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Analysis: Eye on Uzbek energy Washington (UPI) Dec 27, 2007
Since the 1991 collapse of Soviet communism, the 15 newly independent republics have been scrambling both to assert their newfound independence and assert their place in the post-communist world.
Yet legacies remain. The Russian Federation under President Vladimir Putin has consistently attempted to reassert Moscow's control over the post-Soviet sphere in countries of the former Soviet ... read more
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China to slap export taxes on grains as prices soar
Beijing (AFP) Dec 30, 2007China said on Sunday it will levy taxes on grain exports in 2008 in the latest move apparently aimed at reining in galloping inflation and ensuring stable domestic food supplies. The rates would range from five to 25 percent, according to a brief announcement posted on the website of the Ministry of Finance. The move goes even further than one China announced just two weeks ago, when it ... more Dwindling helium supply prompting concerns
New York (UPI) Dec 30, 2007 A looming helium shortage has some U.S. citizens concerned about the impact the gas' availability will have on parades and even research. While owners of U.S. party goods stores are concerned the rising cost of helium will directly impact their businesses, researchers such as Northwestern University Professor William Halperin are concerned about their research efforts, ABC News said Sun ... more Iran nuclear plant to start in summer 2008: FM
Tehran (AFP) Dec 30, 2007Iran on Sunday insisted its first nuclear power station would be launched in the summer of 2008, despite the plant's Russian constructors saying it will not go on line until the end of the year. "The Bushehr nuclear power station will launch at a capacity of 50 percent next summer," said Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, quoted by the state news agency IRNA. A Russian contractor is fi ... more SAIC Motor merger with Nanjing Auto aimed at global markets
Beijing (AFP) Dec 30, 2007The merger of two of China's state-run auto makers comes as its domestic market booms and as the quickly accelerating nation gears up to compete with top global brands, industry officials said. The merger announced Wednesday between Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp (SAIC), one of China's largest car groups, and rival Nanjing Auto is one of the biggest-ever tie-ups between mainland vehicle m ... more Analysis: Fuel curbs China combat ability
Hong Kong (UPI) Dec 28, 2007 By calculating the amount of fuel oil required by the Chinese navy and air force in a large-scale attack across the Taiwan Strait under high-tech conditions, it becomes apparent that such an assault could not be sustained for an extended period. For an attack on Taiwan, China would likely mobilize 10 fighter divisions of the PLA air force. In fact, only one to two regiments under each d ... more |
ENERGY TECH
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Tehran (AFP) Dec 28, 2007Russia has delivered a second consignment of nuclear fuel to Iran's Bushehr power plant, the official news agency IRNA quoted the deputy head of the Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation as saying on Friday. "The second consignment of fuel for the Bushehr nuclear plant arrived in Iran on Friday," Ahmad Fayazbaksh said, adding that the delivery was the same amount supplied in the first consignme ... more Outside View: Russia's Iran nuke role
Moscow (UPI) Dec 28, 2007 According to Zalmay Khalilzad, the permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, the Iranian Six -- the United States, Russia, China and the European trio of Britain, France and Germany -- have at last reached a consensus. The situation around the Iranian nuclear file reads like a crime novel, especially in view of the latest surprise moves by Tehran. Iran has found an o ... more Outside View: EU goes Russian nuclear
Moscow (UPI) Dec 28, 2007 After the EU gave its approval for the Russian-Bulgarian agreement on building a nuclear power plant in the small Bulgarian town of Belene on the bank of the Danube, the two countries are in the starting blocks waiting for the main treaty to be signed in late January 2008. The European Union gave the OK for the nuclear project between Moscow and Sophia after a thorough review by expert ... more Clean coal plants mired by cost and delays
Washington (UPI) Dec 27, 2007 Clean coal-fired plants offer a cleaner fuel source but construction costs and increased greenhouse gas standards in the United States hamper their production. Regulators canceled, suspended or refused several plans to develop clean coal-fired plants citing construction costs, technological pitfalls and regulation regarding greenhouse gas emissions, USA Today said Thursday. Clean ... more |
CIVIL NUCLEAR
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Tokyo (AFP) Dec 26, 2007Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda heads Thursday to China on a mission to further ease strains in relations between the Asian powers which hit rock bottom just a few years ago. Fukuda, a political veteran paying his first visit to Beijing since taking over in September, is hoping to show his skills as a diplomat after a sharp slide in his approval ratings at home. The Japanese leader ... more Illegal land grabs in China threatening food supplies: minister
Beijing (AFP) Dec 26, 2007Illegal land grabs are threatening food supplies in China as scarce farming land is destroyed to make way for industrial and urban development, a minister was quoted as saying on Wednesday. "The illegal acquisition of arable land (for purposes other than agriculture) has endangered food safety and social stability," Land and Resources Minister Xu Shaoshi said, according to the China Daily. ... more Anglican chief warns greed could wreck the Earth
London (AFP) Dec 25, 2007The leader of the world's Anglicans slammed "human greed" in his Christmas sermon, saying it threatened the Earth's fragile environmental balance. Doctor Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, told worshippers at Canterbury Cathedral in south-east England, that humanity needed to protect the world created by God. People should treat each other and nature with "reverence", the Chur ... more Old TVs bad landfill reception
Baltimore (UPI) Dec 24, 2007 When U.S. broadcasters switch to digital transmissions, millions of viewers will likely discard analog televisions creating a potential environmental disaster. Television sets contain toxic substances like lead, mercury and cadmium, and when televisions are sent to landfills or shipped to other countries for dismantling, those substances are sent with them, the Baltimore Sun reported./ ... more
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FARM NEWS
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