Sunday, July 10, 2011

15 Food Companies That Serve You 'Wood'


( Wood pulp, or cellulose, in processed food report updated with the addition of Pepsi,Kellogg and Weight Watchers International.)
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Are you getting what you pay for on your plate?
The recent class-action lawsuit brought against Taco Bell raised questions about the quality of food many Americans eat each day.
Chief among those concerns is the use of cellulose (read: wood pulp), an extender whose use in a roster of food products, from crackers and ice creams to puddings and baked goods, is now being exposed. What you're actually paying for -- and consuming -- may be surprising.
Cellulose is virgin wood pulp that has been processed and manufactured to different lengths for functionality, though use of it and its variant forms (cellulose gum, powdered cellulose, microcrystalline cellulose, etc.) is deemed safe for human consumption, according to the FDA, which regulates most food industry products. The government agency sets no limit on the amount of cellulose that can be used in food products meant for human consumption. The USDA, which regulates meats, has set a limit of 3.5% on the use of cellulose, since fiber in meat products cannot be recognized nutritionally.
"As commodity prices continue to rally and the cost of imported materials impacts earnings, we expect to see increasing use of surrogate products within food items. Cellulose is certainly in higher demand and we expect this to continue," Michael A. Yoshikami, chief investment strategist at YCMNet Advisors, told TheStreet.
Manufacturers use cellulose in food as an extender, providing structure and reducing breakage, said Dan Inman, director of research and development at J. Rettenmaier USA, a company that supplies "organic" cellulose fibers for use in a variety of processed foods and meats meant for human and pet consumption, as well as for plastics, cleaning detergents, welding electrodes, pet litter, automotive brake pads, glue and reinforcing compounds, construction materials, roof coating, asphalt and even emulsion paints, among many other products.
Cellulose adds fiber to the food, which is good for people who do not get the recommended daily intake of fiber in their diets, Inman said. It also extends the shelf life of processed foods. Plus, cellulose's water-absorbing properties can mimic fat, he said, allowing consumers to reduce their fat intake.
Perhaps most important to food processors is that cellulose is cheaper, he added, because "the fiber and water combination is less expensive than most other ingredients in the [food] product."
Indeed, food producers save as much as 30% in ingredient costs by opting for cellulose as a filler or binder in processed foods, according to a source close to the processed food industry who spoke with TheStreet on the condition of anonymity.
Inman said that in his 30 years in the food science business, he's seen "an amazing leap in terms of the applications of cellulose fiber and what you can do with it." He said powdered cellulose has a bad reputation but that more of his customers are converting from things like oat or sugar cane fibers to cellulose because it is "snow white in color, bland and easy to work with."
Most surprising, said Inman, is that he's been able to remove as much as 50% of the fat from some cookies, biscuits, cakes and brownies by replacing it with powdered cellulose -- but still end up with a very similar product in terms of taste and appearance.
"We're only limited by our own imagination," Inman toldTheStreet. "I would never have dreamed I could successfully put 18% fiber in a loaf of bread two years ago."
He said cellulose is common in processed foods, often labeled as reduced-fat or high-fiber -- products like breads, pancakes, crackers, pizza crusts, muffins, scrambled eggs, mashed potato mixes, and even cheesecake. Inman himself keeps a box of Wheat Thins Fiber Selects crackers, manufactured by Kraft Foods(KFT_)' Nabisco brand, at his desk, and snacks on them daily, clearly unmoved by the use of wood pulp in its ingredients.
"Most consumers would be shocked to find these types of filler products are used as substitutes for items that they believe are more pure," Yoshikami said. "We would expect increased disclosure to follow increased use of cellulose and other filler products as the practice increases in frequency."
To that end, TheStreet rounded up a list of popular foods that use cellulose. It's by no means an exhaustive list, and we suggest consumers read food labels carefully. Still, click through the slideshow to find out if your favorite foods contain the "all-natural" wood pulp...
(Please note the following lists are not exhaustive. Some companies list all ingredients on their Web sites. Other items were found in a local grocery store near TheStreet's headquarters on Wall Street in New York City.)
From: www.thestreet.com

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Calderas in Mýrdalsjökull 50 Meters Deep


The Icelandic Coast Guard flew a team of scientists acrossMýrdalsjökull glacier and the flooded area yesterday to examine the circumstances. They estimate that the two calderas in the southern part of the glacier from which the flood emerged are 50 meters deep.
caldera-myrdalsjokull_coastguard
One of the calderas. Photo posted on ruv.is. Copyright: Icelandic Coast Guard.
The scientists estimate the depth based on ash layers in the ice. The black stripe that can be seen in the walls of the calderas is ash from the volcanic eruption in Eyjafjallajökull last year, while the edges of the calderas are black because of the ash from the recent Grímsvötn eruptionruv.is reports.
Their vertical walls indicate that the glacial melt occurred very quickly. It was caused either by a magma intrusion or a steam explosion. The cracks around the calderas are extremely deep and wide—they could swallow a whole house.
They are located in the southernmost part of the Katla crater, which measures 80 square kilometers. It is ten kilometers wide and 500-600 meters deep and is surrounded by mountains, the highest of which are 1,300 meters high.
A thick ice covers the crater, which makes Katla one of the most dangerous volcanoes in Iceland. In case of a large eruption in Katla, a significant amount of ice could melt and cause a huge flood, which could prove dangerous for people living in the area.
Katla last erupted in 1918, which was a large eruption.
The recent activity in Mýrdalsjökull does not indicate an immediate eruption and the activity in the glacier has subsided.
Click here to read an announcement in English and German about the situation.
Click here to read more about the current situation in Mýrdalsjökull.

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Another Iceland volcano stirs, causing flooding

REYKJAVIK : A massive flood of meltwater poured out of Iceland's Myrdalsjokull glacier Saturday, raising fears of an eruption from the powerful Katla volcano underneath, but experts said a large blast was unlikely.
"At around 3:00 am (0300 GMT) ... we had a glacial meltwater runoff from underneath the glacier," Evgenia Ilyinskaya, a volcanologist at the Icelandic Meteorological Office, told AFP.
The giant flood took out a bridge and part of the main road that circles Iceland and prompted evacuations, but there were no reports of injuries.
The flooding sparked fears of an eruption at Katla, known to be one of Iceland's most powerful volcanoes and located just southeast of Eyjafjoell, notorious for last year's flight-halting gigantic ash cloud.
But experts said geothermal heat, and not an eruption, might be the culprit behind the flow of meltwater.
"There is always meltwater because there is geothermal heat under the glacier. So the meltwater builds up and finally floods down," Ilyinskaya pointed out.
"While we can't say for sure there was not a small subglacial eruption that caused it, we don't see any signs of it coming up to the surface," she said.
And according to Freysteinn Sigmundsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland, the floods had begun subsiding by Saturday afternoon.
"There are two possibilities: it is a volcanic eruption, and then its seems to be a small one, or it is only geothermal water," he told AFP.
If there had in fact been a small subglacial eruption, he said, "this doesn't seem to be the large eruption that people have been waiting for at Katla".
Katla, which is named after an Icelandic witch and said to be 10 times more powerful than Eyjafjoell, last erupted in 1918, sending a wall of meltwater down the glacier, bearing ice chunks the size of houses, and blanketing southern Iceland in thick ash.
And according to experts, the volcano, which is also located to the southeast of Grimsvoetn which was behind Iceland's latest eruption in May, is overdue for a powerful blast.
The seismometres had meanwhile gone crazy at the time the so-called river-run occurred, and Ilyinskaya hinted that the activity at Katla may actually have caused sensors around the Hekla volcano, about 110 kilometres (70 miles) east of Reykjavik, to indicate in recent days an eruption there could be imminent.
"It's not unlikely that the activity we saw there was actually caused by the Katla glacier. They're pretty close," she said, adding that measurements around both volcanoes now seemed calm.

Regardless of what caused Saturday's flood, the enormous river gushing from the glacier had taken out a 128-metre-long bridge and part of the road and prompted authorities to evacuate hundreds of people from surrounding areas due to the continued danger of flash floods.
The Icelandic Red Cross set up evacuation centres in the villages of Vik and Kirkjubaejarklaustur which in total had taken in more than 200 residents and tourists.
"Travelers are safe in Iceland except in the defined danger zone at and around the Myrdalsjokull glacier," Iris Marelsdottir, a project manager at the Department of Civil Protection, told AFP.
She stressed however that people in that area needed to "get away from there as soon as possible".
Hreinn Haraldsson, who heads Iceland's Road Administration, meanwhile said it would take two to three weeks to build a preliminary bridge to replace the one washed away.
"The crack in the highway is of course a big concern for the general traffic and tourism in Iceland," he told AFP.
From: Another Iceland volcano stirs, causing flooding - Channel NewsAsia

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Leak forces Tepco to temporarily halt water decontamination system

Monday, July 11, 2011
Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Sunday it temporarily halted the system to decontaminate radioactive water at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture after discovering that about 50 liters of contaminated water and chemicals used in the system were leaking from a pipe after a part broke.The utility has been using the decontaminated water to cool the Nos. 1-3 reactors at the plant, and even during the temporary suspension to fix the part, it was able to continue the cooling function using water that had already been decontaminated, it said.
"The concentration of radioactive substances in the leaked contaminated water was not at levels that would cause problems involving workers' exposure to radiation," a Tepco official said.
The leak occurred in a section of a device developed by France's Areva SA where the chemicals, which are used to condense and precipitate radioactive materials in the contaminated water, are injected from a hose into a pipe through which the polluted water passes, according to Tepco.
The plastic part broke, causing the chemicals and contaminated water to leak, the company said, adding that workers replaced the part with a steel one and resumed operation of the water treatment system.
The chemicals are not toxic, Tepco said.
Smooth operation of the treatment system, which is designed to remove highly radioactive materials from the massive quantities of contaminated water accumulating at the power station, is essential for containing the nuclear crisis, as Tepco recycles the water to cool the plant's damaged reactors.
The contaminated water accumulating at reactor facilities, including coolant liquid leaking from damaged reactors, has been diverted elsewhere at the plant to prevent it from overflowing from the facilities, but the storage locations are nearing full capacity.
From: search.japantimes.co.jp

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News International phone hacking memos passed to police


News International phone hacking memos passed to police 2007 memos appear to show phone hacking more widespread than previously thought and that NoW paid police for information.
Police have been handed internal News International memos from 2007 that appear to acknowledge that the practice of phone hacking was more widespread than previously thought and that police were paid for helping with stories.
The memos - which were written in the wake of the jailing of the News of the World's former royal editor Clive Goodman and the newspaper's £100,000-a-year private investigator Glenn Mulcaire - allegedly show that the pair were not the only News International employees implicated in phone hacking. The memos have now been passed to police investigating the matter.
The disclosure of the memos comes four years after the then executive chairman of News International, Les Hinton, told MPs that the organisation believed Goodman was the sole staff offender.
While giving evidence to the Commons culture committee on 6 March 2007, Hinton was asked whether the News of the World had "carried out a full, rigorous internal inquiry" into phone hacking and whether he was "absolutely convinced" that the practice was limited to a single reporter.
He replied: "Yes, we have and I believe he was the only person, but that investigation, under the new editor [Colin Myler], continues."
The select committee was also told that News International had carried out an internal inquiry "of emails still on its IT systems" in May 2007.
Lawrence Abramson, managing partner of the solicitors Harbottle & Lewis, who reviewed the emails on the instructions of News International, told the committee that they had examined the evidence and concluded: "We did not find anything in those emails which appeared to us to be reasonable evidence that Clive Goodman's illegal actions were known about and supported by both or either of Andy Coulson, the editor, and Neil Wallis, the deputy editor, and/or that Ian Edmondson, the news editor, and others were carrying out similar illegal procedures."
The memos – which are reported to have been recovered by Will Lewis, News International's general manager and the man tasked with investigating the phone-hacking claims – also suggest that the organisation was paying police officers for information.
According to the BBC's business editor, Robert Peston, the documents were not handed to Scotland Yard until 20 June this year and are thought to have been in the possession of Harbottle & Lewis. Peston reports that the memos appear to show Coulson, who edited the News of the World from 2003-2007, "authorising payments to police" for assistance with stories.
The Guardian understands that News International's chief executive, Rebekah Brooks, and James Murdoch, the chairman of its parent company, News Corporation, were made aware of the memos only relatively recently.
From: www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/10

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SOHO latest 1500 (07/09/2011)



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Disinformation???


From:http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/radiation-visualization.html
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Tsunami fear after new Japan quake


UPDATE 11.49am: A TSUNAMI alert has been issued for the Pacific coast of northern Japan after a strong quake hit the region heavily damaged by the March earthquake and tsunami.
The Japan Meteorological Agency issued the advisory for Iwate, Miyagi, and Fukushima prefectures, after a 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck off the main island of Honshu at 1057 AEST.
The US Geological Agency, which also estimated the magnitude at 7.1, said the offshore quake hit at a depth of 10 kilometres in the same general area as the 9.0-magnitude quake of March 11 which triggered a massive tsunami.
Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) said it had not received reports of any fresh problems at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant after the latest earthquake.
"We are still checking details, but cooling of reactors is continuing," a TEPCO spokeswoman said.
A small tsunami of up to 50 centimetres was expected along the affected region, the meteorological agency said.
Communities along the Pacific coast issued warnings and advisories for local residents to seek higher ground but no damage had been reported shortly after the quake.
Television footage of the affected coasts did not show any visible signs of a tsunami or major changes in the waters.
MORE TO COME
From: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/world/tsunami-fear-after-new-japan-quake/story-e6frf7lf-1226091646258

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Quake jolts northeast Japan, 50 cm tsunami warning issued

TOKYO, July 10 (Reuters) - A strong earthquake jolted northeastern Japan on Sunday, and workers at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant were evacuated after an alert for a half-metre tsunami was issued by the Japan Meteorological Agency.
The quake monitoring agency said the earthquake had a magnitude of 7.1 and occurred at a depth of 10 kms (6 miles) off the northeastern coast of Japan.
There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage, public broadcaster NHK said. The same area was hit by a massive earthquake and tsunami on March 11 which cut power to the Fukushima power plant and triggered a radiation crisis.
Tokyo Electric Power said all of the workers at Fukushima had been evacuated to higher ground, adding that there was no sign of any immediate further damage at the nuclear plant where workers have been struggling to build a cooling system to stabilize the reactors.
The U.S. Geological Survey initially estimated the quake’s magnitude of 7.3, but then revised that estimate down to a magnitude 7.
From:http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Quake+jolts+northeast+Japan+tsunami+warning+issued/5078966/story.html


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Verrijking | Tegenstroom

Uranium

Het uranium dat in de natuur voorkomt wordt 'natuurlijk uranium' genoemd. Het uranium bestaat hoofdzakelijk uit 2 soorten isotopen: splijtbaar uranium-235 en niet splijtbaar uranium-238. Voor gebruik in de meest voorkomende kerncentrales (de 'lichtwater-reactoren') is splijtbaar uranium nodig. Van natuurlijk uranium is slechts 0,7% splijtbaar. Dit percentage moet opgevoerd worden naar ongeveer 3% om het geschikt te maken als brandstof. Dit proces heet 'verrijken'.
Een bijproduct van verrijking is verarmd uranium, dat o.a. gebruikt wordt in wapensystemen en munitie. Als uranium verder verrijkt wordt dan 20% U235, kan het gebruikt worden in kernwapens. Na verrijking moet het gas weer omgezet worden tot vaste stof.
UCN, Almelo
urenco almeloIn Almelo staat uraniumverrijkingsfabriek Urenco. Hier wordt uranium geschikt gemaakt voor gebruik in kerncentrales. Vlak over de Duitse grens, in Gronau, bevindt zich nog een Urencovestiging. Urenco heeft een aandeel van 12-15% op de wereldverrijkingsmarkt en produceert genoeg brandstof voor 15 tot 20 kerncentrales.
Bewoners van de grensstreek rond Almelo en Gronau hebben zich verenigd in de anti-kernenergiegroep NENO (Nederlands Euregionaal Nucleair Overleg). Zij voeren actie tegen de productie, het vervoer en de opslag van nucleair materiaal in hun regio. Ze procederen tegen uitbreiding van de verrijkingsfabrieken en proberen nucleaire transporten te verhinderen.
Foto: Demonstratie tegen Urenco, april 2006

From: http://www.tegenstroom.nl/node/164


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