Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Cyd's checkup went well


Jan 31, Dr. Iwasaki removed the sutures from Cyd's shoulder. You can see how small the insicions actually are. There were 2 sutures in the fromt and only 1 in the back.
Now, rehabilitation will start so that Cyd can regain full movement of her right arm.

The Kyoto Protocol and GHG

The Kyoto Protocol is an international treaty aiming to reduce the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions believed to cause global warming and climate change, the most pressing environmental issues of our time. The treaty requires developed countries to reduce GHG emissions to below 1990 levels, but does not set binding limits on developing countries such as China.
However, the parties to the Kyoto Protocol recognized that reductions in GHG emissions can often be achieved more economically in developing countries than in developed countries themselves. Therefore the parties created the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).
The CDM enables developing country parties who carry out projects that reduce GHG emissions to receive credits for these reductions. These credits can be sold to developed country parties, which use them to offset their own emission reduction requirements. For the developed country party this is often a more cost-effective option than reducing reductions from their own domestic operations.

The above introduction to the Kyoto Protocol is taken from Arreon Carbon's website. You can find more information at http://www.arreon.com/

The Kyoto Protocol and GHG

The Kyoto Protocol is an international treaty aiming to reduce the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions believed to cause global warming and climate change, the most pressing environmental issues of our time. The treaty requires developed countries to reduce GHG emissions to below 1990 levels, but does not set binding limits on developing countries such as China.
However, the parties to the Kyoto Protocol recognized that reductions in GHG emissions can often be achieved more economically in developing countries than in developed countries themselves. Therefore the parties created the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).
The CDM enables developing country parties who carry out projects that reduce GHG emissions to receive credits for these reductions. These credits can be sold to developed country parties, which use them to offset their own emission reduction requirements. For the developed country party this is often a more cost-effective option than reducing reductions from their own domestic operations.

The above introduction to the Kyoto Protocol is taken from Arreon Carbon's website. You can find more information at http://www.arreon.com/

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

I love my crocodile



My friends at the kindergarten play with soft and cushy bears but I love my little 'wani'. It's cold and scaly and has big, sharp teeth.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Cyd's operation



Yesterday, Jan 23, Cyd underwent surgery at Shin Suma Hospital. Dr. Iwasaki performed an arthoscopy on her right shoulder joint to fix a condition known as "Bankart Lesion".

"Fill out these forms!" we were told... easier said than done.

We checked in at 8:30 am, and then were made to wait till noon for Cyd's turn. The nurse came to get her at 12:20 and they brought her back, still under narcosis, a little before 2 pm.


Dr. Iwasaki came by with pictures he took during the operation and explained what he did.
Arthroscopy allows the orthopaedic surgeon to insert a pencil-thin device with a small lens and lighting system into tiny incisions to look inside the joint. The images inside the joint are relayed to a TV monitor, allowing the doctor to make a diagnosis. Other surgical instruments can be inserted to make repairs, based on what is with the arthroscope. Arthroscopy often can be done on an outpatient basis.



Anaesthesia and painkillers are taxing the human body heavily. Cyd felt nauseous the rest of the day. I kept vigil at her bedside till 6 pm, then we packed up and returned home. She's recovering in her own bed now and is beginning to feel better.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

DID YOU KNOW..?

The world's 225 richest people now have a combined wealth of $1 trillion. That's equal to the combined annual income of the world's 2.5 billion poorest people

Friday, January 19, 2007

Butter or Guns

Whenever a nation sets out to war against another, it is forced to reallocate its resources, as you can either use your time, material and ingenuity to produce a plough or a sword. (The cost in human blood is another expense.)

Americans - as all of us westerners! - have grown so wealthy and lethargic that we don't really feel the immediate financial impact of the current war in Iraq. Partly because nobody pays close attention to government (as we should) and partly because the war is not financed by increased taxes but by loans from China and Japan (who buy the US treasury notes!).

It is interesting to look at the cost of the Iraq war, a war that was supposed to finance itself with re-invigorated oil exports from Iraq's abundant deposits (the 3rd largest in the world).

Ironically though, Iraqi oil is off the global market since the US invasion.

Ignoring the impact on the oil price which the war undoubtedly helped drive up and which is estimated to have cost US citizens 150 billion USD, the war against Saddam Hussein costs a whooping 200 billion USD annually. At the time of writing, this has added up to 700 billion USD in direct spending. Again, let's ignore the additional future costs of veteran's disability pensions, loss of productivity, etc. and only look at the 200 billion per year of direct spending.

The human mind is not capable of imagining such astronomic figures, therefore I would like to bring this amount into perspective by looking at how much real 'butter' would cost by comparison: (I take my figures from an article by David Leonhardt in the IHT of Jan 18, 2007 and Lester Brown's book "Plan B)

Universal Healthcare: 100 billion annually
(all people covered in the US)

Universal preschool: 35 billion
(early childhood education for every child in the USA: half days for 3 year olds and full day for 4 year olds)

Immunizations: 0,6 billion
(for the world's children against measels, whooping cough, tetanus, polio and diphteria)

Reforesting the earth: 6 billion

Protecting biological diversity: 31 billion

School lunch programs for the 44 poorest countries: 6 billion
(Apparently the most effective population control is educating women. To get poor families also to send girls to school, it has been proven that school lunches is the most effective incentive. I am not excluding boys from this program, but when forced to make a choice, poor families send boys to school, not girls.)

I could go on an on.


200 billion dollars is a huge sum. Throw a tenth of that amount at solar research or at subsidies of renewable energy generation and you'd make a real dent in green house gas emissions and global warming, not to mention increased independence from OPEC.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Date for operation coming up soon

If you've been reading my blog you know that Cyd must have an operation on her shoulder joint (athroscopy). We have scheduled this op on Jan 23, so for the time all bets are off for at least 10 days after that (as far as my schedule and is concerened) , as I have no idea how mobile and self sufficient she will be and how much of my time and extra input will be necessary in cydcare and childcare.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Catholic Service in German in Kobe

High above the city of Kobe, a small german speaking catholic congregation meets once a month in the chapel of St. Franz Xavier. The chapel is actually part of a christian middle school (Rokko- Chu-Gaku)



Pater Kerkmann, who once was the headmaster of Rokko- Chu-Gaku, is now posted in Seto City in Aichi. He travels 3 hours by train (one way) to celebrate mass with us and we appreciate this enormous effort. 2 years ago, there were enough children at the appropriate age level that we could organise the first communion for them.





You are welcome to join us.

Visit the website of the german Consulate Osaka / Kobe for more information on church services:

http://www.osaka-kobe.diplo.de/Vertretung/osaka/de/04/Leben__und__Arbeiten/Katholische__Kirche.html

Sunday, January 7, 2007

A Message from Apple

Incredible waste

Cyd and I, after using them for 7 years or so, were forced to upgrade our handheld phones. They worked perfectly well but the battery packs were dying and irreplaceable.




Sony, Panasonic, Motorola, Nokia, just won't allow you to refit your device with new battery packs - no, you have to get a new gadget. The Korean makers are not any better.


It gets worse: after purchasing new phones, we also had to toss out our old charger-cradles as well as all other auxilliary equipment such as car chargers, usb connectors and headphones - a nice pile of high tec garbage - since the new phones came with totally different jacks.



How many cell phone users are there world wide? A billlion? Two? Can you imagine the world wide pile of cell phones and their chargers as they swap phones periodically (I don't know how often, but am certain that Cyd and I belong to the 'slow' crowd as we don't upgrade very often). Look at Chris Jordan's pictures. You can see a bigger version by clicking on them. I highly recommend you also check out his website at

http://www.chrisjordan.com

where you can find more samples of his fine photography. (By the way, if you have any connections to galleries in Japan, please post me a comment, as I am trying to set up an exhibition for him in Japan.)


How easy would it be to eliminate this incredible wastefulness with simple legislation that all phones have to be equipped with universal ports so that there is only 1 standard for chargers and headphones? It's like I have to refit my electrical outlets in my home every time I buy a new appliance!

And we thought all was ok

Someone did a study and concluded that 60% of all babies born in India would be in intensive care were they born in California.

Friday, January 5, 2007

Wind Power is Exciting - and so is the human mind

I have been an avid fan, supporter and investor in wind power. Like most people, I think of windmills when talking about generation of electricity from wind power, but recently I came across these exciting futuristic-looking images of different approaches to harnessing the power of the wind.

I copied text and images from a site called http://news.com.com/ which is loaded with interesting stuff and I can highly recommend a visit there!

In another twist on wind power, inventors are designing kites and balloons to generate electricity.
The wind industry is undergoing rapid growth as utilities, prompted by government incentives, seek out cleaner sources of power generation. Typically, these commercial-grade projects involve large wind turbines, which stand 100 to 400 feet high.

Kites and balloons are not widely used, and they face some of the same challenges as traditional wind turbines, such as bird deaths and complaints over location. But that isn't stopping people from coming up with "flying" wind generators.
One company, Magenn Power, intends to build a helium-filled balloon that resembles a giant cog wheel.
As the wind passes over it, the system generates electricity through an onboard generator. Power is transferred to the ground via its tethers, according to company Chief Executive Mac Brown.






The advantage that high-flying machines have over traditional wind turbines is that balloons can benefit from more steady air flow, Brown said. The company's Power Air Rotor product would fly at 1,000 feet.
Magenn, which is seeking $5 million in initial funding, intends to sell a 4-kilowatt system to remote villages in Pakistan and India that don't have electricity. Over time, its plan is to develop systems that are tied to the electricity grid to customers in North America and Europe.


"The value proposition we have is getting wind power anywhere," Brown said. "With turbines, you have to site them on coastal or high-wind areas."
Kites, too, are making a go at more than recreational flying.
A company called KiteShip has developed a kite designed to help motor a commercial ship. The kite, whose largest size would be bigger than a football field, can cut a ship owner's fuel cost and pollution emissions by 20 percent, according to the company. A similar system is under development at Germany's SkySails, which says its oversize kite will be pulling a cargo ship sometime this year.









An Italian sensor manufacturer has proposed the Kite Wind Generator Project (KiteGen), which also aims to capture the power of high-altitude wind.




The research project imagines that power plants could be created with kites attached to a giant revolving "merry-go-round" structure.
Briza Technologies, meanwhile, has proposed what it calls the Hovering Wind Turbine, which is also meant to capture faster, high-altitude winds.



The idea behind the hovering turbine is that it would be used as an alternative to turbines in offshore wind farms.
Another advocate of capturing the force of faster winds is Sky WindPower. The company proposes that systems be placed in altitudes of 15,000 feet, according to the company Web site.

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Motocross


As a conservationist Motocross goes a little against my grain and would not be the first choice of recreation for myself. The agressive noise, the consumption of gasoline, the obvious destructiveness do not fit into my concept of preservation and healing the planet. I must admit, however, that it is a great confidence builder and I enjoyed watching Conrad and Edi Kei do the kids course at Kawachinagano.




Motocross is a form of motorcycle sport or all-terrain vehicle racing held on enclosed off-road circuits. Motocross is derived from the French, and traces its origins to British Scrambling competitions. The name "motocross" is a contraction derived from the words "Motorcycle" and "Cross Country". So according to this definition of motocross from Wikepedia, the guys jumping and looping off a ramp on their motorcycles at a course in Kawachinagano are not Motocross riders but something else. What, you may ask? I guess they are full fledged thrill seekers and stuntmen.





I do have a question, though: what motivates a young man to ride a motorbike at full speed off a ramp, fling himself into the air and then, airborne, get off his vehicle to perform some tricks?

Enjoy these fascinating pictures of true athletes on their bikes.








Conrad and Edi Kei had a chance to meet the bikers during a break.

Monday, January 1, 2007

Supercharged for 2007



I am so charged, they call me Miss 100,000 Volt!

Mom, what did you put into my bottle this morning?


Prosit Neujahr!

Is there a better way to start a New Year than to join the Vienna Philharmonika at their customary New Year's Concert? This time Zubin Metha conducted the orchestra on a journey to sounds so rich and juicy that I had to mop up the floor beneath the TV. My favorite part was definitely Erinnerungen an Ernst, which is well known in Austria but never have I seen 90 plus grown academic men in tuxedos having so much fun with such a little tune, as they lapped up every note. A delight for the senses and a reminder of what music is all about.

Have fun and

Prosit Neujahr!