Friday, December 30, 2011

Emissions Trading System shrinks economy but not Britain's carbon footprint




The EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) is siphoning billions from industry and consumers to plump up finance and energy fat cats, according a new Civitas report. The report reveals that, via the EU ETS, each EU citizen is effectively subsidising the power industry by £30 a year. [p. 13] In addition, the Government is adding more costs to UK families and businesses via the carbon price floor which sets a minimum price for carbon credits. This carbon price floor is expected to push another 110,000 British households into fuel poverty by 2016. [p. 61]....................

  • Energy companies are charging higher prices because of the EU ETS without actually cutting emissions.By the end of 2012, European energy companies will have generated between €16-€50 billion in windfall profits from their access to free EU ETS credits while simultaneously passing the non-existent cost on to consumers. [p. 15]

  • Harvesting carbon credits by deliberately generating additional emissions. The Clean Development Mechanism allows HFC-23 gas (normally a by-product of creating other gases for refrigeration) to be created purely for the purpose of destroying it in an environmentally friendly way. HFC-23 is 11,700 times more damaging than CO2. €2.8 billion worth of industrial gas credits have entered the EU ETS market, as entire businesses have sprung up, especially in China, dedicated to producing this gas. After intense pressure from industrial lobbyists, the scrapping of these credits was delayed from January to May 2013, so more credits can now flood the system. [pp. 17-27]

  • Exploiting the badly policed international market to engage in fraud. This includes 'phishing' for passwords that allow credits to be transferred to criminals, as well as selling fake and already spent credits. 90 per cent of all market volume was estimated to be fraudulent in 2009. €5 billion have been lost in 'carousel' VAT fraud since the EU ETS's creation. [p.33-35]

In addition, major banks are profiteering from the EU ETS. Originally supposed to act as intermediaries for covered installations, they run auctions to manipulate and dominate the carbon credit market.


CO2.1, by David Merlin-Jones, is a comprehensive examination of how the EU ETS fails at its own goal of reducing carbon emissions. It details how carbon traders, banks, energy companies and the government are extracting billions from productive businesses and consumers via the EU ETS, while undermining the vulnerable UK economic recovery.

Ultimately, Merlin-Jones shows that the EU ETS is ineffective at reducing emissions. The strategy will do little for the environment until 2016 at the earliest, over ten years after its introduction. [p. 56] The result is more pain for the economy but without real relief for the environment:
CO2.1: Beyond the EU's Emissions Trading System is available from the Civitas shop (RRP: £12.50) and by calling 020 7799 6677.

Reading, writing, arithmetic ... and character?

Key to school improvement: Reading, writing, arithmetic ... and character? 
A study of 20 elementary schools in Hawaii has found that a focused program to build social, emotional and character skills resulted in significantly improved overall quality of education, as evaluated by teachers, parents and students.

Innapropriate use of Facebook & Twitter


Roger Baker, who led a review into police corruption for Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary, said: "Social networking is seen as a risk by all forces and authorities, but there are limited or inconsistent policies around what is acceptable, what you should do, what you shouldn't do.
"We found a significant blurring between people's professional lives on social networking sites and their private lives which may be in the public domain and private lives which probably should remain extremely private."

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Brain damage and crime

Having epilepsy is not linked to committing violent crime 
Despite current public and expert opinion to the contrary, having the neurological condition epilepsy is not directly associated with an increased risk of committing violent crime. However, there is an increased risk of individuals who have experienced previous traumatic brain injury going on to commit violent crime according to a large Swedish study led by Seena Fazel from the University of Oxford, UK, and colleagues at the Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, and Swedish Prison and Probation Service, and published in this week's PLoS Medicine.

Miscarriage of justice points to fingerprint flaws


New Scientist


  • FINGERPRINTS were once the cornerstone of forensic identification. Now a report into a miscarriage of justice has renewed pressure on print examiners to improve their methods, while two new studies reveal the extent of their fallibility. The results could change the fingerprint profession worldwide.
The Fingerprint Inquiry was launched by the Scottish government after detective Shirley McKie was acquitted of perjury. Flawed fingerprint analysiswas the only evidence against her. The report, published on 14 December, concludes that human error was to blame and voices serious concerns about how fingerprint analysts report matches. It recommends that they no longer report conclusions with 100 per cent certainty, and develop a process for analysing complex, partial or smudged prints involving at least three independent examiners who fully document their findings..............

Saturday, December 24, 2011

New forms of torture leave 'invisible scars', say researchers
Use of torture around the world has not diminished but the techniques used have grown more complex and sophisticated, according to new research from Queen Mary, University of London.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

“Battling the Internet Water Army: Detection of Hidden Paid Posters,” can be read at: http://arxiv.org/abs/1111.4297
China’s “Internet water army,” so-called because these paid posters are hired to “flood” websites with comments and threads concerning products and services.
Sleep disorders common among police officers 
A survey of police officers indicated that about 40 percent have a sleep disorder, which was associated with an increased risk of adverse health, safety and performance outcomes, according to a study in the December 21 issue of JAMA.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011


Councils are detecting much more fraud but there's still plenty of places to hide, warns Michael O'Higgins. Criminals are finding new ways of plundering public money... 

Creating government procurement review bodies could help bring ‘lean thinking’ into public sector contract awards, according to a competition lawyer...

Police need clear, publicly agreed rules for dealing with disorder in the wake of this summer’s riots, the Inspectorate of Constabulary said today...
Myths about psychopaths busted 
(Medical Xpress) -- New research challenges the belief that psychopaths are born not made, and suggests psychopaths may even be able to change their spots.
Romania, FBI agents to crack down on cybercriminals 
On computer screens and on the ground, Romanian and American FBI agents stalk cybercriminals, trying to beat them at their own game as fraud originating in Romania has risen dramatically.

The role of social media in protests

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-12-role-social-media-protests.html
(PhysOrg.com) -- A study has explored the dynamics behind social network sites in recruiting and spreading calls for action that contribute to riots, revolutions and protests.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

National pride brings happiness -- but what you're proud of matters

National pride brings happiness -- but what you're proud of matters
(Medical Xpress) -- Research shows that feeling good about your country also makes you feel good about your own life and many people take that as good news. But Matthew Wright, a political scientist at American University, and Tim Reeskens, a sociologist from Catholic University in Belgium, suspected that the positive findings about nationalism weren't telling the whole story. "It's fine to say pride in your country makes you happy," says Wright. "But what kind of pride are we talking about? That turns out to make a lot of difference. The intriguing and politically suggestive differences they found appear in a commentary in Psychological Science, a journal published by the Association for Psychological Science.

Binge drinking by freshman women tied to sexual assault risk

Binge drinking by freshman women tied to sexual assault risk, according to new research
Many young women who steer clear of alcohol while they're in high school may change their ways once they go off to college. And those who take up binge drinking may be at relatively high risk of sexual assault, according to a University at Buffalo-led study in the January issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Adolescent drinking may be as important a risk factor for criminal activity as illicit drug use

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-12-adolescent-important-factor-criminal-illicit.html
Alcohol use has often been linked to criminal activity on the part of both perpetrators as well as victims. While this relationship has been well documented among adults, fewer studies have explored this relationship among adolescents. A new study has found a strong relationship between drinking during adolescence and the commission of crimes, and criminal victimization, for both genders.

What makes solo terrorists tick?

What makes solo terrorists tick?
The double terrorist attack in Norway last July, which claimed 77 lives, has moved violent acts committed by single individuals up the political, media and now research agendas. Known as "lone wolf terrorism," these acts are carried out independently of established terrorist organizations. In his new report 'Understanding Lone Wolf Terrorism,' Dr. Ramón Spaaij, from La Trobe University in Australia and the University of Amsterdam, examines this so-far largely unexplored phenomenon.

Crunching Data to Stop Baddies Before They Strike By Vince Beiser

Law enforcement agencies throughout the country are adopting a statistical approach to policing that can help predict when and where crimes are likely to occur. Pulling together burgeoning public data sets on everything from school schedules to home foreclosures and correlating them with crime stats, analysts can spot surprising patterns that help departments anticipate problems and identify emerging hot spots. Here’s how four cities are using predictive policing to get a jump on the bad guys.
http://tinyurl.com/7dwwl7x

Thursday, December 15, 2011

26 versus 1 — really?

Mats Persson
http://www.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/7483143/26-versus-1-really.thtml

Judging from much of the coverage in UK media, you would be forgiven for thinking that Britain is on the fast track to becoming the North Korea of Europe — eccentric and completely isolated from the rest of the world. Indeed, the media narrative over the past couple of days has largely treated the agreement reached at the summit as concrete, supported in full by everyone apart from Britain. Or ‘27-minus’, as Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso put it.

The reality, of course, is quite different. Leaving aside whether Cameron could have played his cards better (he could have), as Gideon Rachman pointed out in yesterday’s FT, ‘the picture of an isolated Britain’ will become blurred as the rest of Europe grapples with the Merkozy deal.

So let’s have a look at the level of support in cabinets and parliaments around Europe, for the deal’s main points: fiscal integration, stricter EU budget rules and sanctions, new rules for the euro’s permanent bailout fund (the ESM) and fresh cash contributions to the IMF.

Study calls for the ban of online terror material

SOCIAL networking sites like Facebook and YouTube are being used by terrorist groups to groom vulnerable people, and Australia and its international partners should be limiting extremist propaganda on the internet, a new study says.

Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI)

Social exclusion among shift workers and older people

Social exclusion among shift workers and older people
Older people and those who work non-standard hours are less likely to feel integrated into society, according to a study funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)

Ineffective group dynamics play a role in poor research reporting

Ineffective group dynamics play a role in poor research reporting
Ineffective group dynamics within research groups and research collaborations contribute to the unrealistic picture of the data generated in scientific research, according to Judith Rosmalen and Albertine Oldehinkel from the University of Groningen in The Netherlands. In an Essay published in this week's PLoS Medicine, these researchers say: "We feel it is time for scientists to also critically evaluate their own role, and acknowledge that group dynamics within research groups and collaborations might contribute to the persistence of problematic scientific practices."

Majority of jailed women face mental issues

Majority of jailed women face mental issues
(Medical Xpress) -- While University of South Carolina researcher Dana DeHart was visiting jails to interview inmates about their backgrounds, she kept seeing a woman who clearly had mental health issues, yet continued to cycle in and out of the jail.

Nuclear or not? Check the figures

How sustainable is nuclear power for the UK?
The research into the sustainability of nuclear and other electricity options in the UK shows that nuclear power could make a significant contribution to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 2035. However, that would require a huge expansion of nuclear, constituting 35% of the electricity mix by 2035, almost double the current contribution.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Restorative Justice in schools

Restorative practices found to be effective alternative to zero tolerance in schools
Restorative practices appear to be an effective alternative to exclusionary and punitive zero-tolerance behavior policies mandated in many schools today.

Jury's out on top Australian judge's push for court review

TOP judge says juries should be dumped from criminal trials as evidence gets more complicated
http://tinyurl.com/7sdsoln

  • Top judge says evidence too complicated in criminal trials
  • Justice Peter McClellan says there's a growing reluctance to serve
  • Trials without juries "far less time consuming"

Knowledge Management, lamentably lacking!

How to harvest work knowledge

All staff learn as they do their jobs, building up individual mines of useful information. But sometimes it stays inside them instead of being shared more widely and they take it with them when they leave the organisation. Ann McFadyen explains how to help everyone have those lightbulb moments

Apprenticeship funding is ‘dysfunctional’

Apprenticeship funding is ‘dysfunctional’

Apprenticeships should deliver higher quality skills and reach more young people, according to research published today...

Lax spending controls ‘risk damaging police integrity’

Lax spending controls ‘risk damaging police integrity’

The lack of checks on small-scale spending across police forces poses a ‘major risk’ to public money and could damage the reputation of the police service itself, inspectors have warned...

Evacuation plans need to incorporate family perspectives

New study shows evacuation plans need to incorporate family perspectives
A study sponsored by the National Science Foundation found that most respondents felt the evacuation of New Orleans residents to the Superdome after Hurricane Katrina was a "failure" and this opinion has shaped their willingness to accept shelter if offered in an emergency evacuation.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

The globalization of sex trafficking

Researcher studies the globalization of sex trafficking and the organizations that work to stop it
In today's world, human trafficking is not an isolated problem, but a growing global issue. A Kansas State University professor is studying ways that anti-trafficking groups are fighting back.

True in Engalnd as well!

Author Grisham laments bad courtroom science
Best-selling crime author John Grisham told lawmakers that faulty science is all over the US justice system, and urged nationwide improvements to forensic techniques.

MPs brand MoD’s procurement ‘extraordinary failure’

MPs brand MoD’s procurement ‘extraordinary failure’

The Ministry of Defence failed to deliver any armored vehicles in more than a decade, despite spending £1.1bn on its main procurement scheme, the Public Accounts Committee has said...

Guardian News and Media : sustainability report, Living our Values

Guardian News and Media has published the latest version of their independently-audited sustainability report, Living our Values.

It discusses the future of our journalism, how we cover climate change and social justice and highlights innovations in our commercial department and advances in our operational carbon strategy.
www.guardian.co.uk/sustainability

Guardian News and Media has published the latest version of their independently-audited sustainability report, Living our Values

Guardian News and Media has published the latest version of their independently-audited sustainability report, Living our Values.

It discusses the future of our journalism, how we cover climate change and social justice and highlights innovations in our commercial department and advances in our operational carbon strategy.

Monday, December 12, 2011

New Report: The BBC and Climate Change: A Triple Betrayal

http://www.thegwpf.org/press-releases/4520-new-report-the-bbc-and-climate-change-a-triple-betrayal.html

London, 8 December. A new report, published today by the Global Warming Policy Foundation, reveals that the BBC has failed in its professional duty to report accurately and objectively on the issue of climate change, one of the biggest scientific and political stories of our time.

Written by Christopher Booker, one of the UK's most seasoned journalists, the report critically reviews the BBC’s coverage of climate change issues against its statutory obligation to report ‘with due accuracy and impartiality’.

No clear evidence of a decrease in child maltreatment across 6 countries despite decades of policies

No clear evidence of a decrease in child maltreatment across 6 countries despite decades of policies
A Review of child maltreatment trends and policies across six countries/states (England, USA, Sweden, New Zealand, Western Australia [Australia], and Manitoba [Canada]) shows that there is no clear evidence of a decrease in child maltreatment across these nations, despite decades of polices designed to achieve such a reduction. The Review is written by Professor Ruth Gilbert, UK Medical Research Council (MRC) Centre of Epidemiology for Child Health, UCL Institute of Child Health, London, UK, and colleagues across these six nations.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Sorry, didn't mean to riot.

Brendan O’Neill
Getting the rioters to do their dirty work
The Guardian’s study of the August riots is pure advocacy research, designed to harness the power of riotous menace to chattering-class causes.

Still at it, this time in the US!

Romanians charged in US with computer fraud
Four Romanians have been charged with hacking into the computer systems of hundreds of US merchants and making millions of dollars in purchases with stolen credit card data, the Justice Department said Thursday.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Catching terrorists

Backpacks, not the bombs inside, key to finding DNA
Catching terrorists who detonate bombs may be easier by testing the containers that hide the bombs rather than the actual explosives, according to pioneering research led by Michigan State University.

Domestic violence not just at home

Domestic violence not just at home
(PhysOrg.com) -- There is a direct link between domestic violence and productivity in the workplace, with one in five victims experiencing continued harassment from their partners at work, a UNSW study has found.

Britain vs Iran: the politics of nostalgia

Britain vs Iran: the politics of nostalgia
Who’s more deluded: Iranian students who think Britain’s still an imperial threat, or British ministers who fantasise that Iran is EVIL?

Co-existence, inclusivity

New study shows how integrated institutions can lead diverse populations to cooperate in rebuilding countries
(PhysOrg.com) -- One of the most pressing issues in world affairs today is state building: how countries can construct stable, inclusive governments in which a variety of religious and ethnic groups coexist.

Thursday, December 08, 2011

Immigrants - get involved!

Study: Indian, Vietnamese immigrants become 'American' over time through civic activities
Whether contributing money to Boy Scouts, donating a sculpture of Gandhi for a Dallas city plaza, or successfully lobbying against flying Vietnam's communist flag in a citywide international celebration, a new study shows that immigrants in Texas are involved in their communities.

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Study finds increased education lowers crime

Study finds increased education lowers crime
New research from The CIBC Centre for Human Capital and Productivity at The University of Western Ontario shows that education, and related education-based initiatives, can reduce crime rates, improve health, lower mortality rates, and increase political participation.