Tag Archives: industry
Forest2Market Releases Video: Ensure Wood Bioenergy Project Sustainability With Forest2Fuel
New video demonstrates the value of Forest2Fuel services to participants in the wood bioenergy industry. ergy project support services, released a new video that demonstrates the value of its Forest2Fuel product line to wood bioenergy companies as they navigate the complexities of sustainable supply throughout the project lifecycle. The video, Ensure Wood Bioenergy Project Sustainability with Forest2Fuel, features Bioenergy Practice Manager Stan Parton . Parton walks viewers through a hypothetical bioenergy project that demonstrates the value of Forest2Fuel services from the earliest stages of development through financing, execution and ongoing operations. The video is available for viewing on the Forest2Market website , Vimeo and YouTube . Parton noted, “Participants in the bioenergy industry use Forest2Fuel project support services to inform complex decisions. They use our studies to identify project sites, plan feedstock procurement strategies and improve operational efficiency. Our studies arm project owners with the tools they need to prove project quality to financial partners.” Forest2Fuel services include feasibility studies, tipping point analyses, site selection studies, wood fuel indexing for supply and off-take agreements and price benchmarks that buyers and sellers of wood fuel use to compare their procurement performance to, and improve their positions in, the market. “Accurate market data is the key industry participants need to resolve complex issues in the bioenergy project development process,” said Suzanne Hearn, Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Forest2Market. “Our knowledge of the wood biomass supply chain is informed by our data – the most extensive forest biomass transactional database available. Better data equals better decision making, and the depth and breadth of Forest2Market’s information allows for unparalleled insight into biomass supply chains.” Ensure Wood Bioenergy Project Sustainability with Forest2Fuel is the company’s second video. Forest2Market’s first video, Origins, featured the story of the company’s inception and growth through 2012. About Forest2Market Forest2Market, Inc. empowers participants in the forest, wood products, recovered fiber and bioenergy industries to make exponentially better-informed decisions through the strategic application of industry expertise and unique price databases. Founded in 2000 by President and CEO Pete Stewart, Forest2Market is the sole source of transaction-based data available in the marketplace. Possessing over 40 years of experience in the forest products and renewable energy sectors, Stan Parton – Manager, Bioenergy Practice – oversees the Forest2Fuel product line for buyers and sellers of renewable energy fuels. ### Continue reading
500m phones under threat: UN warns of mobile bugs
500m phones under threat: UN warns of mobile bugs (Reuters) / 22 July 2013 A United Nations group that advises nations on cybersecurity plans to send out an alert about significant vulnerabilities in mobile phone technology that could potentially enable hackers to remotely attack at least half a billion phones. The bug, discovered by German firm, allows hackers to remotely gain control of and also clone certain mobile SIM cards. Hackers could use compromised SIMs to commit financial crimes or engage in electronic espionage, according to Berlin’s Security Research Labs, which will describe the vulnerabilities at the Black Hat hacking conference that opens in Las Vegas on July 31. The UN’s Geneva-based International Telecommunications Union, which has reviewed the research, described it as “hugely significant.” “These findings show us where we could be heading in terms of cybersecurity risks,” ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré told Reuters. He said the agency would notify telecommunications regulators and other government agencies in nearly 200 countries about the potential threat and also reach out to hundreds of mobile companies, academics and other industry experts. A spokeswoman for the GSMA, which represents nearly 800 mobile operators worldwide, said it also reviewed the research. “We have been able to consider the implications and provide guidance to those network operators and SIM vendors that may be impacted,” said GSMA spokeswoman Claire Cranton. Nicole Smith, a spokeswoman for Gemalto NV, the world’s biggest maker of SIM cards, said her company supported GSMA’s response. “Our policy is to refrain from commenting on details relating to our customers’ operations,” she said. BECOMING THE SIM Cracking SIM cards has long been the Holy Grail of hackers because the tiny devices are located in phones and allow operators to identify and authenticate subscribers as they use networks. Karsten Nohl, the chief scientist who led the research team and will reveal the details at Black Hat, said the hacking only works on SIMs that use an old encryption technology known as DES. The technology is still used on at least one out of eight SIMs, or a minimum of 500 million phones, according to Nohl. The ITU estimates some 6 billion mobile phones are in use worldwide. It plans to work with the industry to identify how to protect vulnerable devices from attack, Touré said. Once a hacker copies a SIM, it can be used to make calls and send text messages impersonating the owner of the phone, said Nohl, who has a doctorate in computer engineering from the University of Virginia. “We become the SIM card. We can do anything the normal phone users can do,” Nohl said in a phone interview. “If you have a MasterCard number or PayPal data on the phone, we get that too.” iPHONE, ANDROID, BLACKBERRY The mobile industry has spent several decades defining common identification and security standards for SIMs to protect data for mobile payment systems and credit card numbers. SIMs are also capable of running apps. Nohl said Security Research Labs found mobile operators in many countries whose phones were vulnerable, but declined to identify them. He said mobile phone users in Africa could be among the most vulnerable because banking is widely done via mobile payment systems with credentials stored on SIMs. All types of phones are vulnerable, including iPhones from Apple Inc, phones that run Google Inc’s Android software and BlackBerry Ltd smartphones, he said. BlackBerry’s director of security response and threat analysis, Adrian Stone, said in a statement that his company proposed new SIM card standards last year to protect against the types of attacks described by Nohl, which the GSMA has adopted and advised members to implement. Apple and Google declined to comment. CTIA, a US mobile industry trade group based in Washington, D.C., said the new research likely posed no immediate threat. “We understand the vulnerability and are working on it,” said CTIA Vice-President John Marinho. “This is not what hackers are focused on. This does not seem to be something they are exploiting.” Continue reading
Industrial Wood Pellets Help Keep US Forests Working
Taylor Scott International Continue reading