Neste Oil Oyj: Neste Oil welcomes the European Commission’s guidelines on renewable energy

Neste Oil Corporation
Press Release
June 11 at 1.30 pm (EET)

Neste Oil welcomes the European Commission’s guidelines on renewable energy

The European Commission announced its guidelines on how the new Renewable Energy
Directive is to be implemented on 10 June. Under these, the Commission will require that
biofuel usage should result in a clear reduction in greenhouse gas emissions compared to
crude oil-based products. The guidelines clarify the criteria to be used to ensure that
biofuels meet sustainability requirements, and will apply to all biofuels produced in
and imported into the EU. Neste Oil’s views are very much in line with the Commission’s
position.

One of the key aspects of the guidelines is that independent inspectors will be
responsible for auditing the entire production chain, from the origin of the organic
material used to the facilities where it is processed and the fuel suppliers that
deliver gasoline or diesel fuel to service stations. Neste Oil has already carried out
extensive work to ensure that its renewable raw materials are produced responsibly and
can now finalize its verification system in line with the new guidelines.

“It’s excellent news that clear and binding rules have now been established for
renewable fuels in Europe. The Commission’s guidelines will ensure that the Renewable
Energy Directive will be implemented along the same lines in all EU countries,” says
Neste Oil’s Deputy CEO and Executive Vice President, Renewable Fuels, Jarmo Honkamaa.

Neste Oil’s NExBTL renewable diesel, produced from vegetable oil and waste fat from food
manufacturers, complies with all aspects of EU requirements.

Neste Oil Corporation

Hanna Maula
Director, Corporate Communications

Further information: Osmo Kammonen, Senior Vice President, Communications, Marketing and
Public Affairs, tel. +358 (0)10 458 4885

Neste Oil in brief

Neste Oil Corporation is a refining and marketing company concentrating on low-emission,
high-quality traffic fuels. The company is the world’s leading supplier of renewable
diesel. Neste Oil’s refineries are located at Porvoo and Naantali in Finland and have a
combined crude oil refining capacity of approx. 260,000 bbl/d. The company had net sales
of €9.6 billion in 2009, employs around 5,100 people, and is listed on NASDAQ OMX
Helsinki.

Neste Oil is included in the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index and is featured in the
Ethibel Pioneer Investment Register. It has been awarded ‘Best in Class’ recognition for
its social accountability by the Norwegian bank, Storebrand, and is on Innovest’s Global
100 list of the world’s most sustainable corporations. Further information:
www.nesteoil.com http://www.nesteoil.com

150 million-year-old ‘dinobird’ fossil key to animal’s original chemistry

Washington, May 11 (ANI): An international team of paleontologists, geochemists and physicists has found that a 150 million year old “dinobird” fossil has been hiding remnants of the animal”s original chemistry.

Using light source technology of the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL), located at the Department of Energy”s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, the scientists traced a hair-thin X-ray beam across the fossil.

They then identified the locations of chemical elements hidden within the fossil, and found half a dozen chemical elements that were actually a part of the living animal and not merely chemicals that stuck to it from surrounding rocks.

“People have never used a technique this sensitive on Archaeopteryx before.

“Because the SSRL beam is so bright, we were able to see the teeniest chemical traces that nobody thought were there,” said SLAC physicist Uwe Bergmann, who led the X-ray scanning experiment.

The maps created from the chemical elements of the creature show that portions of the feathers are not merely impressions of long-decomposed organic material but actual fossilized feathers that contain phosphorous and sulfur, elements that comprise modern bird feathers.

Trace amounts of copper and zinc, which are present in bodies of birds today, were also found in the dinobird”s bones, which the Archaeopteryx may have required to stay healthy.

As a result, the research has the potential to change the way a paleontologist views a fossil. “We”re able to read so much more into these organisms now using this technology—we”re literally touching ghosts,” said Wogelius. “Chemistry is the real key in the future of paleontology. It”s a paradigm shift.”

As a result of this work, Manning said, he wouldn”t be surprised if “future excavations look more like CSI investigations where people look for clues at a scene of a crime. There”s info that”s still there that can”t be seen with the naked eye. We can only see these really quite valuable pieces of data with the synchrotron eye.”

The study has been published in Proceedings of National Academy of Science. (ANI)

Natural organic matter plays key role in making mercury toxic to living creatures

Washington, August 19 (ANI): Scientists have found that naturally occurring organic matter in water and sediment appears to play a key role in helping microbes convert tiny particles of mercury in the environment into a form that is toxic to most living creatures.

According to Duke University environmental engineers, this finding is important because it could change the way mercury in the environment is measured and therefore regulated.

This particularly harmful form of the element, known as methylmercury, is a potent toxin for nerve cells. When ingested by organisms, it is not excreted and builds up in tissues or organs.

In a series of laboratory experiments, Amrika Deonarine, a graduate student in civil and environmental engineering at Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering, found that organic matter and chemical compounds containing sulfur – known as sulfides – can readily bind to form mercury sulfide nanoparticles.

Since they are more soluble than larger particles, these nanoparticles may be the precursors to a process known as methylation.

“When the organic material combines with the mercury, it prevents the particle from accumulating with other mercury particles and growing larger,” said Deonarine.

“Since the mercury remains in a nanoparticle size, it can easily collect on the surface of microbes where any mercury that dissolves can be taken in by the microbes,” she said.

“Without the organic matter, the mercury sulfide nanoparticles would grow too large and become insoluble, thus reducing the availability of mercury for microbial methylation,” she added.

It is while inside the microbe that the mercury is converted into the harmful methylmercury form, according to the researchers.

These reactions can only take place in cold water environments with little to no oxygen, such as the zone of sediment just below the bottom of a body of water.

Other such anaerobic environments can also be found in waste water and sewage treatment systems, the researchers said.

Mercury is extremely toxic and can lead to kidney dysfunctions, neurological disorders and even death. In particular, fetuses exposed to methylmercury can suffer from these same disorders as well as impaired learning abilities.

There are many ways mercury gets into the environment, with the primary sources being the combustion of coal, the refining of such metals as gold and other non-ferrous metals, and in the gases released during volcanic eruptions. (ANI)

Archaeologists discover world’s oldest tree sign in Prague

Prague (Czech Republic), August 13 (ANI): Archaeologists have uncovered a unique 1000-year-old mark engraved into an oak tree near Celakovice in Prague, Czech Republic, which is probably the oldest preserved sign of this kind in the world.

According to a report in the Prague Monitor, the real meaning of the 10-cm star-shaped mark on the oak trunk is not certain. Experts say it may have marked the territory or serve some iconic purposes.

This find is rare as so old engraved signs were not previously mapped and they are not systematically searched for either, said archaeologist Jana Marikova from the Academy of Sciences (AV)’s Archaeological Institute.

Geologist Radek Mikulas, from the AV’s Geological Institute, found the engraved sign by accident when he was searching for the actual age and state of the old oak trunks that were lifted near Celakovice during sand and gravel strip mining.

The mark was engraved into the trunk after the bark was removed from the spot, and this is why its traces were preserved.

Experts estimate that the oaks were standing near the Labe (Elbe) River between 600-800 A.D. and the engraved symbol must originate from the early Middle Ages.

Archaeologist Dagmar Dreslerova points out that the tradition of engraving signs and ornaments date back to the Palaeolithic Era (Old Stone Age).

However, only engravings made on stone, rocks and exceptionally on bones have been preserved, as wood and other organic material decompose with time.

The first written sources mentioning signs engraved into trees to mark land borders and paths come from antiquity. (ANI)

New military robot to fuel itself by gobbling up dead bodies

Washington, July 15 (ANI): A Maryland company under contract to the Pentagon is working on a steam-powered robot that would fuel itself by gobbling up whatever organic material it can find – grass, wood, old furniture, or even dead bodies.

Robotic Technology Inc.’s Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot (EATR) “can find, ingest, and extract energy from biomass in the environment (and other organically-based energy sources), as well as use conventional and alternative fuels (such as gasoline, heavy fuel, kerosene, diesel, propane, coal, cooking oil, and solar) when suitable,” reads the company’s Web site.

Animal and human corpses contain plenty of energy, and they’d be plentiful in a war zone.

EATR will be powered by the Waste Heat Engine developed by Cyclone Power Technology of Pompano Beach, Florida, which uses an “external combustion chamber” burning up fuel to heat up water in a closed loop, generating electricity.

The advantages to the military are that the robot would be extremely flexible in fuel sources and could roam on its own for months, even years, without having to be refueled or serviced.

Upon the EATR platform, the Pentagon could build all sorts of things – a transport, an ambulance, a communications center, even a mobile gunship.

Robotic Technology is presenting EATR as an essentially benign artificial creature that fills its belly through “foraging,” despite the obvious military purpose. (ANI)

Organic material in ‘dino mummy’ to give clues about its evolution

London, July 2 (ANI): A mummified dinosaur unearthed in North Dakota, US, may contain traces of 66-million-year old organic material, which could provide vital information about its evolution.

The well-preserved fossil of the plant-eating hadrosaur, complete with skin and tendons, was discovered in 1999.

Named “Dakota”, it was a rare find as bacteria in the soil usually break down soft tissue quickly.

However, the rapid burial of Dakota in a waterlogged, low-oxygen environment allowed fossilisation to outpace the normal processes of microbial decay, preserving areas of soft tissue.

According to a report in New Scientist, Phil Manning and Roy Wogelius at the University of Manchester, UK, used electron microscopy and X-ray imaging to study Dakota’s fossilised skin, as well as a claw and a tendon.

They found cell-like structures comparable to those of living vertebrates.

Further analysis of the skin and claw revealed the presence of amino acids – the building blocks of proteins – suggesting that the cell-like structures were indeed cells and that organic material may have been preserved.

Manning said that the presence of amino acids, rather than whole proteins, is a good sign.

After 66 million years, proteins in soft tissue should have broken down into amino acids, so finding large proteins would likely be a sign of contamination.

The high concentrations of amino acids in the fossil, compared with only traces found in the surrounding sediment, support the idea that they came from the fossil.

The researchers hope that further analysis will confirm the presence of organic material and provide fundamental information about the evolution of this species and its descendants. (ANI)

Chemicals used to purify drinking water create toxic by-products

Washington, April 1 (ANI): Chemical disinfectants used to make water safe to drink react with organic material in it, and yield toxic consequences, say researchers.

Michael Plewa, a geneticist at the University of Illinois, points out that disinfection by-products (DBPs) in water are the unintended consequence of water purification.

“The reason that you and I can go to a drinking fountain and not be fearful of getting cholera is because we disinfect water in the United States,” he said.

“But the process of disinfecting water with chlorine and chloramines and other types of disinfectants generates a class of compounds in the water that are called disinfection by-products. The disinfectant reacts with the organic material in the water and generates hundreds of different compounds. Some of these are toxic, some can cause birth defects, some are genotoxic, which damage DNA, and some we know are also carcinogenic,” he added.

Funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the 10-year study was started with a view to developing mammalian cell lines that would be used specifically to analyse the ability of such compounds to kill cells, or cytotoxicity, and the ability of these emerging disinfection by-products to cause genomic DNA damage.

“Our lab has assembled the largest toxicological data base on these emerging new DBPs. And from them we’ve made two fundamental discoveries that hopefully will aid the U.S. EPA in their regulatory decisions. The two discoveries are somewhat surprising,” Plewa said.

His team’s first finding involves iodine-containing DBPs.

“You get iodine primarily from sea water or underground aquifers that perhaps were associated with an ancient sea bed at one time. If there is high bromine and iodine in that water, when you disinfect these waters, you can generate the chemical conditions necessary to produce DBPs that have iodine atoms attached. And these are much more toxic and genotoxic than the regulated DBPs that currently EPA uses,” he said.

Plewa revealed that the study’s second discovery concerned nitrogen-containing DBPs.

“Disinfectant by-products that have a nitrogen atom incorporated into the structure are far more toxic and genotoxic, and some even carcinogenic, than those DBPs that don’t have nitrogen. And there are no nitrogen-containing DBPs that are currently regulated,” he said.

The researcher even said that apart from drinking water DBPs, swimming pools and hot tubs are also DBP reactors.

“You’ve got all of this organic material called ‘people’ — and people sweat and use sunscreen and wear cosmetics that come off in the water. People may urinate in a public pool.

Hair falls into the water and then this water is chlorinated. But the water is recycled again and again so the levels of DBPs can be ten-fold higher than what you have in drinking water,” he said.

According to Plewa, higher levels of bladder cancer and asthma have been observed in people who do a lot of swimming – professional swimmers as well as athletic swimmers.

These individuals have greater and longer exposure to toxic chemicals, which are absorbed through the skin and inhaled.

“The big concern that we have is babies in public pools because young children and especially babies are much more susceptible to DNA damage in agents because their bodies are growing and they’re replicating DNA like crazy,” he said.

Telling about a new project that his team is working on, Plewa said: “We’re working with engineers and chemists to develop new technologies that will disinfect water, that will desalinate water, that will remove pharmaceuticals from water but in so doing, don’t generate by-products that are even more toxic than the things you’re trying to remove.”

He suggests that until the development of new technologies to safely disinfect the water in public pools, education is needed to encourage people to bathe or shower before entering a public pool.

“It’s the organic material that gets in the pool that is disinfected and then re-circulated over and over again. That’s why we call swimming pools disinfectant by-product reactors. But by public education, by personal behaviour, there should be ways that we can reduce the levels of the dissolved organic material that should reduce the level of DBPs,” he said.

A report on this study has been published in the journal Mutation Research.(ANI)

Scientists identify microbe that turns (CO2) and water directly to methane

Washington, March 31 (ANI): In a new research, a team of Penn State engineers has identified a tiny microbe that can take electricity and directly convert carbon dioxide (CO2) and water to methane, producing a portable energy source with a potentially neutral carbon footprint.

“We were studying making hydrogen in microbial electrolysis cells and we kept getting all this methane,” said Bruce E. Logan, Kappe Professor of Environmental Engineering, Penn State. “We may now understand why,” he added.

Methanogenic microorganisms do produce methane in marshes and dumps, but scientists thought that the organisms turned hydrogen or organic materials, such as acetate, into methane.

However, the researchers found, while trying to produce hydrogen in microbial electrolysis cells, that their cells produced much more methane than expected.

“All the methane generation going on in nature that we have assumed is going through hydrogen may not be,” said Logan.

“We actually find very little hydrogen in the gas phase in nature. Perhaps where we assumed hydrogen is being made, it is not,” he added.

Microbial electrolysis cells do require an electrical voltage to be added to the voltage that is roduced by bacteria using organic materials to produce current that evolves into hydrogen.

The researchers found that the Archaea, using about the same electrical input, could use the current to convert carbon dioxide and water to methane without any organic material, bacteria or hydrogen usually found in microbial electrolysis cells.

“We have a microbe that is self perpetuating that can accept electrons directly, and use them to create methane,” said Logan.

Logan, working with Shaoan Cheng, senior research associate; Defeng Xing, post doctoral researcher, and Douglas F. Call, graduate student, environmental engineering, confirmed that the microscopic organisms produced the methane.

The researchers created a two-chambered cell with an anode immersed in water on one side of the chamber and a cathode in water, inorganic nutrients and carbon dioxide on the other side of the chamber.

They applied a voltage, but recorded only a minute current.

The researchers then coated the cathode with the biofilm of Archaea and not only did current flow in the circuit, but the cell produced methane.

The cells are about 80 percent efficient in converting electricity to methane and because they use carbon dioxide as feed stock, would be carbon neutral if the electricity comes from a non-carbon source such as solar or wind power.

“The process does not sequester carbon, but it does turn carbon dioxide into fuel,” said Logan. “If the methane is burned and carbon dioxide captured, then the process can be carbon neutral,” he added. (ANI)

New organic material may give Internet ‘superfast’ speeds

London, March 16 (ANI): An International team of scientists have developed an organic material that may one day enable the Internet to work at “superfast” speeds.

Ivan Biaggio, an associate professor of physics at Lehigh University and member of the research team, says that the novel material has been developed with an unprecedented combination of high optical quality and strong ability to mediate light-light interaction.

He says that the integration of the novel material has been engineered with silicon technology so that it can be used in optical telecommunication devices.

He has revealed that the material is composed of small organic molecules with high non-linear optical susceptibilities.

It can cover the gap that separate silicon waveguides, which control the propagation of light beams on an integrated optical circuit.

“We have been able to make thin films by combining the molecules into a material that is perfectly transparent, flat, and free of any irregularities that would affect optical properties,” Nature magazine quoted Biaggio as saying.

The slot between the waveguides is the region where most of the light guided by the silicon propagates.

Biaggio and his colleagues say that by filling the slot, the molecules add an ultra-fast all-optical switching capability to silicon circuitry, creating a new ability to perform the light-to-light interactions necessary for data processing in all-optical networks.

A research article describing the material has been published in the journal Nature Photonics. (ANI)

3,960 yr old organic material found in Pakistan points to continuity of Indus Valley civilization

Islamabad, Feb 14 (ANI): Archaeologists have found significant clues and material along the right bank of Indus on the Sukkur-Shikarpur highway in Pakistan, which provide evidence of the continuity of ancient civilization in the region, dating back to 3,960 years.

The region, known as Lakhian Jo Daro, is located some 40 kilometers north of Kot Diji and about 120 kilometers southwest of Moenjodaro.

The region has been known to archaeologists of Shah Abdul Latif University (SALU), Khairpur, since the early 1980s and to local, provincial and federal officials as well as to international experts since 1988.

According to a report in the Dawn, some Italian experts, who had visited the area during the mid-90s, took away some organic material from Lakhian Jo Daro and had the relevant C-14 carbon dating done at the Centrum voor IsotopenOnderzook (Centre for Isotope Research) at the Dutch University of Groningen.

The official report GrN-23123, dated Oct 21, 1997, and signed by Dr J. van der Plicht – dated the samples to be about 3,960 years old.

The report located only in the personal files of Professor Mukhtar Qazi, who was the project director in the mid-90s, relates to only the uppermost crust that was scratched at the time.

Now that the dunes have been reduced to the level of natural soil in parts of the site -spread over six kilometers east-west and two kilometers north-south, much more findings have been made and parallels can be easily drawn with the period of Moenjodaro.

According to Dr Nilofar Shaikh, a senior archaeologist of the country who is also the SALU vice-chancellor, relative studies hold much more worth than actual laboratory procedures and the area excavated thus far has thrown up innumerable parallels with earlier and established findings all along the Rohri Hills – from Kot Diji to Bhando Qubo. (ANI)