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  • 22
    May
    2012
    12:05pm, EDT

    Robotic 'fish' take to seas to catch pollution sooner

    Scientists have deployed fish aimed at detecting pollutants in the water at a cost of around $31,600 each. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Miguel Llanos, msnbc.com

    In a bid to track sea pollution by mimicking how fish navigate and work together, scientists on Tuesday moved their robotic fish from the lab to the sea.

    The technology could reduce the time it takes to detect a pollutant from weeks to just seconds, the scientists said in a statement. It could also aid underwater security, diver monitoring and search and rescue efforts.

    Partly funded by the European Union, the SHOAL Consortium deployed its test robots at the northern Spanish port of Gijon on Tuesday.

    The fish -- 5 feet long and costing about $31,600 each -- are designed to swim like real fish and have sensors to pick up pollutants.


    They swim independently but coordinate their actions and send data back to a shore station more than a half mile away.

    "Chemical sensors fitted to the fish permit real-time, in-situ analysis, rather than the current method of sample collection and dispatch to a shore-based laboratory," Luke Speller, a SHOAL scientist who led the project, said in the statement.

    Through artificial intelligence software, the fish can avoid obstacles, map their location and return to base when their eight-hour batteries run low, SHOAL stated.

    "Significantly," SHOAL added, "the robotic fish have been developed to blend into the marine environment in such a way that marine life is neither disrupted nor impacted in any negative way by their presence, but carries on naturally."

    Courtesy SHOAL Consortium

    The specimen is one of the robotic fish developed by the SHOAL Consortium.

    So what happens if one is mistakenly caught by a fisherman? "The fish are able to detect where they are with the array of sensors they have," the researchers say on the Frequently Asked Questions section of their website. "As soon as they are removed from the water they set off a distress beacon that alerts the port authorities who can act immediately."

    And why even design them to look like fish? They "have an incredibly small turning circle allowing them to navigate quickly in ports both to find pollution and avoid ships and the port infrastructure," the researchers added. "It's also low noise so as to not disturb the environment when outside of busy ports."

    After testing this week, the team will make any modifications needed to move the fish into commercial production.

    The project draws on expertise from the University of Essex and the University of Strathclyde in Britain; Ireland's Tyndall National Institute; and Thales Safare, part of Europe's largest defense electronics group.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'Nearly empty': A rare glimpse inside Syria rebel stronghold
    • Analysis: How Egypt's election can transform the Middle East
    • Portraits of a queen: When the monarch becomes the subject
    • Tokyo Sky Tree takes root as world's second tallest structure
    • Robotic 'fish' takes to seas to catch pollution sooner

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    51 comments

    I wonder how long until the Japanese decide they need to harpoon these things - you know, for "research".

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pollution, environment, robots, featured
  • 15
    May
    2012
    10:40am, EDT

    US diplomats find Shanghai air less than sweet

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    A view of the Oriental Pearl TV Tower, right, and downtown Shanghai seen through the haze on May 15, 2012.

    Aly Song / Reuters

    A young man wearing a mask walks along the Bund in Shanghai on May 15, 2012.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    The U.S. Consulate in Shanghai began posting hourly air quality readings for the city this week, with data showing "very unhealthy" conditions at times on Tuesday afternoon.

    The consulate's classification reflects U.S. pollution standards but operates on a different scale than the Shanghai Environmental Protection Bureau, which called conditions "slightly polluted". 

    Denied access to official data, Chinese citizens take their own pollution readings

    A similar monitor on the roof of the U.S. Embassy in Beijing has long been seen as the most reliable source of information on air quality in the Chinese capital.

    Bathed in smog: Beijing's pollution could cut 5 years off lifespan, expert says

    Read more about the Shanghai monitor at the US Consulate's website and find the latest readings on their dedicated Twitter feed.

    Reuters contributed to this report

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    3 comments

    @BenjaminFranklin "That's how London looked...200 years ago. The CCP criminals will tell you that it's a 'blue sky' day in China." So u meant All of officials in London were criminals 200 years ago? I'm sorry I actually hope that some of the cities in U.S would look like this, this would mean that U …

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, pollution, environment, world-news, shanghai
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    11:43pm, EDT

    New Zealand charges owners of stricken ship with causing environmental disaster

    The owners of the stranded and sinking cargo ship Rena are being charged for damage in New Zealand's worst maritime environmental disaster. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Reuters

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- The owners of a stricken container ship wrecked on a reef off a popular New Zealand holiday spot have been charged with causing the country's worst environmental disaster in decades, maritime officials said on Thursday.

    Daina Shipping, a unit of Greece's Costamare Inc., has been charged with discharging harmful substances after its 47,230-ton Liberian-flagged ship Rena struck a reef about 12 miles off Tauranga, New Zealand's biggest export port, in early October.


    The charge carries a maximum fine of $488,000. The owners face an additional daily fine of $8,130.

    PhotoBlog: Stern of stricken container ship sinks off New Zealand

    The ship's captain and second officer have already pleaded guilty to operating the ship in a dangerous manner, releasing toxic substances and to altering the ship's documents.

    The two Filipino men face sentences of up to seven years in jail. They will be sentenced in late May.

    Marine officials said high winds and seas have battered the wreck, causing more containers to fall into the sea and spreading oil still leaking from the ship.

    Maritime New Zealand via Reuters

    The bow section of the stricken container ship Rena remains above water about 14 nautical miles from Tauranga on the east coast of New Zealand's North Island, in this April 4 handout picture. The remains of the ship are stuck on a rock reef six months after it ran aground, in what authorities say is one of the nation's worst environmental disasters.

    The ship spilt around 3301 tons of thick, toxic fuel oil when it hit the reef, killing thousands of sea birds and polluting beaches up to 60 miles from the reef.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'Martyr for Greece': Retiree's suicide sparks violent protests
    • With $10 million bounty on his head, militant openly taunts US
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    13 comments

    greek ships have always been the worst kept... the captains used to get cash, and what they did not spend, they got to keep, so they never repaired anything. they would never think to get a radar repaired even if it wouldn't turn on. greek ships were usually rust buckets, and an accident waiting to  …

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    Explore related topics: oil, new-zealand, pollution, environment, rena
  • 17
    Mar
    2012
    11:46pm, EDT

    Fog and air pollution disrupt travel in Beijing

    AFP - Getty Images

    The new China Central Television (CCTV) tower hardly visible as fog covers most of Beijing on Saturday. More than 400 flights to and from Beijing airport, including around 35 international services, were cancelled or delayed due to thick fog and strong air pollution covering the city, which the US embassy own measuring system, said pollution in Beijing had reached the "hazardous" level early March 17, before dropping one notch to "very unhealthy" later.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Vehicles make their way along a highway as fog covers most of Beijing on Saturday.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Passengers wait for their flights as almost 250 flights were cancelled, including some 15 international services, while more than 180 flights were delayed, including about 20 international services at the Beijing Capital International airport as visibility was at less than 200 metres (650 feet), official state news agency Xinhua said, blaming "widespread fog" for the disruption, in Beijing on Saturday.

    See more pictures from Beijing in PhotoBlog.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, china, air, air-pollution, pollution, beijing, world-news, fog
  • 24
    Feb
    2012
    6:01am, EST

    Bathed in smog: Beijing's pollution could cut 5 years off lifespan, expert says

    This past winter Beijing has seen some of the worst air pollution since the government promised more "blue sky" days after the 2008 Olympic Games. NBC's Adrienne Mong reports.

    By Adrienne Mong, NBC News

    BEIJING — Earlier this month, a U.S. study on the economic impact of China’s air pollution was released with little fanfare. Maybe it was because of the series of successive “blue sky” days we were enjoying in the Chinese capital, thanks to the gusty winds blowing down from Mongolia. 

    The study, which was conducted by researchers at the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, breaks down costs that result from the health impacts from ozone and particulate matter, which typically lead to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.


    The conclusion? “[D]espite improvements in overall air quality,” the cost of air pollution (as in lost economic productivity growth) in China has mushroomed from $22 billion in 1975 to $112 billion in 1995. But for at least one pair of 29-year old software engineers in Beijing, air pollution has actually meant greater economic productivity and a business opportunity.

    A killer app
    Wang Jun and Zhang Bin each moved to Beijing in 2001 to attend college.  Zhang, a Fujian native, was a math major at Beijing University while Wang left Inner Mongolia to study traffic infrastructure at Jiaotong University.

    They met at a high-tech company, where for three years they worked together. Last year, they decided to strike out on their own and set up Fresh Ideas Studio.

    “The primary aim … is creating mobile apps for solving practical problems in our daily lives,” Wang said, on a blustery (but sunny) afternoon at a coffee shop.

    Last year saw some of the worst air pollution in Beijing since the 2008 Summer Olympics, spurring intense discussion among Chinese residents, teeth-gnashing among Western expats, and a near-diplomatic spat between the U.S. and China over fine particulate matter in the air known as PM2.5 that can wreak havoc on the respiratory system.

    “Recently, the media and Weibo [a popular Chinese microblog like Twitter] users are very concerned about air quality, especially in Beijing,” Wang said.

    In particular, there was a lot of online chatter about @Beijing Air, the U.S. embassy Twitter account that posts hourly Air Quality Index(AQI) data. 

    The readings come from an air quality monitor that sits on top of the embassy in downtown Beijing, and they differ sharply from the daily results posted by the Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP).

    Fresh Ideas Studios

    The 2.0 version of Fresh Ideas Studio's app shows both U.S. and Chinese air quality readings.

    AQI values on @BeijingAir range from 0 to 500.  A “good” AQI  is 0 to 50 or what the Chinese call a “blue sky” day.  Unfortunately, many days in 2011 qualified as “unhealthy” to “hazardous.”  But on some of those same days, MEP data maintained the levels were “good” or “moderate.”  (The Chinese, in fact, claim there were 286 "blue sky" days in 2011.)

    “The [Beijing] government says that nearly 80 percent of the days in the last two years met at least the Chinese standard and therefore had good or even excellent air quality,” Steve Andrews, an environmental consultant who has analyzed the @BeijingAir data, said. “While when we look at the U.S. Embassy data … over 80 percent days exceeded what would be considered healthy air quality and more days were hazardous than good.”

    Andrews said that Beijing's pollution levels were "six or seven times higher than the U.S.'s most polluted city." "Air pollution at these levels likely shortens life expectancy by about five years," he added.

    The discrepancy was due to the fact the U.S. embassy monitor includes PM2.5, a fine particulate matter measuring 2.5 micrometers in diameter that, according to the EPA, “pose the greatest health risks [and] can lodge deeply into the lungs.”

    The Chinese data, however, only measured the much coarser PM10 particles.

    Adrienne Mong

    Zhang Bin (left) and Wang Jun watch NBC News cameraman David Lom set up for an interview.

    “I’m a Twitter user and saw many Tweets about [@BeijingAir],” Zhang said. “Many Weibo users reposted the data, too.”

    The software developers decided to try creating a smartphone application that based itself on the @BeijingAir data.

    “Sometimes we can tell there’s a gap between what we feel and the data from the government,” Wang said.  “This is probably why many prefer the data provided by the U.S. embassy.”

    In November, they released a 1.0 version, available only in Chinese and which came with simple but appealing graphics.  On good AQI days, the screen background was light and featured a hiking boot, indicating it was time to be outdoors. On bad AQI days, the screen background turned dark, an X marked the boot, and a person’s face wrapped in a mask would pop up.

    There were iOS and Android versions of the app. Within weeks, it had been downloaded 80,000 times. At least half of those users checked the app regularly, according to Wang. 

    Pollution 'ignored' in past
    Under popular pressure that has been building since last year, Chinese environment authorities in Beijing have agreed to publish PM2.5 data. But they maintain the air quality has improved steadily in recent years. 

    “We may have had bad pollution in the past, but people probably didn’t pay too much attention to it before so it was just ignored,” said An Xinxin, who works in the Automatic Monitoring Office at the Beijing Environmental Protection Monitoring Center. 

    The Center relies on anywhere from 30 to 40 monitoring stations. “Almost every district and county in Beijing has its own station,” explained An. “So citizens in every district and county can know what the pollution in their own area is like.”

    Like many of his colleagues at the municipal level, An pointed out that the U.S. embassy only uses one monitor. “[It] can only represent one spot at a certain time. Their spot might be very close to the road where there is a lot of vehicle exhaust, which causes a high level of PM2.5,” he said. “Our statistics are an average of Beijing as a whole, not just one spot.”

    Zhang has lived in Beijing for more than ten years, but he said he’s not sure whether the air quality has improved or not. “I don’t know if it’s because now I pay more attention [because of the media and online discussion], or if it’s because the air quality has worsened,” he said. 

    But he and Wang dreamed up the idea of incorporating both the Chinese and American data streams into their app.

    On Monday this week, they introduced a 2.0 version that not only posts real-time data from the U.S. embassy in Beijing and U.S. consulates around China, it also includes data from the Chinese Ministry of Environment’s monitoring centers in 120 cities across the country.

    Also available in English, the app has been downloaded nearly 5,000 times.

    “We thought it was good to include both. In some cities, users might want alternative information,” Wang said. “If there were a third source for air pollution data, we’d probably include it in the app, too.”

    They might also want to add Hong Kong to their list of cities.

    This month, a local nongovernmental group said Hong Kong’s air is 20 per cent more deadly than the air in mainland China. 

    Using data from Hong Kong’s own government and the World Health Organization, the Clean Air Network ranked Hong Kong ahead of mainland China, India, Vietnam, and Bangladesh for its high air pollution mortality rates.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    With additional reporting from Bo Gu and Ting Zhao.

    80 comments

    WOW! Sounds like the air in the US before the creation of the EPA, which Santorum, Romney, Paul and Gingrich want to put under the ax, supposedly to create more jobs. Sounds like those jobs would be in the medical field and mortuary science.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, pollution, us-embassy, smog, featured, adrienne-mong
  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    5:47am, EST

    Denied access to official data, Chinese citizens take their own pollution readings

    Andy Wong / AP

    Tan Liang, a resident of Beijing, prepares to take readings on a PM2.5 detector outside his residential compound in Beijing, China, on Dec. 3, 2011.

    The Associated Press reports from BEIJING:

    Armed with a device that looks like an old transistor radio, some Beijing residents are recording pollution levels and posting them online. It's an act that borders on subversion.

    The government keeps secret all data on the fine particles that shroud China's capital in a health-threatening smog most days. But as they grow more prosperous, Chinese are demanding the right to know what the government does not tell them: just how polluted their city is.

    "If people know what their air is like, they are more likely to take action," said Wang Qiuxia, a researcher at local environment group Green Beagle, who shows interested residents how to test pollution on a locally made monitoring machine. Continue reading.

    Andy Wong / AP

    Tan Liang carries a PM2.5 detector towards a garbage-burning facility located near his residential compound in Beijing on Dec. 3, 2011.

    Andy Wong / AP

    Wang Qiuxia, right, a volunteer from an environmental group, teaches Cheng Jing, left, how to operate the PM2.5 detector in Beijing on Dec. 7, 2011.

    Related content:

    • China begins to admit 'fog' is really smog
    • A smog by any other name
    • More world news stories

    Chinese are growing more outspoken about the "fog," now accurately calling it "smog," covering cities like Beijing.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    7 comments

    That's what it used to look like in in East LAX, you couldn't see down the street and on really bad days you couldn't see across the street back in the 70's. China needs environmental regulation and standards in its industry's, maybe they could eventually "Lift the Fog".

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, pollution, environment, beijing, world-news, smog
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Miguel Llanos

I'm the environment and weather editor for msnbc.com, and hope to discuss issues and events with the newsvine community as well as to invite experts into those discussions.

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is NBCNews.com's Multimedia Editor in London.

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