Coal Use Grows Despite Warming Worries

C

Captain Compassion

Guest
Coal Use Grows Despite Warming Worries
By ELAINE KURTENBACH, AP Business Writer
http://www.physorg.com/news112801645.html

The black treasure has transformed this once-isolated crossroads
nestled in the sand-sculpted ravines of Inner Mongolia into a bleak
boomtown of nearly 300,000 people. Day and night, long and dusty
trains haul out coal to electric power plants and factories in the
east, fueling China's explosive growth.

Coal is big, and getting bigger. As oil and natural gas prices soar,
the world is relying ever more on the cheap, black-burning mainstay of
the Industrial Revolution. Mining companies are racing into Africa.
Workers are laying miles of new railroad track to haul coal from the
Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana.

And nowhere is coal bigger than in China.

But the explosion of coal comes amid rising alarm over its dire
consequences for workers and the environment. An average of 13 Chinese
miners die every day in explosions, floods, fires and cave-ins. Toxic
clouds of mercury and other chemicals from mining are poisoning the
air and water far beyond China's borders and polluting the food chain.

So far, attempts to clean up coal have largely not worked. Technology
to reduce or cut out carbon dioxide emissions is expensive and years
away from widespread commercial use.

"Not very many people are talking about what do we do to live with the
consequences of what's happening," said James Brock, a longtime
industry consultant in the Beijing office of Cambridge Energy Research
Associates. "The polar bears are doomed - they're going to museums. At
the end of this century the Arctic ice cap will be gone. That means a
lot of water rising, not by inches but meters."

---

Burned since ancient times, coal dramatically increased in use during
the Industrial Revolution, when it became fuel for the new steam
engines, gas lamps and electrical generators. Worldwide demand for
coal dipped at the end of the 20th century, but is now back up and
projected to rise 60 percent by 2030 to 6.9 billion tons a year,
according to the International Energy Agency.

Today, most coal goes to electrical power plants. In developing
nations such as India, China and Africa, coal is the staple - and
affordable - source of fuel with which families run their first
washing machines and televisions. Worldwide electricity consumption is
expected to double by 2030, the World Energy Council says.

In America, about 150 new coal-fired electrical plants are proposed
over the next decade. In China, there are plans for a coal-fired power
plant to go on line nearly every week. Emissions from these plants
alone could nullify the cuts made by Europe, Japan and other rich
nations under the Kyoto Protocol treaty, according to a report from
the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington.

In a developing country like China, coal is the backbone of the energy
system.

Look at the port city of Shanghai, where the bitter tang in the air is
not from salty sea breeze - it's the smoke from coal-burning stoves in
the suburbs used for cooking and heating. From the shacks of migrant
workers on the edge of town to modern factories and skyscrapers,
China's biggest city is powered by coal. Even the ultramodern Maglev
railway line runs on electricity from a coal-fueled plant.

China mined a record 2.4 billion tons of coal in 2006, up 8.1 percent
from a year earlier. But even that can't keep boilers and blast
furnaces stoked in an economy growing more than 10 percent a year. So
China became a net coal importer for the first time this year. While
Chinese authorities are closing down older, heavily polluting plants,
they can't keep up with a massive expansion in urban housing and
industry and the coal that feeds them.

China is the world's biggest consumer and producer of coal, but it's
far from the only one. U.S. coal production hit a record 1.2 billion
tons last year, according to the National Mining Association, and is
forecast by the government to rise 50 percent by 2030. Yet the United
States rejected the Kyoto Protocol, arguing that the required
emissions cuts could slow economic growth.

For another measure, look at the ticker on the Web site of St.
Louis-based Peabody Coal Co., the world's largest coal mining company,
which tracks its growing sales second by second. Last year: 248
million tons sold. For 2007: On track for up to 275 million tons.

China's Shenhua Group is hot on Peabody's heels. On one day in June, a
record 111 Shenhua coal trains left its mines in north-central China,
the company said.

Rising demand can be met because coal is the Earth's most abundant
fossil fuel, with reserves expected to last some 250 years - far
longer than forecasts for petroleum. And whether in China, India, the
United States or Europe, coal is available at home, away from the
instability of the Middle East.

"The U.S. has under its own soil at least a 200-year supply of coal.
China has a very long-term supply of coal," Steve Papermaster,
co-chairman of the energy committee of President Bush's Council of
Advisers on Science and Technology, told a recent conference in
Shanghai.

For several years, cleaner burning natural gas appeared a promising
substitute. But soaring prices and worries over the reliability of
Mideast and Russian supplies have dimmed the promise of that option.
Alternatives such as wind and solar power are getting cheaper but
still can't compete with coal.

Most experts believe that whatever the costs to the environment and
public health, coal is with us to stay.

"The question is not about putting a line through coal and saying
we're not going to use it," said Milton Catelin, chief executive of
the London-based World Coal Institute, an industry association.
"There's a future for coal. The developing world will have to use
coal. They need cheap energy to get ahead."

---

The solution Catelin and others in the industry are pushing is clean
technology, although they admit they are late to the game.

"The decade 1997-2007 was a lost decade" for clean coal technology,
Catelin conceded. "We should have done much more. Now we're playing
catch-up."

The need is clear. In the provincial steel town of Baotou, trucks
heaped high with coal rumble into Shenhua yards, dumping their loads
into huge sieves for sorting into various grades of quality and size.
Wind gusts whip black soot into the sky, thickening the layer of smog
from the city's smelters.

The U.S. and Chinese governments are subsidizing the development of
technology that converts coal to a clean-burning gas before it is
burned. But such plants still emit ample amounts of carbon dioxide,
notes Qian Jingjing, an expert with the Natural Resources Defense
Council in New York and co-author of the report "Coal in a Changing
Climate."

She and many other experts believe coal can only be made
environmentally sustainable through the more experimental technology
of capturing carbon dioxide emissions and storing them underground.

A joint government-private project in the United States aims to build
such a "zero emissions" plant by 2012. Separately, Xcel Corp. of
Minneapolis, a major electric and natural gas utility, is studying
building a carbon capture and storage power plant in Colorado.

Across the Atlantic, the European Union may require carbon capture and
storage systems for all new coal-fired power plants, with a proposal
expected by year end. The gas would be buried in aquifers, depleted
coal mines or geological faults deep underground.

But the costs are daunting.

"It takes a lot of money since you have to go so deep," said Brock of
Cambridge Energy Research Associates. "There is not one commercial
carbon capture and storage project yet. It's yet to be proven."

With such high costs, few utilities will embrace these technologies
without a strong push or subsidy from government. The U.S. Congress is
weighing several proposals, but their fate remains uncertain.

The degree of public support for such policies remains unclear.
Consumers may balk at having to pay more for electricity from "clean
coal" plants, either through higher rates or taxes.

But there is growing awareness of the problem. In both the West and
India and China, traditional utilities and new players are investing
in wind and solar power. A subsidiary of coal giant Shenhua is
building a 200-megawatt wind farm in the waters off China's east
coast.

"The goal is to raise both efficiency and turn to renewables while
backing out of coal in the process," said Lester Brown, president of
the Earth Policy Institute, an environmental think tank in Washington.
"The question is, can we move fast enough?"

Meanwhile, in Jungar Qi, the house-sized mine trucks rumble on,
rushing their multi-ton loads of coal to railways and coal yards. The
biggest landmark in the city - the two huge smokestacks of its
coal-fired power plant.


--
The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane. -- Marcus Aurelius

Wherever I go it will be well with me, for it was well with me here, not
on account of the place, but of my judgments which I shall carry away
with me, for no one can deprive me of these; on the contrary, they alone
are my property, and cannot be taken away, and to possess them suffices
me wherever I am or whatever I do. -- EPICTETUS

Joseph R. Darancette
daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net
 
All the CO2 we're putting into the atmosphere used to be there. It's not
a pollutant. It's a vital part of nature that plants require for growth.

Captain Compassion <daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net> wrote:

> Coal Use Grows Despite Warming Worries
> By ELAINE KURTENBACH, AP Business Writer
> http://www.physorg.com/news112801645.html
>
> The black treasure has transformed this once-isolated crossroads
> nestled in the sand-sculpted ravines of Inner Mongolia into a bleak
> boomtown of nearly 300,000 people. Day and night, long and dusty
> trains haul out coal to electric power plants and factories in the
> east, fueling China's explosive growth.
>
> Coal is big, and getting bigger. As oil and natural gas prices soar,
> the world is relying ever more on the cheap, black-burning mainstay of
> the Industrial Revolution. Mining companies are racing into Africa.
> Workers are laying miles of new railroad track to haul coal from the
> Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana.
>
> And nowhere is coal bigger than in China.
>
> But the explosion of coal comes amid rising alarm over its dire
> consequences for workers and the environment. An average of 13 Chinese
> miners die every day in explosions, floods, fires and cave-ins. Toxic
> clouds of mercury and other chemicals from mining are poisoning the
> air and water far beyond China's borders and polluting the food chain.
>
> So far, attempts to clean up coal have largely not worked. Technology
> to reduce or cut out carbon dioxide emissions is expensive and years
> away from widespread commercial use.
>
> "Not very many people are talking about what do we do to live with the
> consequences of what's happening," said James Brock, a longtime
> industry consultant in the Beijing office of Cambridge Energy Research
> Associates. "The polar bears are doomed - they're going to museums. At
> the end of this century the Arctic ice cap will be gone. That means a
> lot of water rising, not by inches but meters."
>
> ---
>
> Burned since ancient times, coal dramatically increased in use during
> the Industrial Revolution, when it became fuel for the new steam
> engines, gas lamps and electrical generators. Worldwide demand for
> coal dipped at the end of the 20th century, but is now back up and
> projected to rise 60 percent by 2030 to 6.9 billion tons a year,
> according to the International Energy Agency.
>
> Today, most coal goes to electrical power plants. In developing
> nations such as India, China and Africa, coal is the staple - and
> affordable - source of fuel with which families run their first
> washing machines and televisions. Worldwide electricity consumption is
> expected to double by 2030, the World Energy Council says.
>
> In America, about 150 new coal-fired electrical plants are proposed
> over the next decade. In China, there are plans for a coal-fired power
> plant to go on line nearly every week. Emissions from these plants
> alone could nullify the cuts made by Europe, Japan and other rich
> nations under the Kyoto Protocol treaty, according to a report from
> the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington.
>
> In a developing country like China, coal is the backbone of the energy
> system.
>
> Look at the port city of Shanghai, where the bitter tang in the air is
> not from salty sea breeze - it's the smoke from coal-burning stoves in
> the suburbs used for cooking and heating. From the shacks of migrant
> workers on the edge of town to modern factories and skyscrapers,
> China's biggest city is powered by coal. Even the ultramodern Maglev
> railway line runs on electricity from a coal-fueled plant.
>
> China mined a record 2.4 billion tons of coal in 2006, up 8.1 percent
> from a year earlier. But even that can't keep boilers and blast
> furnaces stoked in an economy growing more than 10 percent a year. So
> China became a net coal importer for the first time this year. While
> Chinese authorities are closing down older, heavily polluting plants,
> they can't keep up with a massive expansion in urban housing and
> industry and the coal that feeds them.
>
> China is the world's biggest consumer and producer of coal, but it's
> far from the only one. U.S. coal production hit a record 1.2 billion
> tons last year, according to the National Mining Association, and is
> forecast by the government to rise 50 percent by 2030. Yet the United
> States rejected the Kyoto Protocol, arguing that the required
> emissions cuts could slow economic growth.
>
> For another measure, look at the ticker on the Web site of St.
> Louis-based Peabody Coal Co., the world's largest coal mining company,
> which tracks its growing sales second by second. Last year: 248
> million tons sold. For 2007: On track for up to 275 million tons.
>
> China's Shenhua Group is hot on Peabody's heels. On one day in June, a
> record 111 Shenhua coal trains left its mines in north-central China,
> the company said.
>
> Rising demand can be met because coal is the Earth's most abundant
> fossil fuel, with reserves expected to last some 250 years - far
> longer than forecasts for petroleum. And whether in China, India, the
> United States or Europe, coal is available at home, away from the
> instability of the Middle East.
>
> "The U.S. has under its own soil at least a 200-year supply of coal.
> China has a very long-term supply of coal," Steve Papermaster,
> co-chairman of the energy committee of President Bush's Council of
> Advisers on Science and Technology, told a recent conference in
> Shanghai.
>
> For several years, cleaner burning natural gas appeared a promising
> substitute. But soaring prices and worries over the reliability of
> Mideast and Russian supplies have dimmed the promise of that option.
> Alternatives such as wind and solar power are getting cheaper but
> still can't compete with coal.
>
> Most experts believe that whatever the costs to the environment and
> public health, coal is with us to stay.
>
> "The question is not about putting a line through coal and saying
> we're not going to use it," said Milton Catelin, chief executive of
> the London-based World Coal Institute, an industry association.
> "There's a future for coal. The developing world will have to use
> coal. They need cheap energy to get ahead."
>
> ---
>
> The solution Catelin and others in the industry are pushing is clean
> technology, although they admit they are late to the game.
>
> "The decade 1997-2007 was a lost decade" for clean coal technology,
> Catelin conceded. "We should have done much more. Now we're playing
> catch-up."
>
> The need is clear. In the provincial steel town of Baotou, trucks
> heaped high with coal rumble into Shenhua yards, dumping their loads
> into huge sieves for sorting into various grades of quality and size.
> Wind gusts whip black soot into the sky, thickening the layer of smog
> from the city's smelters.
>
> The U.S. and Chinese governments are subsidizing the development of
> technology that converts coal to a clean-burning gas before it is
> burned. But such plants still emit ample amounts of carbon dioxide,
> notes Qian Jingjing, an expert with the Natural Resources Defense
> Council in New York and co-author of the report "Coal in a Changing
> Climate."
>
> She and many other experts believe coal can only be made
> environmentally sustainable through the more experimental technology
> of capturing carbon dioxide emissions and storing them underground.
>
> A joint government-private project in the United States aims to build
> such a "zero emissions" plant by 2012. Separately, Xcel Corp. of
> Minneapolis, a major electric and natural gas utility, is studying
> building a carbon capture and storage power plant in Colorado.
>
> Across the Atlantic, the European Union may require carbon capture and
> storage systems for all new coal-fired power plants, with a proposal
> expected by year end. The gas would be buried in aquifers, depleted
> coal mines or geological faults deep underground.
>
> But the costs are daunting.
>
> "It takes a lot of money since you have to go so deep," said Brock of
> Cambridge Energy Research Associates. "There is not one commercial
> carbon capture and storage project yet. It's yet to be proven."
>
> With such high costs, few utilities will embrace these technologies
> without a strong push or subsidy from government. The U.S. Congress is
> weighing several proposals, but their fate remains uncertain.
>
> The degree of public support for such policies remains unclear.
> Consumers may balk at having to pay more for electricity from "clean
> coal" plants, either through higher rates or taxes.
>
> But there is growing awareness of the problem. In both the West and
> India and China, traditional utilities and new players are investing
> in wind and solar power. A subsidiary of coal giant Shenhua is
> building a 200-megawatt wind farm in the waters off China's east
> coast.
>
> "The goal is to raise both efficiency and turn to renewables while
> backing out of coal in the process," said Lester Brown, president of
> the Earth Policy Institute, an environmental think tank in Washington.
> "The question is, can we move fast enough?"
>
> Meanwhile, in Jungar Qi, the house-sized mine trucks rumble on,
> rushing their multi-ton loads of coal to railways and coal yards. The
> biggest landmark in the city - the two huge smokestacks of its
> coal-fired power plant.
 
On Mon, 29 Oct 2007 17:49:30 -0700, nobody@nowheres.com
(the_blogologist) wrote:

>All the CO2 we're putting into the atmosphere used to be there. It's not
>a pollutant. It's a vital part of nature that plants require for growth.
>

The US has 27% of all world wide Coal reserves. The world may run out
of oil but the US won't run out of energy.


>Captain Compassion <daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net> wrote:
>
>> Coal Use Grows Despite Warming Worries
>> By ELAINE KURTENBACH, AP Business Writer
>> http://www.physorg.com/news112801645.html
>>
>> The black treasure has transformed this once-isolated crossroads
>> nestled in the sand-sculpted ravines of Inner Mongolia into a bleak
>> boomtown of nearly 300,000 people. Day and night, long and dusty
>> trains haul out coal to electric power plants and factories in the
>> east, fueling China's explosive growth.
>>
>> Coal is big, and getting bigger. As oil and natural gas prices soar,
>> the world is relying ever more on the cheap, black-burning mainstay of
>> the Industrial Revolution. Mining companies are racing into Africa.
>> Workers are laying miles of new railroad track to haul coal from the
>> Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana.
>>
>> And nowhere is coal bigger than in China.
>>
>> But the explosion of coal comes amid rising alarm over its dire
>> consequences for workers and the environment. An average of 13 Chinese
>> miners die every day in explosions, floods, fires and cave-ins. Toxic
>> clouds of mercury and other chemicals from mining are poisoning the
>> air and water far beyond China's borders and polluting the food chain.
>>
>> So far, attempts to clean up coal have largely not worked. Technology
>> to reduce or cut out carbon dioxide emissions is expensive and years
>> away from widespread commercial use.
>>
>> "Not very many people are talking about what do we do to live with the
>> consequences of what's happening," said James Brock, a longtime
>> industry consultant in the Beijing office of Cambridge Energy Research
>> Associates. "The polar bears are doomed - they're going to museums. At
>> the end of this century the Arctic ice cap will be gone. That means a
>> lot of water rising, not by inches but meters."
>>
>> ---
>>
>> Burned since ancient times, coal dramatically increased in use during
>> the Industrial Revolution, when it became fuel for the new steam
>> engines, gas lamps and electrical generators. Worldwide demand for
>> coal dipped at the end of the 20th century, but is now back up and
>> projected to rise 60 percent by 2030 to 6.9 billion tons a year,
>> according to the International Energy Agency.
>>
>> Today, most coal goes to electrical power plants. In developing
>> nations such as India, China and Africa, coal is the staple - and
>> affordable - source of fuel with which families run their first
>> washing machines and televisions. Worldwide electricity consumption is
>> expected to double by 2030, the World Energy Council says.
>>
>> In America, about 150 new coal-fired electrical plants are proposed
>> over the next decade. In China, there are plans for a coal-fired power
>> plant to go on line nearly every week. Emissions from these plants
>> alone could nullify the cuts made by Europe, Japan and other rich
>> nations under the Kyoto Protocol treaty, according to a report from
>> the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington.
>>
>> In a developing country like China, coal is the backbone of the energy
>> system.
>>
>> Look at the port city of Shanghai, where the bitter tang in the air is
>> not from salty sea breeze - it's the smoke from coal-burning stoves in
>> the suburbs used for cooking and heating. From the shacks of migrant
>> workers on the edge of town to modern factories and skyscrapers,
>> China's biggest city is powered by coal. Even the ultramodern Maglev
>> railway line runs on electricity from a coal-fueled plant.
>>
>> China mined a record 2.4 billion tons of coal in 2006, up 8.1 percent
>> from a year earlier. But even that can't keep boilers and blast
>> furnaces stoked in an economy growing more than 10 percent a year. So
>> China became a net coal importer for the first time this year. While
>> Chinese authorities are closing down older, heavily polluting plants,
>> they can't keep up with a massive expansion in urban housing and
>> industry and the coal that feeds them.
>>
>> China is the world's biggest consumer and producer of coal, but it's
>> far from the only one. U.S. coal production hit a record 1.2 billion
>> tons last year, according to the National Mining Association, and is
>> forecast by the government to rise 50 percent by 2030. Yet the United
>> States rejected the Kyoto Protocol, arguing that the required
>> emissions cuts could slow economic growth.
>>
>> For another measure, look at the ticker on the Web site of St.
>> Louis-based Peabody Coal Co., the world's largest coal mining company,
>> which tracks its growing sales second by second. Last year: 248
>> million tons sold. For 2007: On track for up to 275 million tons.
>>
>> China's Shenhua Group is hot on Peabody's heels. On one day in June, a
>> record 111 Shenhua coal trains left its mines in north-central China,
>> the company said.
>>
>> Rising demand can be met because coal is the Earth's most abundant
>> fossil fuel, with reserves expected to last some 250 years - far
>> longer than forecasts for petroleum. And whether in China, India, the
>> United States or Europe, coal is available at home, away from the
>> instability of the Middle East.
>>
>> "The U.S. has under its own soil at least a 200-year supply of coal.
>> China has a very long-term supply of coal," Steve Papermaster,
>> co-chairman of the energy committee of President Bush's Council of
>> Advisers on Science and Technology, told a recent conference in
>> Shanghai.
>>
>> For several years, cleaner burning natural gas appeared a promising
>> substitute. But soaring prices and worries over the reliability of
>> Mideast and Russian supplies have dimmed the promise of that option.
>> Alternatives such as wind and solar power are getting cheaper but
>> still can't compete with coal.
>>
>> Most experts believe that whatever the costs to the environment and
>> public health, coal is with us to stay.
>>
>> "The question is not about putting a line through coal and saying
>> we're not going to use it," said Milton Catelin, chief executive of
>> the London-based World Coal Institute, an industry association.
>> "There's a future for coal. The developing world will have to use
>> coal. They need cheap energy to get ahead."
>>
>> ---
>>
>> The solution Catelin and others in the industry are pushing is clean
>> technology, although they admit they are late to the game.
>>
>> "The decade 1997-2007 was a lost decade" for clean coal technology,
>> Catelin conceded. "We should have done much more. Now we're playing
>> catch-up."
>>
>> The need is clear. In the provincial steel town of Baotou, trucks
>> heaped high with coal rumble into Shenhua yards, dumping their loads
>> into huge sieves for sorting into various grades of quality and size.
>> Wind gusts whip black soot into the sky, thickening the layer of smog
>> from the city's smelters.
>>
>> The U.S. and Chinese governments are subsidizing the development of
>> technology that converts coal to a clean-burning gas before it is
>> burned. But such plants still emit ample amounts of carbon dioxide,
>> notes Qian Jingjing, an expert with the Natural Resources Defense
>> Council in New York and co-author of the report "Coal in a Changing
>> Climate."
>>
>> She and many other experts believe coal can only be made
>> environmentally sustainable through the more experimental technology
>> of capturing carbon dioxide emissions and storing them underground.
>>
>> A joint government-private project in the United States aims to build
>> such a "zero emissions" plant by 2012. Separately, Xcel Corp. of
>> Minneapolis, a major electric and natural gas utility, is studying
>> building a carbon capture and storage power plant in Colorado.
>>
>> Across the Atlantic, the European Union may require carbon capture and
>> storage systems for all new coal-fired power plants, with a proposal
>> expected by year end. The gas would be buried in aquifers, depleted
>> coal mines or geological faults deep underground.
>>
>> But the costs are daunting.
>>
>> "It takes a lot of money since you have to go so deep," said Brock of
>> Cambridge Energy Research Associates. "There is not one commercial
>> carbon capture and storage project yet. It's yet to be proven."
>>
>> With such high costs, few utilities will embrace these technologies
>> without a strong push or subsidy from government. The U.S. Congress is
>> weighing several proposals, but their fate remains uncertain.
>>
>> The degree of public support for such policies remains unclear.
>> Consumers may balk at having to pay more for electricity from "clean
>> coal" plants, either through higher rates or taxes.
>>
>> But there is growing awareness of the problem. In both the West and
>> India and China, traditional utilities and new players are investing
>> in wind and solar power. A subsidiary of coal giant Shenhua is
>> building a 200-megawatt wind farm in the waters off China's east
>> coast.
>>
>> "The goal is to raise both efficiency and turn to renewables while
>> backing out of coal in the process," said Lester Brown, president of
>> the Earth Policy Institute, an environmental think tank in Washington.
>> "The question is, can we move fast enough?"
>>
>> Meanwhile, in Jungar Qi, the house-sized mine trucks rumble on,
>> rushing their multi-ton loads of coal to railways and coal yards. The
>> biggest landmark in the city - the two huge smokestacks of its
>> coal-fired power plant.


--
The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane. -- Marcus Aurelius

Wherever I go it will be well with me, for it was well with me here, not
on account of the place, but of my judgments which I shall carry away
with me, for no one can deprive me of these; on the contrary, they alone
are my property, and cannot be taken away, and to possess them suffices
me wherever I am or whatever I do. -- EPICTETUS

Joseph R. Darancette
daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net
 
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