Sports

Fina World Junior: More gold, records go Down Under

Fina World Junior: More gold, records go Down Under Moni Mathews / 30 August 2013 Swimmers from Down Under once again stamped their class to nudge ahead in the gold rush in the 4th Fina World Junior Swimming Championships at the iconic Shaikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Sports Complex off the Emirates Highway. The start of the men’s 50m backstroke final at the World Junior Swimming Championships on Thursday. — KT photos by Mukesh Kamal The qualifying honours for the six events on Thursday were spread between six different nations, as the action continued at the complex, rated to be one of the best in the world by the swimmers and the officials taking part here. The talented green and gold capped youngsters had another great night in the late events on Wednesday taking two gold and one bronze to lead the gold medal tally with six, ahead of the US with five and Russia with four. The US remains in the overall lead with 14 medals. Russia is in second with 10 and Australia third with 8. Leading the Australian charge was hot action hero Mack Horton who climbed on to the gold podium for the fourth time with a superb 800m freestyle 7:45.67. Horton took an astonishing nearly 10.3 seconds off the championship record, and winning by over 10 seconds from Jan Micka of Czech Republic (7:56.33) who added the silver to his bronze in the 400m freestyle. Pawel Furtek (7:58.33) took the bronze and Poland’s first medal of the meet. “Missing out on qualifying for Barcelona (world senior Fina meet in July) made me push myself harder in training,” Horton said. Australia also took gold in the crowd pulling 4 x100m freestyle mixed relay. Australia was led out by Luke Percy who had earlier qualified fastest for the 50m freestyle final. Shayna Jack backed up from her bronze in the 100m freestyle to swim the second leg, followed by Regan Leong who had taken gold in the boys 4x100m relay on Day 1. Australia turned in front for the last 50, but Georgia Miller had a fight on her hands with Caeleb Dressel of the US giving his all to catch her. Miller dug deep and hung on for the victory in a championship record 3:28.74. The US took silver and Russia the bronze. In the girls 200m backstroke final Kylie Stewart of the US turned the tables on the 100m gold medallist Daria Ustinova of Russia, taking gold in 2:09.74, a new championship record. The other two finals saw three nations take medals for the first time in the Dubai meet. In the boys 100m butterfly Japan’s Takaya Yasue took gold in 53.01 while Hong Kong’s Siobhan Haughey beat world breaststroke champion Ruta Meilutyte of Lithuania for the gold with a new meet mark. Siobhan said: “I was so nervous, but so happy to swim with an Olympian. Ruta did a good job. It’s my first international competition so to win the gold is great.” New Zealand’s Gabrielle Fa’Amausili finished the girls 50m backstroke in 28.14 to qualify fastest for the semi-finals. The Kiwis who topped the medal count in a previous chapter of the championship have been fairly quiet so far in this event, with only one other appearance in a semi-final to date.   Fans brought their colours to the iconic Shaikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Sports Complex on Thursday   Iryna Glavynk of Ukraine qualified second, with Russia’s Daria Ustinova in third. Ustinova already has a gold from the 100m backstroke and a bronze from the 200m backstroke and will be looking to add a  third medal to her collection in Friday’s final. South Africa also recorded its first fastest qualification time to date with Ryan Coetzee in the boys 50m butterfly finishing in 23.81. Dylan Carter of Trinidad and Tobago also made it through to the semis. Carter just missed a medal in the 100m backstroke final, but will have two more chances when he appears in both the 50m butterfly and 50m backstroke. The Aussies maintained their form posting the top two qualifying times in the girls 400m freestyle. Remy Fairweather finished in 4:09.75, ahead of teammate and 800m gold medallist Alanna Bowles. Fairweather is favourite for the final, having posted times almost two seconds faster than anyone else in the field prior to the championships. Russia, the dominant nation on Wednesday morning recorded the top two qualifying times for the boys 200m breaststroke. Mikhail Dorinov swam 2:13.40, with countryman Aleksandr Palatov second in 2:13.43. Ippei Watanabe of Japan qualified third. Ruta is one of the hardest working swimmers in this meet, contesting nine events. So far she has collected one gold and two silvers, and will be hoping to add to that after qualifying fastest for the girls 200m individual medley final in 2:15.10. Japan’s Emu Higuchi recorded the second best time, ahead of 400m individual medley gold medallist Ella Eastin of the US. In the final heat of the Day 4 programme of the 6-day event, Great Britain took the honours in the boys 4x200m freestyle relay with a new meet mark time of 7:19.93. Great Britain has yet to win gold, and face tough opposition from the US, Canada and Australia. The race is set to see another Mack Horton-James Guy duel. moni@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading

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Britain says ‘no’ but US ready to act alone on Syria

Britain says ‘no’ but US ready to act alone on Syria (AFP) / 30 August 2013 British lawmakers rejected their government’s call for punitive military strikes against the chemical-armed Syrian regime on Thursday, leaving the United States to act alone. Before and after the shock House of Commons vote to defy Prime Minister David Cameron’s bid to win support for military intervention, the White House said America was ready to take unilateral action. Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron is seen addressing the House of Commons in this still image taken from video in London. – Reuters   “We have seen the result of the Parliament vote in the UK tonight,” said Caitlin Hayden , a National Security Council spokeswoman. “As we’ve said, President Obama’s decision-making will be guided by what is in the best interests of the United States. “He believes that there are core interests at stake for the United States and that countries who violate international norms regarding chemical weapons need to be held accountable.” The decision also came after the failure of an improbable eleventh-hour effort by British diplomats to win UN backing for action against Bashar Al Assad’s regime at a meeting of the permanent members of the Security Council. “It is clear to me that the British parliament, reflecting the views of the British people, does not want to see British military action. I get that and the government will act accordingly,” Cameron said. Britain’s opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband is seen addressing the House of Commons in this still image taken from video in London. – Reuters That, combined with deadlock at the United Nations, appeared to effectively sound the death knell for the idea of a broad-based Western military coalition, although other American allies might still participate. But even before the surprise British vote, the White House had signalled that it was ready to act regardless of UN or allied support. “We certainly are interested in engaging with the global international community on this issue,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. “But at the same time, the president’s chief accountability is to the American people that he was elected to protect. “The president believes strongly in making the kinds of decisions and taking the kinds of steps that are necessary to protect our core national security interests that we’ve acknowledged are at stake in this situation.” Earlier, envoys from the permanent five members of the UN Security Council — Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States — had met at UN headquarters in New York. The 45-minute meeting was the second since Britain proposed a draft resolution to permit “all necessary measures” to protect Syrian civilians after a suspected chemical weapons attack last week. But none of the envoys commented as they left. Earlier in the week reports had suggested that a Western strike was imminent, but questions have been raised about the quality of the intelligence linking Assad to the attack. The White House reached out to US lawmakers, with the president’s top aides briefing congressional leaders in a 90 minute conference call. Some members of Congress voiced support for limited, surgical strikes, while urging the administration to continue consulting closely with the Congress. Nancy Pelosi , the minority leader in the House, said she agreed with House Speaker John Boehner that “there needs to be more consultation with all members of Congress and additional transparency into the decision making process and timing, and that the case needs to be made to the American people. “It is clear that the American people are weary of war. However, Assad gassing his own people is an issue of our national security, regional stability and global security. We must be clear that the United States rejects the use of chemical weapons by Assad or any other regime,” she said. US warships armed with scores of cruise missiles are converging on the eastern Mediterranean, and US military officials have said they are ready to launch a powerful barrage against regime targets in Syria. Assad’s ally Russia has blocked all attempts to toughen international sanctions against Damascus or authorise outside force to punish or unseat the regime. Syria, meanwhile, is in the 29 th month of a vicious civil war in which more than 100,000 people are credibly reported to have died. As the stand-off continues, a team of UN inspectors are investigating reports that last week’s gas attack outside Damascus killed more than 350 people, including women and children. A UN spokesman said Thursday that the team had collected “considerable” evidence and will brief UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon soon after they leave Syria on Saturday. “Starting tomorrow he will try to reach out to member states and take discussions forward on the question of what is happening in Syria,” the spokesman said. Ban has appealed for the inspectors to be allowed to complete their work before the major powers decide any follow-up action. Assad remained defiant in the face of the Western threats. “Syria will defend itself in the face of any aggression,” state television cited him as telling a visiting delegation of Yemeni politicians. He vowed that any attack would result in “victory” for the Syrian people. His regime has denied using chemical weapons and blamed “terrorist” rebels. The mood among Damascus residents was fearful, while security forces prepared for possible air attacks by pulling back soldiers from potential targets and introducing tougher controls at roadblocks and hospitals. Continue reading

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Berlin Biomass Plant Gets First Wood Delivery

Published Date: Tuesday, 27 August 2013 By Barbara Tetreault BERLIN — The Burgess BioPower plant hit a new milestone last week with the first delivery of wood as the facility advances through its testing and commissioning stage. Cate Street Capital vice president Alexandra Ritchie said the 75-megawatt biomass plant is scheduled to come on-line by the end of the year. Part of the wood processing structure for the Burgess BioPower biomass plant is this steel A-frame conveyor that sits about 60 feet high. Burgess BioPower has a 20-year purchase power agreement with Public Service of New Hampshire. Last Wednesday there were 398 people employed on site, down from the over 500 employed during the peak of construction. Ritchie said the construction phase is winding down as Cate Street hopes to get the plant operating by late November. She said the construction phase originally was projected to take 25.5 months but will probably end up taking closer to 27 months. On hand to witness the wood delivery were the state’s top energy officials participating in a tour arranged by state Senator Jeff Woodburn. Meredith Hatfield, director of the state Office of Energy Planning, Karen Cramton, deputy director of OEP, and Molly Connors, Gov. Maggie Hassan’s energy adviser along with Rob Riley and Jessica O’Hare of the Northern Forest Center spent about an hour walking the site and climbing to the top of the overhead conveyor for the plant’s wood handling system. Ritchie said the project has already had a significant impact on the local economy. She said the unions involved have worked hard to hire local people for the project. Site manager Carl Belanger estimated as many as half those hired were from the North Country. In addition, Ritchie said local hotels and food establishments have benefited from workers brought into the area to work on the project. Once the plant is operating, it will employ 30 to 40 people. Ritchie said Delta Power Services, which will operate and maintain the biomass plant under a six-year contract with Cate Street Capital, has already hired the majority of those full-time employees. Training for new employees is being done at White Mountains Community College. Beyond those hired directly, she said the project should stimulate hundreds of jobs in the wood products industry through the purchase of 750,000 tons of biomass annually. Ritchie said Cate Street Capital has a 20-year agreement to sell the power generated the plant to Public Service of N.H. which should provide security to logging contractors. Ritchie told the group the biomass plant is Cate Street Capital’s flagship project. “It is a project we are very proud of because of what it means to the area,” she said. Belanger explained the wood processing system for the plant. Truck dumpsters tilt the logging trucks and dump the biomass onto a reclaim conveyor, which transports the wood into the wood processing structure where it is screened and ground. The ground biomass is then fed into an A-frame conveyor that moves back and forth, depositing the wood in a pile under the conveyor. Under conveyors feed the biomass into a transfer conveyor that goes into the main boiler feed conveyor. The tour also went into the turbine building where the 265,000-pound turbine is housed. Ritchie called the turbine the most critical part of the facility and reported that Cate Street Capital actually ordered the turbine before it had final approval for the project because of the lead time involved. The turbine was built in Japan by Fiji and its delivery to Berlin last December was a major undertaking. Belanger also pointed out the bag house — called that because it contains 4,000 filter bags that screen out dust and particulates. A catalyst removes nitric oxide gas. A cooling tower cools the water from the turbine to allow its reuse. The plant will pull water from the city’s system to replace that lost in vaporization. Paving is under way at the site, and Ritchie said Cate Street Capital will also put in a community parking lot near Community Field as part of the public benefit of the project. The highpoint of the tour was to watch the first wood delivery. A load of wood chips harvested at a site in Canaan, Vt., was delivered by Hicks Logging of Jefferson. As the truck dumpster tilted the logging truck, biomass workers could be seen taking pictures of the wood chips emptying out. Continue reading

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