energy security and stability. The 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, held in October 2007, set the goals of quickening the transformation of the development pattern and quadrupling the per-capita GDP of the year 2000 by 2020 through optimizing the economic structure and improving economic returns while reducing the consumption of energy resources and protecting the environment. The Outline of the 11th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development of the People's Republic of China projects that the per-unit GDP energy consumption by 2010 will have decreased by 20 percent compared to 2005, and the total amount of major pollutants discharged will have been reduced by 10 percent. To realize the country's economic and social development goals, the energy industry has set the following targets in the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010): By 2010 the energy supply will basically meet the demands of national economic and social development; and obvious progress will have been made in energy conservation; energy efficiency will have been noticeably enhanced and the energy structure optimized; technological progress, economic benefits and market competitiveness will have been greatly increased; and energy-related macro-control, market regulation, legislation and emergency pre-warning system and mechanism compatible with the socialist market economy will all have been improved. The result will be that the coordinated development will have been achieved between energy production, the economy, the society and the environment. III. All-round Promotion of Energy Conservation China is a developing country with a large population but deficient resources. To attain sustainable economic and social development, it must take the path of conserving resources. China started energy conservation work in a planned and organized way in the early 1980s, and achieved the goal of quadrupling economic growth while doubling energy consumption by the late 1990s by implementing the policy of "stressing both development and saving, with priority given to saving." To further promote energy conservation, the Chinese government made conservation of resources a basic state policy, and issued the Decision of the State Council on Strengthening Energy-conservation Work. The Chinese government has always regarded energy conservation as a major factor in macro control and as breakthrough and driving force for transforming the pattern of economic development and optimizing economic structure. While advancing the work of saving energy and reducing emissions, the Chinese government depends on structural adjustment as the fundamental approach, on scientific and technological advances as the key, on improved administration as a crucial measure, on the strengthening of law enforcement as an important guarantee, on the deepening of the reform as an internal motive force, and on public participation as the social foundation. It promulgated and implemented the Medium- and Long-term Special Plan for Energy Conservation, setting the goal for energy consumption reduction during the 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-2010) and sharing out the tasks and responsibilities to the various provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the central government, as well as key enterprises. China is perfecting the index system of energy consumption per-unit GDP. It will incorporate energy consumption into the overall evaluation of economic and social development and the annual performance evaluation of regional governments. It will adopt an announcement system for this index, implement a target responsibility and accountability system for energy conservation and build an energy-conserving industrial system to effect the fundamental transformation of the country's pattern of economic development. Energy conservation is a realistic choice for China to alleviate the pressure of energy shortage. It is a long and arduous strategic task to keep promoting energy conservation in the course of the country's economic and social development. China will advance energy conservation in all aspects, with the government playing the leading role, the market forming the basis and enterprises playing a major role, with participation of the whole society. China will establish an energy- and resource-saving industrial structure, development pattern and consumption mode by taking improvement of energy efficiency as the core, and transforming the mode of economic development, adjusting the economic structure and accelerating technological advance as the foundation. China will establish an energy-saving industrial system and practice a target-responsibility and performance-evaluation system in this regard. It will improve the mechanism for spreading energy-saving technologies, and encourage R&D of such technologies and products. It will deepen the reform of the energy system, improve the energy pricing mechanism and give full play to economic policies, including fiscal and taxation ones, in promoting energy conservation. To promote all-round energy conservation, China will take the following measures: -- Pushing forward structural adjustment. The major reasons for low efficiency of energy utilization for a long time have been the extensive mode of economic growth and a high proportion of high energy-consuming industries in China. The country will put the transformation of the development pattern and the adjustment of the industrial structure and of the internal structures of industries in the key place for the energy-conservation strategy, and work hard to bring into being a pattern of economic development with "low input, low consumption, less emission and high efficiency." China will accelerate the optimization and upgrading of its industrial structure, make energetic efforts to develop high- and new-tech industries and the service trades, set strict limits on the development of high energy-, material- and water-consuming industries, and eliminate industries with backward productivity, so as to fundamentally change the pattern of economic development and put in place an energy-saving industrial system on an early date. -- Improving energy conservation in industry. Industry is a major sector of energy consumption in China. The country is determined to take a new road to industrialization characterized by high scientific and technological content, good economic returns, low resource consumption, minimum of environmental pollution, and full use of human resources. To achieve this, China will accelerate the development of high-tech industries and transform traditional industries with high- and new-technologies, as well as advanced and applicable ones, and in turn upgrade the overall industrial standard. Industries with high energy consumption, such as steel, nonferrous metals, coal, electricity, petroleum and petrochemicals, chemical engineering and building materials, will be the target sectors for saving energy and reducing energy consumption. The Chinese government has launched an energy-conservation drive among 1,000 enterprises, with the focus on tightening control over those consuming 10,000 tons of standard coal or more each year. It will readjust the product mix, speed up technological reform, improve management and economize on energy. It will support a group of key and demonstration projects aiming to conserve energy and cut consumption so as to rally industries to enhance the ir energy-saving level. It will continue to raise the standards for energy efficiency of industry, eliminate backward and high energy-consuming products, and perfect the market access system. -- Launching energy-saving projects. China is carrying out ten key energy-saving projects, including petroleum substitution, simultaneous generation of heat and power, surplus heat utilization and the construction of energy-saving buildings. The Chinese government supports key and demonstration energy-saving projects, and encourages extensive application of high-efficiency, energy-saving products. China will make vigorous efforts to construct energy- and land-saving buildings, actively promote the energy-saving renovation of existing buildings, and extensively use new walling materials. China will continue to implement petroleum substitution and develop substitute fuels in a scientific way. It will speed up the elimination of old automobiles and ships, actively develop public transport; set limits on high oil-consuming automobiles, and develop energy-saving and environment-friendly automobiles. It will accelerate the innovation of coal-fueled industrial boilers (kilns), regional simultaneous generation of heat and power and surplus heat and pressure utilization, and improve the efficiency of energy utilization. It will save more energy in the sphere of electrical machinery and optimize energy systems, so as to improve the efficiency of both. It will carry out the Green Lighting Project, and spread more rapidly high-performance electrical appliances. It will also spread technologies for firewood- and coal-saving stoves and energy-saving houses in rural areas, and eliminate old, high energy-consuming farm machinery and fishing boats, so as to promote energy conservation in agriculture and the rural areas. It will urge government bodies to save more energy, giving full play to the role of the government in leading energy conservation. It will put in place at an early date the system of energy-conservation monitoring and technological support, strengthening energy-conservation monitoring and establishing new energy services platforms. -- Strengthening the administration of energy conservation. The Chinese government has established a system of compulsory government procurement of energy-saving products, actively advocating energy-saving (including water-saving) products as a priority for government procurement; and included some products with outstanding results and stable performance on the list of compulsory procurement. It will give full play to the role of governmental purchase in policy guidance and in encouraging all sectors of society to produce and use energy-saving products. It will study and formulate fiscal and taxation policies to encourage energy conservation, implement preferential taxation policies for those effectively making comprehensive use of resources, and set up an energy-saving mechanism with multi-channel financing. It will deepen the reform of energy prices to introduce a pricing mechanism favorable for energy conservation. It will put in force an evaluation and examination system in respect of energy conservation in fixed assets investment projects and strictly control increase of energy consumption at the roots. It will set up a new energy-conservation mechanism for enterprises, adopt an energy efficiency labeling mechanism, and promote contract-based energy management and voluntary energy-conservation agreements. It will improve the legal framework regarding energy conservation, and strengthen energy-conservation management by law. It will improve the overall quality of energy-conservation managerial personnel, and step up efforts in law enforcement, supervision and examination. -- Advocating energy conservation in society. The Chinese government energetically advocates the significance of energy conservation by various means, constantly strengthening the public awareness of the importance of resources conservation. It will promote the culture of energy conservation, and work hard to bring into being a healthy, civilized and economical mode of consumption. It will incorporate energy conservation into the system of elementary education, vocational education, higher education and technical training, and publicize and popularize relevant knowledge by means of mass media. It will enhance the energy-conservation week campaign, and mobilize all sectors of society to participate in it. All these measures will help to build a long-term mechanism of energy conservation with the participation of all sectors of society. IV. Improving the Energy Supply Capacity For a long time China has relied largely on domestic energy resources to develop its economy, and the rate of self-sufficiency has been above 90 percent, much higher than that in most developed countries. China is now the second biggest energy producer in the world, and has a relatively strong foundation for the energy production and supply. In the course of building a moderately prosperous society, China will rely mainly on domestic energy resources, give priority to optimizing its energy mix, and work hard to increase its energy supply capacity. China boasts great potential in energy resources exploitation. Coal resources already verified only account for 13 percent of the total deposits, and recoverable reserves account for 40 percent of the discovered resources. Only 20 percent of the country's hydropower resources have been utilized so far. Verified oil reserves are 33 percent of the total deposits, and China has begun to enter the middle phase of oil prospecting, still seeing a big potential. Proven reserves of natural gas account for 14 percent, showing that China is in the early stage of exploration and indicating bright prospects in this sphere. Regarding non-conventional energy, China is still at the early stage of exploitation and utilization, with a great potential for development. As for renewable energy, China has only just started in its exploitation and utilization, so there is immense room for development in this regard. Good prospects are also seen for conserving, making comprehensive use of and recycling resources. To increase its energy supply capacity, China will take the following measures: -- Developing the coal industry in an orderly way. Coal is a basic energy in China, and it is an urgent need to increase the supply capacity, optimize the energy mix, ensure coal mining safety, reduce environmental pollution, increase resource utilization efficiency and build a new coal industry system, so as to guarantee the development of the national economy. China will step up its efforts in prospecting coal resources, render support to large coal mining bases in conducting resource surveys and detailed geological surveys, set standards for commercial prospecting, improve the level of guarantee for coal resources, and steadily push forward the building of large coal mining bases. By merger and reorganization of enterprises, the country will bring into being some large coal mining conglomerates each with a total annual production capability of 100 million tons. It will continue to push forward the development and integration of coal resources by renovating medium- and small-sized coal mines and closing down, in accordance with the law, small ones not conforming to industrial policies, with poor safety conditions, wasting resources and harming the environment, so as to further optimize the structure of the coal industry. It will promote the coordinated development of related industries, and encourage coal-electricity joint operation or coal-electricity-transport integrated management, so as to extend the coal industry chain. It will further mechanize coalmines and enhance overall mechanization in coal mining, promote the clean production and utilization of coal, encourage R&D and spreading of clean coal technologies, and quicken the research into and demonstration of substitute liquid fuels. China will actively develop a circular economy, step up efforts in environmental protection, promote the comprehensive utilization of resources, and accelerate the industrialized development of coal-bed gas. It will strengthen the building of the coal transport system and steadily increase the coal transport capacity. It will establish a responsibility system for safe production, beef up safety installations and put more money into gas prevention and control, so as to improve the level of safe production. -- Actively developing electric power. Electric power is a highly efficient and clean energy. It is also a basic requirement for the steady development of the national economy and society to establish an economical, highly efficient and stable power supply system. China will optimize the power supply structure based on structural adjustment. On the basis of taking into overall consideration such factors as resources, technology, environmental protection and the market, the Chinese government will develop clean coal-fired electric power by setting up large coal-fired power bases and encouraging the building of power plants at pitheads, with emphasis on large, highly efficient, environment-friendly power generating sets. It will actively develop cogeneration of heat and power, and speed up elimination of small and backward thermal power units. On the condition that the ecological environment is protected and problems affecting local people are properly settled, energetic efforts will be made to develop hydropower. It will also actively develop nuclear power, and appropriately develop natural gas power generation. It will encourage power generation with renewable and new energy resources. It will strengthen the building of regional power grids and power transmission and distribution networks and expand the scope of power transmission from western to eastern China. Uniform planning and distribution of electric power will be adopted, and an emergency response system for power safety will be set up to enhance the safety and reliability of the power system. China will continue to strengthen power demand-side management (DSM), exert control over power use for the purpose of conserving energy and work hard to increase energy utilization efficiency. -- Expediting development of oil and gas. China will continue to implement the policy of "simultaneous development of oil and gas," steadily increase crude oil output and make efforts to increase the output of natural gas. The country will step up its efforts in prospecting for and exploiting oil and natural gas, with the focus on major oil and gas basins, including those of Bohai Bay, Songliao, Tarim and Ordos, and actively explore new areas, fields and strata on the land and major sea areas, so as to increase the amount of recoverable reserves. It will tap the potential of major oil-producing areas, improve renovation for stable yields, increase the recovery ratio and slow down the yield decreasing trend in old oilfields. On the condition of reasonable cost, it will actively develop coal-bed gas, oil shale and tar sand and other non-conventional energy resources. The country will expedite the construction of oil and gas pipeline networks and supporting facilities and gradually improve the national network of oil and gas pipelines. -- Vigorously developing renewable energy. China gives top priority to developing renewable energy. The exploration and utilization of renewable energy resources plays a significant role in increasing energy supply, improving the energy mix and helping environmental protection, and is also a strategic choice of China to solve the contradiction between energy supply and demand and achieve sustainable development. China has promulgated the Renewable Energy Law and priority policies for renewable energy electricity, entailing priority to be connected to grids, acquisition in full and preferential price, and public sharing of costs. It has earmarked special funds for renewable energy development to support resource survey, R&D of relevant technologies, building of pilot and demonstration projects, as well as exploration and utilization of renewable energy in rural China. It has released the Medium- and Long-term Program for Renewable Energy Development, putting forward the goal of increasing renewable energy consumption to 10 percent of the total energy consumption by 2010 and 15 percent by 2020. China will further the comprehensive and cascade development of areas with hydropower resources, speed up the construction of large hydropower stations, develop medium- and small-sized hydropower stations based on local conditions, and construct pumped-storage power stations under appropriate circumstances. It will spread the latest technologies for the utilization of solar energy, methane and other renewable energy sources, and increase their market shares. It will also actively popularize technologies utilizing wind, biomass and solar energy for power generation, and build several million-kw wind power bases to achieve industrialization by means of scale power generation. It will actively implement policies supporting renewable energy development, foster a renewable energy market featuring sustained and stable development, and gradually establish and improve an industrial system and a market and service system of renewable energy, so as to promote renewable energy technological advance and industrial development. -- Improving energy development in the rural areas. China has a rural population of 750 million. Due to economic and technical limitations, people in most rural areas still use traditional biomass energy. It is an inevitable demand in the building of a new socialist countryside in all aspects to solve the energy problem for the rural areas. This is also a problem unique to China. The Chinese government sticks to the principle of "development based on local conditions, supplementation between multiple energy resources, comprehensive utilization with focus on actual results," and works hard to improve energy development in the rural areas. The Chinese government has improved the energy conditions for rural people's life and production, and solved the power problem for over 30 million rural people who had no access to electricity and in remote areas not connected to the grid, by carrying out the Lighting Project, "rural grid renovation," "electrification of hydropower-based rural areas" and "connecting villages with the grid" campaigns, and making full use of small-sized hydropower stations, wind energy and solar energy for power generation. Basically, rural and urban residents are connected to the same grid and pay the same rate. China will further actively develop rural household methane and make better use of biomass and solar energy, so as to provide clean energy for the rural people. It will continue popularizing firewood- and energy-saving stoves and small energy facilities, such as small windpower and hydropower stations, in rural areas. It will increase the supply of high-quality fossil energy and increase the proportion of commercial energy consumption in rural areas. Continuous efforts will be made to strengthen the construction of the rural grids to expand their coverage. Moreover, China will actively build green-energy counties for demonstration, and accelerate the exploration and utilization of renewable energy resources in rural areas. V. Accelerating the Progress of Energy Technologies Science and technology is the primary productive force and the main motive force of energy development. China sets great store by the development of energy science and technology, and has narrowed its technological gap with the developed countries in the energy industry and effectively promoted the overall development of the energy industry. The Chinese government promulgated the Outline of the National Plan for Medium- and Long-term Scientific and Technological Development (2006-2010) in 2005, which gives top priority to the development of energy technologies, and, in line with the principle of making independent innovations and leapfrogging development in key fields, shoring up the economy and keeping in step with leading trends, stresses accelerating progress of energy technologies and strives to provide technological support for the sustainable energy development. Following the laws and traits of scientific and technological development, China actively develops and popularizes advanced and applicable technologies in the fields of energy saving, substitution, recycling and pollution control, and is creating a favorable policy environment for the progress of energy technologies. The Chinese government strives to gradually establish a market-oriented system for technological innovation, in which enterprises play the leading role and which combines the efforts of enterprises, universities and research institutes. It vigorously promotes R&D and the application of advanced energy technologies, guides enterprises to expedite technological progress and enhance energy utilization efficiency through the market mechanism. It strengthens the training of talented people in energy science and technology, and improves policies, laws and regulations, and technical standards in this respect to create favorable conditions for the development of energy technologies. -- Popularizing energy-saving technologies. China gives priority to the development of energy-saving technologies, with focus on key technologies in the high energy-consumption sectors, to enhance the utilization efficiency of primary and end-use energy resources; implements the policy outline on energy-saving technologies and guides social investment into the application of energy-saving technologies; places emphasis on R&D of energy-saving technologies and equipment for industry, transport and construction, and the application of technologies connected with integrated renewable energy systems and energy-saving construction materials; strengthens energy measurement, control, supervision and management; and actively fosters an energy-saving technological service system. -- Spurring innovation in key technologies. China encourages the development of clean coal technology, reinforces R&D of advanced technologies, such as coal gasification, processing and conversion, popularizes advanced power generation technologies, including integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC), supercritical and ultra-supercritical power generation, and large-scale circulating fluidized bed (CFB), and develops coal gasification-based poly-generation technology. China attaches particular importance to mastering the third-generation pressurized-water reactor (PWR) nuclear power generation and high temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGR) for industrial experimental technologies. It actively develops technologies in connection with prospecting for and exploitation of petroleum and gas resources under complicated geographical conditions, and highly efficient exploitation of low-grade petroleum and gas resources; encourages the development of technology for substitutes of energy resources, gives priority to the development of technologies for large-scale utilization of renewable energy; and steadily improves the technology of power transmission at voltages of ¡À 800 kv DC and 1,000 kv AC and power grid safety technology. -- Enhancing equipment manufacturing level. The equipment manufacturing industry is the foundation of the development of energy technologies. China gives impetus to the technological progress of the equipment manufacturing industry through key state projects. The Chinese government encourages the development of comprehensive excavation machinery in coal mining, large comprehensive mining, hoisting, transport and washing equipment for underground coal mining, and heavy-duty open-pit mining machinery. It supports the development of complete sets of large equipment for coal chemicals as well as R&D of coal liquefaction and gasification, and coal-to-olefin conversion equipment, the development of high-efficiency and low-pollution power generation equipment, high-efficiency coal-fired power generation units, hydropower and pumped-storage units, heavy-duty gas turbines, PWR nuclear power generation units with a capacity of one million kw, high-power wind-driven generators, and superhigh-power transmission and transformation machinery. It encourages the development of oil and natural gas prospecting and drilling equipment and support equipment for large offshore oil projects, crude oil carriers with a capacity of 300,000 dwt, liquefied natural gas carriers and high-power diesel engines. -- Strengthening frontier technology research. Frontier technology, as a new potential driving force for energy development, can blaze the way for the leapfrogging development of energy industry and technologies. China focuses on research into conversion from fossil, biomass and renewable energy resources to hydrogen, and high-efficiency hydrogen storage, transmission and distribution technology. It also conducts research into the technology for the manufacturing of basic and key components of fuel cells, integration of fuel cell stacks, fuel cell power generation and automotive fuel cell power systems, and strives to make breakthroughs in the technology for the end-use energy conversion, storage and combined cooling, heating and power projection of fossil energy-based micro-miniature gas turbine systems. Meanwhile, the country is speeding up research into the engineering and core technology of gas-cooled faster reactors (GFR), and technology for developing magnetic confinement fusion (MCF) and natural gas hydrate technology. -- Developing basic scientific research. Basic research is the source of independent innovation and it determines the strength and potential of energy development. China concentrates on research into the basic theories of the high-efficiency and low-pollution utilization and conversion of fossil energy, key principles of high-efficiency heat-work conversion, high-efficiency energy saving and storage, basic technology for large-scale utilization of renewable energy, and basic theories concerning technology for large-scale utilization of nuclear and hydrogen energy resources. VI. Coordinating Energy and Environment Development Climate change is a significant global issue of worldwide concern. It is both an environmental and development issue, and intrinsically a development issue. The large-scale exploitation and utilization of energy resources is one of the major causes of environmental pollution and climate change. Appropriate handling of the relationship between the exploitation and utilization of energy resources on the one hand, and environmental protection and climate change on the other, is an urgent issue facing all countries. China is a developing country in the primary stage of industrialization, and with low accumulative emissions. From 1950 to 2002, the aggregate amount of China's fossil fuel carbon dioxide emissions accounted for only 9.3 percent of the world's total in the same period. The amount of China's per-capita carbon dioxide emissions ranked 92nd in the world, and the elasticity coefficient of carbon dioxide emissions per-unit GDP was very small. As a responsible developing country, China attaches great importance to environmental protection and prevention of global climate change. The Chinese government has made environmental protection a fundamental state policy, signed the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, established the National Coordination Committee for Climate Change, submitted to the UN the Initial National Communication on Climate Change of the People's Republic of China, worked out the Management Measures on the Implementation of Clean Development Mechanism Projects, formulated the National Climate Change Program, and adopted a series of proactive policies and measures regarding environmental protection and climate change. China aims to achieve the goal of basically curbing the trend of ecological deterioration, reducing total emissions of major pollutants by 10 percent, and gain visible results in the control of greenhouse gas emissions during its 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-2010). Meanwhile, the country is actively adjusting its economic and energy structures, comprehensively advancing energy saving, emphatically preventing and controlling the pressing problems of environmental pollution, and effectively controlling emissions of pollutants to facilitate coordinated development between energy and the environment. -- Comprehensive control of greenhouse gas emissions. China is expediting the transformation of its economic development mode, giving full play to the role of energy saving and optimization of energy structure in slowing climate change, and endeavoring to cut fossil energy consumption. It is vigorously developing a circular economy, fostering the comprehensive utilization of resources, enhancing the utilization efficiency of energy, reducing greenhouse gas emissions. It continuously improves the capability of addressing climate change with the aid of scientific and technological progress, thereby making positive contributions to the environmental protection of the Earth. -- Energetically fighting ecological destruction and environmental pollution. China will pay more attention to the clean utilization of energy resources, especially coal, and make it a focus of environmental protection, energetically combating ecological destruction and environmental pollution. The country is quickening its pace of control of coal mining subsidence areas and the exploitation and utilization of coal-bed gas, and establishes and improves the compensation mechanism for the exploitation of coal resources and restoration of the eco-environment. It promotes the orderly exploitation of coal resources, restricts the exploitation of high-sulfur and high-ash coal, forbids mining coal with toxic and harmful substances, such as arsenic and radiotoxins, exceeding permissible limits. It actively develops clean coal technology and encourages the application of coal washing, processing, conversion, clean-burning and smoke-purifying technologies. At the same time, it is expediting the construction of desulfurizing facilities in coal-fired power plants, requiring that newly built coal-fired power plants must install and use desulfurizing facilities according to the permissible emission standards, and such existing plants must speed up their desulfurization upgrading. The Chinese government strictly prohibits the construction of new coal-fired power plants for the sole purpose of power generation in medium and large cities or on their outskirts. -- Proactive prevention of motor vehicle emission pollution. The development of the automobile industry and the improvement of the people's livelihood have led to a rapid growth in the number of motor vehicles. Consequently, preventing motor vehicle emission pollution has been put high on the environmental protection agenda. China is actively taking effective measures to this end: strictly enforcing vehicle emission standards; intensifying inspection for the environment-friendly production of vehicles; strictly implementing the annual emission inspection system for motor vehicles; strictly forbidding manufacture, sale and import of motor vehicles exceeding the emission limits. At the same time, China encourages the production and use of vehicles burning clean fuels, and the production of hybrid electric vehicles, and supports the development of rail transport and electric buses. -- Exercising strict environmental management of energy projects. Strengthening the environmental management of energy projects is an effective measure to ensure coordinated development between energy construction and environmental protection. China strictly enforces the environmental impact assessment system, restrains extensive mode of economic growth by exercising a strict environment access system. It ensures simultaneous design, construction and launching of environmental protection facilities at new, expansion and rebuilding projects, intensifies safe management of nuclear power projects, reinforces supervision and management of the safety and radiation environment of nuclear power plants, research reactors and fuel cycle facilities in operation, and practices meticulous safety examination and supervision of nuclear power facilities under construction. It further enhances environmental protection efforts in the construction of hydropower projects, pays equal attention to the requirements of comprehensive development and utilization of river basins while protecting the environment, and increasing the level of comprehensive utilization of water resources and eco-environmental benefits. VII. Deepening Energy System Reform Improving the environment for development is an intrinsic requirement of China's energy development. In accordance with the requirements of perfecting the socialist market economy, China is steadily advancing its energy system reform to promote the development of the energy industry. In 1998, strategic reorganization was accomplished among petroleum enterprises, featuring the establishment of new vertically integrated management system of oil industry. In 2002, China's power industry realized the separation of government functions from those of enterprises, as well as the separation of power plants from grid operation in line with the power system reform plan. In 2005, after the market-oriented reform of the coal industry, China's coal industry saw deepened reform and further development pursuant to the Opinions on Promoting the Healthy Development of the Coal Industry issued by the State Council. China is further deepening reform of the energy system, elevating the energy marketization level, improving the energy macro-control system, and improving the environment for energy development in accordance with the requirements of innovation in concept, management, system and mechanism. -- Strengthening energy legislation. It is an imperative requirement for energy development in China to improve the energy-related legal system to provide a legal guarantee for increasing the energy supply, standardizing the energy market, optimizing the energy structure and maintaining energy security. China sets great store by and actively advances the construction of the energy legal system. China has enacted and put in force the Clean Production Promotion Law and Renewable Energy Law, and has issued a series of supporting policies and measures. The amended Energy Conservation Law has been promulgated. The Energy Law, Circular Economy Law, Law on the Protection of Oil and Natural Gas Pipelines and Regulations on Energy Conservation of Buildings are being formulated. The Mineral Resources Law, Coal Industry Law, and Electric Power Law are being revised. Meanwhile, active efforts have been made in research into energy legislation concerning oil and natural gas, the crude oil market and atomic energy. -- Reinforcing production safety. In the course of energy development, China pays high attention to safeguarding the lives and health of the people, and takes effective measures to halt the trend of frequent occurrences of serious accidents. It adheres to the principle of giving top priority to safety, placing the main emphasis on prevention, and exercising comprehensive control. It has intensified efforts in the control and comprehensive utilization of coal gas, and rectified and shut down small coalmines lacking conditions for safe production. It has enforced safety supervision of coalmines, and guided local governments and enterprises to intensify efforts in technological upgrading for coalmine safety and the construction of safety facilities. It comprehensively carries out education on safe production to enhance the sense of responsibility for safety, continues to consolidate electric power safety and petroleum and gas production safety, intensifies supervision and management measures, and practices a working system in which production safety is supervised by the state and administered by local governments while enterprises take the responsibility. It further implements the safe production responsibility system, and enforces rigorous safe production laws and regulations and a related accountability system. -- Improving the emergency response system. As an important aspect of economic security, energy security has a direct bearing on national security and social stability. China practices unified power dispatch, hierarchical power management and operation of power grids by regions. A safety responsibility system with division of work among government departments, supervision organs and power enterprises has been established, in which the power grids and power generation enterprises work out emergency response plans to cope with large-scale emergencies. Following the principle of unified planning and step-by-step implementation, China has built national oil reserve bases and expanded its oil reserve capacity. It has gradually established a guarantee system for oil and natural gas supply emergencies to ensure secure supplies of energy. -- Accelerating market system construction. China sticks to the policy of reform and opening-up, gives full play to the basic role of the market in allocating resources, encourages the entrance of entities of various ownerships into the energy field, and actively facilitates market-oriented reform related to energy. It has improved the coal market system in an all-round manner, established an open, orderly and healthy power market system characterized by separating government functions from those of enterprises and fair competition, paced up reform of the oil and natural gas circulation system, and promoted the healthy and orderly development of the energy market. -- Deepening reform of management system. China has stepped up efforts in the reform of its energy management system, improved the national energy management system and decision-making mechanism, strengthened unified planning and coordination among state departments and local governments, and consolidated the state's overall planning and macro-control in the field of energy development, with the focus on changing functions, straightening out relations, optimizing the setup and raising efficiency, so as to form a management system that centralizes control to an appropriate degree, divides work in a rational way, fosters scientific decision-making, and ensures smooth enforcement and effective oversight. The Chinese government has furthered the transformation of government functions, giving priority to guidance by policy measures and attaching importance to information services. It has deepened the reform of the energy investment system, and established and improved the investment regulation and control system. It has further strengthened standardized management of energy resources, improved the management system of mineral resources development and exploitation, put in place and improved the system for paid use of mineral resources and the system of trade in mining rights, and rectified and regulated the order of mineral resources exploitation market. -- Advancing price mechanism reform. The price mechanism is the core of the market mechanism. On the premise of properly handling the relations among various interest groups and taking full account of the acceptability of all social sectors, the Chinese government has advanced energy price reform in a vigorous yet steady way, gradually established a pricing mechanism that is able to reflect resource scarcities, changes in market supply and demand, and environmental costs. It has deepened coal price reform to realize all-round marketization. It has propelled electricity tariff reform to ensure that electricity generation and selling prices are eventually formed by market competition, with the electricity transmission and distribution prices being supervised and controlled by the state. It has improved step by step the oil and natural gas pricing mechanism to timely reflect changes in international market prices and domestic market supply and demand. VIII. Strengthening International Cooperation in the Field of Energy China's development cannot be achieved without cooperation with the rest of the world, and the prosperity of the world needs China as well. With accelerating economic globalization, China has forged increasingly closer ties with the outside world in the field of energy. China's development of energy has not only satisfied its own needs for economic and social progress, but also brought opportunities and tremendous space for development to the rest of the world. China is an active participant in international energy cooperation. In multilateral cooperation, China is a member of the energy working group of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus China, Japan and ROK (10+3) Energy Cooperation, International Energy Forum, World Energy Conference, and Asia-Pacific Partnership for Clean Development and Climate. It is an observer of the Energy Charter, and maintains close relations with such international organizations as the World Energy Agency and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Regarding bilateral cooperation, China has established a mechanism for dialogue and cooperation in the field of energy with a number of energy consuming and producing countries, such as the US, Japan and Russia, and the European Union. It has intensified dialogue and cooperation regarding energy exploration, utilization, technology and environmental protection, as well as renewable energy and new energy resources, and has had extensive dialogues and exchanges with them in such aspects as energy policy and information data. In international cooperation in the field of energy, China has not only shouldered a wide range of international obligations, but also played an active and constructive role. China has made active efforts to improve laws and policies related to its opening-up, promulgating in succession the Law on Sino-foreign Equity Joint Ventures, Law on Sino-foreign Cooperative Joint Ventures and Law on Foreign Capital Enterprises to create a fair and open environment for foreign investment. In 2002, China formulated the Regulations for the Guidance of Foreign Investment Orientation, and revised the Catalogue of Industrial Guidance for Foreign Investment and the Catalogue of Advantageous Industries for Foreign Investment in the Central and Western Regions in 2004, in order to encourage foreign investment in the energy sector, including energy and energy-related exploitation, production, supply, transportation and energy equipment production, as well as in the energy sector of the central and western regions. -- Improving external cooperation in the exploration and development of oil and gas resources. China has implemented a cooperative mode based on product-sharing contracts with other countries in the field of oil and gas resources. In 2001, China promulgated the revised Rules on External Cooperation for Ocean Oil Exploitation as well as Rules on External Cooperation for Onshore Oil Exploitation. China protects the legitimate rights and interests of foreign business people participating in collaborative oil exploitation. It encourages foreign business people to participate in cooperation in oil exploration and development, such as risk exploration for oil and natural gas, low-permeability oil and gas reservoirs (fields), and the improvement of the recovery rate of old oilfields. It encourages foreign investment in the construction and operation of oil and gas pipelines, as well as special oil and gas storages and port berths. -- Encouraging foreign investment in exploration and development of unconventional energy resources. In 2000, China promulgated the Opinions on Further Encouraging Foreign Investment in Exploring and Exploiting Non-oil-and-gas Mineral Resources, further opening up its market in this regard. China allows foreign investors, either by themselves or in collaboration with Chinese counterparts, to conduct risk exploration on its territory. Foreign investors who invest in exploring and recovering paragenetic and associated minerals and utilizing tailing or exploring mineral resources in China's western regions are entitled to enjoy the preferential policy of reduction of or exemption from mineral resources compensation fees. Further efforts are being made to improve management of and services to foreign investment in the exploration and exploitation of non-oil-and-gas mineral resources. -- Encouraging foreign investors to invest in and operate energy facilities such as power plants. China encourages foreign investment in the production and supply of electric power and gas, as well as in the construction and operation of thermal power plants with a single-generator capacity of 600,000-kw and above, power stations burning clean coal, power stations featuring heat and power cogeneration, hydropower stations mainly for electricity production, nuclear power stations in which the Chinese side holds the dominant share, as well as power stations with renewable energy or new energy resources. It encourages foreign investors to invest in technology and equipment production for thermal, hydro and nuclear power stations with a considerably large generating capacity as well as for thermal power desulphurization. It also encourages them to invest in the construction and operation of coal pipeline transportation facilities. -- Further improving the environment for foreign investment. The Chinese government has kept its commitments to the WTO made when it joined the organization and has sorted out and rectified administrative regulations and departmental rules concerning energy management that are inconsistent with the WTO rules. In light of the demand of transparency of the WTO, China has relaxed control over the scope of geological data of a public welfare nature, strengthened the work of releasing energy policies, improved the energy data and statistics system and promptly released energy statistics, so as to ensure the openness and transparency of energy policies, statistics and information. -- Further expanding the scope of foreign investment. In bringing in foreign investment for the development and utilization of energy resources, China pays primary attention to introducing foreign advanced technology, management experience and people of high caliber to further shifting the focus from investing in fossil energy resources to renewable resources, from emphasizing exploration and development to the development of service trade, and from relying mainly on foreign loans and direct foreign investment to directly pooling of funds at international capital market. For a fairly long time to come, international energy trade will remain a major way by which China utilizes foreign energy resources. China will actively expand international energy trade, promote the complementary advantages of the international energy market and maintain the stability of this market. China will pursue energy imports and exports, and improve policies for fair trade in accordance with its commitments to the WTO and the WTO rules. It will, step by step, change the current situation of relying too heavily on spot trading of crude oil, encourage the signing of long-term supply contracts with foreign companies, and promote the diversification of trading channels. China supports direct overseas investment by domestic qualified enterprises to engage in transnational operation, and encourage such enterprises to participate in international energy cooperation and in the construction of overseas energy infrastructure, and steadily expand cooperation in energy engineering technology and services in accordance with international practice and the rules of the market economy. Energy security is a global issue. Every country has the right to rationally utilize energy resources for its own development, and the overwhelming majority of countries could not enjoy energy security without international cooperation. To realize a steady and orderly development of the world economy, it is necessary to promote economic globalization to develop in a direction featuring balance, universal benefit and win-win, and it is necessary for the international community to foster a new concept of energy security characterized by mutual benefit and cooperation, diversified development and coordinated guarantee. In recent years, sharp fluctuations of oil prices on the international market have affected the development of the world economy. The causes are multiple and complex, which demands that the international community strengthen dialogue and cooperation to work out a solution together from various aspects. To safeguard world energy security, China holds that the international community should make efforts mainly in the following three aspects: -- Intensifying mutually beneficial cooperation in energy exploration and utilization. To ensure world energy security, it is imperative to strengthen dialogue and cooperation between energy exporting countries and energy consuming countries, as well as between energy consuming countries. The international community should strengthen consultation and coordination as regards energy policies, improve the international energy market monitoring and emergency response mechanisms, promote oil and natural gas development to increase energy supply, realize globalization and diversification of energy supply, ensure stable and sustainable energy supply internationally, maintain reasonable energy prices on the international market, and ensure that each country's energy demands are well met. -- Setting up a system to develop and popularize advanced technology. Energy conservation and diversification is a long-range plan for global energy security. The international community should strive to develop and popularize energy conservation technology, promote the comprehensive utilization of energy, and encourage each country to improve energy efficiency. It is necessary to actively advocate cooperation in highly efficient utilization of fossil fuels, such as clean coal technology, encourage cooperation of the international community in major energy technologies, such as renewable energy, hydrogen energy and nuclear energy, and explore for the establishment of a future world energy supply system using resources that are clean, economical, safe and reliable. Aiming at the sustainable development of humanity, the international community should handle well the problems concerning capital input, intellectual property rights protection and popularization of advanced technology, so as to benefit all countries and allow them to share humanity's achievements. -- Maintaining a safe, stable and wholesome political environment. Safeguarding world peace and regional stability is the prerequisite for global energy security. The international community should work collaboratively to maintain stability in oil producing and exporting countries, especially those in the Middle East, to ensure the security of international energy transport routes and avoid geopolitical conflicts that affect the world's energy supply. The various countries should settle disputes and resolve contradictions through dialogue and consultation. Energy issues should not be politicized, and triggering antagonism as well as the use of force should be avoided. Conclusion In the course of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects that benefits 1.3 billion people of China, energy has a significant bearing on China's economic and social development. It is a long and arduous task to use sustainable energy development to support the sustainable economic and social advancement. The Chinese government will strive to address the energy problem properly to realize sustainable energy development. Though China's energy consumption is growing rapidly, its per-capita energy consumption level is still fairly low -- only about three-fourths of the world's average. The figures for China's per-capita oil consumption and imports account for only one half and one quarter of the world's average, respectively, far below the level of the developed countries. China did not, does not and will not pose any threat to the world's energy security. China will continue to maintain its sustainable energy development and make it promote the sustainable development of the world's energy resources, thus making positive contributions to the world's energy security. Peace and development remain the themes of our era. Pursuing peace, seeking development and promoting cooperation have become an irresistible trend of the times. With the continuous economic globalization, rapid advances in science and technology, quickened flow of the factors of production as well as the accelerated changes of industries, all countries and regions in the world have intensified their interactions. The world needs to strengthen cooperation to safeguard global energy security. China will, together with all other countries, make unremitting efforts to safeguard the stability and security of energy supplies in the world, strive to achieve mutual benefit, win-win and common development, and protect this home human beings share. (China.orgspam December 26, 2007)
  20. There ARE some things that Should just be made in America. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.mysanantonio.com/business/stori...ll.1ad9790.html Web Posted: 12/04/2007 07:18 PM CST Adolfo Pesquera Express-News business writer A San Antonio-based Mexican candy distributor Tuesday voluntarily started recalling a liquid candy after testing by the Texas Department of State Health Services found elevated lead levels in it. Villa-Mex Imports Inc. is recalling Barrilito, a heavy syrup offered in several fruit flavors that is sold in a 3.3-ounce glass barrel-shaped jar with a white plastic lid. A yellow label displays the name Barrilito in red outline letters. Health Services advised Villa-Mex Imports — the only known distributor of the candy in Texas — of its results Monday, said Emily Palmer, a Health Services spokeswoman. The candy is distributed to groceries and convenience stores throughout Texas, she said. "It is called candy, but it is a dark syrup-like product that is usually eaten with a spoon," Palmer said. In August, the California Department of Health Services also requested a recall in that state of the same product after testing found elevated lead levels. Lead amounts more than 0.1 parts per million are considered a health hazard by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Samples in Texas had lead levels up to 0.132 parts per million, and in California they were 0.15 parts per million. Lead consumed by infants, children and pregnant women can delay mental and physical development and lead to learning deficiencies. Texas' Health Services said the problem was with the product, not with the distributor. Labels identify the manufacturer as "Productos Avila, S.A. de C.V. Puerto Malaque 1379 Col. Sta. Maria Guadalajara, Jal. Mexico."Sergio Villarreal, the person identified by a Villa-Mex employee as the owner, was not available Tuesday, and the employee refused to comment on the recall. During the past several years, there have been numerous recalls of Mexican-made candies. Testing by California's Health Services led to recalls in 2004 and 2005 of candies made by a Mars Inc. subsidiary and other manufacturers. Brands taken off the market then included Lucas Limon, Dulmex Rollito de Tamarindo and Tama Roca Banderilla.
  21. I had to ask the question, because us guys are like? Hummmm? This looks good, I will just use what my wife or girlfriend has.
  22. At least now there is hope. How ever with his tenure not over till 2012, he still has time to get this past one issue at a time. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationw...1,6173457.story Chavez bid to boost power fails Venezuelans nix sweeping changes By Oscar Avila | Tribune foreign correspondent December 3, 2007 CARACAS, Venezuela - For the first time, voters put the brakes on President Hugo Chavez's "socialist revolution" by defeating a referendum to expand presidential powers and eliminate term limits, election officials announced Monday. Two packages of proposals to overhaul the constitution each went down to defeat by margins of 51 percent to 49 percent, according to the National Electoral Council. The results were a stunning defeat for Chavez, who had never been on the losing side of an election since winning office in 1998. In the process, he had amassed control of nearly all the political institutions in this major oil-producing nation. Chavez congratulated a previously fractured opposition that was able to pull together university students, business leaders and even former Chavez loyalists. Opponents had warned that the laundry list of 69 constitutional provisions would create a de facto dictatorship. "I think the Venezuelan democracy is maturing. Each of these processes that we live, each election, allows our democracy to mature," a subdued Chavez said in a national television address from the Miraflores Palace. The referendum would have let Chavez seek re-election an unlimited number of times, suspend civil liberties in emergencies and appoint regional officials who would have stripped power from elected governors and mayors. The measures had caused bitter, and often violent, conflicts among an emboldened opposition and Chavez's loyal supporters who saw the changes as a way to keep moving power from the elite to grass-roots movements. Opponents, gathered at a meeting hall in a tidy Caracas neighborhood, had insisted that their own exit polls showed positive signs even after Chavez backers took to the streets, thinking their man had won. "We believe in the vote. We believe in elections. We believe in the construction of a new majority," said Leopoldo Lopez, mayor of the Chacao municipality. Trend 'not reversible' Human Rights Watch and other groups had criticized the measures that would have let the president suspend due process and other civil liberties during states of emergency. The referendum also would have ended the autonomy of the Central Bank. The National Electoral Council reported a generally peaceful day of voting. Council President Tibisay Lucena, ending eight hours of suspense that had the nation on edge, said around 2 a.m. that there were still uncounted ballots but that "analyzing the transmissions, up to now, it has been determined that this is a trend that is not reversible." Lucena urged citizens on both sides to remain calm. "Those who have to celebrate, do so with generosity. Those who have to mourn that their option did not win, go home peacefully," she urged. Several polls had found Chavez in danger of losing. But analysts thought he might pull out a victory thanks to his charisma and well-honed political organization. Turnout wasn't particularly high, according to the first reports, but leading opposition blocs vowed to participate instead of boycotting as in a 2005 legislative vote. Esther Maria Rincon, 43, waited in a line that extended more than a block at the Mariscal Sucre school in the middle-class Libertadores section of the capital. The wait stretched to three hours, but Rincon said she wasn't going anywhere. "Under no circumstances am I leaving before I cast my vote," said Rincon, a teacher who opposed the referendum. "If we don't vote, then they are going to take away so many of our liberties that we won't be able to breathe." Citizens in pro-Chavez slums had draped themselves in red for days to support a man many adore and whose image they display nearly everywhere in tribute. They took to the streets before dawn Sunday with loudspeakers blaring a reveille. In recent days, Chavez had threatened to send supporters to the streets if the opponents tried to challenge the results. He also said he would cut off oil exports to the U.S. if the Bush administration interfered. But Chavez sounded his first conciliatory note Sunday afternoon after voting at a school in the capital. Holding his infant grandson, Chavez said he was confident that the election would proceed smoothly and said he would respect the results. U.S. unsure of vote's integrity The election was complicated because major teams of international observers, such as the European Union and Organization of American States, were not present. U.S. officials said they could not be sure of the election's integrity. But smaller contingents, including foreign lawmakers and the NAACP, were on hand to monitor an election of about 16 million eligible voters. Julia Castillo, 28, said she found it difficult to make up her mind because she liked some measures, including reducing the workday from eight hours to six hours and creating a pension system for street vendors and other workers outside the formal economy. "I think a lot of voters were like me, going back and forth," said Castillo, a linguistics student. "It was hard when so much was in play." - - - Changes up for a vote The referendum before Venezuelan voters asked them to decide on 69 changes to the constitution. The revisions include: *Lengthening presidential terms from 6 to 7 years and eliminating term limits. *Redrawing the country's political map and allowing the president to select provincial and municipal leaders. *Allowing the president to declare a state of emergency for an unlimited period, as long as "the causes that motivated it remain." *Prohibiting foreign funding for "associations with political aims." Critics warn this could be used to strangle human-rights groups. *Granting the president control over the Central Bank, which previously had autonomy. *Reducing the official workday from eight to six hours. *Reducing the minimum voting age from 18 to 16. *Creating a fund to pay social security benefits for the first time to workers in the informal economy, such as maids and street vendors. -- Associated Press ---------- oavila@tribune.com
  23. On a side note; http://www.theconservativevoice.com/ap/art...80&apc=9002 Report due on Iran nuclear program ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.dawn.com/2007/11/27/int3.htm Iran rebukes Saudi Arabia over ME conference TEHRAN, Nov 26: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad chided Saudi Arabia for taking part in a US-hosted Middle East peace meeting, after Arab participation in the event left Tehran isolated, media reported on Monday.Ahmadinejad bluntly told Saudi King Abdullah in a telephone conversation that he wished the kingdom was not attending the conference alongside Israeli and Palestinian leaders starting on Tuesday in Annapolis, Maryland. “I wish the name of Saudi Arabia was not among those attending the Annapolis conference,” Ahmadinejad told the king late on Sunday, according to state news agency IRNA. “Arab countries should be watchful in the face of the plots and deception of the Zionist enemy,” he added. The Islamic republic — which has made non-recognition of Israel one of its main ideological themes — has been left isolated by the attendance at the meeting of Saudi Arabia and its chief regional ally Syria. More than a dozen Arab countries are sending representatives. Iraq’s presence is not confirmed and the Islamist Hamas movement which controls Gaza in defiance of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas is one of the few certain Arab absentees. “The US government, which is an accomplice to Zionist crimes, cannot play the role of saviour by hosting the Annapolis conference,” Ahmadinejad told the Saudi king. Saudi Arabia and other Arab states agreed on Friday to attend the conference, meaning the kingdom will sit at the same table with the Jewish state for the first time to discuss Middle East peacemaking. In another landmark move, Israeli foe Syria agreed on Sunday at the last minute to send Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad. Damascus had made its presence conditional on the inclusion of the issue of the Golan Heights, which Israel has occupied since 1967, on the agenda of the conference. Ahmadinejad on Sunday spoke by telephone to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, saying “only the true representatives of the Palestinian people can take decisions” on their future. Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also reaffirmed his condemnation of the conference, which he predicted was “doomed to failure”. “They hope the conference will help the usurping Zionist regime and save the honour of the Black House,” he said in a speech to militia volunteers, in a sarcastic reference to the White House. Tehran’s anger over the involvement of Riyadh in the conference is the latest hiccup in relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia that have not always been smooth. But the two regional heavyweights have worked to give an impression of unity in recent years, vowing to work together to end the political crisis in Lebanon and bring stability to Iraq. Ahead of the annual hajj pilgrimage next month, Iran has also been urging Saudi Arabia to crack down on religious extremism following reports of anti-Shia sermons and pamphlets in the kingdom. In July 1987, 402 people, mostly Iranians, were killed in clashes between Iranians and Saudi security forces during the hajj, an incident that cast a shadow over relations for years.—AFP
  24. Columbia needs our help. To the Democrats; SHOW SOME BACK BONE. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7112424.stm Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez says he has frozen his country's bilateral ties with neighbouring Colombia. The move follows the decision by Colombian President Alvaro Uribe to end Mr Chavez's role as a hostage negotiator with Colombia's Farc rebels. Mr Chavez said that the decision to end his mediation role was "a spit in the face" and denounced Mr Uribe as a liar. He also said he had frozen relations with Spain over a remark made by King Juan Carlos earlier this month. The king told Mr Chavez to "shut up" after the Venezuelan leader repeatedly interrupted the Spanish Prime Minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, during the final session of Ibero-American summit in Santiago. Mr Chavez later said the matter would be settled only if he received an apology from the king, whom he accused of "arrogance" and "impotence". But Venezuela's ambassador to Spain, Alfredo Toro, played down the spat after meeting Spain's top foreign ministry official for Latin America, Trinidad Jimenez, on Monday. "The two countries have a common future beyond ups and downs," Mr Toro said. Ms Jimenez said Mr Toro assured her there was no change in the countries' bilateral relations. 'Lamentable' The harsh exchange of words between Venezuela and Colombia began on Saturday, when President Uribe insisted he had ended Mr Chavez's involvement in the negotiations for speaking directly to Colombia's army chief despite being told not to do so. "They issued a statement yesterday filled with lies, and that is serious, very serious," Mr Chavez responded - in marked contrast to his reluctant acceptance of the initial announcement on Wednesday. "President Uribe is lying, and he's lying in a shameless way," he said. The Venezuelan leader said Mr Uribe had lied about the reason for the failure of the talks in order to avoid seeking a peaceful solution to the 40-year-long armed conflict with the Farc. "They have spat brutally in our face when we worked heart and soul to try to get them on the road to peace," he said. Mr Chavez said he had therefore decided to freeze Venezuela's relations with its neighbour and second-largest trading partner. "I declare before the world that I'm putting relations with Colombia in the freezer because I've completely lost confidence with everyone in the Colombian government," he said. "Everyone should be on alert with respect to Colombia," he added. "The companies that Colombians have here, the companies we have over there, commercial relations - all of that will be damaged. It's lamentable. "It's like the case of Spain - until the king of Spain apologises, I'm freezing relations with Spain." 'Expansionist project' The BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Bogota says President Uribe wasted no time in responding to the onslaught from his Venezuelan counterpart. His attack on Mr Chavez was less personal but equally devastating, our correspondent says. Mr Uribe accused the Venezuelan leader of not being interested in promoting peace in Colombia and insisted that Venezuela had expansionist plans that Colombia would resist. "The truth is, President Chavez, we need mediation against terrorism, not one that legitimises terrorism," he said. "Your words, your attitudes, give the impression that you are not interested in peace in Colombia, but rather that Colombia be a victim of a Farc terrorist government," he added. "If you are spreading an expansionist project in the continent, in Colombia this project will make no headway." The Colombian president said Mr Chavez had attempted to "set the continent on fire" by attacking Spain and the US, and by "mistreating" Mexico, Peru and Bolivia. "You can not mistreat the continent, set it on fire as you do, speaking about imperialism when you, on the basis of your budget, want to set up an empire."
  25. Yeap! Crime is Senseless. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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