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Posts Tagged ‘Western Europe’

Android Uptake Slow in Europe as Google Phone Rumors Persist

Google Android phones are slow to catch on in Western Europe, researcher IDC said. However, rumors abound that there are several more smartphones in the works based on the Android mobile and wireless operating system, including an iDEN device from Motorola and the Espresso from HTC. Also reportedly on tap is the Google Phone, code-named Passion, from T-Mobile.

Uptake of Google’s Android operating system in Western
Europe Android OS is below expectations despite the fact that Android market
share grew from 4.2 percent in the second quarter to 5.4 percent in the third
quarter.
Research firm IDC said several operators listed Android
devic…


British mission in Afghanistan disabling Al Qaeda: Gordon Brown

In a bid gather public support for the Afghanistan war, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is set to assert the deployment of British troops in that war-torn country has helped to disable Al-Qaeda this year.
“I vigorously defend our action in Afghanistan and Pakistan because al-Qaeda is today the biggest source of threat to our national [...]

Living The 2-Hour Workday: What Is A Travel Buffer & How Can You Create One

Towards the end of my trip around the world in 2008 I started to lose interest in seeing the typical tourist spots, even if the destinations were exotic countries or ancient monuments from cultures long passed.
After visiting many amazing buildings and sites in cities like Edinburgh, London, Brussels, Paris, Rome and Athens, I was [...]

Aug. 19, 1887: What Goes Up Must Come Down

1887: Intent on observing a solar eclipse, a celebrated Russian chemist uses a hot-air balloon to make a solo ascent above the clouds near Moscow, even though he has never been in a balloon before and has no idea how to land one.
Even if Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev had never gotten around to outlining the principles [...]

French pool bans ‘burkini’ swim

A woman looks at a website selling 'burkinis'

French officials have banned a Muslim woman from swimming in a public pool while wearing a swimsuit that covers her entire body.

The woman had swum in July in the pool in Emerainville, east of Paris, in the "burkini" – a loose-fitting garment resembling a wetsuit with a hood.

But staff stopped her from swimming in August, citing hygiene concerns.

It comes as the government examines ways to limit burka use after the president said they reduced dignity.

France is home to Western Europe’s largest population of Muslims, with about 5 million living there.

"That type of suit does not exist in the Koran"

Mayor Alain Kelyor

At the pool, staff "reminded [the woman] of the rules that apply in all (public) swimming pools which forbid swimming while clothed," pool management official Daniel Guillaume was quoted by AFP as saying.

The woman was a French convert to Islam, and had bought the swimsuit in Dubai so that she would not have to uncover herself to go swimming.

"Quite simply, this is segregation," she said, according to Le Parisien newspaper, which identified her only as Carole.

"I will fight to try to change things. And if I see that the battle is lost, I cannot rule out leaving France."

Emerainville Mayor Alain Kelyor said "all this has nothing to do with Islam", adding that the swimsuit was "not an Islamic swimsuit" and that "that type of suit does not exist in the Koran".

‘Prisoners behind netting’

In June the French National Assembly appointed 32 MPs to a six-month fact-finding mission to look at ways of restricting burka use.

In a major policy speech that month, President Nicolas Sarkozy said the burka – a garment covering women from head to toe – reduced them to servitude and undermined their dignity.

"We cannot accept to have in our country women who are prisoners behind netting, cut off from all social life, deprived of identity," Mr Sarkozy told a special session of parliament in Versailles.

In 2004, France banned the Islamic headscarves in its state schools.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

We’re not out of it yet

There have been several strands of relatively good news lately. There’s more pain to come in this industry, but it does at least look like we’ve hit a kind of stabilisation phase with some signs of recovery ahead. That’s true for both the wider world economy (although rising unemployment in the US and Europe will temper the good news for some months yet) and the autos sector.


One thing that is of course notable is the positive impact that government actions are having on automotive markets across the world.


In China and India (and especially China), government packages have been very successful in lifting car demand in recent months.


In Europe, Germany has led the way with a scrappage incentive which, combined with manufacturer discounts, has lifted its car market by around a quarter this year. And now the US vehicle market is seeing some stimulus from ‘cash for clunkers’.


The inherent difficulty with such special measures is the adverse market impact when they are removed. If you encourage a consumer to purchase a car now, to take advantage of a temporary scheme that makes the car cheaper, it may well be a sale that is brought forward from a future time period.


Next year could be very tough when schemes expire. And even if they are extended, we’re into diminishing effectiveness.


As Carlos Ghosn has said, it could be a very tough 2010 in Europe. JD Power has warned that a negative German market correction from this year’s expected near 4m unit market (a ten year high) could send 2010′s German car market as low as 2.6m units.


The hope has to be that underlying economic performance is gaining momentum by then and helping to pick up the slack when such government support wanes.


We’re not out of it yet.

UK: Western Europe car sales up 4.1% in June

Michael Likosky: Ed Rendell: Hardest Working Man in Infrastructure

At this year’s National Governors Association (NGA) meeting, Governor Ed Rendell’s tenure as Chair fittingly came to a close with a plenary session on infrastructure…

July 22, 1962: Mariner 1 Done In by a Typo

1962: When The New York Times copy desk lets a typo slip through, it’s embarrassing but no one gets hurt. When NASA programmers screw up, the consequences are a tad more dramatic, not to mention expensive. In this case, a “missing hyphen” in code forces mission control to abort the launch of the unmanned Mariner [...]

Over-65s to outnumber under-fives worldwide

US census bureau report highlights shift in global population that may bring social and economic changes worldwide

The world is about to cross a demographic landmark of huge social and economic importance, with the proportion of the global population 65 and over set to outnumber children under five for the first time.

A new report by the US census bureau highlights a huge shift towards not just an ageing but an old population, with formidable consequences for rich and poor nations alike. The transformation carries with it challenges for families and policymakers, ranging from how to care for older people living alone to how to pay for unprecedented numbers of pensioners – more than 1 billion of them by 2040.

The report, An Ageing World: 2008, shows that within 10 years older people will outnumber children for the first time. It forecasts that over the next 30 years the number of over-65s is expected to almost double, from 506 million in 2008 to 1.3 billion – a leap from 7% of the world’s population to 14%. Already, the number of people in the world 65 and over is increasing at an average of 870,000 each month.

The rate of growth will shoot up in the next couple of years, with both overall numbers and proportions of older people rising rapidly.

The shift is due to a combination of the time-delayed impact of high fertility levels after the second world war and more recent improvements in health that are bringing down death rates at older ages. Separate UN forecasts predict that the global population will top 9 billion by 2050.

The US census bureau has led the way in sounding the alarm over the changes. This is its ninth report drawing together data from around the globe since it first focused on the trend in 1987.

Its latest projections warn governments and international bodies the tipping point will present widespread challenges at every level of human organisation, starting with the structure of the family, which will be transformed as people live longer.

That will in turn bring new burdens on carers and social services providers, while patterns of work and retirement will similarly have huge implications for health services and pensions systems.

“People are living longer, and in some parts of the world, healthier lives,” the authors conclude. “This represents one of the crowning achievements of the last century but also a significant challenge as proportions of older people increase in most countries.”

Europe is the greyest continent, with 23 of the world’s 25 oldest countries. Such dominance of the regional league table will continue. By 2040, more than one in four Europeans are expected to be at least 65, and one in seven at least 75.

The UK comes in at number 19 in the list of the world’s oldest countries. Top of the pile is Japan, which recently supplanted Italy as the world’s oldest big country. Its life expectancy at birth – 82 years – is matched only by Singapore, though in western Europe, France, Sweden and Italy all have life expectancies of more than 80 years (in the UK it is 78.8).

The contrast in life expectancy between rich and poor nations remains glaring. The report shows that a person born in a developed country can expect to outlive his or her counterpart in the developing world by 14 years. Zimbabwe holds the unfortunate record for the lowest life expectancy, which has been cut to 40 through a combination of Aids, famine and dictatorship.

But an important finding of the report is that the wave of ageing that has until recently been considered a phenomenon of the developed world is fast encroaching on poorer countries too. More than 80% of the increase in older people in the year up to July 2008 was seen in developing countries.

By 2040, the poor world is projected to be home to more than 1 billion people aged 65 and over – fully 76% of the world total.

Ageing will put pressure on societies at all levels. One way of measuring that is to look at the older dependency ratio, or ODR, which acts as an indicator of the balance between working-age people and the older population that must be supported by them.

The ODR is the number of people aged 65 and over for every 100 people aged 20 to 64. It varies widely, from just six in Kenya and seven in Bangladesh, to 33 in Italy and also Japan. The UK has an ODR of 26, and the US has 21.

From that ratio, a number of profound challenges flow. Countries with a high ODR are already creaking under the burden of funding prolonged retirement for their older population. Life expectancy after retirement has already reached 21 years for French men and 26 years for French women.

Though retirement ages have begun to rise in developed countries, partly through inducements from governments to continue working, this still puts an extreme burden on public pensions funds.

Socially, too, there are intense pressures on individuals and families.

With women living on average seven years longer than men, more older women are living alone. Around half of all women 65 and over in Germany, Denmark and Slovakia are on their own, with all the consequent issues of loneliness and access to care that ensue.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Greek police flatten migrant camp

Greek riot police have led an operation to demolish a makeshift camp housing illegal immigrants in the western port city of Patras. The camp was used by migrants hoping to smuggle themselves onto ships bound for Italy and Western Europe.

William Bradley: Diminishing Returns for Obama’s Summiteering?

The Obamas toured a center of the African slave trade on Saturday on the coast of Ghana. President Barack Obama returned early Sunday morning…

Greek police flatten migrant camp

By Malcolm Brabant
BBC News, Athens

Riot police stand behind a burning road block during clashes in central Athens, 7 July

Greek riot police have led an operation to demolish a makeshift camp housing illegal immigrants in the western port city of Patras.

The camp was used by migrants hoping to smuggle themselves onto ships bound for Italy and Western Europe.

Its closure is more proof of Greece’s tougher stance on illegal immigration.

The camp had been a source of tension with many Greeks who regarded it as a major eyesore for themselves and for tourists arriving from Italy.

‘Terrorising migrants’

About 100 riot police escorted bulldozers into the camp before dawn.

They levelled scores of cardboard and plastic hovels.

Only a makeshift mosque and a tent used by volunteer doctors were left untouched.

The camp in Patras had been in existence in some form or another for 13 years.

A few months ago, it accommodated about 1,800 people, mainly from Afghanistan.

But that number had dwindled to about 100 following large-scale arrests and also because the port authorities had made it nearly impossible to get on board ferries to Italy.

The early morning operation was described by Red Cross officials in Patras as "terrorising" the migrants.

One worker said it was designed to send a message to all illegal immigrants that they had no future in Greece.

‘Migrant threat’

The conservative government in Athens has started taking tougher measures against the so-called "clandestines" in recent weeks, especially since the success of the right-wing nationalist Laos party in the European parliamentary election.

A new law has been passed which makes deportation easier.

Greece has been criticised internationally for its handling of would-be asylum seekers.

But recently the EU Justice Commissioner, Jacques Barrot, acknowledged that the "uncontrollable flow of immigration" posed a major threat to the equilibrium of Greek democracy.

The clampdown in Patras will push some migrants into the hands of traffickers in Athens and Italy who are demanding up to $8,000 (£4,940) for passage out of Greece.

Others have given up trying to catch a boat to Western Europe and have headed for Greece’s land borders with Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The range anxiety gamble

This looks like a week in which electric cars are going to be very much in the news – in part due to government initiatives on both sides of the Atlantic. And there are plenty of announcements being made by the OEMs to coincide with that. Nissan’s yesterday about manufacturing electric plug-in vehicles – not hybrids – in the US is particularly intriguing.


It’s the latest news from Nissan on this subject and follows on from Carlos Ghosn’s consistently stated view that electric cars represent the long-term future for the automotive industry. He has perhaps stood out among car firm bosses as a real believer in electric drive technology and the opportunity presented – and on a business planning horizon that he earnestly believes is with us now. Working with partners like Project Better Place has demonstrated a serious intent to grapple with things like infrastructure, too.


At first sight, 100,000 units a year of production in the US sounds pretty ambitious. And maybe it is, given that we’re talking about electric drive vehicles that don’t come with a back-up gasoline engine. That raises the ‘range anxiety’ question alongside consumer acceptance of frequent battery charging rather than occasionally filling the tank with the black stuff.


How far can these cars really go on a single charge? (Nissan says the car will offer 100 miles of range, but what if the heater is on and there are hills to climb…); how often does it need charging?; how much will that cost me and just how robust is the battery? (And the truly environmentally aware may even ask how the juice coming out of the power socket was generated…but I suspect that question will be overlooked or fudged in the minds of many.)


Nissan will have to come up with a very good product to get initial consumer acceptance of this new technology. And – leaving aside the considerable product development and technology issues ahead – I’m sure there is a lot of discussion still to happen concerning the precise business model, too (like the retail price and how battery leasing might work in practice).


But that’s 100,000 units in a passenger vehicle market of almost 16m units (or wherever we are on the recovery path by 2012, when Nissan plans the start of US production). It’s way under a 1% share. Nissan can target sales in US cities where it thinks the car will sell.


Do Americans buy small, more energy-efficient cars? They are now buying more of them – look at the success of Smart’s Fortwo. And Nissan can be cute and look to market the car in places where city authorities are suddenly looking for more EV solutions (like Baltimore, for example).


Market analysts can argue about how quickly US market segmentation will shift, but there is a consensus that smaller and more energy-efficient vehicles will be growing in sales. Electric drive vehicles in various formats will clearly be a part of that broader trend, though it is far from clear exactly where the numbers will be and on what timescale (and the internal combustion engine is doing much to make itself more efficient).


But which way is the oil price wind blowing? I wouldn’t mind betting that in 2012, when global economic recovery is really kicking in, the price of a barrel will be a lot higher than today. That could provide a very fair wind to both hybrids and pure-electrics.


Is range anxiety really a big issue? Incremental improvements are helping, but the issue is not going away. Having said that, there is a point at which range becomes acceptable for many who would consider such a car primarily for relatively low-mileage daily use – the commute to the office, say.


And with that pattern of usage, range anxiety may not be as big an issue in America as in Europe because American households have more multi-vehicle ownership than Europe does.


Whereas a pure EV might be severely limiting in Western Europe (asking the single car household’s sole vehicle to do many jobs for the lowest cost explains why the C-segment is Europe’s largest – cars like the Volkswagen Golf are fine around town and for motorway cruising) US households are perhaps more likely to have a larger vehicle available for longer journeys. ‘I use the EV every day, but the F-150 is just great for the weekends.’


Ghosn is taking a gamble though, that he can lead investment in electric vehicles for ‘mass transportation’ and steal a march on rivals, who are playing much safer with hybrids and ‘range extenders’ (like the Volt) that deal with range anxiety up front. And it’s a pan-global strategy to spread the technology investment across as many units as possible under the Renault and Nissan brands. Later on, when scale economies permit, maybe a viable low-cost ‘Logan-style’ electric car can be developed for price-sensitive emerging markets – which will likely not be figuring too much early on.


If Ghosn gets it right, the EV push could leave Renault-Nissan as one of the most powerful groups in the global auto industry for a generation. But it could be an expensive drag on profitability at a time when the industry’s worst performers come under increasing pressure to cut capacity still further.


It’s a gamble. And Ghosn is perhaps a brave man. But you wouldn’t expect him to have a vision on where the industry is headed and not give it his best shot would you?

JAPAN: Nissan targets US for electric car push

Key Is Getting Climate Message Through: Don

Alicia Wong
alicia@mediacorp.com.sg

He may have made winning a Nobel Peace Prize seem easy: One docu-movie and
former United States vice-president Al Gore shared the honours this year
with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

But when it comes to environmental work, the importance of successfully
conveying the issues to the public – which is what Mr Gore did with An
Inconvenient Truth – cannot be understated, according to the coordinating
lead author of the panel’s Fourth Assessment Report, Professor Richard C J
Somerville (picture).

Prof Somerville, a climate scientist and distinguished professor emeritus
at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, told reporters yesterday that
people needed to “tell their governments that these issues are important
to them”.

“Polling data show this is not an overpowering No-1 priority Â… but I think
governments are responsive,” he said, citing western Europe’s several
centre-right governments that made the environment a “high priority”
despite a pro-business philosophy.

The refusal, on the other hand, by the US to move on environmental
policies until developing countries do so is frustrating for the American
on a personal level. Prof Somerville, who is in Singapore as a Lee Kuan
Yew Distinguished Fellow and was speaking in his capacity as a scientist,
called doubters of the effects of global warming “professional
contrarians”.

It is like smoking. It took 50 years to prove that smoking causes health
problems, and he expects environmental education to take time, too.
“Sceptical people are simply not well-informed about science,” he said.

But “people listen to their physicians and that’s all we are”. As
“planetary physicians”, he said, scientists tell governments and people
“there are different ways to behave and there are consequences”.

While climate science, like medical science, is imperfect, “it’s good
enough to be a valuable ingredient to policymaking”, added Prof
Somerville, who will be giving two public lectures today and on Friday at
the National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University.