Author Archives: Jonathan Soroko

About Jonathan Soroko

Revived from the dead, 18-July-2013

First Solar-Powered Satellite: Vanguard I, 1958

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Image courtesy of NASA

The Vanguard I satellite was and is remarkable in a number of ways: it’s the fifth publicly known launched satellite, the first to use solar power, and, as of this writing, the longest-lasting artificial satellite, at 53 years and counting.

NASA diagram, courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

Six solar cells powered a 5-milliwatt transmitter (a second transmitter was powered by a battery). The solar powered transmitter lasted for six years.
This post is part of an occasional series through which we hope to investigate the progress and promise of solar power.  And its limitations.  So we’re looking for  data points, landmarks, so we can plot the vector of solar power over time. One of our first posts on Solar, “Staten Island Ferry – Sailing to the Future,” posted here, March 8, 2007, noted the 40 KW array on the Staten Island Ferry Terminal, at the base of Whitehall Street in New York City.

Promise and Progress of Solar Power

  1. First Solar Powered Satellite, the Vanguard 1, 1958, posted here, September 3, 2011.
  2. In Jersey Three Strikes Equals a Home Run, posted here, September 7, 2011.

"US court case reveals CIA rendition details" – BBC

The BBC reports that litigation between a charter company and an aviation company involving a fee dispute has led to new details of rendition flights. US court case reveals CIA rendition details summarizes the new details and previous disclosures from other sources, including leaked documents and reports from human rights organizations.

Some of the details noted by the BBC:

  • Airport invoices and other commercial records provide a paper trail for the movements of some terrorism suspects allegedly held in secret CIA prisons, along with government operatives who flew to the scenes of their detention.
  • The records include flight itineraries coordinated with the arrest of accused 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed and the suspected transport of other detainees.
  • The private jets were given US state department transit letters providing diplomatic cover for their flights.
  • The private business jets sometimes landed several times during a single mission, and in at least one case cost the US government as much as $300,000 for one flight.
  • The crew of one of the jets involved made expenses claims for items such as $20 sandwiches and $40 wine bottles, court documents published by the Guardian show.

There’s more in this excellent piece; we haven’t yet seen any coverage in other English-language outlets, but hope to. Any readers having seen other relevant reports are encouraged to share them in comments.

BBC News – After the sludge: Rebuilding Hungary's towns

 

After the sludge: Rebuilding Hungary’s towns

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14575564

By Nick Thorpe BBC News, Hungary

Last October a toxic waste spill from an aluminium factory swallowed homes in Western Hungary in what was the country’s worst environmental disaster. Nick Thorpe visited the town for One Planet from the BBC World Service to see what had become of its residents.

There is nothing to photograph beyond the stream in Kolontar anymore, just weeds and puddles and a track down the middle that turns right, then peters out on a piece of wasteground beside a ditch. It is astonishing how short a road appears when all the houses are gone. All that is left of Kossuth Street and Mill Street.

Erzsebet and Zoltan Juhasz walk down this way sometimes, to see where their home used to be. They even found a tomato plant, growing among the tall weeds where their garden was.

“I dug it up and replanted it in my new garden and now it’s full of fruit!” Erzsebet explains.

“It is the only light moment in a conversation about a subject which is still usually too painful to talk about – the moment when her 14-month-old daughter, Angyalka, was swept from her arms when a tidal wave of red sludge hit their house on 4 October last year.

As we speak in her new kitchen, another little girl, Dori, runs in, laughing hilariously, three years old, wanting to play. Seven-year-old Gergo comes in to listen solemnly to the grown-ups

His father asks him to go out again – both he and Erzsebet are crying – as they tell their story. But the boy stays, and Dori plays, and outside 13-year-old Renata stands by the slide. And Erzsebet is expecting a new baby, a boy, in November.

“We’ve very grateful for all the help we received, from the Red Cross, from the Baptist charity, from the state too, for giving us this house. I mean, they didn’t have to, did they? They could have waited for the aluminium company to pay up.”

Instead, the missing half of Kolontar has been rebuilt in record time, 21 brand new houses on the highest ground in the village.

Promise kept

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban promised when he came here to oversee the evacuation of the village on 9 October that everyone would be fully compensated, everyone would get new homes or the cash equivalent.

And to everyone’s surprise, the promise has been fulfilled, the houses are white and gleaming, each one slightly different, the woodwork is varnished, children are playing in the gardens again, and in the distance, Somlo Hill, Hungary’s table mountain, stands firm as a rock, rising out of the summer haze.

“I wouldn’t have wanted to move out of sight of that,” laughs Endre Csipszer, jabbing his finger at the horizon. We are standing in Devecser now, further down the valley from Kolontar.

Here there is a bigger housing estate, 87 new houses, each with flowers in the window, and workmen carrying new sofas and beds and kitchen furniture in through the door. “Look at all this… some even call it the golden sludge now.”

“We never dreamed of living in a new house, one like this,” says his partner Tereza, showing us from room to room. A few pieces of furniture they managed to salvage from the old house stand in one room. Otherwise, everything is new.

By the ruins of the post office in Devecser, we meet Tamas Toldi, the mayor. The post office is one of the last of nearly 300 buildings to be knocked down in his town, their walls and foundations fatally weakened by the caustic, alkaline waters of the disaster.

“This area in front of us will be turned into a beautiful memorial park,” says the mayor.

“There’ll be lots of park benches, playgrounds, fishermen fishing in the little ponds there. Behind that there’ll be a sportsground with a football pitch. And beyond that, a new light industrial park where we hope to develop renewable energy and create jobs for the town.”

Renewable energy, he stresses. “People here have had enough environmental destruction. It’s very important for them that any jobs created here are not at the cost of more damage to the environment.”

Compensation battle

In the fields between Kolontar and Devecser, the government commissioner for the agricultural rehabilitation of the area, Csaba Szabo, proudly shows us the maize crop, tall and dark green, growing in the middle of a valley at the centre of the path of the red mud.

“We had originally planned for the corn to be burnt as biomass, but the analyses show that it is safe to eat.”

So it will be fed as fodder to the cattle, after all. Nearby, there is a plantation of fast-growing poplars, in an area just before Devecser where the red mud once stood deepest.

Here, all the top soil was removed and replaced, and the poplars will be harvested in just two years’ time, as an energy crop.

People speak of the remarkable regenerative power of nature, and of the unexpected speed and generosity of the state, in a clean-up and rebuilding operation that has cost over $150m (£90.5m) so far, and still continues. But the government remains determined to get that money back from MAL Zrt, the aluminium company.

“For the company to be able to pay compensation to all the victims of this disaster, it is in our interest for them to continue production, to continue generating an income,” says Gyorgy Bakondy, the head of the Hungarian disaster management authority, who supervised the company until last month.

 

He also oversaw a switch from wet, red-sludge producing technology, to dry disposal of the waste.

Caught in a pincer movement of criminal claims, civil claims and the prospect of a massive fine for destroying the environment, the company is involved in discussions behind closed doors with the government.

So might there be an out-of-court settlement? I ask Zoltan Illes, secretary of state for the environment.

“There might be, easily,” he replies.

And if there is, that is likely to happen soon – before the first anniversary of the disaster.

via BBC News – After the sludge: Rebuilding Hungary’s towns.

 

See also, from the BBC:

BBC News – Nigeria blast eyewitness: 'I almost cried'

26 August 2011 Last updated at 10:14 ET Help

A car bomb attack has struck the UN building in the Nigerian capital Abuja, killing at least 16 people.

The powerful blast wrecked the bottom floor of the building.

A witness, named only as Raphael, spoke of his fear and anguish at the scenes he was confronted with.

Read More

via BBC News – Nigeria blast eyewitness: ‘I almost cried’.

BBC News – Iran embassy SAS commander John McAleese dies

 

 

Ex-SAS soldier John McAleese, who led the raid that ended the 1980 siege at Iran’s embassy in London, has died.

Mr McAleese, who was in his early 60s, died on Friday in Thessaloniki, Greece, the Foreign Office said.

The former sergeant led the team which blew out the building’s windows and rescued 24 hostages from gunmen.

His daughter said he had been reunited with his son, a soldier killed in Afghanistan. “Two great heroes taking their place in heaven,” she said.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “We are aware of the death of John McAleese, a hero who served his country bravely and professionally in a military career that spanned many years.

“Our thoughts are with his family and friends at this time.”

Millions of television viewers watched Mr McAleese and his team, dressed in black, storm the embassy on 5 May 1980 to end the six-day siege within 15 minutes of entering.

Six Iranian separatists took over the embassy and demanded the release of 91 political prisoners held in Iran as well as an aircraft to take them and 26 hostages out of the UK.

Then Home Secretary William Whitelaw ordered the SAS attack after the gunmen shot dead Iranian press attaché Abbas Lavasani and dumped his body outside the building.

During the SAS operation, five of the gunmen and one of the remaining hostages were killed.

BBC presenter

Hayley, 28, said her father – who went on to present the BBC programme SAS: Are You Tough Enough? – never got over the death of his son Serjeant Paul McAleese, 29, who was killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan in 2009 as he went to help a fatally injured colleague.

via BBC News – Iran embassy SAS commander John McAleese dies.

How Deficits In Planning Lead, Inevitably To Deficits

Photo courtesy of Liz Roll of FEMA, the FEMA Photo Library.

Follow LJF97 on Twitter Tweet  In New Orleans, during Katrina – or rather prior to Katrina – school buses weren’t accounted for in planning, either as a resource to be protected, or as a tool to be used in evacuation. The result:  insufficient resources for evacuation, and flood-damaged school buses requiring repair or replacement – and taxpayer funds.

When criminals incorrectly believe themselves to be

Assuming that these news reports bear more than a passing resemblance to available credible evidence,  Morris County, New Jersey prosecutors  and two unfortunate defense attorneys will have to deal with this disturbing fact-pattern. Most disturbing is that a young woman, the mother of a young child, predicted that her husband would kill her,  and communicated her fear to at least one family member before he  had her killed – and himself wounded in a staged shooting – in front of their three-year-old son.  The child is now an orphan who has witnessed his mother being killed, his father being shot, and will grow up, orphaned, knowing that his father was responsible for his mother’s death.

The father, one Kashif Parvaiz, when interviewed after the shooting, gave conflicting accounts within hours – the number and race of the assailants seems to have changed within hours.  Three men each of a different race changed to three African-American men. Assuming that Mr. Parvaiz did give both accounts within hours of the shooting, at best he’s demonstrated that he’s not a reliable witness; at worst, that he’s a liar and not very good at it.

Furthermore, he is reported to have repeatedly claimed

The husband of a young mother who was shot dead as they walked with their three-year-old son along a street in the US state of New Jersey has been charged with her murder. Kashif Parvaiz, 26, who was himself wounded in Tuesday’s shooting, said he and Nazish Noorani had been attacked by men who called them terrorists. But police say he and a woman, Antionette Stephen, plotted the murder. Prosecutors have not detailed the suspects’ relationship. According to an arrest affidavit seen by the BBC, Ms Stephen is suspected of pulling the trigger during the attack, in which the child was unharmed. ‘Inconsistent story’ She and Mr Parvaiz are in custody facing charges of murder, conspiracy and weapons offences. He is also accused of child-endangerment. Prosecutors said Mr Parvaiz and Ms Noorani, 27, had been visiting relatives in Boonton, northern New Jersey, on Tuesday evening when shots rang out. Ms Noorani died and Mr Parvaiz was taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries. According to the Morris County prosecutor, Mr Parvaiz told investigators they had been shot by a black male, a white male and a third unknown male, who shouted racist slurs. But inconsistencies emerged in his story under questioning, authorities said. He later said that they had been attacked by three black males, according to the arrest affadavit. Under further questioning, Mr Parvaiz said he did not intend for this to happen, that he did not want to go to jail, and that he should control his anger so this did not happen again. “Within hours of the crime, it was obvious to investigators that this was sadly the alleged handiwork of the victim’s husband, who allegedly did the unthinkable and plotted to murder his wife after a religious celebration,” Morris County prosecutor Robert Bianchi said in a statement. Ms Noorani, a native of Karachi, Pakistan, and Mr Parvaiz, from Brooklyn, were reportedly wed in an arranged marriage six years ago. According to the affidavit, Ms Noorani had recently sent to her brother a text message, which read: “Someday u will find me dead but its cuz of kashi… He wants to kill me..” Mr Parvaiz had told family and neighbours that he was attending graduate school at Harvard, but the school has no record of him studying there. Ms Stephen, a native of India, is an employee at a Best Buy store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, according to US media.

Percentage of population without health insurance by state, 2009

Percentage of population without health insurance indicated by darker tone

 

 

From Wikipedia’s article, Health Insurance Coverage in the United States.

The shaded  areas indicate percentage  of population without health  insurance coverage, with the darkest shading indicating the highest rates of population without insurance.
 20–27%
  16–20%
  14–16%
  10–14%
  4–10%

Taliban attack shows increasing sophistication

The BBC has  reported that a Taliban attack on a British compound in Kabul has killed at least a dozen people.  Attack on British Council compound in Kabul kills 12 .  What’s particularly disturbing is the coordinated nature of the attack, which involved at least three elements:  one force which staged a diversionary attack nearby, a suicide car bomb  attack which breached the compound perimeter wall, and a third force of armed attackers, which entered through the breach created by the car bomb.

Gunmen have stormed the British Council office in the Afghan capital, Kabul, killing at least 12 people and taking over the compound for hours.  A suicide car bomb destroyed the compound wall and a number of heavily armed men forced their way inside.  After several hours of gunfire and blasts, the UK’s ambassador in Kabul said all the gunmen had been killed.   The Taliban said the attack marked the anniversary of Afghanistan’s independence from the UK in 1919.   There has been some confusion about the number of people killed in the Kabul attacks.

At least eight Afghan policemen and a New Zealand special forces soldier were killed, officials from both countries said. Three security guards also died, the Afghan interior ministry told the BBC.   UK Prime Minister David Cameron condemned the “cowardly attack”, saying he had spoken to New Zealand Prime Minister John Key to thank him for the role the country’s special forces had played in defending the compound.

PhotoBlog has an outstanding set of images taken immediately after the attack.  

Here’s additional detail from the BBC report:

Friday’s strike was a three-phase attack, intelligence sources told the BBC. First, a suicide attacker detonated his explosive vest at a square in western Kabul where police were guarding a key intersection shortly after 05:30 (01:30 GMT). Ten minutes later, a suicide car bomber detonated his vehicle outside the front gate of the British Council, destroying a wall, which allowed the attackers into the compound.  A number of Afghan policemen were feared to have been buried in the rubble.
As the area was evacuated, local shopkeepers said as many as nine insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades, heavy machine guns and AK-47s started firing as they ran towards the British Council building.  Afghan and Nepalese guards fought the attackers until help arrived in the form of Afghan commandos and New Zealand special forces.  A lone injured gunman managed to hold out in an area protected by armoured doors and glass before was he killed eight hours after the attack began, Afghan intelligence officials said.

Several aspects of this attack are worth noting.

  • The coordination and sophistication of the attacks suggest  substantial training – and possibly sophisticated facilities, such as live-fire ranges (shooting houses).
  • If the Taliban are increasing the sophistication and variety of their attacks and techniques, we’re going to have up our game as well – but by being smarter, more flexible and make as many allies as possible.
  • The increased sophistication of the attacks – using diversions – suggests the use of some sort of communications equipment perhaps mobile phones – which might provide investigative and intelligence leads.
  • The use of a car bomb not merely as an end in itself, but to breach a perimeter, underscores the difficulty of defending a static position against a sophisticated attack by skilled attackers.

Electric Vehicle breaks 1000-miles, setting new distance record

Charis Michelsen, writing on GAS 2.0, reports that the Offenburg University of Applied Sciences (Germany) has broken the distance record for electric vehicles:

Electric vehicles records are dropping like flies these days, as more and more vehicles push the boundaries of what’s possible for electric cars, boats, and planes.  The latest to fall:  the record for longest drive ever in a battery-powered vehicle (no recharge) was broken last weekend by a new, experimental electric vehicle called “Schluckspecht” (“heavy drinker” in colloquial German).

Developed at the University of Applied Sciences in Offenburg, the car – which is not pretty – does a solid Energizer bunny routine, going and going and going for 1631.5km (1013.77 miles) without needing to recharge the battery.

The test drive took place in Boxberg at the Bosch corporate test track, where a team of four drivers made the record run alongside a camera-equipped pace car. The 36 hour and 12 minute drive (which didn’t exactly break any EV speed records) was also monitored by European testing agents from TÜV Süd.

This world record follows the team’s successful participation in the South-African Solar Challenge 2010, in which the Schluckspecht drove 626.6km (389.35 miles) on public roads – farther (at the time) than any other electric vehicle.

The Schluckspecht boasts little in the way of creature comforts, a fact which helped reduce overall weight and was no doubt helpful during its record-setting drive. However, the engineering behind its design also played a large part in its success, as the Schluckspecht was built from the ground up specifically to chase battery-powered vehicle records in a lab belonging to Ms. Sunmin Lee from Pforzheim University. The body was shaped with “pure aerodynamics” in mind, and – since the vehicle makes use of two wheel-mounted hub-motors – without the need to accommodate an internal engine or transmission.

Source: Gas 2.0 (http://s.tt/132cX)

 

U.S. settles with whistleblower Bunny Greenhouse

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 Below is an excerpt from Erik Eckholm’s piece in the Times, noting the settlement of litigation between Bunnatine “Bunny” Greenhouse and DOD for retaliatory action after her objections, in 2005, to the Halliburton/KBR no-bid contract for logistical support in Iraq. Greenhouse had been the Chief Contracting Officer for the Army Corps of Engineers. She’d previously had a perfect record of performance ratings.

More here

Her primary objections:

  • the study rationalizing the sole-source KBR contract was itself outsourced – to Halliburton/KBR, which recommended itself as the sole source;
  • Even if the contract’s premise was justified for the first few months on emergency grounds, it didn’t make sense for a multiyear, potentially indefinite contract.

Which raises the question of how much work KBR/Halliburton are doing now in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere for DOD, CIA, et cet.  We note the it’s KBR’s former CEO, and later the United States Vice President, who made famous the phrase “undisclosed location.” (For readers from Brooklyn, “undisclosed location” roughly translates to “going to the mattresses.”) KBR is currently, publicly, one of two logistics contractors in Iraq – but classified contracts are, by definition, outside the scope of public review – and for practical purposes – outside the scope of Congressional review.

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Iranian Scientist Rezai-Nejad Gunned Down at Home – NYTimes.com

Gunmen riding motorcycles fatally shot an Iranian scientist in front of his house in Tehran on Saturday, Iranian news agencies reported. It appeared to be the latest in a series of attacks that Iranian authorities have called an assassination campaign directed by Israeli, American and British intelligence agencies against the country’s nuclear program.

The scientist, Darioush Rezai-Nejad, 35, died, and his wife was wounded and taken to a hospital, the news reports said. They also gave varying descriptions of his expertise, with some describing him as an electronics specialist who worked with Iran’s Defense Ministry. It was uncertain what role, if any, he played in Iran’s nuclear program, which American experts believe is aimed at developing a weapons capacity. Iran denies that it is trying to build a nuclear bomb.

According to the semi-official ISNA news agency, Mr. Rezaeinejad was a doctoral student at Khajeh Nasroldeen Toosi University.

ISNA quoted Safarali Baratloo, political-security deputy for the Tehran’s governor’s office, as saying that whether Mr. Rezai-Nejad “is a nuclear scientist is currently under review and we are not certain.” In earlier reports, several Iranian news outlets identified him as being involved in Iran’s nuclear program but later hedged or backed away from that identification.

The shooting came amid Western concerns that Iran may be accelerating its production of nuclear materials to get closer to being able to make a weapon. The expanded effort is overseen by Fereydoon Abbasi, the nuclear physicist who runs the country’s Atomic Energy Organization.

On Nov. 29 Dr. Abbasi was driving to work when a motorcyclist approached and attached an explosive device to the door of his car. The physicist rushed away, pulling his wife with him, and they escaped with minor injuries.

But on the same day, Majid Shahriari, a colleague on the faculty of Tehran’s Shahid Beheshti University, was killed in a similar attack, and his wife and driver were injured. Iranian authorities said Professor Shahriari had managed a major nuclear project.

via Iranian Scientist Rezai-Nejad Gunned Down at Home – NYTimes.com.

Boing Boing

City officials in Fukushima, Japan sowed sunflower seeds Wednesday at a plaza in the city as part of efforts to remove radioactive materials from the soil following leaks and meltdowns at a nearby nuclear plant, following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. — Xeni • Comments: 24

via Boing Boing.

Power Line Policy Passed by Energy Regulatory Commission – NYTimes.com

Once again, Matt Wald of The Times explains what’s happening with our energy infrastructure:

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators laid down principles on Thursday for planning and paying for new power lines, part of a long-term policy effort to help the nation’s electricity grid grow enough to meet the demands of renewable energy and a competitive electricity market.

The rule, which has been in the works for several years, is intended to push the organizations that manage the grid into cooperating with one another, so that developers can build power lines across several states and multiple electrical jurisdictions.

Such cross-jurisdictional transmission lines are becoming more important as states seek to reach their goals of integrating large amounts of wind and solar power,  generally available in remote deserts and mountaintops, into the energy mix.

While generators of power, including renewable energy advocates, generally praised the rule, others were wary and said it could impose big costs on people who get no benefits.

But it has long been clear to grid experts that the existing transmission lines will not allow for a free market in electricity in which generators can compete across vast distances to supply customers, or for meeting state renewable energy goals. Existing rules make it very difficult for a company seeking to build new transmission lines to establish how it will recoup its costs.

The new rule, passed unanimously on Thursday by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, does not specify what the formula should be for allocating costs, or precisely how new lines should be planned. But it does lay out general guidelines, including the notion that the costs should be borne by those who benefit.

The commission also issued an implicit threat: if grid organizations do not enable the construction of badly needed new transmission lines, federal regulators will do it for them.

Jon Wellinghoff, the chairman of the commission, cited a prediction that until 2019, 60 percent of new generating capacity will be wind and sun, often distant from population centers.

via Power Line Policy Passed by Energy Regulatory Commission – NYTimes.com.