Tag Archives: obama
South Africa’s Mandela ‘improving’ as Obama flies in
South Africa’s Mandela ‘improving’ as Obama flies in (Reuters) / 29 June 2013 South Africa’s ailing anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela is doing much better in hospital, his ex-wife Winnie said on Friday, as US President Barack Obama arrived for a visit that will pay homage to a man he calls his “personal hero”. The faltering health of the first black president of South Africa, a revered symbol of racial reconciliation, has drawn world attention since the 94-year-old was rushed to hospital with a recurring lung infection nearly three weeks ago. Earlier this week, the government said Mandela’s frail condition had turned critical, but since Thursday President Jacob Zuma has reported that his health is improving. “I’m not a doctor, but I can say that from what he was a few days ago, there is great improvement,” Mandela’s ex-wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, told reporters outside Mandela’s former home in the Johannesburg township of Soweto. But, she added, he remained “clinically unwell”. Aboard Air Force One prior to arriving in South Africa, Obama paid tribute to Mandela for the way he led his nation out of apartheid after years of struggle, but said he did not need a “photo op” with the former president. “Right now, our main concern is with his wellbeing, his comfort, and with the family’s wellbeing and comfort,” he told reporters before the US presidential aircraft touched down on Friday evening at Waterkloof air force base in Pretoria. During his weekend trip to Johannesburg, Pretoria and Cape Town, his second stop of a three-nation Africa tour, Obama is scheduled on Sunday to visit Robben Island, where Mandela passed 18 of the 27 years he spent in apartheid prisons. White House officials have said they will defer to the Mandela family on whether a visit to the hospital to see Madiba, as he is affectionately known, would be appropriate. Lessons of Mandela Obama told reporters his message in South Africa would draw from the lessons of Mandela’s life. “If we focus on what Africa as a continent can do together and what these countries can do when they’re unified, as opposed to when they’re divided by tribe or race or religion, then Africa’s rise will continue,” he said. White House officials said Obama would hold a “town hall meeting” on Saturday with youth leaders in Soweto, the Johannesburg township known for 1976 student protests against apartheid. Obama, in office since 2009, is making his first substantial visit to Africa following a short trip to Ghana at the beginning of his first term. While well-wishers and journalists crowded outside the hospital in the capital Pretoria where Mandela is being treated, a few blocks away, hundreds of demonstrators protested against Obama’s visit, some burning US flags. Nearly 1,000 trade unionists, Muslim activists and South African Communist Party members marched to the US Embassy shouting slogans denouncing Obama’s foreign policy as “arrogant and oppressive”. Muslim activists held prayers in a car park outside the embassy. Leader Imam Sayeed Mohammed told the group: “We hope that Mandela feels better and that Obama can learn from him.” South African critics of Obama have focused in particular on his support for US drone strikes overseas, which they say have killed hundreds of innocent civilians, and his failure to fulfill a pledge to close the US military detention center at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba housing terrorism suspects. “Two great men” Protesters said the first African-American president should not try to link himself to the anti-apartheid figure. “Mandela valued human life … Mandela would condemn drone attacks and civilian deaths, Mandela cannot be his hero, he cannot be on that list,” said Yousha Tayob. Not far away at the Pretoria heart hospital, some of the people paying tribute to Mandela had words of praise for Obama, who met Mandela in 2005 when he was still a US senator. Nigerian painter Sanusi Olatunji, 31, had brought portraits of both Mandela and Obama to the wall of the hospital, where flowers, tribute notes and gifts for Madiba, as Mandela is affectionately known, have been piling up. “These are the two great men of my lifetime,” he said. As Mandela’s health has deteriorated this year, the realization has grown among South Africa’s 53 million people that the man who forged their multi-racial “Rainbow Nation” from the ashes of apartheid may be nearing his end. The possibility of his dying has already generated controversy among the extended Mandela clan. A dispute between two factions over where the family grave should be went to court on Friday when his eldest daughter and more than a dozen other relatives sought an injunction against Mandela’s grandson, Mandla. The state broadcaster SABC said a court had ordered Mandla to return the remains of three of Mandela’s children from the village of Mvezo, where the anti-apartheid icon was born and where Mandla is now an influential tribal chief, to their former graves in Qunu, the village 20 km (13 miles) away where Mandela spent most of his childhood. Mandla, 39, has built a memorial center in Mvezo that many have interpreted as an attempt to ensure Mandela is buried there. Continue reading
Obama Delivers Renewed Renewable Energy Support For The US
27 June 2013 One of the most powerful people on Earth, US President Barack Obama, gave a passionate address on climate change on 25 June during a visit to Georgetown University in Washington DC. Obama wants to cut carbon pollution and reduce global warming and told an audience of students and visitors: ‘I refuse to condemn your generation, and future generations, to a planet that is beyond fixing.’ Among broad measures outlined, Obama wants to see a reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and the promotion of renewable energy while aiming to hit a 17% cut in carbon emissions recorded in 2005 by the end of this decade. He also took the brave decision to bypass a Congress stuck in stalemate to issue an executive memo to the Environmental protection Agency (EPA)calling for new rules for power plants to limit GHG emissions. The transportation sector has seen calls for further increased fuel economy standards for heavy duty trucks, with the plan also stating ‘biofuels have an important role to play in increasing our energy security, fostering rural economic development and reducing GHG emissions from this sector’. The action plan also reaffirms the Obama administration’s support of the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) and points to investment by the government into research and development for next-generation biofuels. The Advanced Ethanol Council (AEC) says the advanced ethanol industry stands behind the Obama administration in its effort to combat climate change. ‘The President is right to identify the renewable fuel standard and existing federal regulations as critical to the effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the energy sector,’ states AEC executive director Brooke Coleman. ‘Pound for pound, advanced ethanol is the most carbon reductive alternative to gasoline in the world and the RFS is driving the commercial deployment of our industry.’ Furthermore, the action plan informs that the US has more than doubled electrical generation from renewable sources during Obama’s first term, and he hopes to do the same again by 2020. To help achieve that target, the Department of the Interior has been directed to approve 10GW of new renewable capacity by 2020. The plan also notes the Department of Defense is committed to deploying 3GW of renewable energy on military installations by 2025, including biomass. ‘There are two major areas where this administration’s aid can make a big difference for the biomass industry,’ Bob Cleaves, president of the Biomass Power Association, was quoted as saying. ‘The first would be a commitment to the use of federal lands for renewable energy production and, secondly, a confirmation of biomass’ value as a renewable energy source.’ Federal agencies are also setting a new goal to reach 100MW of installed renewable capacity across the federally subsidized housing stock by 2020. – See more at: http://www.bioenergy…h.CWQL39Nk.dpuf Continue reading
Carbon Markets to Be a Focus of Poland Climate Talks, Marcu Says
By Mathew Carr – Jun 26, 2013 This year’s climate talks in Poland will attempt to establish a framework for rules governing industry-based carbon markets and non-market programs after 2020, according to the Centre for European Policy Studies. A so-called framework for various approaches would provide flexibility to nations wary of giving control over their domestic energy or greenhouse-gas markets to an international process, said Andrei Marcu, head of the centre’s carbon market forum in Brussels and adviser to Poland, which is hosting the United Nations negotiations in Warsaw starting Nov. 11. 3:17 June 26 (Bloomberg) — Former U.S. Representative Bob Inglis, a Republican from South Carolina, talks about President Barack Obama’s climate policy and immigration law. He speaks with Tom Keene and Sara Eisen on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance.” (Source: Bloomberg) The rules would allow nations to run their own programs, market or via government regulations and taxes, and choose whether they want to join the international market, he said yesterday by phone. Otherwise, countries could use their emission reductions domestically to show they are taking action to protect the climate, he said. President Barack Obama yesterday said his administration would “redouble” efforts to help forge an international climate-protection agreement that would govern emissions beyond 2020 and apply to all nations, not just those that have already industrialized. “We need an agreement that’s flexible, because different nations have different needs,” Obama said in a speech in Washington . “And if we can come together and get this right, we can define a sustainable future for your generation.” Using EPA Obama sought to limit U.S. emissions from existing and new fossil-fuel power stations and create free trade in clean-energy goods. His resolve to regulate using the Environmental Protection Agency may prompt the business community to lobby Congress to consider adopting more cost-effective carbon markets, said Anthony Hobley, president of the Climate Markets & Investments Association in London . Obama’s speech also may encourage the UN talks to become more pragmatic during their next few negotiating sessions, focusing on setting principles for domestic programs rather than seeking to impose targets, Hobley said yesterday in a phone interview. “We’ve been a little naive in what we expected international law to do.” To contact the reporter on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Lars Paulsson at lpaulsson@bloomberg.net Continue reading