Category: Sci/Tech

  • Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake

    Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake

    Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake

    Julia Harte | October 25th, 2011

    The earthquake struck approximately 20 kilometers north of the city of Van, pictured above. Turkey’s seismology institute estimated the final death toll would reach 1,000.

    A 7.2-magnitude earthquake slammed Turkey‘s eastern province of Van on Sunday. Two days afterward, 366 deaths have been reported, 1,301 injured persons are being treated, and more than 2,000 buildings have collapsed.

    Although the temblor didn’t shake the Black Sea region of Sinop, which was some 800 kilometers northwest of the epicenter, it may have stalled plans to build a nuclear power plant (NPP) there. The Korean nuclear industry now expects the Sinop NPP to be canceled, news agency dongA reports.

    Nuclear ambitions

    Turkey has already signed a deal with Russia to build a NPP at Akkuyu, a city off its southern Mediterranean coast. The Akkuyu plant would be the country’s first. But for the past year, Turkey has also been arranging to build a second NPP at Sinop, on the country’s northern coast at the Black Sea.

    Although South Korea was the first country that Turkish officials considered when planning the Sinop NPP, the Turkish government switched its attention to Japanese nuclear companies last year, apparently attracted by their expertise about building NPPs in seismically active areas. After the Fukushima disaster earlier this year, however, Japan pulled out of all foreign nuclear projects, officially canceling its involvement in the Sinop NPP negotiations in July.

    On an August visit to Seoul, Turkish Foreign Minister Zafer Çağlayan reaffirmed his government’s interest in hearing offers from South Korean nuclear firms for the Sinop project: “My ministry and the Turkish government are open to every proposal by South Korean companies over the issue of nuclear power plants.”

    Cooling down

    After the devastating earthquake that rocked Turkey’s southeast on Sunday, however, the Korean nuclear industry expects Turkey to drop the Sinop NPP. The Korea Electric Power Corporation and the country’s economy ministry will “change their strategy,” according to the report in dongA.

    Sinop is on a small peninsula that juts into the Black Sea, and was one of the areas in Turkey most affected by the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear meltdown. The radiation that emanated from Chernobyl destroyed years of harvest for Turkish farmers along the Black Sea coast, and is believed to be responsible for unusually high cancer rates in the area today.

    Although Sinop (unlike Akkuyu) doesn’t lie on an active fault, Sunday’s earthquake occurred 100 kilometers from the nearest major faultline, highlighting the unpredictability of seismic activity in this especially earthquake-prone country.

    via Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake | Green Prophet.

  • Turkey to produce its national light helicopter

    Turkey to produce its national light helicopter

    ÜMİT ENGİNSOY

    ANKARA – Hürriyet Daily News

    Authorities have launched a program to design, develop and produce Turkey’s first national helicopter within the next five years. The country will probably select a foreign partner with large marketing capabilities, an official says.

    turkey to produce its national light helicopter 2011 10 23 l

    This photo shows a UH-72A Lakota light utility helicopter, used by the US army. Turkey is planning to produce a national helicopter, weighing less than 5,500 kilograms. Company photo.

    Turkey’s defense procurement agency has formally pushed the button to launch an ambitious program to design, develop and produce the country’s first national helicopter, a light platform weighing less than 5,500 kilograms.

    “We aim to build a platform designed by Turkish engineers, with customized sub-systems that also can compete on international markets with its performance and price. The first national helicopter will be sold to the Turkish market and then to international buyers,” the procurement office, known as the Undersecretariat for Defense Industries, or SSM, said in a statement on its website recently.

    A senior SSM official familiar with the program said requests for proposals would soon be issued to international manufacturers willing to cooperate with Turkey on this project. The program is expected to cost Turkey billions of dollars in the next few decades, sources say.

    Potential respondents

    Potential respondents to the planned request for proposal include the U.S. helicopter maker Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. and Italy’s AgustaWestland. Earlier this year, Sikorsky defeated AgustaWestland in Turkey’s multibillion-dollar medium-sized utility helicopter competition. Turkey hopes to select its foreign partner in the light utility helicopter program next year.

    One procurement official said Turkey wanted a foreign partner that can bring marketing advantages to the light utility helicopter program. “It’s not that we can’t make that helicopter ourselves, we can make it. But we would prefer to work with a company that has large marketing capabilities in third markets also,” said the official.

    In a separate helicopter effort, Turkey in August signed a government-to-government deal with the United States to buy six Boeing-made CH-47 heavy-lift military transport helicopters, the first such vehicles in its inventory. The deal is worth up to $400 million.

    On Sept. 29 the SSM held a critical brainstorming meeting to set out a road map for the national helicopter program. Military and civilian officials, industry executives and academics gathered for the meeting to discuss ideas.

    First helicopter in 5 years

    Koksal Liman, head of SSM’s helicopter programs, said Oct. 13 that, “We aim to see our first helicopter in the air within the next five years.” He also said the SSM already had completed budget planning.

    Industry sources have said the type of light helicopter Turkey intends to build should weigh between 4,500 and 5,500 kilograms. The first Turkish national helicopter will be used for both military and civilian purposes, officials said. “Turkey is the world’s ninth largest helicopter market, so it is most natural if we went ahead to boost that sector of our local industry,” Liman said.

    via Turkey to produce its national light helicopter – Hurriyet Daily News.

  • Save lives in Turkey

    Save lives in Turkey

    By David Rohde

    Sun Oct 23, 2011 12:08pm EDT

    quakeA major earthquake in eastern Turkey Sunday morning killed up to 1,000 people and produced images of sweeping destruction and panicked pleas for help. Immediately dispatching search-and-rescue teams and humanitarian assistance is the right course of action for the United States and Europe.

    There is a core humanitarian and moral duty to act now. Quick responses by American search-and-rescue teams saved earthquake victims in the past. Forty-three foreign teams – including six from the United States – pulled 123 Haitians from the rubble alive after last year’s devastating earthquake in Port-au-Prince. Cynics about foreign aid should remember that providing humanitarian assistance in response to national disasters is a central tool in maintaining goodwill toward the United States.

    Unfortunately, there is a widespread perception in predominantly Muslim countries that Americans and Europeans care less about the death of Muslims than those of members of other faiths. Americans gave less aid to victims of Pakistan’s 2010 floods than they did to victims of Haiti’s 2010 earthquake. Haiti’s relative proximity to the United States could be one explanation, but suspicions that Pakistan’s military intelligence service, the ISI, sheltered Afghan Taliban fighters may be another.

    As I said in a past column, average Pakistanis should not be blamed for the actions of the country’s military intelligence service, which does harbor Afghan Taliban militants, and is not controlled by the country’s civilian government. People who oppose Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s criticism of Israel should not blame average Turks for his statements. Immediate aid to Turkey, in fact, would undermine the argument that Americans care more about the deaths of Israelis than Muslims. A sweeping American and European response should be mounted in eastern Turkey as soon as possible.

    PHOTO: Rescue workers try to save people trapped under debris after an earthquake in Tabanli village near the eastern Turkish city of Van October 23, 2011. REUTERS/Abdurrahman Antakyali/Anadolu Agency

    via Save lives in Turkey | Reuters.

  • Turkey’s tourist hotspot hopes to harness sun for power

    Turkey’s tourist hotspot hopes to harness sun for power

    By Diana Magnay and Teo Kermeliotis, CNN
    October 21, 2011 — Updated 1315 GMT (2115 HKT)
    111020095210 solar house antalya horizontal gallery
    Antalya Solar House was built to educate the local population about the benefits of renewable energy.

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS
    • Antalya has launched a long-term initiative to become a climate-friendly city
    • Turkey’s tourist hotspot wants to use solar power to generate electricity
    • The country has been slow in developing a sound solar industry

    Anatalya, Turkey (CNN) — Lapped by the pristine waters of the Mediterranean Sea, the Turkish coastal city of Antalya attracts millions of sun-seeking tourists each year, beguiling them with its sweeping scenery, picture-perfect beaches and blazing sunshine.

    It is this abundance of sunlight — Turkey receives greater annual solar radiation energy than Spain and Germany according to estimates by the Joint Research Center of the European Commission — that has prompted Antalya’s local authorities to push ahead with plans to harness the city’s solar potential.

    “We aim to make Antalya the leader of solar power generation of Turkey and to promote it to the world as ‘The Solar City,’” says Antalya’s mayor Mustafa Akaydin.

    The declaration comes as the sun-soaked city, located some 700 kilometers south of Istanbul, starts rolling out its ambitious plans to use solar power to generate electricity, emulating the successful example of cities like Barcelona, Spain, which has put in place regulations requiring solar panels to be fitted to all large new buildings.

    In April, the city opened the “Antalya Solar House,” an ecological research and educational center designed by architectural firm Temiz Dunya to raise awareness about the benefits of renewable energy and promote eco-tourism.

    The zero-emission structure, which was built with ecological materials, generates most of its energy using photovoltaic panels (22kW in total) as well as a windmill and heat pumps.

    ‘Living’ buildings could inhale city carbon emissions

    These systems are supplemented with gray-water recycling — re-use of used water from bathtubs, showers and so on. — and passive solar heating features such as a greenhouse to collect heat during the winter months. It also has a green roof that facilitates rainwater harvesting and acts as heat insulation.

    “The building is also very significant because it is Turkey’s first energy positive building,” says architect Mehmet Bengu Uluengin, the designer behind the Solar House. “It actually produces more energy than it consumes.”

    The architect says the structure has fascinated the local population while helping to change perceptions that buildings can only be big energy consumers.

    We aim to make Antalya the leader of solar power generation of Turkey and to promote it to the world as ‘The Solar City.
    Antalya mayor Mustafa Akaydin

    “The idea that having a building that not only provides its own energy but actually gives some back is a totally new phenomenon for Turkish people,” says Uluengin, who is also a professor at Istanbul’s Bahcesehir University. “They like it, they find it very intriguing.”

    Local authorities expect around a thousand people to visit Solar House each month, including students, green investors and hotel owners. They say the project is just the first part of a long-term initiative to turn Antalya into a climate-friendly city — other initiatives include a waste management facility that will convert the city’s sewage into biogas.

    “Antalya has already been the pioneering city of green energy (in Turkey),” says Akaydin. “We are trying to make Antalya the leader of agriculture, tourism, park and garden lighting, energy generating and (solar) panel producing.”

    While educating the local population about achieving energy efficiency, Uluengin says the technology used in the Solar House can also help Antalya — Turkey’s biggest coastal resort and home to several five-star hotels — to become an ideal destination for eco-conscious tourists.

    “There are several hotels which are considering green energy to attract customers,” he says.

    “A hotel which can say that … if you’re staying here your carbon footprint is zero for the duration of your stay — this is becoming very interesting for people worldwide,” he adds.

    The way we are going through it in Turkey is more painful but is also healthier because it is growing out of real demand.
    Mehmet Bengü Uluengin, architect

    For the moment, however, sunny Antalya is still far from being branded a green resort — local authorities estimate that eco-visitors account for just 1% of the city’s tourism.

    Mayor Akaydin says that Turkey is missing a trick by failing to exploit its clean energy capabilities.

    “Turkey has a very big potential in solar and wind energy. Unfortunately, the insufficient and wrong policies of the government prevent the promotion of them,” he says.

    Turkey’s geothermal potential

    Despite receiving plenty of sun, Turkey has been remarkably sluggish in developing a sound solar industry. The country still depends heavily on oil and natural gas, most of which is imported from abroad.

    In 2008, oil provided 37% of Turkey’s total final consumption of energy, natural gas and electricity 18% each, coal 17%, biomass and waste 7% and other sources 3%, according to figures by the International Energy Agency.

    At the same time, limited government subsidies, coupled with high costs for green energy equipment, have further impeded the market’s growth, leaving little incentives for households to go solar.

    Yet, Uluengin is optimistic that green initiatives like the one in Antalya can help Turkey’s green energy sector to take off in the coming years.

    He notes that the lack of government incentives has bolstered Turkey’s fledgling renewable energy industry by creating a solid and growing grassroots movement — that, he says, is in contrast to the top-down approach that was implemented in other European countries, where the sector grew after governments started offering subsidies and incentives for green energy usage.

    “The way we are going through it in Turkey is more painful but is also healthier because it is growing out of real demand,” says Uluengin.

  • Feridun Hamdullahpur prepares to lead UW into the future

    Feridun Hamdullahpur prepares to lead UW into the future

     

    Robert Wilson/Record…

    WATERLOO — There is tranquility in the submerged moment.

    There is warmth in the wondrous, fish-filled waters of the Sea of Marmara, where a young boy from Istanbul can swim and snorkel and sail away the days of his youth.

    “You lose track of time,” said Feridun Hamdullahpur, recalling the childhood sanctuary he discovered by dipping beneath the surface of Turkey’s inland sea.

    “You lose your presence. You forget about it. You are so immersed in that environment because it’s so fabulously beautiful.”

    Maybe this morning will provide Hamdullahpur with another serene moment when the 57-year-old professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering is officially installed as the University of Waterloo’s sixth president at the Physical Activities Complex.

    He has already taken over for the departed David Johnston, Canada’s governor-general.

    But this is the instant where the former skydiver figuratively parachutes in to guide a world-renowned school of 30,000 students with 4,000 faculty and staff.

    Maybe he’ll get a skydiver’s rush during fall convocation ceremonies.

    “The first 5-10 seconds of your jump, once you are in a vertical position, after your chute opens, it’s silence,” he said.

    Hamdullahpur’s is an international man, educated in Turkey and Canada, bent on leading Waterloo into an increasingly international age of higher education.

    As he turns 58 on Nov. 3, he’ll be on a flight to the south coast of China where he’ll open a Waterloo office in Hong Kong. He takes off Nov. 2. He touches down Nov. 4. Technically, he’ll miss his birthday.

    But the cause is worthwhile.

    Hamdullahpur believes the university’s physical and intellectual presence must be felt around the world to reach out to alumni and potential new students.

    That’s the only way to stay on top with new universities emerging from India, China, Brazil, Singapore and Europe to challenge the established school powers.

    “The world has changed,” he said of the international push.

    “No reputable university on this planet will survive if we continue in our ways of how we attracted students and talent to our universities. Ten, 15, 20 years ago, we could sit in our offices and expect that people from around the world will come.”

    That’s no longer the case, he said.

    Waterloo already has a Dubai campus in the United Arab Emirates, along with local campuses in Kitchener, Cambridge and Stratford. On Saturday, the first 87 graduates of the school of pharmacy in Kitchener earn degrees.

    Hamdullahpur, the former school provost, is perhaps best-known for sacking the 2010 football season of the scandal-ridden Warriors.

    “It was a bitter pill for everybody but it was a necessary pill,” he said.

    “Education sometimes has hard lessons.”

    Hamdullahpur met his Canadian wife, Cathy, in Halifax in 1983, was former provost at Carleton University in Ottawa and wants Waterloo’s students to get to know him better.

    “It’s an open-door policy with me,” he said. “I’m not somebody who is sitting in his office whose name they can’t pronounce.”

    Hamdullahpur is the youngest of five brothers raised by a single mom. His businessman-father, Nasri, died of liver disease when Feridun was barely one. He didn’t know his dad. So Hamdullahpur, a father of two grown boys, said he will think of his mom on Saturday.

    Merziye, 92, preached humility and the value of education to her boys.

    She still lives by herself in Istanbul.

    “One very independent-minded woman,” Hamdullahpur said.

    He’ll also think of his oldest brother Perviz, who quit school when his dad died in order to run the family business and support his mother and brothers.

    He’ll remember Firuz, the brother he lost in a car crash nine years ago.

    When Firuz was old enough to go to matinees, his smaller brothers would give him money to go to the movies. Feridun and Riza were too young to go.

    When Firuz retuned, he would retell the entire move to a pint-sized audience.

    “We would just sit and listen,” Hamdullahpur said.

    On Saturday, about 2,000 graduating students will get a chance to sit and listen to him.

    jhicks@therecord.com

    via TheRecord – Feridun Hamdullahpur prepares to lead UW into the….

  • Turkey to co-produce pilotless Navy copters

    Turkey to co-produce pilotless Navy copters

    ÜMİT ENGİNSOY

    ANKARA- Hürriyet Daily News

    taiA new program for the co-production of unmanned helicopters worth hundreds of millions of dollars has been launched by military and procurement authorities to boost Turkey’s naval intelligence capabilities, a procurement official said on the weekend.

    The Undersecretariat for Defense Industries (SSM), Turkey’s procurement agency, will formally start the program soon. Requests for proposal will likely be released before the end of the year, the official said on condition of anonymity. “The competition will be open to foreign bidders, but they will have to agree to work with a Turkish prime contractor,” the official said.

    The local prime contractor will most likely be Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) based near Ankara, industry sources said. Last December TAI successfully performed test flights for the Sivrisinek (Mosquito), its first small unmanned helicopter prototype, which is equipped with the Cirit (Javelin), a rocket developed by Turkish missile maker Roketsan.

    The co-production program will involve an initial batch of up to 30 unmanned helicopters, all to be acquired by the Navy. Initial specification for the planned unmanned platform is a range of 180 kilometers and a flight time of up to 10 hours, procurement officials said. In its first test flight, the Sivrisinek was airborne for 90 minutes. According to planned contract specifications, the unmanned helicopters must perform vertical take-off and landing since they will be operated from naval platforms. The unmanned helicopters will initially be deployed on a landing platform dock (LPD) Turkey plans to acquire, but in later stages of the program, they will operate using Turkish corvettes and frigates as bases.

    UAVs either self-directed or remote controlled

    An unmanned or pilotless aircraft (UAV) can function either by remote control by a navigator or pilot, or autonomously as a self-directing entity. In the military most types are used for surveillance purposes, while the U.S. General Atomics’ MQ-9 Reaper is an armed version.

    Most Army and Air Force drones are pilotless aircraft with large wings as they utilize long runways for take-off and landing. But since naval platforms usually lack runways, UAVs used by the Navy are pilotless helicopters. As there is no risk of loss of personnel, UAVs can be used for risky missions. Turkey’s UAV efforts mainly are related to the country’s fight against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants. In the 1990s, Turkey utilized 10 platforms bought from the U.S. General Atomics. In recent years, such platforms were obtained from Israel. Turkey presently has in its inventory nine IAI Heron UAVs for anti-terrorism surveillance but plans to buy a small number of MQ-1 Predator drones from the United States. Meanwhile, its own program to produce the Anka drone has faced technical problems.

    via Turkey to co-produce pilotless Navy copters – Hurriyet Daily News.