jeudi, juillet 30, 2015

From Human Beings to LDAP entries

Nowadays tendency when companies merge or there is a take over operation and the resulting body reaches a critical mass of employees, the human side of the company which usually held HR or a similar body is gradually lost. A company's goal is to make money, but also save operating money to reduce cost; both help increasing share holders dividend if the company is listed. The merging or buying helps to reduce cost of operating, to gain in competitivity. So if you have X HR employees in the first company and Y HR employees in the second one, the resulting company would most certainly not have X+Y HR employees because higher management will most probably say the work is been replicated. Usually the HR force will be reduced by 10 to 30% because the baseline of work can be handled by a reduced number of employees and many tasks are run through processes, therefore can be "automatized".
There is one factor the you consequently loose: the factor that makes the company "human". It is when the employee feels like he's not a number, that the HR representatives looks at him as original, and not through a series of processes and ticking boxes. That factor exists because of a silent work generally not traçable and unseen in reports, statistics and other weapons used by high management to measure the value added of an HR employee, which is actually taking up to 30% of the HR body's time. As opposed to Marketing/sales where you pay more attention to this human side, because down the line it generates revenue. Reduced HR team will do the same work that is within their job description. The issue is that the human side is rarely part of it as you have to generate or save something traçable immediately (e.g. revenue), not happiness and well being. The energy consumed to do their extended work within the newly generated company is energy they do not spend anymore in perfecting the "human" side of the company.

That's when employees become LDAP entries: their past is forgotten, what matters is the present work they are doing and the prospect of what they can give to the company in the future. Hence, a young professional will be seen as more attractive as the past (the experience) is not taken into account in the new calculations, only the present which is ok (almost a cheap labor with great expectations). An experienced an old professional within the company is at loss because all that he has done is not taken into account, he currently works good but he is expensive and the prospect is short as he has few years left before retirement. Within this line of thoughts a natural reaction is to try to retire him, and maybe re-employ him as a consultant (less expensive and easily disposable) if the market allows it. Sometimes the limit is pushed up to considering out employees in the wrong place at the wrong time (e.g. location in a downturn, employee between assignments and a HR department with strict orders of headcount reduction). 

With the globalization, it becomes impossible to mix workload with emotions within a company that reached a critical mass of employee, because that company does mix only with numbers.

jeudi, mars 26, 2015

Hoovering off carbon dioxide, is it realistic?

First of all, I am an all out fan of the Carbon Capture and Storage technology. It has been already a few years I have been gathering information. As I love to dream and picture simple stuff in my mind (it kills time off metro-commuting for example) I always figured out a bright future, Brand-New-World lookalike with pastel colour automatic little hoovers buzzing around busy city centers sucking off CO2 from immediate atmosphere and shiting calcium carbonate bricks*... like rabbits. I never said it was clever thoughs but the idea was keeping me intertained for long enough. Another of my thoughts was, due to the GHG effect retaining sunlight's heat from evading the Earth, the high CO2 concentration is probably up there in high atmosphere and not down here. So I was also trying to figure out the same hoovers but mounted in drones hoovering the stratospheres.
This morning I checked my internet alerts and discovered that Virgin's Sir Richard Branson launched back in 2007 along with Al Gore a contest called the "Virgin Earth Challenge". One of the challenger company made a news statement earlier this month regarding a pilot plant talking about... sucking off CO2 from atmosphere! So first I thought "niiiice", but then I remembered my drones and I wondered if it is not more efficient to suck CO2 off from high up rather than from the ground level? On the other hand, to give them justice, I know that some industries use CO2 as soldering atmosphere to avoid presence of oxygen around the flame and not having to use rare gas, much more expensive. This would mean that CO2 is heavier than air, hence would stay at ground level. That question I will leave it to further investigation, as it triggered my curiosity but for now you can watch this company's announcing video:





*: Calcium carbonate is a by-product of heated up and compressed CO2 in the presence of calcium which could be stored on a little batch reactor behind the hoover powered by sunlight. I had it all figured out, you see? :-)

mercredi, mars 25, 2015

Power of images

I might state the obvious here, but advertising is something corporations take very seriously and that independently of their intention. They just cannot afford to miss their target on advertising, the "too big to fail" downturn is that, just like superstars, dirt goes off your public image way harder than glitter. That is why you will never see some huge companies advertising, they are simply scared of missing and do not want to spend the money it takes no to miss. I have a good example of successful (by my own standards which you might not agree with) advertising for a company that wants positive publicity: BASF sustainability Newletter. Before I go any further I want to say that I did like the way they formatted it, that's why I tried my best to explain it.
 First you look at the newletter and just let yourself go through their updates. Then take two steps back and observe. How did they format their NPO-type newsletter? The first picture is crucial, it is the one that will take the reader through and I stole it for you to stay with me and read my post (I know, I'm evil :-) ). Here we see a fragile human, female child and indian-lookalike. You immediately associate it with:

  • peaceful religion 
  • resilience to their fate 
  • general happiness of living (the colorful background underlines it) 
  • fragile financial situation of 90% of the population. 
 Then the first plan blurred out to understand the focus is on the human, the tap is only the context. It could be food she's pointing at, but you would not associate it with sustainability as easily as with water. The results gives you impression that the mighty can also take care of the frail and help him. It does not say up to where nor how. Then it goes on with other things that you might want to read or not, but you will be caught by this fragile little girl with her used tin bucket pointing at the tap with a happy face. You are now in the emotional with this picture, it would not be the same if it was that middle age indian man signing an important collaboration contract that will be much more of a help for the little girl and her family's future than the water tap (does it work?). BASF intentions are secondary for my analysis, what I want to emphasize is that BASF surely used media professionals to format this newsletter. They cannot afford to waste a Newsletter if it does not advertise inderectly and positively the company. Worst, the newsletter backfires because you did not care enough to what you would show the World. For this reason you will see many companies willing to remain out of the spotlights.

 P.S.: If you feel I am wrong, I'll be glad to hear from you. It is not my area but I have an inclination for marketing and a passion for photography.
 P.P.S.: I really would like to thank the photograph that captured such a beautiful and fragile expression of this child. If anyone knows him please let him know his photo is beautiful.

mardi, décembre 02, 2014

Carbon emission reduction IS feasible, if...

This article is actually comforting me into my positions: true carbon reduction will only come from fossil fuel majors. To continue existing they will find the way to reduce carbon emission. The only thing that needs to be done is Worldwide government laws and act to fiscalize or penalize carbon emission, fossil fuel production... only then will they, as a mean of survival, accept to invest in carbon reduction plans.

mardi, août 12, 2014

The wonders of chemistry ^_^

Nature published the Chemist's choices of 2014, within this review a lot of amazing stuff that makes you realize that Mother Nature can do it all, but not necessarily needs to! Here is a selection of my preferred ones:
A new plastic material imitates veins to heal itself:

A robo-chemist for organic synthesis

Heating up any organic material to make biofuel

Turning photons into fuel

Bath-salt chemical promises safer solar cells

Chemical treatment could cut cost of biofuel

CCS infografics for UK policies

I love infografics, it take a couple of seconds to read and you feel more intelligent afterward! Well it is not entirely true but at least if you want to get deeper in a subject it is a doorsteps. So the UK government issued lately a document showing the possibility of a phase 2 development in CCS. And they did put a couple of infografics that I will paste here, for you guys to appreciate their vision. The document is retrievable here and the infografics are below.
In this first infografics they show the 3 phases of development for an ideal CCS implementation plan. Phase 1 (in blue) is not entirely implemented but the idea is to build main pumping units (phase 1) and satellites (phase 2 and 3) to inject CO2 and also being able to retrieve extra oil reserves. It is the most realistic way to implement further CCS, through the integration with Extended Oil Recovery (EOR) techniques of aging oilfields.

This second infografic show their first power generation project integrating CCS as a plan to reduce Carbon emission (White Rose CCS project), and how it will still be able to fulfill it's goal of powerhouse, in a greener manner than it's predecessors.

This last infografics is their second large power generation project integrating CCS (Peterhead CCS project). 
Both projects plan offshore storage which most probably will be integrated as EOR feedstock. The document claims they should provide 40% of UK's energy by 2050!
Now that is a blue sky plan :-)





mercredi, juillet 23, 2014

The Guardians of the Earth

I read this very interesting article today  talking about carbon and nitrogen cycles from a seminar held in Brazil. The country might suffer the aftermath of a badly organized World Cup (FIFA did very well, but the host country forgot that the entertainment firm would not prepare the country... and all at a sudden it stopped just to accommodate a couple of athletes!!). The R&D is growing steadily and getting into speed with international level. Recently there was this conference on biodiversity from FAPESP A couple of very interesting talks were held talking about the nitrogen and carbon cycles and how the anthropogenic factor modified it.
You can find the Nitrogen Cycle presentation here:
The Carbon Cycle presentation is found below. It is actually part of the same video, I just pinpointed at the correct time for you not to wait 45 min:

What is interesting is the way the debate is elevated and we seem to see the practical solutions pointing from the smog. From a project management point of view, we can identify the problems to assess and define a road-map which will look better than a chat room of grown-up kids trying to "save the forest" like it was at the early days. Not saying we do not need them, actually these dreamers are crucial because they are the reasons the practical people are looking into these issues. The earlier clear the smog for the latter to work more efficiently.
Also from the Stockholm Resilience Center, Nine Pillars of our planet have been defined, boundaries after which uncontrollable events will occur to try to re-establish the balance:

  • Stratospheric ozone layer
  • Biodiversity
  • Chemicals dispersion
  • Climate Change
  • Ocean acidification
  • Freshwater consumption and the global hydrological cycle
  • Land system change
  • Nitrogen and phosphorus inputs to the biosphere and oceans
  • Atmospheric aerosol loading
The image on top is an estimation of how these factors changed since 1950.



mardi, juillet 22, 2014

Third pilar of the Earth

Last week the leaders of the BRICS nations met in Fortaleza to sign a new Multilateral Bank into existence. The New Development Bank (NDB) is born, will be headquartered in Shanghai and will open its doors to developing nations from 2016. It will have an initial capital pool of $50 billion that should rise to double if all goes according to the plan(s). The bank will also have a "Contingency Reserve Arrangement" of some $100bn to insulate developing countries from the “short-term liquidity pressures” of the financial markets. The primary goal of the NDB will be to drive economic progress in the developing world by fostering much-needed infrastructure projects. Currently, such projects in developing nations are costing an estimated $800 billion per annum. By 2025, it will be three times that amount, necessitating a global monthly spend of $200 billion – that’s an outlay analogous to the GDP of the Czech Republic every 30 days. Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa account for 42% of the world's population, and 30% of global GDP based on Purchasing power parity (PPP). In term of global energy numbers, the nations giving birth to the NBD possess 31% of the world's recoverable shale oil and 28% of the world's shale gas. Although the BRICS $50 billion initial war chest represents a small 12% of the subscribed capital of the World Bank and Asian Development Bank, the collaborative intent is there - the recent $400 billion Russo-Chinese gas deal signed between Gazprom and the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) is a testament to that. By the way, NDB also stands for Never Done Before... :-)

lundi, juillet 21, 2014

France, French and Reforms... One of these do not apply

Bonjour, j'ai lu en Juillet un article sur le Nouvel Économiste qui parlait des difficultés de la France à se réformer.  L'article ne répond pas à la question sous-jacente et qui est le parfait reflet de la France d'aujourd'hui: celle qui ne répond pas aux vraies questions. Quand Mr Sarkozy est arrivé au pouvoir je pensais qu'il allait jouer le rôle du jeune politique dynamique donnant un coup de pied dans la fourmilière. Déception devant son populisme peureux. Mr Hollande est encore plus populiste puisque de fibre mittérandienne (que je considère comme l'empereur des populistes). Nos politiques sont plus préoccupés par leurs résultats de campagne que par le développement économique de la France. Vu l'état de notre pays aujourd'hui les mesures pour le redresser vont être très impopulaires mais un politiciens devrait savoir que sa vocation est de voir au delà du mécontentement immédiatiste du peuple (ce qui se définit dans une ligne très fine entre démocratie et autocratie). Les propositions mettront fin au rêve ludique des français qui sont devenu trop paresseux et pensent que tout ce brouhaha international ne les concernent pas. Ils se fustigent de voir les chinois racheter en masse leur Art, vider le notre (dans la foulée) ou encore acheter notre vin en masse ou un village entier dans le Vercors. Ils n'aiment encore moins les investisseurs qui réussissent (pourtant moteurs du pays). 
Une question me vient à l'esprit: pourquoi envie-t-on plus facilement le petit patron que le grand? Les français ont tendance à aimer voir les "patrons payer" surtout ceux des petites PME, les plus fragiles. À première vue envier un patron de petite PME n'est pas tant sexy que d'envier Bill Gates ou feu Steve Jobs. Pourtant les deux dernier ont un train de vie beaucoup plus digne de Richard Gere dans "pretty woman" que le premier. Voici quelle peux être la raison: C'est plus simple d'envier quelqu'un un tout petit peu au dessus de toi, que tu vois tous les jours et avec qui tu arrives à te mesurer parce que les paramètres ne sont pas trop différent, ni les racines sociales. Maintenant quelqu'un qui est vraiment très au dessus de toi ou qui n'a pas eu la même éducation, pas fréquenté les mêmes lieux et qui a tendance à vouloir se cacher tu ne peux pas trop l'envier parce que tu ne le vois pas et en plus tu ne comprends pas vraiment ce par quoi il passe. Enfin les sommes en jeu sont tellement faramineuses parfois que tu ne vois même pas l'utilité de la dépense. Donc il est plus simple d'envier son patron dans une entreprise de 50 personnes que 50000.

Arctic: the last frontier... to spill out?

Back in April: Greenpeace has never been an NGO I liked, I consider them as a bunch of playboys always trying to run the spotlights and never really acting where they should (like in the delta region of Nigeria for instance, or in Congo... ). But the Arctic activism activities in Russia are not that bad as Russia is not really an easy country. The testosterone-driven president-of-a-lifetime just-like-african-nation Poutin is puttin' on (:-P) a show of muscle-full brainless responses to the Greenpeace activists.

Partiality in Recorded Violence: Social Media Influence

Ultimately I am not keeping in touch with my followers, if any.. :-), and I do apologize. It is true that I got a bit dry in term of writing inspiration, it has never been my main strength and I am still at a moment of my life where I question a lot of things that will direct my next 20 years. But that will be for another time! What I wanted to talk about today was the multiplication of violent videos on the main social media since the organization of the 2014 edition of the FIFA World Cup. Facebook is currently an easier way to express your revolt upon injustice, even if it seems sometimes futile and useless you can still vent off, therefore the video came out of this platform but it could easily have come out of twitter or Google+. I decided to comment on the last of these videos, being short it wot be a problem and it symbolize a current revolt of the Brazilians against a restricted fraction of their police force behaving like during the old days where they were empowered to do a bit of whatever they wanted. That was 40 years ago. It is easy to generalize, then you end up discriminating and not trusting an entire task force over the act of a small fraction. Therefore I would like to see the entire history behind this video's event. Like I said earlier, I see many videos of outrageous happenings, but nobody mentions why we arrived at this point of violence. In this video, what did this guy in shorts do? Who is he? Are the cops really policemen, militia or actors who are finding a reason to revolt the mob (now any fantasy can seem real with a camera of poor quality, like in "Blair Witch" or "Clover Field" where they can hide cheap visual effects with bad camera)? A phrase that is out of context can be very misunderstood, fundamentalists use it as a basic enrollment techniques (whether Christian, Jews or Muslim fundamentalists). The same thing can happen with a video. I want to have a fair point of view based on irrefutable arguments and not driven by emotion and part-witnessed violence from an event without which we don't know neither why nor how nor the parties involved.




mardi, mars 11, 2014

Brazil looking for quick energy tap?

My opinion: recent international politic choices of pdt Dilma might suggest that Brazil did not get good output with some (hypothetical) north american negociation about energy delivery, therefore Brazil is looking for some other neighbors to close some more interesting deals (Venezuela? Cuba?). I'd say that is the current line of decision pdt Dilma is opting for. Therefore the cuban deal with BNDES, the latest and rather unexpected support on Maduro's political (and rather hectic) decisions.

vendredi, février 28, 2014

Samba corruption... bad trip

Just a couple of days before Carnival (2 days to be exact) the brazilian Supreme Court ruled out one conviction of racketeering on the worst corruption case of the '00 decade. You can follow the twitter thread of indignation of Brazilians that thought they were done with big thieves. I already made two post about the corruption, which saga really looks like a poor version of the Hangover (that is already not very good): 1, 2 and now the latest sequel which nobody wanted to hear. Now the only hope is that the man behind the original judgement, Joaquim Barbosa, decides to step down from STF to engage the presidency race!!!

lundi, février 24, 2014

FIFA missing one point with Brazil

Curitiba's stadium, Feb 2014...
Mr Blatter missed a very important point, that hopefully (for him) is not irreversible: he got angry at Brazilian people during the Confederation Cup when there are the only one that can help him put this World Cup together on time. Brazilian protests over corruption are exactly what he needs for cities like Curitiba to finish what needs to be finished on time. Now that he positioned himself and FIFA against the Brazilian people, nobody wants FIFA there. He should not put 200 million people against his organization it's dangerous. When a man thinks his organization is above the very own people he depends on, it is a sign of perverse deviation from the original philosophy of the company. Last April Mr Blatter apparently got cleaned of bribery accusation, by his own Ethic's Committee. Well, I leave you with the thought of that when Qatar is cleaning the Nepalese population with the 2022 World Cup, and Brazil has a death toll of five (true it's not a lot, but still, 5 persons over a pressurized leather skin sport!).
Accident in SP's stadium, 2 casualties

Patrick MacDonald is right here, but not only Human Right division should be hurting FIFA's feeling, also an audit team and an independent Ethic's Committee to check on both Blatter and his internal Ethic's Committee.
Conclusion: I will not watch the World Cup, I have decided long ago the boycott was a wise decision to hit where it hurts the most, the (FIFA's) wallet through not buying, not watching TV. Instead I will rent my flat in Rio and go to France, anyone interested?? :-)))




Addendum: Just one day after my post, Financial Times published this nice article. I guess this is what we can call telepathy!

mercredi, février 12, 2014

Uhuru: because a Nation Spying them All kills globalization and brings back regionalization

French anti-virus Uhuru is just a reflex of the fear of the end of the virtual in the name of security (of one country). Unfortunately it comes late, but better late than never. Even the Open Source systems are mainly US-based companies (Linux, Firefox...) which mean they are vulnerable ultimately to US government intimations and intimidations. Europe has too few IP in the virtual World and needs to get back to the game. Is this a first step?

lundi, février 10, 2014

Brazilian creativity

I was with my wife walking back from some place I do not remember when we passed a place that smelled like a dirty homeless guy was sleeping somewhere, except we could not not see him (important point for this post, my wife is brazilian, I'm not). So my wife said "it is a ghost" which made me trip a bit but as I am not a 7 year old anymore (30 years ago I was) I quickly came back to Earth and told her the same thing I just told you. But she was convinced, so I strat to trip again... until I came back to my sences and asked what she meant. A ghost is actually the rag these guy used and that catches their smell, so when they are not here it seems they still are linging around but you cannot see them... a "ghost"! That reminded me that I was always impressed by the way the brazilian people I was hanging with always had that sort of game of contextual nicknaming, more than other cultures (USA, France... you name it). The game is to find the funniest nickname that would immediately have you understanding a fact by the context relating the two (in fact here, the "smeely" ghost and the homeless rag left which smell reminds the presence of the person). That creativity is hardly matched.
Yesterday I watched that documentary about creativity as well, and was interviewed Paulo Barros, the director of the carnival of the samba school União da Tijuca. He said that while he was doing something (irrelevant) he saw a truck with thousands of cooking panels that would go to trash, that gave him an idea as he had to create the carnival's car which was about Oz. The panels where used to create a huge tin man. 

Creativity is something that Brazil has a lot, maybe from the fact (e.g.) that they need to make something important (allegoric cars and costumes) out of not much every year for carnival, and it drags throughout the entire society. Counterpart is that they have trouble to monetize correctly that creativity, which seems to be more an north american quality.

Happy Carnival!!

vendredi, janvier 31, 2014

Multinational Ramping up to Tackle Climate Change

I have not been writing for a little while. Not that I have nothing to say but rather, I'm kept busy lately. I just came across a great article from Coral Davenport, who keeps an economical blog in the New York Times. His article is on how multinational companies are taking measure to tackle Climate Change as it affects their economy. It actually is very close to my opinion on international energy companies (mostly oil and gas) investing in renewable energy sources as a response to the more and more volatile environment in which they evolve. I copied/pasted his article below as a matter of commodity, the original article can be found here.


The article:
Industry Awakens to Threat of Climate Change

Coca-Cola has always been more focused on its economic bottom line than on global warming, but when the company lost a lucrative operating license in India because of a serious water shortage there in 2004, things began to change.

Today, after a decade of increasing damage to Coke’s balance sheet as global droughts dried up the water needed to produce its soda, the company has embraced the idea of climate change as an economically disruptive force.

“Increased droughts, more unpredictable variability, 100-year floods every two years,” said Jeffrey Seabright, Coke’s vice president for environment and water resources, listing the problems that he said were also disrupting the company’s supply of sugar cane and sugar beets, as well as citrus for its fruit juices. “When we look at our most essential ingredients, we see those events as threats.”

Coke reflects a growing view among American business leaders and mainstream economists who see global warming as a force that contributes to lower gross domestic products, higher food and commodity costs, broken supply chains and increased financial risk. Their position is at striking odds with the longstanding argument, advanced by the coal industry and others, that policies to curb carbon emissions are more economically harmful than the impact of climate change.

“The bottom line is that the policies will increase the cost of carbon and electricity,” said Roger Bezdek, an economist who produced a report for the coal lobby that was released this week. “Even the most conservative estimates peg the social benefit of carbon-based fuels as 50 times greater than its supposed social cost.”

Some tycoons are no longer listening.

At the Swiss resort of Davos, corporate leaders and politicians gathered for the annual four-day World Economic Forum will devote all of Friday to panels and talks on the threat of climate change. The emphasis will be less about saving polar bears and more about promoting economic self-interest.

In Philadelphia this month, the American Economic Association inaugurated its new president, William D. Nordhaus, a Yale economist and one of the world’s foremost experts on the economics of climate change.

“There is clearly a growing recognition of this in the broader academic economic community,” said Mr. Nordhaus, who has spent decades researching the economic impacts of both climate change and of policies intended to mitigate climate change.

In Washington, the World Bank president, Jim Yong Kim, has put climate change at the center of the bank’s mission, citing global warming as the chief contributor to rising global poverty rates and falling G.D.P.’s in developing nations. In Europe, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the Paris-based club of 34 industrialized nations, has begun to warn of the steep costs of increased carbon pollution.

Nike, which has more than 700 factories in 49 countries, many in Southeast Asia, is also speaking out because of extreme weather that is disrupting its supply chain. In 2008, floods temporarily shut down four Nike factories in Thailand, and the company remains concerned about rising droughts in regions that produce cotton, which the company uses in its athletic clothes.

“That puts less cotton on the market, the price goes up, and you have market volatility,” said Hannah Jones, the company’s vice president for sustainability and innovation. Nike has already reported the impact of climate change on water supplies on its financial risk disclosure forms to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Both Nike and Coke are responding internally: Coke uses water-conservation technologies and Nike is using more synthetic material that is less dependent on weather conditions. At Davos and in global capitals, the companies are also lobbying governments to enact environmentally friendly policies.

But the ideas are a tough sell in countries like China and India, where cheap coal-powered energy is lifting the economies and helping to raise millions of people out of poverty. Even in Europe, officials have begun to balk at the cost of environmental policies: On Wednesday, the European Union scaled back its climate change and renewable energy commitments, as high energy costs, declining industrial competitiveness and a recognition that the economy is unlikely to rebound soon caused European policy makers to question the short-term economic trade-offs of climate policy.

In the United States, the rich can afford to weigh in. The California hedge-fund billionaire Thomas F. Steyer, who has used millions from his own fortune to support political candidates who favor climate policy, is working with Michael R. Bloomberg, the former New York mayor, and Henry M. Paulson Jr., a former Treasury secretary in the George W. Bush administration, to commission an economic study on the financial risks associated with climate change. The study, titled “Risky Business,” aims to assess the potential impacts of climate change by region and by sector across the American economy.

“This study is about one thing, the economics,” Mr. Paulson said in an interview, adding that “business leaders are not adequately focused on the economic impact of climate change.”

Also consulting on the “Risky Business” report is Robert E. Rubin, a former Treasury secretary in the Clinton administration. “There are a lot of really significant, monumental issues facing the global economy, but this supersedes all else,” Mr. Rubin said in an interview. “To make meaningful headway in the economics community and the business community, you’ve got to make it concrete.”

Last fall, the governments of seven countries — Colombia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, South Korea, Norway, Sweden and Britain — created the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate and jointly began another study on how governments and businesses can address climate risks to better achieve economic growth. That study and the one commissioned by Mr. Steyer and others are being published this fall, just before a major United Nations meeting on climate change.

Although many Republicans oppose the idea of a price or tax on carbon pollution, some conservative economists endorse the idea. Among them are Arthur B. Laffer, senior economic adviser to President Ronald Reagan; the Harvard economist N. Gregory Mankiw, who was economic adviser to Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign; and Douglas Holtz-Eakin, the head of the American Action Forum, a conservative think tank, and an economic adviser to the 2008 presidential campaign of Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican.

“There’s no question that if we get substantial changes in atmospheric temperatures, as all the evidence suggests, that it’s going to contribute to sea-level rise,” Mr. Holtz-Eakin said. “There will be agriculture and economic effects — it’s inescapable.” He added, “I’d be shocked if people supported anything other than a carbon tax — that’s how economists think about it.”

Hope you enjoyed it. Do not hesitate to comment here or on the NYT's page.

dimanche, décembre 08, 2013

Samba corruption... the hangover

This post is the sequel of the Samba corruption post I released a couple of days ago where I might have seemed categoric and full of preconceived ideas. But it was only one side of the story. As for every news, as soon as you read it is already both wrong and history fact. I encourage every one to listen to the country and hear all the voices that speak, from facebook, twitter, blogs and newspapers. What remains is a baseline of hope that brazilians are through with corruption, country of low education, high corruption where the money is invested poorly when not kept safe abroad for personal wealth. Things are changing, brazilians are demanding and they want professionalism instead of cheap magic and smoke curtains. I saw this news (in Portuguese) saying that, finally, the game of power from Globo seems over. I was having a discussion with my wife trying to understand how a TV channel could over the years and with the globalization stay always so dominant. Well I read this article and got the answer. I translated it in english for a larger audience to have a grasp of what happened and understand that things, in Brazil, are changing and fast.

The above link, translated in english:

There are many signs showing that the crisis that has developed in the Botanical Garden is here to stay . Growing rumors that the company will not be able to honor payroll and expenses in 2014 and therefore commissioned a study of cuts, mainly in wages paid to actors. For the first time in history, Globo has a manager in charge that came from journalism and used to lower production costs . He was astonished at what he saw in Globo Productions, expenses that go well beyond industry standards. 

And the deviations ?

" There must be a lot of corruption," says a veteran who has held management positions, " One imagines that there is overpricing , things that work well for years . And if he stirs it up there he might fall" he concludes . As we know that the string always bursts from the weaker side, hardly budget cuts will affect the best actors, but the intermediate wages and little thieves as the banks that " deviate clip and elastic". But the fact is that bleeding trigger leaks, raw material for any journalist will never be put in defect in 2014 . After all " In a house where the bread is missing, everybody fights and nobody is right". 

And what's behind this "phenomenon " ? 

A significant drop in sales! Hardly able to keep the Globe BV, the volume bonuses, paid to advertising agencies whenever she concentrates ads on the same channel. The reason ? Less audience. There is no argument that proves the owner that the maintenance of a national campaign in a broadcaster is advantageous, if she does not take the message to the public that it promises. Globo is therefore facing a huge impasse like never seen before . 

But why the audience falls so fast ? 

Analysts polled by this blog say it is time to " review indexes " . The announcement that the competing TV stations just hire another institute to make measurements - using even more meters - is forcing Ibope , which has always been "from the house " , to review its " methodology " . 

Not new, isn't it? 

Any time data is questioned . Since the defunct TV Manchete, of Bloch, who in the '90s challenged Globo's fields where she boasted of having more competence : soap opera and major television news coverage , such as Carnival . At the end of the same decade , another competitor also accused Ibope of manipulation: SBT. Silvio Santos came to ban the audience meter of his station , a sign that did not trust the numbers. But not if none of the cases Globo agencies and TV Globo were concerned. 

What has changed ? 

Recently TV Record thickened the chorus , accusing Ibope of consolidating their numbers down and the competitor station up. That's what finally triggered the search for a more independant system of measurement. Finally was created a culture broth necessary to question the ethics of the competitive practice of Marinho's channel.

But this is only one side of the crisis? 

Yes, it really is " picking " on their side is that for the first time there is no political support from older times . From time to time, the station is also under fire from social networks . Their actions and their methods are questioned all the time .

The signal chickened when?

In June , a crowd of protesters decided to march toward the company's subsidiary in São Paulo on the Cable-Stayed Bridge , new postcard of the city , shouting slogans against the manipulation and the monopoly exercised by the group . " That created enormous instability.We stayed inside afraid of invasion and vandalism" said one official, who was required to wait after hours for the crowd to disperse before leaving the building that night . 

And do not stop there ... 

Everyone remembers that renowned journalists began to be harassed during covering, cars vandalized and torched, reports aborted for safety and a huge effort had to be made in the months after to try to rescue the image and confidence of the channel. But the damage was already done . Today , the station is treated with hatred. Their news lost credibility nor the recent game of chairs implemented worked. 

And friendly fire ? 

Fátima Bernardes and Zeca Camargo left for line shows, which for Globo Production was another sign that journalism progresses on schedule. Result: boycotts . Is difficult to work in some programs , which became the target of friendly fire or internal competition . Another destabilizing factor . 

But that is nothing 

The blow was the scandal of the offshore banks accounts to evade tax authorities. Estimated debt with penalty and interest came to be a billion dollars . That's right , one billion, all audited , documented , judged, condemned , but not paid because of spectacular actions, which involved bribery , theft of public faith document , blackmail , intimidation and even exchange of gunfire , that elicited a typical modus operandi of the best scripts of the films shown in Prime Time. Some maintain that the broadcaster has bought stolen documents from the IRS and to recover the document on the day of the sale, they had forged a policeman striking to send a TV crew to cover the event . 

Any signs of cooling dow?

It seems that this time , however there are still some political action in Brasilia , the order is moving  the process forward . " Let Globo Bleed " was the mantra as it is sung in Bossa Nova very softly , an allusion to the celebrated declaration of Fernando Henrique Cardoso to Tucanos chiefs , during the Mensalão scandal and the possibility of impeachment of President Lula . Even today the process that pilfered Revenue " has not showed up ." But it is one of the best campaign and blackmail dossiers around the block. 

This weakens the image of the Brothers 

To appear smiling in photos that illustrated the news that today they sum up one of the greatest wealth of the country , the Marinho brothers also contribute nothing to improve the image of the company. In an unjust and unequal country like ours , the news has a devastating effect on the image of the conglomerate . The public begins to think , albeit empirically , that they are the typical white-collar criminals . People who attend the social columns , " detached " , celebrities , but not worth , in the jargon of the class walking train " a sour pot " . 

With a combination of these , what to expect ?

With the words of our worshiped Marcos Valle : 
Today is a new day
Of a new time that begins
From these new days
the joys will be for all
All we need is wanting
All our dreams will come true
The future has already begun ... 

Sought without much interest in knowing its opinion , I admit, the broadcaster would not comment 

Thank you

vendredi, novembre 29, 2013

Samba Corruption

It took me a while to issue this post. I would like to issue it now because I think it is on the verge of being obsolete and that's an amazing news (or I hope so... the obsolescence ^_^).


The most worrying problem (to my own sense) Brazil is currently facing is corruption. I will probably state the obvious here but corruption takes your management resources,  drive your country away from productivity and has the tendency to tire the populations. I remember once I was talking to a friend of mine from Ivory Coast in 2000's something over a laundry machine in Paris (a lot happen when you go clean your clothes). He was explaining me how friends of his had worked a lot to make money in Paris and then went back to IvC to open a shop... real entrepreneurial endeavour. Arriving there they spent away all their investment in small "payments" to help their store opining process which eventually never happened.  Small corruption had eaten all the money away. You can understand that it does not only happened to that person and this non regulated government is participating to the decadence of the country (I love to blame the government ^_^). Well in Brazil you can find something similar and after years in the country I believe it has helped to lower the economy growth from what it should have been. I can see three main corruption schemes:

- Something equally dangerous to generalized small corruption that is called patrimonialism: you earned a position thanks to your birth line before your competences. Brazil is full of it and example flows (family Sarney, sons of ex-president Lula and many more). Even if everybody knows, it is big enough for all these people to walk away in impunity.

- Which drives me to the second plague: impunity of crimes (like the case of the -now solved- Mensalão). Not only for corruption cases but for all sort of criminal offences. I remember when I first came to Brazil I realized the price of life was not the same as in Europe. You get into trouble and you die for quite stupid reasons here (traffic issue, stressed out robber, lost bullet if you are near dangerous favelas...). Your assailant has good chance to disappear unharmed and uncharged for his crimes. The country is big and there is enough place to hide but that's not new. Justice is slow for charging criminals and your social origin is a factor to get things resolved. The late case of the foreign girl raped in a minibus is a typical example of social factor for crime resolution as it had happen before to local favela girls (same criminals) but when this American victim hit the tabloids the case was solved in a week. So if you want to keep on your criminal activity better keep low profile and only hassle the locals! So when big money is "lost", construction projects overpriced,  social fundings hijacked for private purpose by the time the justice is on the case the money has vanished and the criminals already seeked out their protection. How not to want to steal when your own head of state are robbing the country? That blurs with patrimonialism and race issues, but here is an exposed example showing that they are wanting to end with the trends. Rio de Janeiro is very representative of that kind of corruption.
- That brings me to the carioca factor, things happen else where in Brazil and not in Rio (the Alphaville complex never settled in Rio before 2011 and it is a national brand, but from São Paulo!) or the contrary. Something that has to do with the "carioca spirit" of the city, "o jeitinho carioca", gives you the feeling there is no other way to do or organize something than their way. When you arrive in Rio for carnival all is shiny,  beautiful and well organized. After a while you start to explore more the city, the state and you realize it is messy and absolutely not optimised financially. All that money disappearing isn't used for education,  health or public transport so everything is going overpriced because there is not enough qualified people,  hence not enough wealth produced but more people wanting to consume. Very recently the case of an abuse of public resources to private ends splashed at the governor of Rio de Janeiro state during the June protests and it is an actual sign of changing mentalities (which will be debated on a later post). That is only a representative example showing that it could and should be better but the head of the organization is not interested to improve for not knowing better.

mardi, novembre 05, 2013

Brain drain 2.0

Courtesy of JISC infonet
http://www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/topics/moocs/
The MOOCs, or Massive Online Open Courses, is said to be a new way to get knowledge without having to dislocate from where you are. It is free or cheap, and dispensed by reknown universities (Havard, Stanford, MIT). I see a clear continuation of an American culture that started during the second WW: the brain drain,  or importing foreign innovative minds to work in and for the USA. By creating these courses they found a way to identify the best brains from all over the World, even before they go to the university. You just need a cyber-cafe with an average internet connection. You never change a good system do you?