NYC Mayor Bloomberg signs $1 billion dollar deal with Japanese company Nissan to make NYC cabs.
5/3/11, "Announcing NYC's Taxi of Tomorrow: The Nissan NV200," NYC.Gov, mikebloomberg.com
"It is anticipated the first “Taxi of Tomorrow” will be introduced into service in late 2013. As part of the regular phase out of taxis, the current fleet on the road will be retired out of service within three to five years, depending on whether they are in-use part or full-time,
- and replaced by the Nissan NV200.
Nissan will be able to manufacture the NV200 to run on electric-only power starting in 2017. The City will test the use of all-electric powered taxis starting in 2012 with six fully electric Nissan Leafs – provided free of charge – to road test electric vehicles. If the pilot proves successful, the City will explore the possibility of the wider use of electric powered taxis." (last paragraph)
======================================
5/3/11, "Nissan Wins $1B Pact To Provide NYC Taxis Beginning In Late 2013," Wall St. Journal
"New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday that Japanese automobile company Nissan Motor Co. (NSANY, 7201.TO) had won a 10-year, $1 billion contract to provide thousands of taxis to the city
- beginning in about two years.
The other "Taxi of Tomorrow" finalists were Ford Motor Co. (F) and Turkish car maker Karsan Otomotiv Sanayii ve Ticaret AS (KARSN.IS). At a press conference here, Bloomberg said none of the interested bidders proposed making their cars in the U.S., at least at first, so the move shouldn't be seen as choosing
- a foreign company over a domestic one."...(subscription)
Bloomberg and Obama in golf cart on Martha's Vineyard,
August 2010, ap photo.
========================================
Mayor Bloomberg has a business, Bloomberg New Energy Finance, devoted to profits in the global warming and carbon trading industry. Since 2007 he has called for more taxes on Americans as reparation for climate crime. From his UN speech 3 years ago:
--------------------------------------
2/12/2008, "Mayor (Bloomberg) Compares Threat of Global Warming to Terrorism," NY Sun, Benny Avni, United Nations
"While he acknowledged that scientists are unable to predict its consequences, Mayor Bloomberg yesterday compared the scourge of global warming to
- the threat of terrorism and the proliferation of
- weapons of mass destruction.
- to reduce global warming.
Other participants in the conference called for a "war" against climate change, in which
- the United Nations would serve as a
- front-line combatant.
Mr. Bloomberg renewed his call, made first late last year, for taxing countries such as America that emit large amounts of carbons, which are believed to cause changes in the planet's climate. "So long as there's no penalty or cost involved in producing greenhouse gases, there will be no incentive" to meet
- targets set by international institutions,
the mayor told the General Assembly. "For that reason, I believe the U.S. should enact
- a tax on carbon emissions.
"Terrorists kill people. Weapons of mass destruction have the potential to kill an enormous amount of people," Mr. Bloomberg told reporters after addressing the U.N. General Assembly, but
- "global warming in the long term has the potential to kill everybody."
Like smoking, Mr. Bloomberg said, these are preventable killers. "We should go after terrorists every place in this world, find them and kill them, plain and simple," he said. If weapons of mass destruction "get out of the hands of the countries that have them and get into the hands of terrorists, the potential is just mind-boggling," he added. And while global warming "is a much longer-term thing," he said, it "has all of the same potentials of destroying the planet that we live on.
- No scientist knows for sure what's going to happen, but you don't want to wait to find out."
Mr. Bloomberg announced that in addition to his initiatives to convert the city's taxi fleet to hybrid fuels, devise a plan for congestion tax, "green our buildings," and plant more trees, the city would curb the use of tropical hardwoods, which it purchases to the tune of $1 million a year, causing rainforest deforestation. The city will immediately reduce by 20% the use of such hardwoods, which are used in park benches, ferry landings, beach boardwalks, and the Brooklyn Bridge walkway. A new design study would devise ways to replace them altogether in the long term, the mayor said. The two-day conference, titled "Addressing Climate Change: the United Nations and the World at Work," included, in addition to members of the General Assembly, such stars of entertainment and industry as
- film actress Daryl Hannah and
- Virgin Atlantic Airways founder Richard Branson.
- "avert a catastrophe" to the environment.
- "We need a war room," he said.
On another issue, Mr. Bloomberg told The New York Sun that the Fire Department of New York has had access to the U.N. compound on First Avenue, and "we think we have plans if there were fire" there. "The United Nations is making progress," he added. "They're going in the right direction, they are not there yet." Specifically, he indicated, plans should be made ahead of the ambitious U.N. renovation plan this spring. "Construction is always a dangerous period, so we're going to have to work very carefully with them going forward."
Jurisdiction issues have hampered relations between local emergency teams and the United Nations. Most recently, the organization declined to notify local authorities when workers got sick after handling boxes from
- North Korea at a U.N. basement.
After the Sun reported on the incident, FDNY officials were permitted to examine the boxes and determined that mold was the cause of the sickness. "We are not here to try to take their sovereign right to dictate what goes on, on their property," Mr. Bloomberg said of the United Nations. "But given the interaction with the emergency responders in the city, we have to work together.""
Bloomberg addresses United Nations on alleged global warming in 2008.
- photo from Gothamist.
.
No comments:
Post a Comment