Sunday, December 13, 2015

After Paris, what lies ahead for world climate?

After Paris, what lies ahead for world climate?

[LE BOURGET, France] After a champagne moment in Paris, where ministers from around the world crafted a pact to fight perilous climate change, now comes the hard part.
Experts are under no illusion that celebrations and high-flown rhetoric are enough when it comes to rolling back greenhouse-gas emissions.
If anything, they say, the divisions that beleaguered the nearly two-week haggle have underscored the political and economic obstacles that now lie ahead.
The deal finally struck on Saturday, a day into extra time, enshrines the goal to cap global warming at two degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels - and at an even more ambitious 1.5C if possible.
But the bad news is that humanity may already have used up almost 1C of that allocation, the UN's World Meteorological Organization warned last month.
And the emissions-curbing pledges submitted by 185 countries to give the agreement substance, even if fully honoured, set the stage for a 3C warmer world.
The only hope lies in hard-fought provisions in the pact to encourage nations to ramp up their actions over time, and thus keep a 2C goal in focus.
"This is the key thing to ensure that the actions get stronger and stronger so that we get to two degrees and below," WWF climate expert Tasneem Essop told AFP.
2C is the threshold at which politicians hope mankind can avoid the worst climate change impact: dangerous storms, drought, sea-level rise, water wars, mass migration and the spread of diseases.
The agreement itself admits "with concern" that current national plans are not enough.
As a result, it has built in a number of checks to try and keep the fast-closing 2C window ajar.
Scattered over different sections of the 31-page document, the measures collectively make up what has become known as a "ratcheting up" mechanism.
It could play a vital part in a pact where emissions commitments are voluntary and there is no single timetable for achieving carbon reductions, which scientists point to as a gaping flaw.
According to the Climate Action Tracker (CAT), a tool developed by four climate research institutes, most country pledges are "inadequate" and "nearly all" governments need to enhance their 2025 or 2030 contributions.
The first step will be a stock-taking in 2018, two years before the agreement enters into force, of the overall impact of countries' progress in abandoning fossil fuels like oil, coal and gas in favour of renewable sources like solar and wind.
The findings must inform the next round of country pledges to replace those that will enter into force with the agreement, in 2020.
"This will be a significant political moment where governments will be urged to ramp up their efforts," said Mohamed Adow of Christian Aid, which lobbies on poverty issues.
Observers are concerned that unless the 2020 pledges are reviewed soon, the 3C trajectory will be locked in for at least 10 years.
Some countries had set 10-year targets for 2025, others 15-year ones until 2030.
"It just makes it harder and harder to take actions that can in fact bring us down to the levels we need to be at," said Ms Essop.
Once the agreement takes effect, the collective impact of countries' efforts will be reviewed at five-year intervals from 2023.
The outcome of these reviews will "inform" countries in "updating and enhancing" their pledges every five years starting in 2025.
AFP

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Blind Spot (Video)


Blind Spot


Blind SpotBlind Spot is a documentary film that illustrates the current oil and energy crisis that our world is facing.
Whatever measures of ignorance, greed, wishful thinking, we have put ourselves at a crossroads, which offer two paths with dire consequences.
If we continue to burn fossil fuels we will choke the life out of the planet and if we don’t our way of life will collapse.
According to one review, it makes An Inconvenient Truth look like a sitcom.
There’s a lot of environmental films out there that while not painting a rosy picture still want us to feel a sense of hey things will still be ok, not so with Blind Spot. Director Adolfo Doring has, along with many of the scientists, economists and other experts, wisely decided that the time for coddling us is past, perhaps even too long past.
This absolutely beautifully shot ode to the end of our world as we have known it doesn’t even bother to try and convince us. Either you see the visual beauty of this world, city and country, and want to save it or you don’t.
Either you hear and heed the wisdom of the cadre of experts he presents or you don’t. There is no panic in this ?lm just an absolute and stark reality that we either choose to face or not.
Either way the film tells us it's coming and as one environmental advocate quotes nature as saying (and I paraphrase) either you do it or I will and if I do it I’ll remove things and most of them will be you.

US senators near deal on oil exports

US senators near deal on oil exports

WASHINGTON
Senate negotiators are nearing a deal to allow unfettered US crude oil exports for the first time in 40 years, though differences remain on renewable-energy tax credits that Democrats are demanding in return, according to people close to the discussions.
While any agreement could still collapse in the coming days - the deal faces opposition in the House - lawmakers are weighing the extension of solar and wind tax credits for as long as five years in exchange for lifting the crude-export restrictions, which were established to counter the energy shortages of the 1970s.
Tax breaks are part of the discussion, though lawmakers are still negotiating the length of wind- and solar-energy tax extensions and whether they should be phased out, said a Senate Democratic leadership aide, who wasn't authorised to speak on the record.
If agreed to and approved by Congress, repeal of the nation's ban on most crude oil exports would mark the most significant shift in US oil policy in more than a generation. Repeal, benefiting oil producers including ConocoPhillips, Hess Corp. and Continental Resources Inc, would come at a time when the industry is cutting jobs to deal with a global glut in crude oil and the lowest prices in seven years. Talks for a deal are under way as envoys from 195 nations reached an agreement to limit fossil-fuel pollution and curb the effects of climate change.
Congress is considering lifting the export ban as part of either a package to extend expiring tax provisions or to finance the government through Sept 30 before current funding authority expires on Dec 16. Among the items being discussed are a 9 per cent manufacturing tax credit for refiners and an extension of the US Land Water Conservation Fund, according to at least three lobbyists close to the negotiations.
Even if such a deal is struck by Republicans and Democrats in the Senate, House Democrats, who are vital to reaching an agreement, have suggested they won't go along unless a provision for indexing the Child Tax Credit, which allows taxpayers to reduce federal income taxes for each qualifying child, is added to the mix. And it's unclear whether House Republicans will support a deal if they assess that the price Democrats are seeking is too high.
On Friday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told reporters that Republicans were refusing to include the indexing in the deal they are seeking.
"They're not going to index it. Instead, they put 'Big Oil' in there," she told reporters.  "We do not want to give our imprimatur to it. We will not be an accomplice," she said.
"Imagine that they would give over US$100 billion in tax credits for people who want to do business overseas, and they won't give us the money for indexation for young people - money that is spent immediately because people need it," Ms Pelosi said.
The California Democrat added that the "maybe US$700 billion or more" in "permanent tax extenders" being pushed by Republicans would hurt the ability to invest in social welfare and educational programmes.
The prospects for lifting the export ban are highest if there's a separate tax-extender bill that includes medium- to long-term tax credits benefiting wind and solar producers, said Kevin Book, managing director of ClearView Energy Partners LLC, in a research note to clients.
"We think the prospects for an end of the crude oil export ban probably depend most on the architecture of the final deal," he said.
BLOOMBERG

Global leaders agree to stop global warming

Global leaders agree to stop global warming   

[LE BOURGET, France] Cheering envoys from 195 nations have approved a historic accord in Paris to stop global warming, offering hope that humanity can avert catastrophic climate change and usher in an energy revolution.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius ended nearly a fortnight of gruelling UN negotiations with the bang of a gavel, marking consensus among the ministers, who stood for several minutes to clap and shout their joy, with some shedding tears of relief.
"I see the room, I see the reaction is positive, I hear no objection. The Paris climate accord is adopted," declared Mr Fabius, the president of the talks.
Turning to a little green hammer with which he formally gave life to the arduously crafted pact, he quipped: "It may be a small gavel but it can do big things." The post-2020 Paris Agreement ends decades-long rows between rich and poor nations over how to carry out what will be a multi-trillion-dollar campaign to cap global warming and cope with the impacts of a shifting climate.
With 2015 forecast to be the hottest year on record, world leaders and scientists had said the accord was vital for capping rising temperatures and averting the most calamitous impacts from climate change.
Without urgent action, they warned, mankind faced increasingly severe droughts, floods and storms, and rising seas that would engulf islands and coastal areas populated by hundreds of millions of people.
US President Barack Obama hailed the agreeement saying: "This moment can be a turning point for the world. We've shown that the world has both the willingness and the ability to take on a challenge."
The framework, which has encountered criticism from environmentalists for not going far enough and from some Republican lawmakers in the US who question whether humans are affecting the global climate, was described by the administration as the starting point for developed and developing nations to cut carbon emissions.
The crux of the fight entails slashing or eliminating the use of coal, oil and gas for energy, which has largely powered prosperity since the Industrial Revolution began in the 1700s.
The burning of those fossil fuels releases invisible greenhouse gases, which cause the planet to warm and disrupt Earth's delicate climate system.
Ending the vicious circle requires a switch to cleaner sources, such as solar and wind, and improving energy efficiency. Some nations are also aggressively pursuing nuclear power, which does not emit greenhouse gases.
The Paris accord sets a target of limiting warming of the planet to "well below" 2 degrees Celsius compared with the Industrial Revolution, while aiming for an even more ambitious goal of 1.5 C.
To do so, emissions of greenhouse gases will need to peak "as soon as possible", followed by rapid reductions, the agreement states.
The world has already warmed by almost 1C, which has caused major problems in dry developing countries, according to scientists.
Some environmentalists said the Paris agreement was a turning point, predicting the 1.5C goal would help to doom the fossil-fuel industry.
"That single number, and the new goal of net zero emissions by the second half of this century, will cause consternation in the boardrooms of coal companies and the palaces of oil-exporting states," Greenpeace International chief Kumi Naidoo said.
Developing nations had insisted rich countries must shoulder the lion's share of responsibility for tackling climate change as they emitted most of the greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution.
The United States and other rich nations countered that emerging giants must also do more, arguing developing countries now account for most of current emissions and thus will be largely responsible for future warming.
On the crucial financing issue, developed countries agreed to muster at least US$100 billion a year from 2020 to help developing nations.
However, following US objections, it was not included in the legally-binding section of the deal.
Ahead of the talks, most nations submitted voluntary plans to curb greenhouse-gas emissions from 2020, a process billed as an important platform for success.
But scientists say that, even if the pledges were fully honoured, Earth will still be on track for warming far above safe limits.
In an effort to get countries to scale up their commitments, the agreement will have five-yearly reviews of their pledges starting from 2023.
Nations most vulnerable to climate change lobbied hard for wording to limit warming to 1.5 C.
Big polluters, such as China, India and oil producing-giant Saudi Arabia, preferred a ceiling of 2 C, which would have enabled them to burn fossil fuels for longer.
China's chief negotiator Xie Zhenhua said the pact was not perfect.
"However, this does not prevent us from marching historical steps forward," he said.
"This indeed is a marvellous act that belongs to our generation and all of us." Tuvalu, a Pacific island nation of about 10,000 people at risk of being submerged by rising oceans, celebrated.
"We have saved Tuvalu, and in doing so we have saved the world," Tuvalu negotiator Ian Fry said.
Nicholas Stern, a former chief economist for the World Bank who has become a prominent global advocate of climate action, also hailed the deal.
"This is a historic moment, not just for us and our world today, but for our children, our grandchildren and future generations," Mr Stern said.
French scientist Jean Jouzel, who contributes to the UN's Nobel-winning climate panel, was cautious.
He told AFP the 1.5 C goal was legitimate for climate-vulnerable countries but in reality, it was "a dream, and certainly too ambitious to reach." "My disappointment is about action before 2020," which would help avert future warming, he said. "There is really no ambition there at all."
AFP, BLOOMBERG

China's latest data removes rate rise hurdle for Fed

China's latest data removes rate rise hurdle for Fed

[BEIJING] China's latest round of economic data showed fresh evidence of stabilisation after policy makers unleashed several rounds of monetary and fiscal stimulus.
Bloomberg's monthly China gross domestic product tracker picked up to a 6.85 per cent estimated growth pace for November, the best reading since June, after reports on Saturday on industrial production, retail sales and fixed-asset investment all exceeded forecasts.
Unexpected strength in China's old growth drivers and renewed vigour in new ones helped remove potential hurdles for Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen as she and her colleagues meet this week to decide whether to raise US interest rates for the first time since 2006. China has already cut rates to a record low after the slowest growth in a quarter century.
"Stimulus is gaining traction in stabilising growth," Bloomberg Intelligence economists Fielding Chen and Tom Orlik wrote in a report on Saturday. "Resilient numbers from China clear a potential obstacle to Fed liftoff in the week ahead. Stabilising growth reduces the urgency for China's policy makers to add to their own stimulus."
After six rate cuts since late last year failed to spur a faster expansion and exports posted a fifth-straight monthly drop, the People's Bank of China is changing tactics. A unit of the central bank signaled on Friday that it would reduce the yuan's link to the dollar and instead value the yuan by tracking it against a broad range of currencies.
Industrial output climbed 6.2 per cent in November from a year earlier, the National Statistics Bureau said on Saturday, compared with the 5.7 per cent median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg and October's 5.6 per cent. Retail sales gained 11.2 per cent for the best reading of 2015 while fixed-asset investment increased 10.2 per cent in the first 11 months of the year.
The reports followed others last week showing the yearlong slide in imports is moderating and that consumer inflation is picking up. Policy makers have added stimulus to help maintain medium to high-speed growth while shifting to a more balanced, services and consumption-led economy and away from manufacturing and infrastructure spending.
"The risk of a hard landing remains low," Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics Ltd in Hong Kong, wrote in a note. "The macro-policy easing measures taken earlier this year have had a favourable impact on growth."
All three gauges released on Saturday showed more strength than economists had forecast, with industrial output exceeding all but one of 37 economist estimates in the survey. Average daily auto production jumped 16 per cent in November from a year earlier, NBS said. That compared with a 4.9 per cent rise in October and a 11.2 per cent drop in July.
Policy makers have unleashed new rounds of fiscal and monetary stimulus to keep growth on track as it slowed from 7.3 per cent last year, already the slowest full year since 1990, to 7 per cent in the first half and to 6.9 per cent in the third quarter.
President Xi Jinping's goal for GDP expansion of at least 6.5 per cent over the next five years is already at risk even after the rate cuts and other stimulus. Growth will fall below Xi's bottom line next year, according to a third of forecasters surveyed by Bloomberg News, while the median estimate for 2017 is for a 6.3 per cent expansion.
China's broadest measure of new credit rebounded in November, official data showed on Friday, signaling that monetary measures are having an impact. Aggregate financing rose to 1.02 trillion yuan (S$223 billion) in November, according to the PBOC. That compared with the median forecast of 970 billion yuan in a Bloomberg survey.
Fed policy makers will gather in Washington from Dec 15-16 for their last policy meeting of 2015. Officials put off a rate increase in September because of growing risks, mainly from China, to their outlook for economic growth and inflation even as they continued to say they were on track to raise the target later this year, meeting minutes show.
As speculation US rates will rise has boosted the dollar, the PBOC on Wednesday cut the yuan's reference rate to 6.4140 per dollar, its weakest level since 2011. On Friday, the central bank's China Foreign Exchange Trade System unit spurred speculation that policy makers want to reduce the currency's link to the dollar and let it weaken further.
The new yuan index will be composed of 13 currencies to "help bring about a shift in how the public and the market observe RMB exchange rate movements," CFETS said statement released late on Friday.
Loosening the link to the dollar, which has climbed to the highest in more than a decade against major peers, would help support trade for China's export-dependent economy.
The change "could end up being a significant shift in currency policy," Mark Williams, the chief China economist at Capital Economics Ltd in London, wrote in a note. "The timing of this announcement is significant, on the cusp tightening by the Fed, which could feed further dollar strength." BLOOMBERG

Jack Ma: lessons on global leadership By Bill George

Jack Ma: lessons on global leadership

In the new edition of Discover Your True North, bestselling author Bill George profiles nearly 50 new leaders, including Warren Buffett, Indra Nooyi, Arianna Huffington, Paul Polman, Mike Bloomberg, Mark Zuckerberg, and others.
In the following excerpt from Discover Your True North, George explains how Jack Ma became China’s first global leader and how other leaders can develop global intelligence, or “GQ.”
Alibaba’s Jack Ma has emerged as China’s first truly global leader, the face of the new China: a free-enterprise entrepreneur working within the confines of a Communist government to build a more equitable society.
Ma was on fire as we talked over lunch the day that Alibaba launched the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history. Its stock price makes Alibaba the eighteenth-largest global company by market capitalization. Ma’s goal isn’t making money. Because of Alibaba’s success, he is already China’s wealthiest citizen, with a $20 billion net worth. Yet when he asked his wife whether it was more important to be wealthy or have respect, they agreed upon respect.
In person, Ma is warm, affable, open, and authentic. For all his success, he is extremely humble, preferring to talk about building a great company that helps customers, creates jobs, and serves society. “I’m just a purist. I don’t spend 15 minutes thinking about making money,” he said. “What is important in my life is influencing many people as well as China’s development. When I am by myself, I am relaxed and happy.” He added, “They call me ‘Crazy Jack.’ I hope to stay crazy for the next 30 years.”
China’s large and growing economy has made it an increasing economic force the past two decades, but it has not produced global companies. Instead, Chinese businesses have focused domestically and engaged in low-cost production for international companies. Ma has a very different approach. He sees the Internet as a worldwide phenomenon that knows no borders. Today, the Alibaba companies serve 600 million customers in 240 countries. Ma intends to expand aggressively in the American, European, and emerging markets by linking 1 million small businesses with 2 billion Asian consumers. He also has plans to disrupt China’s commercial banking and insurance sectors.
In the times I have been with him, Ma relishes telling his life story. Raised in humble origins in Hangzhou in the 1980s, he overcame one obstacle after another. He was rejected at virtually every school he applied to, even grade schools, because he didn’t test well in math.
Yet he persevered. From ages 12 to 20, he rode his bicycle 40 minutes to a hotel where he could practice his English. “China was opening up, and a lot of foreign tourists went there,” he said. “I showed them around as a free guide. Those eight years changed me deeply, as I became more globalized than most Chinese. What foreign visitors told us was different from what I learned from my teachers and books.”
As a young man, Ma applied for jobs at 30 companies and was rejected at every one. He seemed most stung by his experience at Kentucky Fried Chicken where 24 people applied and 23 got jobs. Ma was the only applicant rejected. Consequently, he became an English teacher at Hangzhou Electronics Technology College. When he visited America for the first time in 1999, he was stunned by the entrepreneurial culture he saw in California. “I got my dream from America,” he said. “In the evenings in Silicon Valley, the roads were full of cars, and all the buildings had lights on. That’s the vision of what I wanted to create [at home in China].”
Returning to Hangzhou, he and Joe Tsai (now executive vice chair) founded Alibaba in Ma’s modest apartment. “We chose the name,” he explained, “because people everywhere associate it with ‘Open, Sesame,’ the command Ali Baba used to open doors to hidden treasures in One Thousand and One Nights.” Ma focused on applying his team’s ideas to help businesses and consumers find their own hidden treasures. He was unsuccessful in raising even $2 million from American venture capitalists, but, once again, he persevered. Eventually, he raised $5 million through Goldman Sachs, and later, Masayoshi Son of Japan’s SoftBank invested $20 million.
Ma is passionate about building the Alibaba ecosystem in order to help people, a philosophy that he is trying to embed into the DNA of the company. At the company’s founding, he issued generous stock option packages to early employees because he wanted to enrich their lives. The day of the IPO, he insisted Alibaba’s six values–Customer First, Teamwork, Embrace Change, Integrity, Passion, Commitment–be placed on the pillars of the New York Stock Exchange.
Ma’s commitment to a cause larger than himself has propelled him forward.
“My vision is to build an e-commerce ecosystem that allows consumers and businesses to do all aspects of business online. I want to create one million jobs, change China’s social and economic environment, and make it the largest Internet market in the world.”
American tech leaders, such as Larry Page of Google and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, have emphasized technology and product above everything. Not Ma. “I’m not a tech guy,” he said. “I’m looking at technology with the eyes of my customers—normal people’s eyes.”
With his light-hearted nature, Ma participates in annual talent shows where he sings pop songs. He also practices Tai Chi and martial arts, which he calls “the most down-to-earth way of explaining Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism. These practices cherish brotherhood, morality, courage, emotion, and conscience.”
Ma worries that China lost an entire generation when Mao Zedong phased out Confucianism and other forms of spirituality. His bold vision is to restore that sense of values and purpose to the next generation. “It’s not policies we need, but genuine people,” he said. Ma is highly ethical in his business practices. He noted, “I would rather shut down my company than pay a bribe.”
For all his confidence, Ma is not without worries. He believes his biggest challenges are to create genuine value for his customers, to work cooperatively with the government, and to build his team of global leaders. He would like to use his wealth to found a university for entrepreneurs that can produce the next generation of Chinese entrepreneurs. “Our challenge,” Ma said, “is to help more people to make money in a sustainable manner. That is not only good for them but also good for society.”
Developing Global Intelligence (GQ)
Ma embodies the global intelligence, or GQ, that is needed for today’s global leaders. Succeeding in the new global context will require companies to cultivate a cadre of executives—as many as 500 per company—who have the capabilities of global leaders. Developing these new leaders requires unique leadership experiences, ideally in emerging markets, combined with leadership development programs that differ materially from today’s corporate training programs. Traditionally, the latter have focused on managerial skills and building one’s functional knowledge. Yet the shortcomings of leaders—and their subsequent failures—usually result from the lack of leadership capabilities that we call global intelligence, or GQ.
GQ consists of seven elements, all of which are essential for global leaders:
  • Adaptability
  • Awareness
  • Curiosity
  • Empathy
  • Alignment
  • Collaboration
  • Integration
Several of these characteristics—such as awareness—seem very similar to parts of the process we’ve examined for discovering your True North. That’s by design. Global interactions heighten the stress that leaders face. The more global the context, the more demanding leadership becomes. When leaders are placed in emerging market situations, the complexity increases exponentially because the differences in language, culture, customer preferences, negotiating tactics, business practices, laws, and ethical standards are so great. The same applies to the activities of daily living in these countries. That’s why many otherwise solid leaders struggle with global assignments and working in emerging markets.
Let’s examine each of these characteristics of global leaders.
Adaptability
Being a global leader requires the ability to understand today’s volatile world and foresee changes coming in the years ahead. Global leaders must be able to adapt quickly to the rapidly changing global context by shifting resources to opportunity areas and developing contingency plans to cope with adverse geopolitical situations.
This is particularly true in emerging markets, where frequent changes in government, currency movements, financial crises, ethnic conflicts, wars, and terrorism may literally change the business climate overnight. In recent years, we have seen this happen in Greece, Egypt, Iraq, Pakistan, Ukraine, Russia, and India, to mention just a few. Global leaders must be prepared to alter their tactics quickly to adjust to changes.
Awareness
Leaders need to understand the world around them, as well as themselves—their strengths, vulnerabilities, and biases—to perceive how they will react to the significant cultural differences they encounter. When people from developed countries live in emerging markets, they become much more aware of themselves and their insecurities as they begin to understand the complexities of other languages, being in the minority, and differences in cultures and norms.
Curiosity
Global leaders must have deep curiosity about the cultures they encounter. This includes a personal passion for diverse experiences and an insatiable desire to learn from other cultures. They also must be humble to recognize that different cultural norms and ways of doing things guiding other cultures may often be superior to their own. When you visit an emerging market, such as China or India, do you stay in a deluxe hotel and eat in Western restaurants, or do you get out into the country, meet the people, go to local markets and shops, and visit people’s homes to see how they live? That marks the difference between domestic leaders traveling overseas and global leaders who are open to experiencing all the world has to offer.
Empathy
Empathy is the ability to walk in someone else’s shoes. This requires humility and the capability to engage people from different cultures personally, rather than standing back and judging them. Empathy builds rapport and bonding and creates lasting relationships. Only with empathy are leaders able to draw the highest level of engagement from colleagues from different cultures and empower them to achieve exceptional performance.
Alignment
The challenge for global leaders is to align all employees around the company’s mission and its values, a commitment that transcends national and cultural differences. Achieving alignment is far more difficult in a global context because the business practices and ethics in emerging markets often differ so dramatically from those of developed countries. Thus, global leaders are asking local employees to put the company’s mission and values ahead of the business practices and values in countries where they have grown up and worked. It is no longer sufficient just to comply with the laws and ethics without regard for negative consequences their business practices may have on the countries in which they operate. However, this does not mean giving up their culture and the norms by which they live, because norms can vary widely from country to country.
Collaboration
In a global context, collaboration is the ability to create horizontal networks that cut across geographic lines, bring people together around common goals, and create a modus operandi that transcends geographic norms. In authentic global collaborations, participants put company and project goals first and work together in partnerships to achieve them. The most successful geographic collaborations are led by global leaders who know the strengths and weaknesses of each regional group and who make assignments within the team to take advantage of their relative strengths.
Integration
One of the greatest challenges global leaders face is incorporating local and global issues into an integrated corporate strategy. Such a strategy enables them to optimize their position in a wide array of local markets efficiently to create sustainable competitive advantage. Doing so requires deep understanding of local markets and the global vision to see how their companies can serve their customers’ needs in a superior manner by leveraging their corporate strengths. That’s the only way they can outcompete local companies, which often have a cost advantage because they operate in the region.
As Unilever’s COO Harish Manwani explained, “We have a globally distributed organizational model that balances local relevance with global leverage.”
We don’t believe in “Think local; act global.” Instead, we believe in “Act local; think global.” The company starts by acting locally, creating relevance through an understanding of consumer needs and desires and their local cultures. Then we leverage Unilever’s vast global resources to deliver superior products to meet those needs. This is how we gain competitive advantage over local producers. We are committed to bringing our expertise to local markets.
Today’s authentic global leaders recognize that in the future, businesses can only thrive by serving all the people of the world equitably while also contributing to their societies.
Reprinted from Discover Your True North, Expanded and Updated Edition, Copyright © 2015 by Bill George. Published by Wiley.
Republished with permission from Knowledge@Wharton (http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu), the online research and business analysis journal of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.” Publication does not imply endorsement of views by the World Economic Forum.
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Author: Bill George is a bestselling author.
Image: Jack Ma, Founder and Executive Chairman of Alibaba Group, June 9, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Segar 

Google says it has a quantum computer that's 100 million times faster than a regular computer

Google says it has a quantum computer that's 100 million times faster than a regular computer

d wave_1000q_2xCourtesy D-WaveThe D-Wave 2X's 1000-Qubit Quantum Processor.
This week, Google announced a breakthrough that could prove its quantum computer is actually using quantum mechanics.
When researchers gave the D-Wave 2X a carefully crafted test problem, the 1,000-qubit computer solved it 100,000,000 times faster than a classical computer could.
Quite a few tech giants and government organizations are investing in quantum computing. And many of them, including Google, NASA, and Lockheed Martin, are working with the commercial quantum computers built by D-Wave.
The idea is that these devices can harness the counter-intuitive effects of quantum mechanics to solve problems faster than conventional computers, which could potentially improve artificial intelligence, materials science, space exploration, and even Google web searches.
(Skeptics, however, have suggested these practical applications are far-fetched and that quantum computing would most likely be applied to a less glamorous business: proving the theories of quantum mechanics.)
No matter how we plan to use quantum computers, we have to jump a big hurdle first: proving that a computer is actually using quantum mechanics to solve a problem. One sign of QC in action is quantum speedup—and that's just what a team of Google researchers has discovered [disclosure: one of the researchers is friends with this author]. In their paper, released on the arXiv pre-print server, they designed a problem that a real quantum machine should be able to solve more effectively than a classical one. Then they posed this problem both to their D-Wave 2X and to a classical single-core computer. The D-Wave 2X was significantly speedier than the classical machine, and 100 million times faster than a classical computer running an algorithm that mimics quantum computing.
So Google has proved their quantum computer is really a quantum computer...right? The D-Wave 2X certainly seems to be using quantum effects. But the problem it solved was designed to be easy for a machine like the D-Wave and difficult for the algorithm it was competing against. It's as if you tested the intelligence of a physicist by having her compete with a literary critic to solve a complex math problem: The scientist may ace that specific test, but it doesn't prove she's smarter than the critic overall—and it doesn't prove that she would beat a mathematician in the same competition. If the researchers had chosen a different problem, or if they had compared the D-Wave 2X to a different algorithm, the quantum machine may not have been quite so impressive.
Ultimately, extraordinary claims will require extraordinary proof. To win over critics, D-Wave computers will have to demonstrate quantum behavior over and over again. In the process, researchers will learn how to improve these devices so they have more computing power and commit fewer errors. And that's a big win for everyone.
This article originally appeared on Popular Science.

Where are the world’s oil rigs? By Sebastian Brixey-Williams

Where are the world’s oil rigs?

Last month, Royal Dutch Shell announced it had abandoned Arctic explorations. The Anglo-Dutch company said the oil and gas it found in the Burger J well off the coast of Alaska was “not sufficient to warrant further exploration”.
The low price of oil is putting pressure on fossil fuel companies such as Shell to drop many of their speculative operations. While environmental groups like Greenpeacecalled the move a “defining day for the Arctic”, many remain cautious that low oil prices will encourage the further use of fossil fuels in general.
Today, there are 1,470 offshore oil rigs around the world. The chart below, based on data from Statista, shows where they are located, as of May 2015.
1510B09-oil rigs gulf of mexico north sea chart
Seven regions have more than 100 oil rigs, which can be broadly divided into four areas.
In the Americas, alongside the chart-topping Gulf of Mexico (213 rigs), the waters around Mexico and Brazil have 113 and 104 rigs deployed, respectively.
In Europe, the North Sea has a high density of offshore oil extraction, with 184 rigs shared between the United Kingdom, Germany, Denmark and Norway.
Far East and South-East Asian fields take the third and fourth spots, with 173 and 163 rigs each. The Persian Gulf has the highest density of all, serving the Gulf States and Iran with 145 rigs.
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Author: Sebastian Brixey-Williams is a Digital Content Producer at Formative Content. 
Image: An aerial view of the Oseberg oil platform in the Norwegian sea. REUTERS/Helge Hansen

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