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      <title>Deep Blue Group Construction Solutions by </title>
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      <pubDate>2013-08-19 06:41:49 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Deep Blue Group Construction Solutions: Hyperloop Transportation</title>
         <author>jessavelt</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/jessavelt/couk42ea73/wish/11830547</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>World Travel News – How quickly do you want to get from point A
to point B? Tired of worrying if you are going to be involved in a plane or car
crash? The future of travel may soon become a reality.&nbsp;Elon Musk unveiled
his much anticipated plans for the Hyperloop by releasing his 57-page technical
white paper titled <a href="http://www.costaricantimes.com/hyperloop-transportation-becoming-reality/19263">“Hyperloop
Alpha.”</a></p>
<p>The Hyperloop is intended to become the “fifth” mode of
transportation — a tube under or over the ground that would transport a dozen
or so people in individual pods. The actual size will likely depend on
technology, but the idea is to provide exceptionally fast service to the
traveling public between cities under 900 miles apart. The innovation could
move people from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 30 minutes with the pods
traveling up to 800 miles per hour.</p>

<p>It all sounds pretty cool and very space age. (Jetsons, anyone?)</p>
<p>Is it too good to be true?</p>
<p>Yes, for now. And Musk knows it. But that doesn’t make the idea
any less relevant. The white paper properly draws attention to the future.
Indeed, from a layman’s perspective, Musk seems to lay out a plausible path for
the applied technology needed to bring the Hyperloop into reality.</p>
<p>Recall that steam railroads were almost as pie-in-the-sky before
Scottish inventor William Murdoch invented the first workable prototype steam
locomotive in 1784. The idea of propelling humans at “break neck” speeds of
between 25 or 35 miles per hour, let alone 50 miles per hour or more by 1850,
was considered the stuff of fancy.</p>
<p>In more contemporary times, stunning transportation
infrastructure projects have achieved feats unthinkableuntil technological breakthroughs made
them possible. France’s Millau Viaduct is the tallest bridge in the world, with
its roadway suspended 890 feet (270 meters) above the valley of the River Tarn
and one of its towers rising to 1,124 feet (343 meters).</p>
<p>But the historical reality is that economic hurdles may prove
more important than the technological ones. In the longer term, the Hyperloop
will have to deliver a service the traveling consumer will want and be willing
to pay for before it can create the revolution Musk envisions.</p>
<p>On this point, the Millau Viaduct provides critical insights
into what could make the Hyperloop a success.<br>
Constructing the bridge was technically impossible just decades earlier, and
improvements in technology on the margin slowly made the concept feasible. New
developments in materials and computer-controlled construction techniques
brought it into the realm of possibility and profitability.</p>
<p>The potential profitability may well be the more important
element. The bridge was built by a private construction company, Compagnie
Eiffage, under a 75-year concession that would be paid by tolls. In other
words, the company had enough confidence in the practical benefits of the
bridge that it was willing to commit to a half billion to the project. Those
practical benefits would have to be paid for by consumers through tolls.
Without the tolls, the project would likely not have gotten off the ground,
even though it was technologically feasible and it could cut travel times by as
much as four hours.</p>
<p>Thus, while the Hyperloop may be theoretically if not be technically
feasible now, the real long-run hurdle for Musk and the project’s developers
will be whether the new transportation system provides a tangible benefit
significant enough to a large enough swath of the traveling public that its
costs will be justified by the benefits they receive.</p>

<p>Notably, using similar technology, 12 bridges with higher road
decks have been built since the opening of the Millau Viaduct (although it
still retains the record as the highest bridge).</p>
<p>Mega-projects are often judged by their technical merits. But
these projects need to do more than satisfy the egos of engineers and
futurists. Their social impact and practical importance depend crucially on
their ability to deliver broad-based benefits in tangible ways that become the
foundation for long-term sustainability.</p>
<p>Musk has done an admirable job of setting the stage for a useful
public discussion. Now we should be more focused on the long-run economic
merits of his proposal instead of the short- term technical hurdles.</p>

</p>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2013-08-19 06:45:09 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Deep Blue Group Construction Solutions: How green is Tohoku’s ‘Green Connections’ project?</title>
         <author>normanh4wk</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/jessavelt/couk42ea73/wish/11925423</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2013/08/17/general/how-green-is-tohokus-green-connections-project/#.UhVEidLVAmF">http://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2013/08/17/general/how-green-is-tohokus-green-connections-project/#.UhVEidLVAmF</a><br></p><p>On its surface, the plan seems like an environmentalist’s dream come true: Take wreckage from the March 11, 2011, Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami in the Tohoku region of Honshu and pile it along the washed-out coastline; cover the crumbled concrete and broken wood with soil; then top it all with trees.</p><p>Communities in Tohoku have been creating “disaster-prevention” forests similar to these (minus the raised banks) since at least the 17th century, but few withstood 2011′s huge tsunami. By restoring them, coastal settlements get natural protection from wind and sand — while waste becomes the literal foundation of a safe and “green” recovery.”</p><p>That’s the basic outline of Midori no Kizuna (Green Connections), a Forestry Agency project getting under way on Pacific beaches from Aomori Prefecture in the north to Chiba Prefecture bordering Tokyo.</p><p>Meanwhile, a similar private-sector plan to plant a “great forest wall” in the region is also rolling into action. Both have all-star support: former Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda plugged Green Connections on national television in April 2012; while the Great Forest Wall Project is being led by Morihiro Hosokawa, another former prime minister, and world-renowned ecologist Akira Miyawaki. The latter has worked in countries including Malaysia and Brazil planting a diverse mix of local tree species to quickly recreate and restore indigenous forests. The initiative has already raked in ¥270 million of donations.</p><p>So why is Yoshihiko Hirabuki, a plant ecologist in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture — Tohoku’s biggest city — spending his summer scuttling between the local Forestry Agency office and construction sites along the city’s shoreline, trying to slow the restoration of coastal forests?</p><p>As he tells it, it’s because the undertaking is an environmental wolf in sheep’s clothing.</p><p>“There’s something wrong with a forest-creation project that destroys the living things — flowers, insects, birds and grasses — that managed to survive the massive tsunami,” he says. “In this era of respect for the importance of ecosystem services and biodiversity, I can’t help thinking Japan is making an irreversible mistake.”</p><p>He’s not alone in that opinion. The Nature Conservation Society of Japan (NACS-J) — one of the country’s most respected environmental organizations — and the academic Society of Vegetation Science have both submitted petitions to the government expressing concern that tree-planting projects could damage the unique coastal ecosystems that are already recovering.</p><p>The central problem is this: Native plant communities could end up buried under a strip of rubble covered with dirt trucked in from nearby mountains and planted with “man-made” forests — unless environmental-impact assessments are conducted, conservation zones are set aside, and great care is taken during construction.</p><p>Those are some of the protective measures Hirabuki and a group of about 30 other conservationists have been pushing for the Forestry Agency to take in Sendai.</p><p>Earlier this year, the agency’s Sendai branch office agreed to set up a committee to consider the project’s environmental impacts and come up with a strategy for preserving biodiversity. But Hirabuki says it amounts to too little, too late.</p><p>Yoichi Umeki, the Forestry Agency official in charge of coastal forest restoration in the Sendai area, has declined to provide any details about the committee or about conservation measures the agency may be considering or has taken so far. Meetings of the committee and all its activities are also closed to the public.</p><p>How can that be? “There are certain important species in the area. It’s possible that if we made the information public they would be threatened,” Umeki says.</p><p>However, an even bigger risk may come from the construction of earth banks, coastal roads and wider-than-ever sea walls.</p><p>“You have this very long, very thin strip of important natural environment. If it were wider we might be able to save half of it, but because it’s so narrow it’s difficult to protect,” says NACS-J director Ryuichi Yokoyama. “By turning everything into forest, you risk lowering the mosaic of biodiversity created by different plants growing in subtly different types of soil.”</p><p>Makoto Nikkawa, secretary general of the Great Forest Wall Project, insists that his organization’s work, at least, will not reduce biodiversity.</p><p>“We’re planning to create patches of forest, not a solid strip, which would not be possible anyway because you have ports and river mouths. We are carrying out surveys and will leave ecologically valuable places as-is. Where local opinion is divided, we won’t go forward,” he says.</p><p>Over the next 15 years, the donation-funded foundation aims to plant 90 million seedlings on earth-and-rubble banks running from Iwate Prefecture to Fukushima Prefecture. The seedlings will be a mix of 20 or more broadleaf evergreen species native to the region, which the project’s vice-president, the ecologist Miyawaki, says are much more tsunami-resistant than introduced species such as pines. These trees will block wind and ideally act as a huge filter in the event of a tsunami, preventing people, cars and other debris being swept out to sea.</p><p>The width of the “forest wall” will vary according to location. Where beaches are narrow and isolated in Iwate Prefecture and northern Miyagi Prefecture, protective forests could be just 30 meters wide. Further south, where the Sendai Plain meets Sendai Bay to form one of the region’s longest strips of flat coast, they may reach 300 meters inland.</p><p>But the 40-km beach stretching from Sendai down to the southern border of Miyagi Prefecture is home to many important native species, including Japanese marsh warblers, bees, bush peas, rugosa roses, Japanese field mint and tiger beetles found only on strands. The beach has been designated by Miyagi Prefecture as a Natural Environment Conservation Zone and by the Environment Ministry as the site of one of Japan’s 500 Important Wetlands as well as several designated Special Plant Communities.</p><p>Hirabuki, who is a professor at Tohoku Gakuin University in Sendai, has tracked plant communities in the area since the 2011 disaster. He found that native species bounced back surprisingly well from the widespread damage they suffered during the tsunami. Scientists studying marine life, coastal insects and birds report the same.</p><p>Forestry Agency official Umeki says his office is aware of those studies, but insists that conserving plants and animals can’t take precedence over restoring people’s livelihoods.</p><p>“The coastal forests were created by the local people. We are required by law to manage them, and we have a responsibility to restore them to their pre-tsunami state. Only if that happens will people be able to get their lives back,” he says.</p><p>The forests were planted during the Edo Period (1603-1867) to block salt, wind and sand as farming and fishing settlements crept ever closer to the ocean. The trees may also have absorbed some of the force of past tsunamis. In Sendai, the tree of choice was the black pine, which is probably not native to the area but can survive poor, sandy soil and salt spray. The tsunami wiped out 300 hectares of these forests in Sendai and about 140 km of them from Aomori to Chiba prefectures. As the massive trees were washed inland they added to the destruction.</p><p>Now that they are gone, Sendai farmer Yoshimitsu Itabashi says cold winds sweep across his fields located about 500 meters inland. Post-disaster rezoning means he can no longer live by the sea, but he can farm there.</p><p>Now that public-works projects have restored agricultural infrastructure, Itabashi plans to stay for the long term. He says he wants the government to restore the coastal forests.</p><p>But the Forestry Agency is doing more than simply restoring what existed before. Groundwater levels were high to start with, and are even higher now due to land subsidence in the earthquake. As a result, roots spread out just below the soil surface and trees topple easily in a tsunami.</p><p>To solve the problem, the Forestry Agency decided to build banks about 3 meters high to promote deep root growth. If all goes according to plan, these earthworks of an unprecedented height by traditional standards will be completed by 2016 and the planting by 2021. Hirabuki estimates that about a third of the earth banks planned for Sendai have been built so far.</p><p>The Great Forest Wall Project is proceeding more slowly: Volunteers have planted just under 1 km of mixed broadleaf forest so far in Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures. Last year, volunteers also collected 110,000 acorns in the Tohoku region, which are being raised in pots for planting next year.</p><p>For now, Hirabuki is focused on convincing the Forestry Agency to create an untouched nature park in the last patch of Sendai’s coastline where plans for forest restoration are still up in the air.</p><p>Those plans will likely be decided in September. Until then, Hirabuki will continue to reluctantly trade his old life as a scientist for his new one as an embattled activist.</p></p>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2013-08-21 07:50:05 UTC</pubDate>
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