Five Ways to Prevent the Next Deepwater Horizon

As I write this piece on Day 70 of the Gulf oil spill, the start of the 2010 hurricane season threatens to further slow the containment of the Deepwater Horizon well.

But obviously, as we’ve moved into the third month of the ongoing disaster, the weather is only the latest of the numerous setbacks suffered in the struggle to shut down the broken well. A quick recap of the biggest challenges BP and the federal government have faced to date:

* The failure of the original containment dome installed by British Petroleum on May 7-8, clogged by the formation of chemical crystals produced from a mixture of gas and frigid seawater.
* The May 11 decision to abandon the installation of a smaller containment “top hat.”
* The failure of the May 26-29 “top kill” procedure to plug the broken blowout protector.
* The June 3 failure of the diamond-edged saw intended to produce the clean cut needed to smoothly cap the well riser. A robot, wielding shears, eventually produced a jagged cut that permitted the placement of a containment cap and the partial capture of the estimated 35,000-60,000 (and counting) barrels of oil gushing daily from the broken pipe.
* The June 23 temporary displacement of the containment cap by a robot — a mishap fortunately corrected shortly afterward.

As this suggests, there have been few decisive answers to the engineering challenges posed by Deepwater Horizon. BP’s containment efforts, and they have been herculean, numerous, and ongoing, have yet to halt the leak, and the gargantuan spill appears almost certain to continue until a relief well is completed in August. In the interim, the oil will continue to flow and to despoil the Gulf ecosystem and economy.

My own experience suggests that environmental pollution, even comparatively small discharges, can be notoriously difficult to fix. About 10 years ago, I unexpectedly found myself directing the clean-up of a building-scale environmental emergency. At the time I was managing a national commercial real estate portfolio. One of my properties was a research and development project tenanted by a manufacturing firm under a long-term lease. After years of occupancy, the tenant exercised a termination option and vacated.

Subsequent inspection and testing revealed that, in blatant violation of its lease, the tenant had left behind a witch’s brew of chemical residues — including dust from silver and mercury (both toxins) — that had penetrated the building’s plumbing and ventilation systems. Testing and clean-up — which required the use of space-suited technicians, quantities of crime scene tape, and prominent haz-mat postings — took upwards of three months. And (unlike Deepwater Horizon) we were working on firm ground, rather than at a depth of 5,000 feet below sea level.

My experience with that manufacturer leads me to believe that environmental contingency planning is typically given short shrift by many businesses, unless substantial financial liability is anticipated in the event of environmental problems. That was certainly the case with my tenant. The recently revealed shortcomings of oil industry containment plans for deepwater spills suggest that my concerns about the quality of corporate planning for environmental contingencies are hardly misplaced.

Next page: How to stop another spill before it happens.
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So, how do we prevent another Deepwater Horizon? The following suggestions couple additional safety requirements for deepwater drilling with penalties to reflect the environmental and economic costs of drilling gone wrong. By enhancing safety standards and motivating companies to develop more careful contingency plans, both approaches should help protect America and the petroleum industry from the disasters that can arise in the course of doing business.

Remote shutoff capability. Require additional back-up systems to shut down offshore wells automatically. Norway and Brazil require acoustic triggers that can shut down deepwater wells remotely, in the event that mechanical systems fail. Norway has required acoustic backup systems on all rigs since 1993.

Relief well capability. At minimum, adopt Canada’s “same-season relief well capability” requirement. To receive a deepwater drilling permit in certain Canadian Arctic waters, a petroleum company must demonstrate that it has a viable system that can be deployed to drill a relief well in the same season. The Canadian requirement has been in place for 34 years. Even more to the point might be to require that a relief well be drilled at the same time as the initial well. Yes, this is an expensive precaution, but it is well below the billions that BP will spend to contain Deepwater Horizon, clean up the spill, and make good on economic claims.

Spill penalties. Impose meaningful financial penalties for deepwater spills. What is meaningful? Enough to incentivize private industry to take environmental contingency planning seriously. The $75 million per incident liability cap associated with a deepwater spill was clearly insufficient to motivate BP and its peers to develop effective contingency plans. An obvious approach would be to repeal the Oil Pollution Act’s $75 million per incident liability limit on deepwater drilling.

Onshore facilities are subject to a $350 million liability cap that can be adjusted by federal regulation — the Deepwater Horizon disaster suggests that deepwater drilling should be subject to equal or more rigorous penalties. Civil and criminal penalties in force under the Oil Pollution Act should also be re-examined for adequacy in ensuring deterrence.

Energy legislation. Also warranted: the development and passage of comprehensive energy legislation to reduce dependence on fossil fuels. As attorney Shari Shapiro, my colleague and fellow blogger, observes, “Deepwater Horizon needs to be this generation’s Love Canal moment. Congress has an unparalleled opportunity to capitalize on the anger, the shock and the awareness of the fragility of the environment to pass comprehensive energy legislation. Thank god, Love Canal moments do not come along often. It would be a pity to waste it.”

Moratorium. The Obama administration has proposed a six-month moratorium on deep water drilling. That plan has been overturned by a federal judge. A legal appeal is planned and the administration is readying an alternative moratorium approach. I’m mindful of the economic costs associated with a moratorium, but we need a breather to reassess the safety of deep water drilling. Indeed, Deepwater Horizon has already produced a temporary risk management ban on deepwater drilling — in Norway, which halted deepwater drilling in early June to evaluate the lessons of the spill.

Meanwhile, oil continues to flow into the Gulf of Mexico.

Leanne Tobias is founder and managing principal of Malachite LLC, an advisory firm that specializes in the development, leasing, management, financing and certification of sustainable or green real estate on a global basis. You can get in touch with Leanne at this link.

Germany brimming with confidence despite setbacks

Germany will go into the World Cup in top form despite a string of injuries that ruled out several starting players, coach Joachim Loew said hours before the team was due to depart for South Africa on Sunday.

Injuries have so far ruled out captain Michael Ballack and four other players, severely restricting Loew’s options in midfield for the June 11-July 11 tournament and robbing his team of its natural leader.

But two comfortable wins against Hungary and Bosnia in the past days have shown the Germans were able to successfully absorb the shock of these withdrawals, with the team playing at times mesmerising football.

“We are going into this tournament well prepared,” Loew told the federation website before boarding the huge A380 passenger plane bound for Johannesburg. The team, who will arrive on Monday, will then travel to their base outside Pretoria.

“I have full confidence in the quality of our team,” said Loew.

While he still has to finalise his choices for the defence and attack, Loew seems to have decided on his new-look midfield.

Sami Khedira and Bastian Schweinsteiger have made a seamless transition from supporting actors under Ballack to playing leading roles, combining beautifully to initiate Germany’s offensive play from their holding midfield positions.

Thomas Mueller also looks to have edged out any rivals for a spot on the wings after fine performances from the 20-year-old.

Overall Ballack’s injury looks to have been a blessing in disguise with the team playing more freely, his responsibilities shared by more than just one player.

“We know what we have to do,” said Schweinsteiger. “Most of us have gone through these situations before.”

Germany take on Australia in their first Group D match on June 13. They then play Serbia and Ghana.

France’s Henry faces life as a substitute

(Reuters) – France’s captain and most prolific scorer Thierry Henry faces the once inconceivable prospect of being a substitute at the World Cup for the country he has graced for over a decade.

Sports

The only player in the squad who was part of the team’s 1998 World Cup triumph, the 32-year-old appears set to lose his place up front in coach Raymond Domenech’s first team to Nicolas Anelka and the captain’s arm-band to left back Patrice Evra.

Prior to naming his squad for the June 11-July 11 finals in South Africa, Domenech endorsed Henry as a trusted ‘great player’, yet has started him on the bench for France’s two World Cup warm-ups against Costa Rica and Tunisia.

Henry, despite boasting a record 51 goals in 120 appearances and standing on the verge of becoming the first France player to take part in four World Cups, appears to be paying the price after suffering a series of setbacks.

Pushed on the fringes at Barcelona where he rarely started a game this year, Henry has also been marked by the controversy sparked by his handball in a playoff win over Ireland last November.

Henry, until that day never considered a cheat, handled the ball in the build-up to the decisive goal that sent France through to the finals, sparking one of the biggest outcries in the competition’s history.

LEADING PLAYER

“I am lucky to play with Titi at club level and it’s true that the last few months have been complicated for him,” defender Eric Abidal, Henry’s team mate at Barca, told reporters at France’s training camp in Tunisia.

“He’s been thinking about the World Cup and getting ready for it, hoping it would give him a breath of fresh air. He’s a leading player in our group and we know we can count on him.”

Henry has not complained after being left out of the starting line-up twice, even congratulating Evra after he wore the armband in a 2-1 win over Costa Rica last week, but has also been careful to avoid the media.

“The coach has made choices that can be difficult to accept but Titi is still ready to help out,” Abidal said of Henry’s uncomfortable situation.

Beloved of French fans for lifting the team out of tight spots and fondly remembered at Arsenal where he scored 226 goals during his eight-year spell at the London club, Henry could still make an impact at the World Cup.

For now, he faces the task of recapturing his scoring instinct from back-stage, instead of being the front-man.

“I don’t see any first-choice players or substitutes,” Domenech said of his decision to leave Henry on the bench.

“We’re a group. Everybody must remain under pressure and available to help.”

(Editing by Ian Ransom)

Malaysia by-election campaign starts in key Borneo state

Campaigning began on Saturday for a Malaysian by-election in a government stronghold state whose outcome could boost Prime Minister Najib Razak’s confidence to call snap national polls as early as next year.

The race for the mainly urban and ethnic Chinese parliament seat of Sibu in the timber and resource rich Borneo state of Sarawak pits a party in Najib’s National Front coalition against the opposition Democratic Action Party (DAP).

The May 16 vote will not alter the balance of power but Najib’s ability to reverse the coalition’s record losses in the last general election in 2008 will require strong support in Sarawak, which provides it with 30 of its 137 seats in parliament.

Analysts say a strong government win in Sibu could embolden Najib to call for state-wide elections in Sarawak by the end of this year followed soon after by general elections, which do not have to be held until 2013.

An opposition win in Sibu would help the People’s Alliance grouping, of which the DAP is a member, remain on track as a contender to wrest federal power after a series of recent setbacks including the resignation of four of its MPs.

VOTING TREND

“Sibu will be an indicator of the voting trend in the upcoming Sarawak state election. If the opposition wins the seat by a big margin it will be a big worry for Najib going ahead,” said James Chin, a politics professor at Monash University in Kuala Lumpur.

Najib took office in April last year pledging economic and political reforms to woo lagging investment and turn back his ailing coalition from the 2008 polls losses. [ID:nSGE62T035]

The National Front, which has ruled the Southeast Asian country uninterrupted for 52 years since Independence from Britain in 1957, lost control in five of Malaysia’s 13 states and its once iron clad two-thirds control of parliament.

The uncertainties have helped dent foreign investment, with net portfolio and direct investment outflows reaching $61 billion in 2008 and 2009 according to official data.

Retention improved this year, mainly into a bond market fuelled by a Malaysian interest rate hike and the use of the ringgit as a proxy for a possible Chinese yuan revaluation, although Malaysian assets have been hit by risk aversion due to investor fears that Greece may default.

Political tensions in Malaysia are also being fueled by opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s ongoing trial for sodomy that resumes next week and which he says is a political conspiracy. [ID:nSGE6430A0]

A contentious verdict in the trial that ends late August could anger his supporters and lead to a repeat of the street demonstrations that rocked the capital following Anwar’s sacking as Deputy Prime Minister in 1998, political analysts have said.

(Editing by David Fox)

Shoot-to-kill order after school knifings

A Chinese city has ordered police to shoot to kill anyone attempting to harm school students following a spate of violent attacks against children that have stunned the nation, state press said.

The south-west municipality of Chongqing, a city of more than 30 million people, issued the order after China’s public security ministry called for stepped-up security around schools and kindergartens nationwide.

“The police have clear regulations in these odious cases where direct attacks occurring at or in the vicinity of schools have injured students or children,” the Chongqing Evening News reported.

“If they cannot contain the violent acts, police can shoot to kill in accordance with the law.”

The order comes after a series of attacks on children last week.

On Friday, a farmer armed with a hammer injured five children and a teacher at a primary school in the eastern province of Shandong before setting himself on fire.

A day earlier, a jobless man, apparently angry over a series of personal and professional setbacks, slashed 29 children and three adults at a kindergarten in the eastern city of Taixing armed with a knife used for slaughtering pigs.

That attack came two days after a 33-year-old teacher placed on sick leave for mental problems injured 15 students and a teacher in a knife attack at a primary school in southern China’s Guangdong province.

On that same day authorities in Fujian province in the south-east executed a former doctor for stabbing to death eight children and injuring five others in March in a fit of rage after he broke up with his girlfriend.

The attacks underscore how China, which has enjoyed lower violent crime rates than the West, faces a growing public safety threat from disgruntled individuals amid rising mental illness rates and looser social controls.

Player of the Year Rooney allays World Cup fears

London, Apr 26 (ANI): Allaying fears over his fitness for the World Cup, ace striker Wayne Rooney Cup has declared that he will return for Manchester United’s potentially decisive final Premier League game of the season against Stoke City on May 9.

After picking the PFA Player of the Year Award, Rooney said: “I’m fine. I’ll be all right for the World Cup. In fact, I’ll be ready for the Stoke game.”

United feared Rooney, suffering from groin and ankle problems, would miss the title run-in.

Rooney paid tribute to United boss Sir Alex Ferguson as he picked up his trophy, with the Young Player of the Year award going to James Milner.

“Sir Alex is a great manager who has really brought me on as a player since I joined United. His hunger passes through to the players. It’s great to see he’s pushing 70 and hasn’t changed a bit. I’m sure he’ll be here for a long time yet,” he said.

Rooney has undergone a gruelling 55-game season and his old knee injury has also flared up again, The Sun reports.

United No.2 Mike Phelan admitted that the latest injury setbacks have been brought on through sheer exhaustion for Rooney.

“He has a groin problem and that is possibly due to fatigue. He’s had a fantastic season and these things creep up on you now and again. Wayne has just suffered in the past two to three weeks,” Phelan said. (ANI)

AIDS vaccine researcher hopeful

A leader in the search for a vaccine against HIV, which causes AIDS, said that recent advances have given scientists new reason for hope.

Dr. Alan Bernstein, executive director of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise, cited the world’s first successful test of an experimental AIDS vaccine. In September, researchers said the vaccine protected one in three people from getting HIV in a large study in Thailand.

Dr. Bernstein also pointed to recent progress in determining whether people with HIV produce antibodies that could lead to a vaccine guarding against a variety of forms of HIV. He also said there is progress in mapping the many variations of what he called a “clever virus” that has so far eluded vaccine efforts because it kills some of the key cells needed to make a vaccine.

“This is a very exciting time in the field,” Dr. Bernstein said. “A vaccine is possible, and we have the scientific tools now to turn that possibility into a reality.”

Though he said the research effort has turned a corner after several setbacks, he cautioned a vaccine was still several years away.

Others are far less optimistic.

“I wish I could say I was. But I’m not,” said Salim Karim, director of the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa.

“It’s proving to be a challenge that’s more complex than previously thought,” he said, adding he has spent 15 years researching a vaccine, and expected success to take at least another 15.

Karim called the Thai study a “glimmer.” Scientists must now try to improve the vaccine so that it protects more than a third of the people who get it, and lasts for more than the six to 12 months it now appears to be effective.

Questions have been raised about whether an HIV vaccine was possible, and even whether it made sense to devote time and energy to the pursuit. Dr. Bernstein said a comprehensive approach, that includes finding a vaccine, must be taken against AIDS.

As head of an international group of major vaccine researchers and funders, Bernstein was in South Africa to discuss strategy with U.N. health and AIDS officials.

South Africa, a country of some 50 million, has an estimated 5.7 million people infected with HIV, more than in any other country. In an announcement that marked a dramatic shift from the past, South African President Jacob Zuma pledged on World AIDS Day last year to embark on earlier and expanded treatment for HIV-positive South Africans. The program was to be formally launched this weekend.

Dr. Bernstein said a vaccine would be particularly important for Africa, where prevention and treatment campaigns have proven costly. A vaccine, unlike an expensive lifetime regime of AIDS drugs, would be administered every few years.

A vaccine “is the most effective public health measure we’ve come up with,” Dr. Bernstein said.

The International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, which focuses on research into vaccines against strains of HIV that are prevalent in the developing world, says a vaccine must be part of a comprehensive solution. It says “no major viral epidemic has even been defeated without a vaccine.”

According to a new report summarizing findings presented at a 2009 conference of vaccine researchers, the vaccine hunt is “steadily moving ahead,” though HIV presents tough challenges.

The report in the May issue of The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal says that the massive, international effort to find an AIDS vaccine has had important side effects, providing information for the development of other vaccines and treatment for other diseases.

Jaques goes county to crack Test side

Former Australian opener Phil Jaques is targeting an international recall after joining up with English county side Worcestershire for a third spell.

Jaques, who has played 11 Tests and scored a century in his last innings for Australia against the West Indies in Bridgetown in 2008, has been overlooked since then and has also been struck down with back problems.

But the 30-year-old came through the domestic season with New South Wales with no injury setbacks and is hoping a successful spell with Worcestershire will help him earn a recall to the international fold.

“Last summer back home, I played every game for New South Wales. I was the only one to do that which was a good achievement in itself in a long season,” he told Press Association Sport.

“It is very exciting to be back fit and hopefully I can really pile on the runs over here this year.

“I wouldn’t be playing cricket if I didn’t have ambitions and my ambition is to get back to the highest level you can achieve – and that is playing for Australia.

“That is why I am here. That is why I chose here rather than the Indian Premier League.

“I wanted to play county cricket, get some volume of games in and hopefully get back into the Australian side. That is the goal ahead.”

He admitted it was a “weird feeling” to notch a ton in his last Test and then not play again.

“But I know I can play at that level and right now it is about knocking on the door hard enough and getting the runs on the board I need and waiting for an opportunity,” he said.

“The guys who have been playing, Simon Katich and Shane Watson, have been outstanding.

“They have probably been our best two batsmen over the last 12 months along with Michael Clarke and Ricky Ponting.

“It is very hard to get back into that team. But I’ve got to go back to the drawing board, score lots of runs ands wait for an opportunity.

“I will be looking to get back to converting decent scores into hundreds and I hope I can do that at Worcestershire. The body has held up. I have had no injury problems and the back is getting stronger by the day.”

Fiery Obama drums up health care votes

US president Barack Obama declared Democrats were on the cusp of history after a century struggling for health reform, amid cresting excitement in Congress ahead of a weekend vote.

Mr Obama also invited the entire House of Representatives Democratic caucus to the White House on Saturday afternoon to round off an intense vote-whipping operation on the most sweeping social reform bill in decades.

After months of setbacks, bitter partisanship and legislative logjam, Mr Obama appeared almost triumphant, rekindling the spirit of change which powered his euphoric 2008 election campaign but which has been dimmed by the slog of government.

“Right now, we are at the point where we are going to do something historic this weekend,” he said, two days before a key House of Representatives vote on his sweeping plan to offer healthcare to 32 million uninsured Americans.

“In just a few days, a century-long struggle will culminate in an historic vote,” Mr Obama said, as 8,500 supporters chanted his campaign theme “Yes We Can” in a sports arena in northern Virginia.

On Capitol Hill, Democratic leaders kept up the pressure on wavering Democrats, seeking to piece together the magic majority figure of 216 in the vote expected on Sunday.

“I’m very excited about the momentum that is developing around the bill,” said Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic speaker of the House.

Ms Pelosi however stopped short of saying she had the votes in hand to pass the measure after a dramatic week of arm-twisting and head counts.

“When we bring the bill to the floor, we will have a significant victory for the American people,” Ms Pelosi said.

If the House passes the bill on Sunday, Mr Obama would then sign it into law.

Senate vote

The Senate is then expected to vote on a House-passed package of fixes to the bill which would amend that law and make it palatable to House members.

Democratic lawmakers are due at the White House at 4:00pm on Saturday, and the meeting will also include Senate Democratic Majority leader Harry Reid, a White House aide said.

Mr Reid’s presence could be intended to assure House members that the Senate will do its part by endorsing changes to original healthcare legislation that many House members find unpalatable.

Republicans have mounted a fierce campaign of obstruction designed to stop the bill, which they say would hike taxes and amounts to a massive government takeover of the mostly-private healthcare industry.

“It’s clear that now is the crunch time. It’s pretty clear that the vote is pretty tight,” said Republican House minority leader John Boehner.

The healthcare bill would amount to the most significant social reform legislation in 40 years, and is seen as crucial to establishing Mr Obama’s political authority, and to defining his eventual presidential legacy.

It would bring the country closer than ever before – 95 per cent of the population – to universal health coverage.

Democrats are also touting an estimate by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office which says the bill could cut $US130 billion from the bloated US deficit through 2019 and $US1.2 trillion in the second 10 years.

‘Do not quit’

Mr Obama was in a fiery mood Friday, warning that failure to pass the bill at the 11th hour would reward insurance firms that had “run amok” at the expense of ordinary Americans.

“Do not quit, do not give up, we keep on going, we are going to get this done, we are going to make history, we are going to fix healthcare in America,” he declared at the end of a rousing speech.

He chose to hold what was likely the final rally of his health reform push at George Mason University, friendly territory in an arena packed with students where he held one of his first presidential campaign events back in 2007.

A lone woman dissenter in the crowd screamed out an inaudible protest and was hustled out by a security guard.

The legislation also aims to end abusive insurance company practices and curb soaring healthcare costs that already run to double those of other rich countries.

The bill would create new insurance marketplaces starting in 2014 and require most Americans to carry insurance, while offering subsidies to many.

Some of its most popular measures include bans on insurers denying coverage because of pre-existing illnesses, imposing lifetime caps on coverage, or dropping people from coverage when they get sick.

-AFP

Dubai World debt amounts to dizzy 59 billion dollars

Nicosia, Aug 26 (ANI): The Government-owned conglomerate Dubai World owed 59 billion dollars in debts at the end of 2008, its property subsidiary Nakheel said in a financial exchange filing to NASDAQ Dubai.

This represents a big part of the Dubai Government debt, believe to amount to 80 billion dollars.

Nakheel revealed details of its parent firm as part of its obligations on a 3.5 billion dollars sukuk due in December.

Khaleej Times newspaper says that Government-owned companies in Dubai are under pressure to restructure as the emirate struggles to bolster its slowing economy amid the rising costs of financing its heavy debts.

Dubai recently announced plans to raise the second 10-billion dollars tranche of a 20 billion dollars bond issue later this year, and it has set up a support fund to distribute money raised from the bond.

Dubai but has been hit hard by a near 50 per cent drop in property prices in the emirate. It is entangled in a number of disputes over unpaid bills to foreign contractors.

Dubai World on Wednesday said it might withdraw from 4.5 billion dollars Malaysian maritime centre project, the latest in a series of setbacks for the emirate’s government-run investment arm.

The group, which owns port operator DP World DPW.DI and Istithmar World, the owner of high-end retailer Barneys New York, announced on August 6 that it has postponed several projects, including tourism developments in Africa. (ANI)

If reconciled, Taliban militants could turn on India: Nicholas Burns

New Delhi, Aug.18 (ANI): Expressing reservations over the idea of opening up communication channels with certain sections of Taliban, the former United States Deputy Secretary of State, Nicholas Burns, on Tuesday said that the US should resolve the problem keeping in view the regional context.

“Reconciling with Taliban is very complex and there is a risk that after the talks these militants could turn on India. We (US) should go ahead to look at the problem in the regional context,” said Nicholas Burns in the capital.

Burns, who retired from the U.S. foreign office a year-and-a-half ago, on Tuesday was here in Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) where he addressed ex-diplomats and strategists.

U S has been suffering major setbacks in combating Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan and under its new AfPak policy, it is planning to hold talks with what it calls “Good Taliban” and would carry on its offensive against the ‘Bad Taliban’.

New Delhi is however skeptical about any reconciliation with militants and does not believe in the “Good Taliban theory”.

Burns further stressed that the U.S should deal with India and Pakistan singularly and there should be no ‘hyphenation’.

“The US should have independent relationship with Pakistan and India,” he added.

Calling India’s role in Afghanistan as “positive and constructive”, Burns said that Pakistan equipped with nuclear bombs and high instability is creating worries like no other country.

Burns said: “India could play an instrumental role in bringing Iran onboard as a nuclear Iran is not in the interest of India.”

On the issue of Mumbai terror attack on 26/11 last year, Burns said: “Mumbai attack had evoked lot of sympathy in the United States and we should use this to motivate the two countries in countering terrorism not only in south Asia but other parts of the world as well.”

Burns had played a key role during negotiations related to the Indo-U.S nuclear deal. By Naveen Kapoor (ANI)

Pak’s Twenty20 World Cup triumph victory a deja vu

London, June 22 (ANI): Pakistan captain Younis Khan drew a parallel between his team’s Twenty20 World Cup triumph at Lords’ with Imran Khan’s 1992 World Cup victory.

“I’m the second Khan,” Younus said, addressing a post victory press conference.

Pakistan team’s fight back story in the 16-day Twenty20 championship mirrors that of 1992 team led by Imran Khan, who famously urged his players to fight “as if you were a cornered tiger.”

On Sunday, a delighted Imran Khan warmly congratulated Pakistan cricket team over their “tremendous performance” against Sri Lanka.

“Our cricketers did us proud,” The Nation quoted Khan, as saying.

Imran Khan, who had just landed in Houston, Texas, from Dallas said the Pakistani cricketers, despite their isolation from international cricket, fought courageously and came from behind to clinch the World Cup.

He said the morale-boosting news came in the wake of the Swat tragedy and several other setbacks. “This victory is so uplifting,” he remarked. (ANI)

Swat operation in final stage as Taliban ‘staring defeat in the face’ : Pak army

London, May 26 (ANI): The Pakistan Army has claimed that its mission against the Taliban and other extremist groups in the Swat Valley is near accomplishment, as the Taliban has virtually announced a one-sided ceasefire.

With the Army intensifying its operation in Mingora and other parts of the Valley, and engaging in severe street fighting, the Taliban has suffered a series of setbacks over the past week.

This has compelled the outlawed outfit to vow to not fire ‘even a single bullet’, The Independent reports.

“Our aides will remain there in Mingora, but we will not attack, we will not fire shots,” said Muslim Khan, the Taliban spokesman.

However, the military has refuted claims that it would too cease its operations in the region after the Taliban’s call for truce.

It said that the Taliban is ‘staring defeat in the face’, which has forced it to apply such a militant ‘ploy’ to escape the offensive.

Terming Muslim Khan’s statement as ‘part of a broader militant ploy’, the ISPR spokesperson Major General Athar Abbas said:

“Khan’s remarks were part of a broader militant ploy to escape. They are now remembering the civilians whom they used to behead and decapitate.”

Earlier, the Army claimed a series of successes in Mingora and other parts of the Swat valley.

It captured Mingora’s Green Square , an area that came to be known as ‘the bloody square’, because the Taliban used the area to throw away the headless corpses of policemen, soldiers and civilians there.

According to an estimate, 1.9 million people have fled the valley and surrounding districts, but up to 20,000 remain in Mingora, where the military entered Saturday after encircling it. Many of the estimated 4,000 militants in the valley are believed to be there, raising the prospect of bloody urban fighting. (ANI)

Hyperactive children benefit from climbing

Stuttgart, Germany – Climbing can be a form of therapy for hyperactive children, according to a German professional journal.

Climbing takes the need for movement in hyperactive children and channels it into controlled and planned movements, report the authors of an academic paper in the professional journal Ergopraxis.

Thus, therapeutic climbing doesn’t just help children physically, but also provides mental and emotional development in those suffering from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

The study shows that climbing helps foster concentration, grasp of detail and trust in others.

To boost the positive effects, climbing can also be linked to other activities, write the authors. For examples, cards with numbers can be placed in the climbing wall’s handholds and the child can be asked to add them up.

An additional benefit is that children immediately enjoy success, helping them to improve their self worth, a major plus for ADHD children, who often suffer a variety of setbacks and criticisms on any given day. (dpa)

Watson reveals how four champs helped to rebuild his career

Sydney, May 24 (ANI): Australian all rounder Shane Watson has revealed how four legends guided him through his darkest days and instilled the self-belief to achieve his dream of an Ashes tour.

Watson said the quartet’s support and advice helped him to overcome 12 injuries in six years, the latest a groin complaint.

With the first Test 46 days away, Watson said Glenn McGrath, Steve Waugh, Shane Warne and Greg Chappell were the secret weapons that facilitated his return as Australia’s top all-rounder.

Former Test quick McGrath, who lost wife Jane to breast cancer last June, counselled Watson on handling setbacks.

Waugh worked on Watson’s mental toughness; batting great Chappell honed his technique at the Centre of Excellence and spin-king Warne pinpointed ways to enhance his bowling.

“I’ve been very lucky to have those guys around me. I’m blessed to have had some of the greats of world cricket to communicate with and support me because those guys have gone through different scenarios in their career and came out the other end to be on top of the cricket world,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Watson, as saying.

“I’m really appreciative. Their little hints and advice has helped with my frame of mind. I’m very close to Glenn McGrath, I’ve had quite a number of chats to him about the direction I want to go and what I want to do. Glenn has been amazing for me. It’s just his strength of character. There are things he’s had to go through in his life and he’s had a good talk to me about my setbacks and how I can come back from them. He’s just such a positive person and that’s rubbed off,” he added.

“I’ve had a good chat with Steve Waugh. His advice has been based on mechanisms and ways to handle situations that aren’t ideal. He’s talked to me about the power of the mind and what you can achieve when you set your mind on things,” Watson said, adding that he had gleaned just as much from Warne and Chappell, who have focused on technical shortcomings. (ANI)

Astronauts fix Hubble gyroscopes, despite technical glitch

Washington, May 16 (ANI): Astronauts have managed to repair gyroscopes in the Hubble, the most critical repair to the giant space telescope, despite facing significant glitches in the process.

According to a report by BBC News, in a second spacewalk, mission specialists Mike Good and Mike Massimino put a refurbished pair of gyroscopes into the telescope after a new set refused to go in.

Besides the gyroscopes, which would enable the Hubble to orient precisely, the giant telescope also got fresh batteries to ensure five more years of life.

Despite the setbacks, scientists said that Hubble would function well, pointing to ever-distant objects in the cosmos.

The troubled spacewalk on May 15 was the longest yet, lasting eight hours.

“At times, I felt like I was wrestling a bear,” Mike Massimino was quoted as saying by AFP news agency, as he and Mike Good struggled to install the gyroscopes, or “rate sensing units” (RSUs).

Previously, only three of the six gyroscopes worked.

But, after the marathon spacewalk, Hubble has four brand new sets and two refurbished ones. Only two are needed to orient the telescope properly.

Of the six gyroscopes replaced, three had failed, two were acting up and one was working properly.

Gyroscopes keep the 19-year-old Hubble telescope pointed where it should be, and hence the replacement operation was the most important part of this mission’s five scheduled spacewalks.

The first part of the spacewalk was to replace the three RSUs, each of which contains two gyroscopes.

While the first RSU went in as planned, the second one did not seat properly on its plate. The crew opted to place the third RSU in the slot of the second.

The same problem occurred when the RSU meant for the second slot was placed into the third, so the crew opted to install a refurbished unit instead.

But, Hubble’s deputy senior project scientist, Mal Niedner, said he was not concerned that the astronauts had to resort to refurbished gyroscopes, which lack the latest anticorrosive wiring.

“It’s the difference between an A and an A-plus,” he was quoted as saying by AP news agency.

The three batteries that were replaced were the original equipment installed on Hubble 19 years ago, intended to have just a five-year lifespan. (ANI)

Two ministers says UK PM Brown has lost control of his party

London, May 1 (ANI): Two senior Cabinet ministers have privately warned that Prime Minister Gordon Brown has lost control of the Labor parliamentary party and have predicted that election defeat is almost certain.

One minister close to Brown told The Daily Telegraph: “We can still turn this round, but Gordon is not listening. He is lashing out and reacting to headlines. It’s all so reminiscent of the last months of John Major. If we don’t get our act together – and that means Gordon needs some better advice – we could go down to a defeat every bit as big as, if not bigger than, the Tories in 1997.”

Another Cabinet minister said: “Gordon is looking for someone to blame for the Gurkhas but he refused to see that we were in trouble and did not see it coming. Instead we had the spectacle of the Prime Minister, insisting at the dispatch box at 12.15, that the deal was the right one, only to be defied by dozens of our MPs only hours later. I am afraid we are giving the impression that we have lost control of our own side.”

“We have to get a grip, give him better advice, otherwise there will be more talk of leadership challenges, which is the last thing we want,” he added.he series of setbacks to Brown’s authority has raised questions about his continued leadership of the party.

One senior minister said: “The Parliamentary Labour Party is in total meltdown. It is worrying. The backbenchers will now rather hit Gordon’s authority than allow things like the Gurkhas to go through. What that means is that we will stop putting tough legislation through the Commons for fear of getting defeated. The public are not stupid. They will soon spot that and it is then that you risk looking like a busted flush.”

One loyalist minister conceded that Brown has lost the respect of many of his own MPs. (ANI)

Media overlooks health contexts of DUI cases among young celebrities

Washington, April 23 (ANI): Though drinking and driving (DUI) arrests of celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan stir up a news storm, little attention is paid to the health consequences, according to a new study.

According to Katherine Smith, PhD, lead author of the study, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Injury Research and Policy, very few articles pointed towards public health contexts.

The assistant professor with the Bloomberg School’s Center for Injury Research and Policy and her team examined the stories covered by the New York Times, TIME, People and the evening news broadcasts from ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and Fox.

Smith, along with co-author Andrea Gielen, ScD, director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy, and colleagues Denise Twum and Andrea Gielen, found that only 4 percent of the articles mentioned any harm or potential harm arising from the DUI events.

Smith said: “While the celebrity DUI stories raised awareness of the issue of drinking and driving among young people, an opportunity to educate this audience on solutions to prevent DUI was missed.”

It was further revealed that most stories concentrated on arrest, sentencing and going to or release from jail whilst less than 50 percent covered the legal aspects of the DUI event.

Experts observed that there was very little thought given to any DUI-related policy or possible societal intervention, while consequences of the DUI mainly referred to legal repercussions or professional setbacks.

Even quotes leaned more towards the justice process, such as those from police, district attorney, judge, while there were no words from public health stakeholders or DUI advocacy groups, the study claims.

Gielen said: “This is really a missed opportunity.”

She continued: “Unfortunately, when media cover paltry legal consequences for the celebrities alongside routine use of their glamorous photos, we are likely doing a disservice to young people.

“We need to be getting the message to young people that drinking and driving is a serious issue with substantial legal and life-threatening consequences.”

The results of the study are to be published in the May 2009 issue of Alcohol and Alcoholism. (ANI)

Media overlooks health contexts of DUI cases among young celebrities

Washington, April 23 (ANI): Though drinking and driving (DUI) arrests of celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan stir up a news storm, little attention is paid to the health consequences, according to a new study.

According to Katherine Smith, PhD, lead author of the study, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Injury Research and Policy, very few articles pointed towards public health contexts.

The assistant professor with the Bloomberg School’s Center for Injury Research and Policy and her team examined the stories covered by the New York Times, TIME, People and the evening news broadcasts from ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and Fox.

Smith, along with co-author Andrea Gielen, ScD, director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy, and colleagues Denise Twum and Andrea Gielen, found that only 4 percent of the articles mentioned any harm or potential harm arising from the DUI events.

Smith said: “While the celebrity DUI stories raised awareness of the issue of drinking and driving among young people, an opportunity to educate this audience on solutions to prevent DUI was missed.”

It was further revealed that most stories concentrated on arrest, sentencing and going to or release from jail whilst less than 50 percent covered the legal aspects of the DUI event.

Experts observed that there was very little thought given to any DUI-related policy or possible societal intervention, while consequences of the DUI mainly referred to legal repercussions or professional setbacks.

Even quotes leaned more towards the justice process, such as those from police, district attorney, judge, while there were no words from public health stakeholders or DUI advocacy groups, the study claims.

Gielen said: “This is really a missed opportunity.”

She continued: “Unfortunately, when media cover paltry legal consequences for the celebrities alongside routine use of their glamorous photos, we are likely doing a disservice to young people.

“We need to be getting the message to young people that drinking and driving is a serious issue with substantial legal and life-threatening consequences.”

The results of the study are to be published in the May 2009 issue of Alcohol and Alcoholism. (ANI)

Media overlooks health contexts of DUI cases among young celebrities

Washington, April 23 (ANI): Though drinking and driving (DUI) arrests of celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan stir up a news storm, little attention is paid to the health consequences, according to a new study.

According to Katherine Smith, PhD, lead author of the study, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Injury Research and Policy, very few articles pointed towards public health contexts.

The assistant professor with the Bloomberg School’s Center for Injury Research and Policy and her team examined the stories covered by the New York Times, TIME, People and the evening news broadcasts from ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and Fox.

Smith, along with co-author Andrea Gielen, ScD, director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy, and colleagues Denise Twum and Andrea Gielen, found that only 4 percent of the articles mentioned any harm or potential harm arising from the DUI events.

Smith said: “While the celebrity DUI stories raised awareness of the issue of drinking and driving among young people, an opportunity to educate this audience on solutions to prevent DUI was missed.”

It was further revealed that most stories concentrated on arrest, sentencing and going to or release from jail whilst less than 50 percent covered the legal aspects of the DUI event.

Experts observed that there was very little thought given to any DUI-related policy or possible societal intervention, while consequences of the DUI mainly referred to legal repercussions or professional setbacks.

Even quotes leaned more towards the justice process, such as those from police, district attorney, judge, while there were no words from public health stakeholders or DUI advocacy groups, the study claims.

Gielen said: “This is really a missed opportunity.”

She continued: “Unfortunately, when media cover paltry legal consequences for the celebrities alongside routine use of their glamorous photos, we are likely doing a disservice to young people.

“We need to be getting the message to young people that drinking and driving is a serious issue with substantial legal and life-threatening consequences.”

The results of the study are to be published in the May 2009 issue of Alcohol and Alcoholism. (ANI)