Tuesday, August 13, 2013

J.C. Penney says Bill Ackman resigns from board

(Reuters) - J.C. Penney Co Inc said activist investor Bill Ackman, who has been pressuring the struggling department store operator to oust its chairman and chief executive, has resigned from the board.

The company's shares, which have lost a third of their value this year, rose as much as 4 percent in premarket trading.

Ackman, whose Pershing Square Capital Management owns about 18 percent of J.C. Penney, has been embroiled in a public battle with the retailer after he aired his concerns about the course of the company and the performance of its top management.

Ackman has demanded the ouster of Chairman Thomas Engibous and the replacement of interim Chief Executive Myron Ullman.

"At this time, I believe that the addition of two new directors and my stepping down from the board is the most constructive way forward for J.C. Penney and all other parties involved," Ackman said in a statement released by the company on Tuesday.

J.C Penney said retail industry veteran Ronald Tysoe would join its board and that it would appoint another director soon.

Tysoe spent 16 years as vice chairman of Federated Department Stores Inc, now Macy's Inc, and currently on several other boards.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that as part of the negotiations over board composition, Ackman's effort to immediately remove Ullman would be put on hold. (http://link.reuters.com/bez32v)

The public battle between Penney and Ackman escalated late last week with the hedge fund manager demanding the ouster of Engibous as well as Ullman. Ackman had demanded that Ullman be replaced within the next 30 to 45 days.

Ackman's resignation may be a victory in short term for Ullman and the board but will give Pershing Square more latitude to begin selling its big stake in the company.

It also remains to be seen what other large investors do if Ullman remains at helm for an extended time.

So far, the other large investors have held off on making changes to their holdings.

Soros Fund Management LLC, backed by billionaire financier George Soros, is holding on to its 7.9 percent stake in Penney, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday.

Another large Penney investor, Glenview Capital Management, also appears to be sitting tight on its "passive" 4 percent stake in the retailer.

A person familiar with the hedge fund led by Larry Robbins said the firm had not taken any sides in the public dispute between Ackman and Penney's board.

Penney shares were up 2 percent at $13.49 in premarket trading.

(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad and Siddharth Cavale; Additional reporting by Vijay Vishwas in Bangalore; Editing by Ted Kerr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activist-investor-ackman-resigns-j-c-penney-board-104144926.html

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NJ choosing 2 candidates for Lautenberg's seat (The Arizona Republic)

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Travel and tourism hiring grows, but are they good jobs?

Waiter

Food service jobs represent nearly half of the positions in the travel and tourism industries. (Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

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Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-travel-and-tourism-hiring-20130809,0,673779.story?track=rss

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Video: Global markets update: Europe shares turn lower

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52733431/

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New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 090, No 74, 12/11/1985

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Title: New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 090, No 74, 12/11/1985
Author: University of New Mexico
Subject(s): student newspaper
Date: 1985-12-11
Publisher: University of New Mexico
Citation: Volume 090, No 74, 12/11/1985
Description: New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 090, No 74, 12/11/1985
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1928/20147

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Source: http://repository.unm.edu:80/handle/1928/20147

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IBM drives the future of renewable energy with new wind and solar forecasting system

(iTers News) - IBM today announced an advanced power and weather modeling technology that will help utilities increase the reliability of renewable energy resources. The solution combines weather prediction and analytics to accurately forecast the availability of wind power and solar energy. This will enable utilities to integrate more renewable energy into the power grid, helping to reduce carbon emissions while significantly improving clean energy output for consumers and businesses.

The solution, named "Hybrid Renewable Energy Forecasting" (HyRef) uses weather modeling capabilities, advanced cloud imaging technology and sky-facing cameras to track cloud movements, while sensors on the turbines monitor wind speed, temperature and direction. When combined with analytics technology, the data-assimilation based solution can produce accurate local weather forecasts within a wind farm as far as one month in advance, or in 15-minute increments.

By utilizing local weather forecasts, HyRef can predict the performance of each individual wind turbine and estimate the amount of generated renewable energy. This level of insight will enable utilities to better manage the variable nature of wind and solar, and more accurately forecast the amount of power that can be redirected into the power grid or stored. It will also allow energy organizations to easily integrate other conventional sources such as coal and natural gas.

"Utilities around the world are employing a host of strategies to integrate new renewable energy resources into their operating systems in order to reach a baseline goal of a 25% renewable energy mix globally by 2025," said Vice Admiral Dennis McGinn, President and CEO of the American Council On Renewable Energy (ACORE). "The weather modeling and forecasting data generated from HyRef will significantly improve this process and in turn, put us one step closer to maximizing the full potential of renewable resources."

State Grid Jibei Electricity Power Company Limited (SG-JBEPC), a subsidiary company of the State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC), is using HyRef to integrate renewable energy into the grid. This initiative led by SG-JBEPC is phase one of the Zhangbei 670MW demonstration project, the world's largest renewable energy initiative that combines wind and solar power, energy storage and transmission. This project contributes to China's 5-year plan to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels.

By using the IBM wind forecasting technology, phase one of the Zhangbei project aims to increase the integration of renewable power generation by 10%. This amount of additional energy can power roughly more than 14,000 homes. The efficient use of generated energy allows the utility to reduce wind and solar curtailment while analytics provides the needed intelligence to enhance grid operations.

"Applying analytics and harnessing big data will allow utilities to tackle the intermittent nature of renewable energy and forecast power production from solar and wind, in a way that has never been done before," said Brad Gammons, General Manager IBM's Global Energy and Utilities Industry. "We have developed an intelligent system that combines weather and power forecasting to increase system availability and optimize power grid performance."

This project builds upon another IBM smarter analytics initiative at Denmark's Vestas Wind Systems, the world's manufacturer of wind power turbines. Vestas, together with IBM's big data analytics and supercomputing technology, is able to strategically place wind turbines based on petabytes of data from weather reporters, tidal phases, sensors, satellite images, deforestation maps, and weather modeling research. This insight cannot only deliver improvements in energy generation but also reduce maintenance and operational costs over the life of the project.

The Hybrid Renewable Energy Forecaster represents advancements in weather modeling technology, stemming from other game-changing innovations such as Deep Thunder.? Developed by IBM, Deep Thunder provides high-resolution, micro-forecasts for weather in a region - ranging from a metropolitan area up to an entire state - with calculations as fine as every square kilometer. When coupled with business data, it can help businesses and governments tailor services, change routes and deploy equipment-to minimize the effects of major weather events by reducing costs, improving service and even saving lives.

IBM and Smart Grid

IBM is involved in more than 150 smart grid engagements around the world, in both mature and emerging markets.


Source: http://itersnews.com/?p=44065

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Monday, August 12, 2013

Outsourcing: Govt, private sector partnership & unemployment

By Princewill Ekwujuru

With Gross Domestic Product,(GDP) estimated at $262billion in 2012, Nigeria is the largest economy in Sub-Saharan Africa. Yet, economists say it is far from its potential even with its huge population estimated at 162.5 million people. Economist had further said that barriers to the optimal growth and development of the economy is its huge infrastructure deficiency which makes it a harsh operating environment for businesses.

The harsh operating environment which is with consequencies on businesses, especially small and medium scale enterprise, explains the slow pace of its development and its high unemployment rate especially among young graduates who are supposed to make positive contributions to the economy. This, however , has caused stakeholders to continually ponder on ways of employment generation from time to time.

One of the areas that have somewhat been overlooked in this regard is the outsourcing profession and proponents had insisted that Nigeria should actually become the hub of outsourcing in Africa. To achieve the benefits that abound in the sector, there is need for a partnership between government, private sector and the outsourcing sector. China and India are examples of economies that have taken outsourcing seriously and are reaping the benefits.

Still in its infancy though, the outsourcing sector in Nigeria is showing promises. This was affirmed by the quality of spokespersons and attendees from multinational corporations that attended the 2013 Outsourcing Expo jointly organised by the Resource Intermediaries Limited (RIL) and the Association of Outsourcing Practitioners of Nigeria (AOPN) in Lagos.

The expo turned out to be a harvest ground for ideas on how to grow the industry. Speakers at the event Seni Adetu, Managing Director, Chief Executive Officer, Guinness Nigeria, and Soji Oyawoye, Managing Director, Resource Intermediaries Limited, among others discussed a wide range of issues that will engender growth of a globally competitive outsourcing sector in Nigeria. This was in line with the objective of the expo to make the outsourcing sector in the country achieve its potential and perhaps by extension contribute to the efforts to reduce the high rate of unemployment in the country by a significant level.

However, for the sector to grow, develop and contribute to the GDP of the country like its counterparts in China and India, there is need for a strong collaborative effort between government and the industry leaders in the private sector.?? The role of government in this initiative, some participants contended, is to provide an enabling environment with necessary incentives that will motivate both local and foreign entrepreneurs to invest in the sector.

At the expo, Oyawoye, who is one of the conveners, disclosed that professional outsourcing is new in Nigeria. According to him, companies have been contracting and calling it outsourcing for over 30 years. He expressed concern over what he called ?contracting? in the name of outsourcing and urged those who are misconstruing the two to have a rethink as the two are mutually exclusive. He described it as bad signal for the young industry, while adding that in developed countries, the outsourcing profession drives the economy.

In his keynote address titled ?Outsourcing and the need for the Outsourcing Professional?, Seni Adetu, Managing Director/CEO, Guinness Nigeria, identified the benefits of outsourcing to business, urging outsourcing service providers to be professional and develop proper business strategy because the industry needs a systemic approach. He however noted that the increasingly competitive nature of the business environment has made outsourcing an imperative for companies like Guinness Nigeria, while also stressing that outsourcing has come to stay because of the need to keep pricing down.

Adetu differentiated outsourcing from contracting, saying that the core reason for outsourcing is to build ?organisational efficiencies and to grow shareholders value?. Drawing a line between the two business concepts ? contracting and outsourcing ? he explained that ?Outsourcing principally means ceding a business process to somebody or an organization outside your business. In contracting you are involved; you are the one telling the provider what you want. When you outsource, what you measure is result not the process,? Adetu explained.

He noted that ?Outsourcing users will want to choose well-funded large scale outsourcing vendors with good track records for service and support. Some of the outsourcing practitioners have no scale, skill or idea of the service they propose to offer?, and added that for the industry to grow, the practitioners must be professional.

Using Guinness Nigeria Plc as a case study, Adetu explained some of the reasons why a company should outsource as ?when a company is unable to manage certain areas of its day-to-day business and process satisfactorily. When comparative costs are lower on the short or long term and when it is a distraction to the core business?, he stated.

Meanwhile, speaking with our correspondent at the venue of the Expo, Adebayo Oyefolu, an outsourcing practitioner welcomed the idea of an annual outsourcing expo. He stressed that besides the fact that the forum sensitizes users of outsourcing to the existence of the sector at a professional level, it is a discussion platform for germane issues affecting the sector such as how to grow the practice in the country.

On his part, Isaac Otokitin believed that outsourcing practice in the country is an industry waiting to expand. In his words, ?The opportunities available in the outsourcing practice are immense. It is an industry that can greatly contribute to improving the economy of the country via industry growth and employment generation. You will agree with me that employment generation is one of the challenges facing the country and the outsourcing profession is a fertile sector that can absorb so much with the support of government and big multinationals operating in the country,? Otokitin said.

Quality responsible for Bane?s Whisky recognition?Watts

Mr. Andy Watts, Master Distiller of? Bane?s Whisky,? Africa?s first single grain whisky? has said that part of its success secrets that won the brand a recent global recognition is commitment to quality production and? blend of local raw materials.

Watts, whose brand recently occupied the global center-stage as the world?s best grain Whisky during the World Whisky Awards ceremony held in London recently, disclosed in a statement that the maturation process adopted by his distillery in brewing its whisky was a unique process.

He said the whisky is made to undergo a double maturation process, whereby the spirit is placed in oak barrels and matured for a minimum of three years, after which the drink is revatted for additional two years before it is bottled for consumption.

According to him, whiskies do not age while they are in the bottle. Rather, maturation is achieved years before bottling, stressing that? ?absolute skill and passion goes into each bottle of Bain?s Cape Mountain Whisky, utilizing only the finest grain and double maturation process to produce a lightly flavoured, refined spirit that can be discovered in each and every sip?

Source: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/08/outsourcing-govt-private-sector-partnership-unemployment/

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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Missing California teen found safe; kidnapper killed LA...

Missing California teen found safe; kidnapper killed

LA Times:?Missing California teen Hannah Anderson was found safe in the Idaho wilderness Saturday after being missing since Wednesday. James DiMaggio, the suspected kidnapper, was reportedly killed in a confrontation with the police.

The multi-state?search for Anderson began after the bodies of her mother and younger brother were found in the DiMaggio?s burnt home on Wednesday. Police found Anderson and DiMaggio after a helicopter reportedly spotted their campsite.?

Police said Hannah appeared to be in good condition and would be reunited with her father by tomorrow.?

Police said DiMaggio was shot by an FBI agent.

Photo: Reuters

Source: http://breakingnews.tumblr.com/post/57923897434

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FAWCETT v. OIL PRODUCERS INC OF KANSAS

L. Ruth FAWCETT, Appellee, v. OIL PRODUCERS, INC. OF KANSAS, Appellant.

No. 108,666.

-- July 19, 2013

Before ATCHESON, P.J., GREEN and McANANY, JJ.

Robert W. Coykendall and Will B. Wohlford, of Morris, Laing, Evans, Brock & Kennedy, Chtd., of Wichita, and Julia Gilmore Gaughan, of the same firm, of Topeka, for appellant.Rex A. Sharp and Barbara C. Frankland, of Gunderson, Sharp & Walke L.L.P., of Prairie Village, and David E. Sharp, of the same firm, of Houston, Texas, for appellee.David W. Nickel, of DePew Gillen Rathbun & McInteer, LC, of Wichita, for amicus curiae Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association.

This interlocutory appeal under K.S.A. 60?2102(c) involves a class action brought by a royalty owner in Seward County, Kansas, on behalf of all royalty owners who were paid royalties from Oil Producers, Inc. of Kansas (OPIK), which owned the working interest or which operated Kansas wells from January 1, 1996, to the present. The plaintiff, L. Ruth Fawcett Trust, with Les Spaulding as the Trustee (Fawcett) claimed that OPIK had underpaid royalties, and sought recovery of the underpayments. Namely, plaintiff contended that the stipulated price adjustments contained in the gas purchase agreements between OPIK and certain gas purchasers were actually deductions of expenses that OPIK was not allowed to deduct from plaintiff's royalty share. Both parties moved for summary judgment. OPIK argued that it had complied with the express requirement of the leases to pay royalties based on actual proceeds of sales of gas that it had sold at the well. Moreover, OPIK maintained ?that it would require a gross adulteration of the gas sales contracts to interpret the price adjustments to be improper ?expense? deductions.?

The trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff. On appeal, OPIK contends that the trial court erred when it held that OPIK impermissibly calculated the plaintiff's royalty payments on the net proceeds OPIK received from certain gas purchasers instead of calculating plaintiff's royalty payments on the gross proceeds of the gas purchase contracts. We disagree. Accordingly, we affirm.

There are 25 oil and gas leases at issue in this case. Each of the oil and gas leases contain the same or similar language giving the lessor (royalty owner) either a one-eighth or three-sixteenths share of the gas produced and sold at the mouth of the well. Two examples of the specific lease language are as follows:

?The lessee shall pay to the lessor for gas produced from any oil well and used by the lessee for the manufacture of gasoline or any other product as royalty 1/8 of the market value of such gas at the mouth of the well; if said gas is sold by the lessee, then as royalty 1/8 of the proceeds of the sale thereof at the mouth of the well. The lessee shall pay lessor as royalty 1/8 of the proceeds from the sale of gas as such at the mouth of the well where gas only is found??

or

?The lessee shall monthly pay to lessor as royalty on gas marketed from each well where gas only is found, one-eighth (1/8) of the proceeds if sold at the well, or if marketed by lessee off the leased premises, then one-eighth (1/8) of its market value at the well??

OPIK, the producer/operator of the gas wells, had gas purchase contracts with ONEOK Midstream Gas Supply, L.L.C. (ONEOK), Duke Energy Field Services, LP (Duke), Unimark L.L.C. (Unimark), and DCP Midstream, LP (DCP). ONEOK deducted a gathering and compression fee and a dehydration fee. It is clear, based on the record, that ONEOK deducted these various fees from the total value of the gas purchased.

Duke deducted a gathering fee, a conditioning fee, and a fuel reimbursement fee for possible lost or unmeasured gas. In addition, if the gas did not meet the quality as required under the contract, Duke could elect to accept the delivery of the gas and deduct any costs it incurred to bring the gas within the quality specifications.

Unimark deducted all third-party costs, fees, and charges incurred that were associated with selling the gas, including treating, gathering, transporting, and compressing fees.

Although the record does not contain the contract between DCP and OPIK, there is a billing statement which states that DCP deducted fees and adjustments from the total value of the gas purchased.

Fawcett, one of the royalty owners, filed a class action lawsuit against OPIK alleging that OPIK had underpaid royalty owners by taking several deductions before the gas products were in a marketable condition. A check stub submitted by Fawcett for a royalty payment indicated that the only fee subtracted from the gross value of the gas proceeds was a state tax. The check stub did not contain any information regarding the deductions taken by the gas purchasers before they paid OPIK for the gas products. Apparently, OPIK calculated the royalty it owed to the royalty owners based on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well to gas purchasers less the cost of the stipulated price adjustments contained in the gas purchase contracts between OPIK and the gas purchasers.

Both parties filed motions for partial summary judgment. The trial court granted Fawcett's partial motion for summary judgment, finding that OPIK impermissibly reduced the royalty payments by failing to compute the royalty payments based on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well to the gas purchasers. In addition, the trial court granted class certification.

OPIK filed an application for interlocutory appeal, which was granted.

Did the trial court err when it held that OPIK impermissibly calculated the royalty payments on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well to gas purchasers less the cost of the stipulated adjustments contained in the gas purchase contracts?

OPIK argues that the trial court erred when it granted Fawcett's partial motion for summary judgment. Specifically, OPIK contends that under the express language of the oil and gas leases, it was only required to calculate royalty payments based upon the actual proceeds it received from the gas purchasers. In addition, OPIK asserts that the implied duty to market rule does not reach as far as the trial court has allowed it to extend. Amicus curiae Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association, in supporting OPIK's position, argues ?that the marketable condition rule can be met by selling natural gas in its raw form at the well to natural gas purchasers under arm's-length transactions.? Nevertheless, Fawcett argues that OPIK cannot alter its obligations under the oil and gas leases or under the marketable condition rule with its confidential gas contracts with third parties. Moreover, Fawcett contends that OPIK had the duty to transform the gas into a marketable product and OPIK alone bore the expense of making the gas marketable.

We come, therefore, to the question of whether the royalty payments are to be computed on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well or on gross proceeds of gas sales at the well less cost of the stipulated price adjustments contained in the gas purchase agreements between OPIK and the gas purchasers.

Standard of Review

When the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, summary judgment is appropriate. The trial court is required to resolve all facts and inferences which may reasonably be drawn from the evidence in favor of the party against whom the ruling is sought. When opposing a motion for summary judgment, an adverse party must come forward with evidence to establish a dispute as to a material fact. In order to preclude summary judgment, the facts subject to the dispute must be material to the conclusive issues in the case. On appeal, the same rules apply; summary judgment must be denied if reasonable minds could differ as to the conclusions drawn from the evidence. Osterhaus v. Toth, 291 Kan. 759, 768, 249 P.3d 888 (2011).

The facts of this case are undisputed. When there is no factual dispute, appellate review of an order regarding summary judgment is de novo. David v. Hett, 293 Kan. 679, 682, 270 P.3d 1102 (2011).

The Oil and Gas Leases

There are generally three types of oil and gas leases with regard to the royalty clause in Kansas: (1) the proceeds lease; (2) the market value lease; and (3) the Waechter lease (a combination of the proceeds lease and the market value lease). Lightcap v. Mobil Oil Corporation, 221 Kan. 448, 457?61, 562 P.2d 1 (1977).

Language contained in proceeds leases are not always the same, but the pertinent language regarding the payment of royalties is that the lessee shall pay the royalty owner a share of the actual monies received from the sale of the gas. Smith v. Amoco Production Company, 272 Kan. 58, 76, 31 P.3d 255 (2001).

Market value leases require the computation of royalty payments based on the price that would be paid by a willing buyer to a willing seller in a free market. Matzen v. Cities Service Oil Co., 233 Kan. 846, 851, 667 P.2d 337 (1983).

Under Waechter leases, because the sale of the gas occurs at the wellhead, the royalty payments are to be computed based upon the actual sale price received by the producer. Waechter v. Amoco Production Co., 217 Kan. 489, 509?12, 537 P.2d 228 (1975).

In this case, 22 out of the 25 oil and gas leases are obviously Waechter leases. The language of the royalty clause in Waechter is identical to the language of the royalty clauses in 22 of the oil and gas leases in this case: ?one-eighth (1/8) [or 3/16] of the proceeds if sold at the well, or if marketed by lessee off the leased premises, then one-eighth (1/8) [or 3/16] of its market value at the well??

The gas, under these oil and gas leases, was sold at the well under the gas purchase contracts between OPIK and the gas purchasers. Therefore, the geography of the sale of gas was at the well and the geography for the computation of the royalty was also at the well.

The remaining three oil and gas leases contain the following language:

?The lessee shall pay to the lessor for gas produced from any oil well and used by the lessee for the manufacture of gasoline or any other product as royalty 1/8 of the market value of such gas at the mouth of the well; if said gas is sold by the lessee, then as royalty 1/8 of the proceeds of the sale thereof at the mouth of the well. The lessee shall pay lessor as royalty 1/8 of the proceeds from the sale of gas as such at the mouth of the well where gas only is found??

This language is a combination of a market value lease and a proceeds lease. Because the language is not identical to a Waechter lease, these leases cannot be considered Waechter leases. Nevertheless, the portion of the leases pertaining to the market value of the gas is not applicable in this case because the gas was sold at the wellhead and was never used by the producer to manufacture gasoline or any other product. In this situation, the remaining three leases should be deemed proceeds leases. As a result, the geography of the sale of gas was at the well and the geography for calculation of the royalty was at the well.

The relevant provisions of the leases at issue provided that the royalty was to be paid at one-eighth or three-sixteenth of the proceeds for gas sold at the well. No provision was made in the leases for deductions or, for that matter, the stipulated price adjustments contained in the gas purchase agreements.

The Definition of Proceeds

OPIK asserts that it sold the royalty owners' gas at the well, therefore, OPIK argues that it is required to pay only one-eighth or three-sixteenths of the actual proceeds. To reach this interpretation, OPIK cites to selected quotations from several Kansas cases to support its argument that ?proceeds? refers to the money OPIK actually received from the gas purchasers. See, e.g., Cities Service Oil Co., 233 Kan. at 860 (?In Waechter, we held that under a royalty clause calling for one-eighth of the proceeds if sold at the well, the lessor was entitled to no more than his proportionate share of the amount actually received by the lessee for the sale of gas. Following Waechter, we held in Lightcap that where a lease calls for royalties based on the proceeds from the sale of gas, the proceeds means the money obtained from an actual sale, and the lessor of a proceeds lease is entitled only to his proportionate share of those proceeds.?); Lightcap, 221 Kan. 448, Syl. ? 5 (?Where a lease calls for royalties based on the ?proceeds' from the sale of gas, the term ?proceeds' means the money obtained from an actual sale and lawfully retained by the seller.?); Waechter, 217 Kan. at 512 (?Proceeds ordinarily refer to the money obtained by an actual sale.?).

OPIK argues, based on its interpretation of the earlier mentioned cases, insofar as the royalty payments are concerned, the royalty is to be computed not on the entire gross proceeds of gas sales at the well to gas purchasers, but on such gross proceeds less the deductions set out in the gas purchase contracts and disclosed on the billing statements. Accordingly, OPIK maintains that it complied with the leases' royalty clause when it paid the royalty owners one-eighth or three-sixteenths of the actual money transferred into its possession from the gas purchasers.

OPIK further asserts that this definition is clearly established law in Kansas. Our Supreme Court, however, in Hockett v. The Trees Oil Co. 292 Kan. 213, 251 P.3d 65 (2011), explained that in Waechter, the producer had a long-standing contract with an interstate gas purchaser. The contract was subject to federal regulatory approval. The contract provided that the gas purchaser would pay the producer a price per thousand cubic feet (mcf) which was apparently less than the current market value of the gas at the wellhead. On appeal, the argument between the royalty owner and the producer was whether ?proceeds? meant the price per mcf in the purchase contract between the producer and the gas purchaser, which was approved by federal regulators (sale price), or whether it meant the prevailing market rate per mcf of a willing seller and a willing buyer without relying on the purchase contract or the regulatory constraints (market value). The Hockett court explained that in Waechter, the court held that ? ?where gas is sold at the wellhead there are ?proceeds? of that sale?the amount received by the seller from the purchaser.? ? Hockett, 292 Kan. at 222.

The Hockett court further explained that when the court in Waechter was defining ?proceeds? as the amount received by the producer, the court was merely distinguishing the actual gross contract rate per mcf from a hypothetical wellhead market rate per mcf. The Hockett court pointed out that the Waechter decision did not purport to address the impact on royalty payments of any deductions from the gross sale price which the gas purchaser might make to pay expenses attributable to the producer. Hockett, 292 Kan. at 222.

The Hockett court noted that Lightcap is very similar to Waechter in the language used regarding ?proceeds.? In Lightcap, our Supreme Court stated that the term ?proceeds? means the money obtained from an actual sale and lawfully retained by the seller. See Hockett, 292 Kan. at 223. The addition of the language ?and lawfully retained? addressed the fact that the federal regulatory agency disapproved of the contract rate that was filed and adjusted the rate downward accordingly. Lightcap, 221 Kan. at 451. Because of the adjustment, the producer could keep only the portion of the federally approved sale price paid by the gas purchaser. As a result, the ?proceeds? of the sale for payment of royalties included only the portion of the sale price that the producer was legally authorized to receive. Hockett, 292 Kan. at 223. Again, there is no indication in Lightcap that the court addressed the result of deductions from the gross sale price on royalty payments which the gas purchaser might make to pay expenses attributable to the producer.

In Cities Service Oil Co., the argument also centered on whether the royalty owners should have been paid an amount in excess of their proportionate share of the sale price based upon a hypothetical market value of the gas. The court continued to adhere to Lightcap and Waechter regarding the treatment of proceeds from the sale of gas at the wellhead. 233 Kan. at 860?61.

OPIK's situation is not comparable to that in Waechter, Lightcap, and Cities Service Oil Co. Those cases each dealt with whether proceeds of the sale should constitute the hypothetical value of the gas or the federally approved value of the gas. None of those cases considered the result on royalty payments of deductions taken from the gross sale price by the gas purchaser before paying the producer. The determination of what ?proceeds? were in those cases will not bear nearly the weight of reliance which OPIK places on them.

In Hockett, a statutorily required conservation fee was deducted by the gas purchaser before making payment to the producer. The producer then based the royalty payment on the amount it actually received from the gas purchaser. The producer argued that the parties' intent in the royalty clause was to require the royalty owner to share in the cost of the conservation fee. After distinguishing Cities Service Oil Co., Lightcap, and Waechter, our Supreme Court held that

? ?proceeds' in a royalty clause refers to the gross sale price in the contract between the [gas] purchaser and the lessee/producer/seller, so long as the contractual rate per mcf has been approved by the applicable regulatory authority. If the lessee claims that it is entitled to compute and pay royalties based upon an amount less than the gross sale price, it must find the authority to do so somewhere other than in the lease's royalty clause.? Hockett, 292 Kan. at 223.

Our research of Kansas law has revealed no case in which this particular issue has been decided: Do the leases in question allow OPIK to pay the royalty owners a royalty based on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well to gas purchasers less the cost of the stipulated price adjustments contained in the gas purchase agreements between OPIK and the gas purchasers?

In Sternberger v. Marathon Oil Co., 257 Kan. 315, 330?31, 894 P.2d 788 (1995), a class action was instituted by a royalty owner on behalf of royalty and overriding owners in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. The suit sought recovery of ? ?marketing costs' ? or ? ?gathering line amortization expenses,? ? which had been deducted from the plaintiff's payments by TXO Production Corp. (the predecessor of Marathon) to recover expenses for transporting the gas from the lease to the point of sale. 257 Kan. at 317.

In Sternberger, there was no market for the gas at the wellhead, and TXO was unable to interest a gas purchaser in constructing a line to the well. As a result, TXO built its own gathering system to gather the gas from six wells and transport it to the pipeline. TXO, the lessee producer, then paid a transportation fee to Kansas Gas Supply, the pipeline, which it charged back to the royalty owners, as well as a 12?cent per mcf amortization of the cost of the construction of the pipeline, which it called a ?marketing cost,? and a ?line amortization? charge, which appeared to result in a retirement of the cost of the gathering system over approximately 12 to 13 months. These costs included maintenance, trucking of the pipe, a per diem charge for the foreman, survey, and right-of-way costs for the gathering system.

The trial court held that the deductions by TXO, now Marathon, were improper, and judgment was entered in the amount of the total deductions, $119,994.52, plus prejudgment interest of $50,346.63, for the total judgment against Marathon of $170,341.20. In following earlier Kansas decisions, the Sternberger court held that the geography of the royalty computation as required by the lease language was at the well. But there being no market at the well, the Sternberger court held that the transportation costs were to be borne proportionally by the lessor and the lessee. 257 Kan. at 331?32.

Sternberger is instructive because it points out that ?[t]he lessee has the duty to produce a marketable product, and the lessee alone bears the expense of making the product marketable.? (Emphasis added.) 257 Kan. at 330?31. In discussing Garman v. Conoco, Inc., 886 P.2d 652 (Colo.1994), the Sternberger court noted that the lessee has the burden of proving the reasonableness of its costs and ?[a]bsent a contract providing to the contrary, a nonworking interest owner is not obligated to bear any share of production expense, such as compressing, transporting, and processing, undertaken to transform gas into a marketable product.? (Emphasis added.) 257 Kan. at 331.

Finally, as Fawcett points out in her brief, ?Sternberger reaffirmed the line of demarcation between deductible and nondeductible expenses at the mainline transmission line ?pipeline quality.? ? Sternberger carefully distinguished between ?gathering? and ?transportation? charges, and more specifically, transportation charges after the gas reaches interstate transmission line quality and pressure. At issue in Sternberger was the lessee's ?line amortization charge? for laying a pipeline from a well to the interstate transmission line. 257 Kan. at 318. But there was ?no evidence that Marathon engaged in any ? compression, processing, or dehydration.? Sternberger, 257 Kan. at 331. Because nothing was done that would physically ?transform? the gas, ?the deductions made by Marathon are properly characterized as ? ?transportation? ? rather than ? ?gathering? ? or other production costs.? 257 Kan. at 331. Consistent with Kansas law, transportation of transmission ?pipeline quality? gas is deductible from royalty. 257 Kan. at 322. ?Generally, Kansas law holds that transportation costs are borne proportionately by the lessor and lessee.? Sternberger, 257 Kan. at 322 (citing Scott v. Steinberger, 113 Kan. 67, 213 Pac. 646 [1923] ) (transporting gas); Voshell v. Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co., 137 Kan. 160, 19 P.2d 456 (1933) (transportation of oil by pipeline); and Molter v. Lewis, 156 Kan. 544, 134 P.2d 404 (1943) (transportation of oil by truck). ?Scott, Voshell, and Molter are dispositive of the issue in this case. These cases clearly show that ? the lessor must bear a proportionate share of the expenses in transporting the gas or oil to a distant market.? Sternberger, 257 Kan. at 324. Scott also makes clear that ?transportation? to a ?distant market? does not mean transportation within the field before a processing plant, but after the processing plant on the interstate transmission line to ?Kansas City or Chicago.? Scott, 113 Kan. at 68?69.

Implied Duty to Market Rule

OPIK asserts that the implied duty to market the gas is an implied duty in fact and not an implied duty in law. Consequently, OPIK contends that the courts must look to the language of the lease and the intent of the parties. OPIK further asserts that if the implied duty to market is not expressly written into the lease, then the parties are not subject to the duty.

OPIK, however, fails to acknowledge this court's decision in Farrar v. Mobil Oil Corp., 43 Kan.App.2d 871, 234 P.3d 19, rev. denied 291 Kan. 910 (2010), where this court discussed the implied duty to market and whether that duty is implied in fact or implied in law. This court determined that, generally, the implied duty to market is one that is implied in law and the only way to defeat the implied duty to market is by express language in the lease showing a contrary intent. ?Under Kansas law, an implied covenant can only be defeated by express language showing a contrary intent.? Farrar, 43 Kan.App.2d at 886. See also Gilmore v. Superior Oil Co., 192 Kan. 388, 393, 388 P.2d 602 (1964) (?[I]n the absence of an express provision of the lease creating such duty, the lessee is under an implied obligation to exercise reasonable diligence in marketing the gas produced.?). Gilmore further stated that if such lessee is desirous of a more complete coverage of the marketing of oil, gas, liquid hydrocarbons, or even helium gas, which has been found to exist in the minerals underlying the vast Hugoton field, the lessee has the opportunity to protect itself by the manner in which it draws the lease. 192 Kan. at 391.

Here, no express provision was made for deductions in the leases in question.

As Fawcett notes in her brief, OPIK relies on Davis v. Key Gas Corp., in which the two leases contained ?express no-deduction? attachments, making the leases effectively express no-deduction leases. Davis v. Key Gas Corp., 34 Kan.App.2d 728, 124 P.3d 96 (2005) (The Key Gas lease provided: ?It is agreed that Lessor shall bear no costs of gas treatment, dehydration, compression, transportation or water hauling charged to this lease by Lessee in its operations thereon.?). The implied duty to market rule has the same effect as an express no-deduction lease-no deductions are allowed from royalties unless language in the lease ?clearly and expressly? allows them. Thus, the outcome in Key Gas (no deductions as a matter of law) is the same outcome as the trial court concluded here. The only exception being that the Key Gas lease also expressly forbade deducting ?transportation? expenses which are not at issue here. Key Gas, 34 Kan.App.2d at 730.

Next, we must consider whether OPIK can avoid its obligations under the implied duty to market the gas by negotiating and contracting with a gas purchaser for a gross sale price of the gas sold at the well and then allow the gas purchaser to deduct from that gross sale price any amount used to compress, dehydrate, treat, and gather the gas.

Like OPIK here, Key Gas argued that it did not breach the lease because it did not take the deductions, rather the midstream service provider, ONEOK, did. In Key Gas, the oil and gas leases contained a condition precedent that required the lessee, Key Gas, to charge transportation costs and other expenses to the leases before Key Gas became liable for these expenses. Because those costs were deducted by the gas purchaser, ONEOK, from the amount paid to Key Gas for gas purchased under their contract according to its terms, they were not charged to the leases by Key Gas and the condition precedent that would trigger Key Gas' liability for the costs was never fulfilled.

L. Wayne Davis and Davis Farm, L.L.C., the plaintiffs, brought an action against Key Gas for underpayment of royalties. The question was whether Key Gas was required to pay to Davis' portion of the transportation and other expenses deducted under the purchase agreement that Key Gas had with ONEOK. Davis argued that the express provisions of paragraph 9 of the lease, which stated that the lessor was to bear no costs for gas treatment, dehydration, compression, transportation, or water hauling, prohibited any deduction from Davis' royalties and that Key Gas could not construct the gas purchase contract in such a fashion which imposed the deductions on the royalty owner and thus disclaimed its responsibility called for under paragraph 9 of the lease. Key Gas, however, argued that it was paying appropriate royalties to Davis, maintaining that the deductions made under the gas purchase contract were not charges made by Key Gas under its lease with Davis. Moreover, Key Gas contended that it made no deductions from the ONEOK payment that it received in figuring Davis' royalty share and was, in fact, paying his royalty share of the actual proceeds received.

The trial court held in favor of Key Gas, holding that there was no suggestion of collusion between ONEOK and Key Gas as was the concern in Sternberger, 257 Kan. at 330.

The Key Gas majority held that Key Gas could not deduct such costs from its royalty payments under circumstances where Key Gas had prevented fulfillment of a condition precedent contained in the oil and gas leases. In reaching its holding, the Key Gas majority considered the parties' intent under the leases and determined that Key Gas had in its control the ability to avoid those previously mentioned charges by entering into a gas purchase contract with ONEOK, which allowed ONEOK to charge Key Gas for those charges. The Key Gas majority determined that when Key Gas contracted with ONEOK, it relinquished control over transportation costs and other expenses, rendering performance of the condition precedent impossible. As a result, the majority in Key Gas held that Key Gas could not rely on nonperformance of a condition precedent to deny liability under circumstances where its own action was the cause of the nonperformance.

Consistent with the legal maxim that one cannot do indirectly what one cannot do directly, the majority in Key Gas rejected Key Gas' argument that it could avoid the ?express no-deduction? provision by treating the expenses as a reduction in revenue, i.e. as ?actual proceeds,? instead of a service charge. 34 Kan.App.2d 728, Syl. ? 9, 731. See also Wilson v. American Fidelity Ins. Co., 229 Kan. 416, Syl. ? 3, 625 P.2d 1117 (1981) (?A party should not be permitted to accomplish indirectly what it cannot accomplish directly.?).

OPIK cites to a concession made by plaintiff in Key Gas that Sternberger might have held the other way (which it would have for a true transportation expense). Fawcett, in this case, makes no such concession here. But because transportation is not at issue here, the Key Gas plaintiff's concession is irrelevant. And in Key Gas, it is unnecessary to address the difference because ?transportation costs and other expenses ? were barred. (Emphasis added.) 34 Kan.App.2d at 732 (?It appears that Key Gas never disputed that the types of costs and expenses deducted by ONEOK were those listed in paragraph 9 of Exhibit A of the oil and gas leases.?).

Under the implied duty to market rule, OPIK cannot charge to the royalty owners any expenses to make the gas marketable. Moreover, as stated earlier, under Hockett,

? ?proceeds' in a royalty clause refers to the gross sale price in the contract between the [gas] purchaser and the lessee/producer/seller, so long as the contractual rate per mcf has been approved by the applicable regulatory authority. If the lessee claims that it is entitled to compute and pay royalties based upon an amount less than the gross sale price, it must find the authority to do so somewhere other than in the lease's royalty clause.? 292 Kan. at 223.

Here, the language used in the leases valued the gas at the well. Moreover, the leases obligated OPIK to market the gas at the well. Under Kansas law, the leases make it clear that the royalty is to be computed on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well. Because no special provision in the leases allowed OPIK to compute royalties based on the gross proceeds of gas sales at the well less the cost of the stipulated price adjustments contained in the gas purchase agreements, we determine that OPIK's arguments fail.

Affirmed.

I concur with Judge Green's analysis in this case. We are asked to decide whether the proceeds to be divided among royalty holders from the sale of gas at the wellhead are the gross proceeds from the sale or the net proceeds after deducting charges incurred by the buyer for treating the gas after the point of sale. Setting aside public policy issues, the position taken by the appellant, Oil Producers, Inc. of Kansas, on this central issue is marked by a level of simplicity and clarity that avoids the morass of resolving the issue of marketability. OPIK argues: ?The duty to market in Kansas has only ever required operators to produce a saleable gas product and market and sell it free of cost to the royalty owner.? According to OPIK, if a product can be sold, it ipso facto is marketable. Thus, the proceeds of the sale subject to distribution among the royalty interest holders were the net sale proceeds.

But a demand curve can be drawn for any item that may be subject to a commercial transaction. I do not ascribe to the notion that because there is some point on every such curve where somebody would be willing to pay for the item, each and every item passes the test of marketability. Under that test, the notion of marketability becomes superfluous. That seems to defy a level of common sense that even judges are expected to bring to the discussion.

Besides, our Supreme Court spoke to the issue of marketability in Sternberger v. Marathon Oil Co., 257 Kan. 315, Syl. ? 3, 894 P .2d 788 (1995), when the court stated:

?Under a natural gas lease, once a marketable product is obtained, reasonable costs incurred to transport or enhance the value of the marketable gas may be charged against nonworking interest owners. The lessee has the burden of proving the reasonableness of the costs. Absent a contract providing to the contrary, a non-working interest holder is not obligated to bear any share of production expense, such as compressing, transporting, and processing, undertaken to transform gas into a marketable product.? (Emphasis added.)

While the expense at issue in Sternberger was the cost of a gas gathering pipeline system, we cannot ignore this language on marketability from the syllabus, which is there to set forth a point decided in the case. See K.S.A. 20?111.

Finally, I write separately to clarify my position inartfully expressed in Davis v. Key Gas Corp., 34 Kan.App.2d 728, 743, 124 P.3d 96 (2005), rev. denied 281 Kan. 1377 (2006). While Key Gas dealt with transportation and other expenses charged back against the royalty interest holders, attention seemed to me to be focused at the time on the transportation issue. My dissent was directed solely to the majority's handling of that issue and not the issue of other expenses charged back, though one would have a hard time detecting that from what I wrote. In the case now before us, transportation costs are not at issue, so I concur with Judge Green's use of Key Gas in considering the other expenses deducted from the royalty payments.

GREEN, J.

Source: http://feeds.findlaw.com/~r/FindLawKanCtApp/~3/00deldj2uKI/1639843.html

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Saturday, August 10, 2013

Sports writing workshop

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MIPrepZone.com, Macomb County?s source for everything high school sports, is seeking people with a passion for sports to help cover high school events this fall.

On Tuesday, Aug. 13, Macomb Daily Sports Editor George Pohly will conduct a free workshop for aspiring sports writers, videographers and photographers. The workshop will be part of an open house at The Macomb Daily?s new offices in Clinton Township.

The open house/workshop starts at 6 p.m. at The Macomb Daily (19176 Hall Road, on the south side of Hall, a short distance east of Romeo Plank). We are on the second floor of the building behind the branch of Huntington Bank. Contact Pohly at george.pohly@macombdaily.com, or 586-783-0270, if you would like to attend.

Perhaps you are considering a career in sports writing. Or maybe you are a parent who wants to get involved, or a teacher seeking ways for students to acquire practical experience. If so, the open house/workshop is for you. We will show you how to get started.

Source: http://www.macombdaily.com/article/20130808/NEWS01/130809428/sports-writing-workshop

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

TabZolo Keeps You Focused on One Tab at a Time

Chrome: If you're like me, you probably open a handful of tabs every day that you never even get around to actually looking at. TabZolo helps you prevent tab overload by keeping your browsing focused to only one tab at a time.

TabZolo brings you back to a bygone, tabless browsing era, but sometimes that's exactly what you need to stay focused. When you enable the extension, every tab except the one currently selected will disappear, and it will even prevent you from opening any new ones. When you need to use tabs again, just disable the extension, and all of the tabs that it previously closed will reappear right where you left them. It's a simple concept, but if you tend to bury yourself in a pile of webpages throughout the day, forcing yourself to only use one at a time can be a big help.

TabZolo (Free)

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/GxfbGrhEdVs/tabzolo-keeps-you-focused-on-one-tab-at-a-time-845544805

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

U.S. housing starts fall to ten-month low, weather blamed

By Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Housing starts and permits for future home construction unexpectedly fell in June, but the decline in activity was likely to be short-lived against the backdrop of bullish sentiment among home builders.

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday housing starts dropped 9.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 836,000 units. That was the lowest level since August last year.

Economists, who had expected groundbreaking to rise to a 959,000-unit rate, shrugged off the decline and said wet weather in many parts of the country had dampened activity. They noted that much of the drop was in the volatile multifamily segment.

"It looks like it's weather-related," said Sam Bullard, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, North Carolina. "On the surface it doesn't look good, but we are confident that starts activity is still going to climb higher in the months to come."

Permits to build homes fell 7.5 percent last month to a 911,000-unit pace. Economist had expected permits to rise to a 1-million unit pace.

Though it was the second straight month of declines in permits, they remained ahead of starts. Economists said this, together with upbeat homebuilder confidence, suggested groundbreaking activity will bounce back in July and through the remainder of this year.

Sentiment among single-family home builders hit a 7-1/2 year high in July, a report showed on Monday, amid optimism over current and future home sales.

MORTGAGE RATES STILL LOW

There was little to suggest that a recent spike in mortgage rates was restraining home building activity, economists said, pointing to the improving builder confidence.

"New home supply and housing completions remain low, home prices are rising and, despite the recent rise, mortgage rates remain low," said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics in New York. "To us, this all points to housing activity adding to growth in the second half of the year."

Housing's recovery is being aided by still-low mortgage rates engineered by the Federal Reserve's accommodative monetary policy and steady employment gains.

Mortgage rates increased in recent weeks after the Fed expressed its desire to start cutting back on its bond purchases later this year. The monthly $85 billion in bond purchases have been holding down interest rates.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the central bank still expected to start scaling back its massive asset purchase program later this year, but left open the option of changing that plan in either direction if the economic outlook shifted.

The U.S. stock market rose as Bernanke's comments led markets to believe the central bank's plans to pull its monetary stimulus were not set in stone. The U.S. dollar gained ground while Treasury securities prices slipped.

Bernanke offered an upbeat assessment of the housing market's prospects.

"Housing activity and prices seem likely to continue to recover, notwithstanding the recent increases in mortgage rates, but it will be important to monitor developments in this sector carefully," Bernanke told lawmakers.

Last month, groundbreaking for single-family homes, the largest segment of the market, slipped 0.8 percent to its lowest level since last November 2012. Starts for multi-family homes declined 26.2 percent to a 245,000-unit rate.

Starts were down in all four regions in June, with big declines in the Northeast, South and the Midwest.

Weak groundbreaking suggested a smaller boost to both second and third quarter gross domestic product from residential construction. Second-quarter GDP estimates are ranging between 0.5 percent and 1 percent.

The economy grew at a 1.8 percent annual pace in the first three months of the year.

Permits for multi-family homes fell 21.4 percent last month. But permits for single-family homes rose 0.6 percent to a their highest since May 2008.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci and Chizu Nomiyama)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/housing-starts-fall-ten-month-low-124046675.html

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Gov. Rick Perry Won't Seek Re-Election (ABC News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/317977497?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Lake Vostok Found Teeming With Life

I've read TFA, and thanks for adding some clarity, but I still have to wonder when they'll sequence the DNA.

Apparently you neither read the TFA nor the reply to your original false assertion that they didn't sequence the DNA.

Nor does your claim "if it's just an already known species then it's just contamination" make any sense.

I was on a remote island recently. I picked up an odd feather on the beach. I brought it back home and used it to identify the bird it came from. It was a known species.

There is absolutely no basis in that observation to support the claim that my backpack had somehow become contaminated by feathers from that species, and DNA is no different from feathers in this regard, when subject to ordinary standards of careful handling for such samples, which were obviously applied in this case (that is: the people doing the research are not and should not be presumed to be complete idiots.)

So you're completely wrong about all that, but have a nice day anyway!

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/khMqSvHg4Lc/story01.htm

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Zimmerman Trial Live Stream: Trayvon Martin 911 Call Becomes Focal Point

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/zimmerman-trial-live-stream-trayvon-martin-911-call-becomes-foca/

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Breeding fears for Britain's bats

Britain's bats could face difficulties this summer following two cold springs in a row, a charity suggests.

Latest figures from the National Bat Monitoring Programme revealed that fewer of the flying mammals were counted in 2012 than the previous year.

The Bat Conservation Trust is concerned that this year's "unseasonable start" could mean that bats struggle to bounce back.

However it suggested it is too early to tell if bats are on a downwards trend.

During the summer bat activity reaches its peak. But this year the animals are faced with the challenges of a delayed breeding season and a lack of winged insects on which they feed, according to the Bat Conservation Trust.

"After two years of long, wet winters and a particularly late and cold start to summer this year, the outlook isn't too promising for our bats," said Dr Kate Barlow, head of monitoring at the charity.

The latest report from the National Bat Monitoring Programme revealed the level of bat activity recorded in 2012. Common pipistrelle; soprano pipistrelle; noctule and serotine bat species were all lower in number than in 2011, and "roost counts" were down compared with the year before for six of the species.

Bat Conservation Trust's Philip Briggs explained breeding in bats appeared to be reduced or delayed last year, probably due to the cold spring and exceptionally wet summer.

"Female bats often skip a year with breeding, or would certainly delay breeding... This can mean that if a baby's born quite late in the summer, they've got less time to feed up and get to full size and strength before they go into hibernation, which could impact on their overwinter survival."

Mr Briggs speculated that this year, the bats' breeding season could again have been delayed due to the cold spring but added:

"I suppose if we continue with the current good weather this could help improve breeding success and survival throughout the summer, but we'll just have to see how things go."

Seventeen species of bats breed in the UK, including the rare Bechstein's bat, the distinctive-looking brown long-eared bat and the Daubenton's bat, also known as the "water bat" because it snatches insects from water surfaces.

Over the past 15 years, the National Bat Monitoring Programme has shown that the population trends for all of the surveyed bat species are increasing or stable.

However, Dr Barlow commented: "All our bats produce only one baby a year... so a few years of bad weather could have dramatic impact on numbers of bats if they are unable to find enough food to allow them to breed successfully."

Join BBC Nature on Facebook and Twitter @BBCNature.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/23161183

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

"Maybe if pro-choice activists really want to stop Texas from regulating clinics they should just..."

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?Maybe if pro-choice activists really want to stop Texas from regulating clinics they should just start calling them ?fertilizer plants.?

Source: http://oinonio.tumblr.com/post/54786365644

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Saturday, July 6, 2013

Android security flaw impacts 900 million phones worldwide

A major security flaw may be placing any Android smartphone bought over the last four years at risk for takeover by hackers, according to a security firm.

Bluebox Security, a San Francisco-based cybersecurity startup, says that nearly 900 million devices that run the Android operating system could be targeted. A hacker could then go as far as to take over the entire phone remotely or steal data from the device.

In a blog posted to the company's website, Bluebox CTO Jeff Forristal called the risk to both individual Android users and the platform itself "great."

"A malicious app can access individual data, or gain entry into an enterprise," Forristal wrote.

Forristal says that if a hacker is able to gain access to your phone, they have the ability to read emails, text messages and take any account information or passwords stored there. If the phone is fully taken over, that person would also be able to make phone calls, send text messages or even record calls.

Natasha Lomas of TechCrunch points out that the flaw has not been widely exploited and that Google, which produces and maintains Android, is likely working on a fix.

Google also says that they've modified the way developers can submit applications to the Google Play store to increase security.

A July 2 report from the International Data Council, which tracks smartphone sales and usage worldwide, indicated that 93 percent of all smartphone shipments over the first quarter of 2013 ran Android.

52 percent of all American smartphone users own a phone that runs Android, while 41.9 percent own an Apple iPhone.

Source: http://www.wjla.com/articles/2013/07/android-security-flaw-impacts-900-million-phones-worldwide-91018.html

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Friday, July 5, 2013

The balancing act of producing more food sustainably

The balancing act of producing more food sustainably [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Jul-2013
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Contact: University of Oxford Press Office
press.office@admin.ox.ac.uk
University of Oxford

A policy known as sustainable intensification could help meet the challenges of increasing demands for food from a growing global population, argues a team of scientists in an article in the journal Science.

The goal of sustainable intensification is to increase food production from existing farmland says the article in the journal's Policy Forum by lead authors Dr Tara Garnett and Professor Charles Godfray from the University of Oxford. They say this would minimise the pressure on the environment in a world in which land, water, and energy are in short supply, highlighting that the environment is often overexploited and used unsustainably.

The authors, university researchers and policy-makers from NGOs and the UN, outline a new, more sophisticated account of how 'sustainable intensification' should work. They recognise that this policy has attracted criticism in some quarters as being either too narrowly focused on food production or as representing a contradiction in terms.

The article stresses that while farmers in many regions of the world need to produce more food, it is equally urgent that policy makers act on diets, waste and how the food system is governed. The authors emphasise that there is a need to produce more food on existing rather than new farmland because converting uncultivated land would lead to major emissions of greenhouse gases and cause significant losses of biodiversity.

Sustainable intensification is the only policy on the table that could create a sustainable way of producing enough food globally, argues the paper; but, importantly, this should be only one part of the policy portfolio. 'It is necessary, but not sufficient,' said Professor Charles Godfray of the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food. 'Achieving a sustainable food system will require changes in agricultural production, changes in diet so people eat less meat and waste less food, and regulatory changes to improve the efficiency and resilience of the food system. Producing more food is important but it is only one of a number of policies that we must pursue together.'

Increasing productivity does not always mean using more fertilisers and agrochemicals as these technologies frequently carry unacceptable environmental costs, argue the authors. They say that a range of techniques, both old and new, should be employed to develop ways of farming that keep environmental damage to a minimum.

The authors of the paper accept that the intensification of agriculture will have some implications for other important policy goals, such as preserving biodiversity, animal welfare, human nutrition, protecting rural economies and sustainable development. Policy makers will need to find a way to navigate through the conflicting priorities on occasion.

Lead author Dr Tara Garnett, from the Food Climate Research Network at the Oxford Martin School, said: 'Improving nutrition is a key part of food security as food security is about more than just calories. Around two billion people worldwide are thought to be deficient in micronutrients. We need to intensify the quality of the food we produce in ways that improve the nutritional value of people's diets, preferably through diversifying the range of foods produced and available but also, in the short term, by improving the nutrient content of commonly produced crops.'

'Sustainability requires consideration of economic, environmental and social priorities,' added Dr Michael Appleby of the World Society for the Protection of Animals. 'Attention to livestock welfare is both necessary and beneficial for sustainability. Policies to achieve the right balance between animal and crop production will benefit animals, people and the planet.'

Agriculture is a potent sector for economic growth and rural development in many countries across Africa, Asia and South America. Co-author Sonja Vermeulen, from the CGIAR Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), said: 'It is sustainable intensification that can provide the best rewards for small-scale farmers and their heritage of natural resources. What policy-makers can provide is strategic finance and institutions that support sustainable and equitable pathways, rather than quick profits gained through depletion.'

###

For more information, please contact the University of Oxford Press Office on +44 (0)1865 280534 or email press.office@admin.ox.ac.uk

Alternatively, contact taragarnett@fcrn.org.uk or charles.godfray@zoo.ox.ac.uk

Notes for Editors

The article 'Sustainable intensification in agriculture: premises and policies' by Tara Garnett et al will be published in the 5 July issue of Science. The article follows a workshop on food security convened by the Oxford Martin School and the Food Climate Research Network at the University of Oxford. A more detailed account of the workshop is at: http://www.futureoffood.ox.ac.uk/sustainable-intensification

Dr Tara Garnett runs the Food Climate Research Network: http://www.fcrn.org.uk

Professor Charles Godfray is the Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food: http://www.futureoffood.ox.ac.uk.

For more information on the Oxford Martin School, please visit http://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/.

Dr Michael Appleby is Chief Scientific Adviser for Humane Sustainable Agriculture at the World Society for Protection of Animals http://www.wspa.org.uk

Dr Sonja Vermeulen is Head of Research at the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security http://ccafs.cgiar.org

To receive a copy of the Science article, please email scipak@aaas.org


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The balancing act of producing more food sustainably [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Jul-2013
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Contact: University of Oxford Press Office
press.office@admin.ox.ac.uk
University of Oxford

A policy known as sustainable intensification could help meet the challenges of increasing demands for food from a growing global population, argues a team of scientists in an article in the journal Science.

The goal of sustainable intensification is to increase food production from existing farmland says the article in the journal's Policy Forum by lead authors Dr Tara Garnett and Professor Charles Godfray from the University of Oxford. They say this would minimise the pressure on the environment in a world in which land, water, and energy are in short supply, highlighting that the environment is often overexploited and used unsustainably.

The authors, university researchers and policy-makers from NGOs and the UN, outline a new, more sophisticated account of how 'sustainable intensification' should work. They recognise that this policy has attracted criticism in some quarters as being either too narrowly focused on food production or as representing a contradiction in terms.

The article stresses that while farmers in many regions of the world need to produce more food, it is equally urgent that policy makers act on diets, waste and how the food system is governed. The authors emphasise that there is a need to produce more food on existing rather than new farmland because converting uncultivated land would lead to major emissions of greenhouse gases and cause significant losses of biodiversity.

Sustainable intensification is the only policy on the table that could create a sustainable way of producing enough food globally, argues the paper; but, importantly, this should be only one part of the policy portfolio. 'It is necessary, but not sufficient,' said Professor Charles Godfray of the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food. 'Achieving a sustainable food system will require changes in agricultural production, changes in diet so people eat less meat and waste less food, and regulatory changes to improve the efficiency and resilience of the food system. Producing more food is important but it is only one of a number of policies that we must pursue together.'

Increasing productivity does not always mean using more fertilisers and agrochemicals as these technologies frequently carry unacceptable environmental costs, argue the authors. They say that a range of techniques, both old and new, should be employed to develop ways of farming that keep environmental damage to a minimum.

The authors of the paper accept that the intensification of agriculture will have some implications for other important policy goals, such as preserving biodiversity, animal welfare, human nutrition, protecting rural economies and sustainable development. Policy makers will need to find a way to navigate through the conflicting priorities on occasion.

Lead author Dr Tara Garnett, from the Food Climate Research Network at the Oxford Martin School, said: 'Improving nutrition is a key part of food security as food security is about more than just calories. Around two billion people worldwide are thought to be deficient in micronutrients. We need to intensify the quality of the food we produce in ways that improve the nutritional value of people's diets, preferably through diversifying the range of foods produced and available but also, in the short term, by improving the nutrient content of commonly produced crops.'

'Sustainability requires consideration of economic, environmental and social priorities,' added Dr Michael Appleby of the World Society for the Protection of Animals. 'Attention to livestock welfare is both necessary and beneficial for sustainability. Policies to achieve the right balance between animal and crop production will benefit animals, people and the planet.'

Agriculture is a potent sector for economic growth and rural development in many countries across Africa, Asia and South America. Co-author Sonja Vermeulen, from the CGIAR Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), said: 'It is sustainable intensification that can provide the best rewards for small-scale farmers and their heritage of natural resources. What policy-makers can provide is strategic finance and institutions that support sustainable and equitable pathways, rather than quick profits gained through depletion.'

###

For more information, please contact the University of Oxford Press Office on +44 (0)1865 280534 or email press.office@admin.ox.ac.uk

Alternatively, contact taragarnett@fcrn.org.uk or charles.godfray@zoo.ox.ac.uk

Notes for Editors

The article 'Sustainable intensification in agriculture: premises and policies' by Tara Garnett et al will be published in the 5 July issue of Science. The article follows a workshop on food security convened by the Oxford Martin School and the Food Climate Research Network at the University of Oxford. A more detailed account of the workshop is at: http://www.futureoffood.ox.ac.uk/sustainable-intensification

Dr Tara Garnett runs the Food Climate Research Network: http://www.fcrn.org.uk

Professor Charles Godfray is the Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food: http://www.futureoffood.ox.ac.uk.

For more information on the Oxford Martin School, please visit http://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/.

Dr Michael Appleby is Chief Scientific Adviser for Humane Sustainable Agriculture at the World Society for Protection of Animals http://www.wspa.org.uk

Dr Sonja Vermeulen is Head of Research at the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security http://ccafs.cgiar.org

To receive a copy of the Science article, please email scipak@aaas.org


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-07/uoo-tba070413.php

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