Wednesday November 30, 2005 | ${log.root}/lowem.log Inflation, Investing and Everything |
|
British Airways, Europe's third-largest airline, said it planned to cut almost 600 management jobs as part of wider plans to reduce labor costs. BA said it would cut 35 percent of its 1,715 senior and middle management staff by March 2008. Senior managers would be hit the hardest with 50 percent of their jobs to go. The cuts would save the airline 50 million pounds, contributing to a previously-announced target to reduce costs by 300 million pounds by March 2007. BA's new Chief Executive Willie Walsh who took over the top job at BA from Rod Eddington last month, has been under pressure to further cut costs at the airline which faces high fuel prices and tough competition. Eddington cut 14,000 jobs during his five-year tenure at BA. A source told Reuters last month that Walsh was eyeing a 15 percent cut in its total workforce of 46,000 over several years. Google Base : (2005-11-30 21:09:45 SGT)
[Biz]
Permalink
peakoil.com -> timesonline.co.uk : The rusting oil derricks that once pumped crude from beneath the streets of Los Angeles are being brought back to life almost 50 years after being abandoned. The derricks - black, hammer-like contraptions that squat over oil wells - were long ago rendered uneconomic by falling petroleum prices and the soaring value of property in Southern California. But now, with the price of crude oil near a record high and the property market rapidly cooling, Tinseltown has rediscovered its less glamorous economic roots. As one oil industry lawyer once said: "They ruined a perfectly good oilfield by building a city on top of it." Analysts say that many Los Angeles wells were plugged after giving up only 25 per cent of their oil - even though modern technology allows up to 50 per cent of a reserve to be drained. Now those wells are being hastily reactivated. Indeed, analysts predict that the number of abandoned oil wells throughout California, which stands at about 3,000, will soon drop to zero. There are thought to be about 4,000 active urban oil wells in the greater Los Angeles area. (2005-11-30 17:38:21 SGT)
[Energy]
Permalink
China's central government has angrily blamed managers of a northeastern mine for a huge explosion that killed at least 150 people, saying obvious signs of danger emerged days before the blast. As rescue efforts wound down, the government's work safety watchdog turned its focus to the cause of the blast and quickly backed up assertions from victims's relatives that the mine's management disregarded warning signs. Just over 6,000 people died in China's coal mines last year, according to government figures. State press said the figure represented 80 percent of global fatalities in the industry. Independent critics, including the Hong Kong-based China Labor Bulletin, say the number of coal mining deaths in China each year could be as high as 20,000. Fatalities often go unreported as mines seek to avoid costly shutdowns, the critics say. The crisis has worsened in recent years as demand for coal has escalated to help fuel the nation's breakneck economic growth. China relies on coal for two-thirds of its energy needs and the government said early this month it intended to increase domestic coal production from 2.1 billion tons to 2.4 billion tons over the next five years. (2005-11-30 17:30:45 SGT)
[Energy]
Permalink
The final release of Mozilla Firefox 1.5 is now available for download from GetFirefox.com or from the ftp site. Users of the release candidates should receive the update soon. Firefox 1.5 introduces several new features, including an improved software update system, faster Back / Forward page navigation, a new option to clear private browsing data, drag-and-drop reordering of browser tabs, a redesigned Options/Preferences window and more robust popup blocking. Standards support is also improved, with support for Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG), JavaScript 1.6 and additional CSS properties. Accessibility is much improved (including new DHTML accessibility features), security has been enhanced and Mac OS X support has also been improved. More details can be found in the 1.5 Release Notes, and the support forums staff is available for questions. (2005-11-30 08:24:00 SGT)
[Tech]
Permalink
Most popular blog postings on lowem.log : 1. Singapore SIBOR interest rates fall to 1.5%, lowest since Dec 2004 Featured articles on lowem.log : 1. ABC Guide to Beating Inflation in Singapore and Elsewhere |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||