Showing posts with label energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label energy. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2012

HEALTH / DIET - Good foods to diet - ROMANIA






 What would you do to fit into the pattern of a star? Unfortunately, your body structure can not dictate it at birth. But in addition to the extra pounds you can fight. Here's what to include in the diet in order to reach the desired shapes! Diet can help you lose weight, but not neglecting exerciseit physically. Recent scientific studies have shown that the intake of calories is not necessarily higher in obese than persons of normal. What differs are energy losses and saith that fats are much lower in overweight.

Grapes give you energy
In place to kill time munching a packet of biscuitswhich definitely do yourself are doing well, eating grapes. They shall not be submitted as hard as pastry products and, in addition, give you energy as compared with activities you do during the day. The grapes are sweet, but as long as you don't exaggerate their consumption, they do offer a good tonus and successful hunger kidding. One hundred grams of grapes contain only 70 calories.

Weaken with potatoes
Potatoes are very good if you want to weaken. You capture this news? Well,No problem are potatoes, but the manner in which they are prepared. And just maybe, Without fries they are rich in fatand you see when getting on the scales. But if you do it in the oven or boiling anger, they are very good for your diet. Also, try not to combini with meat and bread. Potatoes contain only 97 calories.

For dessert, a chocolate pătrăţică
If you lust for sweet and not one can master with vegetables and fruit, 20 grams of black chocolate are a great way to pamper yourself generous. She will bring fewer calories than a serving of ice cream, cake or pudding. And to be complete, you tacâmul asezona with a natural fruit juice made in house.

Curds, source of protein
If it is made from skimmed cow's milk, fresh cheese is a good source of vitamins, calcium and protein. A serving of 100 grams contains 56 calories. You want to give a special flavor and taste delicious? When is it okay to a combini with fruits and vegetables, such as grapes, walnuts, roşia, cucumbers and peppers. Also, don't forget to expend two liters of water.

Friday, June 15, 2012

ENVIRONMENT - UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

Carbon baseline numbers in by year’s end

Early target set to slash 5 million tonnes of CO2 yearly

Dubai desalination plant

Dubai: A bid to measure the amount of carbon emissions produced by Dubai’s biggest industrial, government and energy entities should have its first set of hard statistics collected by the end of the year, say officials.
With hard numbers in hand, officials with the Dubai Carbon Centre of Excellence (DCCE) can then monitor, review and verify CO2 statistics to create a carbon baseline inventory giving authorities an accurate snapshot of how much carbon is being released throughout the emirate.
Preliminary targets have set carbon emission limits per year in Dubai at five million tonnes.
“Today, we’re checking the baseline,” said Waleed Al Ahmad Salman, chairman of the DCCE, in an exclusive interview on Tuesday. “We need to know what Dubai is producing in each sector. Each entity will keep a record of their emissions and then we will build a strategy with a target.”
Once identified, carbon emissions will be cut through a variety of programmes ranging from using new desalination pumps and waste heat recovery to newer technology in aluminium production.
 
The UAE ranks within the top third countries globally for its footprint given that the country depends heavily on electricity to not only power homes and industry but also to power desalination plants to keep its desert cities quenched.
To help reduce dependence on carbon-producing plants, leaders have rolled out the Dubai Integrated Energy Strategy 2030 to cut demand by 30 per cent, said Salman.
“We’re trying to build a platform to meet 30 per cent in energy reduction by 2030,” he said. “We’re looking not to expand capacity but looking to make plants more efficient and clean.”
Part of the strategy to slash greenhouse gases is working to educate the public consumer on alternative ways of reducing electricity in the home, he said.
“We’re putting in a huge effort to reduce demand. If we can change this behaviour, we can reduce the amount of energy we use, Salman said.
Several projects by DCCE now in the planning stages will target consumers such as an exchange programme that offers energy-saving Compact Fluorescent Light (CFL) light bulbs that use 50 per cent less energy.
Ivano Iannelli, CEO of DCCE, said once the greenhouse data is collected by year’s end, the DCCE will share the information with its entity partners to help them make decisions on how best to cut CO2 production.
“We’re looking at sources of the raw data. We’re transferring knowledge to empower entities and government to work with us,” Iannelli told Gulf News. “We’re trying to add intelligence to these numbers.”
The DCCE was officially launched January 18, 2011 under the Supreme Council of Energy.

Monday, June 4, 2012

ENVIRONMENT / GREEN LIVING - UNITED KINGDOM

Build more turbines: poll shows public wants wind farms

George Osborne hopes to cut wind turbine subsidies because his MPs fear their constituents oppose them. But new polling proves their antipathy is hot air

 

Seven people in 10 want more wind farms built across the countryside to meet Britain's energy needs – despite a high-profile political backlash which jeopardises their future.
The Treasury is considering cuts of up to 25 per cent in subsidies for on-shore wind farms after intense lobbying from countryside campaigners and rural Conservative MPs.
Critics claim that the turbines – many built in picturesque places – cause significant noise pollution and would be economically unviable without such large government handouts.
But a ComRes poll for The Independent reveals surprisingly strong public support for wind farms: 68 per cent of the public believe that new wind farms are "an acceptable price to pay" for greener energy in the future.

Younger people are more supportive than older, with almost 80 per cent of those aged between 18 and 44 backing wind farms, compared with 59 per cent of those aged 45 and over.

The findings will encourage the Liberal Democrats, traditionally greenest of the three main parties, who are determined the Coalition does not falter in its drive for more renewable energy.

The ComRes survey results run counter to recent developments which have seen conservation charities, such as the National Trust and the Campaign to Protect Rural England, come out against the proliferation of wind farms in the countryside.

Last week a High Court judge ruled that villagers' right to preserve their landscape was more important than the Government's renewable energy targets.

Lincolnshire County Council is planning to use the judgment to become the first county council in Britain to prevent wind farms being built in its area, and more local anti-wind moves are expected. The growing sense of revolt is making itself felt within the Tory party – more than 100 Tory MPs wrote to David Cameron in February calling for a cut in the £400m-a-year subsidy for onshore wind farms, warning that they blight the countryside.

At the weekend it was reported that the Chancellor, George Osborne, is responding to back bench pressure over the issue by planning major cuts in the subsidies of up to 25 per cent.

Yet our poll shows that beyond rural communities, which are directly affected, and the Conservative back benches, wind turbines remain remarkably popular. Some 68 per cent of people agree with the statement, "Building new wind farms is an acceptable price to pay for greener energy in the future", while 23 per cent disagree. and 9 per cent are "don't knows".

The younger generations are more likely to agree than older people. Some 79 per cent of those aged between 18 and 44 agree, compared with 59 per cent of those aged 45 and over.

There are also differences on party lines. Some 70 per cent of people who voted Liberal Democrat at the 2010 general election and 69 per cent of Labour voters agree that that wind farms are an acceptable price to pay, a view shared by only 58 per cent of Conservative voters. And 72 per cent of those in London and the South-east agree, compared with 68 per cent in the North of England, 67 per cent in the Midlands, and 63 per cent in Wales and the South-west.

The ComRes findings will encourage the Liberal Democrats, traditionally the greenest of the three main parties who, led by Energy Secretary Ed Davey, successor to the robustly pro-wind Chris Huhne, are determined that the Coalition does not water down its renewable energy drive.

Mr Davey is likely to be directly at odds with Mr Osborne inside the Cabinet, as Mr Huhne was before him, over the Chancellor's attempt to cut wind subsidies, in response to growing pressure within the Conservative party (and back bench anger at the list of budget U-turns).

Wind farm opponents are riding the crest of a wave. They were jubilant last week when Mrs Justice Lang ruled that the Government's renewable energy targets did not outweigh the right of the villagers of Hemsby in Norfolk to preserve their landscape.

The judge said that building four 350ft turbines, a proposal from the company Sea & Land Power and Energy which had already been rejected by both council and government inspectors, would harm the character and appearance of the beauty spot on the edge of the Norfolk Broads.

There are 3,144 onshore wind turbines in Britain, in just over 300 wind farms, with another 500 turbines offshore.

Rob Norris, a spokesman for RenewableUK, the trade association representing the wind industry, said: "This poll is evidence of the true level of support for wind energy in the UK. Although there's a vociferous minority who don't support renewable energy, the better-informed majority understand the many benefits."