Community > Posts By > exxman

 
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Wed 09/21/11 04:29 PM


Alison Krauss & Union Station - When you say nothing at all
:wink: waving


:smile: waving flowerforyou


Jason Aldean - She's Country

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Sat 09/17/11 03:04 AM
This impacts every single person trying to conserve energy by using CFL light bulbs. The price for the light bulbs was about $2.50-$3.50 3 months ago.

And standard light bulbs are becoming a rarity to find since in January of 2012 they will be phased out. My guess is LED Lighting is about to see a lot more usage and investments.

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Sat 09/17/11 03:00 AM
BEIJING — In the name of fighting pollution, China has sent the price of compact fluorescent light bulbs soaring in the United States.

By closing or nationalizing dozens of the producers of rare earth metals — which are used in energy-efficient bulbs and many other green-energy products — China is temporarily shutting down most of the industry and crimping the global supply of the vital resources.

China produces nearly 95 percent of the world’s rare earth materials, and it is taking the steps to improve pollution controls in a notoriously toxic mining and processing industry. But the moves also have potential international trade implications and have started yet another round of price increases for rare earths, which are vital for green-energy products including giant wind turbines, hybrid gasoline-electric cars and compact fluorescent bulbs.

General Electric, facing complaints in the United States about rising prices for its compact fluorescent bulbs, recently noted in a statement that if the rate of inflation over the last 12 months on the rare earth element europium oxide had been applied to a $2 cup of coffee, that coffee would now cost $24.55.

An 11-watt G.E. compact fluorescent bulb — the lighting equivalent of a 40-watt incandescent bulb — was priced on Thursday at $15.88 on Wal-Mart’s Web site for pickup in a Nashville, Ark., store.

Wal-Mart, which has made a big push for compact fluorescent bulbs, acknowledged that it needed to raise prices on some brands lately. “Obviously we don’t want to pass along price increases to our customers, but occasionally market conditions require it,” Tara Raddohl, a spokeswoman, said. The Chinese actions on rare earths were a prime topic of conversation at a conference here on Thursday that was organized by Metal-Pages, an industry data firm based in London.

Soaring prices are rippling through a long list of industries.

“The high cost of rare earths is having a significant chilling effect on wind turbine and electric motor production in spite of offsetting government subsidies for green tech products,” said one of the conference attendees, Michael N. Silver, chairman and chief executive of American Elements, a chemical company based in Los Angeles. It supplies rare earths and other high-tech materials to a wide range of American and foreign businesses.

But with light bulbs, especially, the timing of the latest price increases is politically awkward for the lighting industry and for environmentalists who backed a shift to energy-efficient lighting.

In January, legislation that President George W. Bush signed into law in 2007 will begin phasing out traditional incandescent bulbs in favor of spiral compact fluorescent bulbs, light-emitting diodes and other technologies. The European Union has also mandated a switch from incandescent bulbs to energy-efficient lighting.

Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota is running for the Republican presidential nomination on a platform that includes strong opposition to the new lighting rules in the United States and has been a leader of efforts by House Republicans to repeal it.

China says it has largely shut down its rare earth industry for three months to address pollution problems. By invoking environmental concerns, China could potentially try to circumvent international trade rules that are supposed to prohibit export restrictions of vital materials.

In July, the European Union said in a statement on rare earth policy that the organization supported efforts to protect the environment, but that discrimination against foreign buyers of rare earths was not allowed under World Trade Organization rules.

China has been imposing tariffs and quotas on its rare earth exports for the last several years, curtailing global supplies and forcing prices to rise eightfold to fortyfold during that period for the various 17 rare earth elements.

Even before this latest move by China, the United States and the European Union were preparing to file a case at the W.T.O. this winter that would challenge Chinese export taxes and export quotas on rare earths.

Chinese officials here at the conference said the government was worried about polluted water, polluted air and radioactive residues from the rare earth industry, particularly among many small and private companies, some of which operate without the proper licenses. While rare earths themselves are not radioactive, they are always found in ore containing radioactive thorium and require careful handling and processing to avoid contaminating the environment.

Most of the country’s rare earth factories have been closed since early August, including those under government control, to allow for installation of pollution control equipment that must be in place by Oct. 1, executives and regulators said.

The government is determined to clean up the industry, said Xu Xu, chairman of the China Chamber of Commerce of Metals, Minerals and Chemicals Importers and Exporters, a government-controlled group that oversees the rare earth industry. “The entrepreneurs don’t care about environmental problems, don’t care about labor problems and don’t care about their social responsibility,” he said. “And now we have to educate them.”

Beijing authorities are creating a single government-controlled monopoly, Bao Gang Rare Earth, to mine and process ore in northern China, the region that accounts for two-thirds of China’s output. The government is ordering 31 mostly private rare earth processing companies to close this year in that region and is forcing four other companies into mergers with Bao Gang, said Li Zhong, the vice general manager of Bao Gang Rare Earth.

The government also plans to consolidate 80 percent of the production from southern China, which produces the rest of China’s rare earths, into three companies within the next year or two, Mr. Li said. All three of these companies are former ministries of the Chinese government that were spun out as corporations, and the central government still owns most of the shares.

The taxes and quotas China had in place to restrict rare earth exports caused many companies to move their factories to China from the United States and Europe so that they could secure a reliable and inexpensive source of raw materials.

China promised when it joined the W.T.O. in 2001 that it would not restrict exports except for a handful of obscure materials. Rare earths were not among the exceptions.

But even if the W.T.O. orders China to dismantle its export tariffs and quotas, the industry consolidation now under way could enable China to retain tight control over exports and continue to put pressure on foreign companies to relocate to China.

The four state-owned companies might limit sales to foreign buyers, a tactic that would be hard to address through the W.T.O., Western trade officials said.

Hedge funds and other speculators have been buying and hoarding rare earths this year, with prices rising particularly quickly through early August, and dipping since then as some have sold their inventories to take profits, said Constantine Karayannopoulos, the chief executive of Neo Material Technologies, a Canadian company that is one of the largest processors in China of raw rare earths.

“The real hot money got into the industry building neodymium and europium inventories in Shanghai warehouses,” he said.

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Sat 09/17/11 02:38 AM
Alison Krauss & Union Station - When you say nothing at all

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Wed 08/24/11 04:13 PM
:cry: It's gone

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Wed 08/24/11 04:07 PM

So hows the Fishing in Everybodys Areas? Here in NKY and OH IN . As far as creek fishing been kinda slow in current months. Early Spring all rain.Mid summer kinda drought-like.



Really not sure, the lake levels are so low in the North Texas area i have not bothered visiting much less fish.

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Wed 08/24/11 04:00 PM
Edited by exxman on Wed 08/24/11 04:01 PM
Finally THE RAIN HAS COME BACK TO DALLAShappy

:banana: :banana: :banana: :banana:


And trust me it is news in these parts laugh :tongue:

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Wed 08/24/11 03:45 PM
Scorpians - Winds Of Change


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4RjJKxsamQ&ob=av2e

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Wed 08/24/11 03:43 PM
Scorpians

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Wed 08/24/11 03:42 PM
Blows her a kiss flowerforyou

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Wed 08/24/11 03:41 PM
Bill Bates

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Wed 08/24/11 03:40 PM
razor

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Wed 08/24/11 03:35 PM
Thoughts of compassion

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Wed 08/24/11 03:34 PM
glasses Takes Man0's spot and tosses him a beer :wink:

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Tue 08/23/11 03:23 PM
511

Good evening Lady flowerforyou

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Tue 08/23/11 01:50 PM


such a great song and there are a few versions on it that are awesome, my thoughts.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3RYvO2X0Oo

^^ Beatles^^

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DeOSLNbhfg

^^Carlos Santana ft. Indie Arie^^ Very very nice remake on it. Puts it into a different category.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9xBgHcXsbGk

^^ Jeff Healy ^^


I love em all! Tanks



Welcome. I am glad you enjoyed them. I watched them myself and that was when i was awed by the Santana version, not that the others aren't great. It was just different and still inspiring you know?

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Tue 08/23/11 11:16 AM
510

Hiya Savannah flowerforyou

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Tue 08/23/11 11:01 AM
510


Scratches head and wonders if anyone really knows what number we are on:laughing: spock


**NOTICE TO ALL PARTICIPANTS**

Women count upward by 1,
Men Count downward by 1,
You MUST WAIT for someone else to POST before you post YOUR NEXT number.


*Kicks sand at FindMe flowers*
*Waves at Joyflowers*

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Mon 08/22/11 07:16 PM
Edited by exxman on Mon 08/22/11 07:16 PM
:smile: Yahooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo


Now i can go to bed. Been a very long day.


Ladies,

flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou
flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou

Maybe next time :tongue:

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Mon 08/22/11 07:05 PM
501

laughs slow down young man, we got this !!

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