Big Brother star to wed after terminal cancer confirmed

British Big Brother star Jade Goody has been diagnosed with terminal cancer.
British Big Brother star Jade Goody is fast-tracking plans to get married after being told doctors cannot cure her cancer.

Goody, 27, only has months to live after her cervical cancer spread to her liver, bowel and groin, the British Press Association reported. She sprung into the spotlight during her first appearance in the Big Brother house in 2002, before going on to launch a range of her own products and host television shows. Goody’s return to the house in 2007, on the celebrity edition of the show, ended in ignominy, after her taunting of Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty outraged viewers and resulted in more than 40,000 complaints. However, in August 2008 she accepted an offer to go on the Indian version of Big Brother. Two days into that she was diagnosed with cervical cancer and left the house. Goody’s spokesman, Max Clifford, told PA that Goody was “devastated” and was working to put her legal affairs in order. She has two sons, Bobby, five, and Freddie, four, and has told British media that she wants to leave them financially secure. Her boyfriend, Jack Tweed, had proposed at her hospital bedside, Clifford said. Goody, in a wheelchair, was seen in London on Sunday shopping for a dress.

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Lance Armstrong’s bicycle stolen after race

Lance Armstrong is racing in the California Amgen Tour as he attempts a comeback after retiring in 2005.
A one-of-a-kind bicycle belonging to U.S. cycling legend Lance Armstrong was stolen from a team truck in California just hours after he rode it Saturday on the first day of a nine-day race.

Cancer survivor and seven-time Tour de France champion Armstrong is racing in the Amgen Tour of California this week as he attempts another comeback after retiring from the sport in 2005. Armstrong’s first comeback came in 1998, two years after he was diagnosed with advanced testicular cancer that had spread to his lungs and brain. Doctors gave him a less than 50 percent chance of survival. Armstrong announced the bike theft on his Twitter account Sunday morning and posted a photograph. “There is only one like it in the world therefore hard to pawn it off. Reward being offered,” he wrote. The bicycle that was stolen is not the one that Armstrong rides every day during the race. The stolen bike is used only for time trials, a race in which cyclists ride individually at staggered intervals over a set distance and try to get the best time. The thieves took four bicycles from a truck Armstrong’s Astana team had parked behind a hotel in Sacramento. The other three bicycles belonged to team members Janez Brajkovic, Steve Morabito and Yaroslav Popovych, Astana said.

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Armstrong, 37, won the Tour de France, considered the premiere bicycle race in the world, a record seven times from 1999-2005. The 750-mile Amgen Tour of California ends Sunday. It is the second major race in which Armstrong has participated since announcing his comeback in September. He raced last month in the Tour Down Under in Australia, finishing 29th. Armstrong said he is aiming for another Tour de France victory this summer and was not expected to contend in the Australian race, which he used to gauge his fitness level after more than three years out of the saddle.

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Sex trade, forced labor top U.N. human trafficking list

Aid agencies say young women are being forced into prostitution across Russia's capital.
Sexual exploitation and forced labor are the most common forms of human trafficking in the world, a new report from the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime said.

The “Global Report on Trafficking in Persons” is based on data from 155 countries and offers a global assessment of human trafficking and efforts to fight it. The most common form of human trafficking is sexual exploitation, at 79 percent, the report said. The victims of sexual exploitation are predominantly women and girls. In about one-third of the countries that provided information on the gender of the traffickers, women made up the largest proportion of traffickers. In Central Asia and Eastern Europe, women make up more than 60 percent of those convicted of trafficking. “In these regions, women trafficking women is the norm,” said Antonio Maria Costa, the head of U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime. “It is shocking that former victims become traffickers. We need to understand the psychological, financial and coercive reasons why women recruit other women into slavery.” The second most common form of human trafficking is forced labor, or slavery, making up 18 percent of the total, although the writers of the report say it may be underreported. “How many hundreds of thousands of victims are slaving away in sweat shops, fields, mines, factories, or trapped in domestic servitude” Costa said. “Their numbers will surely swell as the economic crisis deepens the pool of potential victims and increases demand for cheap goods and services.”

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Regardless of the type of human trafficking, nearly one in five of its victims were children, according to the report. “Children’s nimble fingers are exploited to untangle fishing nets, sew luxury goods or pick cocoa,” the report said. “Their innocence is abused for begging, or exploited for sex as prostitutes, pedophilia or child pornography. Others are sold as child brides or camel jockeys.” In a 2008 report on human trafficking, the U.S. State Department listed Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia as destination countries with widespread trafficking abuses, particularly forced laborers trafficked from Asia and Africa who are subject to restrictions on movement, withholding of passports, threats and physical and sexual abuse. The report found those countries made feeble efforts to rescue victims and prosecute traffickers. The department’s report also says slave labor in developing countries such as Brazil, China and India was fueling part of their huge economic growth. Other countries on the blacklist were Algeria, Cuba, Fiji, Iran, Myanmar, Moldova, North Korea, Papua New Guinea, Sudan and Syria. The U.N. Protocol Against Trafficking in Persons has been in place since 2003. The number of member states “seriously implementing” the protocol has doubled, according to the U.N. report. But it singled out Africa for lacking the necessary legal instruments and the will to crack down on human trafficking. “There are strong international agreements to ensure that people’s lives are not for sale,” Costa said. “I urge governments to enforce them.”

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Japan’s economy ‘worst since end of WWII’

A businessman walks past a homeless man taking a nap at a Tokyo park.
Japan is grappling with its worst economic crisis since the end of World War II, the nation’s economic and fiscal policy minister said Monday.

The comments from Kaoru Yosano followed news of Japan’s gross domestic product falling 12.7 percent in the fourth quarter in 2008. “This is the worst economic crisis in the post-war era,” Yosano said at a press conference, according to Japan’s Kyodo news agency. The global economic crisis has pummeled Japan, which depends largely on its auto and electronics exports. The slump in exports has led to tens of thousands of layoffs across Japan. “Behind [the contraction in GDP for] the October-December quarter is a terrific downturn in exports,” he said, according to Kyodo. “Like other major countries, our country cannot avoid the pains of structural change,” Yosano said.

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To stimulate the economy, the Japanese parliament needs to act quickly on key budget measures, he said, referring to bills related to a second supplementary budget for fiscal 2008 and early passage of the state budget for fiscal 2009.

Asked about Japan possibly producing a new economic stimulus plan in the short term, Yosano said wide-ranging discussions would be needed first. “After seeing this level [of GDP], it is our duty to think of various policy options,” he added.

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Accidental Genius: Why a Stradivarius Sounds So Good

Accidental Genius: Why a Stradivarius Sounds So Good

Classical musicians and music lovers believe that prized string instruments are enriched by the generations of virtuosi who have played on them. In the case of the great Cremonese instrument maker Antonio Stradivari, whose violins and cellos have been the choice of the world’s best musicians for three centuries, this belief is coupled with the theory that Stradivari was an inimitable genius on the scale of Mozart and Beethoven. What else could explain why Stradivari’s instruments remain the best in the world so long after the death of their creator?

Try varnish. That’s the theory of Joseph Nagyvary, a professor emeritus of biochemistry at Texas A & M University. In a study published last week in the scientific journal Public Library of Science ONE, Nagyvary argues that Stradivari probably had no idea what made his instruments special because the crucial factor, an externally applied varnish on the wood, was beyond his apprehension or control.

Using the ashes of minute wood samples, Nagyvary analyzed the chemical makeup of violins made by Stradivari and a contemporary Cremonese maker Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesù, whose violins are thought to be near equals to Strads. The ashes of the Strad’s wood contained numerous chemicals — most notably borax and chromium — that suggest it had been aggressively treated with a varnish designed to protect against infestation. The analysis also found that the organic matrix of Stradivari’s wood was damaged and weakened, almost certainly by the application of the mineral preservative, leading Nagyvary to speculate that the wood’s porous quality allows Stradivari instruments to resonate with a rich, powerful tone.

“There is a possibility here that Stradivari received the wood pre-treated and so did not even know these minerals in his wood were the crucial factor for the sound, and this is why, despite almost surely having apprentices, the art of his instrument making was not passed on,” he says.

Nagyvary believes this evidence upends the widespread belief among instrument makers that only the strongest wood can produce a lush, full sound. According to Nagyvary, the opposite is true. He also says it casts doubt on the working hypothesis of many scientists that Stradivari worked during Europe’s “little ice age” of the 15th-17th centuries, in which low summer temperatures led to slow but uniform growth in the Spruce trees used for instruments, and that the wood’s uniform density explains the instruments’ high quality of sound. Last year, researchers in The Netherlands and the U.S. used medical imaging technology to confirm that the wood came from slow-growing trees, and researchers in Sweden have argued that Swedish Spruce in the country’s cold North are the closest specimens Europe now holds to the wood of the Stradivari era. But Nagyvary doesn’t believe the growing conditions of local forests to be an important factor.

“The problem with the Little Ice Age Theory,” he says, “is that the same wood was available to French, German and other violin makers in Europe, but only instruments made in Cremona were any good. I believe that’s because of the special, preservative varnish used there.”

Perhaps. But American concert violinist James Ehnes says that while varnish may be one of the keys to Stradivari’s greatness, it can’t be the only one, for the simple reason that not all Strads sound the same. Ehnes recently released a DVD, Homage, in which he performed on 12 instruments in the Fulton Collection in Seattle — probably the greatest collection of Stradivari and Guarneri violins in the world. Each Strad had its own voice, he says, although there also existed a “family resemblance” throughout the collection. “When I played these instruments I got the feeling that there were a thousand reasons why they were so great. There will never be one secret,” he says.

For musicians, the debate over what defines the Stradivarius sound and the underlying causes for this uniqueness may soon be academic, as private collectors drive the price beyond their reach. “The era when musicians could afford their own Strad is coming to an end,” Ehnes says. The concert violinist Cho-Liang Lin says the Stradivarius he bought for $300,000 25 years ago is probably worth $3 million now. He points to the sale of recently deceased cellist Mstislav Rostropovich’s Duport Stradivarius, which trade publications recently put at $20 million. “There’s no way even a highly successful young musician could afford that,” he says.

But Lin’s dismay is tempered by excitement over a new generation of instrument makers who, utilizing research by Nagyvary and others, are producing violins, cellos and violas almost indistinguishable in quality from a Stradivarius. Lin himself often plays on a violin made by a Brooklyn-based luthier, Sam Zygmuntowicz. Idaho-based cello maker Christopher Dungey has made instruments for the world’s top cellists. Lin says, “We don’t know whether the modern instruments we’re using will be, after 100 years of vigorous playing, equal to Stradivarius. They already sound pretty darn good right now.”

Yet even if scientists were to establish a unified theory for Stradivari’s greatness, musicians will always be inclined to spiritual explanations that reflect the numinous and otherworldly qualities of classical music itself. In October 1987, my father, Lynn Harrell, a cellist, performed at London’s Royal Festival Hall a week after the death of Jacqueline du Pre, the beautiful and extravagantly talented British cellist whose career was cut short at 28 when numbness in her fingers turned out to be Multiple Sclerosis, a disease that eventually killed her. It was an emotional experience: by that time, my father was playing one of du Pre’s cellos — a 1674 Stradivarius — and he was due to use it to perform Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto in E Minor, a piece of barely restrained mourning that took on added power in the memory of du Pre’s playing. “I dedicated the performance to her,” my father recalls. “For years after I bought the Strad I could hear Jackie’s [artistic] voice when I played, especially when I played Elgar. Perhaps all the hours she spent working on projecting a certain coloring and style minutely warped and changed the wood so that it more readily put forth her particular style. I don’t know. But I’m sure of this: her musical presence remained in that instrument.”

See pictures of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra playing in North Korea.

Read a TIME story about Stradivari.

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Viewing TV Outside The Box

Viewing TV Outside The Box

The day after thanksgiving, my TiVo died. Because it doubles as my cable box, this meant that for the week it took to get a replacement, my TV was dead as well. This would be a tragic circumstance for most Americans. But for a TV critic, it was a blow to my livelihood. I was like a cotton farmer after a weevil infestation. I was cut off from the main pipeline of American media life.

Or I would have been, a couple of years ago. Now, however, my situation offered a learning experience in TV-free TV. I had no cable, but I had DSL and a houseful of gizmos with screens: desktop, laptop, cell phone. Could I make do with them Plenty of my countrymen do. Through necessity, I was entering a club more viewers are joining by choice: the posttelevision society. Some download TV to avoid ads. Some Netflix series so they can watch them in one big marathon. Some like the convenience, some the portability. Some are cutting their cable or satellite bills to save money in hard times. Millions of others use online video as a backup–Huluing dramas they missed live, watching March Madness on CBSSports.com or Wimbledon on ESPN360. The business implications of all this are huge. Who will get paid for the TV of the future How do you replace TV-commercial revenue And how do you measure a hit when more and more of the audience is watching on computers, on DVD players, via video-game consoles or on the screen of the bike at the gym These are all important questions. But not for me. Mine were: Could I satisfactorily watch TV without a box How would it change my experience And more broadly, now that TV is divorced from the television , now that video is as portable as a Grisham paperback, now that big-budget series can be blog-embedded and e-mailed just like your YouTube video of your cat falling asleep–what are we even talking about when we talk about TV My TV Is Dead. Long Live TV! First hurdle first: Online video has gotten much better since the days of watching a jerky postage stamp over the din of your hard drive whirring like an espresso grinder. While my plasma monolith sat mute, I watched 30 Rock in high-quality video on my laptop through Hulu.com My iPhone doubled as a wireless video device. By downloading free apps like Joost and Truveo, I could use its brilliantly lit display–a munchkin plasma screen–to watch last night’s Daily Show and Gilmore Girls reruns. Much of what I couldn’t get free, I could buy from iTunes and carry with me. I watched Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles on the subway, The Office in my office. Some things were unavailable–quit being stingy with the Top Chef, Bravo!–but what I lost in choice I made up for in serendipity. I downloaded video podcasts from Cook’s Illustrated, watched Rob Corddry’s Web comedy Children’s Hospital and rediscovered the cult comedy Strangers with Candy because it turned up randomly through the Joost app on my iPhone. See the 100 best TV shows of all time. See the 50 best inventions of 2008.

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Afghanistan to help review U.S. war on terror

Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai, right, meets with Richard Holbrooke in Kabul on February 15, 2009.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Sunday that his country would join the strategic review of the U.S.-led war on terrorism.

Speaking at a joint news conference with visiting U.S. diplomat Richard Holbrooke, Karzai said he is “very, very thankful” that President Barack Obama accepted his proposal to join the review. Holbrooke is visiting Afghanistan after a trip to neighboring Pakistan. Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tapped Holbrooke as special representative for the two countries, a signal of how the new administration considers Afghanistan and Pakistan intertwined in any solution to the war in Afghanistan and the terrorist threat along their shared border. At the news conference in Kabul, Holbrooke said Sunday that he conveyed the administration’s support of the upcoming elections on August 20, a date recently set by Afghanistan’s electoral commission. “President Obama and Secretary Clinton and the United States government were very gratified to hear President Karzai reaffirm his support of the August 20 decision,” Holbrooke said. Holbrooke’s visit comes as Obama plans to send another 30,000 troops to Afghanistan to fight what he’s called the “central front in our enduring struggle against terrorism and extremism.”

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In an interview on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS,” which aired Sunday, Karzai said that, with a resurgent Taliban, a still-flourishing drug trade and a border with Pakistan believed to be home base for al Qaeda, his country can’t afford for U.S. troops to leave any time soon. “U.S. forces will not be able to leave soon in Afghanistan because the task is not over,” Karzai said. “We have to defeat terrorism. We’ll have to enable Afghanistan to stand on its own feet. We’ll have to enable Afghanistan to be able to defend itself and protect for its security … “Then, the United States can leave and, at that time, the Afghan people will give them plenty of flowers and gratitude and send them safely back home.” At the same time, Karzai said the actions of troops currently in Afghanistan have turned some of the public against them. “It’s the question of civilian causalities. It’s a question of risk of Afghans. It’s the question of home searches,” he said. “These activities are seriously undermining the confidence of the Afghan people in the joint struggle we have against terrorism and undermining their hopeful future. “We’ll continue to be a friend. We’ll continue to be an ally. But Afghanistan deserves respect and a better treatment.” While he said he welcomes additional U.S. troops, Karzai suggested they need to work along the Afghan-Pakistan border and in the poppy fields that fuel a drug trade that threatens to turn the nation into a narco-state — not in the villages where most Afghans live. “We have traveled many years on. What should have happened early on didn’t unfortunately happen,” Karzai said. “Now, the country is not in the same mood as it was in 2002. And so any addition of troops must have a purposeful objective that the Afghan people would agree with.” The Obama administration is conducting several reviews of U.S. policy in Afghanistan, including a review by Gen. David Petraeus, the commander in the region. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said the original mission in Afghanistan was “too broad” and needs to be more “realistic and focused” for the United States to succeed. “If we set ourselves the objective of creating some sort of central Asian Valhalla over there, we will lose, because nobody in the world has that kind of time, patience and money,” Gates said during a recent Senate hearing. He called for concrete goals that can be reached in three to five years. Speaking via satellite from Kabul, Karzai called former President George Bush “a great person,” but said he can work with Obama — despite the president’s comments as a candidate that Karzai had “not gotten out of the bunker” to improve security and infrastructure in Afghanistan. “President Obama is a great inspiration to the world,” he said. “The people of America have proven that they can really be the light holders for change and the will of the people in the world. “And his coming to power by the vote of the American people is a manifestation of that great power of the American people.” Karzai also acknowledged corruption in the Afghan government, but defended the work he’s done to combat it. “Sure, corruption in the Afghan government is as much there as in any other third world country,” he said. “Suddenly this country got so much money coming from the West, suddenly so many Afghans came from all over the world to participate. Suddenly there were projects — suddenly there were this poverty that turned into some sort form of prosperity for this country,” he said. He said a government department has been created to deal with corruption and that corrupt judges, administrators and other officials are dismissed “daily” over corruption charges.

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Fiancee kidney donor: ‘Of course we were a match’

Liz Murray donated her kidney to her fiance after he was diagnosed with congestive heart failure.
From songs to poems to sayings on the side of coffee cups, everyone tries to define love in words.

But often, it’s the extraordinary actions we take in the name of love that really define it. Liz Kelly’s fiance, Matt House, needed a kidney after he was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. In order to get him to the top of the donor list, Kelly signed up to donate hers. At first, she never dreamed she would actually be a match, but it turned out she was. The Springfield, Massachusetts, couple (he’s 31, she’s 29) spoke with CNN’s Nicole Lapin about whether Kelly thought fate played a hand in finding him a donor match. The following is an edited transcript of the interview: Nicole Lapin: Liz, I didn’t know about the donor process, until we started talking to you guys. The donor process works whereby a friend or a family member can donate a kidney to get Matt higher on the list, so you decided that you were going to do that. Why did you decide to do that Watch Nicole Lapin’s interview with Liz Kelly and Matt House » Liz Kelly: It was pretty much a no-brainer, I think. His sister was actually going to donate at first. But she didn’t work out for health reasons. It’s obviously better to have, you know, a family member donate a kidney, too.

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But since that wasn’t going to work out, his stepfather stepped in because they were the same blood type. And that ended up not working out either. He had some heart issues and some other health issues. So, I said, you know what, I’ll just donate to the list. And that’s what I was intending on doing. And then I found out that we were actually a match, and it was amazing. Lapin: It was amazing, I’m sure, to get that phone call, because you did it just so that you could get higher on the list. A lot of people on our Web site are fascinated by your story, guys. [A viewer] has a question for you right now, Liz: Have you ever had any surgeries before this one If not, how did your prepare yourself for this Kelly: No. This was my first surgery, so that definitely made me very nervous. That was the definitely scariest part for me, just not knowing what to expect. But, Matt has been through several surgeries before. So I know I had him in my corner. And I looked up a lot online. I found out a lot of great information online. So that’s definitely how I prepared. Lapin: And [another viewer] has a question in for Matt, actually: Were you scared that perhaps your body might reject Liz’s kidney or were you always confident that the surgery would be a success Matt House: I think I was pretty confident with her being the same blood type or us matching is pretty phenomenal, so I didn’t expect it to reject it anyway. Maybe after the surgery if I would have a little pain down there or something like that, I would get a little nervous and think that it was going to reject, that there’s something wrong. But that would just pass. It was me just being a little overanxious, I guess, but not really, no. I was pretty confident everything would go well overall. We’re both pretty healthy for the most part. And being the same blood type was just you know really great, so it worked out good. So, I wasn’t really worried at all. Lapin: Fate, some may say House: Yeah, yeah, definitely.

Lapin: Yours is a lot bigger. You’re a little girl, but you happen to have a kidney that is perfect for Matt. Do you think it was meant to be Kelly: I do. I definitely do. People tell me that all the time. When they told us that we were a match, I was very surprised at first, but then I thought about it a little more. Of course we were a match. How could we not be a match

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Clinton heads to Asia for first state trip

Hillary Clinton seeks improved relations with China, where she said the U.S. would renew military contacts.
Hillary Clinton says her first overseas trip to Asia as U.S. secretary of state is aimed at creating a "network of partners" to tackle problems that no nation can deal with alone, including the global economic crisis.

En route to Asia on Sunday, Clinton told reporters that the economy would serve as the backdrop of her trip, and she intends to explain steps the United States is taking with its $787 billion stimulus bill. She said she will be “seeking cooperation on ways that we are going to work through these very difficult economic times.” Clinton is slated to travel to Japan, China, South Korea and Indonesia to discuss a range of issues, including mutual economic recovery, trade, the prevention of nuclear weapons proliferation and reversing the global warming trend. The trip represents a departure from a diplomatic tradition under which the first overseas trip by the secretary of state in a new administration is to Europe. Speaking at the New York-based Asia Society last week, Clinton said the Obama administration wants to “develop a broader and deeper” relationship with Asia, a region that has felt overlooked by the United States despite its growing global importance. “It demonstrates clearly that our new administration wants to focus a lot of time and energy in working with Asian partners and all the nations in the Pacific region,” she said, “because we know that so much of our future depends upon our relationships there.” Watch David Lampton of John Hopkins University discuss Clinton’s trip » On Sunday, she addressed North Korea’s nuclear program, which she’s called “the most acute challenge to stability in northeast Asia.” Clinton said the Obama administration is prepared to seek a permanent, stable peace with Pyongyang as long as its regime pursues disarmament and does not engage in aggression against neighboring South Korea. The United States has a “great openness and willingness to working with them,” she said.

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Much of Clinton’s conversations during this week’s travels will be dominated by the global financial meltdown. She said despite the financial crisis, the United States hopes to expand trade with countries in the region. She called for an improved relationship with China, where she said the United States would shortly renew military-to-military contacts. She will also try to establish closer cooperation on climate change with China, which has surpassed America as the largest emitter of greenhouse gases.

Todd Stern, her new envoy for climate change, is accompanying Clinton on the trip. Officials said Clinton had hoped to name a special envoy for North Korea before leaving for Asia to signal the Obama administration’s commitment to addressing North Korea’s nuclear program, but that the timing and specifics of the job were still being worked out. Clinton has said she hopes to name the envoy “soon.”

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Abu Dhabi: An Oil Giant Dreams Green

Abu Dhabi: An Oil Giant Dreams Green

Sami Khoreibi can’t stop smiling. The baby-faced CEO of Enviromena Power Systems, Khoreibi launched his business a little over a year ago. Now he is looking over a 10-MW solar farm in the desert outside the city of Abu Dhabi, with row after row of solar panels angled to the Middle Eastern sun like bathers lying poolside. The solar farm is the earliest tangible part of Abu Dhabi’s Masdar City, a $22 billion project designed to be the world’s first zero-carbon-footprint, zero-waste settlement–the embodiment of this oil-rich Arab city’s surprisingly green dreams. “This is bringing attention and capital from around the world to Abu Dhabi,” says Khoreibi. “We’re going to use this as a launching pad for clean development.”

Abu Dhabi is the last place you might expect to find the future of environmentalism. The wealthy capital of the United Arab Emirates is the world’s eighth biggest producer of petroleum. But the leaders of Abu Dhabi know–perhaps better than most–that the oil won’t last forever, so they have embarked on the Masdar Initiative, a multibillion-dollar push to establish the emirate as a center for clean-technology development and innovation. Those plans include Masdar City, designed by British architect Norman Foster, as well as a $250 million clean-tech investment fund and an energy-engineering school linked with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. If it all works, this desert emirate could become the Saudi Arabia of renewable energy and a living model for the way technological innovation could defuse the threat of climate change. “This is really a very powerful image,” says Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. “It clearly shows that a country that has no immediate economic need to diversify its energy production is willing and able to do so.” Abu Dhabi’s leadership is all the more necessary at a moment when once vibrant green businesses are flagging, thanks in part to the plummeting price of oil. In the U.S. and Europe, new wind- and solar-power installations are slowing, energy start-ups are starving for funds and some green companies are laying off workers. But it’s still full speed ahead in Abu Dhabi, where last month’s World Future Energy Summit attracted more than 16,000 visitors and companies that ranged from General Motors to modest Chinese solar manufacturers. And with a new Administration in Washington struggling to keep its own ambitious green agenda on track, Abu Dhabi kept the momentum going at WFES by announcing that at least 7% of its electricity would come from renewable sources by 2020, up from nothing today. Nor, said Masdar officials, would the recession have a major impact on the emirate’s plans, announced last year, to invest $15 billion in clean energy–an amount equal to what President Barack Obama has suggested spending annually for the entire U.S. “We are looking beyond the current financial crisis,” says Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, Masdar’s CEO. “But all our projects are still proceeding.”

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