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China Olympics

 
Don't get me wrong here, I love the Olympics, but what troubles me is that when a country spends so much for an event such as this, while many in that country are in shambles, be cause of the earth quakes, that has been in that country , and the way it treats its citizens, slave labor, and the selling of  prison inmates dead bodies to overseas exhibitions of the human body, and no freedoms, and all other things that is not right in China, seems a bit out of balance to me. I see that on the news about how the earth quake victims still have no place to live and all the world care relief being given to these people that much of the money spent on the Olympics could have done more good for their own.
Our priorities suck. China tries just in the last few months to clean up the air there, just for the Olympics, will their efforts to clean up their pollution practices continue after the games have come and gone? We will see.................It just amazes me what governments see as important.
Just trying to understand where we are as a people in the 21 st. century. What we hold as important and what isn't is very telling. What I see, is a sad mindset, hopefully, with all eyes on China, that maybe they will come out of their dismal past, and evolve.
for what it is worth.
 
 
 
SUPERPOWERS
How Much Will Beijing Pay For The Olympics

The Chinese have already started making money. A year before the games, Chinese shops abound in Olympic souvenirs and goods with Olympic symbols. There are bright ads of the future games all around, even at the bottom of the Great Chinese Wall. The 2008 Olympic symbols have already reached Moscow.
by Vasily Zubkov
Moscow (RIA Novosti) May 28, 2007
The Chinese authorities are sparing no expense for the 2008 Olympic Games. They are eager to show the whole world China's impressive economic success, growing prosperity, openness and love of peace. The Chinese Olympics promises to be the most expensive sports event in human history.

In the past hundred years, the summer 2004 Olympics in Athens had the biggest price tag - seven billion Euros. Preparations for it dealt a serious blow at the Greek budget - it developed a 5.3% deficit, which exceeds by far the European Union's admissible threshold. Judging by all, the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing can break this record.

Getting ready for the games, the Chinese carefully studied the Greek experience. The Greeks got into financial problems largely because they did not include in the budget a considerable part of expenditures on social needs and other indirect Olympic requirements. In order to avoid this, the Chinese and Beijing budgets were sensibly over-adjusted. But it is still unknown how much exactly the Chinese are going to spend on the games.

In official estimates, in the 2002-2007 period investment in the Olympic preparations should reach 141 billion Yuans (about $18 billion). But the closer the games, the more doubts there are about China's ability to keep within the announced budget. Quoting Beijing authorities some foreign sources report that China will have to spend 63 billion Yuans ($8 billion) on the construction of new underground lines and other transportation facilities, and another 40 billion Yuans ($5 billion) on the building of satellite cities.

The figure of 280 billion Yuans ($39 billion) looks more authentic but it absorbs only indirect spending on Olympic preparations. It does not cover the construction of sports facilities and development of a security system. Nor does it include the 67 billion Yuans ($8.5 billion) that the port of Qingdao (Tsingtao - Western postal name) was going to spend on the preparations for the Olympic regatta in the Yellow Sea.

Athens spent $2.4 billion on competitions, accommodation of athletes and guests and other events that were directly linked with competitions. Let's compare it with Chinese spending. Deputy Chairman of the Olympics-2008 Organizing Committee Wang Wei said that in March 2007, China spent two billion dollars on the project, half of which came from the International Olympic Committee. Preliminary estimates show that Beijing will spend on the Olympics many times more than Athens did.

At the same time, the money spent is already bringing benefits to China. Lavish Olympic injections have given a powerful impetus to the construction of housing and transport facilities; additional government contracts have encouraged the development of domestic high tech companies working in electronic instrument-making and machine-building.

Beijing's economy has been streamlined; the share of services has shot up, and the environmental situation in the Chinese capital has improved. In official figures, the Beijing economy owes a 2.07% addition to the annual growth rates to the Olympic projects. The programs already implemented are bringing more than one billion dollars a year to the municipal budget.

It is only natural that the state has funded the bulk of indirect Olympic spending, but private investors have also made a contribution. Some companies are sponsoring the Olympics, for example General Electric and Eastman Kodak. Others have invested in sports hoping for future dividends. Thus, the American Golden State Holding is building the main Olympic stadium in Beijing and simultaneously working on an electric power station and a water duct in one of the city's districts.

A company set up with the participation of local residents is building an all-purpose sports palace Wukesong (Five Pine Trees) in the west of Beijing. It will host a basketball tournament. After 2008 this centre will become private. Other Olympic facilities will also be used for trade and entertainment. For example, the Olympic water sports centre - the Water Cube - will become Beijing's biggest water leisure facility. The two thousand flats built for athletes will be sold.

It is striking that the thrifty Chinese are spending money on such an unusual scale. Their Olympic budget extends to projects in cities that will not host the Olympics. The steppe-located city of Hohhot will get a new airport worth $70 million and a fast highway linking it with Beijing. This is done to back up the capital airport in case of heavy rains during the games.

The Beijing Organizing Committee rejected my apprehensions about huge spending and an ability to recoup it. A high-ranking Chinese official said: "The main goal of the Olympic investment is to create an infrastructure that will serve the people of Beijing after 2008 as well. We will make the Olympic budget profitable. We are doing all we can for our games to be one of the best and they will bring us money."

The Chinese have already started making money. A year before the games, Chinese shops abound in Olympic souvenirs and goods with Olympic symbols. There are bright ads of the future games all around, even at the bottom of the Great Chinese Wall. The 2008 Olympic symbols have already reached Moscow.

Considering the profits that the Olympic Organizing Committee will make from selling the rights to television broadcasting of competitions, sponsor incomes, and money from ticket sales (worth almost one billion dollars), it is easy to believe that the Olympic Games in Beijing will not bring financial losses.

 
 
   
 

Fix those Traffic Lights to Reduce Congestion (And Emissions)

Interesting Article from Treehugger!

 

Fix those Traffic Lights to Reduce Congestion (And Emissions)

by Jeremy Elton Jacquot, Los Angeles

traffic light
Image courtesy of grendelkhan via flickr

You know the feeling: You're sitting in front of a traffic light for what seems like an eternity -- yet there's no cross traffic. And, as luck would have it, the light immediately reverts back to red after only allowing barely a handful of cars in front of you to pass. Surely, you wonder, there must be a better way of doing this?

Well, it turns out that you'd be right -- and that tweaking just a few controls on those accursed traffic signals would be enough to significantly reduce road congestion and air pollution -- by up to 10% and 20%, respectively. Furthermore, it would help drivers conserve fuel and cut the number of accidents at intersections, as McClatchy's Fred Greve reports in his excellent piece.

According to the National Transportation Operations Coalition, roughly 75% of the country's 300,000 traffic signals need timing adjustments or replacements. A lack of skilled engineers, political resistance and bureaucratic ineptitude, however, are preventing the necessary reforms from being implemented at the national level.

Only at the state- or city-level -- in California, Florida, Washington, Minnesota, Maryland, Georgia and Texas -- are efforts underway to streamline intersections and revamp traffic management. Unlike other countries, which have adopted adapted signal-timing systems, most cities in the U.S. continue to use outdated, ineffective centralized timers. While the latter operate by set intervals, changing lights, say, every 10 minutes during a specific time slot, adapted signal-timing systems monitor traffic conditions and flexibly adjust to optimize the flow -- even in the case of an accident, poor weather or construction.

Yet, because they're expensive and difficult to program, the adapted signal-timing systems have made few inroads in traffic departments here. Local politicians are often unwilling to invest the necessary capital or time to push these new technologies through; as a result, over 95% of traffic signals in the U.S. are still timer-driven.

Thank goodness some more progressive-minded communities have been willing to take a stab at reform, often to great success:

Among the most resourceful is Portland, Ore., which installed carbon dioxide emissions monitors at intersections before it improved their flow. The lower pollution that the monitors recorded enabled Portland to claim pollution-reduction credits that it sold for $560,000 on the carbon offset market. The money helped pay for Portland's intersection improvements.

Lakewood, Colo., another community that closely tracked before-and-after conditions, found that synchronizing lights at just 16 of its intersections delivered huge benefits. They included a daily savings of 635 hours in driving time, 172 gallons of gas and 758 pounds of pollution emissions, according to Denver's regional traffic authority.

Richard Plastino, Lakewood's director of public works, described the gains from improved intersections as "one of the few low-cost alternatives...to physical reconstruction of intersections and streets."

Then there's the real-life gain. Seattle, for example, retimed and synchronized more than 500 intersections between 1998 and 2002. The clearest result was a 20 percent drop in congestion on three of the city's major arteries.

As then-Seattle Mayor Paul Schell, the effort's leading proponent, argued at the time: "It's the one investment we can make in the near term that will make a difference in people's lives every day."

Los Angeles, anyone?

 
 
 

   
China Keeps on Truckin'

Ever been on the roads of China at night? Just go down to your local Wal-Mart, walk around and look at all the products on display. Then just imagine all of the parts they are made up of loaded on heavy trucks, thundering across the highways of China. That is what it is like.


Overloaded Truck


Fairly typical truck
from Automobile Mag blog


On my recent trip to Mt. Tai, my friend Wendy drove her car the two and a half hours to Tai An, where we would begin the climb. The highway was like a solid mass of trucks. Big, overloaded trucks. In Wendy’s zippy little Chevy, we weaved around and between them. (My eyes were definitely wide open!)


When I used to live at the Shijiazhuang airport, anytime we wanted to travel to the city, we drove 45 minutes on the highway, also covered in trucks. I’ve never seen anything like it.


From the New York Times’ Choking on Growth series:

Trucks here burn diesel fuel contaminated with more than 130 times the pollution-causing sulfur that the United States allows in most diesel. While car sales in China are now growing even faster than truck sales, trucks are by far the largest source of street-level pollution.

Doesn’t that sound lovely? Read more about trucks in China, oil consumption, diesel fuels, and how they are contributing to pollution here (NY Times).

 
 
   
 

Choking on Growth
New York Times is featuring a special series on the devastating impact of China’s “epic pollution crisis.” It is worth reading, although I feel like I’ve read all of this before. It is painfully obvious to anyone living in the PRC just how degraded the environment is, or how at risk many areas are for degradation. If you are new to China or need a good overview of the crisis, this is for you. Let me summarize it for you:
* China’s environment = very, very bad
* Effects on Chinese people’s health = very, very terrible (and mine too!)
* Measures needed to prevent environmental disaster = too many, too late?
Part 2 of the series discusses water scarcity and focuses on my former haunt of Shijiazhuang. I can definitely confirm that it was dry, dry, dry there. The DH says that from the air, the whole area looked like desert to him. I was very glad to leave Shijiazhuang for the relatively clean air of Linyi. I hope it stays that way.

The DH comes from a part of Spain that was once terribly polluted by mining and steel factories. The air quality was bad and the rivers were all toxic. The good news is now the rivers are recuperating and the air is getting cleaner. Change is possible, although I suspect China is not willing to forgo the economic growth necessary to make a real difference in the environment. (You can see pictures of the transformation of Avilés’ river estuary here.)

A side note: New York Times has done away with that silly “Select” program, and now all content, including opinions, is once again available free of charge.
 
 
 

   
My God, what have we done?
AmeliaA+.jpg hosted for free by ImageShack


You name it, we've killed it, deformed it, destroyed it, or contaminated it... from insects to people, from well-water to oceans, from soil to the atmosphere, from our bodies to those of generations to come.

When I was a child my schoolyard and backyard were sprayed with DDT, my feet were x-rayed with unregulated equipment each time I got a new pair of Tom Mccann shoes, the steel mills spewed their orange-black clouds over my city, the government tested atomic bombs while children marched outside in school bands. In 1969 the Cuyahoga River in my hometown of Cleveland caught on fire. When I was a young mother-to-be in Detroit PCB's contaminated our milk even as the milk nourished the embryo that would become my daughter. My spouse carried home chemicals from work on his clothing that he passed on to his children with every embrace.

Nothing has improved in the 21st century. Now they tell us we are endangered by factory waste, animal waste, plastic, food additives, pesticides, teflon, flame retardants, stain repellants, cigarette smoke, lead, asbestos, mercury, aluminum, fragrances, cell phones and even baby bottles... and there's ozone depletion, agent orange and nuclear waste.

Last year the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released data on 148 substances, from DDT and other pesticides to metals, PCBs, and plastic ingredients, measured in the blood and urine of several thousand people. What does it mean? Apparently no one knows... or cares.
Each year the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reviews an average of 1,700 new compounds that industry is seeking to introduce. Only a quarter of the 82,000 chemicals in use in the U.S. have even been tested for toxicity.
 
 
   
 

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Latest Comment
Re: You paid for this. - Hahaha! No discrimination on your part. I can respect that.

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