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Monday, October 31, 2011

Superior Energy targets rental tools business - Brazil


New Orleans-based oil field services and equipment provider Superior Energy Services (NYSE: SPN) is targeting the rental tools business in Brazil, company CEO David Dunlap announced Tuesday.

"The tip of the spear for us expansion wise in Brazil is rental tools. The drilling market has expanded there. There's not been an increase in the rentals side of the business to accommodate that expansion, so rentals are in high demand," Dunlap said in a presentation.

The executive added the country meets Superior's international expansion criteria for increasing the company's footprint in a market: large, expanding and mature.

"What I see in these mature markets that I like is that they've got a labor base and management base of local talent. And so when you go into a country like Brazil, I don't need to deal with someone from New Orleans, or Houston, or Lafayette, we can hire a seasoned executive in Brazil."

Superior's regional operations also cover Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Trinidad & Tobago and Venezuela.
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América Móvil to launch in Costa Rica within 2 weeks, says CEO - Central America


Latin American telecoms giant América Móvil (NYSE: AMX) expects to launch its greenfield operations in Costa Rica in the next 15 days, seeking to beat its biggest regional rival, Telefónica (NYSE: TEF), to the draw in entering the newly liberalized Central American market, company CEO Daniel Hajj told a conference call with investors.

Earlier this month, Telefónica launched a presubscription process and said that within weeks it would start offering mobile services in Costa Rica, where it will operate as Movistar.

"I think in Costa Rica we're going to launch next week or the next. In the next 15 days we're launching," Hajj said.

América Móvil - which operates in most of Latin America under the Claro brand - and Telefónica won spectrum tenders in January.

The companies have recently been granted the necessary numbering for 1mn lines; as such, they can now start signing up customers.

According to Inside Costa Rica, unofficially, Movistar will be using the 6 prefix, Claro will have 7 and state monopoly ICE will continue with its 8 prefix.

Telecoms regulator Sutel spokesperson Carolina Mora said the operators would officially announce their prefixes at their start of operations.

As regards América Móvil's relatively new operation in Panama, Hajj said that the unit was growing and that the company is focused for the moment on revenue generation.

"We're doing well in Panama. What you need to do in Panama is grow your revenues, because you do some investments and those investments need to have some revenues. That's what we're focusing on in Panama," Hajj said.

Launched three years ago, Claro Panamá is by far the smallest mobile operator in the country, with only 2.3% market share in July, according to Dichter & Neira Research Network.

As the operation has grown, its revenues are no longer considered part of the Claro Colombia operation and are now included as part of Central America. Read More...

Stunning looks but what happened?

Have you ever had a friend who looked stunning but over time they ‘faded’, perhaps the look they once had is now ‘not in vogue’ or they have aged and the look does not fit the image, they should have altered to an image which suits their age, level of maturity etc…

I was out shopping today and started to see a few, “not quite walmart’ people but some a bit too close for comfort. Then a few who were the opposite, I started to put two and two together and thought… “Isn’t it interesting how the looks convey so much”. What I was now seeing was confidence, poise, pride, conviction, energy, warmth, integrity, strength, trust, beauty…” Guess which group this was!

While on the other side there was, sloth, lack of care, little confidence, an unruly ‘dis-ease’, coldness etc.”

It then struck me, it was a reflection of the shopping experience I had been having recently. Some businesses poised and confident while others, uneasy and fragile. Wow what a comparison, on the one hand people and the other hand businesses yet there was a correlation to the way I felt about them both, a sort of emotional connection, ethereal and subtle but somehow strong at the same time.

Well that’s how I feel sometimes with some businesses I observe. The businesses I love are the ones who are consistently on top of their game. The ones who take care to present well, keep up with the times without following the latest fad. The ones who have pride and professionalism without an air of arrogance.

One quick example, I parked near a shop which sells Chef’s essentials, it’s open to the public so I took the chance to browse (I’m an avid cook so hey it was a great fit). On entering the store, one of the staff (although serving others) nodded and said “hello” I reciprocated and continued to browse.

As I went further into the store another service professional approached and said “It looks to me as though you are happy to browse, unless there is something specific you my like assistance with?” I smiled broadly and said “I’m quite happy thanks you read my interest well!” She smiled back reassuringly.

I wandered some more and selected a few things which took my fancy, on arriving at the counter, I was assisted with some light chatter and some ideas about one of the items I had selected “You can also use that for…” it was welcome info. I felt confident to ask a few silly questions without the store people rolling their eye’s and I was met with some great responses which answered my queries well and helped me feel as though they were not silly questions after all.

I left the store pleased with the purchases and information I sought, nice… Mind you I have had the opposite on more than one occasion. Oh and by the way the store was well stocked (range and qty of each item) and beautifully presented, with items clearly labelled with price and other details.

To get back to the original idea of the post I reflected on a not so good experience in a store earlier in the day, not enough staff, taking too long to serve and trying to find what I wanted in their crowded space was annoying, If I did not want the item so much I would have gone elsewhere. I walked out of there with a sense of disdain and grumpiness. Mind you this store had started out well a few years back but is fading off my radar the more I go back and suffer the little things which annoy me.

Stunning looks, but what happened… certainly, so take the time to figure out what’s happening in your business so you can prevent this from happening.

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Sebelum Menembak Guru Ngaji, Oknum Polisi Pesta Miras


SURABAYA- Sekretaris DKW Garda Bangsa, Ka'bil Mubarok, mengungkapkan oknum polisi yang menembak Riyadhus Sholikin, Guru Ngaji asal Sidoarjo, sebelumnya pesta miras di sebuah kafe yang tak jauh dari lokasi kejadian. Diduga aksi penembakan itu di bawah pengaruh alkohol.

"Sebanyak 4 oknum polisi ini sebelumnya sedang kumpul-kumpul di sebuah Cafe Ponti, kuat dugaan mereka sedang pesta miras," kata Ka'bil saat berada di Mapolda Jatim, Senin (31/10/2011).

Dia menjelaskan, saat itu Sholikin yang mengendarai mobil bernopol L 1499 NW diduga serempetan dengan anggota Reskrim Polres Sidoarjo Briptu Widianto yang menaiki motor Supra bernopol W 5077 XL.

Riyadhus Sholikin dikejar oleh polisi yang mengendarai mobil Daihatsu Xenia. Bahkan informasi yang diperoleh Ka’bil, Riyadhus dikejar oleh dua mobil yang dikendarai polisi.

Sejauh ini belum diketahui apakah korban setelah menyerempet mobil polisi memang sengaja melarikan diri.

"Informasinya polisi juga sempat mengeluarkan tembakan peringatan, kata sahabat Sholikin mengeluarkan celurit. Ini kan aneh, semasa hidup sahabat Sholikin adalah kader terbaik PC Ansor Sidoarjo. Mana mungkin dia membawa celurit," kata Ka'bil.

Oleh karena itu, demi menjaga ketertiban dan keamanann secara bersama-sama dan suasana kondusif di Sidoarjo, maka DKW Garda Bangsa Jatim meminta pihak Kepolisian untuk tidak mengeluarkan statemen yang kontra produktif dan tendensius.

"Pernyataan Polisi seolah-olah sahabat Sholikin adalah orang jahat dengan melakukan perlawanan mengeluarkan celurit. Padahal Sholikin dipercaya sebagai pendidik di daerah lingkungannya," tandasnya.

Sementara itu, Kepolisian membatah terkait tudingan pelaku penembakan dalam kondisi mabuk. Pjs Kabid Humas Polda Jawa Timur, AKBP Elijas Hendra, mengatakan pihak propam sudah melakukan test urine ke beberapa polisi yang diduga terlibat atas kasus tersebut.

"Semua yang terlibat sudah diperiksa oleh Propam Polres Sidoarjo. Dari hasil test urine mereka dinyatakan negatif dari pengaruh alkohol," kata Elijas ketika dikonfirmasi.

Polda Jatim juga telah menurunkan tim khusus untuk menyelidiki kasus tersebut. Sebanyak 7 anggota yang diterjunkan. "Hasilnya belum diketahui," tukasnya.
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Friday, October 21, 2011

Hatta: infrastruktur Tak Bisa Berdiri Sendiri

Lombok - Pemanfaatan sebuah infrastruktur baru tidak dapat dimaksimalkan tanpa dukungan sarana pendukungnya. Atas dasar itu, sebuah mega proyek pembangunan infrastruktur kerap masih membutuhkan penyelesaian sarana penopangnya, sebelum dapat digunakan secara optimal.

Hal seperti ini terjadi juga dalam pemanfaatan Bandara Internasional Lombok (BIL). Penyelesaian BIL rupanya belum disertai pembangunan jalan akses utamanya yang menghubungkan bandar udara itu dengan Kota Mataram, ibukota Nusa Tenggara Barat (NTB). Mataram terpisah jarak sekitar 40 kilometer dari BIL yang dibangun di Tanak Awu, Pujut, Kabupaten Lombok Tengah, NTB.

BIL yang menggantikan bandar udara lama, Selaparang, ini diresmikan oleh Presiden Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Kamis (20/10/2011).

"Pada waktu membangun Bandar Udara Djuanda, Surabaya pun begitu. Bandaranya sudah selesai sebelum pembangunan jalan aksesnya," tutur Menteri Koordinator Perekonomian Hatta Rajasa di Lombok, NTB, saat mendampingi Presiden meresmikan BIL.

Usai peresmian BIL, Hatta mendampingi Presiden Yudhoyono melihat dari dekat pembangunan jalan khusus akses BIL sepanjang 21,3 kilometer dari kawasan bandara hingga patung sapi di Gerung, Kabupaten Lombok Barat. Pembangunan jalan khusus ini belum rampung.

Adapun, dari Gerung ke Kota Mataram sepanjang 18 kilometer belum terbangun jalan khusus akses BIL. Pengguna bandara masih harus mengandalkan jalan lama dari Mataram ke Pelabuhan Laut Lembar, Kabupaten Lombok Barat.

Presiden melihat secara langsung jalan lingkungan dalam kawasan bandara itu yang juga belum rampung. "Saya akan mengkoordinasi dan memantau terus pembangunan jalan ini. Saya yakin bisa cepat selesai," tutur Hatta.

Pekerjaan lain yang belum selesai adalah pembangunan jalan akses menuju dan keluar bandara. Presiden Yudhoyono pun secara khusus meminta Menteri Koordinator Perekonomian turun tangan dalam upaya penyelesaian jalan akses bandara yang belum rampung.

"Jalan keluar-masuk bandara ini harus segera dibereskan. Saya minta Pak Menko Perekonomian menindaklanjutinya," ujar Presiden dalam pidatonya saat upacara peresmian BIL, yang juga dihadiri sejumlah Menteri Kabinet Indonesia Bersatu (KIB) II.

Menurut Hatta, akses jalan yang cepat menuju dan keluar bandara sangat penting. Jika akses jalan tidak bagus, pengguna bandara yang ingin menuju kota dan sebaliknya akan terhambat. "Akses jalan yang cepat menjadi perhatian wisatawan yang ingin datang ke Lombok," jelas Hatta.
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Wapres Boediono Kecil Hobi Nonton Wayang


Cerita pewayanang biasanya sangat dikenal oleh orang Jawa. Begitu juga dengan Wakil Presiden Boediono. Di masa kecilnya, pria yang dikenal sederhana itu sangat gemar menonton wayang.

Masa kecil Boediono dihabiskan di Blitar, Jawa Timur. Karena saat itu hiburan masih sangat sedikit, pementasan wayang menjadi pilihan anak-anak. Boediono mengaku sangat menyukai cerita-cerita pewayangan.

"Saudara sekalian kalau mengenang kembali masa kecil saya waktu itu wayang menjadi bagian dari hidup anak-anak," kata Boediono saat membuka Kongres Sekretariat Nasional Pewayangan Indonesia ke VIII di Kantor Wapres, Jl Medan Merdeka Selatan, Jakarta Pusat, Jumat (21/10/2011).

Menurut Boediono, di kota kelahirannya, sebagaimana kota-kota umumnya di Jawa pada saat itu, hiburan masih jarang. Bioskop ada, namun jumlahnya sedikit. Lagi pula, harga tiket masuknya mahal bukan main. Karena itu, wayang menjadi hiburan satu-satunya bagi anak-anak.

"Wayang itu gratis. Itu selalu ada di kampung dan kota. Pertunjukan setiap minggu atau bulan di kota selalu ada dan selalu ditunggu oleh anak-anak," kenang pria kelahiran 25 Februari 1943 itu.

Boediono mengatakan, orang tua pada zaman dulu juga mendorong anak-anaknya untuk menonton wayang. Sebab, wayang mengandung nilai-nilai kehidupan yang berharga melalui cerita yang disajikan. Orang tua menginginkan anaknya belajar sifat dan karakter dari tokoh-tokoh pewayangan.

"Kalau malam saya ingat bapak saya membangunkan pukul 02.00 WIB untuk nonton wayang sampai pagi. Jadi memang didorong oleh orang tua. Ini contoh orang tua memberikan dorongan anak-anaknya untuk menyukai dan mengapresiasi budaya sendiri," kata dia.

Meski sudah menonton wayang secara langsung, lanjut mantan Gubernur Bank Indonesia, ini, belum tentu anak-anak pada zamannya mengerti. Karena itu, orang tuanya selalu membantu dengan menceritakan kembali tentang kisah sebuah lakon wayang.

"Dulu selain nonton wayang secara langsung, orangtua bercerita. Saya tidak dong (mengerti) sebelum diceritain bapak saya bagaimana background dan karakter-karakter wayang," ungkapnya.

Di masa kini, apakah anak-anak masih tertarik pada wayang? Menurut Boediono, asal dikemas dengan baik, cerita wayang tidak kalah menariknya untuk anak-anak. Apalagi, wayang memiliki nilai-nilai dasar yang bisa ditransmisikan.

"Apa yang disebut kebenaran dan kejahatan sangat terlihat kontras dalam cerita wayang. Itu mudah ditangkap oleh anak-anak, tentu dengan kemasan yang baik," ujar Boediono.
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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Liga Champions Real Madrid Masih Sempurna



MADRID--MICOM: Real Madrid masih mampu menjaga rekor tidak terkalahkan dalam penyisihan Grup D Liga Champions. Menjamu Lyon di Santiago Bernebeu, Raabu (19/10), Real Madrid menang telak 4-0.
Kemenangan ini membuat tim asuhan Jose Mourinho tersebut kokoh di puncak klasemen sementara dengan nilai sembilan dari tiga laga yang sudah dimainkan. Hebatnya hingga saat ini, gawang Real Madrid yang dikawal Iker Casillas belum pernah sekalipun kebobolan.

Empat gol Real Madrid ke gawang Lyon masing dihasilkan karim Benzema menit ke-19, Sami Khedira (47), bunuh diri pemain Lyon Lloris (55), serta Sergio Ramos (81). Bagi Lyon, kekalahan ini membuat posisi mereka turun ke peringkat tiga digeser Ajax.

Ajax disaat bersamaan menang 20 atas Dinamo Zagreb. Tambahan tiga angka ini membuat Ajax memiliki poin empat, sama dengan Lyon namun unggul selisih gol. (OL-04)
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Barca dan Milan Ingin Lolos Secepatnya


LONDON--MICOM: Barcelona dan AC Milan berharap dapat memastikan tempat di babak sistem gugur (knock out) Liga Champions, dengan tiga pertandingan tersisa, jika mereka mampu mengalahkan Victoria Plzen dan BATE Borisov pada pertandingan Rabu (19/10) waktu setempat.

Juara bertahan, Barcelona, yang pada pertandingan Liga Champions terakhir menghancurkan BATE dengan kemenangan besar 5-0, diprediksi tidak akan menemui kesulitan saat menjamu Plzen.

Barca dan Milan sama-sama mengoleksi empat poin dari dua pertandingan, sementara BATE dan Plzen hanya mampu mengumpulkan satu poin.

Dengan besarnya perbedaan kualitas antara kedua raksasa, Barca dan Milan, dengan BATE serta Plzen, maka sangat kecil peluang BATE dan Plzen untuk mampu lolos dari babak penyisihan grup.

Di Grup F, Marseille akan menjamu Arsenal. Kedua tim ini mengawali musim di liga domestik masing-masing dengan buruk. Maka, baik Marseille maupun Arsenal sangat berharap dapat meraih hasil bagus di Liga Champions.

Marseille memimpin klasemen sementara Grup F dengan koleksi enam poin dari dua pertandingan, diikuti oleh Arsenal yang mengumpulkan nilai empat.

Namun Arsenal harus mewaspadai kiprah Borussia Dortmund yang akan melawat ke Olympiacos. Jika Borussia mampu meraih poin tiga di kandang Olympiacos, dan Arsenal gagal mendapatkan poin atas Marseille , maka Arsenal akan tersingkir ke posisi ketiga.

Persaingan di Gurp E berlangsung lebih ketat. Chelsea berada di puncak klasemen dengan empat poin, disusul Bayer Leverkusen dengan tiga poin, Valencia dua poin, dan Racing Genk yang baru mengumpulkan satu poin. Jika Chelsea mampu meraih kemenangan atas Genk pada laga Rabu, maka dapat dipastikan mereka sudah lolos ke babak knock out.

Pemimpin klasemen sementara Grup G, Apoel akan menjalani pertandingan berat saat melawat ke kandang FC Porto. Dalam 19 pertandingan kandang di kompetisi Eropa sebelumnya, Porto mampu mengemas 15 kemenangan.

Pertandingan lain akan mempertemukan wakil Ukraina, Shakhtar Donetsk, dengan klub Rusia, Zenit St Petersburg. (Ant/wt/X-12)

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Beras Impor Masuk Sumbar 33 Ton

PADANG--MICOM: Divisi Regional Badan Urusan Logistik (Bulog) wilayah Sumatera Barat menyebutkan beras impor asal Vietnam masuk ke Sumbar sebanyak 33 ton.



"Jumlah beras impor yang masuk sudah dua kapal atau tercatat 13 ton dan 20 ton lagi menyusul jelang akhir tahun," kata Kepala Divre Bulog Sumbar, Erizal Effendi di Padang, Selasa (18/10).
Menurut dia, ketersedian beras impor Vietnam itu akan mampu memenuhi kebutuhan beras untuk masyarakat miskin di 19 kabupaten dan kota lebih enam bulan ke depan.
Pagu Raskin wilayah Sumbar pada 2011 sebanyak 46.338.840 kilogram dengan jumlah 257.438 Rumah Tangga Sasaran (RTS).
Erizal menyebutkan, kualitas beras impor asal Vietnam cukup baik atau setara dengan kualitas beras asal Bukittinggi.
Justru itu, saat penyaluran ke masyarakat tim tingkat kabupaten dan kota sampai ke kecamatan harus lebih mewaspadai dan jangan sampai salah sasaran.
Kadivre Bulog Sumbar juga memprediksi pergerakan harga beras medium pada Oktober-Januari 2012 mulai naik atau berkisar Rp9.000/kg di pasaran.
Namun, kenaikan tak terlalu signifikan sehingga dengan percepatan penyaluran Raskin oleh pemerintah kabupaten dan kota, tentu dapat membuat stabilitas harga di pasaran.
Apalagi, persedian berast impor di gudang Bulog melebihi dari cukup, sehingga perkiraan kenaikan harga tak perlu dikhawatirkan masyarakat.
"Kita akan terus melakukan pemantauan pergerakan harga beras di pasar-pasar tradisional wilayah Sumbar, sehingga dapat dilakukan langkah antisipasi terjadi lonjakan," ujarnya. (Ant/OL-3)
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Monday, October 17, 2011

Royal Wedding Yogya Sebelum Dinikahkan, GKR Bendara Ditanting Kembali Oleh Sri Sultan HB X

Foto: Lucas Aditya Yogyakarta - Sri Sultan Hamengku Buwono X menanyakan kembali ketetapan hati putrinya Gusti Kanjeng Ratu (GKR) Bendara sebelum dinikahkan. Prosesi tantingan ini dilakukan Sultan HB X sendiri di Emper Bangsal Prabayeksa Kraton Yogyakarta pada pukul 19.30 WIB. Sebab Sultan sendirilah yang akan menikahkan putri dengan KPH Yudanegara pada hari Selasa (18/10/2011) di Masjid Panepen, Kraton Ngayogyakarto Hadiningrat.

Acara `tantingan` adalah pernyataan kesediaan dan kesiapan calon pengantin puteri yang dipersunting calon pengantin putera.

Dalam acara itu Sri Sultan HB X didampingi GKR Hemas. Sedangkan GKR Bendara didampingi tiga kakaknya GKR Pembayun, GKR Condro Kirono dan GKR Maduretno.

Sultan malam itu yang mengenakan baju surjan warna hijau, kuning dan hitam motif kembang-kembang serta kain dan blangkon motif truntum. Sedangkan GKR hemas mengenakan kebaya warna krem. Dalam prosesi itu juga dihadiri abdi dalem kaji (haji) atau penghulu/ulama kraton. Prosesi tantingan berjalan lebih kurang 20 menit.

"Anak ingsun Gusti Kanjeng Ratu Bendara, apa sliramu wis sumadya tak dhaupake karo abdi ingsun Kanjeng Pangeran Harya Yudanegara? (Anak saya Gusti Kanjeng Ratu Bendara, apakah kamu bersedia saya nikahkan dengan abdi saya Kanjeng Pangeran Harya Yudanegara?" tanya Sultan kepada putri bungsunya.

GKR Bendara kemudian menjawab, "inggih, (ya-red)".

Jawaban singkat yang menandakan kesiapannya GKR Bendara. Setelah itu abdi dalem penghulu kraton kemudian membacakan doa.

Proses ini sebagai kelengkapan administrasi untuk pernikahan.Pernyataan tersebut kemudian dicatat oleh petugas dari Kantor Urusan Agama (KUA) Kecamatan Keraton, Kota Yogyakarta yang didampingi penghulu kraton yang dipimpin KRT H. Dipodiningrat.

Selanjutnya GKR Bendara maju dihadapan Sultan dan melakukan sungkem di lutut kanan ayahandanya.
Usai tantingan, Sultan bersama permaisuri GKR Hemas menuju Kesatriyan untuk menemui calon pengantin putra serta meninjau kesiapan acara akad nikah besok. Di Kesatriyan, KPH Yudanegara turut serata menemui Sultan dan GKR Hemas. Turut hadir adik-adik Sultan seperti KGPH Hadiwinoto, GBPH Prabukusumo.
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Giring 'Nidji': Penghasilan Musisi 80 Persen dari RBT



Giring 'Nidji': Penghasilan Musisi 80 Persen dari RBT 

"Iya penghasilan musisi 80 persen dari RBT. Tulang punggung industri musik Indonesia," paparnya saat ditemui di Hard Rock, EX Plaza, Jakarta Pusat, Senin (17/10/2011).

Ayah dua anak itu juga sangat menyayangkan tindakan pemerintah yang secara cepat mengambil keputusan. Menurut Giring, seharusnya bukan RBT yang ditutup. Melainkan pihak-pihak yang sudah melakukan pencurian pulsa.

"Saya datang hanya sebagai musisi bahwa saya ingin pemerintah lebih memikirkan kita. Kita bayar pajak, kita jujur RBT itu kan halal sedangkan yang tidak halal malah nggak ditutup. Kayak download gratis dan pembajakan. Hal itu kan bisa merugikan banyak orang termasuk saya," terang Giring.

Ia juga berharap bahwa tepat pukul 00.00 WIB nanti pemerintah tidak jadi melakukan penutupan RBT.

"Tadi sudah datang ke komisi 1 DPR untuk meninjau ulang masalah regulasi yang akan diberlakukan oleh BRTI mengenai kebijakan RBT. Mereka mengerti permasalahanya dimana, mereka tahu ternyata waktu tinggal sedikit nanti malam semua RBT akan di reg ulang. Mudah-mudahan besok tidak terjadi apa-apa," harapnya.
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Thursday, October 13, 2011

Obama’s Jobs Council Offers Plan to Boost Foreign Investment

By Margaret Talev



(Updates with Obama quotes in third, 18th paragraphs.)

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) -- A group of executives advising President Barack Obama on jobs is recommending an effort to attract $1 trillion in foreign direct investment within five years and upgrade the nation’s transportation and energy infrastructure.

The President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, headed by General Electric Co. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt, released its 52-page report today during a meeting with Obama in Pittsburgh, where the president also is promoting his $447 billion jobs plan.

Obama told the panel that the legislation he’s proposed “incorporates a lot of the ideas” in the report. Still he said he recognized that opposition from Republicans may block passage of his full plan and if it fails to get through “we’re going to have to break it up” into parts.

With the U.S. jobless rate at 9.1 percent in September -- the sixth consecutive month it’s been at 9 percent or higher -- Obama is pressing Congress to act on his jobs plan. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, has scheduled a procedural vote this evening on the legislation, which faces resistance from Republicans and some Democrats on its tax and spending provisions.

Counting Votes

Democrats have 53 seats in the Senate with 60 votes needed to move forward. Maryland Representative Steny Hoyer, the second-ranking Democrat in the House, urged fellow party members in the Senate to stay united on tonight’s vote even if they disagree with portions of the legislation. Failure to do so risks “undermining the president’s message,” he said at his weekly news conference.

Administration officials said they expect to get almost unanimous support from Democrats even as the total falls short of the 60 needed to proceed.

The president met with his jobs council while visiting the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local No. 5 Training Center.

He called the report “outstanding” without endorsing specific recommendations.

The jobs council report, published on its website, calls for more extensive initiatives than the president has proposed, touching on immigration, tax policy, business regulation and worker training. It contains recommendations that support Obama’s proposals, such as infrastructure spending, as well as those that Republicans back, including relaxing some regulation.

“There is no ‘silver bullet’ to create jobs,” the report says.

Foreign Investment

One way is to get more investment from overseas, according to the council. The report says the U.S. attracts 18 percent of global direct investment, down from nearly 26 percent in the late 1990s.

That trend can be reversed as the wage gap between the U.S. and China falls and ocean freight and Chinese real estate prices rise, the report says. The council’s goal of $1 trillion in foreign direct investment in the next four to five years would be a 20 percent to 25 percent increase over current trends, it says.

The council backs Obama’s call for spending on infrastructure improvements both to spur hiring in the short term and improve the nation’s long-term competitiveness by making the economy more productive. It also recommends steps to encourage private investment in advanced energy technology.

The U.S. is falling behind economic competitors such as China in infrastructure, such as roadways, ports, rail links and airports, according to the report.

‘Two-Fer’ Projects

The report says roads, schools, electric grids and other infrastructure projects are “two-fers” because they create short-term jobs and promote competitiveness in the long term.

“If Washington can agree on anything, it should be this,” the council said.

The council calls for a reauthorization of surface transportation funding legislation rather than repeated extensions that Congress has passed. The panel also endorsed Obama’s proposal to create an infrastructure bank that would leverage private funds to projects.

To get construction under way, the council said federal regulatory and permitting reviews should be streamlined and speeded up. Increasing infrastructure projects is “not just a question of money” and the government should “simplify regulatory review” to avoid “unnecessary delays.”

Sarbanes-Oxley

In order to reduce barriers for firms to make initial public offerings, the council recommended modifying the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley law to let shareholders of public companies with market valuations of less than $1 billion opt out of compliance requirements.

Obama said alterations to the law should be examined for their impact on smaller companies and asked the council to recommend specific “tweaks.”

Among the other recommendations: eliminate capital gains taxes on investments of up to $25 million in privately held companies as long as the investment is held for at least five years; give accredited angel group investors a refundable 30 percent tax credit; further streamline the patent process and access to Small Business Administration financing; speed visas and expand immigration opportunities for highly skilled workers; train more engineers and health care workers; and require independent regulatory commissions to conduct cost-benefit analyses on any “economically significant” regulatory actions with an annual impact of $100 million or more.

“Bipartisan action on this agenda in Washington -- even on modest issues, to start -- would boost confidence at this juncture and have a positive effect on our economy,” the report said.

Along with Immelt, the 27 members of the jobs council include Steve Case, Revolution LLC CEO and AOL Inc. co-founder, Ursula Burns, chairman and CEO of Xerox Corp., Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of Facebook Inc., Jim McNerney, CEO of Boeing Co., and Richard Parsons, chairman of Citigroup Inc. Read More...

European Stocks Retreat From 10-Week High as Commodities Decline

By Shiyin Chen



Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- European stocks fell from a 10-week high, while copper led a decline in commodities on concern earnings and economic growth will slow amid the region’s debt crisis. Asian shares rallied a sixth day after China took steps to help smaller companies.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slid 0.4 percent as of 8:07 a.m. in London, after closing yesterday at the highest level since Aug. 4. Standard & Poor’s 500 futures were little changed. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 1.2 percent. Oil lost 0.7 percent in New York and copper sank 1.6 percent. The euro weakened 0.3 percent to 106.26 yen, while the Australian dollar and South Korean won climbed to three-week highs.

Carrefour SA said today profit may fall as much as 20 percent this year and analysts predict JPMorgan Chase & Co. will report a 10 percent decline in net income. European Commission President Jose Barroso will speak today in Brussels after calling yesterday for a “coordinated approach” to recapitalize the region’s banks. China unveiled a package of measures to help small companies, including tax breaks and easier access to bank loans, as data on exports signaled slowing economic expansion.

“The market over the next few days may be due for a bit of a correction as we’ve had many days of gains,” Mohammed Apabhai, head of Asia trading at Citigroup Inc., said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Hong Kong. “If things do go wrong, markets remain massively vulnerable, but we’re not expecting that. Of course everything hinges on what comes out of Europe.”

The Federal Reserve said in minutes released yesterday some officials wanted to keep further asset purchases as an option to boost the economy last month.

--With assistance from Rishaad Salamat in Hong Kong, Elffie Chew in Kuala Lumpur, Candice Zachariahs in Sydney, Kristine Aquino and Katrina Nicholas in Singapore, and Richard Dobson and Irene Shen in Shanghai. Editors: Shelley Smith, Lars Klemming Read More...

Monday, October 10, 2011

tips business online

By Erwin

all my friends tell me about the business around
I want to tell you that I am still a beginner so not many know ..
I know
The most important in online business is how can you invite people to visit your blog or website
you have to do is make comments on the blog your friends or business associates and an interesting comment to your blog visitors to come to you
You must register and pay per click in the address of certain sites that receive the service ...
That's all I can give if useful, please in that drowsy also do not take anything Read More...

Energy Poverty Seen as History at IEA for $48 Billion a Year

By Simon Clark and Lananh Nguyen



Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The world’s entire population can have electricity and cleaner stoves by 2030 if $48 billion is invested each year, the International Energy Agency said in its first estimate of the cost to end energy poverty.

The sum is about the same as the combined annual capital spend of Europe’s two biggest oil companies, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and BP Plc, and five times the $9.1 billion that was invested in 2009 to boost energy access in developing nations. There are 1.3 billion people, or 20 percent of the world population, living without electricity and 2.7 billion that lack clean cooking facilities, the IEA said.

The obstacles to providing modern energy access to everyone are surmountable and national governments should publish targets and provide more seed capital to incentivize private investors, IEA Chief Economist Fatih Birol said in an interview from Paris.

“Providing energy for all is crucial for social and economic development, and beyond that it’s a moral obligation,” he said. An illustration of the inequality is that 791 million people in sub-Saharan Africa excluding South Africa use about as much energy each year as 19.5 million people in New York State, Birol said, citing IEA data.

Judy Mirangoh burns fuels in her house in the Kenyan village of Wanyororo to make heat and light because she has no electricity. Her mud-walled home is less smoky since she replaced her traditional wood-burning fire with a cookstove earlier this year, helping her wallet and her health.

Three-Stone Fire

Such stoves burn half the wood of the old three-stone fire, which contributes to indoor air pollution that causes about 1.5 million premature deaths a year, Birol said. The 45-year-old single mother of two still burns paraffin in lamps for light.

“I wish I would have electricity in my home,” Mirangoh said in a telephone interview. “The cook stove is really helping me. It has less smoke, so it is cleaner and healthier.”

Vietnam is an example of a success story, according to the IEA report titled “Energy for All, Financing Access for the Poor” that was published today. The share of the population with electricity has risen to 98 percent, from less than 5 percent, in the past 35 years, the agency said.

“The electricity supply has become far more reliable,” Tran Thi Thu Lan, 58, a retired high school teacher in Hanoi, said in an interview. “In the past we had rolling power cuts which made our lives more difficult.”

Power Connection Plans

Bangladesh, Ghana and South Africa have plans to extend electricity to all their populations by 2020, according to the IEA. Indonesia plans to connect 95 percent of its people to power supplies by 2025 while the Philippines targets 90 percent of households by 2017, according to the IEA, which is the Paris- based energy-security adviser of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

In Kenya, 84 percent of the 33 million population had no access to electricity in 2009, and 83 percent of Kenyans relied on traditional cooking facilities powered mainly by wood, agricultural and animal waste, the IEA said.

Mirangoh’s Envirofit cookstove was provided by the Colorado-based Paradigm Project, a venture started by Greg Spencer, the co-founder of Blue Source LLC, a company which develops and manages projects that reduce carbon emissions, generating tradable carbon offsets. Spencer, who is 55, wants to provide 5 million stoves in developing countries by 2020 and is tapping grants, investor capital and carbon offsets for funding.

Gathering Firewood

“We want to prove that it is possible to do good and make a profit at the same time,” Spencer said in a telephone interview. “We have to bring in for-profit capital to reach our objective.”

Spencer is currently on a 10-day, 136-mile (218 kilometer) trek from San Diego to Los Angeles with his 26-year-old son, carrying 50-pound bundles of wood on their backs to raise awareness of the grueling journey millions of women undertake in the developing world to gather firewood.

Women are often responsible for collecting firewood and are more susceptible to smoke-related respiratory diseases because they do most of the cooking, the IEA’s Birol said. Premature deaths from indoor air pollution are projected to exceed those from malaria and the HIV/AIDS virus combined in 2030, and can be reduced by improving access to cleaner and more efficient stoves and cooking facilities.

African nations that lack energy reserves face the greatest challenge in providing energy to their people. Oil import bills in sub-Saharan Africa increased by $2.2 billion last year, outpacing gains in development assistance funding, the IEA said.

Using Export Revenue

Oil exporters on the continent such as Nigeria and Angola could better use their revenue to end energy poverty, according to the report. The capital cost of providing modern energy services to all deprived households in the 10 largest oil and gas exporting countries of sub-Saharan Africa is about $30 billion, or about 0.7 percent of those governments’ cumulative income from oil and gas exports, IEA data showed.

Wind, sun and hydro power are most likely to solve energy poverty for people living in rural areas in Africa because the power sources can be tapped without requiring construction of large transmission grids, Birol said.

Microfinance institutions may be able to help distribute and fund the purchase of low-cost sun-powered lamps, according to a report by the Washington-based Center for Financial Inclusion. Solar lamps cost between $10 to $100, a significant expense for many in Africa, said David Levai, an author of the report.

WillowTree, a Dubai-based investment company, sees business opportunities in providing solar lamps and stoves in Africa, according to managing partner Nadine Kettaneh.

“The market opportunity is driven by low grid penetration, large and growing populations, high energy prices and very low- income populations,” Kettaneh said. “These are all factors that contribute to a very attractive market for solar portable lighting.”

Back in Kenya, solar power is still a dream for Mirangoh.

“I would like to have a solar lamp,” she said. “I have seen one in a friend’s house.”

--With assistance from Nguyen Dieu Tu Uyen in Hanoi. Editors: Stephen Voss, Raj Rajendran Read More...

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Retail Sales Probably Rose in September: U.S. Economy Preview

By Timothy R. Homan
 

Oct. 9 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. retail sales increased in September at the fastest pace in six months, providing a sign of optimism for some merchants heading into the holiday shopping season, economists said before a report this week.
The projected 0.7 percent gain would follow no change in the previous month, according to the median of 69 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of Commerce Department figures on Oct. 14. The trade gap widened in August, other data may show.
Macy’s Inc. and Kohl’s Corp. are among retailers adding more workers than last year in anticipation demand will hold up even amid limited job growth and stock-market volatility that’s left Americans more pessimistic. President Barack Obama, lawmakers and the Federal Reserve face pressure to spur the employment gains needed to support household spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the world’s largest economy.
“The consumer thus far has remained fairly resilient to the worries of Wall Street,” said Russell Price, a senior economist at Ameriprise Financial Inc. in Detroit. “Retailers right now are still pretty much treading water. They’ve managed their inventory and staffing levels very, very well to maintain profit levels.”
Retail purchases excluding automobiles rose 0.3 percent last month after a 0.1 percent increase in August, economists said.
September light-vehicle deliveries climbed to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 13.1 million, according to Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey-based Autodata Corp. The rate is the highest since April’s 13.2 million, when lost output caused by Japan’s earthquake and tsunami began crimping supply of cars and parts.
Same-Store Sales
Same-store sales at retailers, excluding Wal-Mart Stores Inc., rose 5.5 percent in September compared with a year earlier, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers.
At the same time, slower job growth, the real-estate slump and a volatile stock market will limit retail sales growth to 2.8 percent during the holiday season this year, according to the National Retail Federation.
The gain to an estimated $465.6 billion in November and December sales compares with a 5.2 percent jump last year and the 10-year average of 2.6 percent, the Washington based NRF said last week. Stores may hire 480,000 to 500,000 seasonal employees, in line with the 495,000 added last year, the group said.
“Households have been very cautious in their spending decisions,” Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said Oct. 4 in congressional testimony. “Probably the most significant factor depressing consumer confidence, however, has been the poor performance of the job market.”
Labor Market
The jobless rate held at 9.1 percent in September even as employers added more payrolls than forecast. The Labor Department said Oct. 7 that payrolls climbed by 103,000 workers after a revised 57,000 increase the prior month that was more than originally estimated. The figures reflected the end of a strike at Verizon Communications Inc. that brought 45,000 people back to work.
The White House last month submitted a $447 billion jobs bill to Congress that economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast would help avoid a return to a recession by maintaining growth and pushing down the unemployment rate next year. The legislation faces Republican opposition.
Macy’s, the second-biggest U.S. department-store chain, is increasing hiring of mostly part-time workers by 4 percent for the holiday season to match sales growth in its stores and online. Kohl’s, the fourth-largest U.S. department-store chain, said last week it may hire more than 40,000 holiday workers, a 5 percent increase from 2010.
The Standard & Poor’s Supercomposite Retailing Index is little changed this year, while the broader S&P 500 Index has declined 8.1 percent during the same period.
Companies may have started preparing for the holiday shopping season by ordering more imported merchandise in August. The U.S. trade deficit probably widened to $46 billion from $44.8 billion in July, economists said ahead of an Oct. 13 report from the Commerce Department.
Read More...

Friday, October 7, 2011

Steve Jobs: The Products

How Apple stokes desire, and what the Apple experience says about the modern world

By Sean Wilsey
On 9/11/11, I was detained on my way to the U.S. Open women’s final. Security was tight and all spectators were patted down and relieved of food, water, and backpacks. A guard felt my jacket, discovered a hard, deck-of-cards-sized object, and, before I could remove it from my pocket for her to inspect, exclaimed, “Oh, that’s an iPhone!” Then she smiled and, in an action emblematic of the relationship between America and Apple (AAPL), waved me through—as though nobody with such a device could have evil designs.

Apple is now synonymous with American values and enterprise. But it was not always thus. Apple users long constituted less than 6 percent of the market, even at the mid-’80s peak of the Macintosh. Before owning my first Mac, I wrote code in BASIC and grudgingly learned DOS commands and keystrokes—which required such awkward finger placements it was like playing a jazz chord progression whenever one backed up a file. Apple was already figuring out the seemingly obvious: Computers are meant to work for us. Apple products were simple, but only a rabid minority seemed to care.

Now, thanks to a faultless execution of that principle, the whole world has fallen for Apple. Still simple in appearance, Apple products have the feel of precision chronometers or gunsmith-forged, by-appointment-to-Her Majesty-grade firearms, with none of the exclusivity of such things. A couple of weeks ago I saw a man in filthy clothes lying on a Manhattan sidewalk, fiddling with his iPhone. It looked as though it may have been his only possession.

The conventional notion about Apple is that the company’s devices are powerful, intuitive, beautifully designed, and somehow free you to be more … yourself. They are also dazzling, which I am using in the original sense, as in “they confound with their brilliance.” Certainly, there is something not quite rational about the desire they evoke. And I am speaking from experience. There are at this moment six in-use Apple devices on my desk. I estimate that I’ve owned $30,000 worth of hardware from the company: four PowerBooks, a G4 tower with Cinema Display, two MacBook Pros, a first-generation iPod, the first black iPod, an iPod shuffle, a G5 tower, the old iPhone, an iPad, the current iPhone, and a MacBook Air. I am a stockholder. I am, it almost goes without saying, writing this on an Apple. And it’s increasingly likely that you are reading it on one.

With each Apple purchase, I’ve always thought: They can’t possibly make anything better than this. And they then produce some new thing that appears to have descended from on high, a child of immaculate gods. At which point the formerly gorgeous thing, as in the case of the 11-year-old Cinema Display that I still use today, just starts to look wrong, despite its ongoing utility—the mix of gray and transparent plastic sad in contrast to the brushed steel of the latest, like something left out in the rain. And so the consumerist reincarnation: There’s always going to be a new product coming out. Nothing ever dies, it just gets replaced.

Growing up in San Francisco, 40 miles from Silicon Valley, my first digital experience was on an Apple II Plus. Others may have been crunching spreadsheets on VisiCalc, but I was calculating the launch angle and velocity of a flashing white dot. I typed in coordinates, pressed “Return,” and a projectile was fired at an enemy missile battery, operated by a friend on a networked computer. I was nine, it was the late ’70s, and I had a future in ballistics.

The first logo had a line from Wordsworth inscribed around the border, about Isaac Newton: “A mind forever voyaging through strange seas of thought—alone.” Now, on each box comes, “Designed by Apple in California/Assembled in China.”
As a San Franciscan, the “Designed in California” part makes me proud. Apple couldn’t have flourished in any other place. It is of my home state. Like so much about California, though, it is not always what it seems. It is user-friendly, but not … friendly. Beloved, and rich, the company is famously tightfisted. And any sense of openness is certainly an illusion—whatever’s inside headquarters, at 1 Infinite Loop in Cupertino, is as closely guarded as a Soviet secret city during the arms race. One former Apple employee, quoted by PC Magazine, summed up the company as follows: “It’s a culture of silence.” A monastery.



The chief officer of my local police precinct told the neighborhood’s most recent community council meeting that there had been 39 robberies over the previous month, and the majority of them involved Apple products. Numerous people have been violently, surreptitiously, or otherwise dispossessed of their iPhones, iPads, and, in at least one case, a computer. Most common, and striking to me, were incidents wherein texting or talking pedestrians simply had their phones snatched out of their hands. In street parlance, an “iMugging.”

The chief discouraged the use of white headphones and urged residents to engrave serial numbers and “NYC” on portable electronics as a prelude to registering them with the police, who were offering to loan out an engraver for the purpose. When I told my wife all this, she said she had no interest in participating. “If my iPhone gets stolen,” my wife said, “I’ll be psyched because I’ll get to buy a new one.”

Designer Alan Kay, inventor of the laptop, had this to say upon the iPhone’s release: “Steve understands desire.”

Apple computers are beautiful and work beautifully. They may or may not, to quote Jobs, be putting “a dent in the universe.” Apple computers are simply pleasurable. It’s fun to be able to see ourselves as a pulsing dot of significance in a world of fascinating destinations, or to board a plane without waiting in line to get a piece of paper, or to figure out what awesome music is playing in a restaurant without having to be so uncool as to ask. Apple understands how we wish to see ourselves, and a pleasing sense of omnipotence comes of all this power and ease. We feel that we are masters.

As for dazzlement, sometimes I find myself sitting before my computer’s screen in a posture previous generations would only recognize as prayer, and doing nothing—as though I’m waiting for it to tell me who I am, what the future will bring, to enlighten me. The moment elongates. I am mesmerized. This is weird enough solo; but it’s commonplace to disengage, without warning, from a conversation or meal or steering wheel in the presence of an iPad or iPhone. And who hasn’t been disquieted observing their fellow Apple users gathered together, each looking into their own screens, faces lit with a ghostly glow from below? It’s a culture of silence.



Last year, a teacher I respected warned my wife and me against “screen time” for our daughter. She instructed us to avoid videos because flashing lights “activate the fight-or-flight instinct,” wherein “endorphins are released, your judgment is impaired, your senses are all heightened, your heart rate increases.” In making her point, she went so far as to say that screen-centric children could become anesthetized to true experience and to true danger. I have no idea if this is true. But it is plausible, and it certainly goes a long way toward explaining why it has been so easy for neighborhood thieves to snatch up so many iPhones.George Churinoff, a venerable Buddhist monk, splits his time between a monastery in rural Wisconsin and, when the Dalai Lama is in New York, a relative’s apartment in Lower Manhattan. He also works as a Mac specialist. Venerable George, as he is customarily addressed, has loaded hundreds of rare texts from the Indian Library of Congress onto iPads for the perusal of Buddhist clergy.

Churinoff told me, “I got the idea when his holiness the Dalai Lama was in town teaching. I was looking at my iPad. Richard Gere sat next to me, and I said, ‘Why don’t you get one of these for the Dalai Lama and he can read the texts?’” Churinoff then set out to do this for a number of high-ranking Buddhists. “The lamas were excited and thought it would give them easy access to the entire canon,” he said. “One lama was even prepared to offer a tantric empowerment”—a sermon that initiates devotees—“using the text on his iPad.” This would be roughly equivalent to the Pope preaching mass with a Mac.

Perhaps one thing shows above all others how remarkable Apple is: Any assessment of its value, culturally, is as much a referendum on the value of us all. This singular company has been so fully embraced, is so unquestioningly loved, is taken so personally by so many, that it may as well be a stand-in for our own values: speed, ease, and the self-regard we tell ourselves is individualism. Apple, as John Lennon (also co-opted by the company’s advertisements) once described the Beatles, is “more popular than Jesus.” What other publicly traded entity has ever been able to achieve such a thing?

Jobs was well-known for his unbending, and sometimes odd, aesthetic sense. He once rejected the design of some internal Macintosh hardware, invisible to users, based solely on aesthetics. The novelist Mona Simpson, subsequent child of (and raised by) the same parents who put Steve Jobs up for adoption, modeled a character on her brother, and described him in the book’s opening line as “a man too busy to flush toilets.” (Jobs told an interviewer, “About 25 percent of it is totally me, right down to the mannerisms.”) Simpson’s novel is centered around the daughter of a brilliant Silicon Valley executive and her misbegotten efforts to connect with her father. Jobs’s eldest child, Lisa, wrote an essay in The Southwest Review, mentioning, among other things, the dietary habits bequeathed to her. She describes how Jobs “spit out a mouthful of soup after hearing it contained butter” (though it was vegetarian). “With him,” she went on, “one ate a variety of salads.”

In the same essay, Lisa Jobs describes a dinner with her father in Tokyo. They are in the iconic ’60s-modernist Hotel Okura—a space that so exemplifies Apple’s design ethos that I conflate it with the interior of a Macintosh. Seated in the restaurant “with its high ceilings and low couches,” they abandon vegetarianism and eat cooked eel and sushi:

“He ordered too many pieces, knowing we wouldn’t be able to finish them. … It was the first time I’d felt, with him, so relaxed and content, over those trays of meat; the excess, the permission and warmth after the cold salads, meant a once inaccessible space had opened. He was less rigid with himself, even human under the great ceilings with the little chairs, with the meat, and me.”

If there is a connection to be drawn between this anecdote and our own experience as consumers of Jobs’s products, perhaps it is the push-pull Steve Jobs embodied that has always animated America, a country of opposed forces: sybarites and skinflints, puritans and hedonists, natural grandeur and heedless development.

He was a monk-like man who seemed to give everything to bring us, as consumers, as followers, everything we wanted. Occasionally he was also “even human.”
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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

The Seven Pitfalls of Business Failure And How to Avoid Them


Summary When you're starting a new business, the last thing you want to focus on is failure. But if you address the common reasons for failure up front, you'll be much less likely to fall victim to them yourself. Here are the top 7 reasons why businesses fail and tips for avoiding them.



According to statistics published by the Small Business Administration (SBA), seven out of ten new employer establishments survive at least two years and 51 percent survive at least five years. This is a far cry from the previous long-held belief that 50 percent of businesses fail in the first year and 95 percent fail within five years.

Better success rates notwithstanding, a significant percentage of new businesses do fail. Expert opinions abound about what a business owner should and shouldn't do to keep a new business afloat in the perilous waters of the entrepreneurial sea. There are, however, key factors that -- if not avoided -- will be certain to weigh down a business and possibly sink it forevermore.

1. You start your business for the wrong reasons.
Would the sole reason you would be starting your own business be that you would want to make a lot of money? Do you think that if you had your own business that you'd have more time with your family? Or maybe that you wouldn't have to answer to anyone else? If so, you'd better think again.

On the other hand, if you start your business for these reasons, you'll have a better chance at entrepreneurial success:
* You have a passion and love for what you'll be doing, and strongly believe -- based on educated study and investigation -- that your product or service would fulfill a real need in the marketplace.
* You are physically fit and possess the needed mental stamina to withstand potential challenges. Often overlooked, less-than-robust health has been responsible for more than a few bankruptcies.
* You have drive, determination, patience and a positive attitude. When others throw in the towel, you are more determined than ever.
* Failures don't defeat you. You learn from your mistakes, and use these lessons to succeed the next time around. Head, SBA economist, noted that studies of successful business owners showed they attributed much of their success to "building on earlier failures;" on using failures as a "learning process."
* You thrive on independence, and are skilled at taking charge when a creative or intelligent solution is needed. This is especially important when under strict time constraints.
* You like -- if not love -- your fellow man, and show this in your honesty, integrity, and interactions with others. You get along with and can deal with all different types of individuals.

2. Poor Management
Many a report on business failures cites poor management as the number one reason for failure. New business owners frequently lack relevant business and management expertise in areas such as finance, purchasing, selling, production, and hiring and managing employees. Unless they recognize what they don't do well, and seek help, business owners may soon face disaster. They must also be educated and alert to fraud, and put into place measures to avoid it.

Neglect of a business can also be its downfall. Care must be taken to regularly study, organize, plan and control all activities of its operations. This includes the continuing study of market research and customer data, an area which may be more prone to disregard once a business has been established.

A successful manager is also a good leader who creates a work climate that encourages productivity. He or she has a skill at hiring competent people, training them and is able to delegate. A good leader is also skilled at strategic thinking, able to make a vision a reality, and able to confront change, make transitions, and envision new possibilities for the future.

3. Insufficient Capital
A common fatal mistake for many failed businesses is having insufficient operating funds. Business owners underestimate how much money is needed and they are forced to close before they even have had a fair chance to succeed. They also may have an unrealistic expectation of incoming revenues from sales.

It is imperative to ascertain how much money your business will require; not only the costs of starting, but the costs of staying in business. It is important to take into consideration that many businesses take a year or two to get going. This means you will need enough funds to cover all costs until sales can eventually pay for these costs. This business startup calculator will help you predict how much money you'll need to launch your business.

4. Location, Location, Location
Your college professor was right -- location is critical to the success of your business. Whereas a good location may enable a struggling business to ultimately survive and thrive, a bad location could spell disaster to even the best-managed enterprise.

Some factors to consider:

* Where your customers are
* Traffic, accessibility, parking and lighting
* Location of competitors
* Condition and safety of building
* Local incentive programs for business start-ups in specific targeted areas
* The history, community flavor and receptiveness to a new business at a prospective site

5. Lack of Planning
Anyone who has ever been in charge of a successful major event knows that were it not for their careful, methodical, strategic planning -- and hard work -- success would not have followed. The same could be said of most business successes.

It is critical for all businesses to have a business plan. Many small businesses fail because of fundamental shortcomings in their business planning. It must be realistic and based on accurate, current information and educated projections for the future.

Components may include:

* Description of the business, vision, goals, and keys to success
* Work force needs
* Potential problems and solutions
* Financial: capital equipment and supply list, balance sheet, income statement and cash flow analysis, sales and expense forecast
* Analysis of competition
* Marketing, advertising and promotional activities
* Budgeting and managing company growth

In addition, most bankers request a business plan if you are seeking to secure addition capital for your company.

6. Overexpansion
A leading cause of business failure, overexpansion often happens when business owners confuse success with how fast they can expand their business. A focus on slow and steady growth is optimum. Many a bankruptcy has been caused by rapidly expanding companies.

At the same time, you do not want to repress growth. Once you have an established solid customer base and a good cash flow, let your success help you set the right measured pace. Some indications that an expansion may be warranted include the inability to fill customer needs in a timely basis, and employees having difficulty keeping up with production demands.

If expansion is warranted after careful review, research and analysis, identify what and who you need to add in order for your business to grow. Then with the right systems and people in place, you can focus on the growth of your business, not on doing everything in it yourself.

7. No Website
Simply put, if you have a business today, you need a website. Period.

In the U.S. alone, the number of internet users (approximately 77 percent of the population) and e-commerce sales ($165.4 billion in 2010, according to the US Department of Commerce) continue to rise and are expected to increase with each passing year.

At the very least, every business should have a professional looking and well-designed website that enables users to easily find out about their business and how to avail themselves of their products and services. Later, additional ways to generate revenue on the website can be added; i.e., selling ad space, drop-shipping products, or recommending affiliate products.

Remember, if you don't have a website, you'll most likely be losing business to those that do. And make sure that website makes your business look good, not bad -- you want to increase revenues, not decrease them.

When it comes to the success of any new business, you -- the business owner -- are ultimately the "secret" to your success. For many successful business owners, failure was never an option. Armed with drive, determination, and a positive mindset, these individuals view any setback as only an opportunity to learn and grow. Most self-made millionaires possess average intelligence. What sets them apart is their openness to new knowledge and their willingness to learn whatever it takes to succeed.

Copyright 2011, Attard Communications, Inc.
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Monday, October 3, 2011

‘White Shirts’ of Police Dept. Take On Enforcer Role

‘White Shirts’ of Police Dept. Take On Enforcer Role

Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
Police commanders last week as protesters marched by; white shirts — lieutenants, captains or inspectors — have assumed a bigger role than usual.
The New York Police Department puts an endless list of tasks on the shoulders of its so-called white shirts — the commanders atop an army of lesser-ranking officers in dark blue.
But the portfolio of the white shirt has now unexpectedly grown to include the role of enforcer.
As the Occupy Wall Street protests, which began on Sept. 17, lurch into their third week, it is often the white shirts who lay hands on protesters or initiate arrests. Video recordings of clashes have shown white shirts — lieutenants, captains or inspectors — leading underlings into the fray.
White shirts led the face-off with protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday afternoon. The episode provided no viral YouTube moments, as the senior officers avoided confrontations with the demonstrators. Yet as hundreds of arrests were made, chants of “white shirts, white shirts” could be heard.
And a white shirt is the antagonist in the demonstrations’ defining image: Deputy Inspector Anthony Bologna’s dousing of some penned-in women with pepper spray on Sept. 24, which seemed to surprise at least one of the blue shirts standing near him on East 12th Street, near University Place. The department is investigating the spraying.
Martin R. Stolar, a member of the National Lawyers Guild who is representing protesters, said, “It appears that it is white shirts that are directing the rough arrests.” To him, their actions constitute a policy from on high. Even the chief of department, Joseph J. Esposito, the highest-ranking officer, was mixing with marchers last Saturday, briefly holding two people by the arm and directing their arrests.
Paul J. Browne, the department’s chief spokesman, did not return a call to discuss the department’s strategy, but in an e-mail he said most of the roughly 80 arrests made last Saturday “were made by police officers directed by supervisors.”
In everyday policing situations, the one-two punch of uniformed response usually goes like this: Blue shirts form the first wave, with white shirts following. But those roles seem reversed in the police response to the Wall Street protests.
Police officers, law enforcement analysts and others cited a number of reasons for it. The prevalence of white shirts around Zuccotti Park, the center of the protests, signals how closely the department monitors high-profile events. Strategies are carefully laid out; guidelines for crowd dispersal are rehearsed; arrest teams are assembled. It is all in an effort to choreograph a predictable level of control.
Yet in the pepper-spray episode last Saturday, critics say, judgment was lacking.
“Unlike much street policing, large marches and protests involve lots of advance planning and the assignment of many supervisors to the scene,” said Christopher T. Dunn, of the New York Civil Liberties Union. “It’s therefore not surprising that supervisors would be personally involved in arrests. What is surprising and alarming is the sight of them using excessive force against protesters. Beyond the injuries that causes, it sends a terrible message.”
For blue shirts, training dictates that they act as a team, not as individuals, said Thomas Graham, a retired deputy chief who until last year commanded the department’s Disorder Control Unit.
“We don’t want the officer initiating an action,” Mr. Graham said. He said the goal was for commanders to steer subordinates into action.
Some observers have credited the police with nimbly tolerating the Wall Street protests, demonstrations that have received no official permits. Outside 1 Police Plaza on Friday evening, the seasoned agitator known as Reverend Billy tried to curry sympathy from the more than 60 officers standing across a police barricade. His sentiment was summed up in a protest sign that read, “The Working Class Must Unite (Hey, Cops, That Includes You).”
At the same time, the unscripted nature of Occupy Wall Street can prompt concerns among the police about chaos; marchers make on-the-spot alterations in their routes, and Saturday was a prime example: The march across the Brooklyn Bridge seemed as though it would be confined to the pedestrian walkway until a smaller group of protesters decided to march across the roadway, leading to hundreds of arrests.
Deputy Inspector Roy T. Richter, the head of the Captains Endowment Association, said he would prefer that his commanders use their delegating skills.
“Similar to a precinct station house, you don’t want your precinct commanders making arrests and issuing summonses,” he said. “Instead, they direct their resources, which include lieutenants, sergeants and police officers, to effectively address crime and quality-of-life conditions.”
But one commander who has spent time at the protests said there were moments when commanders must act: “Any lieutenant or above can say, ‘Officer, arrest those three right there,’ but in the meantime, if you are standing near someone and they should be arrested, grab them. You still have the same powers.”
He added: “There are those of us who wear white shirts, who, I won’t say are afraid of the street, but who never really put their hands on anyone, but took tests and got promoted. Then there are those of us who were good cops to begin with and then got promoted, and we are not afraid to put our hands on people when we have to.”
Rob Harris and Colin Moynihan contributed reporting.
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Doctors Inc. When the Nurse Wants to Be Called ‘Doctor’


Josh Anderson for The New York Times
Patti McCarver, a nurse whose doctor of nursing practice degree entitles her to call herself “doctor,” meeting with a patient.
NASHVILLE — With pain in her right ear, Sue Cassidy went to a clinic. The doctor, wearing a white lab coat with a stethoscope in one pocket, introduced herself.
“Hi. I’m Dr. Patti McCarver, and I’m your nurse,” she said. And with that, Dr. McCarver stuck a scope in Ms. Cassidy’s ear, noticed a buildup of fluid and prescribed an allergy medicine.
It was something that will become increasingly routine for patients: a someone who is not a physician using the title of doctor.
Dr. McCarver calls herself a doctor because she returned to school to earn a doctorate last year, one of thousands of nurses doing the same recently. Doctorates are popping up all over the health professions, and the result is a quiet battle over not only the title “doctor,” but also the money, power and prestige that often comes with it.
As more nurses, pharmacists and physical therapists claim this honorific, physicians are fighting back. For nurses, getting doctorates can help them land a top administrative job at a hospital, improve their standing at a university and win them more respect from colleagues and patients. But so far, the new degrees have not brought higher fees from insurers for seeing patients or greater authority from states to prescribe medicines.
Nursing leaders say that their push to have more nurses earn doctorates has nothing to do with their fight of several decades in state legislatures to give nurses more autonomy, money and prescriptive power.
But many physicians are suspicious and say that once tens of thousands of nurses have doctorates, they will invariably seek more prescribing authority and more money. Otherwise, they ask, what is the point?
Dr. Roland Goertz, the board chairman of the American Academy of Family Physicians, says that physicians are worried that losing control over “doctor,” a word that has defined their profession for centuries, will be followed by the loss of control over the profession itself. He said that patients could be confused about the roles of various health professionals who all call themselves doctors.
“There is real concern that the use of the word ‘doctor’ will not be clear to patients,” he said.
So physicians and their allies are pushing legislative efforts to restrict who gets to use the title of doctor. A bill proposed in the New York State Senate would bar nurses from advertising themselves as doctors, no matter their degree. A law proposed in Congress would bar people from misrepresenting their education or license to practice. And laws already in effect in Arizona, Delaware and other states forbid nurses, pharmacists and others to use the title “doctor” unless they immediately identify their profession.
The deeper battle is over who gets to treat patients first. Pharmacists, physical therapists and nurses largely play secondary roles to physicians, since patients tend to go to them only after a prescription, a referral or instructions from a physician. By requiring doctorates of new entrants, leaders of the pharmacy and physical therapy professions hope their members will be able to treat patients directly and thereby get a larger share of money spent on patient care.
As demand for health care services has grown, physicians have stopped serving as the sole gatekeepers for their patients’ entry into the system. So physicians must increasingly share their patients — not only with one another but also with other professions. Teamwork is the new mantra of medicine, and nurse practitioners and physician assistants (sometimes known as midlevels or physician extenders) have become increasingly important care providers, particularly in rural areas.
But while all physician organizations support the idea of teamwork, not all physicians are willing to surrender the traditional understanding that they should be the ones to lead the team. Their training is so extensive, physicians argue, that they alone should diagnose illnesses. Nurses respond that they are perfectly capable of recognizing a vast majority of patient problems, and they have the studies to prove it. The battle over the title “doctor” is in many ways a proxy for this larger struggle.
For patients, the struggle has brought an increasing array of professionals trained to deal with their day-to-day health woes, but also at times confusion over who is responsible for their care and what sort of training they have.
Six to eight years of collegiate and graduate education generally earn pharmacists, physical therapists and nurses the right to call themselves “doctors,” compared with nearly twice that many years of training for most physicians. For decades, a bachelor’s degree was all that was required to become a pharmacist. That changed in 2004 when a doctorate replaced the bachelor’s degree as the minimum needed to practice. Physical therapists once needed only bachelor’s degrees, too, but the profession will require doctorates of all students by 2015 — the same year that nursing leaders intend to require doctorates of all those becoming nurse practitioners. Dr. Kathleen Potempa, dean of the University of Michigan School of Nursing and the president of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, said that the profession’s new doctoral degree, called the doctor of nursing practice, was simply about remaining current. “Knowledge is exploding, and the doctor of nursing practice degree evolved out of a grass-roots recognition that we need to continuously improve our curriculum,” she said.
Last year, 153 nursing schools gave doctor of nursing practice degrees to 7,037 nurses, compared with four schools that gave the degrees to 170 nurses in 2004, when the association of nursing schools voted to embrace the new degree. In 2008, there were 375,794 nurses with master’s degrees and 28,369 with doctorates, according to a recent government survey.
Dr. Potempa said that nurses with master’s degrees were every bit as capable of treating patients as those with doctorates.
Nursing is filled with multiple specialties requiring varying levels of education, from a high school equivalency degree for nursing assistants to a master’s degree for nurse practitioners. Those wishing to become nurse anesthetists will soon be required to earn doctorates, but otherwise there are presently no practical or clinical differences between nurses who earn master’s degrees and those who get doctorates.
Nurse practitioners must generally graduate from college and take an additional 12 to 16 months of classes, which include months of treating patients for both mild and serious illnesses in clinics and hospitals under the watchful eyes of instructors. Those earning doctorates must generally take a further four semesters or 12 to 16 months of additional classes.
While instruction at each school varies, Dr. McCarver took classes in statistics, epidemiology and health care economics to earn her doctor of nursing practice degree. These additional classes, at Vanderbilt University, did not delve into how to treat specific illnesses, but taught Dr. McCarver the scientific and economic underpinnings of the care she was already providing and how they fit into the nation’s health care system. Studies have shown that nurses with master’s level training offer care in many primary care settings that is as good as and sometimes better than care given by physicians, who generally have far more extensive training. And patients often express higher satisfaction with care delivered by nurses, studies show. Physicians say they are better at recognizing rare problems, something studies have trouble measuring.
The benefits to patients of nurses receiving doctorates is unclear, since there is no evidence that nurses with doctoral degrees provide better care than those with master’s degrees do.
Given the proven effectiveness of nurses with master’s degrees, even some nursing leaders have asked why nurses should be required to get doctorates.
“If it ain’t broke, why fix it?” asked Dr. Afaf I. Meleis, dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.
Some health care economists say the push for clinical doctorates across health professions could be misguided. They argue that anything requiring students to spend more time and money getting trained will invariably result in longer waits and increased costs for patients, because fewer students will meet the increased requirements and those who do will eventually demand higher compensation.
“Everyone’s talking about improving patients’ access to care, bending the cost curve and creating team-based care,” said Erin Fraher, an assistant professor of surgery and family medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. “Where’s the evidence that moving to doctorates in pharmacy, physical therapy and nursing achieves any of these?”
Depending on their area of specialty, nurse practitioners earn a median salary of $86,000 to $90,000 annually, according to the Medical Group Management Association — a bit less than half of what primary care physicians earn. Nurses with doctorates generally earn the same salaries as those with master’s degrees since insurers pay the same rates to both. Physician groups fear that the real reason behind the creation of the doctor of nursing practice degree is to persuade more state legislatures to grant nurses the right to treat patients without supervision from doctors.
Twenty-three states allow nurses to practice without a physician’s supervision or collaboration, and most are in the mountain West and northern New England, areas that have trouble attracting enough physicians. Nursing groups have lobbied for years to increase that number. “This degree is just another step toward independent practice,” said Louis J. Goodman, chief executive of the Texas Medical Association.
Not true, Dr. Potempa said — the new degree simply ensures that nurses stay competent. “It’s not like a group of us woke up one day to create a degree as a way to compete with another profession,” she said. “Nurses are very proud of the fact that they’re nurses, and if nurses had wanted to be doctors, they would have gone to medical school.”
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A U.S.-Backed Geothermal Plant in Nevada Struggles

WASHINGTON — In a remote desert spot in northern Nevada, there is a geothermal plant run by a politically connected clean energy start-up that has relied heavily on an Obama administration loan guarantee and is now facing financial turmoil.
Ethan Miller/Getty Images
The company is Nevada Geothermal Power, which like Solyndra, the now-famous California solar company, is struggling with debt after encountering problems at its only operating plant.
After a series of technical missteps that are draining Nevada Geothermal’s cash reserves, its own auditor concluded in a filing released last week that there was “significant doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”
It is a description that echoes the warning issued in 2010 by auditors hired by Solyndra, which benefited from the same Energy Department loan guarantee before its collapse in August caused the Obama administration great embarrassment.
 The parallels between the companies illustrate the risk inherent in building the clean energy marketplace in the United States, government officials and industry experts say. Indeed, the loan guarantee program exists precisely because none of these ventures are a sure bet.
There are important differences between the fate of Nevada Geothermal and Solyndra, the maker of solar panels that has filed for bankruptcy.
The amount of money the federal government has at stake with Nevada Geothermal — a loan guarantee of $79 million plus at least $66 million in grants — is much smaller than the $528 million investment in Solyndra. There have been no allegations of wrongdoing by Nevada Geothermal or its Blue Mountain, Nev., plant.
Executives of the company express confidence that they can recover and say that the government investment is not at risk, despite the challenges they face because of a high debt load and lower-than-expected energy output at their plant.
 “We are here,” said Brian D. Fairbank, the chief executive, who like other company executives works out of Vancouver, British Columbia, where Nevada Geothermal Power has corporate offices. “We’re doing O.K.”
An Energy Department spokesman said he considered the Nevada Geothermal project a success, noting that the company had a long-term contract to sell its power.
“The Blue Mountain power plant is up and running, generating clean, renewable power and has been consistently making its loan payments on time and in full,” the spokesman, Dan Leistikow, said.
The company also did not hire half a dozen Washington lobbying firms, as Solyndra did, and there is no evidence of White House involvement in pushing the project.
But the Nevada Geothermal project has benefited from the support of a bipartisan collection of Nevada politicians, most notably Senator Harry Reid, a Democrat and the Senate majority leader, who has called his home state the “Saudi Arabia of geothermal energy.”
Nationally, geothermal energy produces only about 3,000 megawatts of power, a minuscule slice of the national electricity supply. The Nevada Geothermal plant generates just 35 megawatts — enough to serve about 35,000 homes for a year — and the company has only 22 employees in the state.
But Mr. Reid has taken the nascent geothermal industry under his wing, pressuring the Department of Interior to move more quickly on applications to build clean energy projects on federally owned land and urging other member of Congress to expand federal tax incentives to help build geothermal plants, benefits that Nevada Geothermal has taken advantage of.
“This project is exactly the type of initiative we need to ensure Nevada creates good-paying jobs,” Mr. Reid said in a statement in April 2010, after he visited the company’s Nevada plant. That was two months before the project even got conditional approval for the Energy Department loan guarantee.
During the tour, Mr. Reid had a chance to see electric generation equipment installed by a company called Ormat Technology, which is a Nevada Geothermal partner. Ormat’s lobbyist in Washington, Kai Anderson, and one of the company’s top executives, Paul Thomsen, are former aides to Mr. Reid.
Just last month, again with Mr. Reid’s support, Ormat secured its own Energy Department loan guarantee, worth $350 million, to help support three other Nevada geothermal projects that are expected to produce 113 megawatts of power.
Mr. Reid has received some support from the industry, in the form of at least $43,000 worth of campaign contributions from the geothermal industry since 2009, according to an analysis of federal campaign finance records.
Adam Jentleson, a spokesman for Mr. Reid, said that the senator was proud of his work as an advocate for geothermal power and a broad array of other clean energy projects in his state. But Mr. Jentleson, and the Energy Department spokesman, said Nevada Geothermal company had not received, nor been offered, any special treatment.
“If projects like this did not contain a certain level of risk, alongside their enormous potential for creating jobs and generating clean energy, there would be no need for the bipartisan loan guarantee program,” Mr. Jentleson said.
An Obama administration official also pointed out that the Nevada Geothermal project won the enthusiastic support of prominent Republicans in the state, and of the Bush administration.
When Nevada Geothermal Power was finishing construction on its plant in late 2009, there was ample reason for optimism. Boiling waters are not far from the surface at this remote site, three hours outside of Reno. It had a 20-year contract to deliver power to the state’s largest electric utility company. But even before it applied for the Obama administration incentives, problems at the plant cropped up. Company executives have variously predicted the plant could generate as much as 45 megawatts, after accounting for energy needed to power it.
Yet when the plant started up in October 2009, only 27 megawatts of net power were initially generated from the hot water pumped from the earth. That was not enough for the company to honor its commitment to the electric utility company, or to pay back a $91 million loan — carrying 14 percent interest — that it has with a Washington-based investment firm.
Through modifications at the Blue Mountain site in Nevada — drilling new wells to produce more steam — the company has been able to get the net power output up to a steady 35 megawatts. But, as the annual report released last week reiterated, that was still not enough production to cover the company’s loans and operating costs.
And that is just the beginning of the troubles. Early last year, it was forced to shut down for more than a month, after a “faulty layout of underground cables” caused a short circuit, a company statement said. Tests by the company also show that because of mistakes made in how the wells were set up, the water temperature is dropping, potentially meaning a drop in future power production.
Geothermal projects in general have encountered complications in recent years. They are a much riskier enterprise than solar panels or wind turbines, because the drilling can take several years and the power output is not guaranteed until the work is complete.
That explains why in recent months, shares of geothermal companies have collapsed, dropping far more than the shares of most renewable energy businesses. Nevada Geothermal, as of the market close Friday, was trading at 10 cents a share, down from $1.24 when its plant opened in 2009.
Obama administration officials knew about most of these difficulties before the Energy Department agreed in September 2010 to partly guarantee a second major loan to Nevada Geothermal, worth $98.5 million.
Nevada Geothermal executives, meanwhile, are working to renegotiate their $91 million, high-interest loan to avoid a default, which could come as soon as December. They have teamed up with Ormat to drill at a new Nevada site, and hope perhaps to do future drilling at the Blue Mountain site to increase the energy output there.
MacMurray D. Whale, an engineer and research analyst at Cormark Securities, wrote a report last week on Nevada Geothermal warning that “looming default overshadows financial results.”
“If there is not sufficient cash flow to service that debt, then the loan guarantee will be invoked,” Mr. Whale said.
Mr. Fairbank, the chief executive, said such speculation was reckless and unwarranted.
No matter what happens, he said, the geothermal plant already produces enough revenue to pay back the government-guaranteed loan, which has first standing among the creditors. Furthermore, the company’s revenue is growing.
“These aren’t the best of times for geothermal companies, including our own,” Mr. Fairbank said. “But it does not mean we are not going to be here two years from now.”
Mr. Leistikow, of the Energy Department, said he was also confident that the federal investment was secure, as the loan guarantee was tied to the plant, not the parent company.
The Department of Energy distributed 28 loan guarantees, worth a total of $16 billion, before the program ended last Friday.
Some of the companies, like Poet, the ethanol company, and Abengoa, the Spanish energy technology company, are large and have healthy balance sheets. Others are smaller wind and solar businesses that generate healthy cash flows from providing power to utilities or consumers. Still, there is always the possibility of failures in industries trying to take new technologies from the laboratory to commercial scale.
Peter Hartley, an economist at Rice University, said renewable energy generally is hindered by the distance from large population centers, and cumbersome regulations that make the permitting of long transmission lines difficult. The collapse of natural gas prices over the last three years due to a boom in shale drilling across the country, he added, “makes the economics of the renewables that much harder to compete.” Read More...
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