Tag: Tubitak

  • Recycling energy from thermal plants to save $660 mln

    Recycling energy from thermal plants to save $660 mln

    An energy recycling project developed for thermal power plants by the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜBİTAK) and the İstanbul-based Yıldız Technical University (YTÜ) could save the country nearly TL 1 billion ($660 million) a year, the Anatolia news agency reported on Monday.

    thermal power

    The project will use the energy emitted during the production of electricity at those plants to heat over 100,000 homes around Turkey, it said. The project will also provide those homes with warm water and reduce Turkey’s carbon dioxide and sulfur emissions, Anatolia added.

    According to information received by the news agency from TÜBİTAK officials, whose names were not mentioned in the report, a huge amount of energy is emitted while the country’s 14 thermal power plants are producing electricity and this energy is heating the air. The joint research showed that 15 million megawatt hours (mWh) of this energy could be used for domestic heating and other purposes, the report said. The council and YTÜ have been working to recycle that much energy as part of the project for the last four years. The project was recently concluded and put in force at a thermal power plant in the western province of Kütahya’s Soma district. Only there, the recycled energy will be used to heat and provide warm water to 22,100 homes.

     

  • Turkey’s highest science council invites Turkish academics in US to come home

    Turkey’s highest science council invites Turkish academics in US to come home

    MICHIGAN – Anatolia News Agency

    turkey8217s highest science council invites turkish academics in us back home 2010 12 03 l

    A top Turkish scientific body has launched a campaign to entice Turkish academics working at United States universities back to Turkey by highlighting the caliber of the nation’s research and development, or R&D, culture.

    As part of the “Destination: Turkey” campaign launched by the Scientific and Technical Research Council of Turkey, or TÜBİTAK, top representatives from prominent Turkish industrial institutions visited Turkish academics in the U.S. to tell them about the R&D opportunities in Turkey to encourage them to return to Turkey.

    In the first leg of a series of visits by TÜBİTAK, the Turkish delegation visited the city of Boston and the state of Michigan to meet Turkish academics.

    The meeting was attended by more than 100 Turkish and foreign academics living in Michigan and surrounding states either working or continuing study in the U.S.

    Yıldız Holding Human Resources, Law and Supply Chain Group head Melih Özuyar said at the meeting R&D potential under the Yıldız Holding roof was exceptional and that the holding would give those who accepted TÜBİTAK’s invitation to return to Turkey the opportunity to work at relevant projects in the Yıldız Holding portfolio.

    Yıldız Holding owns the well-known food brand Ülker, producing biscuits, candy, dairy products, instant foods and other such products.

    Özyuvar said the project enabled them to reach out to many research assistants in the U.S. and tell them about projects the holding is willing to develop in collaboration with cutting-edge scientists and researchers. “Taking part in this project is extremely important for us in order to provide a high-quality labor force to our company.”

    He said the company was perfectly capable of creating the same opportunities for researchers as those in the U.S. “Today, our laboratories are equipped with almost the same technology as in laboratories in the U.S. and the EU,” he said, adding that wages were no longer below Western standards.

    There were almost 250 R&D staffers in their companies and 200 of them were working in the comestibles departments, he said.

    ASELSAN Defense Technologies Group General Manager for Unmanned Systems Bülent Bilgin also spoke at the meeting. ASELSAN attached the utmost importance to employing Turkish researchers who have worked in the EU or the U.S. because the company believed such researchers could bring special added value to the R&D process. “We want to benefit from the same technology as in U.S. and therefore we are devout supporters of, as well as grateful to, TÜBİTAK’s “Destination: Turkey” project,” he said.

    This first meeting was attended by representatives from Ankara, Bahçeşehir, Boğaziçi, Ege Universities, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul Şehir University and Sabancı and Uludağ Universities, as well as representatives of the TÜBİTAK Institute for Space Research, the İzmir High Technology Institute and top officials from companies such as Yıldız Holding, ASELSAN, Arçelik, Türk Telekom A.Ş and FNSS.

  • Science gives way to religious dogma in Turkey

    Science gives way to religious dogma in Turkey

    By Ferruh Demirmen

    The recent censorship of the Darwin story in the “Science and Technology Journal,” published by The Scientific and Technological Research Council (Tübitak) of Turkey, caused consternation in the scientific community in Turkey and beyond. Tübitak is the leading government agency established to advance science and technology in Turkey.

    The censorship, first time of its kind in Tübitak’s 46-year history, was an event that would shame any respectful scientific organization.

    The making of a scandal

    The event started innocuously enough when the chief editor of the journal, Dr.  Çiğdem Atakuman, decided to commemorate Charles Darwin’s 200th birthday by running a 16-page cover story on the scientist’s life and his theory of evolution in its March edition. Unesco, the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, had declared 2009 as the Year of Darwin.

    By established protocol in Tübitak, Atakuman had the authority to decide on the contents of the journal. But when Prof. Dr. Ömer Cebeci, a vice-president and member of the governing Science Board, found out about the Darwin article while it was at the press, the article and the photograph of Darwin on the cover page were peremptorily removed.

    A revised March edition, missing 16 pages and one week late, was issued, and Atakuman was verbally fired from her editorial position (“re-assigned”). The cover page was replaced with one dealing with global climate change.

    What Tübitak did not realize was that its actions were a recipe for a scandal.

    Condemnation

    The reaction from various quarters in Turkey and abroad was swift. Academics and students from various universities in Turkey gathered in front of the Tübitak building in Ankara to protest the censorship. Amid calls for the resignation of the Science Board, other academics, journalists, nongovernmental organizations and opposition politicians condemned Tübitak’s action. Turkish media gave wide coverage to the incident, and newspapers abroad weighed in.

    Tübitak was caught in a storm it had not expected.

    Voices of concern came from the Royal Society in London, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), EU politicians, and other foreign sources. Bloggers wasted no time on the Internet to chime in.

    Science versus dogma

    What lay at the core of these criticisms, and rightly so, was that science was being subjugated to the dictates of religious dogma. Darwin’s theory of evolution, while it forms one of the building stones of modern science, is incompatible with Islamic faith that man was created by God.

    Data suggest that only 25 percent of Turks believe in evolution, some, including the education minister Hüseyin Çelik, associating it with atheism. Turkish theologians generally reject the idea that man evolved from lower beings.

    There is, of course, a similar quandary with the Christian and Jewish faiths, but in the Turkish case Islamic teachings never stood in the way of evolutionary science. The academics and scientists managed to separate or reconcile evolution and Islamic faith, and the government did not interfere. They were free to practice and teach science including the theory of evolution.

    That was in keeping with the secular fabric of the republic as established by Kemal Atatürk.

    Tübitak itself featured Darwin many times in its journal in the past, and the event passed without any incident.

    Islamic wind

    The changeover in Tübitak’s stance on science, in particular the theory of evolution, is no accident. After the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in November 2002, the government has undertaken a relentless campaign to undermine secular education in Turkey. Elements of Islam have been injected into the educational system in various degrees, and religious schools have been promoted. Evolution has been relegated to second status in favor of creationism.

    The government has implemented its Islamic policy through laws, regulations and partisan appointments (in some cases in “acting capacity’). The result is a highly politicized educational system from bottom up, including the Council of Higher Education (YÖK).

    The shift in Tübitak is part of this politicization process. Beginning in January 2004, when the current president of the Science Board, Prof. Dr. Nüket Yetiş, was appointed in acting capacity, most members in senior administration resigned or were forced out. Amendments made to Tübitak’s charter in August 2008 gave the government substantial control over the institution.

    Also in August 2008 Yetiş, whose appointment had previously been vetoed by President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, was appointed as the president of Tübitak by President Abdullah Gül. Yetiş reportedly has ties to Islamists.

    Of the 12 members of the Science Board, 10 received their appointments during the AKP government.

    So, at the core of the Darwin scandal was political pressure coming from the AKP.

    Damage control

    To remedy the embarrassment, Tübitak issued a statement denying censorship of the Darwin article and attributing the incident to “miscommunication.” It said there would be a special issue of the magazine later in 2009 covering Darwin.

    A press release issued by Atakuman in reply, giving a detailed account of the events, however, left no doubt that censorship had taken place. Atakuman noted that after the incident she was reprimanded by Cebeci, her boss, in his office for pursuing a “provocative” subject in a “sensitive environment” – meaning the AKP rule.

    Tübitak would be hard put to explain why the Darwin article was provocative.

    Stung by criticism, the government, despite its well-known opposition to evolution, claimed it had played no role in the incident. Surprisingly – and perhaps not surprisingly – YÖK, the council overseeing higher education, declined to comment.

    More fallout

    What is most disconcerting about the Darwin incident is that it may stunt independent thinking and hinder science in Turkey. Science can only advance if it is free of ideology and religious dogma. Darwin’s theory of evolution is an integral part of science, and it must be disseminated, argued and researched without outside interference. Tübitak should promote, not hinder, such efforts.

    It is no surprise that Prof. Dr. Tahsin Yeşildere, Head of the Association for University Lecturers, commented that “Turkish science is in the hands of anachronistic brains who hold it in contempt,” while Lord Martin Rees, president of the Royal Society, called the Darwin incident an example of “cultural corruption and . . . intellectual dishonesty.”

    Nor is it a surprise that some EU politicians expressed disquiet, pointing out that the incident was a blatant violation of freedom of thought and scientific independence. Le Monde commented that Islamic groups in Turkey were waging war against Darwin.

    Turkey’s prospect to join the EU, already shaky, will no doubt be affected.

    What is also ironic, and disturbing, is that the Darwin censorship has taken place in a country that had benefited from Atatürk’s vision. Atatürk observed, eloquently, that “Science is the true guide in life.”

    A disquieting thought

    It has been 84 years since America had its bizarre “Scopes Trial” (“Monkey Trial”) in a Tennessee court. The trial was portrayed by some as a titanic struggle between good and evil, when in fact it was about truth and ignorance, or about light and dark.

    Is it possible that Turkey may soon have its own “Scopes Trial”? That would be most unfortunate. But if the AKP, with its Islamic agenda, continues to meddle with science, it may come to that.

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  • Clyde sells systems for Turkish satellites

    Clyde sells systems for Turkish satellites

    MARK SMITH DEPUTY BUSINESS EDITOR [email protected] 

    CLYDE Space, Scotland’s only space industry business, has struck a £150,000 deal to supply two flight model power systems to Turkey’s fledgling satellite programme.

    The deal with the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (Tubitak) will see Glasgow-based Clyde provide two flight model battery charge regulator systems for the launch of Rasat, the first Earth-observation satellite to be built and developed in Turkey.

    The 120kg spacecraft is to be launched into a “700km sun-synchronous orbit” in late 2009.

    Clyde Space, one of the world’s leading suppliers of small satellite power systems, has been capitalising on the growing demand for so-called nano and miniature satellites.

    Craig Clark, who set up Clyde Space in 2006 with the help of Scottish Enterprise, said: “We were delighted to be part of the Rasat team and to supply our small satellite battery charge regulator to Tubitak.”

    The battery charge regulator is specifically designed for use with lithium ion battery technology, and includes four 85-watt solar panel trackers and digital interface to battery and solar panel telemetry.

    Clark added: “Lithium ion is still a relatively new technology to most spacecraft manufacturers, and our knowledge and experience in this area added significant value to the Rasat engineering team.”

    Clark, who is based at Glasgow Science Park, last month revealed plans to turn his business into a multimillion-pound venture with the world’s first website selling Earth-orbiting satellites.

    The website, which was launched in August, primarily targets the US market and offers credit card sales of satellites for research purposes.

    The satellites, which put a futuristic spin on the notion of Clyde-built engineering, are all designed and manufactured at the Clyde Space base in Maryhill. The miniature satellites – most of them as small as 10cmcubed – known as cubesats and microsatellites, unfold in space like pizza boxes. They are launched into space by a rocket, then fired into orbit, where they unfold and begin gathering information.

    Source: The Herald, 26 Sep 2008