<font color='black' size='2' face='arial'><b>The sun in your eye</b><br>
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<div class="MsoNormal">A visiting professor at Shenyang Aerospace University from
Shandong province asked me to consider tutoring advanced engineering students
in talking about solar energy in English.
Being a strong proponent of alternative energy and power to fossil fuel,
I said "Yes!" </div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Oil fields off China Sea's continental shelf are privilege terrain
of foreign oil companies who used to only play a minimal fee. In some recent arrangement, 45 percent of an
exploration is owned by a transnational corporation, the other 45 percent belongs
to a Chinese company like PetroChina listed in the Stock Exchange, and the
remaining 10 percent owned by a government body. </div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Our doggedly hopeful card sees the drilling of oil to eventually
taper down to non-reliance as China fends off opportunism and intrusion on its
sovereignty over the China Seas, while it pursues hydro, wind, solar, natural gas,
biofuel, and nuclear alternatives to fossil fuel. Let us be clear about the issues of
sovereignty in the China Seas; it is all about access to oil, even as we watch
the same issue disintegrate South Sudan, and roil the normally passive folks of
Myanmar.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">We saw mini-hydro in the Zichuan's autonomous Zang country,
and the practice is encouraging. Small-scale
hydro, like those in Japan, can handle requirements of southwest China.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Meanwhile, Nanjing's haze looks like Sherlock Holmes'
London, not of inland fog but of <i>mei-</i>fired
(coal) smog. The obvious task of developing
alternative energy is most urgent in China.
I live in Shenyang that straddles the low end of the Manchurian plain, a
trough between two mountain ranges, which keeps the smog perpetually in
between, so I am resigned to a respiratory ailment as I stay here longer.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Late November this year in Qingdao, a Sinopec oil refinery pipeline
exploded on what is blamed as human error, i.e., poor planning of pipe laying in
an urban area, lackluster maintenance procedure, and susceptibility to danger
through the city sewage system. When a
leak was discovered, the area was not immediately sealed and evacuated; the
ensuing explosion cost 55 lives and many injuries. Ironically, this was almost a replay of a
similar incident in 1988.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">In 2011, ConocoPhillips oil platforms had three leaks that
polluted waters six times the size of Singapore on Bohai Bay north of Shandong
(kept from news for a month until it slipped out in a blog). The third leak coincidentally occurred on the
same day as a refinery at the Daya Bay Economic and Technical Development zone
in Guangdong exploded. The alarm was not
only on the flammable material in the refinery but also of its proximity to the
Nuclear plant situated close to the urban center of Hong Kong.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">We now know that 40 hours of solar energy reaching the earth
is enough to power the whole planet's current annual requirement. The energy is free and the hustles on photovoltaic
catchments are now easily a walk in the park, or, a drive through in unpopulated
wide-open spaces like the grassland, or, on the sides and tops of city
buildings. The technology is available at cost par to coal, gas, and oil fired
power generation. </div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">So, why are we not doing it?
Like any addiction, dependence on oil is like alcohol fume to the intoxicated. It is not easy to curtail. Production structures around the world that
harness fossil fuel, and the financial instruments that sustain them, hold legislative
power protecting turf as they guide global economic growth.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Popular wisdom is still wary on why we would want a rapid
change. We are still on denial on the
extent of human participation in climate change presently experienced around
the planet, no small thanks to oil money for distorting the science that feeds illusions. We
keep to the comfort of the familiar.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">"Those who walk in darkness have seen a great
light," is a metaphor from the Prophet Isaiah used during the Yuletide season. The light source Ra (sun) ruled in Egypt for
centuries, and a mythical journey of a nightly trip into Nile's nether lands to
emerge again in the light of dawn, influenced the theme of exodus in the Torah
and the resurrected image of the Christian faith. The experience of clear blue sea in the Aegean
where depth is seen from great distance above adds to the European philosophical
metaphors of lucidity, enlightenment, and liberation.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">The big lie is the inevitability of polluting earth's
atmosphere; we would rather trigger Armageddon over oilfields to ensure
corporate bottom lines than move away with determination from an addiction. But individuals can raise cane to demand that
communal resource be used to avert a natural catastrophe already at our
doorsteps. Or, more quietly, like my
brother's house in Oahu's Ewa Beach, and of my classmate in Oakland, CA, go
photovoltaic! Self-interest can be
enlightened.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">The <i>arenga pinnata, </i>a
tropical sugar palm tree that grows in Saipan and the rest of Micronesia also traps
sunshine that converts into biofuel. The
resource is there. We only need to decide. Let's go solar. </div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">May your darkness see the light of day!</div>
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