July 04, 2007 24/7 News Coverage packed with life
Iridium Passes First Milestone On Way To Deploying NEXT
Bethesda MD (SPX) Jul 04, 2007
Iridium Satellite announces it has released a Request for Information (RFI) to potential partners interested in participating in the design, development and deployment of "Iridium NEXT," the company's next-generation satellite communications network. The Iridium RFI is the company's first official step toward the procurement of the NEXT system. Today's Iridium constellation provides the only mob ... read more

RSS FEEDS - SPACE : EARTH : WAR : ENERGY : SOLAR : GPS
 

Memory Foam Mattress Review
 
Previous Issues Jul 03 Jul 02 Jun 29 Jun 28 Jun 27
Russia Threatens Missile Deployment But US Shrugs Off Threat As Not Constructive
Moscow (AFP) Jul 04, 2007
Russia issued a veiled threat on Wednesday to deploy rockets in its Kaliningrad region bordering the European Union if the United States built a missile defence shield in central Europe. Moscow and Washington are locked in a standoff over the US plans for a radar station in the Czech Republic and interceptor rockets in Poland. Russia says the plans threaten its security. The threat to put missil ... more

India Monsoons Leave Hundreds Dead And Millions Stranded
New Delhi (AFP) Jul 04, 2007
The death toll from this year's monsoon climbed to 474 on Wednesday as blinding rains lashed eastern India, according to officials and media reports. Two more deaths in the past 24 hours pushed the death toll to 13 in drenched West Bengal, officials said in state capital Kolkata where knee-deep flood waters invaded homes and offices. The city of 16 million people had received 300 millimetres (11 ... more

Ancient Arctic Ponds Drying Up
Montreal (AFP) Jul 04, 2007
Ancient ponds in the Artic tundra in northern Canada are drying up and some will disappear in less than a quarter-century due to global warming, Canadian researchers report in a new study. "Using these data, we show that some high Arctic pond ecosystems, which represent the most common aquatic habitat in many polar regions, have desiccated as a consequence of climate change," says the study, pub ... more

Environmental Degradation A Growing Public Danger To People In China
Beijing (AFP) Jul 04, 2007
China's environment is close to breaking point and the situation is endangering people's lives, one of the nation's top anti-pollution officials said in comments published Wednesday. Pan Yue, an outspoken vice minister at the State Environmental Protection Administration, said campaigns to clean-up the environment were going backwards because the country's primary focus continued to be on econom ... more

Activists Demand Full Details Of German Nuclear Plant Fire
Kiel, Germany (AFP) Jul 04, 2007
Environmentalists on Wednesday blasted an energy company for failing to reveal the full extent of a fire last week at a German nuclear power plant. The German branch of Friends of the Earth, BUND, demanded from European energy group Vattenfall "full transparency in the investigation of the causes of the fire and possible dangers." A company spokesman dismissed the criticism, saying it had provid ... more

  superpowers:
  • Eyeing The Shanghai Group In 2007

    superpowers:
  • US And Russia Begin Nuclear Reduction Talks

    africa:
  • Corruption Remains Critical Obstacle To Africa
  •  
    Earth News, Earth Sciences, Climate Change, Energy Technology, Environment News  
    Cities To Boom In Africa And Asia
    Washington DC (UPI) Jul 03, 2007
    The urban populations in Africa and Asia will at least double over the next 30 years to 1.7 billion, adding more people than the Chinese and U.S. populations combined. According to a recent U.N. study, urban populations are growing at more than 1.2 million people a week. In 2008, for the first time in history, city residents outnumber rural population, the report's principal author George Martin ... more

    Japan Defence Chief Sorry For Atom Bomb Remarks, Despite The Obvious
    Tokyo (AFP) July 1, 2007
    Japan's defence minister apologised Sunday after sparking outrage over remarks which implied that the atomic bombs dropped by the United States on Japan were the inevitable way to end World War II. Defence Minister Fumio Kyuma said in a speech on Saturday: "I understand the bombings brought the war to its end. I think it was something that couldn't be helped." He apologised on Sunday durin ... more

    BAE Systems Completes Major New Facility For Ionospheric Physics Research
    Gakona, Alaska, June 27, 2007
    BAE Systems has completed work on the world's largest and most capable ionospheric research facility. The facility will be used to study interactions between high-power radio signals and the earth's ionosphere. As the prime contractor for the U.S. Defense Department's High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) research station, BAE Systems designed and built the facility, operating s ... more

    French Group Veolia Wins Big Saudi Desalination Contract
    Paris (AFP) June 28, 2007
    The French utility services group Veolia has won a contract worth 702 million euros (945 million dollars) to design and build a water desalination plant in Saudia Arabia, Veolia said Thursday. The facility will also produce its own electricity, and construction is to be handled by a consortium that includes General Electric of the United States, the Korean group Hyundai Heavy Industries, and Veo ... more

    Another Potential Cure For HIV Discovered
    Chicago (AFP) Jun 29, 2007
    In a breakthrough that could potentially lead to a cure for HIV infection, scientists have discovered a way to remove the virus from infected cells, a study released Thursday said. The scientists engineered an enzyme which attacks the DNA of the HIV virus and cuts it out of the infected cell, according to the study published in Science magazine. The enzyme is still far from being ready to ... more

      eo:
  • GOP House Science Committee To Evaluate NASA Earth Science Budget

    pollution:
  • Islands Off China Vanishing Under Weight Of Exploitation

    earth:
  • In Russian Far East Nature Makes No Allowances For Tourists

    earth:
  • Arizona Starts Research Initiative At Biosphere 2
  •  
    Energy News - Technology - Business - Environment  
    Australian Drought Turns To Flood As California Dries Out
    Sydney (AFP) July 1, 2007
    As severe water restrictions take effect in Australia's major agricultural area, experts say there are signs the country's worst drought in a century may finally be coming to an end. Torrential rain last week flooded parts of Victoria state, just weeks after a deluge hit New South Wales and left nine people dead. The rains helped replenish dwindling dam levels in some of Australia's major ... more

    The Challenge Of Desertification
    United Nations (UPI) June 28, 2007
    Climate change manifests itself in many ways in different parts of the globe. While flooding is the fear of small island states and seaside communities in several parts of the globe, it is desertification in many other regions, fertile fields transformed into "drylands," threatening international stability. Desertification has been dubbed "the greatest environmental challenge of our times. ... more

    Statoil And Shell Scrap Carbon Capture Plans To Pump More Oil
    Oslo (AFP) June 29, 2007
    Norwegian oil group Statoil and Britain's Shell said Friday they were scrapping plans to use carbon dioxide (CO2) to increase oil production. An evaluation showed that "though the value chain is technically feasible, it is not commercial viable," Statoil said in a statement. The project, announced in March 2006, involved the construction of a gas-fired power plant and a methanol production facil ... more

    EU To Relaunch Ties With Africa Amid Rising Chinese Influence
    Brussels (AFP) Jun 29, 2007
    The European Union aims to set up a strategic partnership with Africa to meet the continent's most important needs and match growing Chinese influence there, officials said Thursday. "We are looking for new, high-level relations. We want it to be a strategic partnership," Portugal's State Secretary for European Affairs, Manuel Lobo Antunes, told reporters. "We want to respond to individual ... more

    Hong Kong Choked By Growing Pollution Problem
    Hong Kong (AFP) June 30, 2007
    Discarded cigarette packets, McDonald's wrappers and even old socks litter the shores of Lau Fau Shan in Hong Kong's far north, home to what remains of the territory's oyster farming industry. From across the border in China, factories belch smoke into the fetid air over Deep Bay, one of Hong Kong's most polluted stretches of water. Ten years after the territory was handed back to the Chin ... more

    24/7 news coverage of Your world at War.  
      nuclear-civil:
  • Russia And France Establish JV To Produce Nuclear Power Planet Turbines

    gas:
  • Russia Pipeline No Threat To Europe Caspian Project Says Gazprom

    nuclear-civil:
  • Belarus To Announce Nuclear Power Planet Tender Soon

    gas:
  • India-Iran-Pakistan Talks On Gas Pipeline Still To Continue
  •  
    Previous Issues Jul 06 Jul 05 Jul 04 Jul 03 Jul 02

    The contents herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy statement