Friday, October 30, 2015

Oil Producers Curb Megaproject Ambitions to Focus on U.S. Shale

  • Rising complexity making biggest crude developments harder
  • Failure rates soaring when companies can least afford
Big U.S. oil companies are starting to think small.
A stubborn 16-month crude rout with no end in sight is driving the largest U.S. oil producers away from costly, high-risk megaprojects long touted as the industry’s future and toward safer shale operations that generate the cash needed to satisfy anxious investors.
Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Chevron Corp., ConocoPhillips and Hess Corp. have all either delayed or abandoned projects that range from the deep seas of the Gulf of Mexico to Canada’s oil sands and the U.S. Arctic. At the same time, Exxon and Chevron both announced plans to substantially increase U.S. crude production, largely as a result of their shale operations.
“What makes more sense in this environment: drill a $100 million well in the deepwater Gulf that might come up empty, or poke lots of holes in west Texas where you already know there’s oil for a few million apiece?” said Michael Webber, deputy director of the University of Texas Energy Institute.

Reduced Spending

Explorers are expected to slash spending on deepwater wells by 20 percent to 25 percent next year, compared with a 3 percent to 8 percent overall reduction on all types of fields, according to Barclays Plc analysts including J. David Anderson. The type of giant reservoirs that require megaproject treatment are now found in only the roughest, deepest and coldest parts of the world.
One example: An equipment failure forced Chevron to put its $5.1 billion Big Foot development, a deepwater Gulf of Mexico project that was supposed to begin pumping crude this year, on hold until at least 2018. The San Ramon, California-based company hasn’t said whether the delay will bloat the price tag, which already had risen 28 percent from a 2010 estimate of $4 billion.
International producers are failing to deliver 80 percent of megaprojects on time and on budget, compared with about 50 percent in 2005, said Neeraj Nandurdikar, oil and gas director at Independent Project Analysis Inc.
“It’s really bad for megaprojects now,” said Joseph Triepke, managing director at Oilpro.com and a former analyst at Citadel LLC’s Surveyor Capital unit. “When oil was $90 or $100 a barrel, there was a lot of wiggle room to make a return. But at $45 oil, there’s no wiggle room. Enormous projects can’t go over or be late.”

Updating Shareholders

West Texas Intermediate for December delivery rose 53 cents to $46.59 a barrel Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Exxon and Chevron may update investors on their biggest ventures when they report third-quarter results on Friday. “Chevron is taking actions responsive to the current price environment,” said Kurt Glaubitz, a company spokesman. “We are getting our cost structure down and actively managing to a smaller capital program.” An Exxon spokesman declined to comment.
ConocoPhillips, the third-biggest U.S. oil producer, canceled plans in July to search the deep Gulf of Mexico this year. Terminating a long-term rig lease may cost the Houston-based company as much as $400 million.
Other megaproject disappointments include Exxon’s Kearl oil-sands development in western Canada, where logistical challenges and harsh weather repeatedly delayed the $12.7 billion project before its opening in 2013. Plans to increase output again by 2020 have been shelved indefinitely. At Chevron’s gas-export project in Gorgon, the largest construction undertaking in Australia’s history, rising labor costs helped bloat the price tag by about 20 percent to $54 billion.

Supply Glut

The shale drilling boom led to a supply glut that deflated prices by more than half since 2014 and shale remains one of the most economic options for producers. For Exxon and Chevron, that’s meant rededicating their spending to a region they’d mostly ignored for the half century before the shale boom while they pursued giant overseas discoveries.
Exxon has more than tripled the number of rigs it has drilling shale formations around the U.S. since buying XTO Energy for $35 billion in June 2010, Jack Williams, the senior vice president in charge of Exxon’s wells, said during a March meeting with analysts in New York. Exxon plans to double U.S. shale production in the next three years.
For Chevron, shale wells are forecast to contribute the equivalent of 160,000 barrels of daily oil output in the next two years, the company said in a March presentation to analysts. Despite the fall in crude markets, Chevron Chairman and CEO John Watson has so far stuck to his goal of boosting worldwide output 20 percent to 3.1 million barrels a day by the end of 2017, in large part because of shale.
Only 10 percent of non-shale discoveries this year will be profitable, down from 40 percent in 2010, said Julie Wilson, a senior exploration analyst at Wood Mackenzie. Cost overruns have afflicted 64 percent of oil and gas megaprojects and 73 percent of them have faced delays, according to an Ernst & Young LLP survey of 365 developments.
“Projects are getting bigger and bigger and they are failing more often,” said Howard Duhon, systems engineering manager at Gibson Applied Technology and Engineering Inc., which advises major oil companies on how to design deepwater projects. Equipment is more complex and project teams are three or four times bigger, and “it’s not clear we’re getting any better results,” he said.

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Miss Anita Sokum (Marketing Manager)

U.A.E. Removes Fuel Subsidy as Oil Drop Hurts Arab Economies

The United Arab Emirates, the third-biggest OPEC producer, will link gasoline and diesel prices to global oil markets starting next month, becoming the first country in the oil-rich Persian Gulf to remove transport fuel subsidies.
Fuel prices will be deregulated as of Aug. 1, the Ministry of Energy said in a statementon Wednesday. Diesel prices will also be linked to global markets, and are initially expected to decline, it said. Prices for both fuels will be announced on the 28th day of each month, the ministry said.
Gasoline is now subsidized in the U.A.E., the second-biggest Arab economy and home to about 6 percent of the world’s oil reserves. Unleaded gasoline 98 octane in the U.A.E. sells for 1.83 dirhams (50 cents) a liter, according to prices on the ministry’s website. The U.S. price of premium unleaded gasoline is $3.18 a gallon, or 84 cents a liter, according to AAA, the biggest U.S. auto group. That compares with 16 cents in Saudi Arabia, the largest OPEC producer.
“There was no reason to subsidize in a country that is as rich as the U.A.E.,” said Nasser Saidi, former chief economist at Dubai International Financial Centre and head of Nasser Saidi and Associates. “All manufacturing and industry which is highly energy intensive will need to adjust. People will now have to think twice before buying gas guzzling cars.”

Subsidies Cost

Persian Gulf members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries provide some the largest per capita energy subsidies in the world, according to the International Monetary Fund. Subsidies have cost U.A.E. state-owned energy companies about $1 billion a year over the last decade, Suhail Al Mazrouei, the U.A.E. energy minister, said in February.
The U.A.E., which doesn’t impose income tax or measures such as value-added taxes, comprises seven sheikhdoms including Abu Dhabi and Dubai, the Persian Gulf business hub. Expatriates comprise about 80 percent of the country’s residents.
The change is part of the government’s plan “in diversifying sources of income, strengthening the economy and increasing its competitiveness in addition to building a strong economy that is not dependent on government subsidies,” Al Mazrouei said in the statement. A committee will review fuel prices every month, according to the statement.
Global oil prices have dropped almost 50 percent in the past year to $56.57 a barrel today as increased production from the Middle East to the U.S. swelled supplies, leaving a global surplus. The 2015 break-even crude price for the U.A.E. is about $65.50 a barrel, according to Deutsche Bank AG estimates.
“Moving to international prices is a very rational and a correct policy to undertake at this moment because the international oil prices are very low,” Saidi said.

Budget Deficit

Energy subsidies will reach $5.3 trillion this year, with the U.A.E. at $29 billion and Saudi Arabia at $106.6 billion, according to an International Monetary Fund report in May. Qatar has the world’s biggest subsidies per capita at $5,995, compared with the U.S. at $2,177 and China at $1,652.
“Low international energy prices have opened a window of opportunity for countries to move toward more efficient pricing of energy,” the IMF said. “A gradual approach may be desirable, given the size of the required price increases.”
Saudi Arabia uses fuel and power subsidies to transfer oil wealth to citizens, and the kingdom is expected to post a budget deficit equal to 20 percent of economic output this year, the IMF said last month. Cutting them is politically sensitive after domestic discontent led to the overturning of governments in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt since 2011.
The oil and gas sector in the U.A.E. contributed 34.3 percent of its gross domestic product at current prices in 2014, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. With lower oil prices, the U.A.E. will have a fiscal budget deficit for the first time since 2009, according to the IMF.
“They have to finance the fiscal deficit and this is one small way to do that,” said Sanyalak Manibhandu, head of research at NBAD Securities LLC in Abu Dhabi.

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Miss Anita Sokum (Marketing Manager)

9000 Brokers, 1000 Scammers, 20 Real Service Providers!

Have you ever tried to find a needle in a haystack? That is what it is like to find a real provider in the Bank Guarantee industry……

You have 9000 Brokers who all pretend to be BG service providers, or “claim” to be direct to real BG service providers when in fact they are just direct to another broker who claims to be a service provider! Ha ha ha ha Or worse, you have a bunch of brokers who are all in a broker chain and they are all lying to each other pretending to be the BG Service Provider but really there isn’t a BG Service Provider amoungst them!
You have 1000 Scammers who all pretend to be BG Providers but really all they want to do is take your money and run.

After being in the Finance Industry for well over a decade, I would estimate there are really less then 20 Real BG service providers. The reality is if you take away the brokers and the scammers the industry is VERY small and tight knit.

The toughest job for most clients is wading through the brokers and the scammers to find a real provider, it can be an exhausting process that leaves many people frustrated and disillusioned.
And it gets worse….. because there are only around 20 real service providers in the industry….. those 20 service providers receive more work than they can handle and get huge amounts of interest and inquiries from customers. This means in most cases the BG service provider can pick and chose who they want to do business with and who they dont!

The reality is, the Client needs the BG provider far more than the BG provider needs the Client. This is rarely understood by clients who think (mistakenly) that they are very important and hold all the power. Remember the BG Service Provider is doing hundreds of millions and sometimes billions of dollars in deals a week or month, when they see a client with a few hundred thousand dollars… its as important to them as a tiny crum on their financial plate.

And when that client comes along with an ego, demands and seven tons of insecurity and frustration after dealing with 9000 Brokers and 1000 scammers for the last year, then end result is the real BG Service Provider simply puts that client in the “too hard basket” and rejects you.

Jilted by a real BG Provider is not what you want, because the industry is small (around 20 real service providers) and most of them talk to each other and do deals with each other. So when you get blacklisted or jilted by one, often the doors at many of the other BG service providers close at the same time.
 BG Deals get done with Customers as a Priviledge… NOT A RIGHT!

Access Loan ventures are genuine dlc providers

Real BG Providers dont need your deal or money, they work with you because your easy to deal with, a nice person and you make them cash completing your transaction without hassels or headaches.

Contact Us Today For Your Loan, International Project Funding, Bank Guarantee, SBLC, DLC & Letters of Credit

Our Skype ID: accessloans
Our Emails:  info@accessloanventures.com  and  accessloanventures@outlook.com 

Bank Guarantee Warning Signs…. BEWARE!

Homeless people buying and monetizing Bank Guarantees is never going to happen! Despite this every day we get contacted by so many people who are under the false illusion that they can buy a $500 Million BG with no money. They want the Funder to pay the Bank Guarantee Issuer so they can do a deal for FREE, taking no risk, investing none of their own money and having no liability.


ACCESS LOAN VENTURES top world sblc provider


Those types of deals do not exist in the real world, if they did every homeless person in the world today would be doing them, heck we would be doing them! You simply will not get into the game if you do not have MONEY, that is the hard cold facts. In this business you have to have money to make money and thats the TRUTH.

Contact Us Today For Your Loan, International Project Funding, Bank Guarantee, SBLC, DLC & Letters of Credit

Our Skype ID: accessloans
Our Emails:  info@accessloanventures.com  and  accessloanventures@outlook.com 

Bank Guarantee vs SBLC – Which is Better?

Access Loan ventures BG provider

Bank Guarantees and SBLC (Standby Letter of Credit) are both financial instruments but each has a very different financial purpose. Most banks can issue either a Bank Guarantee or an SBLC so we are often asked by clients which one is better?


If your primary purpose is to have your Bank Guarantee or SBLC monetized, discounted or funded so you receive the most amount of cash from the instrument as possible…. Then a BANK GUARANTEE will be BETTER!

The reason is funders who monetize Bank Guarantees and SBLC (Standby Letter of Credit) prefer Bank Guarantees and generally pay MORE for Bank Guarantees than they do for SBLCs. LTV (Loan to Value) ratios on Bank Guarantees tend to be higher than SBLCs so if your sole goal is to maximise the monetized return from your financial instrument, request a Bank Guarantee Not an SBLC.

Contact Us Today For Your Loan, International Project Funding, Bank Guarantee, SBLC, DLC & Letters of Credit

Our Skype ID: accessloans
Our Emails:  info@accessloanventures.com  and  accessloanventures@outlook.com 

Bank Instruments for lease (Letters of Credit, bank guarantee, sblc, dlc)

access loan ventures project funders

Access Loan Ventures are direct providers of freshly cut bank instruments like BG (Bank Guarantee), MTN's (Medium Term Note), SBLC (Standby Letter of Credit) & DPLC's (Direct Pay Letter of Credit) CD's (Certificate of Deposit),  and just about every other type of financial instruments available through our network.
ALL OUR BG, SBLC AND LETTERS OF CREDIT ARE ISSUED BY TOP PRIME AAA RATED BANKS LIKE BARCLAY'S BANK LONDON, DEUTSCHE BANK AG GERMANY, HSBC, STANDARD CHARTERED BANK ETC. 

  • Bank Guarantee (BG) in US$ or Euros
  • Standby Letter of Credit (SBLC) in US$ or Euros
  • Medium Term Notes (MTN’s) in US$ or Euros
  • Treasury Bills (T-Bill) in US$ or Euros
  • Documentary Letter of Credit (DLC, SLC, LC) in US$ or Euros
  • Promissory Notes in US$ or Euros
  • Discounting of Bank Instruments

Our bank instruments can be engaged in PPP Trading, Discounting, signature project(s) such as Aviation, Agriculture, Petroleum, Telecommunication, construction of Dams, Roads, Bridges, Hospitals, Hotels, Condo, Real Estate and all kind of international business trading including oil/gas business, diesel, Gold Dust, Gold Bars, Rough Diamonds etc.

Below is our detailed terms and procedure for BG/SBLC.

Description of Instruments:

1. Instrument:             Bank Guarantee (BG) /StandBy Letter of Credit (SBLC)
2. Total Face Value:      Eur/USD 1Million (Min) to Eur/USD 5Billion (Max)
3. Issuing Bank:            Barclays Bank, HSBC, Lloyds Bank London, Standard Chartered Bank, Deutsch Bank AG,  Frankfurt  or any AA Rated Bank.
4. Age:                       One Year and  One Day
5. Leasing Price:           4% of Face Value a plus 2% brokers commission (1% for the lessee side and 1% for the lessor side, PLEASE NOTE, THIS BROKERS COMMISSION COMES INTO EFFECT ONLY IF THERE ARE BROKERS INVOLVED IN THE TRANSACTION)
6. Delivery:                  Bank-To-Bank Swift.
7. Payment:                 Wire Transfer
8. Hard Copy:               Bonded Courier within 7 banking days.


PROCEDURE:
1. Both parties (Lessor and Lessee) execute, sign and initiate the Deed of Agreement, which thereby automatically becomes a full commercial recourse contract.

2. Within 3 days after Both parties sign the Agreement, Lessor will issue a Notarized signed and sealed Corporate Refund Recourse Undertaking to the Lessee guarantying to refund Lessee all the cost incurred by lessee for the bank transmission charges (For swift MT760 BG/SBLC or Pre-advice MT799 or both as the case may be) after due execution of the contract.

3. Within 3 working days after Lessee receives Lessor's signed and sealed Corporate Refund Recourse Undertaking, Lessee will make payment by wire transfer into the Lessor's bank  account for the bank transmission charges for the BG/SBLC MT760 swift transmission or Pre-advice MT799 swift transmission or both.

4. Within Three (3) banking days after confirmation of receipt of payment of the bank transmission charges for the BG/SBLC MT760 swift in Lessor's bank account, the Lessor will deliver the BG/SBLC via bank confirmation of swift BG/SBLC MT760 to the Lessee's banker including the hard copy of the BG/SBLC via bank bonded courier in Seven (7) banking days.

5. Lessee pays Lessor the leasing fee and the brokers their commission fees not later than 21 banking days after the BG/SBLC hard copy is received and confirmed at lessee's bank. Should Lessee default to pay the leasing fees to the Lessor and the brokers commission fees as agreed after 7 banking days of confirmation of BG/SBLC MT760 in lessee's bank account, Lessor will instruct the issuing bank to put a claim on the BG/SBLC thereby forcing the Lessee's bankers to return the BG/SBLC MT760 to the issuing Bank.
6. Any unauthorized calls or communication to bank (s) by any party or their representatives is highly prohibited and can result to contract termination.

7. The bank transmission charge of the BG/SBLC will depend on the face value of the BG/SBLC.   

8. The transaction can be completed/concluded within 7 days. It all depends on how fast the client wants to move.

If you need any further advise, information or assistance, do not hesitate to contact us immediately via Email or Skype


Our Skype ID: accessloans
Our Emails:  info@accessloanventures.com  and  accessloanventures@outlook.com 

Sunday, October 25, 2015

We are providers of Fresh Cut BG, SBLC, DLC & Letters of Credit.

We provide Fresh Cut BG, SBLC, DLC & Letters of Credit.

We are direct providers of Fresh Cut BG, SBLC, MTN, DLC and CDs which we have specifically for lease. We do not have any broker chains in this offer or get involved in Chauffer driven offers. We deliver with time and precision as set forth in the Contract Agreement. You are at liberty to engage our leased facilities into trade programs as well as in signature project(s) such as Business expansion projects, Aviation, Agriculture, Petroleum, Telecommunication, construction of Dams, Bridges and any other turnkey project(s) etc. Our terms and Conditions are reasonable.

DESCRIPTION OF INSTRUMENTS:
1. Instrument: Bank Guarantee (BG)/SBLC
2. Total Face Value: Eur/Usd 1M MIN and Eur/Usd 50B MAX).
3. Issuing Bank: HSBC, Barclays Bank, Standard Chartered, Citibank or AA rated Bank in Western Europe or USA.
4. Age: One Year, One Day
5. Leasing Price: 4% of Face Value plus 1% brokers commission (only if there is a broker involved in the transaction)
6. Delivery SWIFT TO SWIFT.
7. Payment: Wire Transfer.
8.. Hard Copy: Bonded Courier within 7 banking days.

All relevant business information will be provided upon request plus our terms and procedures:

We look forward to doing business with you soonest.

Best Regards,
Dr. Chantha

Skype: accessloans
Twitter:  @accessloankh

China’s government is cracking down on investors who are asking for its help

Thousands of Chinese investors were expected at a protest in Beijing this morning (Oct. 26) to demand the government force Fanya Metal Exchange, a trading platform-turned-asset manager, to return an estimated $6 billion of their funds. But only a few dozen actually turned up, after a nationwide police crackdown over the weekend that resulted in hundreds of investors being pulled from Beijing hotels, and others receiving threatening police visits in their homes, several investors told Quartz.
At around 9am, less than one hundred investors were gathered across the street from the headquarters of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), where they planned the protest, eyewitnesses and investors told Quartz. Dozens of police already stood by at the gate of CSRC, with around twenty buses parked nearby, presumably ready to take investors away.
Dozens of police officers standing by outside CSRC on Oct. 26, 2015.
Dozens of police officers standing by outside CSRC on Oct. 26, 2015.
Fanya's investors waiting at a street corner of Jinrong Street where CSRC is based.
Fanya's investors wait near the CSRC headquarters.
Investors, many of whom have lost their life savings and family members' as well, say they're protesting because they feel they don't have any other options. “We want the government to take up its responsibility on this subject, we are not anti-government," Lu, a businessman from north China’s Shanxi province who has invested  several million yuan in Fanya, told Quartz from the protest site. “If we don’t defend our rights, we’ll never have hope.” Lu said his wife was taken by police from their hotel room last night.[pullquote]We are not anti-government.[/pullquote]
As many as 220,000 Chinese investors put money into the metals exchange, which halted all trading six months ago. Fanya's founder and chairman Shan Jiuliang recently said Fanya is not responsible for paying the investors back. The Chinese government played a part in Fanya's rise, but so far local and national government have done little to get investors' money back. Increasingly desperate investors have staged a series of protests, even, at one point, kidnapping chairman Shan and turning him in to the police.
Police allowed protests in the past, but Monday's comes as more than 200 top leaders of China's ruling Communist Party hold a policy-making meeting in Beijing known as the fifth plenum, where China's next five-year plan is expected to be announced. The meeting seems to have inspired the crackdown.
One 53-year-old Fanya investor, who asked to be identified only by his surname Li, told Quartz on Sunday (Oct. 25) that he had decided not to attend the protests for safety reasons, after police kept harassing him and his family at their home in Hangzhou, in Zhejiang province. Li said a police officer warned him to not go, because many foreign media will be reporting on the fifth plenum in Beijing, so the protests will make the state look bad. The police officer, Li said, warned him "stern action" would be taken if he went.
The protest was not scheduled for the Party's fifth plenum, organizers told Quartz, the timing was just a coincidence. Police began to intercept protesters who were making their way to Beijing over the weekend, as well as clearing out Beijing hotels where they were staying.
Protesters believe police used the complaints that they filed about Fanya to local authorities to track them down.[pullquote]Protesters believe police used the complaints that they filed about Fanya to local authorities to track them down.[/pullquote]
"Several hundred" Fanya investors who checked into Beijing hotels were rounded up by police and kept in Jiujingzhuang Relief Services Center, Beijing's biggest detention hub for protesters, one investor who had been detained told Quartz by phone on Sundaynight. On Monday morning, she said she and other investors were on a high-speed train back to their hometown of Zhejiang, under police supervision.
The police didn't use any force at all, she said, perhaps because all the investors complied with their instructions. Still, being detained was something she said she "never expected" would happen.
A protest organizer surnamed Tao from southeastern China's Zhejiang province told Quartz organizers didn't know the exact number of investors who had be jailed or taken away by Beijing police. But she said there were still around a thousand investors in Beijing, sleeping on the street to avoid police. Whether they'll actually hold a protest "all depends," she said.
Tao said investors originally expected Monday’s demonstration would be “the biggest protest in the past decade in Beijing," but they had never thought of  starting any confrontations with the government. "If we don’t have the money back, we won't have our lives,” Tao said.
The government has been fast to deal with protesting investors, "but slow dealing with the cheaters,” Li said.

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Sunday, October 18, 2015

Congress is mulling whether to slap $100,000 fines on Americans who hack cars (maybe even if they own the car)

Accessing an automobile's computer systems or data without authorization may soon result in a six-figure fine in the US.
draft bill (pdf) proposed Wednesday by the House Energy and Commerce Committee establishes a civil penalty of up to $100,000 to any person who accesses “without authorization, an electronic control unit or critical system of a motor vehicle, or other system containing driving data for such motor vehicle, either wirelessly or through a wired connection.” The penalty would be applicable multiple times for each system accessed.
It is unclear who would need to grant "authorization" or what "access" even constitutes, based on the text of the bill. An interpretation that determined that authorization could only be granted by the manufacturer would have wide-ranging implications for tinkerers, researchers, and mechanics alike. Presumably, this interpretation could mean that a car owner can't access her own driving data without permission from the manufacturer. Another possibility is that a non-dealership mechanic would need clearance to use certain diagnostic equipment on a car.
It's not far fetched; the auto industry is already trying to establish that car owners don't actually own all of their cars, and therefore can't do things like inspect the code running on their computers.
The bill comes after a series of high profile incidents where researchers have found security vulnerabilities in automotive computer systems, as well as reports of criminals exploiting flaws. That's all on top of every-day enthusiasts who—in a long American tradition—tinker with and modify their cars.
In July, two researchers revealed they were able to hijack a Jeep Cherokee wirelessly. They were able to perform juvenile tasks like blast Kanye West music from the radio. They also were able to disable the brakes and accelerator of the car. Chrysler, Jeep's corporate parent, issued a recall for the vehicles days later to patch the vehicles’ software.
In August, another researcher was able to unlock and start OnStar equipped vehicles from GM.
Thieves reportedly have been able to break into cars by spoofing the signal of keyless entry fobs.
Not all security vulnerabilities require active efforts. Cars have also been found to leak information all by themselves. Tire pressure monitors have been found to broadcast their readings on radio frequencies that can be found and decoded.
The bill also calls for the creation of national standards and guidelines on securing the technology and data in automobiles.

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A US state court must decide: Is this godless church still a church?

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Every Sunday morning, dozens of locals gather at a bar in Concord, New Hampshire to eat pie and fight each other with foam swords.

They call themselves the Church of the Sword, and in lieu of worshipping a higher being, the five-year-old institution preaches self-ownership and self-defense. Its hymnals are called “jams,” it lets followers keep several other faiths, and its customs—like the Ritual of Combat, in which service-goers duel with each other with fake swords to symbolize the defense of personal opinions—may seem more like eccentric social club activities than sacred rituals.

Yet the church, which has 280 members, is fighting to be legally recognized as a religion. The group recently sued the town of Westmoreland (where it is based) for denying it a religious tax exemption on a property donation. It lost: according to the town and the county court that decided the case, the organization doesn’t qualify for tax breaks because it’s political, godless, and simply not a real religion.

Members of Church of the Sword, performing a ritual.(Courtesy of Church of the Sword)
The group is now appealing its case to the New Hampshire Supreme Court. In oral arguments Thursday (Oct. 15), the church claimed Westmoreland’s definition of “religion”—as a group that must have a spiritual leader and worship a universe-creating supernatural power—is discriminatory.

“We are definitely a religion,” Kevin Bloom, the organization’s senior pastor and the owner of the bar where members regularly assemble, tells Quartz. “We’ve met every week for five years, we meet the majority of the [Internal Revenue Service’s] 14 points for defining a church.”

Members of the church, some of whom are libertarian activists whomigrated to New Hampshire together, believe that upholding personal learning and self-improvement is just as spiritually valid as worshipping a deity. Like many established religions, the church runs educational programs, memorial services, weddings, counseling, and philanthropic activities. Above all, it fosters a stringent set of shared values, Bloom tells Quartz.

The foam swords are used for the defense of personal opinions.(Courtesy of Church of the Sword)
Under the law, Westmoreland reserves the right to determine whether or not a group counts as a religion for tax purposes. If the Church of the Sword loses the appeal, it would owe $3,200 per year in taxes on the donated house, which members consider a parsonage.

The town is adamant that the church is a social organization, chiefly because it doesn’t believe in a supreme being.

Bloom says that’s a narrow-minded view. “They’re essentially saying Daoism and Buddhism can’t be religions, either,” he says. “If the New Hampshire Supreme Court comes up with a standard that excludes us, we’ll go to federal court immediately.”

Several other religiously-oriented organizations are facing similar battles over government recognition, including two more in New Hampshire. If the Church of the Sword wins the suit, it would set a precedent for other unrecognized churches across the state to get tax relief, too.

In 2013, the UK’s highest court made a landmark decision that believing in a god is not essential to a religion—and the coming months will tell whether a US state is willing to say the same.

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Do University Technology Patents Pay Off? Ask Apple, Which Was Ordered to Pay $234 Million

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The prevailing wisdom states that when universities try to cash in on their research — be it chip-design or gene splicing — they come out on the losing end.
Tell that to Apple, which was ordered this week to pay $234 million to the University of Wisconsin’s patent-licensing group for violating a patent on technology that improves the efficiency and performance of computer processors.
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation convinced a jury that the A7 chips that power the iPhone 5s, the iPad Air and the iPad mini infringe on this patent. The University Friday hailed the verdict as a triumph for education and pledged to plow the money back into research and education.
“This is a case where the hard work of our university researchers and the integrity of patenting and licensing discoveries [have]  prevailed,” said WARF managing director Carl Gulbrandsen.
Some researchers, including the Brookings Institute, have argued that universities should abandon the old approach of licensing their technology to the highest bidders, noting that only a handful of schools — as in eight — took 50 percent of the total licensing income of the university system. Instead, the study’s author, Walter Valdivia, urged universities to nurture their own startups and make their patents available to these budding companies.
For some educational institutions, the court route has proved lucrative — especially in the technology sector.
A University of California spin-off, Eolas, won $520.6 million against Microsoft in 2003 in a Web browser patent suit. In 2010, Cornell University won a $184 million jury verdictagainst Hewlett-Packard, though damages were later reduced to $53 million. And last year, Carnegie Mellon University collected one of the largest damage awards in history — a $1.5 billion judgment — in a suit against Marvell Technology Group saying that it infringed on two hard disc drive patents.
In the Wisconsin suit, Apple could have been liable for up to $862.4 million in damages. The educational institution used the same patent to sue Intel in 2008, in a dispute that was settled out of court.
Apple has said it plans to appeal the verdict.

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Friday, October 16, 2015

The Autobahn doesn’t have speed limits. Germans think it’s time to change that

For much of Germany's Autobahn, the federally-controlled highway system, there are no speed limits. But for how much longer?
recent poll by YouGov found that 56% of the German public is now in favor of a nationwide speed limit of 150 km/h (93 miles per hour) on German highways. Forty-eight percent believed a nationwide speed limit would make the Autobahn safer—but 45% percent disagreed.
When the upper limit was suggested at 130 km/h or 100 km/h, the level of support dropped. Only 11% of Germans would be in favor of implementing a speed limit similar to the UK’s, which is 112 km/h, while 40% of respondents were interested in implementing France’s current limit of 130.
While most countries across the world have imposed upper speed limits, Germany is among a small number of countries, including Afghanistan and North Korea, not to follow suit. According to European Transport Safety Council (ETSC), 52% of the German highways don’t have speed limits. Only 33% have permanent speed limits.
Older drivers were far more likely to be in favor of lower limits, with half of those over 55 supportive of a 130 km/h nationwide limit, compared with just over a third of 18-to-24-year-olds. The survey interviewed 1198 people from Oct. 9-13.
Road deaths on highways have been steadily decreasing across Germany, but are still higher when compared to France and the UK. This could be simply down to the differences in standards of driving, number of highways, or quality vehicles between these countries—but of the 645 road deaths on German highways in 2006, the ETSC found 67% of these deaths occurred on motorway sections without speed limits.

In the last few years, the issue of speed limits has intensified in Germany. Sigmar Gabriel, the chairman of the Social Democratic Party, proposed a speed limit in the run-up to the last elections but many politicians, including chancellor Angela Merkel, heavily opposed the move.
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