Month: March 2017

Cheap Energy & New Technology: China Sees a Manufacturing Future — In America

Cheap Energy & New Technology: China Sees a Manufacturing Future — In America

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

DONGGUAN, China—Glen Lin is struggling to keep his shoe company competitive on the world’s factory floor in southern China. Wages are shooting up 15% each year. Taxes are high. Shipping is exorbitant, and slow. So, as fast as he can he’s automating production, while planning an escape to his largest market—the U.S.

The vice general manager of Dongguan Winwin Industrial, a Taiwan-owned company, is scouting for a location in America to move his newest machinery that turns out high-quality sneakers and casual shoes. Most likely, he’ll end up near one of his main customers: Skechers, based in California, Crocs in Colorado, or Nike in Portland, Ore

In global manufacturing, fortunes are starting to shift in America’s favor.

That’s despite Donald Trump’s angry election rhetoric about China “raping” the U.S., and his threats to forcibly bring home manufacturing jobs by slapping across-the-board tariffs of 45% on Chinese imports.

The trends were clear well before Mr. Trump started rallying his blue-collar base with alarmist messages of protectionism. In fact, China’s trade challenge peaked years ago: Exports to the U.S. surged in the immediate aftermath of the country joining the World Trade Organization in 2001, throwing several million U.S. assembly workers out of a job, but they have since flattened out.

Nowadays, the exit of U.S. factory jobs from the country is roughly matched by posts coming in, according to the nonprofit Reshoring Initiative, which encourages companies to bring production back to the U.S.

Job-creating investment from China is booming in particular. Last year, it tripled to $45.6 billion from a year earlier, according to the Rhodium Group.

Chinese social-media sites were abuzz last year when the auto-glass tycoon Cao Dewang announced he was moving part of his production empire to Ohio. Some commentators denounced him for “running away.” He insisted he could make more money producing for the U.S. market from Ohio than China.

Although U.S. wages are still higher than those in China, the gap is rapidly narrowing. Andy Gu, vice president of international business for Midea, a massive home-appliance maker also based in southern China, says a competent engineer now demands up to $50,000 a year. Ordinary workers get about $600 a month, with food and lodging on top.

Moreover, industrial land in the U.S. is often cheaper than in Chinese coastal cities. The shale-gas revolution has dramatically lowered U.S. energy costs.

But the real key is technology: Advanced manufacturing is leveling the playing field.

Full story

 

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

March 22, 2017 at 11:56PM

When will the Science Minister ask some hard questions about the global warming cabal that’s got him in their pocket?

When will the Science Minister ask some hard questions about the global warming cabal that’s got him in their pocket?

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT
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By Paul Homewood

 

image

https://twitter.com/theboltreport/status/844471001714974720

 

Another hard hitting piece from the Bolt Report!

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March 22, 2017 at 11:30PM

Brexitday meal.

Brexitday meal.

via Scottish Sceptic
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The first item on the list has got to be Brussel sprouts – as there’s bound to be a rush – because any celebrating of leaving Brussels has got to involve sprouts in some way. Next is Champagne  – but … Continue reading

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March 22, 2017 at 11:05PM

Ex-climate minister on board of THREE oil firms (and he’s also got an energy guzzling Scottish castle with 16 bathrooms)

Ex-climate minister on board of THREE oil firms (and he’s also got an energy guzzling Scottish castle with 16 bathrooms)

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT
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By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Dave Ward

 

 

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Snouts and troughs!

From the Mail:

 

Gamekeeper turned poacher: Ex-Tory MP Charles Hendry has three jobs with oil firms

 

A former climate minister who has plugged green schemes and owns a Scottish castle has three jobs with oil companies.

Ex-Tory MP Charles Hendry has joined the boards of Independent Oil and Gas and its major stakeholder London Oil and Gas, on top of his role as an adviser to international oil giant Vitol.

London Oil and Gas is trying to buy producing assets in North America, the Caspian Sea and west Africa, while Independent has assets in the North Sea and is looking to expand.

Hendry, 57, owns a 20-bedroom castle in Scotland, and is advising the Government for an international conference on reducing carbon dioxide emissions and boosting green energy.

In his time as a minister he once boasted that he wanted the Government to be the ‘greenest ever’.

Yesterday, he said: ‘I am very excited about the potential of the North Sea and I think it is in the national interest for the country to get as much oil and gas from the North Sea as we can. I am a great believer in diversity of energy.’

The former Wealden MP was energy and climate change minister between 2010 and 2012, when he backed a £120million biomass plant in Yorkshire and signed a deal to bring power from Icelandic volcanoes to Britain via undersea cables.

Since leaving office he has taken lucrative roles in the energy sector, including as the director of Atlantic Superconnection, the firm trying to build the undersea cable from Iceland.

He also became chairman of Forewind, a consortium of British and Norwegian energy firms building an offshore wind farm off Yorkshire, having overseen a major energy partnership between the UK and Norway.

Palatial: Hendry, 57, owns Blair Castle - a 20-bedroom castle in Ayrshire, Scotland which is thought to be worth around £2.5m

Palatial: Hendry, 57, owns Blair Castle – a 20-bedroom castle in Ayrshire, Scotland which is thought to be worth around £2.5m

He has since quit both posts for the oil companies. London Oil and Gas says it is working hard to offset emissions.

It adds, on its website: ‘We are constantly looking for new, innovative ideas designed to mitigate the effect of carbon emissions and improve the lives of those affected.’

IOG chief executive Mark Routh said this week: ‘Charles joins the company at an exciting stage of our development and his deep knowledge and experience of the sector will be invaluable.’

It comes as the Government is consulting on giving tax breaks to buyers of ageing assets in the North Sea, in the hopes of keeping the basin going for longer.

In 2011 Hendry bought Blair Castle in Ayrshire, thought to be worth around £2.5million. It has three storeys, 20 bedrooms, 16 bathrooms, an outdoor pool and is set in 260 acres of countryside.

London Oil and Gas declined to disclose Hendry’s salary as a director while his salary as a non-executive director of IOG is expected in the company’s annual report. Another non-executive director earned £28,000 last year.

Hendry has several other business interests, including renting out the Blair Estate he bought with wife Sallie.

It is understood he is advising the Government for an Expo in Kazakhstan this summer when more than 100 nations will discuss cutting carbon emissions.

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Saving the world is nice, but business is business!!

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March 22, 2017 at 11:01PM