Tag: Project

  • Biden expected to OK Alaska oil project — a blow to his green base

    Biden expected to OK Alaska oil project — a blow to his green base

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    Biden pledged to halt new oil and gas development on federal land during his 2020 campaign, and he and Democrats in Congress passed landmark climate legislation last summer aimed at weaning huge swaths of the economy off of fossil fuels. But the surge in oil prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced the administration into an awkward embrace of the oil industry, as Biden countered Republican accusations that his policies were to blame for the skyrocketing price at the gas pump that was stoking inflation.

    Approving Willow would be just the latest shift by Biden toward the political center as he moves toward a potential reelection bid. He similarly dismayed liberals last week by saying he would not veto a GOP-led repeal of changes to D.C.’s criminal code.

    The White House defended Biden’s environmental record Saturday in comments to POLITICO, saying Biden’s policies have made the U.S. “a magnet for clean energy manufacturing and jobs” with policies that help the U.S. come closer to meeting climate goals. A White House official said that using oil and gas is still consistent with Biden’s near- and long-term emissions targets, which the official said the U.S. is on track to meet.

    “This approach has not changed — nor will it. Our climate goals are cutting emissions in half by 2030 and reaching net-zero by 2050 — not 2023,” the official said. “That has always meant that oil will continue to be a part of the energy mix in the short-term while we shore up domestic clean energy production for the long-term.”

    Environmental groups acknowledged Saturday that they were largely in the dark about the White House’s plans, but said they believed that the current discussions inside the administration were largely over whether to limit the number of drilling sites at the Willow project to two rather than three. Conoco had proposed building five well pads.

    “It sounds like different groups in the White House are still discussing” the potential size of the project, said one environmental advocate who had been in contact with the administration late Friday.

    “They told us they had nothing to offer” on the state of project deliberations, added the person, who was granted anonymity to describe internal White House deliberations.

    But if the reports of the approval are true, Biden’s shift to the center on oil would threaten to demoralize the climate activists he needs to support him in 2024, said Jamal Raad, co-founder and senior adviser of the group Evergreen Action.

    “It will be harder for us and climate activists to rally around this president come next year,” Raad said, explaining the action would detract from his many accomplishments, such as the $370 billion in climate and clean energy incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act, while putting the onus on Biden to issue tougher environmental rules on cars and power plants.

    Conoco declined to comment until it hears a decision directly from the administration.

    Conoco Chief Executive Ryan Lance last week urged the administration to approve Willow, saying the project was in line with the Biden administration’s recent exhortations to the industry to increase oil production to help batten down prices.

    “This is exactly what this administration has been asking our industry to do over the last couple of years,” Lance told an energy conference in Houston.

    Regardless of the size, any plan would call for drilling oil and building miles of pipelines and roads, a gravel pit, an air strip and other infrastructure in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, a 36,875-square-mile patch of federal land in the relatively undeveloped Arctic wilderness. It would produce as much as 600,000 barrels of oil over its three-decade lifetime.

    The project would also add nearly 280 million tons of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere over that period, according to the Interior Department’s environmental analysis. That would be the equivalent of adding two new coal-fired power plants to the U.S. electricity system every year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency’s emissions calculator.

    The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, originally set aside by the Harding administration for potential oil drilling in 1923, is outside the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, another swath of northern Alaska that Biden has declared off-limits for oil development.

    Environmentalists said they were still holding onto hope based on the administration’s denial that it made a final decision to OK the project, despite multiple news reports saying that an announcement of the approval would be made in the coming days. (Bloomberg News first reported Friday night that the administration had decided to greenlight it.)

    “Great! Then there is still time to turn this all around!!!” Natural Resources Defense Council spokesperson Anne Hawke posted on Twitter after White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre denied on Friday that a final decision had been made.

    Hawke also reached out to Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg for help persuading Biden, tweeting at the young advocate: “In just days, the US will approve a massive oil project in Alaska. Can you help us tell US @POTUS to #StopWillowProject?”

    Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), a longtime climate advocate, expressed dismay at the news.

    “We cannot allow the Willow Project to move forward,” he tweeted late Friday. “We must build a clean energy future — not return to a dark, fossil-fueled past.”

    An approval, if it comes, would infuriate environmental groups and continue a year-long strengthening of the administration’s relationship with the oil industry. But it would also come as market analysts are forecasting that oil prices will remain volatile for the next several years, which would make killing the project politically tricky.

    Biden himself has softened his rhetoric on transitioning the country away from fossil fuels, and he has repeatedly pressed the oil and gas industry to increase production in the short term to keep prices lower.

    “We are still going to need oil and gas for a while.” he said during his State of the Union speech last month.

    The Willow development is the rare large-scale oil project to be announced in recent years in the United States, where the industry has instead shifted its focus to drilling smaller, cheaper and faster projects using fracking to tap into shale fields in the Southwest. If approved, construction could start soon, and additional construction in Alaska’s North Slope for Willow will occur throughout the summer and fall, the company has said.

    Alaskan native tribes have expressed split opinions on the project, with some warning it would degrade their environment and others welcoming its potential economic gains.

    “The Willow Project is a new opportunity to ensure a viable future for our communities, creating generational economic stability for our people and advancing our self-determination,” said Nagruk Harcharek, president of the nonprofit Voice of Arctic Iñupiat, in a statement Saturday. “North Slope Iñupiat communities have waited nearly a generation for Willow to advance.”

    Yet that urgency to develop the project, and the signals from the White House, were disheartening to environmental groups.

    “To us, it all sucks because it flies in the face of meeting our climate goals. So we’re going to keep fighting until there is a final record of decision,” said Tiernan Sittenfeld, senior vice president of government affairs with the League of Conservation Voters.

    Some of Biden’s green allies suggested the move could have repercussions for Democrats in 2024. Along with the long-debated Keystone XL pipeline from Canada, which Biden effectively killed in one of his first acts as president, Willow has joined the ranks of fossil fuel projects that in earlier decades would have flown under radar but have now taken on outsized political significance.

    The Biden administration is caught in the middle, hyping the Inflation Reduction Act it signed into law as the biggest climate-related legislation ever but also asking companies to keep pumping barrels to keep fuel prices low in the here-and-now. That law has also won praise from the oil and gas sector for its incentives for carbon capture and storage and clean hydrogen – technologies the fossil fuel producers are pursuing.

    Raad, from Evergreen Action, said the Willow project “was something that really took the internet and social media by storm the last few weeks – because it is a physical thing and a physical place that feels real.” And that has implications for Biden’s hopes for reelection, he added.

    “There’s just no escaping the fact that we’re going to need to rally young folks and folks interested in climate next year to win,” Raad said. “And this does not help in any shape or form.”

    As of March 2, environmental advocates were citing 9,000 videos protesting Willow on the social media platform TikTok. Former Vice President Al Gore earlier this week weighed in to say it would be “recklessly irresponsible” to approve Willow.

    Deirdre Shelly, campaigns director with the youth environmental group Sunrise Movement, said her organization is already strategizing for the next election and that approving Willow would make organizers’ jobs more difficult.

    “This is just a huge disappointment. … It does feel like an about-face,” she said. “It makes it even harder for us to convince young people that they need to vote, that the Democratic Party leaders will act on climate.”

    But the administration also felt heavy pressure from the oil industry and the state’s politically powerful Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski. Murkowski has long championed Willow as a needed boost to the Alaskan economy, which has been troubled for years as the overall oil industry has picked up stakes to move to the cheaper opportunities in the Lower 48.

    Oil and gas companies and energy-state lawmakers would have been ready to blame the rejection of Willow for any subsequent rise in energy costs, even though the Biden Interior Department has approved new permits to drill on public land at a faster rate than his predecessors.

    Murkowski, speaking Friday in Houston before the announcement, said she had met with the White House last week to warn that the administration was legally bound to approve the project, given that Conoco held oil leases on federal land.

    “The fact of the matter is these are valid existing leases that Conoco holds,” Murkowski told reporters. “If the administration [had] basically not allowed them to be able to access those leases, what follows then? … Alaska litigation is always something that we have to reckon with.”

    Catherine Morehouse contributed to this report.



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    #Biden #expected #Alaska #oil #project #blow #green #base
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • US federal agency funds methane capture project India

    US federal agency funds methane capture project India

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    Washington: A federal US agency has approved grant funding for a feasibility study to develop a coal mine methane (CMM) recovery facility in the Jharia coalfield in Jharkhand, said to be the first of its kind in India.

    The US Trade and Development Agency (USTDA) said on Thursday that to support efforts by the Prabha Energy Private Limited (PEPL) to develop a coal mine methane (CMM) recovery facility in the Jharia coalfield, it approved grant funding for a feasibility study.

    Virginia-based Advanced Resources International has been selected to carry out the study, a press release by the USTDA said.

    “USTDA is pleased to collaborate with PEPL on this project, which presents a tremendous opportunity to strengthen India’s energy resilience and sustainability using innovative technology that US companies can readily provide,” USTDA Director, Enoh T. Ebong, said.

    “This project will prevent the direct release of methane, a harmful greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere. This will have a positive climate impact on India and the world,” Ebong added.

    According to the press release, the USTDA-funded feasibility study will develop recommendations on extracting, gathering, compressing, and processing CMM at the Jharia site while using innovative US technologies and solutions. By capturing the CMM, the project has the dual benefit of preventing methane emissions and providing local industries with a cleaner fuel alternative to coal.

    “PEPL is pleased to partner with USTDA and ARI on the potential capture of methane gas from the Jharia coal mine in India,” CEO & Director of PEPL, Prem Sawhney, said.

    “This project, which is the first of its kind in India, will increase India’s domestic gas resources while also creating avenues for US equipment and technology suppliers,” Sawhney added.

    The study advances the goals of the federal agency’s Global Partnership for Climate-Smart Infrastructure to support the use of US technologies and services in overseas climate-smart infrastructure projects and that of the US-India Strategic Clean Energy Partnership’s Responsible Oil and Gas Pillar.

    The project also supports the Biden Administration’s commitment to the Global Methane Pledge to reduce global methane emissions and limit global warming, the USTDA said.

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    #federal #agency #funds #methane #capture #project #India

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ex-Twitter Blue project head breaks silence, days after Musk fired her

    Ex-Twitter Blue project head breaks silence, days after Musk fired her

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    San Francisco: Blue product manager Esther Crawford, who shot to fame late last year after a picture of her sleeping in the Twitter office went viral, but was among the around 200 employees laid-off by boss Elon Musk recently, has broken her silence, revealing how it feels to suddenly lose a job despite working so hard.

    In a series of tweets, the former Twitter employee sought to reveal how some people, left behind after mass layoffs at the company, felt, claiming that people who remain at a company after mass layoffs get “demonised for not quitting”.

    “Seeing people who remain at a company after a round of layoffs get demonised for not quitting in solidarity is truly bizarre. Empathy should be extended to both sides. It’s hard to lose your job and the people who remain often end up having to pick up even more work,” she tweeted.

    She further added: “For those laid off, it can be jarring to suddenly have a piece of your identity taken away — especially if you were truly passionate about the problem & work. It’s normal to have a lot of feelings as you rebuild a new routine and plan for the future.”

    Crawford also said that after a series of layoffs, the remaining employees might feel even “lonelier and scarier”.

    “For the people still at the company it can feel lonelier and scarier after a bunch of people you know and trust are gone. A new normal has to emerge and that takes time as projects, people and priorities shift.”

    “At the end of the day, businesses are not families — they’re teams”, Crawford emphasised.

    Moreover, she believes that the company’s needs can change or new directions can emerge.

    Keeping up the fighting spirit, she ended: “Many things are out of our control in life, so the best thing to do is be adaptable and antifragile — that way you don’t just bounce back from challenges but become smarter, wiser and stronger because of them”.



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    #ExTwitter #Blue #project #breaks #silence #days #Musk #fired

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Smart City Project On Track For Mid-April Completion: Div Com Kashmir

    Smart City Project On Track For Mid-April Completion: Div Com Kashmir

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    SRINAGAR: The Divisional Commissioner Kashmir, Vijay Kumar Bidhuri on Monday said that the many works of smart city project will be completed by April 15 as round the clock work is going on.

    As Kashmir is all set to host G20 meeting in May, 2023, at summer capital Srinagar, the Div com said that the work on Smart City project is being carried out rapidly and people will have to bear till 15th of April till the work will be completed.

    He said that the work is going on during the night time and the inspections are being carried out all through the night.

    About the demolition drive, he said that the administration has already made it clear that the poor will not be touched so it is being ensured on ground. (KNS).

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    #Smart #City #Project #Track #MidApril #Completion #Div #Kashmir

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • SKIMS Provisional Short List of Candidates for the post of Research Associate-I in ICMR Project

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    SKIMS Provisional Short List of Candidates for the post of Research Associate-I in ICMR Project

    Dated: 1-3-23

    For Provisional Short List of Candidates for the post of Research Associate-I in ICMR Project click link below:

    * NOTICE : Provisional Short List of Candidates for the post of Research Associate-I in ICMR Project

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    [ad_2] #SKIMS #Provisional #Short #List #Candidates #post #Research #AssociateI #ICMR #Project( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Srinagar Set To Blossom With Japanese Sakura-Inspired ‘Cherry Theme Garden’ Project

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    SRINAGAR: The summer capital ‘Srinagar’ would soon have a splendid Cherry Theme Garden on the pattern of Japanese Sakura with all the modalities being finalized in this regard.

    This was revealed during a virtual meeting of officers of the Floriculture Department with the Japanese authorities and the Union Ministry of External Affairs.

    The conference was mediated by Professor A K Chawla, Adviser (Japan) East Asia Division MEA. The meeting included in-depth discussion of a number of project-related problems, including the purchase of planting material from Japan and technical assistance.

    “Cherry Theme Garden” is a Rs 10 crore project, an extension plan for Srinagar’s Tulip Garden to make it more attractive and magnificent for visitors. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Government of India, is facilitating the project.

    While highlighting the broad contours of the project, Commissioner Secretary Floriculture, Sheikh Fayaz Ahmad, said that there will be a requirement of about 2500 cherry trees in the first instance and certain varieties have been identified that will suit our place. He said that the department will preferably be exporting plants in a phased manner to ascertain the behavior of the plants and later go for expansion.

    He also informed that a 3-member team of officers will visit Japan to get a first-hand experience of the plants and will make sure the best plant material is exported for the Cherry Theme Garden in Srinagar.

    Commissioner Secretary added that Jammu and Kashmir have huge potential for floriculture activities with modern farming technologies as a game changer for J&K’s economy.

    President Sakai International Interchange Association, Tadashi Nishiyama (Japanese Sakura Expert) while answering various queries, suggested that the government of Jammu and Kashmir should send them a variety-wise total number of plant materials required for the proposed garden. He also assured to provide all possible technical help in this regard.

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    #Srinagar #Set #Blossom #Japanese #SakuraInspired #Cherry #Theme #Garden #Project

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Major project in Heidelberg: students build their own dormitory

    Major project in Heidelberg: students build their own dormitory

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    Final touches: The building is standing, now the future residents are furnishing it, including furniture they have built themselves.
    Image: Maximilian von Lachner

    In Heidelberg, students have realized a major project. Now the first are moving into their own dormitory – and trying out a new way of living together.

    Whe wants to move into the Collegium Academicum needs strong fingers. Because things are still stuck and hooked everywhere in the new wooden building. The bed box hardly closes, the sliding doors to the rooms roll with difficulty and the wall panels, which can be pulled in front of the windows to provide shade, also require a good tug. Mirjam Hofmann doesn’t think it’s all that wild. “The wood is still warping,” says the twenty-year-old and presses a slatted frame into its frame. Meanwhile, a cordless screwdriver is humming in the next room. Around twenty young people are standing in the small apartment, a couple of boys heave a shelf through the kitchen, a young woman calls: “Nice, we made it!”

    Mirjam and her fellow students actually did it: they built their own hall of residence in Heidelberg – and did everything themselves, from financing to the building contract. All they have to do is set up the furniture in the 46 shared apartments on four floors. 176 self-milled beds, cupboards and tables. And that’s why there are twenty of them standing in one apartment to explain things to each other. The student builders have put up with a lot for their 21 million euro mega project. Last but not least, they have spent their free time on the construction site over the past few months. To reduce costs. And to finally finish the construction. Because like everywhere else, there was a significant delay on this construction site thanks to Corona, a shortage of craftsmen and collapsed supply chains.

    #Major #project #Heidelberg #students #build #dormitory

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    #Major #project #Heidelberg #students #build #dormitory
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Saudi’s cube-shaped project lands in controversy over ‘replicating Kaaba’

    Saudi’s cube-shaped project lands in controversy over ‘replicating Kaaba’

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    “The Mukaab” — a huge cube-shaped structure project in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has given rise to controversy on social media platforms for its resemblance to the ‘Kaaba’ which is Islam’s holiest site in Makkah.

    The controversy began after Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, announced the launch of the New Murabba Development Company on Thursday, February 16, which aims to develop “the world’s largest modern downtown in Riyadh”.

    The huge golden cube, which has a capacity of 20 buildings the size of New York’s Empire State Building, plans to integrate residential units, entertainment spaces, hotels and restaurants into the city of the future.

    However, the design caused an uproar online due to its cubic shape, with many saying it was an attempt by the Saudi authorities to take the focus away from the Kaaba in Makkah.

    Some people allege that the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia is building “a separate Kaaba for himself, which is for entertainment.” 

    “Is Mohamed bin Salman building his own Kaaba in Riyadh? This is the design he has chosen for his latest project; a new “Kaaba” of entertainment!! Surely only a wretched individual would choose a holy design for such an unholy purpose!!” Author, Chairman of Almustakillah TV, Dr Mohammad al-Hachimi al-Hamidi, who is a PhD from the University of London tweeted.

    “When Bin Salman stood on top of the holy Kaaba in Mecca in 2019, it was almost symbolic of his intention to subjugate the Islamic influences in #SaudiArabia. Today he has embarked on another symbolic challenge in announcing plans to build a new ‘Kaaba’ of entertainment”, Sami Hamdi, a commentator on MENA, tweeted.

    Intercept reporter Murtaza Hussain joined in questioning the choice of design, saying, “Building a new Kaaba exclusively devoted to capitalism is a little too on the nose.”

    The user also claimed that Saudi Arabia tries to minimize reverence and respect for other buildings by creating such structures.

    “It appears [the crown prince] is building his Kaaba. Will he enforce it as the new qibla for worshippers?” another tweeted.

    However, other social media users, including those from Saudi Arabia, responded to the criticism. “Why are foreign Muslims so easy to manipulate?” asked one user.

    “If every cubic-shaped building is ‘a new Kaaba’, you will find millions of kaabas in Riyadh, because we have a lot of cubic-shaped buildings.”

    As per a report by Arab News, in July 2006, a story in Arabic was shared that someone is deliberately mocking Islam by building another Kaaba in New York, only the cube-shaped building will not be not for the God-fearing devotees, but a 24-hour nightclub 24/7 which – according to translated stories – would be “Makkah” for visitors to New York.

    Later it became clear that the building was neither a nightclub nor a replica of the Kaaba. It was, however, the iconic cube-shaped Apple flagship store on New York’s 5th Avenue.

    Because earlier images showed that the glass sides of the cube-shaped shop covered with a protective black layer caused an absolutely false story to spread like wildfire, due to the colour resemblance of the actual Kaaba.

    “There’s a fascinating plot twist when you compare the two stories – the Apple Store versus The Mukaab. In the second, the land of this so-called diabolical plot is no longer “the infidels” United States of America, but the Kingdom which is the cradle of Islam,” Arab News reported.

    It is reported that the reasons for these claims are, of course, an attempt to discredit and cast doubt on the huge and impressive reforms of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.



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    #Saudis #cubeshaped #project #lands #controversy #replicating #Kaaba

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )