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Thu, May 01, 2008

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Gas Project on Anvil in 45 Days
White Is New Black Gone Green

Gas Project on Anvil in 45 Days
India, Pakistan and Iran will finalize in 45 days all agreements for implementation of the long-delayed tri-nation gas pipeline project, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on April 29.
All pending issues and agreements would be finalized within 45 days and “given to the leadership of the three countries. Afterwards we will decide,“ he said addressing a news conference in New Delhi after talks with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Times of India reported.
On extending the pipeline to China, he said “We have received one proposal. We will evaluate it and consider its merit and evaluate all aspects of the proposal.
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President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (2nd l) shakes hands with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi, April 29.
Describing Iran’s relationship with India as “deep and historic“, the president said the “two sides are too close to each other and hope in the future we will finalize the gas pipeline project.“
India on April 29 night said the gas pipeline with Iran and Pakistan is a ’doable’ project though a “lot of work“ needs to be done to ensure that it is commercially viable, secure and there were assured supplies.
“We think it is doable,“ Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon told reporters after three-hour talks between visiting Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi.
Officials of the three countries will be meeting soon to continue discussions on the 7.1 billion-dollar project.
Asked when the deal is expected to be signed, Menon said, “If we have an assured project we can sign tomorrow.“ On the negotiations on gas price, he said the issue was not of treating it as a commercial transaction but to see the potential as a confidence-building measure between the three countries.
Asked about western concerns over Iran, Menon said India saw Tehran as a factor of stability in the region.
New Delhi has made it clear that Iran had every right to pursue a peaceful nuclear program while fulfilling its international obligations. The Iranian president briefed the prime minister on its nuclear program.
To a question whether there was a change in India’s policy on Iran after New Delhi voted against it at the IAEA, Menon disagreed saying “we never see it as a shift. We see it as a continuation of the relationship.“ Ahmadinejad and Singh discussed ways for taking the IPI project forward.
Menon said a meeting of the India-Iran Joint Commission will be held in the middle of the year where the two countries will discuss ways and means to strengthen their relationship.
The two leaders agreed to triple bilateral trade to 30 billion US dollars but set no date.
On including China in the IPI pipeline project, Menon said, “It was just an idea“ and the pre-feasibility study covered only three countries.
Menon said the gas pipeline was much more than a commercial project. “It is much more than a commercial project. We also see it as a confidence building measure between the three countries. It will last for 40 years. We see it as an assured supply to meet our energy needs,“ he said.
Asked about Ahmadinejad’s response to India’s request for gas supplies, Menon said, “He said Yes, I think that is our common goal. He also said it (IPI pipeline) was an assured source of supply.“ To a question, Menon said, “I do not think what we are doing with Iran should worry anybody. The more the engagement, the better it is for us all.“

White Is New Black Gone Green
Summer’s coming, and that means hot days - hot enough to have to turn on air conditioners. But what if we could lower that need - just a little bit? According to the United States Department of Energy, the average air-conditioned home releases two tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere at energy is consumed--and as homeowners collectively lay out a total of $11 billion a year to cool those homes.
Today, there isn’t an easy solution to the challenges of energy use and pollution, but there is an easy way to cut back on both and add some other cost-saving benefits in the process: elastomeric roof coatings, Energy-daily said.
Elastomeric roof coatings protect flat roofs from UV light as well as damage from wind and rain. Important characteristics, however acrylic roof coatings are also white--and therefore help reduce cooling costs.
The technology behind these coatings are a mainstay in an environmentally advanced portfolio that specialty materials company Rohm and Haas has been developing for the last 30 years.
Because they are white, elastomeric coatings reflect more sunlight before it becomes heat. Traditional flat black roof coatings, such as asphalt, absorb sunlight and radiate heat. These elastomeric coatings also protect against cracking because they themselves expand and contract as part of the roofing material. The result is a cooler and longer-lasting roof, lower ambient air temperatures and energy savings for the entire building.
Elastomeric roof coatings also have the potential to help save lives. According to the United States National Weather Service, heat is the leading weather-related killer. More than 400 Americans die from heat-related illnesses in a typical year, more than killed by lightening, tornadoes, floods, and hurricanes combined.
Most of these deaths take place among the elderly and poor, who cannot afford air conditioning. Cities like Philadelphia have begun housing initiatives enlisting the use of white elastomeric roof coatings and are seeking increased standards for new and replacement flat roofs above the current state building codes.
Lastly, not only does an elastomeric-coated roof save energy and lives, but it reduces landfill waste and provides substantial savings in maintenance and replacement costs. Roof repair used to mean tearing off the aging roof and replacing it, but with proper maintenance, elastomeric-coated roofs can last much longer than traditional roofs.
Maintenance is limited to occasional cleaning with a hose or power washer and reapplication of the coating on average every 7 to 10 years.

Strike Ends
Oil prices pulled back on April 29 from recent highs close to 120 dollars as British refinery workers returned to work after a two-day strike that hit fuel supplies.

EnergyCol3
Coal Price Hikes Push Electric Rates
Consumers struggling with high gas prices, rising food costs and falling home values have something new to worry about: Sharply rising electricity rates due to a surge in coal prices over the past year.
There is an abundance of coal in the United States, but like other commodities its price is increasingly dependent on events elsewhere in the world, AP said.
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Snowstorms this winter cut coal production in China and heavy rain flooded mines in Australia--the world’s largest coal exporter. Meanwhile, demand for coal to generate electricity and make steel is rising almost everywhere, especially in fast-growing China and India.
That has increased the world’s appetite for American coal, helping to push up the price of the fuel utilities burn to drive the steam turbines that generate half of the country’s electricity. US coal exports jumped 19.2 percent last year, according to the Energy Department, and are expected to rise another 15 percent this year.
“As more of the world develops and uses more energy, and supply tries to keep up with demand, we’re going to have these pinch points,“ said Carol Pfeiffer, director of fuels for the US for utility giant E.On.
Central Appalachian coal, a benchmark grade that’s widely used by power plants, has jumped from around $40 a ton in early 2007 to almost $90 a ton now. Coal from the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana, which has about three-quarters the heat content of Central Appalachian coal, jumped from less than $10 a ton to almost $15 a ton over the same time period.
Utilities must burn more Powder River Basin coal to generate an equivalent amount of energy, and it must travel east by rail, which adds significantly to its final cost. Utilities such as American Electric Power, for instance, mostly burn Appalachian coal in their eastern plants, but rely on cheaper Powder River Basin coal in the west.

Price Increases
Facing such steep price increases, utilities nationwide are raising rates and are likely to push for even more dramatic increases in electric rates in the coming months. In parts of coal-dependent West Virginia, for instance, electricity rates will rise 15 percent this year. That’s one of the biggest increases in American Electric’s history, a rate hike the company attributes largely to rising coal costs.
West Virginia is far from alone. In Kentucky, which like West Virginia gets more than 90 percent of its electricity from coal, the four biggest utilities have raised rates an average of 12 percent over the past 12 months, according to the Kentucky Public Service Commission.
Pamela Earlywine, a single mother of two in Paris, Ky., says her monthly electric bill has risen about 20 percent since last year. “We’ll just have to cut back even further,“ Earlywine said. “I’m already paying at least $30 more every month, so that changes my whole budget.“
American Electric’s planned 15 percent rate hike may not sound like much, but it means a bump of $900 a month for Twin River Hardwoods, a small, rural West Virginia sawmill whose monthly electric bill is already $6,000. “That would hurt,“ said owner Tony Woodyard.
The national average retail price of electricity rose 2.3 percent last year, the Energy Department says. But in West Virginia, prices rose 4.6 percent.

Fuel Costs
Energy research firm Global Insight expects rates to rise 5.7 percent nationally this year, largely due to coal costs, and Stifel Nicolaus analyst Barry Bannister recently forecast that fuel costs will boost retail electric rates 69 percent by 2015--more than double the increase of the last 10 years.
While states and utilities nationwide are taking steps to reduce their dependence on coal, the amount of the nation’s electricity generated by burning it will actually grow to 54 percent by 2030 from 49 percent now, the Energy Department says.
Despite recent price increases, coal is still cheap compared to other fuels. In 2006, for instance, coal cost $1.69 per BTU, or British thermal unit--a measure of how effectively a burning fuel generates heat--according to the Energy Department. Natural gas, in contrast, cost $6.87 per BTU.
Some of the reasons coal prices are up, including the weather related disruptions in China and Australia this winter, will likely be resolved quickly. But other causes are more long-term in duration. Ports in Australia aren’t adequate to handle growing demand, leaving ships lined up 30 to 50 deep waiting to load coal. South Africa faces similar transportation bottlenecks.
Demand for coal, meanwhile, is growing worldwide. China recently shifted from mostly exporting coal to mostly importing it.
In the US, transportation costs, rising wages and expensive new safety regulations have boosted the cost of mining coal. The prospect that Congress will pass laws sharply restricting polluting carbon emissions raises the possibility of even greater cost increases as producers spend on equipment and technology to cut emissions.
But until utilities face carbon restrictions, their biggest headache is coal costs.