Power Failure: UK’s Wind Farm Plans In Disarray

Hundreds of local revolts against wind farms have jeopardized the plan to use them to generate more than a quarter of Britain’s electricity, figures seen by The Independent reveal.

New wind farms are needed to have any chance of creating enough renewable energy to reduce reliance on coal and gas power production. But planning approvals for them in England are at an all-time low, with only one in three applications getting the go-ahead from councils in the face of angry and organised opposition from people living nearby.

More than 230 separate local campaign groups against wind farms are operating across the UK, from Scotland and Kent to Norfolk, Yorkshire and Cornwall. These groups are scoring striking successes in defeating planned wind farms – even when faced with the weight of official recommendations. [Read more...]

Fall Tourism Continues Summer’s Gains

Golf, the traditional backbone of shoulder season tourism, remains weak as golfers spend less and discounts run high, officials said.

Many hotel, attraction and restaurant managers said that they’ve seen modest growth in part from couples and group events, such as The Southeastern Atlantic Shriners Association festival in September. Weather will likely determine how business will be for the rest of the fall, they said.

“Overall, we’re encouraged by the positive trends we’ve seen both in terms of the number of people and the occupancy rate and while the golf industry is seeing lower than desired growth … that’s a very good sign in a weak economy,” said Brad Dean, president and chief executive of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce. [Read more...]

Countries Straining From Food Price Increases

A few pennies’ increase in the price of a loaf of bread can mean the difference between getting by and going hungry – and erupting in anger – in the world’s poorest countries.

A spike in food prices has triggered deadly riots in Mozambique this week, and experts worry other countries that saw such unrest during the last global food crisis in 2008 could be hit again. Over the last two months, food prices worldwide have risen 5 percent.

“I think everyone is wondering if we are going to have a repeat of 2008 when … there were food riots around the world,” said Johanna Nesseth Tuttle, director of the Global Food Security Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. [Read more...]

‘Poo-powered’ Car Hits Bristol Streets

A ‘poo-powered’ VW Beetle has started to make its way through the streets of Bristol in a bid to encourage sustainable motoring.

The Bio-Bug is powered by methane gas, which is generated during the sewage treatment process.

And the good news is that despite being powered by fuel created from sewage, the car does not smell unpleasant.

Engineers from Wessex Water estimate the waste from 70 homes would generate enough gas to run the car for 10,000 miles (16,100km).

“It performs like a normal car – you wouldn’t know it was powered by biogas,” the BBC quoted a company spokesman as saying. [Read more...]

A Conscience Decision

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Meeting an accident is really a frustrating event which is why if you have been injured in any kind of accident, whether it is at work or anywhere then you could have an accident compensation claim. All you have to do is seek the assistance of people you can trust to handle the matter. The No win no fee basis will really help you, as there is no obligation for you to proceed. So better act now, contact and or visits the above mentioned for more details and information’s.

Cheap Apartment Choices

When trading penny stocks having a great penny stock broker is the key to making money and helping you with winning trades. But along with it also comes choices of possibly having your own pad or place to stay with. Going forward Cheap Rental is an online marketplace allowing anyone from private residents to commercial properties to seek and rent out their extra space. The reputation-based site allows for user reviews, verification, and secures online transactions. Listings include vacation rentals, private rooms, entire apartments, bed and breakfasts, boutique hotels, castles, tree houses, and many other traditional and non-traditional accommodations.

Nevertheless, while some apartment hunters will be happy to proactively check different web site, others want to receive weekly communication via email by signing up for an email list; and the Twitterholics, also want to receive theirs through Twitter. Well, what makes MyCheapApartments.com unique aside from being the #1 in tracking down resource for cheap apartment choices is the fact that users can easily search for anything they are looking for all in one resource, whether it is cheap rental homes or cheap Rental Assistance listings, by employing the search tools offered on this resource. So why don’t you give it a try, anyway, you don’t have to stay for more weeks, as most apartments are available by the week and some are for shorter periods only.

Housing Market Could Spoil The Recovery Party

The gloom is dissipating. The jobs market is improving: 162,000 new jobs were created in March. Factor out the 48,000 hired temporarily to help with the census, and you still have positive growth. Employment in the hard-hit construction industry — which lost 864,000 jobs in the past 12 months — held steady, while jobs were added in manufacturing, mining, healthcare and temporary services.

But not all the news is good: the number of people out of work for more than 27 weeks rose to 6.5m, the unemployment rate remains stuck at 9.7%, and the total unemployed, involuntarily underemployed and too discouraged to look for work rose, and now constitute 16.9% of the workforce.

Still, the resumption of job creation is good news, and only one of the signs that the recovery continues. Share prices in the first quarter were up about 5%, their best start in more than a decade, as corporate profits came in better than expected after rising 8% in the fourth quarter of 2009, and corporate balance sheets remained strong. Bonds also did well, with investment-grade US debt and junk bonds up from their 2008 lows by 35% and 82%, respectively. So far, the fear that huge fiscal deficits will trigger inflation, a rise in interest rates and therefore a fall in bond prices, seems to be confined to a minority of investors. The majority are ignoring what might be the canary in the coal mine — a rise in interest rates demanded by purchasers of US government bonds. The yield on the Treasury’s 10-year note is hovering round the psychologically important 4% level, the highest since June 2009.

The performance of share and bond prices contributed to a recovery in consumer confidence after a sharp fall in February — it rose from 46.4 to 52.5 in March (1985=100). Which might explain last month’s spurt in car sales. General Motors’ sales of brands it intends to keep were up 43% year-on-year, Ford sales were up 40%, Toyota used incentives (discounts) of $2,256 per vehicle to drive sales up 41%, and although Chrysler’s sales fell 8%, the company expects to break even this year.

The good news was not confined to the motor sector. Overall consumer spending is growing at an inflation-adjusted annual rate of 3%, the highest since the first quarter of 2007. Rosalind Wells, chief economist at the National Retail Federation, says “consumers are coming back to life a little”. With mortgage defaults and personal bankruptcies rising, relieving many consumers of debt and mortgage payments, those consumers have more cash to spend.

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reports that the manufacturing sector as a whole grew in March for the eighth straight month, and at the fastest pace since July 2004, to a six-year high. Seventeen of eighteen industries reported growth (only plastics lagged). Exports were up, as were inventories, the latter in anticipation of restocking by retailers and higher sales. A global survey of 11,000 companies by KPMG shows mounting optimism, with American manufacturing and service sector firms the second most optimistic (Brazilian ones were first). That confidence accounts for the increase recently recorded in business investment, which just might drive growth if consumers retreat from the malls again.

Most forecasters are guessing that when the final numbers for the overall economy are in, they will show that it grew at an annual rate of about 3% in the first quarter of this year, below the 5.6% rate of the final quarter of last year, but more than satisfactory. Several businessmen, some of whom were in the pessimist camp until recently, are now talking to me about a V-shaped recovery, a rebound of vigour and duration.

That view is not uniform. Small-business owners and entrepreneurs are somewhat gloomier. Some do not do much or any export business, and so are not sharing in the recovery of world trade. Many complain that their banks don’t want to know them when they ask for credit. Others worry that the president’s healthcare bill will drive up their insurance premiums. Still others know that the taxes on their personal incomes are due to rise, reducing their incentive to invest and hire.

Then there is the housing market, which remains an enigma. There are signs of stability. Twelve of the 20 cities covered by the S&P/Case-Shiller index of home prices show modest increases, and the overall index has risen for eight consecutive months, to almost year-ago levels for the first time in three years. Big publicly traded builders are again buying construction-ready lots. Warren Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway owns Clayton Homes, a maker of manufactured housing, predicts that “within a year or so residential housing problems should be behind us”. Investors are among the optimists: homebuilders’ shares have nearly doubled over the past year.

They may be in for an unpleasant surprise. New home sales are still lagging, the supply of unsold homes remains high, the tax credit for first-time buyers expired last week, at the same time as the Federal Reserve Board discontinued its $1.4 trillion programme to purchase mortgage-backed securities. The housing market is key to creating construction jobs, and all the jobs that go with furnishing a home.

If these headwinds prove too strong, the arrival of spring will see the bears emerge from hibernation, especially if the recovery proves to be only “a sugar high” based on unsustainable government spending and low interest rates, which the bond vigilantes will, sooner rather than later, drive up.

My own guess is that the recovery will gather pace. If the Fed is to err, it will err on the side of waiting too long to “exit”. There is no sign that the government will rein in spending — increases are more likely — and a wall of money is sitting on the sidelines looking for investments or deals.

In the longer run, of course, we will have to pay the piper for the administration’s Greek-style fiscal policy. Meanwhile, enjoy the ride. By Irwin Stelzer:, The Times