|
Country outstrips UK, Japan, France and Canada as renewable energy capacity soars India added 2.33GW of grid-connected renewable power capacity during the year to the end of March, according to a statement from the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, mRead more |
|
Partner Demand Centre will serve as central hub for reseller marketing activity Cisco has created a new organisation tasked with boosting the speed and efficiency of partner marketing activities. The Cisco Partner Demand Centre will provide assistance toRead more |
|
Cybercrime awareness day warns internet users that online scams cost victims on average £325 each Cybercriminals cost the British public £3.5bn a year in frauds, scams and identity theft, according to the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca)....Read more |
|
Vendor hires new UK supremo to back revamped partner programme Ruckus Wireless’ new UK chief is banking on the vendor’s first deal registration scheme and a fortified top-partner level to help grow its reseller base....Read more |
|
Fibrestream boss wants Ofcom the put pressure on the telecoms giant Community network specialist Fibrestream has asked UK comms regulator Ofcom to force BT to provide the postcodes that will receive its fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC) connection....Read more |
White House meeting aims to kick start US climate bill
President Obama yesterday rolled up his sleeves and waded into theincreasingly fractious debate surrounding plans for a US climate bill, gathering
key Democrat and Republican senators in a meeting at the White House to discuss
how to move the stalled legislation forward.
The meeting, which also included members of Obama's cabinet, reportedly
failed to deliver concrete breakthroughs but was still seen as a boost to the
chances of passing flagship legislation that many observers believe has been
neglected as a result of the White House's focus on passing healthcare reform.
The meeting was attended by the bipartisan trio of Senators – Democrat John
Kerry, independent Joe Lieberman, and Republican Lindsey Graham – who have been
working on a compromise version of the bill designed to secure the 60 votes
necessary for it to pass the Senate.
They did not present the final version of their proposals, which is still
expected later this month, but they assured the president that they were making
swift progress towards delivering a compromise bill.
"We're moving very rapidly," Kerry told reporters after the White House
meeting, adding that a series of further meetings to iron out remaining issues
were scheduled for next week.
Significantly, attendees at the meeting said that the president reiterated
his desire to see climate change legislation pass this year, and rejected
proposals that the administration scale back the bill to focus solely on energy,
ditching controversial measures designed to curb carbon emissions and focusing
instead on targets for renewable energy generation.
Senator Graham told reporters that proposals from a number of senators,
including his fellow Republican Lisa Murkowski, to focus only on the energy part
of the bill would not secure support from senators keen to see measures to
tackle emissions included which is necessary to reach the crucial 60 vote mark.
A White House spokesman said that the president would throw his weight behind
the senators' efforts to secure cross-party support for the legislation.
"The president expressed his strong support for a bipartisan effort to
establish clean energy incentives that will create jobs and reduce our
dependence on foreign oil," he said. "[The senators] agreed to continue the
dialogue about a path forward for comprehensive energy legislation."
Few fresh details were revealed about the shape of the new draft bill, which
is widely expected to include increased support for nuclear energy, clean coal
technologies and offshore oil drilling, in an attempt to secure support from
moderate Republicans.
However, senator Lieberman did reveal that the bill would ditch the term
'cap-and-trade', but could still include a scaled back version of emissions
trading focused on the energy sector.
"We don't use that term any more," Lieberman told reporters. "We will have
pollution reduction targets."
Cap-and-trade has proved the most divisive element of the bill with many
Republican senators characterising it as a "cap-and-tax" scheme, warning that
binding limits on emissions for carbon intensive facilities will damage US
competitiveness and drive up energy prices.
Democrats have rejected accusations that the scheme would result in job
losses, but now appear to be edging towards a compromise that would retain some
form of carbon pricing, but would scale back the reach of the scheme and
incorporate safeguards designed to ensure that affected firms do not migrate
overseas.
Arts & Entertainment
Design, Organizations, Classical Studies, Digital, Visual Arts
Business & Economy
Management, Marketing And Advertising, Textiles And Nonwovens
Computers & Internet
Mobile Computing, Cad And Cam, Data Formats
Health & Sports
Medicine, Conditions And Diseases, Reproductive Health, Weight Loss, Aging, Organizations
Shopping
General Merchandise, Travel, Health, Ethnic And Regional, Consumer Electronics
Kids
School Time, People And Society, Entertainment, Pre-School, Games, Your Family
|
A comprehensive PC clean-up and optimisation tool The issue of having to upgrade an ageing PC is rarely a welcome one, and could involve considerable expense in a business environment. Squeezing the life from a struggling machine is therefore common prRead more |
|
Sam Fisher is no longer confined to the shadows In the fifth full-length Splinter Cell game, Sam Fisher becomes a rogue agent. Anyone unfamiliar with the events leading up to this needn’t worry though, as everything you need to know about Sam and hisRead more |
|
Download films and TV programmes to rent or buy Most of us are now used to the idea of paid-for music downloads, but other forms of entertainment have yet to take off in digital format. Books, for instance, are now being downloaded in large numbers, beRead more |

