Saturday, 1 March 2014

Are you sick of Climate Change? If you do, Support the WWF Malaysia-Earth Hour 2014.


                   


 





Earth Hour is a global environmental initiative in partnership with WWF. At 8:30pm on Saturday 29th March 2014, individuals, businesses, governments and communities will turn off their lights for one hour to show their support for environmentally sustainable action towards the betterment of the one thing that unites us all: our living planet.


Earth Hour began in 2007 in a single city, but by 2012, Earth Hour reached more than 7,000 cities and towns across 152 countries and territories, becoming “the world’s largest campaign for the planet”. Please sign up here; the more people pledge to “Live Green”, the more powerful our efforts to protect our planet become.



Pledge to Live Green!


I will switch off non-essential lights during Earth Hour 2014, and switch off lights, computers and other electrical appliances in the office/classroom when my friends and I leave for lunch or to return home.

http://www.wwf.org.my/how_you_can_help/take_action/eh2014/


Organisation Pledges/Corporation Pledge

My organisation would like to participate in Earth Hour by switching off non-essential lights from8:30pm to 9:30pm on Saturday, 29 March 2014. The list of participating organisations will be published in our news section below on Friday, 28 March 2014.http://www.wwf.org.my/how_you_can_help/take_action/eh2014/eh14_business_sign_up_/

                                           

China to build high-speed rail to Singapore, via Laos

lao-rail.jpg
China is giving a steely infrastructural hug to its southeast Asian neighbors, with plans to roll out a massive high-speed rail system to crisscross Laos, Thailand, and Malaysia en route to Singapore. Laos, which currently boasts a humble two miles of functioning railway track, is in for a bit of a shock.
The Lao government, the cuddly Lao People's Revolutionary Party, met with Li Keqiang last year and welcomed the plan with open arms. As The Telegraph reports, Laos could be potentially transformed or crippled by the deal:
Constructing it will be a mammoth engineering task. It will require 154 bridges and 76 tunnels, as well as 31 train stations, just to get the line the 260 miles from Boten on the Laos-China border to Laos’ capital Vientiane. An estimated 20,000 Chinese workers will be needed to build it, with the completion date set for 2019. [...]
Using untapped minerals as collateral, Laos plans to borrow £4.5 billion from Beijing to pay for its section of the railway. Equivalent to almost 90 per cent of Laos’s annual GDP of £5.2 billion, the loan will instantly make Laos the world’s fourth most-indebted nation after Japan, Zimbabwe and Greece.
Many international financial bodies regard the loan as a disaster waiting to happen. The Asian Development Bank has described it simply as “unaffordable”.
Just servicing the yearly interest on the loan will amount to almost 20% of Laos’s annual government spending.
In short, the Chinese government will essentially own Laos after the check clears, but with a national product of about 8.5 billion USD, there are several individual Chinese billionairs who could purchase the country in full anyways. The main railways are aimed for completion by 2019, with expansions planned into Burma/Myanmar, Thailand, and Cambodia in the years to come.

New bullet train with 'Chinese standards' planned

New bullet train with 'Chinese standards' planned
Travelers board a high-speed train in Guilin in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous regionGuangxi became the country's first ethnic autonomous region to beintegrated into the national high-speed railway networkChen Fuping / for China Daily 

China will boost the development of key technologies in high-speed railways and design a new bullet train with "Chinese standards", accordingto the State-owned railway operator.
"In the high-speed railway fieldwe must accelerate the research of crucial technologiesWe will strive to complete the design of the Chinese-standard bullet train and its major parts within this year," Sheng Guangzugeneral manager of China Railway Corpsaid on Thursday inBeijing.
Shengwho made the remarks at the company's first work conferencepledged to show the public a new bullet train that uses the nation's owntechnological standards before the end of 2015.
Currentlymost of the advanced parts used on bullet trains running on Chinese tracks such as tractionbrakes and control software aredominated by foreign companiesincluding AlstomSiemens and Kawasaki Heavy Industriesaccording to sources close to China RailwayCorp.
The situation has left Chinese train manufacturers no choice but to assemble or directly import such partsMeanwhilethe comparativelybackward industrial capability has also led to problems in producing some cutting-edge componentsthey said.
Zhao Jiana professor at Beijing Jiaotong University who specializes in China's railway systemsaid though Chinese factories can producealmost all bullet train partsthe key technologies are still bought from their foreign counterparts.
"A German company monopolizes the brake systemwhile other Western companies control the traction parts," Zhao said. "ActuallyI thinkChina Railway Corp should allocate more resources in building not-so-fast lines rather than investing a huge amount of money in high-speedlines."
In DecemberChina Railway Corp announced that the total length of Chinese rail lines has exceeded 100,000 kmwith more than 10,000 kmbeing high-speed lines.
According to the national railway network planhigh-speed rails will reach 19,000 km by 2015.
"High-speed lines cost a lot and create colossal debts for the railway industryThe ticket price of a high-speed train often exceeds the levelmany blue-collar or migrant workers can affordIn additionthe new lines are not compatible with trains running at slower speeds," Zhao said. "They can save the money and use it to increase the speed of old lines or build more ordinary lines."
In contrastanother researcher from the university who wished to remain anonymous said he endorses the move to develop China's own bullettrain technology.
"Once the new train is developed and manufacturedit has a big potential in intercity links and the overseas high-speed rail market," said theresearcherwho is playing a leading role in China's high-speed railway innovation project.
"HoweverI don't think China Railway Corp should hype up the so-called Chinese standards because using a single set of standards in designwill stifle innovation."
He added that Chinese manufacturers have made remarkable strides in developing key technologies used on bullet trains and ended the eraof foreign companiesdomination in this field.
zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China's High-Speed Rail Network To Be Doubled


China builds 6,000 miles of track in the time the UK only debates the merits of constructing 100 miles of high-speed rail line.


China has announced it will spend £60bn this year in an effort to almost double the size of its high-speed rail network.
The investment forms part of a project which represents the largest and fastest rail expansion programme in the world.
Since 2008, and in the time Britain has taken only to debate the merits of one line - HS2 - which would be just over 100 miles long, China has built 6,000 miles of track, much of it elevated, and invested in 1,000 high-speed trains.
The network is currently almost double the combined length of Europe and Japan's railway networks.
The programme, the government says, forms a key part of the country's drive to modernise, urbanise and pull the Chinese people out of poverty.
Sky News took a ride on the 10am from Shanghai to Beijing. Bang on time, the shiny new bullet train pulled out of the city's Hongqiao station.
The train, 16 carriages long, has three classes: standard, first and business, which resembles the interior of an aeroplane.
China high speed trains
China has built 6,000 miles of track since 2008
Sitting in a fully reclining airline-style seat is businessman Paul Zhou.
He said: "Our country is building an entire high-speed rail system and it has made our travel easier.
"It has shortened the journey between cities. It helps a lot on our work and life.
"On the airlines, there are always delays. They are very unreliable.
"I used to travel by plane, but now I almost always use our high-speed trains to go everywhere. They are comfortable, environmentally friendly, and always on time."
Out of the window the Chinese countryside is a blur as the train reaches its cruising speed of 190mph.
China now boasts the world's fastest conventional train. The CRH380A, manufactured by the Qingdao Sifang Company, has a top speed of 237mph, but in test runs it reached 302mph.
The trains run on a network of new lines, many of which are elevated. Together they knit together more than 100 cities across the country.
China high speed trains
The country has the world's fastest train with a top speed of 237mph
Each of the cities has a vast new station. Most look more like airport terminals and they are packed - proof that this railway revolution has got China moving.
Another passenger, Zhao Changhua, is an office worker from the city of Jinan. She has just started commuting to Shanghai for work - a distance of 535 miles, but a journey time of just four hours.
She told Sky News: "It's very comfortable. It's convenient and fast. I'm very proud of it.
"It's the result of the fast development of our country's technology. It has given great benefits to our lives.
"This is my second time on a high-speed train, I think it's much easier than taking a plane.
"Airports are far away from the city centre while train stations are closer. So I choose high-speed trains."
The journey from Shanghai, west, then north, to Beijing is 800 miles - the length of the UK. It is completed in four hours, 48 minutes.
In second class, it costs the equivalent of £55, in first it is just under £100 and in business it costs £175.
Outside we see glimpses of rural China carved up by the new lines, but we also spot new cities springing up. It is evidence that the new rail network is stimulating the local economy at every stop.
Roland Boal in China
Designer Roland Boal says the China network is a huge opportunity
Of all the passengers we spoke to, none had a bad word about the service. Most hoped that China could help the UK with its high-speed train development.
Mr Zhou said: "I hope the British government will use Chinese technology, let China help you to build your high-speed railway."
What none of the passengers realise is that the train they are on is actually designed, in part, with the help of a UK firm.
Priestmangoode is a design consultancy based in the UK but with a growing footprint in China. The company has combined the UK's flair for quality design with China's willingness to pay for it.
Roland Boal, head of Priestmangoode's China division, explained that China's "can do" attitude and seemingly bottomless pockets are a huge opportunity.
He told Sky News: "There is a hunger for new and exciting things. China is moving really fast and moving forward.
"There is a certain sense of excitement among people here and I think they want products that reflect that, whether it's a train or a plane.
"If it's a high-speed train, then make it look really fast. Not pared back; make it look fast.
"Western companies need to pay a lot more attention to what's happening here.
China's high speed rail line
The country's high speed network runs on elevated lines
"I get very upset when I hear things like 'of course it broke, it was made in China' or 'I don't buy that company's products because they're made in China'. I think there is such an out-of-date attitude towards the obvious capability of manufacturing in China."
This railway revolution is not without significant controversy, though.
In 2011, two high-speed trains collided. Forty people were killed and 172 others injured.
Had the trains been travelling at full speed, the number of dead would have been significantly higher.
A signalling failure was blamed; the whole project was questioned and almost cancelled.
A further controversy stems from the fact that the technology behind the network is not Chinese.
In the early stages of the project, China bought high-speed train sets and technology from Canada's Bombardier, Japan's Kawasaki, Germany's Siemens and France's Alstom.
Chinese engineers then combined these technologies and produced their own trains.
Corruption has also plagued the project. In July last year, the country's railways minister, Liu Zhijun, was jailed for corruption, bribery and abuse of power. His demise brought the financial cost into focus.
At the last count, the existing project had cost £24bn through Chinese government loans, according to figures published in the Chinese state media.
The government hopes to recoup some of those costs by selling its success abroad.
China is in talks with countries including Romania, Georgia, Thailand, Burma and several in South America.
There is also a desire to help the US and the UK with their own projects.
The Chinese government, which runs the network through its Ministry of Transportation, declined our request for an interview for this report and refused Sky News all official access to their trains and stations. No reason was given.
The report was compiled without their agreement.
However, speaking to the Chinese media, and addressing the safety concerns, Deng Xiaojun, deputy chief engineer of Qingdao Sifang, one of the state-owned locomotive manufacturers, said that the trains are designed according to international standards and in some areas even stricter.
He told China's Xinhua news agency: "We have a rounded mechanism to ensure the train's safety operation."
Back on the train, and on time - almost to the second - the 10am from Shanghai pulls into Beijing South station.