Spot Videocracy banned from Rai and Mediaset

Both RAI and Mediaset ban spots for ‘Videocracy’
Doc links Italy’s cultural decay to Berlusconi empire

By MICHAEL DAY

Videocracy_posterWhen the Mediaset TV empire controlled by Italo Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi banned spots for Swedish-Italian helmer Erik Gandini’s “Videocracy,” hardly anyone blinked.
After all, the doc, which unspooled at the Venice film fest, links moral and cultural decay in Italy with the rise of Berlusconi’s TV channels.

However, eyebrows began to rise when pubcaster RAI also refused to play the trailers, deeming the pic “offensive to the honor and personal reputation of the prime minister.” The move fueled suspicions that Berlusconi was leaning on the state-run broadcaster, whose governors are his political appointees.

Absent the ability to promote the film on Italy’s main TV channels, Gandini is largely left preaching to the converted rather than drawing in more mainstream auds.

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Gandini has said the film was prompted by his experience of foreigners sniggering at Berlusconi’s astonishing degree of control over Italians’ access to information.

Auds will now have to discover for themselves how wide that control really extends.

by VARIETY.COM

Fear for port works

Group fears port works will sink Venice

port_veniceItalian authorities plan to expand Venice’s port into a bustling shipping hub, further endangering the fragile lagoon and contributing to the sinking of the treasured city built on water, a conservation group said Monday.

Venice in Peril, a British fund that works to preserve Venice, said a report it obtained from the local port authority showed plans to accommodate more and bigger ships in a bid to compete with other European harbors.

The Venice port authority confirmed it had written the report, but insisted the works will respect the environment and are necessary to deal with the growing flow of tourists and goods.

The debate illustrates the complex and often controversial balancing act between protecting the UNESCO world heritage site and exploiting a sea port that gives easy access to prosperous areas of northern Italy and central Europe, as well as rapidly developing markets in the Balkans.

The report drawn up for the Italian Senate outlines ongoing and future works including the continued dredging of passages in the shallow lagoon to allow larger vessels in and the construction of a new shipping terminal in the long-declining mainland industrial zone of Porto Marghera.

The port authority is spending at least euro260 million ($370 million) to dredge inlets and navigation channels to allow the passage of ships of up to 400 meters (1,300 feet) in length.

This is particularly concerning for conservationists because dredging and heavy ship traffic are seen as one of the causes of the rising sea level in the lagoon, which threatens the low-lying islands on which the historic city is built.

“The fact that big ships have access to the lagoon has important consequences for its health,” said Jane da Mosto, a researcher for Venice in Peril. “Apart from environmental concerns … the problem of high tide is accentuated, so it means more flooding for Venice.”

Under the combined effect of rising water levels and settling of the land, Venice has sunk 23 centimeters (nine inches) in the last century.

Most experts agree that the waves generated by large ships and the currents that run through the deep passageways play a big part, displacing and dragging out to sea the sandbanks and other sediments that help keep water out.

In winter, Venice periodically goes through bouts of “acqua alta” (high water), when strong winds and high tides conspire to push the sea into streets and piazzas, forcing tourists and locals alike to don rubber boots and teeter along impromptu bridges.

The rising sea level has increased the frequency of the floods, and in December, Venice suffered its worst deluge in 22 years. Experts warn the problem could further worsen in the coming decades as climate change causes sea levels to rise globally.

The port authority report dismisses environmental concerns by declaring them solved thanks to a project to build towering movable barriers designed to rise from the seabed and prevent flooding.

The euro4.3 billion ($6.13 billion) system, named Moses after the Old Testament figure who parted the Red Sea, is expected to be operational by 2014.

“The problem of the hydraulic equilibrium is solved because it will be manageable through judicious use of the Moses system,” the report says.

Not so, some experts said.

The Moses barriers block shipping so they would only be raised when an exceptionally high tide is expected. That would not lower the average sea level and stop the waters from slowly eating away at Venice’s bricks and stones, said Luigi D’Alpaos, professor of hydrodynamics at the University of Padua.

“Moses will, at best, manage the acqua alta,” he said in a telephone interview. “But the other problems are not at all addressed by the barriers.”

Officials at the Venice port authority said the dredging is needed to restore the navigation channels, which are filling up with silt, to their original depth. They said the digging will not go beyond the depth allowed by law and any expansions on land will be done within the existing port zone.

But Venice in Peril said work should be done instead to reduce the depth of the channels, where possible, or at least reconstruct the natural lagoon features that protected the city for centuries.

by: AP

Hydrogen: green or not green?

The dirty source of the world’s first clean-hydrogen power plant

powerA Venice, Italy power plant made headlines this week as the first in the world fueled exclusively by hydrogen, and rightly so. But most of the news organizations–including the Associated Press and The New York Times–that rewrote the press release from Enel, Italy’s largest electricity producer, barely noted the source of the plant’s hydrogen: petrochemical plants that manufacture plastics.

And there are no plastics in Ecotopia. Venice’s emission-free power is a byproduct, essentially, of the main ingredients of plastic shopping bags, synthetic rubber, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), also known as “the poisonous plastic.”

The Enel plant receives its hydrogen from an adjacent ethylene cracker operated by Polimeri Europa. Ethylene crackers mix hydrocarbons with steam and heat to produce ethylene, an organic hydrocarbon that serves, among other things, as an ingredient in plastic bags; butadiene, an ingredient in synthetic rubber; and styrenics, used in such products as styrofoam and PVC. The Enel plant also receives hydrogen from a Syndial PVC plant. All are located in Porto Marghera, a notoriously polluted industrial park on the mainland side of the Venice Lagoon.

Friends of the plastics industry will be quick to point out the better accomplishments of plastics, like life-saving medical devices and the replacement of even more energy intensive forms of packaging. And perhaps using a byproduct of plastics to produce clean energy is like finding the silver lining in a dark cloud. But the great accomplishment of the Venice plant, finding that cheap hydrogen, leaves it dependent on an industry that pollutes.

The petrochemical plants previously used the surplus hydrogen to produce heat for their own operations.

Hydrogen power plants are just over the horizon in the United States. Jetstream Wind is building one now in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico that will use solar and wind power to separate water into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen will be burned to produce energy. When burned, it recombines with oxygen to produce water vapor without producing carbon dioxide. That’s why hydrogen is considered clean.

“Basically, it’s a scaled-up model of eighth-grade science,” Jetstream CEO Henry Herman told the Associated Press. “In eighth grade we took DC batteries, ran cables into water and produced hydrogen gas. All we’re doing is utilizing that on a much larger scale.”

But the energy produced at that plant will cost up to four times the amount that energy now costs in Truth or Consequences, according to the AP. Those numbers should improve over time, as the wind and solar facilities pay for themselves, but this strategy leaves hydrogen produced by renewables at a disadvantage compared to the less clean Italian model.

Hydrogen power from polluting industry: green or not green?

by: trueslant.com

Italy’s Record “Superenalotto” Jackpot

Italy’s record lotto jackpot climbs to euro 135.9 m

lottoItaly’s record-breaking state lottery on Thursday once again disappointed millions of Italians as well as foreigners who had crossed the border to join the hunt for the rising jackpot.

No one guessed the winning six-number combination of the Superenalotto game and the highest prize ever offered by the Italian lottery grew to euro135.9 million ($194 million).

Germans, Austrians and other foreigners headed into Italy to play the lottery before the draw, including some who flew into Milan for a few hours just for a chance to win euro131.5 ($186 million) Thursday night.

Germany’s top-selling Bild newspaper said 140 passengers aboard a chartered Air Berlin jet won a phone-in contest for free airline tickets aboard an early afternoon flight from Berlin to Milan’s Malpensa airport.

Besides the free seats, the winners were treated to a heaping plateful of pasta, a cup of espresso and the opportunity to buy Superenalotto tickets at a smoke shop at the Milan airport.

Later in the afternoon, without ever leaving the airport, the passengers were flying back to Berlin, “just in time for dinner and to find out if they’ve won,” said Italy private Canale 5 TV.

No one has picked the winning numbers since January, and now the Superenalotto jackpot is Italy’s biggest ever — and, according to Italian news reports, the biggest in Europe, as well. Drawings are held three times a week.

Austrians, Croats and Slovenes living close to Italy “stormed” across the border to try their luck, the Austria Press Agency reported Thursday.

Many of them packed restaurants and hotels in Italy’s German-speaking Alto Adige, or South Tyrol, region, which borders Austria.

French visitors were driving into neighboring northwest Italy for a chance to play the numbers lotto, many Germans have been sighted in resort towns of Lake Maggiore buying tickets, and Superenalotto tickets appeared to be as popular as postcards in many Venice souvenir shops.

Other foreigners catching lotto fever were enjoying already planned vacations in Italy. Nicola and Peter Minchella came from Edinburgh, Scotland.

“I never thought to play in another country before, but since it’s making headlines, we’ll probably buy a ticket,” said Nicola Minchella, as the pair dipped into gelato and sipped coffee at Castellino’s, an outside cafe at Piazza Venezia in the heart of Rome.

At a counter inside the cafe, customers waited in line to buy lotto tickets. What if Peter Minchella picked the winning numbers?

“I’d travel the world and keep buying lottery tickets,” he said, smiling.

The cost is euro1 ($1.42) for the chance to choose two combinations of six winning numbers.

In places like Naples, where a favorite pastime is interpreting dreams in terms of numbers, many people preferred to choose their own. But players could also purchase tickets with two random sets of numbers already printed on them.

With many smoke shops closed in Italy for vacations, those open bustled with players. At Castellino, one customer spent euro2,000 (some $2,800), a drop in the bucket against the 1 in 622 million odds, said manager Stefano Menchetti.

Not all had dreams of riches only for themselves.

The mayor and some of his employees in one small town in northeast Italy chipped in to buy tickets, pledging to use any winnings to build a theater for Ceneselli’s 1,900 citizens.

“We’ve played our ages, our birth dates” as the lucky numbers, said Mayor Marco Trombini in a telephone interview. “There’s no logic in luck anyway.”

by: The Associated Press