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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/3/2012 10:51:13 AM
Why Rio Was A Failure, And Why That's A Serious















Climate change is a real and serious problem as 17-year old Brittany Trilford reminded world leaders while speaking recently at the Rio+20 Earth Summit in Brazil. “We are here to solve the problems that we have caused as a collective, to ensure that we have a future,” Trilford said.

The problem is only getting worse as a report released last month by the International Energy Agency (IEA) shows. The report contains a disturbing statistic: Global carbon emissions from fossil-fuel combustion reached a record high last year, representing a 3.2 percent increase from 2010. Coal accounted for 45 percent of the increase, oil accounted for 35 percent, and natural gas accounted for 20 percent. However, there is some good news emerging from the report. The U.S. has achieved the largest reduction in carbon emissions since 2006 of all countries or regions. Carbon emissions in the U.S. decreased by 1.7 percent last year and 7.7 percent since 2006.

Unfortunately, it is not entirely good news. The report attributes the decrease to switching from coal to natural gas for power generation, hand in hand with an exceptionally mild winter, which reduced the need for space heating. Although natural gas produces fewer carbon emissions than coal, it is still a fossil fuel. In order to keep the global temperature rise to two degrees Celsius, as climate scientists recommend in order to avoid the worst effects of climate change, there needs to be a serious reduction in the use of fossil fuels.

The world is on a trajectory that results in emission levels which could lead to a global temperature rise of 3.5 degrees Celsius, according to IEA’s report, World Energy Outlook 2011. The Rio+20 Summit represented an “important opportunity for action,” as the report put it. Unfortunately, the Summit resulted in afailure. One of the top Twitter trending hashtags for the Summit was #riofail.

There are two main reasons the Summit was a failure. First, nothing legally binding came out of it. As Food & Water Watch points out, the developed countries keep stating that it was “not a pledging conference.” Second, developed countries did not offer funds to help developing countries mitigate climate change.

All is not lost. Two days before the Summit started, the environmental group 350.org launched a 24-hour Twitterstorm which urged people to tweet about ending fossil fuel subsidies with the hash tag #endfossilfuelsubsidies. Millions of people around the world took part in the Twitterstorm. Clearly, the world’s citizens want their leaders to take action on climate change, including ending fossil fuel subsidies for the biggest emitters of greenhouse gases.

If you didn’t take part in the Twitterstorm, it’s not too late to make your voice heard. Sign the petition, End Polluter Welfare which targets the CEOs of ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, BP and Chevron. Let them know you want fossil fuel subsidies to end.

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Photo: Flickr user, ItzaFineDay



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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/3/2012 10:57:56 AM

Financial Giants Are Moving Jobs Off Wall Street

Where Wall Street jobs are moving now

Thousands of mid-tier jobs are relocating to these places as big banks move them out of New York. Lower salaries

New York’s biggest investment houses are shifting jobs out of the area and expanding in cheaper locales in the United States, threatening the vast middle tier of positions that form the backbone of employment on Wall Street.

The shift comes even as banks consider deeper staff cuts here, which could undermine the state and city tax base long term.

“Places like New York or London will remain financial centers, but most of the players are taking a much harder look and asking whether they can move large numbers of jobs,” said James Malick, a partner at the Boston Consulting Group who advises banks on relocation. In addition to higher taxes in the New York region, employers face real estate and labor costs significantly above the national average.

Consultants say they have seen a sharp pickup in this trend, known as near-shoring, as opposed to offshoring overseas. Goldman Sachs, during a presentation to investors in late May, even boasted of the cost savings that relocating jobs can bring.

“Some functions need to stay in the United States, but they don’t need to be in New York City or near the client,” Mr. Malick said. And with most investment giants facing anemic revenue and more stringent regulation that cuts into trading revenues, relocation is more tempting than it was before the financial crisis.

[Related: Small business advocate finds middle ground]

Low-level jobs have already migrated to call centers and back offices overseas, while top-end traders and bankers are secure in the New York area, experts say. Instead, services like accounting, trading and legal support, and human resources and compliance are being shifted to places like Salt Lake City, North Carolina and Jacksonville, Fla.

Garry Douyon enjoyed his job helping process trades and working with clients and traders at RBS in Stamford, Conn., earning nearly $100,000 a year, but when the firm decided last fall to move his team to Salt Lake City with a salary of $60,000, he said he really didn’t have much of a choice.

“I didn’t even consider moving,” said Mr. Douyon, who founded a biofuels company, All-City Clean Energy, in Brooklyn with four partners. “I liked RBS but I have my roots here, I have a home, I have kids in school.” A few members of his team decided to go, he added, but most chose to stay in the New York area.

The potential shift has profound implications for New York’s tax base and economy because of Wall Street’s outsize financial profile. Last year, the industry contributed 14 percent of New York State’s tax revenue.

After peaking at 213,000 in August 2007, securities industry jobs in the state fell more than 15 percent in the wake of the financial crisis, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Since then they have risen nearly 12,000, but at 191,200, employment is well below pre-crisis levels. By contrast, over the same period, Delaware gained 1,300 securities jobs while Arizona picked up 2,600.

The federal government does not specifically track securities jobs in Utah, North Carolina or Florida, popular locations for near-shoring. But data from firms illustrates the trend.

Since the end of 2009, Deutsche Bank’s work force in the New York area has fallen to 6,900 from 7,400 even as its staff in Jacksonville rose to 1,000 from 600. Credit Suisse’s staff in the New York region has dropped by 500 in the past four years, but the firm has added 450 positions in North Carolina’s Research Triangle, in the area of Raleigh, Cary, Durham and Chapel Hill. And last year, Bank of New York Mellon cut 350 jobs in New York City while hiring 150 people in Lake Mary, Fla.

[Related: Inflation Makes Big Incomes Smaller]

New York’s status as a financial capital is not likely to fade, and the state’s share of securities jobs in the United States has held steady at about 24 percent in recent years. “Even as the securities industry goes through a difficult time, New York remains the financial capital of the world and I don’t see that changing anytime soon,” said Thomas P. DiNapoli, the New York State comptroller.

But regional offices perform more and more of the sophisticated work usually associated with Wall Street and nearby trading hubs like Jersey City and Stamford. This parallels a shift in some technology jobs away from Silicon Valley to Portland, Ore., and cities in Texas, said Michael Shires, a professor at the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine, who prepares an annual ranking of the best cities for employment.

“I expect to see an acceleration,” he said, noting that while these middle-tier jobs may lack the salaries and glamour usually associated with Wall Street, “these are the support people that actually make the stuff work.” What’s more, there are many more positions in the middle of the jobs pyramid at Wall Street firms than at the top.

Deutsche Bank’s office in Jacksonville started out in 2008 as a back-office service center, according to bank officials. Since then, technology workers, legal and compliance staff members, and trading support jobs have been added. More recently, some traders who deal directly with clients are being located there. Lower costs and taxes are behind the moves, the officials said.

J. Keith Crisco, the North Carolina secretary of commerce, visits New York three to five times a year, meeting with executives from firms already in North Carolina, like Credit Suisse, while reaching out to prospects. Another trip is planned this month.

North Carolina provided Credit Suisse with roughly $14 million in incentives to bring it to the state.

Delaware, which announced in April it had lured up to 1,200 JPMorgan Chase jobs to the state, is set to pay the giant bank $10.1 million in cash incentives. Alan Levin, director of the Delaware Economic Development Office, estimates the typical salary for those jobs at $78,000 a year.

“These jobs will be here for a long time,” he said. “We want to create not just jobs but careers.”

The erosion of middle-tier jobs in the financial sector is not limited to New York. In a presentation to analysts in late May, the president of Goldman Sachs, Gary Cohn, described what he called the firm’s “high-value location strategy.” By looking outside hubs like New York, London, Tokyo and Hong Kong, he said, the firm could save 40 percent to 75 percent on job-related expenses.

[Related: The 15 Most Disliked Companies in America]

Over a third of Goldman hires in 2011 and 2012 have been in cities like Bangalore in India, Salt Lake City, Dallas and Singapore, Mr. Cohn said. Utah, with looser regulation and lower taxes than New York, has been a particular area of growth for Goldman.

While Goldman’s work force in the New York area has been flat since the end of 2009 at just over 10,000, full-time employees in Salt Lake City have doubled to 1,400, making that office Goldman’s sixth-largest globally. In addition to its technology and operations staff, Goldman has expanded activities like research and investment management there.

These days, Mr. Douyon is building a refinery at the Brooklyn Navy Yard that aims to make biodiesel from waste products like vegetable oil and grease from restaurants. While he says it is a more flexible way of life and, he hopes, more lucrative, he still feels the tug of the trading floor.

“To be honest, I miss working on Wall Street,” he said.

Jessica Silver-Greenberg contributed reporting.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/3/2012 11:00:06 AM
Euro Zone Crisis: Unemployment At Record High
















Unemployment in the 17-nation euro zone rose to a record high in May to 11.1 percent up from 11.0 percent in April, the highest since the data series started in 1995 and the highest since the euro was created in 1999. Joblessness has risen in the euro zone for the past fourteen months.

In May, 17.561 million people were unemployed, an increase of 88,000 from the previous month, says EU statistics body Eurostat. Spain’s unemployment rate, which is the highest in the EU, rose 24.6 percent in May, up from 24.3 percent.

A number of European companies including Deutsche Lufthansa AG, PSA Peugeot Citroen and Air France-KLM Group are seeking to eliminate jobs in order to lower costs as the fears over the ongoing fiscal crisis are more and more entrenched.

In the BBC, Chris Williamson, chief economist at data provider Markit: “Companies are clearly preparing for worse to come, cutting back on both staff numbers and stocks of raw materials at the fastest rates for two-and-a-half years.” A separate report, the manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), showed manufacturing declining in June, for the eleventh straight month.

Mark Miller, an economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London, in Bloomberg, described the “overall picture” as “worrying, as problems in the real economy are being compounded by problems in financial markets…. It’s very difficult to see an immediate end to this.”

Euro Zone in a Recession?

Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London, said simply in the New York Times that “the data show the euro zone is in a recession.” Schmieding also said that the European Central Bank (ECB) must “step up and do its part” at a policy council on Thursday.

But it is also up to European leaders to act to resolve the euro zone debt crisis, which has dragged on since December of 2009. Mario Draghi, the ECB president, had said on May 31 that the bank is reaching the limits of its powers to address the crisis.

Last Friday, after a night of negotiations at the euro zone summit, politicians announced that bailout funds could be used to recapitalize struggling banks, rather than the funds going first to governments and driving up their debt. European leaders also initiated steps to create a unified banking regulator for the euro zone to “break the link between worries about banks and sovereign finances.”

The need for European politicians to act only grows as what the New York Times calls a “vicious cycle in which reduced government outlays contribute to declining growth, government revenue falls further, generating new pressure to cut spending” is already imminent.

Related Care2 Coverage

Euro Zone Crisis: Italy Wins, Germany’s Out

Euro Zone Crisis: No More Merkozy At Day 1 of Summit

Euro Zone Crisis: Why Put a Dog “In Charge of the Sausages”?

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Photo by DavidDennisPhotos.com



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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/3/2012 10:00:58 PM
Hi Michael and all,

There are diverging positions about everything in this world - including global warming - and the truth could well be midway between the extremes. At least that has always been my position, with the articles I usually post in this thread rather intended as a warning. Along these lines, why not use a
cautious approach instead of risking all life on this planet and the future of our children by allowing the gross capitalists to prevail in everything they endeavour, only to fill their pockets beyond measure? Yet certain things cannot be looked over so easily...

What's Behind The Record Heat?



This map shows the heat wave currently sweeping across the United States with temperatures taken by a NASA satellite on June 26, 2012.

Heat is beating records around the country: the first five months of 2012 have been the hottest on record in the contiguous United States. And that's not including June, when 164 all-time high temperature records were tied or broken around the country, according to government records.

That's unusual, since the most intense heat usually comes in July and August for much of the country, said Jake Crouch, a climate scientist with National Climatic Data Center. For example, only 47 all-time high records were tied or broken in June of last year.

[Slideshow: Heat wave scorches the U.S.]

Also, more than 40,000 daily heat records have been broken around the country so far this year, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Compare that with last year —the ninth warmest on record — when only 25,000 daily records had been set by this date.

In other words, the heat really is that bad. And behind the records is a set of weather and climate conditions that is keeping the heat locked in over the country, with little respite in sight.

Can't stand the heat

The warm summer follows an unusually warm winter, which was the hottest and driest that the western United States has ever seen since records have been kept, said Jeff Weber, a scientist with the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

The heat burning up the country right now is due in part to a persistent high pressure system, also called a heat ridge or dome, which parked itself over the mountain west, and has now shifted east into the Midwest and Southeast. The system is unfortunately stuck in place, Weber said, because of a slowdown of the North Atlantic Oscillation, a climate pattern that pulls weather patterns eastward across the country.

This "blocking" of the Atlantic has caused the jet stream, which normally ferries air from west to east across the United States, to buckle and trap heat in the Midwest and Southeast, Weber told OurAmazingPlanet.

High and dry

That's not unusual in the summer, said National Weather Service meteorologist Greg Carbin. But this pattern of hot air does cover a broader area than usual, and the total amount of hot air is greater, stretching higher up in the atmosphere than normal, he said.

Dry soils, in part a product of the dry winter, exacerbate the heat. "If the soils were wetter, more energy would be absorbed by the water and the daily high temperatures wouldn't be as warm," Crouch told OurAmazingPlanet. For example, southern Georgia and Florida, drenched by Tropical Storm Debby, haven't been as hot as areas to the north in the last week or so.

[Slideshow: Millions struggle without power]

Unfortunately, the heat doesn't look likely to dissipate soon, with the National Weather Service expecting warmer-than-usual temperatures to continue for the remainder of the summer across much of the country. The southwest and Rocky Mountains could be in for a reprieve soon, however, thanks to the beginning of the North American monsoon, which is predicted to start bringing moisture and cooler temperatures into the area later this week, Weber said.

Climate change?

The early heat waves of summer — following higher temperatures in spring and winter — could also be part of a pattern of climate change.

"It's consistent with what we'd expect in a warming climate, but it's hard to quantify any effect climate change might have on an individual event like this heat wave," Crouch said.

While only one heat wave cannot by itself be linked to climate change, a significant increase in these types of events over time could be a hallmark of a warming planet. "An increasing frequency of heat waves —that's one aspect of climate change you can point to," Carbin said.

Over the past few years, daily record high temperatures have been outpacing daily record lows by 2-to-1 on average, according to the website Climate Central. A 2009 study found that if the climate were not warming, that ratio would be expected to be even. So far this year, there have been 40,113 high temperature records set or tied, compared with just 5,835 cold records, a ratio of about 7-to-1.

"This could be a harbinger of things to come," Weber said.

[Watch Video Here]

Reach Douglas Main at dmain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow him on Twitter @Douglas_Main. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter @OAPlanet. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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