Monday, January 11, 2010

Nuclear is the best and cleanest way to solve our power needs

Sunday 10 January 2010 20.32 GMT
Anti-nuclear protesters in Germany

Protesters carry a mock-up of a nuclear waste drum during a demonstration against Germany's nuclear power policies. Photograph: Theo Heimann/AFP/Getty Images

The health dangers from nuclear radiation have been oversold, stopping governments from fully exploiting nuclear power as a weapon against climate change, argues a professor of physics at Oxford University.

Wade Allison does not question the dangers of high levels of radiation but says that, contrary to scientific wisdom, low levels of radiation can be easily tolerated by the human body.

Most scientists who have responded disagreed with Allison's conclusions, but his comments have highlighted the lack of understanding of how the body deals with low doses of radiation, a crucial issue given it is increasingly used in modern medical procedures such as scanning and cancer treatment.

Nuclear crises, from the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to the meltdown of a nuclear reactor at Chernobyl, have created widespread fear and distrust of nuclear power, and global pressure to keep radiation at the lowest possible level, according to Allison, a particle physicist who makes his arguments in a self-published book, Radiation and Reason. He says long-term data on the health of survivors of the atomic bombs have demonstrated how good the human body is at protecting itself from radiological and chemical attack.

"The ability to repair damage and replace cells, we discovered in the last 50 years, show how radiation doesn't cause damage except under extreme circumstances," he says. "The radiation that a patient gets in one day from a course of radiotherapy treatment, it would take a million hours of exposure for someone standing in the radioactive waste hall of Sellafield. And, if you have radiotherapy, it goes on for several weeks."

Ionising radiation, the type from nuclear reactions, can break strands of DNA in cells and these can make a cell cancerous unless the body's machinery can fix the damage. Scientists have used data from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, plus that from experiments on animals and cell cultures, to create a measure of how much damage is caused by high levels of radiation. This has then been extrapolated back, in a straight line, to estimate the potential damage from low levels of radiation to create what is called the linear non-threshold (LNT) model.

"The problem with a lot of these discussions is that you eventually get to the point where you don't have any more data," said Professor Gillies McKenna of Oxford University, Cancer Research UK's expert on radiation oncology. "Even the data from Hiroshima and Nagasaki – there weren't enormous numbers of cancers created in those cases, so we have to extrapolate what we think would happen at low dose."

Since the end of the second world war, scientists have worked on the basis that there is no dose of radiation so low that it is not dangerous. Allison, however, believes there is a threshold below which any radiation exposure is fully repaired by the body – but this is a view mainstream scientists disagree with.

"I wouldn't say Allison's ideas are fanciful but when you weigh up all the evidence, the scientific authorities come to the conclusion that the LNT dose-response relationship for low doses is the best we can do," says Richard Wakeford, an epidemiologist specialising in the health effects of radiation at the University of Manchester.

Allison's hypothesis assumes that all of the DNA damage caused below a threshold of radiation dose can be fixed by the cells' internal machinery. "I can't see and nor do the majority of experts in the field how these processes can be 100% effective," said Wakeford.

"Radiation is particularly effective at causing double-strand DNA breaks, which make it difficult for the repair mechanisms in the cells to repair them properly."

Where McKenna and other scientists do agree with Allison is that fear of radiation is a problem. McKenna's expertise is in the use of radiation to kill cancer cells. "People become so fearful of radiation that they avoid diagnostic tests that might save their lives or avoid radiotherapy when they have cancer that is much more likely to kill them than exposure to radiation. He is right that it has become a little bit hysterical. People are now avoiding CT scans or avoiding building nuclear power stations when in most aspects, radiation is a very useful thing."

Half of cancer patients will be given radiotherapy and more than half of those will be cured by it, McKenna said. "In most instances, where you use radiation – certainly in medicine and in most other forms of industry – the benefits greatly outweigh the risks."

Treatment involves a dose of radiation directed at the cancer cells which is 10 to 20 times the dose that would be fatal directed to the whole body.

Some areas of the country, such as Devon and Cornwall, have naturally high levels of radiation in the rock, and yet they do not have high incidence of cancer. "It would suggest to me that we can tolerate relatively higher doses of radiation, unless you add things on top like smoking," said McKenna, adding that there were good scientists on both sides of the debate, "but you reach a point where you can't generate the data you need and I do think we need to be careful not to exaggerate the risks and increase the fears."

Nothing has generated quite as much cancer concern in the UK as Sellafield power station in Cumbria. Concern about radiation leaks at the plant, known as Windscale when it was commissioned in 1956, grew over the years until in 1983, Yorkshire Television produced a documentary called The Nuclear Laundry, suggesting low-level radiation emissions posed a risk. In the 1990s clusters of childhood leukaemia cases were identified near the site.

Investigating those concerns has been the preoccupation of Comare, the government's expert committee on the medical aspects of radiation, since it was set up in 1985. After years of painstaking work and many reports, it has yet to establish a link between radiation and childhood leukaemia. The evidence for some sort of infection, possibly caused by the movement from one area to another of people working at the plant, is far stronger.

Comare's chairman, Alex Elliott, a professor of clinical physics at Glasgow University, says there is a wide spectrum of views on the dangers of low-level radiation. "There are those who believe people like me are part of an international conspiracy to hide the dangers of radiation from the public," he said. At the other end are the believers in "radiation hormesis", who say we live in a beneficent soup of low-dose radiation, which is essential for life and may even prevent cancer deaths.

Elliott steers a middle path. "The Comare view, along with the consensus worldwide, is that the current risk estimates are broadly correct," he said. "They keep being revised but if they are wrong, it is by no more than a factor of two or three in each direction." And, he said, "we believe the linear hypothesis should continue to be used."

It is almost impossible, he said, to carry out experiments that would prove that low-level radiation is dangerous or is not, because the risks are so small.

But radiation generates fear, he said. "Because we can't see, hear, smell or touch it, we are much less tolerant of radiation than anything else. We are definitely hysterical about radiation. We go to enormous lengths on the precautionary principle.

"I don't know how many people are killed on the roads each year, but we live with that. We're not thinking of banning trucks. We're incredibly bad at risk-benefit analysis."

But Wakeford said that calculating the risks of low-level radiation is becoming increasingly important. "One of the big issues today is just how you manage these new, relatively high-dose diagnostic procedures like CT scans. This is probably the big issue as far as low doses are concerned. In the US, remarkably, the average citizen receives more dose from medical diagnostic procedures than he receives from background radiation, which is a dramatic increase from the last time this was assessed about 20 or so years ago. When you come to make an assessment about balance of risk about whether to give a child a CT scan or not, these are real considerations, not hypothetical at all."

Comare, in a rare respite from studying leukaemia clusters at nuclear installations, recently produced a hard-hitting report on sunbeds, calling for a ban on their use by under-18s. "At the minute, it would appear that more people are damaged by sunbeds than by nuclear power in the UK," Elliott said.

Reasons to be fearful? Expert views

Mike Clark, scientific spokesman for the Health Protection Agency

"There is an international scientific consensus about the health effects of ionising radiation which is based on decades of research worldwide. This is the so-called linear hypothesis, by which you extrapolate health effects observed at high doses to calculate risks at low doses. There are scientists who disagree with this and clearly Professor Allison is one of them. However there are also some scientists who claim the linear hypothesis can underestimate risks.

"The Health Protection Agency accepts the scientific consensus and bases its advice on recommendations from the International Commission on Radiological Protection."

Professor Steve Jones of Westlakes Research Institute, who published research on the health of the former British Nuclear Fuels workforce and the link between high radiation doses and heart disease

"One of the problems, is that the effect of radiation at low doses is very difficult to determine from observational science because the effects are small. The cancer risk to any group of people over a lifetime is 25% and if you look at whether radiation will increase over that you will struggle to get a clear result. Another reason to be cautious is because some studies suggest that the risk of radiation may be an increase in circulatory diseases as well. A good judgement based on all the scientific information available is it would be unwise to move away from what we have."

Richard Wakeford, visiting professor of epidemiology at the University of Manchester

"I do not find these arguments particularly convincing. I have to say, when I've reviewed the evidence, it is very difficult to detect the adverse effects of radiation at low levels because the predicted excess risk of cancer is small and is easily hidden in the noise of other factors like smoking and diet and drinking. All the people who hang on to these arguments are missing the point. If you take the evidence as a whole from radiation epidemiology, there's probably a risk from cancer arising from small doses of radiation they're around about what you get from a linear no-threshold dose response."

Susan Short, clinical senior lecturer in oncology at University College London

"I do have sympathy with the view that the effects of radiation have been overestimated but it reflects ignorance in the community about radiation; it's still portrayed as a dangerous unknown though we understand a lot about it really. People have such poor understanding of risk – these people who go and demonstrate against local nuclear power plants are the same as those who will happily smoke 20 cigarettes a day or lead high-risk lifestyles and don't see the irony."

Thursday, December 10, 2009

More recession on the way!


By Thomas Penny Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) — Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said the U.K. economy will recover from its longest recession on record next year as the government’s stimulus measures take hold. The finance minister forecast growth in 2010 to between 1 percent and 1.5 percent, the same as he estimated in March. He expects growth of about 3.5 percent in 2011 and 2012. For 2009, Darling forecasts the economy will shrink by between 4.75 percent, deeper than his March projection for a contraction between 3.75 percent and 3.25 percent. Trailing in opinion polls before an election that he must hold by June, Prime Minister Gordon Brown is balancing the need to clamp down on a record budget deficit while extending support to voters struggling in the deepest recession since 1980. “We must continue to support the economy until the recovery is established,” Darling said in a speech in Parliament in London today. “The choices are between going for growth or putting the recovery at risk. To reduce the deficit while protecting front-line services or cuts, which put these services in danger.” Darling, delivering his pre-budget statement, will announce his deficit projections later in the speech. In March he expected a shortfall of 175 billion pounds ($285 billion) in the current fiscal year, about 12 percent of gross domestic product and the most in the Group of 20 nations. Tax Plans He’s also planning to raise taxes on bonus pay earned by bankers and to maintain spending on health and education programs popular with voters, Treasury officials say. He confirmed he’d return value added tax to 17.5 percent at the end of this year from 15 percent. He also extended tax relief on empty properties, cut duties on bingo gaming and raised the basic state pension 2.5 percent from April. He also will increase disability benefits by 1.5 percent. Brown’s Labour government and David Cameron’s Conservatives both have promised measures to bonus payments in the City, London’s financial district. Where the two parties diverge is on just how quickly the government should curb the deficit. “We can’t solve the problem of the deficit straight away, but what there’s an absence of is a credible plan,” Conservative leader David Cameron said yesterday. “I don’t think anyone’s going to be impressed with a plan that doesn’t at least have some early action in it.” To contact the reporter on this story: Thomas Penny in London at tpenny@bloomberg.net


Read more from the original source:

Darling Says U.K. Economy Will Recover From Recession Next Year, Grow 1.5%



Faces of the recession: One year later (photos)


CNET revisits the people and places profiled in a series about the impact of the bad economy on different parts of the tech industry.


Read more …


Startup News & Technology | Faces of the recession: One year later (photos)


WASHINGTON - Le nombre de nouveaux travailleurs licenciés désirant obtenir les prestations de chômage a augmenté plus que prévu la semaine dernière, après avoir baissé pendant cinq semaines consécutives. Malgré cette augmentation, les demandes ont baissé régulièrement depuis cet été, un signe que les suppressions d'emplois sont à ralentir et à l'embauche pourrait reprendre dès l'an prochain au milieu d'une reprise économique générale. Demandes initiales d'assurance chômage a augmenté de 17.000 à une 474000 corrigées des variations saisonnières, le département du Travail a annoncé jeudi. Qui a été supérieur aux attentes des analystes de 460.000 nouvelles demandes. Des réclamations ont été en partie gonflé par un bond suivant la semaine de vacances de Thanksgiving, alors que de nombreux bureaux de chômage de l'État sont fermées, un analyste du département dit. Licenciements saisonniers dans l'industrie de la construction a également joué un rôle.


 

New Jobless Claims Rise to 474,000 After Falling For 5 Straight Weeks

WASHINGTON — The number of newly laid-off workers seeking jobless benefits rose more than expected last week, after falling for five straight weeks.

Despite the increase, claims have fallen steadily since this summer, a sign that job cuts are slowing and hiring could pick up as soon as early next year amid a broad economic recovery.

Initial claims for unemployment insurance rose by 17,000 to a seasonally adjusted 474,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. That was above analysts’ expectations of 460,000 new claims.

Claims were partly inflated by a surge following the Thanksgiving holiday week, when many state unemployment offices are closed, a department analyst said. Seasonal layoffs in the construction industry also played a role.

Economists closely monitor initial claims, which are considered a gauge of the pace of layoffs and an indication of companies’ willingness to hire new workers.

The four-week average of claims, which smooths fluctuations, fell to 473,750, its 14th straight decline and the lowest level since September 2008.

Still, claims will have to fall to about 425,000 for several weeks to signal the economy is actually adding jobs, according to many economists.

The number of people continuing to claim benefits fell by 303,000 to 5.16 million, the lowest level since February. The total unemployment benefit rolls have fallen in 11 of the past 12 weeks.

But the so-called continuing claims do not include millions of people that have used up the regular 26 weeks of benefits typically provided by states, and are receiving extended benefits for up to 73 additional weeks, paid for by the federal government.

About 4.6 million people were receiving extended benefits in the week ended Nov. 21, the latest data available. That’s an increase of about 130,000 from the previous week, and is partly due to an extension of benefits that Congress enacted last month.

The economy grew at a 2.8 percent pace in the July-September quarter and analysts say it is likely growing at a similar pace in the current quarter. But that is much slower than the average 6 percent rate in previous economic recoveries.

As a result, most economists expect the unemployment rate to rise in coming months and remain above 9 percent through the end of next year.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Monday that he expects “modest” economic growth next year. That should help push down the nation’s unemployment rate — now at 10 percent — “but at a pace slower than we would like,” he acknowledged.

The Labor Department last week said employers shed 11,000 jobs in November, much better than economists expected and below the 111,000 lost the previous month.

GDP contracted by 2.1 per cent in real terms in the third quarter of this year, the NSO said today. GDP had contracted by 3.2 per cent in the second quarter and 1.7 per cent in the first quarter.


It said that in terms of the production approach, growth in value added was registered in electricity, gas and water supply; financial intermediation; health; other community services; public administration; real estate, renting and business activities; agriculture; mining and quarrying; education and fishing.


Drops in value added were registered in the manufacturing sector; hotels and restaurants; transport, storage and communication; wholesale and retail trade; and construction.


In terms of the expenditure approach, GDP at constant prices declined by 2.1 per cent. Total final consumption expenditure in real terms increased by 0.6 per cent. Gross fixed capital formation at constant prices went up by 2.2 per cent.


Referring to the income approach, the NSO said that the rise in GDP at current prices amounted to €3.9 million. A €15.4 million rise in gross operating surplus of enterprises was however offset by a €4.4 million decline in compensation of employees, and a €7.1 million drop in net taxation on production and imports.


Gross national income at market prices for the third quarter of the year was estimated at €1,420.5 million.






No Comments







Write comment
















Write comment

Name


Email


URL (optional






Your comment












Monday, November 23, 2009

Could Bing pull this off?

Rupert Murdoch is pointing a gun to Google’s head, and Microsoft is helping him pull back the trigger. For the past few weeks, Murdoch and his officers at News Corp. have been very vocal about their distaste for Google and their desire to lead other media companies in a boycott of sorts.

Murdoch keeps threatening to stop letting Google index the WSJ.com and his other media sites, and wants other news sites to join him in this self-imposed silence. The folks at Microsoft’s Bing think this is a great idea. Not only that, but the FT reports that Microsoft is in fact in discussions with News Corp. and other publishers about the possibility of paying them to remove their sites from Google’s search index. This report comes on the heels of a meeting in Europe where Bing dangled the prospect of premium spots in search results to publishers and outright money for search R&D.

Microsoft is not afraid to buy search market share, which is what it’s doing with the Yahoo search deal and even its Cashback program. But with these latest talks, it is literally trying to buy the news, or at least exclusive access to the news.

Bing can’t buy all the news, it can only buy certain brands. If Bing can somehow become the only place you can find news results and working links to the Wall Street Journal and other top papers such as the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the LA Times, for instance, that would be a big reason to switch for a lot of folks. But it’s not clear how much Bing would have to pay the news companies of the world for them to give up all the traffic Google sends them in return for a fraction of that traffic and some cash.

Even Google couldn’t afford to strike such deals. Says Murdoch, of Google, “If they were to pay everybody for everything they took from every newspaper in the world, and every magazine, they wouldn’t have any profits left.”

In order to actually make a dent in Google’s market share, Bing would have to pay such exorbitant sums to so many different news companies that it would be difficult to recoup its investment. Bing certainly get some marketing buzz out of any such move, but that’s about it.

The big problem with a search engine trying to buy market share by buying parts of the news is that information spreads so quickly these days, exclusives last about 30 seconds. That information will end up on a site that is indexed by Google. Or the same news will be broken by someone else on the Web before the WSJ.com even gets to it.

Exclusive indexing goes against the Web’s inherent openness. Companies that try to curtail that openness don’t last long on the Web.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Still fighting: Adobe and Apple

Adobe engages Apple in passive aggressive warfare with iPhone's Flash message

Adobe's seemingly tried everything in its fight to get Apple to tear down enough development barriers to get Flash ported to the iPhone, culminating in a native compilation option in CS5 that... well, really doesn't solve much of anything. So far, nothing's worked. What's next? Get the masses fired up with some old-fashioned propaganda and let 'em riot down at One Infinite Loop, of course! Visiting Adobe's Flash download page from an iPhone now shows a pretty tersely-worded message informing the user that they're getting short-changed simply by Apple's refusal to budge, so yeah, if you hear an occasional cry of "this is outrageous, I'm writing Apple immediately!" while sitting at an airport gate or a coffee shop, you can safely guess what just happened.

[Via Gear Diary]

Monday, October 26, 2009

Scary trailer for THE FOURTH KIND inspires DARK SIDE to teach YOU how to defend against alien abductions (seriously)!

Scary trailer for THE FOURTH KIND inspires DARK SIDE to teach YOU how to defend against alien abductions (seriously)!

Posted on August 24th, 2009
Posted on August 24th, 2009


Like some kind of evil sequel to Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind, The Fourth Kind takes real file footage from supposed alien abductees under hypnosis in Nome, Alaska and fictionalizes their stories for the silver screen.

Milla Jovovich plays Abby, a shrink who discovers a disturbing similarity in her patients’ nightmares.  They all have visions of an owl at their window, paralysis, intense fear, yadda-yadda.  The deeper she delves into this mystery, the scarier it gets.  Under hypnosis, patients relive their terror as aliens abduct them and do God-knows-what to their helpless bodies.  From what the trailer suggests, Abby goes from bystander to victim as the aliens begin targeting her for abduction.

I did a quick online search and came up with no easy-to-find articles about a rash of alien abductions related to the film.  I did find a few message boards looking for info on Nome, Alaska abductions from people who likewise saw the trailer.  They’ve come up with zip so far.

It would appear we have another Blair Witch Project situation here.

I’m actually delighted about that.  They had me going for a second with the supposed “real footage” shown in tandem with the fictionalized footage of the same events.  I did notice that some of the supposed real footage had some some stagy CGI effects, so I knew it wasn’t all kosher.  It’ll be neat to see the hype build as it did for BWP, but of course it won’t receive a fraction of the unprecedented level of interest that BWP generated due to the fact that audiences aren’t quite as gullible as they used to be.

I recall the (mediocre) movie Fire in the Sky caused a bit of a stir as one of the most credible “real life” instances of alien abductions, told in a fictional setting.  The film set the standard for how abductions are visually portrayed and paved the way for shows like The X-Files to hit phenomenal levels of success.  It also caused a wave of hysteria amongst a great deal of people who thought they had likewise been abducted by aliens.

I’m not particularly moved by the idea of people believing they are abducted out of their beds by aliens for two reasons:  1. because everyone has seen versions of the case studies one way or another know the protocol well enough to fake it.   2. because “sleep paralysis,” also known as “the old hag effect” debunks 99.99999% of these cases.

In all seriousness, sleep paralysis used to happen to me on a regular basis, and if you’ve ever experienced it, it’s easy to see how someone could twist that experience into thinking something supernaturally nefarious has happened to them.  The details vary but the experience is universally the same.  While drifting off to sleep, a neurological hiccup in the sleep cycle causes the mind to stay lucid while the body goes into sleep mode, leaving the person temporarily paralysed.  In this state, the brain tries to initiate a dream, causing vivid auditory and sometimes visual hallucinations.

It’s a bit disconcerting at first but once you get used to it, it’s not so alarming.  If you can manage to relax and not panic, the experience can be quite interesting.  I’ve noticed I can will myself out of it by giving my brain the command to make my body twist back and forth.  After a few tries I can usually wrestle my body awake.  If I try to go back to sleep directly after that, the experience often repeats.  My personal hallucinations were quite predictable and detailed.  It always began with a funny noise, like the sound of my fan sputtering or the door to my room being opened.  Then it would sound like someone was in the room, walking around and making noises.  Sometimes I would hear voices and see strange things, but I kept calm so I saw nothing terrifying.  I’d wake up, sometimes with witnesses awake in the room, and everything was fine.  This all usually happened if I tried to take a nap during the day.

As you can see from this old painting, the term “old hag effect” came from days of superstition when people believed that sleep paralysis was an evil spirit, sitting on their chest and trying to steal their soul/breath.  One of the most common hallucinations was that of a scary, old woman or “hag.”  People would talk about it, then others would have the same hallucination.  Kind of like a mass hysteria of bad dreams amongst a bunch of people living within the same channels of communication.  Now we have come full circle in the modern age.  The “old hag” has become a “gray alien” and once again an explainable neurological phenomenon has become superstition.

That won’t keep me from enjoying or being frightened by this film.  The teaser is highly unsettling and I honestly don’t want to see anymore until its release.  No more spoilers for me.  I want to experience it clear of expectations.

P.S.  If you ever experience the “old hag effect” (or suddenly become paralysed and think you’re being abducted by aliens) do what I do:  Use your mind to imagine yourself twisting/rocking from side to side in bed.  Concentrate really hard and force it.  After several tries you’ll find yourself jolting awake and nearly rolling right out of bed.  Or can relax and enjoy it or at least try to wait it out.  Eventually you’ll drift into a regular sleep cycle…  as long as you don’t panic.

Just don’t let this super-scary trailer for The Fourth Kind psych you out into having one…

Thursday, October 22, 2009

The Obama Administration busts 1000's of drug smugglers

U.S. Arrests Hundreds in Raids on Drug Cartel

Calling it a “significant blow” to the operations of a major Mexican drug cartel, Attorney General Eric Holder announced on Thursday the arrests of 303 people and the seizure of illegal drugs, weapons and millions of dollars over the past two days in a series of coordinated raids in 19 states.

At a news conference in Washington, Mr. Holder said the raids were aimed at the United States operations of the La Familia Michoacán drug cartel, which he described as the newest and most violent of Mexico’s five drug cartels.

“While this cartel may operate from Mexico, the toxic reach of its operations extends to nearly every state within our own country,” he said.

In Dallas alone on Wednesday, he said, 77 people were arrested.

Beyond the arrests, Mr. Holder said, the authorities seized more than $32 million in United States currency, more than 2,700 pounds of methamphetamine, nearly 2,000 kilograms of cocaine, about 16,000 pounds of marijuana and 29 pounds of heroin during the 44-month effort. More arrests are expected.

“These are drugs that were headed for our streets and weapons that often were headed for the streets of Mexico,” he said. “That’s why we are hitting them where it hurts the most — their revenue stream. By seizing their drugs and upending their supply chains, we have disrupted their ‘business-as-usual’ state of operations.”

The arrests were part of “Project Coronado,” focusing on La Familia, which controls drug manufacturing and distribution, mostly of methamphetamine and cocaine. The group began several years ago as a vigilante organization aimed at removing the influence of drug dealers in the state of Michoacán, but it has evolved into a ruthless cartel itself.

It now competes with the Gulf and Sinaloa cartels, but La Familia is unusual in that its leaders espouse a religious philosophy and ask the core members of the organization to carry bibles and attend church. It recruits heavily from drug rehabilitation centers in Michoacán.

Monday, October 12, 2009

New Michael Jackson single 'This Is It' premieres at official site

New Michael Jackson single 'This Is It' premieres at official site

Relax News

' Michael Jackson's This Is It'

All Rights Reserved