Monday 31 May 2010

give us our daily sun...

part II: a park, not a farm

One PV-mover might be lonesome; but a number of those make a PV-park:



Carpe diem!






Tuesday 25 May 2010

feed conversion ratio: 15:1

or: dreaming of sustainable proteins!

Dan Barber: How I fell in love with a fish



If you are patient enough you will find out - one day - why this blog again and again mixes so many different subjects like construction technology, efficiency, fish, renewables, sun, and much more.

For now: they are all very directly related.

Carpe diem!


Tuesday 11 May 2010

learn from automobile industry?!

why not, construction industry!?!

While we are working on our "more than a nursery" project we would like to share some thoughts with you on MMC, Modern Methods of Construction. Sometimes it helps to look beyond one's plate, so we like to compare the construction industry with the automobile industry which in this case takes your feet back onto the ground of what is so "modern" about something that is just new to a specific industry.

In 1908 Henry Ford installed the first assembly line...





Since then, 100 years later, the automobiles come in all colours, not just black, and any shape but the basic advantages of a factory installed assembly line still make good sense: it considerably cuts assembly time while material and quality control dictate the building progress from start to finish. The result are products built to the required standards and highest quality requirements.

So the time of horse and buggy levels of technology are long gone; however, there is (at least) one more important parallel: Henry Ford started those assembly lines in 1908 and 19 years later had built 15,5 million Model Ts during what we know were very tough times of economic difficulty and transition - not unlike the times we are just entering into.

So.., why wait?

Carpe diem!

Saturday 8 May 2010

no blue, no green

... Sylvia Earle on the importance of our oceans!





Carpe diem!

Friday 7 May 2010

more than a nursery...

rockenergy's project in Glasgow


We will detail the nursery's key components and technology details in the coming weeks and explain why the construction is "A" rated (EPC)*; here is what our client Milnbank Housing Association and the Energy Saving Trust have to say:







Carpe diem


*
EPC (Energy performance Certificate) rated; not rated by any of the rating agencies dominating financial headlines, the rats.

Tuesday 4 May 2010

you don't know how lucky you are, boy...

... no, not back in the USSR!

This "lucky" refers to the exposure of the UK to Greece, Spain and Portugal...

Analysts at Credit Suisse calculated that UK banks had £25bn of exposure to Greece and Portugal but £75bn to Spain, where the collapse in the property market has already forced banks such as Barclays to admit to bad debt problems and left Royal Bank of Scotland facing questions about its exposure.

"Lloyds' exposure to the three regions is likely to be negligible, we estimate that Barclays has £40bn exposure (predominantly loans in Spain and Portugal, excluding daily positions in Barclays Capital), and RBS has around £30bn–£35bn (again predominantly Spain, although we estimate £3bn to £4bn in Portugal and Greece as well)," the Credit Suisse analysts said.
Guardian

At the same time, here is which EUROland (UK is POUNDland!) bails out Greece with how much - for now:

Financial Times

And this is the same over time:

Financial Times

So one could read this as last respite for ES and IT, Spain and Italy; but the draws might be split 8:3 between the countries and the IMF. Anyway, will this help such candidates like ES and IT? They are down with a bad cold and this will give them the final cough?!

I am sure, there will be more to share and split for the UK in the near future!

Carpe diem!




double dip or dip, deep, deeper ...

... into depression?

Last Friday night I attended a lecture on Scotland "after the recession"; well presented and lots of information on how and why Scotland - so far - managed to cope pretty well.

The quotation marks in the title expressed the lecturer's doubts obviously shared by the majority of the audience of where we really are; "in" a recession, “about to get out of one" or is this the beginning of what could be seismic changes?

Even though we talked about
Scotland in Scotland the dominating influence of what happens outside tiny wee Scotland, in Europe, in fact in the world is mind-boggling and some of this is mirrored in the headlines about Greece and the EURO just these last days.

Take nothing for granted!
100 years ago this planet hosted little more than one billion people; little did they know what they were in for: lots of turmoil and drastic life style changes, WWI and II, almost No. III, but also mobile phones, cars, refrigerators, free markets, freedom to travel for many and then plenty of everything for most; mobility unlimited: long live capitalism.

My Grandma, born 1905, knew the last German Kaiser, saw Hitler come and kill, lost it all, started from scratch and lived until the years when all-German Chancellor Kohl celebrated the flourishing German landscapes dogmatising the has-to-be-EURO.

In homage of capitalism and to rope in a reunited Greater Germany Europe installed this distressed single currency called EURO - eight years later we now pick up the pieces.

Think to the end!
The EURO is history: it was to provide shelter for the export champion
Germany, sharing the bed with the other European economies that were and are net importers, and until 2002 had had to devalue their former individual currencies regularly; one pole and lots of antipoles; however, the exchange market acted as the relief valve and balanced the imbalances. One Pound after the war was DM11.00, it would be DM2.30, now; Italy added zeros (on the left) to the old Lira prices only to then cut them off on the New-Lira notes and to print more of those; same in France and Spain and Portugal - nobody called anybody PIGS then - but the daily figures for buying bread and butter had just become too long and too complicated to only be spoken out before the bread was getting old. With the EURO in place the antipoles acted as importers of what Germany put out even better - alone, it was all based on the buyers' growing EURO debt levels and an increasing (trade-)imbalance amongst the EURO countries. It had to implode (and where it hasn't yet it will) as the basic problem remains unsolved no matter how many “rescue-packages” they will come up with.

Look beyond...
Keeping the shine and moving forward by just pumping more debts of deeply indebted economies into what are over indebted economies, anyway, while the global war for the weakest currency and the lowest production cost, i.e. export by hook or by crook, has only just begun ... how does this make sense? When all seek their Heil in exporting who is going to import, to pay …how … when? The white spots on the maps are long filled with colour and data, no more new emerging markets, we have addressed them all; growth finds its limit on the given surface of this planet.

... revisit ...
the alternative: new Drachma for Greece writing off huge chunks of its debts and shelving the rest until the pigs start to fly will make Greece the holy golden tourist land and at the same time provide cheap labour right at the European doorstep; no need to go to China for labour intensive production and more pressure and competition just around the corner of EUROland. But then, would not EURO-trapped
Portugal, Spain, Italy, Ireland, even France and very likely any other leftover EURO country want to enter the same Greek path? Dump debts the fast and easy way, provide jobs for their workers and import hard currency through extensive tourism programmes? A card house’s collapse does not happen in slow motion.

At the end the EURO would be hard but brittle like glass until it had finally destroyed the one and only supporting leg of what once was an export champion's famous economy; then imports to Germany might become inexpensive and worthwhile had not the German masses' purchase power been destroyed long ago.

A vicious circle...
Indeed, it is the classic robbing Peter to pay Paul or vice versa decision. Actually, I do not believe in the politicians being able to solve this overwhelming problem at all - simply because they are the very same that led us into this situation not listening to those many experts that had predicted exactly what has happened so far and is going to happen now. It was just so easy to see it coming and they were told more than once by very competent people.

... and so downward this spiral …
With or without a decision for or against hanging in there, the Euro, in fact Europe has lost its momentum; it has lost its competitiveness, the Europeans are exploited, sedated and stuck in serious but then deflective problems such as migration and ageing of their population; the real challenges, opportunities and markets with still some growth potential from consuming to purchase power are found in Asia; a pity that those are pretty much protected by language and more so by political and social structures.


…tightening in on us!

After what was dreamt to be one free, unlimited global market this vicious spiral is very likely to take us back into what was called sectionalism, once; in 1815 38 independent states formed the “Deutsche Bund”, an early structure of Germany later entering the Treaty of Rome (1957). It is worthwhile mentioning that only in 1833 the “Zollverein” tried to harmonise weights and currencies to allow the “Deutsche Bund” to assimilate what was a pot of different currencies within its members – a long process that even today under European structures is still not finished – but was crowned eight years ago prematurely with a single currency lacking any kind of solid substructure.

And Scotland ...?
What will happen is all but in our Scottish hands; regional or national election will not make a blind bit of difference; however, since waiting for who, devil or Beelzebub, will be the winner offers no progress we might as well prepare ourselves for what will happen undoubtedly; devil and Beelzebub have in common that the “time after” will feel like somebody hit the reset button; the fight for labour and for competitive, hard currency collecting export goods will repeat 19th and 20th centuries’ headlines; at the same time access to resources will only be available for those who pay in advance with hard currency or utterly inflated paper money. Protectionism is around the corner when all is in short supply and needs fighting for.

If Scotland was considered a company, what would the management do? Would it not try to make the company as independent as possible from external influences? Would it not increase the level of self sufficiency? Would it not secure labour and stock up on any possible resource and raw material it needed in case of a crisis? So for Scotland this means to get much more independent – not politically but economically, i.e. its dependence on food, energy, all kinds of resources and at the same time secure labour and self-supply. The import of tourists' hard currency might become very difficult should the EURO and/or the Dollar decide to take a plunge; vice versa, imports of food and energy would become very difficult should the Pound be targeted as the next speculation victim – any of this can be better weathered if we made ourselves as independent as possible.

This might all be depressive news; but then, much better than a long, dark depression. So go for it.

Carpe diem!