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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Wind Turbine Installations May Rise 20% in 2011, GWEC Lobby Group Says

Wind turbine installations may rise 20 percent this year worldwide and double by 2015, the Global Wind Energy Council said in a statement today.

Capacity to produce electricity from the wind may rise by 40 gigawatts in 2011 from 294.4 gigawatts at the end of last year, the lobby group said in a statement from Brussels. By 2015, it forecasts 450 gigawatts.
“2010 was a tough year for our industry, but 2011 is looking up,” said Steve Sawyer, secretary general for GWEC. “We’ve paid the price for the 2008 and 2009 financial crisis. Now we’re back on track.”  

Source: Bloomberg

Industrial Manufacturing CFOs Reveal Top Concerns Of 2011

Industrial Manufacturing CFOs Reveal Top Concerns Of 2011

Monday, March 14, 2011

Economists Weigh in on Disaster in Japan

In the aftermath of a series of earthquakes and a tsunami that has also destabilized a number of the country’s nuclear-power facilities, Japan’s economy is likely to see positive and negative effects from the disaster, economists write. While the report, issued by economists Takahide Kiuchi and Kohei Okazaki, uses the Kobe earthquake of 1995 as a reference point, it is also careful to note that the still-evolving nature of last week’s disaster makes estimating its impact on financial markets “problematic.”
Negative economic effects described by the report are expected to last as long as six months and are attributed to the loss of material resources such as housing, industrial facilities and offices, and public infrastructure. A reduction in consumer activity also is expected to adversely affect gross domestic product. Expanded public, capital and housing investment expected to accompany medium- and long-term efforts to rebuild will deliver a positive effect on the economy, according to the report.

The disaster is also expected to delay Japan’s exit from its economic lull. “We expect the negative impact on real GDP growth to be greatest in Apr–Jun, but we believe it is too pessimistic to expect a sharp downturn in the Japanese economy,” according to the Nomura report. “On the other hand, we do not expect rapid expansion in rebuilding demand stimulated by significant government spending to drive a V-shaped recovery, given the precedent of the Kobe earthquake and the delays to funding then.