michael lambe's scrapbook
little irish jackhammer
Energy News
- While Japan Turns Away from Nuclear Power, South Korea Sticks to Plan - Earth & Industry - May 22, 2012 at 5:44 am
- Nuclear reactor reprieve puts UK energy plans in doubt - Gazeta.KZ - May 22, 2012 at 3:43 am
- Pricing nuclear out of the energy future? - Climate Spectator - May 22, 2012 at 1:12 am
- Germany's Energy Transition: One Year Later - openPR (press release) - May 21, 2012 at 5:39 pm
- G-8 to Eliminate Fossil Fuel Subsidies, Curb Climate Pollutants - Environment News Service - May 21, 2012 at 5:18 pm
- Merkel Tightens Grip on Energy Overhaul as Progress Lags - BusinessWeek - May 21, 2012 at 12:46 pm
- Planning a new environment policy - The Japan Times - May 20, 2012 at 11:50 pm
- While Japan turns away from nuclear power, South Korea sticks to its path - The Guardian - May 17, 2012 at 3:30 pm
- Nuclear's Once Bright and Shiny Future Blinks Out - Huffington Post - May 12, 2012 at 7:45 pm
- Japan's Greenhouse Gas Emissions Efforts Eroded By Fukushima Nuclear Disaster - Huffington Post - May 4, 2012 at 2:10 pm
powered by Google News Just Better 1.2 plugin
-
Comments Off
Here’s a creepy story (really creepy if you have ever seen Juon) about a woman who snuck into a 57 year old man’s house and started living in the storage space above his closet.
… the man had become increasingly uneasy as he found food missing and couldn’t shake the feeling that he wasn’t alone… LINK
Apparently, police suspect she was a serial closet hopper, moving from house to house. Wow, eh?
-
Comments Off
The Sun Always Shines On Your Greens
There’s yet another post up on Deep Kyoto tonight of vegan & organic restaurant Hale ~晴れ~ which means “sunny”. Hmm. I’m sensing a trend for “sunny” organic restaurants here; Sunny Place, Sunshine Cafe…Now here’s a bunch of Japan related links so I can avoid actually writing anything.
Burakumin Photographs by Masaru Goto
http://www.globalcompassion.com/ has an exhibition of photos by Masaru Goto of Burakumin:
The Burakumin are a nearly invisible (yet identifiable) group of Japanese people. They are the remnant of a caste system that formally passed away long ago. Their ancestors were the untouchables. Despite being racially and ethnically Japanese through and through, the Burakumin still face discrimination and struggle together under the weight of their shared history. (Quoted from globalcompassion.com)
The photographs, a series of portraits, are colorful and reveal a remarkable zest for life in each of the participants (like the guy who says he wants to die shouting “Whoo!”). Each picture is followed by a short account of each persons experiences. I found bamboo artisan Keigin Ishida’s story of his relationship with his father especially touching. LINK TO MASARU GOTO’S EXHIBITION
Whale Meat SCANDAL!!!
Recently, Greenpeace have been making a big hullabaloo about Japanese whalers filching whale meat at the tax-payers expense. Now the news has gone global. Here’s a link to the BBC article: LINK And here’s what Greenpeace have to say about it:
We did it! Within 72 hours of our exposé of corruption in the whaling industry and embezzlement of whale meat, 40,000 Greenpeace supporters wrote to Japanese officials demanding an investigation.Despite denials from the company that runs the whaling ship that the stolen whale meat was just “souvenirs” the Tokyo public prosecutor’s office agreed there were grounds for an investigation. It’s working!
By law, the sale of whale meat outside the official “scientific whaling” programmme is not supposed to happen — all proceeds are supposed to offset the taxpayer-subsidized whaling. This means the entire whaling programme is illegal and needs to have its permits revoked and subsidies cancelled — let’s get 80,000 messages in the NEXT 72 hours demanding that! LINK TO GREENPEACE CAMPAIGNDon’t Read This if You’re Eating
I wonder why it is, that despite broadly agreeing with pretty much everything Greenpeace stands for, I find myself increasingly irritated by them and reluctant to post links to their campaigns. Ah, I know. It’s because of ridiculous videos like this. What genius came up with the idea of “average Joe vomiting off the back of a ship” as a marketing campaign? How is that appealing? Really? Ah, oh well…
Speaking of vomit, this article isn’t particularly enlightening but the headline kind of grabbed me: 54 sickened at hospital after farmer’s chemical-fuelled vomit generates toxic gas. Wow, eh?
-
Comments Off
Thanks to Jules for this Mainichi Daily News article:
TSUKUBAMIRAI, Ibaraki — The municipal government here has cancelled a lecture on domestic violence scheduled for next Sunday in response to protests from opponents, city sources said.
Opponents criticized the Law for the Prevention of Spousal Violence and the Protection of Victims, which allows the government to provide shelters for domestic violence victims, on the grounds that it would lead to the breakdown of families. LINK
Bloody hell, eh?
-
Comments Off
A funny sort of a day today; my first class being unusually well behaved and even the most intransigently awkward students being extremely well-behaved and doing exactly what I told them to do, I was early on in a very good mood. But then the last class of the day, which is usually friendly and fun, was today oddly awkward and unfriendly and unfortunately needed a bit of shouting at to get it into line… A further example of 竹に上下の節あり I suppose. Sometimes those jointy knobbly bits come in unexpected places.
Three recent posts on Deep Kyoto are:
Getting Around Town, A Guide to Import Stores, and a short piece on the Omen noodle restaurant. Take a look if you so desire.
There’s an interesting cogitation by David Cromwell on medialens today on one of the most contentious issues of WWII: whether or not the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were justified. It’s an old debate that swings back and forth between the orthodox line that the bombings were a necessary evil and the revisionist view that it was a cynical tactical manoevre. People tend to plump down on one side or other of the argument and feel very strongly about it too. Why is this article worth reading? Well, for one thing: “Despite the topic’s near-disappearance from news agendas and contemporary debate, the threat of nuclear annihilation sadly remains. Humanity still stands at the edge of the abyss.” And also this article does seem to give a fuller picture:
Western historians debating the reasons for the end of the war have focused heavily on the U.S. ‘decision’ to drop the atomic bomb.[2] But there has been relatively little attention devoted to the deliberations among the Japanese wartime ruling elite which led to surrender. Even less has been known about Soviet decision-making and the Soviet entry into the Pacific War against Japan.
A stumbling block until recently has been that no historian has been sufficiently fluent in English, Japanese and Russian to investigate the primary archival material – including internal government documents, military reports and intelligence intercepts – in all three languages. This partly explains why historical debate in the West has been so focused on the Truman administration’s motives and policy-making: this, after all, could be pursued on the basis of English-language material. For example, in 1965, ‘revisionist’ historian Gar Alperovitz published an influential book, ‘Atomic Diplomacy’, in which he argued that use of the atomic bombs was militarily unnecessary and was intended as a show of U.S. strength against Soviet power. There has been furious debate about this for several decades… LINK
On a tangent, there’s another interesting article up on the Mainichi Daily News website on Japanese Cyborg Farmers. As Japan’s population is aging and many young people are leaving the countryside in favour of big city life, researchers at Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology have built a robotic ex0-skeleton for old people so they can keep on farming well into their dotage. Marvellous. Now it’s ten o’clock already and I still haven’t eaten dinner. Why did I forget to eat?
-
Comments Off
This is just one of those things that always puts a smile on my face when I see it. However, though I’ve seen Japanese rockabilly dancers doing their thing in both Fukushima and Tokyo this is the first time I’ve seen it in Kyoto (just outside City Hall last Sunday incidentally). And there does seem to be an important difference here. In Kansai, girls do it too! Fukushima and Tokyo rockers were always a pretty lary looking bunch of guys, but here in Kansai rockabilly dancing appears to be a family affair because these guys bring their wives and daughters to join in the fun. How nice. Enjoy!
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/ZQpYGHYqHx0" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /] -
Comments Off
Browsing Gizmodo this evening, (slogan: so much in love with shiny new toys it’s unnatural) I came across this very silly and thereby highly amusing soya sauce bottle. LINK.
And here’s an admirable man who somehow manages to combine religious belief with a creditable degree of common sense: LINK.
And, um, here’s some Sade. Just because she nice.
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/6MKHJ5Cyk90" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /] -
Comments Off
I just read this very entertaining piece by the SF writer Charlie Stross on his impressions after a recent visit to Japan. Having been here ten years, it’s refreshing to see this country through the eyes of someone to whom Japan is new and exciting, and especially through the eyes of a writer who is so concerned with what comes next. It also gave me a little thrill when he was describing a restaurant that looks like someone’s house (because it is) and I suddenly realised – I know that place! – I know that cat! – I was there the other week! Link.
And then I found this in the comments and it made me laugh too: Earthquake Sets Japan Back to 2147.
-
3 Comments
There’s a fresh review up on Deep Kyoto today of 進々堂 a famous Kyoto cafe with a long history and a sadly anal-retentive owner.Last night I watched a marvellous 8 minute animation on youtube and thought to myself: “Must put that on my blog tomorrow!” Here’s the trailer:
Tantalizing, isn’t it? Sadly the animation itself has been taken down overnight for copyright infringement. Pity. However, this link is both entertaining in it’s own right, and gives some insight into the character of the man resposible, Blur Studio’s creative director and co-founder Mr. Tim Miller.
[DISCLAIMER: Strong language unsuitable for children or my mum. Mr. Tim Miller doesn't mince words.]Or you can just watch this video of what happens in a crowded Tokyo swimming pool (yes – it is actually a pool!) when somebody turns the wave machine back on: MASSIVE CRAZINESS!
The Horror! The Horror!
-
Comments Off
School’s out for summer! Yay-hey-hoo-hoo-ha!
Ahem. There’s a fresh review up on Deep Kyoto of Café Bibliotic Hello! today. I first went there three years ago on the recommendation of one Duncan Flett, and then somehow forgot all about it until my colleague Helen Bisset reminded me of it today. In the intervening years the Palm trees have gotten a little bit out of hand.
Nice place though (if a little pricey).
And following on from yesterday’s mini-rant, here is further confirmation of the ineptitude of officials: Japan Admits Greater Nuclear Leak
-
Comments Off
Here’s my favorite quote today, after earthquakes in Niigata caused fires at a nuclear power plant:
Well, they would say that wouldn’t they? That’s what officials say. “Everything is alright! Trust me! I’m an official!” Pardon me if I detect a whiff of radioactive bullsh*t. For me the question is; why does Japan, being super earthquake prone as it is, subject also to typhoons and tsunamis and every other possible natural disaster, why does Japan want to litter itself with nuclear power plants? Is this not ENTIRELY MAD? Am I hopelessly naive in thinking that positioning a nuclear power plant over a major fault line is just a teensy bit careless? There are 53 of them you know, 53 operational nuclear power plants in Japan. Is this not quite a few?
Ah well, I’m sure the officials will take care of it. I’m sure they are in Niigata right now, personally sorting out those tipped-over barrels. So we can all rest easy in our beds.
There’s a fresh posting up on Deep Kyoto tonight for those who need to drown their sorrows in an ambient atmosphere: The Flying Keg
(Update: There’s a good overview of Japan’s nuclear power industry up here: Japanese Fears Over Nuclear Power Industry)

