Saturday, March 2, 2013

Boehner: No reason to block Keystone XL pipeline

FILE - In this Jan. 23, 2013, file photo, Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D, points at a illustration of existing pipeline, while speaking at a news conference about the Keystone XL oil pipeline on Capitol Hill in Washington. The State Department on Friday, March 1, 2013, raised no major objections to the Keystone XL oil pipeline and said other options to get the oil from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change. But the latest environmental review stops short of recommending whether the project should be approved. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 23, 2013, file photo, Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D, points at a illustration of existing pipeline, while speaking at a news conference about the Keystone XL oil pipeline on Capitol Hill in Washington. The State Department on Friday, March 1, 2013, raised no major objections to the Keystone XL oil pipeline and said other options to get the oil from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change. But the latest environmental review stops short of recommending whether the project should be approved. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

Map shows existing and proposed extension of Keystone XL pipeline

FILE - In this Feb. 8, 2013, file photo, Secretary of State John Kerry, right, speaks with reporters during a news conference with Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird at the State Department in Washington. The State Department on Friday, March 1, 2013, raised no major objections to the Keystone XL oil pipeline and said other options to get the oil from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change. But the latest environmental review stops short of recommending whether the project should be approved. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? A new State Department report is the latest evidence that the long-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada should be approved, supporters say.

The draft report, issued Friday, finds there would be no significant environmental impact to most resources along the proposed route from western Canada to refineries in Texas. The report also said other options to get the oil from Canada to Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change.

The new report "again makes clear there is no reason for this critical pipeline to be blocked one more day," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. After four years of what he called "needless delays," Boehner said it is time for President Barack Obama "to stand up for middle-class jobs and energy security and approve the Keystone pipeline."

Environmentalists see the State Department report in a vastly different light.

They say it was inadequate and failed to account for climate risks posed by the pipeline. The report also is based on a false premise, opponents say ? namely, that tar sands in western Canada will be developed for oil production regardless of whether the Keystone XL pipeline is approved.

"Americans are already suffering from the consequences of global warming, from more powerful storms like Hurricane Sandy to drought conditions currently devastating the Midwest and Southwest," said Daniel Gatti of the group Environment America. Production of oil from Canadian tar sands could add as much as 240 billion metric tons of global warming pollution to the atmosphere, Gatti said, a potential catastrophe that would hasten the arrival of the worst effects of global warming.

Gatti and other opponents said development of the vast tar sands is far from certain, despite assurances by the project's supporters.

"Tar sands can be stopped, and we are stopping it," Gatti said, citing a rally in Washington last month attended by an estimated 35,000 people. Project opponents also have blocked construction in Texas and Oklahoma and have been arrested outside the White House gate.

The pipeline plan has become a flashpoint in the U.S. debate over climate change. Republicans and business and labor groups have urged the Obama administration to approve the project as a source of jobs and a step toward North American energy independence. Environmental groups have been pressuring the president to reject the pipeline, saying it would carry "dirty oil" that contributes to global warming. They also worry about a spill.

The State Department review stopped short of recommending approval of the project, but it gave the Obama administration political cover if it chooses to endorse the pipeline in the face of opposition from many Democrats and environmental groups. State Department approval of the 1,700-mile pipeline is needed because it crosses a U.S. border.

The lengthy report says Canadian tar sands are likely to be developed, regardless of whether the U.S. approves the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry oil through Montana, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma.

The report acknowledges that development of tar sands in Alberta would create greenhouse gases but makes clear that other methods of transporting the oil ? including rail, trucks and barges ? also pose a risk to the environment.

The State Department analysis for the first time evaluated two options using rail: shipping the oil on trains to existing pipelines or to oil tankers. The report shows that those other methods would release more greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming than the pipeline. The Keystone XL pipeline, according to the report, would release annually the same amount of global warming pollution as 626,000 passenger cars.

A scenario that would move the oil on trains to mostly existing pipelines would release 8 percent more greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide than Keystone XL. That scenario would not require State Department approval because any new pipelines would not cross the U.S border.

Another alternative that relies mostly on rail to move the oil to the Canadian west coast, where it would be loaded onto oil tankers to the U.S. Gulf Coast, would result in 17 percent more greenhouse gas emissions, the report said.

In both alternatives, the oil would be shipped in rail cars as bitumen, a thick, tar-like substance, rather than as a liquid.

The State Department was required to conduct a new environmental analysis after the pipeline's operator, Calgary-based TransCanada, changed the project's route though Nebraska. The Obama administration blocked the project last year because of concerns that the original route would have jeopardized environmentally sensitive land in the Sand Hills region.

The administration later approved a southern section of the pipeline, from Cushing, Okla., to the Texas coast, as part of what Obama has called an "all of the above" energy policy that embraces a wide range of sources, from oil and gas to renewables such as wind and solar.

The draft report issued Friday begins a 45-day comment period, after which the State Department will issue a final environmental report before Secretary of State John Kerry makes a recommendation about whether the pipeline is in the national interest.

Kerry has promised a "fair and transparent" review of the plan and said he hopes to decide on the project in the "near term." Most observers do not expect a decision until summer at the earliest.

Canadian Natural Resource Minister Joe Oliver said Friday that Canada will respect the U.S. review process and noted the importance of the pipeline to the Canadian economy.

Obama's initial rejection of the pipeline last year went over badly in Canada, which relies on the United States for 97 percent of its energy exports.

___

Associated Press writers Rob Gillies in Toronto and Dina Cappiello in Washington contributed to this report.

__

Follow Matthew Daly on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-02-Oil%20Pipeline/id-554e398adcfc411ebf6cb48bd5d8834c

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Boeing to cut jobs at second Dreamliner plant: report

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Boeing Co will cut hundreds of jobs at a South Carolina plant that makes 787 Dreamliners over the course of this year, but the move has nothing to do with the recent grounding of the troubled jetliner, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

The cuts, which chiefly target contract workers, are not uncommon as productivity improves on a new airplane program and were conceived before major problems with the 787s battery surfaced, the Journal said. Two high-profile battery malfunctions led to international aviation regulators grounding the jetliner in mid-January.

The cuts could account for up to 20 percent of the workforce in some teams at the plant in North Charleston, South Carolina, the Journal reported, citing an unnamed source familiar with the plan. Overall, the plant employs more than 6,000 people.

Boeing did not confirm the layoffs, but did tell Reuters it plans to reduce reliance on contract workers at the South Carolina plant.

"Boeing regularly uses contract labor and 'industry assist' to supplement its workforce during surge activities and on development programs that require a production ramp up - that's standard practice in the aerospace industry," said Marc Birtel, a Boeing spokesman. "As we progress in improving efficiencies in our processes, training our entry-level employees and growing the experience of our team in South Carolina, we expect to continue to reduce reliance on contract labor/industry assist to meet our production objectives."

The South Carolina plant is the second Boeing facility where 787s are assembled after the larger Everett, Washington, facility north of Seattle. Between them, Boeing turns out five Dreamliners per month.

So far, the plane maker has said production has not been slowed by the grounding of the 787 and it aims to fulfill its plan to ramp up to 10 787s per month by the end of 2013.

(Reporting By Bill Rigby. Editing by Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boeing-cut-jobs-second-dreamliner-plant-report-003501387--sector.html

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Bob Woodward Has Now Picked the Most and Least Important Fights with a POTUS (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/288056092?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Seals take scientists to Antarctic's ocean floor

SYDNEY | Thu Feb 28, 2013 4:14pm EST

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Elephant seals wearing head sensors and swimming deep beneath Antarctic ice have helped scientists better understand how the ocean's coldest, deepest waters are formed, providing vital clues to understanding its role in the world's climate.

The tagged seals, along with sophisticated satellite data and moorings in ocean canyons, all played a role in providing data from the extreme Antarctic environment, where observations are very rare and ships could not go, said researchers at the Antarctic Climate & Ecosystem CRC in Tasmania.

Scientists have long known of the existence of "Antarctic bottom water," a dense, deep layer of water near the ocean floor that has a significant impact on the movement of the world's oceans.

Three areas where this water is formed were known of, and the existence of a fourth suspected for decades, but the area was far too inaccessible, until now, thanks to the seals.

"The seals went to an area of the coastline that no ship was ever going to get to," said Guy Williams, ACE CRC Sea Ice specialist and co-author of the study.

"This is a particular form of Antarctic water called Antarctic bottom water production, one of the engines that drives ocean circulation," he told Reuters. "What we've done is found another piston in that engine."

Southern Ocean Elephant seals are the largest of all seals, with males growing up to six meters (20 feet) long and weighing up to 4,000 kilograms (8,800 lbs).

Twenty of the seals were deployed from Davis Station in east Antarctica in 2011 with a sensor, weighing about 0.220 to 0.440 pounds, on their head. Each of the sensors had a small satellite relay which transmitted data on a daily basis during the five to 10 minute intervals when the seals surfaced.

"We get four dives worth of data a day but they're actually doing up to 60 dives," he said.

"The elephant seals ... went to the very source and found this very cold, very saline dense water in the middle of winter beneath a polynya, which is what we call an ice factory around the coast of Antarctica," Williams added.

Previous studies have shown that there are 50-year-long trends in the properties of the Antarctic bottom water, and Williams said the latest study will help better assess those changes, perhaps providing clues for climate change modeling.

"Several of the seals foraged on the continental slope as far down as 1,800 meters (1.1 miles), punching through into a layer of this dense water cascading down the abyss," he said in a statement. "They gave us very rare and valuable wintertime measurements of this process."

(Reporting by Pauline Askin, Editing by Elaine Lies and Michael Perry)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/iZR9C8kxcC0/us-australia-antarctic-seals-idUSBRE91P03020130228

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Oregon fourth graders wax philosophical about nature of work

Students in a fourth grade classroom in Eugene, Ore. are tackling tough questions about the ethics and values of work in discussions led by University of Oregon philosophy students.?

By Staff,?Associated Press / March 1, 2013

In this Feb. 26, 2013 photo, University of Oregon philosophy instructor Paul Bodin and UO student Kevin Keiter engage a fourth grade class at Edison Elementary School in a philosophy discussion in Eugene, Ore. Bodin has deployed his junior and senior students to elementary school classrooms to teach philosophy this term.

Associated Press

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The fourth-grade students in Jenny Vondracek's class are wrestling with a thorny question ? the nature of work.

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To prime the discussion, the Edison Elementary School students have read a story, "Frederick" by Leo Lionni, about a community of mice.

The mice spend the summer gathering and storing food for the winter, except for Frederick, a poet who just sits around observing the natural world, storing up images in his mind. When winter comes and the mice run out of food, they turn to Frederick, who warms and entertains them with reminders of the sun and tales of beauty.

The question for the fourth-graders: Is Frederick working in the same way as the mice who gather food?

Under the guidance of University of Oregon philosophy student Kevin Keitner, Vondracek's 28 students have pushed their desks out of the way and sit in a big circle, ready to jump right in to the discussion.

"He worked hard by thinking," Lucas Scott says of Frederick. "The others worked hard by carrying things."

Classmate Trevor Veillette offers a comparison as a way of coming to grips with it.

"Studying hard for a geography test would be different than, like, training for a triathlon," he says.

Jarrett Bryant has his own perspective.

"I don't think that mouse was working hard. He was just sitting out there," he says.

For one hour each week, Eugene fourth- and fifth-graders at a handful of schools are tackling philosophy, thanks to a joint effort between the university and the Eugene School District.

University students lead the discussions in classrooms at Adams, Camas Ridge, Chavez, Family and Edison elementary schools.

This is not philosophy with a capital P ? your Platonism, Marxism, Kantian or existentialism schools of thought.

This is intended to be real-life stuff, the lively dinner-table conversation that almost no one can step away from.

What does it mean to be brave? What is friendship? Can we evaluate good and bad art? Is lying always wrong? Do animals have rights?

And yes, says Paul Bodin, the instructor in the UO's education department who dreamed up the program, kids are totally up to the conversation.

Bodin talked the UO philosophy department into offering a class to encompass the project, and letting him teach it, after stumbling on a book, "Big Ideas for Little Kids" by Mount Holyoke College philosophy Professor Thomas Wartenberg.

It was the fifth session in the series for Vondracek's class at Edison on Tuesday, and the students needed only occasional prompting from Keitner and Bodin to explore the idea.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/8MMpptsX4W0/Oregon-fourth-graders-wax-philosophical-about-nature-of-work

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New iPhone apps worth downloading: Fleksy - Happy Typing and Audiobooks for Audible updates, Yet Another Zombie Defense

Start your day with Fleksy - Happy Typing, a keyboard app that makes thumb typing easy with a powerful auto-correct feature. Following that is a big update to Audiobooks from Audible, an app that for listening to and navigating through your audiobooks. Finally, we?ve got Yet Another Zombie Defense, a twin-stick shooter with real-time strategy elements.

What?s it about? Keyboard app Fleksy makes typing with your thumbs a lot easier by providing an intuitive user interface design.

What?s cool? First, Fleksy?s keyboard is bigger and more intuitive than the iPhone?s. The keys are still in the same places as on a standard QWERTY keyboard, but gone are extra buttons like punctuation marks. The idea is that you should be able to thumb-type without looking. The second feature makes the first work even better: Fleksy packs a powerful autocorrect feature that?s sharper than the one native to Apple?s iOS platform, so even if you totally botch a word while typing, you?ll be able to continue uninhibited.

Who?s it for? If you type or text a lot on your iPhone and could use a better way to do it, try Fleksy.

What?s it like? For another cool take on the keyboard, try SWYPE.

What?s it about? The dedicated app for audiobook delivery service Audible brings books straight to your favorite iOS devices and makes finding new ones a snap.

What?s cool? Audible?s app is great for users who get a kick out of listening to rather than reading their books. Audiobooks for Audible is an audio book delivery service and offers a quick means of navigating through and listening to your audiobooks. The app makes transferring new books to your device faster over Wi-Fi and includes controls that let you skip around by chapter or through fast-forwarding. You can also leave bookmarks and multitask with the app, accessing other iOS features while you listen. Audiobooks? latest redesign brings a new user interface to iPhone users and optimizes the app for the iPad as well.

Who?s it for? If you?re an Audible subscriber and prefer listening to a book while commuting, working out, or traveling, set yourself up with the service.

What?s it like? Audiobooks Premium can deliver you thousands of public domain audiobooks, while Bookmark is a handy app for saving your place in things to which you?re listening.

What?s it about? Yet Another Zombie Defense is a top-down twin-stick shooter that throws in the ability to buy strategic elements like turrets and crates to help you survive longer.

What?s cool? Despite its name, Yet Another Zombie Defense is actually more than most zombie twin-stick shooters. You control a character from a top-down perspective and blast zombies with one control stick and move around with the other. The game adds elements of real-time strategy as well, because as you kill zombies and earn money, you can buy things like crates for building walls, auto-turrets, and better weapons. As time goes on, the game becomes harder, so you?ll need to plan for each night of fighting off zombies by making adequate preparations.

Who?s it for? This one?s for zombie shooter and twin-stick shooter fans, especially those with a strategic mind.

What?s it like? Gun Bros. 2 also nails the twin-stick shooter vibe, and Brainsss puts players on the other side of the human-zombie conflict.

Download the Appolicious Android app

Source: http://www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/13255-new-iphone-apps-worth-downloading-fleksy-happy-typing-and-audiobooks-for-audible-updates-yet-another-zombie-defense

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U.S. Justice Dept says wins $1 bln Dow Chemical tax shelter case

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department said on Wednesday it has won a $1 billion tax shelter case against Dow Chemical Co that involved a Swiss partnership, Wall Street financial giant Goldman Sachs and international law firm King & Spalding.

The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana "rejected two tax shelter transactions entered into by The Dow Chemical Company that purported to create approximately $1 billion in phony tax deductions," Justice said in a statement.

Chief Judge Brian Jackson also imposed penalties, the department said of the decision in the Baton Rouge court.

A Dow spokeswoman said in a statement that Dow sued the U.S. government for return of taxes paid for tax years 1993-2003.

"Dow paid all taxes at issue plus interest, but requested the U.S. District Court to agree that the taxes were wrongly assessed by the IRS," the spokeswoman said.

"Dow is disappointed by the trial court's decision ... we believe the opinion is not supported by the facts and applicable law. Dow is exploring all of its options, including appeal."

The Justice Department said the tax transactions were created by Goldman Sachs and King & Spalding and involved forming a partnership that Dow operated from its European headquarters in Switzerland.

Jackson wrote in his 74-page opinion that the government was correct to reject "the artificial tax benefits created by these schemes that were designed to exploit perceived weaknesses in the tax code and not designed for legitimate business reasons," according to the Justice Department.

Assistant U.S. Attorney General Kathryn Keneally of Justice's Tax Division said: "It is offensive to all taxpayers who pay their fair share when our largest corporations believe that they can claim hundreds of millions of dollars in tax deductions that are manufactured by abusive tax schemes."

Goldman Sachs could not immediately be reached for comment. A King Spalding spokesman declined to comment.

(Reporting by Patrick Temple-West in Washington, with Ernest Scheyder and Lauren LaCapra in New York; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-justice-dept-says-wins-1-bln-dow-231910482--sector.html

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