Archive for December, 2009

Chilled air system in Hainan could replace air conditioners, save energy

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

A Chinese energy company started work on a centralized refrigeration station in the southern city of Sanya, in Hainan Province, on Saturday, as part of the country’s energy-saving drive.

The station at the Yalongwan Holiday Resort is being built by Hainan Guodianhuade Energy Investment Co. Ltd. as a means to reduce the use of traditional air conditioning. It will make ice during the night, when energy demand is low, and send cooled air to buildings during the day.

With an investment of 174 million yuan (23.8 million U.S. dollars), the project includes a refrigeration station that can cool 400,000 square meters and 8,000 meters of pipes.

The project, upon completion, is projected to save 15 million kwh of electricity and 2 million cubic meters of liquefied petroleum gas every year, compared with traditional decentralized cooling systems.

It could set an example in terms of energy saving for the vast southern parts of China that could use such centralized systems, according to the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).

China’s rapid economic development has led to high energy consumption and pollution. However, statistics indicate that China is becoming more energy-efficient, according to the country’s first energy white paper, which was published earlier this week.

During 1980-2006, energy consumption increased 5.6 percent annually, while the economy grew 9.8 percent annually, the paper said.

Federer, Djokovic roll into semifinals

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Roger Federer was at his dominant best Wednesday to book a place in the Australian Open semifinals as Ana Ivanovic brought Venus Williams’ tournament to a halt.

The Swiss ace kept his cool in two close-fought sets against 12th seeded American James Blake before running away a 7-5, 7-6 (5), 6-4 winner and will face Serbian third seed Novak Djokovic for a place in the final.

Standing between Ivanovic and a final appearance is Slovakia’s Daniela Hantuchova, who blew Polish teenager Agnieszka Radwanska off court 6-2, 6-2, as she continues her comeback after a dive in the rankings.

In beating Blake, Federer reached a record 15th consecutive Grand Slam semi and secured the No 1 ranking for a record 209th week.

“It’s great being on top of the game for so long and being compared to greats like Rod Laver and Pete Sampras, it’s great being part of the pinnacle of the sport in every Grand Slam I’m playing in,” Federer said.

Federer, who is on track to face second seed Rafael Nadal in Sunday’s final, will remain the world No 1 ranked player for the tournament following his victory over Blake.

“I heard rumors I could lose it (top ranking), but we’re a long shot away of ‘I got to lose, he’s got to win’,” Federer said.

“We know how tough it is to win Grand Slams, it’s a long way,” he added.

It was a sorry end for Williams, who was desperate to claim her first title at Melbourne Park to add to her four Wimbledon and two US Open crowns.

Ivanovic, 20, overcame the American eighth seed in a ferociously contested 7-6 (3), 6-4 thriller, and credited the crowd on center court and her improved fitness for helping her into the last four for the first time.

“It was an amazing match, we had lots of long rallies, she’s an amazing competitor and she was also playing very well today,” the 20-year-old fourth seed said after posting her first win over Williams in four attempts.

“I’m just so happy I pulled through the whole two sets.

“Most of all I’m thrilled that it happened here because I just love playing here and I’m so comfortable here on court.”

Williams played with her left thigh heavily strapped, but gave credit to her opponent. And she defiantly vowed to bounce back.

“I have full expectations and aspirations to continue to play high-quality tennis and to continue to be a champion,” she said.

Ivanovic will play ninth seed Hantuchova, ensuring at least one player in the final on Saturday will be contesting their first Australian decider.

In the other semifinal, fellow Serb Jelena Jankovic, seeded three, takes on fifth-seeded Russian Maria Sharapova on Thursday.

Hantuchova, 25, emphatically announced her Grand Slam comeback when she outclassed Radwanska for the loss of just four games.

The win ended Radwanska’s giant-killing run, which included second seed Svetlana Kuznetsova and former world No 3 Nadia Petrova, and confirmed the 25-year-old Slovak’s return to the big time.

She is in her first Grand Slam semi-final and it comes five years after her last Grand Slam quarter-final appearance here.

“It feels great. Every tennis player knows what I’m talking about when you get to that point when you feel like everything you touch is going in and I want to go on as long as possible,” she said,

Djokovic was in dazzling form against Ferrer, but admitted nerves got the better of him as he tried to close the match in the third set.

“I even surprised myself with the way I played today, especially in the first two sets, but in the end I was very, very nervous,” he said.

“You always try to improve and I’m very happy that I am performing my best tennis in the major events, this is just the start, so hopefully I can get all the way.”

The Serb has advanced without dropping a set in his five matches, stretching his winning streak on hardcourt to nine matches.

“He’s done a phenomenal job, four semifinals of Grand Slams at his age, I was never close to that at his age, he’s improved so much in the last couple of years and it’s exciting playing the best in the world,” Federer said.

Yao Ming-less Rockets rip Wizards 94-69

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

Yao Ming couldn’t step on the court because of a foot stress fracture, so his teammates stepped up Tuesday night and notched a 94-69 win over the Washington Wizards for their 13th consecutive victory.

The Rockets didn’t appear to miss their All-Star center, jumping to a 7-0 lead and never trailing as they coasted to their 17th win in the last 18 games. The streak is their longest since their championship season of 1993-94, and the longest active streak in the NBA.

“Not having Yao, everybody had to step up a little bit and we all did,?? said Luther Head after scoring a team-high 18 points. “Everybody contributed and everybody scored. We did it as a team.”

Houston started 41-year-old Dikembe Mutombo in place of Yao, but also used the 6-foot-9 Carl Landry in the spot. Yao was averaging 22 points and 10.8 rebounds this season. Landry finished with 12 points.

“The first half was about as good defensively as we could play,” said coach Rick Adelman. “You really got to give Dikembe credit for stepping in.”

Tracy McGrady was ineffective for the first three quarters, going 2-of-11 with six points. He helped the Rockets stretch their lead when he had two slam dunks early in the fourth quarter to make 73-51 and finished with 11 points.

McGrady said Yao’s injury was a “devastating blow,” but that they can’t use it as an excuse.

“If we continue to play defense and believe, then we really control it ourselves,” he said. “Everybody is really counting us out, which is cool, but we just have to keep believing.”

With one star out and another struggling, the Rockets got double-digit contributions from several others, including Luis Scola, who was 7-of-7 for 14 points. Rafer Alston finished with 13 points.

Grand Canyon formed when dinosaurs roamed

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

A study in March dated the initial carving of the Grand Canyon at 16 to 17 million years ago, but a more recent study suggests the carving from water and wind may have begun when dinosaurs still roamed the American Southwest.

“The Colorado River, with some help from the wind, ultimately carries the detritus away pebble by pebble, sand grain by sand grain,” said one of the authors of the new study, Brian Wernicke of Caltech. “From this point of analysis, the unanswered questions about how and why the canyon formed start to pile up.”

The new thinking, detailed in the May issue of the Geological Society of America Bulletin, indicates that the canyon, or at least a prototype of it, actually formed about 55 million years ago ?w and possibly sooner ?w in younger rock layers that lay above the ones the canyon is cut into today. Erosion wore down these layers while water continued to carve out the canyon, essentially moving the whole landscape down through the rock sequence until it got to its present-day position.

Wernicke and his team used grains of the mineral apatite in the canyon’s ancient sandstone walls to find clues as to when the different rock layers were uncovered by erosion.

Apatite contains the radioactive elements uranium and thorium. As these elements decay, they spit out helium atoms. By comparing the relative abundances of the elements scientists can date the apatite grains.

These crystals form deep in the Earth, where temperatures are much hotter than at the surface. With each mile of depth, temperatures increase by about 72 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius). At temperatures above 158 F (70 C), the helium escapes from the mineral, but once the grains cool below that temperature, the helium becomes trapped. So the date of the apatite grains tells scientists the last time the rock layer was buried deep underground.

The dates the team got from samples taken from the bottom of the Upper Granite Gorge and the top of the surrounding plateau show that the two different rock sequences were both about 131 F (55 C) from 55 to 28 million years ago, then cooled to near-surface temperatures about 15 million years ago, Wernicke said.

If the rock sequences were at the same temperature for all those millions of years, they must also have been at the same depth, Wernicke and his team surmised. This suggests to the researchers that a canyon must have existed at least 55 million years ago in the younger rock layers that once lay atop the southwestern plateaus. It might have emerged sooner, they say.

The finding challenges the notion that the upper layers of the rock sequence were eroded away before the canyon formed. Instead, the team’s findings suggest that a canyon had formed in the upper layers and then the top rock layers were eroded away, with the river-cutting of the canyon keeping pace and continually lowering the position of the canyon.

Quake rescuers seek tiny signs of life

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Ma Yuanjiang, a power plant executive, was rescued at around 00:50 am Tuesday from the rubble in Wenchuan County of southwest China’s Sichuan Province, nearly 179 hours after the May 12 earthquake.

He was surprisingly able to speak after being rescued, and shortly after he began to eat a little, said Wu Geng, Ma’s colleague and also head of the plant, who was at the rescue spot.

Ma was at a meeting when the magnitude 8.0 earthquake ravaged the plant office building, and he was trapped in the debris of the second floor, which has presented huge difficulties for rescuers.

The 31-year-old survivor was pulled out by a Shanghai rescue team from the debris of an office building at a flattened power plant, after more than 30 hours’ efforts.

Rescuers found Ma in the afternoon on May 18 when they were digging a hole trying to reach Yu Jinhua, a colleague of Ma.

Followed by an amputation operation, Yu was rescued at about 6:00 p.m. on May 18. Rescuers then turned to Ma and sent sweetened water to him through a straw.

Ma was receiving treatment at the temporary clinic of the Chongqing No. 3 Military Hospital, and will be sent by air to a hospital in Chengdu.

Ma, who is a power generation department deputy director of the Yingxiu Bay Hydro-Power Plant, is the only survivor saved so far on Tuesday.

Around 4:30 pm Monday, a man named Peng Guohua was saved 170 hours after the tremor, and was in a stable condition, military sources said Tuesday.

Peng was transferred to a military medical team stationed in the Anxian County of Mianyang City at 4 am Tuesday for medical treatment, and is currently in a stable condition, the military sources said on Tuesday.

Chances of survival are getting remote as a week has passed since the earthquake. Although challenged by continuous aftershocks, rescue operations are still proceeding, and dead bodies are promptly disposed of to prevent epidemic.

The Chinese health, police and civil affairs authorities said police and medical workers will keep record of the unidentified bodies and collect body tissues for DNA tests. The police will manage the DNA database for future identification.

Rescuers disinfected and took photos of the bodies before burying them. A brigadier from the Jinan Military Area Command said the photos will be collected and sent to local civil affairs office for reference.

“We took 30 cameras with us when we came for the rescue,” said Tang Yanfeng, a brigadier leading rescue work in the Pengzhou City, one of the worst-hit areas in the earthquake.

“Some people may never have a chance to see the bodies of their families, and we hope it’ll be a comfort to those if they could see their last photos,” he added.

Nationwide, the death toll from the quake rose to 34,073 as of midday Monday, while 245,108 people were injured.

Seeking Tiny Signs of Life

Beichuan, China - In the thin light of morning, rescuers pointing a flashlight into a pile of debris saw what looked like a person’s ear. The victim was deep inside the rubble; they could not tell if it was a man or a woman.

Rescue crews searching for dwindling numbers of survivors from China’s earthquake are looking for the smallest of clues.

On Monday, they found two: the ear, attached to a person showing the faintest signs of life, and the electronic beep of a toy.

The tiny traces of hope came at different times of day in Beichuan, a town reduced to mounds of rubble in last week’s quake. And they set off hours of painstaking work as rescuers tried to determine the safest approaches to keep debris from shifting and burying the survivors — if they were still alive.

It started around 6 am. Survivors who have come daily to search the wreckage for lost family members shouted to emergency workers, saying they thought they might have found someone. Shining flashlights 13 feet down into the wreckage, they found a sign.

“We saw an ear. It was not decayed,” said Xu Xiangqian, part of the Volunteers of Nantong Red Cross Society near Shanghai, who helped with the work. “And we knew maybe there was some hope.”

The rescuers surveyed the site, which was shaded by a tree, strategizing ways in and chipping away at the concrete. A heavy crane sat ready, roaring to life when needed.

As they worked on, around 5 pm in another corner of what was the town, at the end of a road, covered in glass, shoes and other belongings, geologists inspecting a collapsed apartment building, heard the tinny sound of music, like that from an electronic game. When they shouted, they said a woman’s voice — weak and faint — responded.

Both rescues ended in uncertainty after hours as night fell. Such endings were becoming more common as the magnitude-8.0 quake’s aftermath stretched into its ninth day, lowering the chances for survivors. Rescue workers said they have been called to numerous sites after possible signs of life were detected only to find nothing.

“We’d come out, we’d work for more than half a day and in the end, nothing,” said Zhang Qingshan, a member of the National Rescue Team, who lost his voice in the first few days of the tragedy because he had been shouting out to possible survivors who had been trapped.

Still survival remains possible. Rescuers speculated that the woman near the electronic toy stood a reasonable chance. Seeing a nearby sign for a restaurant in the debris, they wondered if the woman might have food to survive on. They tapped the storefront’s mangled metal gate and shouted “Hello? Is there anyone there? Hello?” over and over again.

Rescuers were buoyed by the midmorning retrieval of a 61-year-old woman from the ruins of a market 164 hours after being trapped.

“It was a miracle of life,” the Xinhua News Agency quoted medical worker Zeng Jun, as saying. “After hours of emergency treatment, Li showed normal signs and can answer simple questions.”

Her son, Zhao Jun, who learned of the rescue on television and rushed to the hospital, described his mother as “an ordinary old lady and not in good shape.”

Monday also marked a week since the quake, a good time, the rescue volunteers said, for finding someone. “It’s our greatest hope to find someone. We would be so happy,” said a member of the Guizhou Fire Battalion team who would give only his surname, Zhao. “Even if we have 1 percent of hope, it’s enough for us.”

The Guizhou team was trying to reach the person whose ear was first found. As the cool morning turned into a blazing hot afternoon, team members in bright orange jumpsuits, white helmets and facemasks were joined by soldiers in military fatigues. The maneuvered heavy machinery to pry apart stubborn pieces of debris. A crane lifted huge slabs of concrete.

“Slowly! Slowly!” rescuers shouted, worried that the hole they were making in the pile would suddenly collapse.

Equipment used to measure vital signs were lowered in. There were very faint signs of life. The growing crowd watching the process — mostly journalists and soldiers taking pictures on their cell phones — craned their necks. An ambulance equipped with a resuscitator and oxygen stood by.

The work stopped only twice: during a brief but strong aftershock around 4 pm, and at 2:28 pm, when emergency vehicles, police cars and work vehicles honked their horns and sirens crescendo in unison to mark the one week of the start of the quake.

There were many false alarms as excitement grew when it seemed like the rescue was almost complete — then dimmed when it became obvious the person was still trapped. It was never clear what building they were in before it collapsed or whether it was a man or a woman.

By late afternoon, the group of onlookers had thinned and rescuers had taken a new tack.

“Right now, we think the person is about 4 meters (13 feet) deep. We’ve gone 2 meters (6.5 feet) in and there’s a piece of concrete that’s blocking us,” said an official from the Ministry of Public Security’s Fire Battalion told reporters.

“The space can fit only 1.5 people but we have two people squeezed in there, chipping away at the concrete. We do not dare use anything bigger,” said the official, who refused to give his name but said he spoke on behalf of the agency.

It was much the same for the trapped woman with the electronic game. Once detected, rescuers surveyed the site. An argument over how to proceed ensued: should they tear through the ground-level rubble or drill from above?

Eventually, they drilled in from the floor above — and found no one. The mood deflated and the rescue experts dwindled away,

“Sometimes people use their last ounce of strength to call out to us and when they hear that we are coming to save them. They are so emotional, they die,” said Wang Jianwei, a member of Zhang’s National Rescue Team and who found the 61-year-old woman earlier in the day.

Only a handful of soldiers and two volunteers remained at the site, unconvinced that the space was empty. They resumed calling out to the woman and banging on metal.

“All of us heard the music and some of us heard her voice. There’s definitely someone in there,” said Meng Ye, a 40-year-old volunteer from the central city of Xi’an. “That sound will haunt me all night.”

The men worked after the sunset, using only a small flashlight to keep the darkness away.

Crustaceans, squid found where once there were fish

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

Researchers are pointing fingers at global warming again, saying it has caused dramatic shifts in some aquatic communities in which fish populations die off and crabs, lobsters and squid take over.

The finding comes from a new analysis of 50 years worth of fish-trawling data collected in Narragansett Bay and adjacent Rhode Island Sound but may apply elsewhere, researchers said.

Resident fish communities have progressively shifted from vertebrate species (fish) to the invertebrates (lobsters and crabs); from bottom-feeders to species that find their food higher up in the water column; and from larger, cool-water species to smaller, warm-water dwellers.

“This is a pretty dramatic change, and it’s a pattern that is being seen in other ecosystems … but we’re in the relatively unique position of being able to document it,” said Jeremy Collie of the University of Rhode Island, leader of the new study.

Collie said while most of the changes observed in the survey occurred slowly, an abrupt change appeared to take place in 1980 and 1981 when benthic species (or bottom-feeders), such as winter flounder and silver hake, declined and pelagic species (or those that feed closer to the surface), such as butterfish and bluefish, increased.

“We think there has been a shift in the food web resulting in more of the productivity being consumed in the water column,” Collie explained. “Phytoplankton are increasingly being grazed by zooplankton, which are then eaten by planktivorous fish, rather than the phytoplankton sinking to the bottom and being consumed by bottom fish. It’s a rerouting of that production from the bottom to the top.”

Collie also noted that it was the decline of benthic species that had freed up the bottom of the bay for lobsters and crabs to move in.

Eating in Beijing

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Beijing is undergoing a culinary revolution of the most extraordinary kind. Over the past decade, restaurants specialising in cuisines from around China –and the world – have sprung up across the city. And the venues, from chic, modern dining rooms to hole-in-the-wall eateries hidden in Beijing’s ancient hutongs, are a big part of the fun. The variety is even more impressive when one considers that two decades ago the city was still a culinary desert. In the 1950s, Mao Zedong decided to cut off China’s capitalist tails, a move that resulted in the closure of private restaurants.

In 1980, Yuebin Fanzhuang (43, 31 Cuihua Hutong, opposite main gate of the National Art Museum of China, Dongcheng, tel 6524 5322, mains 10-43RMB) opened in a tiny hutong, becoming the first getihu, or private, restaurant to re-open in Beijing. It was nothing special, and has long since been eclipsed by other eateries, but it ended the long hiatus and offered markedly better food and service than the lethargic state-run restaurants. That said, right up to the early 1990s eating in the capital often meant dining out at one of the ubiquitous Cantonese or spicy Sichuan cafés, usually drab affairs with dim fluorescent lighting and plastic garbage bag table cloths that stuck to your forearms. It was not that long ago that huge heads of cabbage were piled up on the roofs of Chinese houses and on street corners, a reminder of the limited fare then available.

The opening of the Red Capital Club in 1999 in a restored courtyard house set the trend for quaint hutong restaurants. The beautifully renovated The Source offers a set meal of Sichuan dishes; and The Courtyard, once an old house next to the East Gate and moat of the Forbidden City, was transformed into a bright space serving fusion food.

Restaurants also began moving into the city’s parks. Conveniently for tourists many of the best are in Ritan Park. One of the most noteworthy, however, is Bai Family Mansion, set in a sprawling garden that dates back to the beginning of the Qing Dynasty.

Gui Jie, or Ghost Street is lined with billowing red lanterns hanging in front of the more than 100 restaurants standing shoulder-to-shoulder on this thoroughfare that stretches 1.5 kilometres (one mile) from east to west along Dongzhimennei Dajie. The all-night dining boulevard is a night cat’s dream. It’s best known for its mala xiao longxia (hot, numbing crayfish); spicy duck’s neck, a specialty of Wuhan; and the hot, sour fish hotpot that made Guizhou famous. Gui Jie was dubbed ‘ghost’ street because gui is pronounced the same as the Chinese word for ghost. Actually, the character for the street name means ‘vessel for holding food’, but ‘ghost’ better captures the open-all-hours feel of the neighbourhood.

The most recent trend in restaurants in Beijing has seen the opening of chic restaurants with an ultra-contemporary design. The avant-garde People 8 is so fashionably dark that you need a flashlight to make your way to what are probably the coolest toilets in the city. LAN, one of the latest additions to Beijing’s restaurant scene, was designed by Philippe Starck, who whipped the 6,000-square metre (65,000-square-foot) space into a fairy fantasyland.

The year 2006 saw a foreign invasion as restaurants from all over the world set up shop in Beijing. In addition to American, European and South-east Asian restaurants, the city now offers Iranian, Turkish, Tunisian, Israeli, Cuban and Greek food, all opened by natives of those countries. French restaurants and pâtisseries are at the forefront. Caféde la Poste, a French bistro set up by a young French chef, serves excellent steaks, while W dine & wine , opened by Belgian Geoffrey Weckx, a former chef at several five-star hotels in China, offers a variety of moderately priced continental dishes.

For all the openings, the ancient ritual of the tea house, or a dinner at an old laozihao may still be the best part of your trip. It’s difficult to imagine where the next culinary trend will take us, but one thing is certain – dining out in Beijing will never be dull again.

Dining etiquette

Chinese meals are ordered for sharing, with guests serving themselves from dishes placed in the centre of the table. It is good manners to take from each dish only what can be eaten immediately; don’t pile up large amounts of food on your side plate or in your rice bowl.

If there is a serving spoon or serving chopsticks, use them; otherwise it’s acceptable to use your chopsticks to take food directly from the communal plate. One custom for serving someone at your table is to flip your chopsticks so you can use the clean ends to take a portion of food to serve guests.

Use your spoon to scoop foods such as tofu or peanuts; after all, your purpose is not to show off your deft handling of chopsticks but to get food onto your plate. For anyone who finds chopsticks awkward, there is no shame in asking for a fork (chazi) or spoon (shaozi). When you’re not using your chopsticks, put them on the chopstick holder – chopsticks sticking up resemble the incense sticks used at funeral services or on ancestral altars.

Cold dishes come first, followed by meat and vegetable dishes, and then fish. Soup comes last. The rice bowl will normally be your soup bowl at the end of a meal.

Chinese friends may try to get you to drink a lot, and you will often hear the toast ‘ganbei’, literally ‘dry bottom’. If you don’t want to down your drink in one you can just say ’suiyi’ or ‘as you like’, which means either party can drink as little or as much as they choose. And if you don’t drink at all, explain that at the beginning of the meal and stick to what you’re drinking.

When dining in a more formal setting, guests normally do not drink at will. It is good manners to wait for another guest to toast you before drinking. After a toast, raise your glass with two hands and tip it slightly in the direction of the person who is toasting with you to show that you’ve taken a drink.

If you are invited to a meal, the person who treats will order the meals. It’s rare for Chinese to go dutch, although nowadays some Chinese who understand the go-dutch concept will comfortably split the bill. But reciprocating is the favoured Chinese way, taking turns to treat. If you’re invited to a Chinese home for a meal, bring some fruit or flowers as a gift.

Practicalities

While most of the restaurants listed in this guide have English menus, some local places will not. Our advice in this case is simply to point to the things you see on other tables. It’s what the locals do.

The Chinese tend to eat early by Western standards. Most local restaurants serve lunch between 11.30am and 2pm, and dinner between 5.30pm and 9pm. Some kitchens are now staying open until 10pm, with a few restaurants even venturing into the wee hours. These places are generally not open for lunch. It is advisable to book in advance for the popular restaurants, particularly at weekends.

The Centre

The historical heart is packed with countless inexpensive eateries. Popular choices include authentic Chuanban , Qin Tang Fu , which specialises in Shaanxi dishes, and the Red Capital Club, which serves Zhongnanhai cuisine. For reasonably priced Western dishes, desserts and coffee, go to the Caribou Café.

‘Malling’ consumes shoppers in the Philippines

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

The Southeast Asian country has three of the world’s 10 largest shopping centers, two of them in the capital, Manila. Scores of others, ranging from modern glass and steel structures to older, fading buildings, dot cities across the archipelago.

Although over 40 percent of the country’s 90 million people live on $2 or less per day, malls here are crowded at all times, and especially packed at weekends.

Around 80 percent of the Philippines’ population go to shopping centers and around 36 million people visit shopping plazas once or twice a month, according to Nielsen Media Research.

“People just come to the mall to stay cool, said Chris Balberona, a driver for a bank, who was at Manila’s Megamall watching ice-skaters on an artificial rink.

“Life is hard right now so we don’t really come here to shop.”

The air-conditioned malls are a boon in this steamy tropical nation. But shopping plazas in the Philippines have also become a place to pay bills, meet or watch people, eat or see a film.

Catholic masses are even held in the corridors of some malls. While the faithful sit on plastic chairs, less religious folk continue to browse the rails nearby.

Shopping is only an option at Manila’s malls.

A WAY OF LIFE

But with inflation hitting a near 17-year high of 12.2 percent in July as gas and food prices soar, Filipinos are forking out even less these days for non-essentials such as cinema trips and more clothes.

Private consumption is the lifeblood of the Philippine economy and a drop-off in spending is expected to cut economic growth this year to 5.1 percent, according to a Reuters poll last month, from a three decade peak of 7.2 percent in 2007.

Economic growth skidded to a seasonally adjusted 0.8 percent in the first quarter compared to 1.3 percent in the fourth quarter of last year

SM Prime, the largest mall operator in the Philippines, said 2.5 million people still visited its 30 shopping centers across the country.

“There has been no noticeable decrease in this number primarily because the ‘malling’ lifestyle has become a way of life for the Filipinos,” said Cora Guidote, vice-president for investor relations at SM Prime.

But with the cost of travel spiking because of high oil prices, some Filipinos say they are cutting back on their mall trips and restricting themselves even more to window shopping.

Cita Foronda, an executive assistant who goes to a mall once a week with her four children, says the visits are now almost entirely to kill time.

“We only shop on a need basis now,” Foronda said. “Even with the sales, it’s not attractive anymore.”

With very few public parks or other public amenities in Manila, and high pollution levels, she says the small play areas for children are a big attraction.

“If you have small kids, of course, you go to the mall,” she said. “You want your kids to be happy because you hardly see them during the work week.”

Almost all utilities bills can be paid in malls, banks are attached and a fairly inexpensive meal at a fast-food eatery is always an option.

“It’s like they give you everything just so you go,” Foronda said.

REMITTANCES

Another factor keeping malls popular is the large inflows of remittances sent home by millions of Filipinos who work overseas.

These remittances, estimated to reach a fresh peak of nearly $16 billion this year, support the retail sector even amidst the economic slowdown.

Every few years a new mall emerges in Manila or one of the larger cities, bigger and more extravagant than the last.

One of the newest is the Mall of Asia, the world’s third largest shopping centre. It is almost as big as Vatican City.

Two other malls in the Philippines, SM North Edsa and SM Cebu, also made the top 10 list in the study.

But for those hardest hit by the recent economic crisis, the family pastime of ‘malling’ is becoming increasingly rare.

“Before, it was a regular family day for us to go to the malls, even if we went there to just eat or walk around,” said Romeo Castillo, a taxi driver who has two children.

“Now, it’s really impossible even for that, it’s just out of our budget.”

Bahrain’s FM on surprise visit to Iraq

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Bahrain’s Foreign Minister Shiekh Khalid Bin Ahmed al-Khalifa arrived in Baghdad on Saturday on a surprise visit for talks with senior Iraqi officials, an Iraqi Foreign Ministry statement said.

The top diplomat will hold a meeting with his Iraqi counterpart Hoshyar Zebari, with an aim of enhancing bilateral relations between the two countries, the statement said without giving further details.

His unannounced one-day visit, which came after the Gulf nation named a new ambassador to Iraq last month, is the latest high-level visit by a senior Arab official.

Three years ago, Bahrain’s top envoy in Iraq was wounded when attackers tried to kidnap him while en route to work in Baghdad.

Several Arab governments named ambassadors to Iraq recently after the United States criticized them for acting slowly on normalizing relations with the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

Sunni Arab countries had been reluctant to restore close ties because of ongoing violence there, and have been cool to what is a Shiite-dominated government in Iraq.

Washington repeatedly encouraged its Arab allies to strengthen their ties with Iraq as a way of countering the growing influence of Iran and reinforcing Iraq’s Arab identity.

Wind farms could change weather

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

A new study suggests that massive wind farms could steer storms and alter the weather if extensive fields of turbines were built, according to a news report.

It is not the first study to come to this conclusion.

The new research is an interesting “what if,” but the installation of large wind turbines would have to be taken to the extreme to have the global effects portrayed.

The scientists, Daniel Barrie and Daniel Kirk-Davidoff of the University of Maryland, calculated “what might happen if all the land from Texas to central Canada, and from the Great Lakes to the Rocky Mountains, were covered in one massive wind farm,” according to Discovery News. The result of such an unlikely installation: a real serious Butterfly Effect.

Such massive wind farming would slow wind speeds by 5 or 6 mph as the turbines literally stole wind from the air. A ripple effect would occur in the form of waves radiating across the Northern Hemisphere that could, days later, run into storms and alter their courses by hundreds of miles.

The researchers “acknowledged the hypothetical wind farm was far larger than anything humans are likely to build,” according to the Web site, but if Department of Energy projections for wind farming are met by 2030 (for the country to get 20 percent of its electricity from wind), “it could probably have an effect,” James McCaa of 3Tier, Inc., a renewable energy forecasting company based in Seattle, is quoted as saying.

In 2004, two separate groups of scientists did similar calculations.

One group found the opposite effect.

Somnath Baidya Roy of Princeton University and colleagues simulated the effect of extensive wind farms on local weather. They found a drying and warming effect in the morning that would warm the air across moist and cool overnight soil, causing the local wind speed to increase slightly.

Also in 2004, David Keith of the University of Calgary and his colleagues estimated the drag from wind farms if they covered 10 percent of the Earth’s land surface. They concluded that global cooling would occur in polar regions and global warming would result in temperate regions such as North America at about 30 degrees North latitude.

When that study was released, Keith had an interesting take on the possibility: “The message here is climate change, but that doesn’t equal global warming,” Keith said. “It’s possible this would have benefits,” by working against the atmospheric effects of fossil fuel consumption on global climate, he said.