Longboard Log
• May. 10, 2006 - Very Interesting article in Sydney Herald
• Mar. 1, 2006 - Pocket Rocket?
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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A material developed to protect electronics in nuclear weapons could resolve a shortage after the major supplier of surfboard foam suddenly closed its doors late last year, officials said on Monday.
Surfers worldwide reacted with shock and prices shot up in December after the southern California company that invented the foam and fiberglass process used in most surfboards went out of business. Its owner, Gordon Clark, was apparently tired of fighting environmental regulators over the foam blanks that he supplied to surfboard shapers worldwide.
Reading about that crisis in the world of surfing got Leroy Whinnery thinking. A polymer chemist at the Sandia National Laboratories, a national security lab in Livermore, California, he had been working on a foam material to protect the electronics in nuclear missiles.
"I read in the paper about the surfboard foam core manufacturer closing his doors and thought that this foam that I had been working on, if we could get it to lower density, could be relevant and help the surfing community," he said.
The problem with the old surfboard foam was the presence of a toxic chemical called TDI. The Sandia material, which they call TufFoam, does not contain TDI.
Whinnery said he has made a mini two-foot long surfboard with the material, and the lab -- which is operated by a Lockheed Martin Corp. for the U.S. Department of Energy -- is now trying to license the technology.
If surfboard makers are interested, the proceeds could even ultimately help national security, a lab official said.
"Essentially the taxpayer gets a return on the investment. When we get licensing revenue in, that gets pumped right back into additional research that the lab does," said Scott Vaupen, a Sandia business associate.
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• Feb. 22, 2006 - blogs updated
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• Aug. 15, 2005 - Shell to Hell
The Deal:
From 1975 for oil and gas companies there was a tax rate of 50%, an automatic 50% state stake in any commercial well, and royalties of 6 %– 7%.
In 1987, after lobbying by the companies, Ray Burke got rid of the 50% state stake and removed royalties.
In 1992 after further lobbying Bobby Molloy reduced the tax rate to 25% and 100% tax write offs were introduced, meaning that the companies can subtract their costs from their tax bill.
In 1996 the licence for the Corrib Gas field was granted to Enterprise Energy Ireland a subsidiary of Enterprise Oil, which has since been bought out, in 2002, by Shell, and the consortium also includes Statoil and Marathon Oil.
Enterprise Oil held major fundraising events for Fianna Fail at the Galway Races in 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001.
Other contractors involved are also major Fianna Fail donators.
Then Minister Frank Fahey granted them innumerable licenses before the planning procedures were over, and gave them 400 plus acres of Coilte land.
Bertie Ahern has had meetings with Shell on this issue.
The deal is the pipelines after the refinery, running to Dublin and Scotland, will be constructed by the state, that is, Bord Gais, while a good deal of infrastructure, new roads and bridges is already being built by the state, i.e. Mayo County Council. Some of the gas, that which is not exported, will then be purchased back by the state.
These companies have a track record of not employing Irish rig workers.
According to Mike Cunningham, a former director of Statoil Exploration (Ireland): “No other country in the world has given such favourable terms as Ireland.”
In other places in Europe the state take can be 55% or even 79% of a field.
The Pipeline:
This is an unprecedented development, normally up stream pipelines of untreated gas do not go over land.
The gas pipeline also has adjoining pipelines carrying hydraulic fluid, cleansing acids, and a waste pipe. There will also be electric cables.
This is a high pressure pipeline, 345 bar pressure for the gas, 610 bar pressure for the acids and hydraulic fluid.
It is untreated, that is, odourless, without the added smell for detecting leaks.
This is not the normal run of the mill gas pipeline.
In Kinsale the gas is refined at sea, piped ashore at a much lower pressure and odorised.
The biggest Bord Gais pipelines, in the so-called Transmission network, bringing the gas cross-country or overseas, run at 16 – 70 bar pressure.
This development is so unprecedented the relevant legislation and regulations assumes its non-existence, that is, it applies to off shore upstream pipelines and to on land ones of around the levels of pressure used by Bord Gais.
The large pressure is necessary as the pipeline is actually pumping the gas straight out of the field, normally this process takes place completely at sea.
This pipeline will pass by peoples’ houses and by villages. It is being built through a bog where there have been landslides.
Carrowmore Lake:
This is the source of the regional water supply, and is protected as a Natura 2000 site under the E.U. habitats directive; it is also on the United Nations list of protected conservation areas. It has already been degraded due to Shell related civil engineering, with a marked decline in fishing and the arrival of algae bloom. It will be on the receiving end of emissions from the proposed refinery at Ballinaboy.
Broadhaven bay:
Into Broadhaven Bay will be pumped the waste from the refinery, including lead, nickel, magnesium, phosphorus, chromium, arsenic, mercury and the radioactive gas radon, due to the bay’s circular tidal pattern and semi-enclosed nature a large portion of this toxic waste is likely to stay within the bay rather than be washed out to sea. Broadhaven Bay is a Special Area of Conservation under E.U. regulations; it also provides livelihoods to local communities through fishing.
According to state heritage agency An Duchas “Broadhaven Bay supports an internationally important number of Brent Geese” as well as regionally important populations of other birds.
The Environmental Impact Statement made to the Department of the Marine by Shell as part of the process to gain a licence for off-shore work claimed there was "no evidence that Broadhaven Bay is of particular importance to cetaceans (whales and dolphins)". Against this the Irish Whale and Dolphin group pointed out the historic and anecdotal evidence to the contrary, which is sightings by fishermen and the former presence in the area of major whaling stations.
However it now turns out that Shell commissioned a study by University College Cork's Coastal and Marine Resources Centre which found the exact opposite from the claim Shell made in its environmental impact statement.
Shell neglected to mention the study, though the lack of concrete data on whales and dolphins in their statement was criticised by the departmentof Marine.
The U.C.C. research team recorded over 220 sightings of seven whale and dolphin species, plus sightings of two seal species and marine mammals such as basking sharks and a sea turtle in Broadhaven Bay and north-west Mayo waters. This including sightings of the relatively rare Risso’s Dolphin. It found that Broadhaven Bay was an important breading and rearing area for dolphins and whales.
The pipeline is to go straight through the machair sand dunes/coastal grasslands at one end of Broadhaven Bay. These are habitat unique to the north west of Ireland and the north west of Scotland.
The Refinery:
The cleaning terminal, a large combustion plant, is a huge project. It will require in excess of 120 MW power to operate. The power will come from burning off the uncleaned gas condensate, full of chemical nasties, such as oxides of carbon and nitrogen, sulphur dioxide, methane and ozone.
There are nine chimneys, four of them approximately 140 feet high. They will release carbon dioxide and methane equivalent to the global warming potential of 27,000 dairy cows. The Environmental Impact Study (EIS) from Enterprise Energy Ireland (EEI) notes two houses within a 2 km radius of the station. In fact, there are 16 houses.
The waste water problem is twofold. There is a pipe to take waste impurities to sea and a perforated perimeter ditch which will surround the drainage from the site. The waste water storage sump is designed to withstand one hour continuous rainfall, though Crossmolina had 106 days consecutive rainfall last autumn. The overflow will flow into Carrowmore Lake, which feeds the water supply of Erris.
This untreated waste water will contain many lethal substances, including lead, nickel, magnesium, phosphorus, chromium, arsenic, mercury and the radioactive gas radon.
Both the refinery and the pipeline are to be constructed on unstable bog land, Shell’s plan to stabilise this involves mixing in cement to form a hard surface. This process has only ever had small field trials and lab tests and creates a reaction which produces the very toxic hexavalent chromium.
A previous indymedia feature on this story, with much more detail, is to be found here: http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?story_id=68857 |
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• Jul. 15, 2005 - Longboard World Championships cancelled
Typical of the low regard the ASP has for Longboarding?
ASP WORLD LONGBOARD CHAMPIONSHIP CANCELLED
ASP International regretfully announces that the 2005 ASP World Longboard Championship has been cancelled. Citing corporate changes, Nokia has had to withdraw their sponsorship of the event.
The Championship was due to run July 10-17, featuring a US$35,000 Men's division and for the first time at ASP level, introducing a US$10,000 Women's division.
The ASP World Longboard Championship was, for the second year, scheduled to be incorporated within the long running Biarritz Surfing Festival. Founder of the BSF, Robert Rabagny, informed ASP Europe of this untimely development, yet confirmed that the Biarritz Surfing Festival itself would run as scheduled, featuring a Men's division offering a US$15,000 purse and a US$3,000 Women's purse.
ASP International pledges its commitment to longboarding and will work towards re-establishing the World Longboard Championship in 2006.
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