U.S. says new sanctions on Iran could impact Pakistan

(Reuters) – Pakistan should be wary of committing to an Iran-Pakistan natural gas pipeline because anticipated U.S. sanctions on Iran could hit Pakistani companies, the U.S. special representative to the region said on Sunday. While sympathetic to Pakistan’s energy needs, the U.S. special representative to the region, Richard Holbrooke, told reporters that new legislation, which targets Iran’s energy sector, is being drafted in the U.S. Congress and that Pakistan should “wait and see.”

Politics

“Pakistan has an obvious, major energy problem and we are sympathetic to that, but in regards to a specific project, legislation is being prepared that may apply to the project,” he said, referring to the pipeline. “We caution the Pakistanis not to over-commit themselves until we know the legislation.” Pakistan is plagued by chronic electricity shortages that have led to mass demonstrations and battered the politically shaky government of President Asif Ali Zardari.

U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman said last week he expects Congress to finish shortly legislation tightening U.S. sanctions on Iran that will include provisions affecting the supply of refined petroleum products to Tehran, and add to sanctions on its financial sector.

Lieberman, an independent, is a member of a House-Senate committee of negotiators working on final details of the bill and said it could pass by July 4.

The $7.6 billion natural gas pipeline deal, signed in March, doesn’t directly deal with refined petroleum products and was hailed in both Iran and Pakistan as highly beneficial.

The U.S. has so far been muted in its criticism of the deal, balancing its need to support Pakistan, a vital but unstable ally in the global war against al Qaeda, with its desire to isolate Iran.

But the legislation could be comprehensive enough to have major implications for Pakistani companies, Holbrooke said.

“We caution Pakistan to wait and see what the legislation is.”

This was Holbrooke’s tenth trip to Pakistan since President Barack Obama appointed him special representative to the region. His visit followed a series of working groups this week that are part of the U.S.-Pakistan strategic dialogue, which both countries say will lay the groundwork for a new relationship.

Afghanistan was on the agenda in meetings with the Pakistani leadership, Holbrooke said, including talks on a Pakistani role in talks between the Afghan Taliban and the Kabul government.

But the United States would not support Pakistan pushing the Haqqani network, one of the strongest factions of the Afghan insurgency and mostly based in Pakistan’s North Waziristan, into talks with Kabul as Washington sees the group as intransigent, brutal and too tightly allied with al Qaeda.

The United States has said any groups wishing to lay down their weapons must renounced al Qaeda and agree to participate peacefully in the Afghan political process.

“It’s just hard to see that happening,” Holbrooke said of the Haqqani network.

Regardless of what happens in Afghanistan, he said, the United States would remain engaged with Pakistan.

“Pakistan matters in and of itself. Whatever happens in Afghanistan, the U.S. cannot turn away from Pakistan again,” he said. “We are not going to repeat the mistakes that occurred – at least not on our watch — of the last 20 years.”

Global Partners Completes Acquisition of Three Gasoline and Distillate Terminals in Newburgh, NY

Transaction Adds 950,000 Barrels to Partnership`s Refined Product Storage
Capacity
WALTHAM, Mass.–(Business Wire)–
Global Partners LP (NYSE:GLP), one of the largest wholesale distributors of
gasoline, distillates and residual oil in the New England states and New York,
said today that it has completed its previously announced acquisition of three
gasoline and distillate terminals in Newburgh, New York from Warex Terminals
Corporation. The terminals have a combined storage capacity of 950,000 barrels,
increasing Global Partners` total storage capacity to approximately 10.2 million
barrels.

“Our acquisition of these waterborne terminals is one of several recent
strategic initiatives that expand our storage and supply of transportation fuels
and broaden our footprint in the Northeast,” said Eric Slifka, President and
Chief Executive Officer of Global Partners. “We continue to expect this
transaction to be accretive to unitholders in the first 12 months of operation
with improving returns over time as the business potential of these assets is
further realized.”

In May, the Partnership signed an agreement with Exxon Mobil Corporation to
purchase 190 Mobil branded retail gas stations in Massachusetts, Rhode Island
and New Hampshire. The agreement includes the right to supply Mobil branded fuel
to the stations and to an additional 31 independently owned and operated Mobil
stations in the same states. The transaction is expected to be completed in
2010. In addition, Global Partners and Canadian Pacific Railway have initiated
an expansion project that will add 180,000 barrels of ethanol storage capacity
and rail access at the Partnership’s refined petroleum products terminal in
Albany, New York. Separately, Global Partners is converting 230,000 barrels of
distillate storage to gasoline storage at the Albany terminal. These projects
are scheduled to be operational by year-end.

About Global Partners LP

Global Partners LP, a publicly traded master limited partnership based in
Waltham, Massachusetts, owns, controls or has access to one of the largest
terminal networks of refined petroleum products in the Northeast. The
Partnership is one of the largest wholesale distributors of gasoline,
distillates (such as home heating oil, diesel and kerosene) and residual oil to
wholesalers, retailers and commercial customers in the New England states and
New York. Global Partners LP, a FORTUNE 500®
company, trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol
“GLP.” For additional information, please visit www.globalp.com.

Forward-looking Statements

Some of the information contained in this news release may contain
forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements do not relate strictly to
historical or current facts and include, without limitation, any statement that
may project, indicate or imply future results, events, performance or
achievements, and may contain the words “may, ” “believe,” “should,” “could,”
“expect,” “anticipate,” “plan,” “intend,” “estimate,” “foresee,” “continue,”
“will likely result,” or other similar expressions. In addition, any statement
made by Global Partners LP’s management concerning future financial performance
(including future revenues, earnings or growth rates), ongoing business
strategies or prospects and possible actions by Global Partners LP or its
subsidiaries are also forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are
not guarantees of performance. Although Global Partners LP believes these
forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, statements made
regarding future results are subject to a number of assumptions, uncertainties
and risks, many of which are beyond the control of Global Partners LP, which may
cause future results to be materially different from the results stated or
implied in this news release. For additional information about risks and
uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from
forward-looking statements, please refer to Global Partners LP’s Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2009 and subsequent filings the
Partnership makes with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Developments in
any of these areas could cause Global Partners LP’s results to differ materially
from results that have been or may be anticipated or projected. All
forward-looking statements included in this news release and all subsequent
written or oral forward-looking statements attributable to Global Partners LP or
persons acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by these
cautionary statements. The forward-looking statements speak only as of the date
of this news release or, in the case of forward-looking statements, contained in
any document incorporated by reference, the date of such document, and Global
Partners LP expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to update these
statements to reflect any change in its expectations or beliefs or any change in
events, conditions or circumstances on which any forward-looking statement is
based.

Global Partners LP
Thomas J. Hollister, 781-894-8800
Chief Operating Officer and
Chief Financial Officer
or
Edward J. Faneuil, 781-894-8800
Executive Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary

Copyright Business Wire 2010

New sponge-like material beneficial for the environment

Washington, May 18 (ANI): A team of chemists has designed a new sponge-like material that can remove mercury from polluted water, easily separate hydrogen from other gases and is a more effective catalyst than the one currently used to pull sulfur out of crude oil.

Hydrodesulfurization is a widely used catalytic chemical process that removes sulfur from natural gas and refined petroleum products, such as gasoline and diesel and jet fuels.

Without the process, which is highly optimized, people would be burning sulfur, which contributes to acid rain.

Scientists have tried to improve hydrodesulfurization, or HDS, but have made no progress. Many consider it an optimized process.

Now, the Northwestern researchers, in collaboration with colleagues at Western Washington University, report that their material is twice as active as the conventional catalyst used in HDS, while at the same time being made of the same parts.

The material, cobalt-molybdenum-sulfur, which is black, brittle and freeze-dried, is a new class of chalcogels, a family of material discovered only a few years ago at Northwestern.

Chalcogels are random networks of metal-sulfur atoms with very high surface areas.

The new chalcogel is made from common elements, is stable when exposed to air or water and can be used as a powder.

This is the first report of chalcogels being used for catalysis and gas separation.

Mercouri G. Kanatzidis, Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison, Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and doctoral student Santanu Bag made this catalyst using a method different from that of the conventional catalyst.

The Northwestern material is a gel made of cobalt, nickel, molybdenum and sulfur that then is freeze-dried, producing a sponge-like material with a very high surface area.

It is this high surface area and the material’s stability under catalytic conditions that make the cobalt-molybdenum-sulfur chalcogel so active.

The researchers also demonstrated that the new chalcogel soaks up toxic heavy metals from polluted water like no other material.

The chalcogel removed nearly 99 percent of the mercury from contaminated water containing several parts per million.

Mercury likes to bind to sulfur, and the chalcogel is full of sulfur atoms.

In addition to being a better HDS catalyst and a mercury sponge, the chalcogel also is very effective at gas separation.

The researchers showed that the material easily removes carbon dioxide (CO2) from hydrogen, an application that could be useful in the hydrogen economy. (ANI)