An Insatiable Demand
Transcription
An Insatiable Demand
SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Une sélection hebdomadaire offerte par An Insatiable Demand Rising Oil Prices Make Mealtime More Expensive By KEITH BRADSHER KUANTAN, Malaysia — Rising prices for cooking oil are forcing residents of Asia’s largest slum, in Mumbai, India, to ration every drop. Bakeries in the United States are fretting over higher shortening costs. And here in Malaysia, brand-new factories built to convert vegetable oil into diesel sit idle, their owners unable to afford the raw material. This is the other oil shock. From India to Indiana, shortages and soaring prices for palm oil, soybean oil and many other types of vegetable oils are the latest, most striking example of a developing global problem: costly food. The food price index of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, based on export prices for 60 internationally traded foodstuffs, climbed 37 percent last year. That was on top of a 14 percent increase in 2006, and the trend has accelerated this winter. According to the organization, food riots have erupted in recent months in Guinea, Mauritania, Mexico, Morocco, Senegal, Uzbekistan and Yemen. No category of food prices has risen as quickly this winter as so-called edible oils. Cooking oil may seem a trifling expense in the West. But in the developing world, cooking oil is an important source of calories and represents one of the biggest cash outlays for poor families, who grow much of their own food but have to buy oil in which to cook it. Few crops illustrate the emerging problems in the global food chain as well as palm oil, the price of which has jumped nearly 70 percent in the last year JUSTIN MOTT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES The price of palm oil is up nearly 70 percent in a year, part of a global boom in commodity prices. A worker in Malaysia collects palm oil fruit. Continued on Page 4 Saudi Arabia Eyes an Industrial Future By JAD MOUAWAD RABIGH, Saudi Arabia — The alarm bell sounded the end of the lunch break here one November afternoon, and suddenly thousands of workers — on foot, on bicycles and in buses — streamed in, seemingly from out of nowhere, and jolted this huge construction site to life. Amid the cranes, towers and beams rising from the desert, more than 38,000 workers from China, India, Turkey and beyond have been toiling for two years in unforgiving conditions — often in temperatures exceeding 37 degrees Celsius — to complete one of the world’s largest petrochemical plants in record time. By the end of the year, this massive city of steel at the edge of the Red Sea will take its place as a cog of globalization: plastics produced here will be used to make televisions in Japan, cellphones in China and thousands of other products to be sold in the United States and Europe. Construction costs at the plant, which spreads over 20 square kilometers, have doubled to $10 billion because of shortages in materials and labor. The amount of steel being used is 10 times the weight of the Eiffel Tower. “I’ve worked on many big things in my life, but I’ve never worked on anything this big,” an American project manager mused during a bus tour of the project, called Petro Rabigh, a joint venture of the staterun oil company Saudi Aramco and Sumitomo Chemical of Japan. Size isn’t the only consideration. The project is Saudi Arabia’s bold- est bet yet that this oil-rich kingdom can transform itself into an industrial powerhouse. The plant is part of a $500 billion investment program to build new cities, create millions of jobs and diversify the economy away from petroleum exports over the next two decades. “The Saudi economy was in idle mode for 20 years,” said John Sfakianakis, the chief economist at SABB, formerly known as the Saudi British Bank, who is based in Riyadh, the Saudi capital. “Today, the feeling here is, ‘We’ve won the lottery; let’s not waste it.’ ” The kingdom’s big economic goals would have been unthinkable without the surge in energy prices that Continued on Page 4 EMAAR DEVELOPMENT, VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS A detail from a rendering of the King Abdullah Economic City, on the Red Sea. It is one of six new cities planned by Saudi Arabia as it works to diversify its economy. In Japan, Purists Fret at Rise of the Cellphone Novel By NORIMITSU ONISHI TOKYO — Until recently, cellphone novels — composed on phone keypads by young women wielding dexterous thumbs and read by fans on their tiny screens — had been dismissed in Japan as a subgenre unworthy of the country that gave the world its first novel, “The Tale of Genji,’’ a millennium ago. Then in December, the year-end bestseller tally showed that cellphone novels, republished in book form, have not only infiltrated the mainstream but have come to dominate it. Of last year’s 10 best-selling novels, five were originally cellphone novels, mostly love stories written in the short sentences characteristic of text messaging but containing little of the plotting or character development found in traditional novels. What is more, the top three spots were occupied by first-time cellphone novelists, PHOTOGRAPHS BY KO SASAKI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES touching off a debate. turned into a 142-page hard“Will cellphone novels kill cover book last year. It sold ‘the author’?’’ a famous lit400,000 copies and became erary journal, Bungaku-kai, the No. 5 best-selling novel asked on the cover of its Januof 2007, according to a closely ary issue. Fans praised the novwatched list by Tohan, a major els as a new literary genre crebook distributor. ated and consumed by a gener“My mother didn’t even ation whose reading habits had know that I was writing a novconsisted mostly of manga, or el,’’ said Rin, who, like many comic books. Critics said the cellphone novelists, goes by dominance of cellphone novels, with their poor literary qual- Rin is a successful only one name. “So at first when I told her, ity, would hasten the decline of cellphone novelist. well, I’m coming out with a Japanese literature. novel, she was like, what? She Cellphone novelists are making the kind of sales that most traditional didn’t believe it until it came out and appeared in bookstores,’’ she added. novelists can only dream of. A year ago, one of Starts Publishing’s One star, a 21-year-old woman named Rin, wrote “If You’’ over a six-month stretch young cellphone stars, Chaco, gave up her phoneeventhoughshecouldcomposemuch during her senior year in high school. While commuting to her part-time job or faster with it by tapping with her thumb. “Because of writing on the cellphone, in free moments, she tapped out passages on her cellphone and uploaded them on a her nail had cut into the flesh and became bloodied,’’ said Shigeru Matsushima, an Web site for would-be authors. After cellphone readers voted her novel editor. “Since she’s switched to a computNo. 1 in one ranking, her story of the tragic er, her vocabulary’s gotten richer and her love between two childhood friends was sentences have also grown longer.’’ CAHIER DU « MONDE » DATÉ SAMEDI 26 JANVIER 2008, NO 19598. NE PEUT ÊTRE VENDU SÉPARÉMENT The Traffic Is Very Heavy Elephants and their handlers illegally ply the streets of Bangkok in search of gullible tourists. WORLD TRENDS 3 Thinking Is Doing Using only her brain activity, a monkey makes a robot halfway across the world move its legs. SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY 6 2 LE MONDE SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 O P I N I O N & C O M M E N TA RY EDITORIALS OF THE TIMES Don’t Tie the Hands Of the Next President President Bush is discussing a new agreement with Baghdad that would govern the deployment of American troops in Iraq. With so many Americans adamant about bringing our forces home as soon as possible, a sentiment we strongly share, Mr. Bush must not be allowed to tie the hands of his successor and ensure the country’s continued involvement in an open-ended war. Given what’s at stake in Iraq in terms of American and Iraqi lives lost, national treasure and broad national security interests, the negotiations on any new agreement must be fully transparent — which they are not. The national debate must be vigorous and thoughtful, and then Congress must vote on whatever deal results. The White House and the Iraqi government decided in December to pursue the pact as a way to define long-term relations between the two countries, including the legal status of American military forces in Iraq. The ostensible goal is a more durable political, economic and security relationship than is possible under a United Nations resolution, the current international legal basis for the American military presence in Iraq. Iraqi officials, increasingly unhappy with restrictions on sovereignty because of the presence of 160,000 foreign troops, have said that they won’t extend the United Nations mandate beyond this year. A Washington-Baghdad deal would have to take its place for the troops to stay. Formal negotiations won’t start until February and few details are known, but already the two sides are laying down markers. The Iraqi defense minister, Abdul Qadir — apparently tone-deaf to the Ameri- can political debate — told The Times’s Thom Shanker that his nation would not be able to take full responsibility for its internal security until 2012 or be able to defend its own borders from external threat at least until 2018. That is far too long for most Americans, but not for Mr. Bush, who is quite comfortable leaving American troops fighting in Iraq for another decade. A related issue concerns whether the agreement would grant assurances that America would help Iraq defend against foreign aggression — something a senior White House official says has not been ruled out. That’s a worrying prospect. Such guarantees could further encourage Iraqi dependence on the American military and might draw the United States into a regional conflict. Among other questions still to be answered are how long the United States wants basing rights in Iraq and how it might assuage Iraqis demanding the right to try American troops and contractors accused of killing civilians and other misdeeds. (The United States almost always brings troops home for trial.) Mr. Bush is rushing to complete a deal before he leaves office in January 2009. That is just as reckless and irresponsible as most of his decisions regarding Iraq. America’s interests demand that his successor has maximum flexibility to plot a course, which we hope includes a quick and orderly withdrawal of troops. One way to ensure that flexibility is to make sure that Congress approves any deal with Iraq, as leading Democrats, including Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, are insisting. The time for Congressional intervention is now. Climate Data Is Hard to Ignore Skeptics about global warming often point to Antarctica to show that Al Gore and others who worry about climate change have exaggerated the dangers greatly. They may concede that the Arctic is melting and even that Greenland is beginning to appear a bit shaky. But look at Antarctica, they will say. It’s actually growing colder, and the ice sheet is thickening. That argument is becoming harder to sustain. According to a study published recently in the journal Nature Geoscience, changes in water temperature and wind patterns related to global warming have begun to erode vast ice sheets in western Antarctica at a much faster rate than anyone had previously detected. The study pointed out that the ice loss is very small compared with the continent’s kilometers-deep ice sheets. Even so, the study suggests that if the trend continues, global sea levels could rise higher and more swiftly than previously supposed. The findings give more urgency to the search for a new global agreement to limit emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. There has always been uncertainty over Antarctica’s weather, partly because it is so hard to find what is hap- pening in large parts of the continent. And there are, in effect, two Antarcticas. East Antarctica, which makes up about 90 percent of the total, sits above sea level and is relatively stable, with increased snowfall compensating for any loss of ice. A study in 2002 concluded that the interior had actually cooled over the previous decade. Then there is the western shelf, an expanse of ice and snow slightly bigger than Afghanistan and largely below sea level. Using measurements from satellites that scanned about 85 percent of Antarctica’s coasts from 1996 to 2006, the study’s authors found that West Antarctica has been losing ice at a rate that is 60 percent faster than 10 years ago. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicted that if nothing is done to slow the increase in global warming gases, the world’s oceans could rise as much as 60 centimeters in this century. Many scientists add another 30 centimeters because they think the panel underestimated glacial flows. It is too early to predict how much the melting from Antarctica will add. Still, the new findings are unsettling and yet another warning that there is no way to deny and nowhere to hide from global warming. NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF Experience Is Not the Only Priority With all the criticism from the Clinton camp about whether Barack Obama has enough experience to make a strong president, consider another presidential candidate who was far more of a novice. He had the gall to run for president even though he had served a single undistinguished term in the House of Representatives, before being hounded back to his district. That was Abraham Lincoln. Another successful president scorned any need for years of apprenticeship in Washington, declaring, “The same old experience is not relevant.” He suggested that the most useful training comes not from hanging around the White House and Congress but rather from experience “rooted in the real lives of real people” so that “it will bring real results if we have the courage to change.” That was Bill Clinton running in 1992 against George H. W. Bush, who was then trumpeting his own experience over the callow youth of Mr. Clinton. It might seem obvious that long service in Washington is the best preparation for the White House, but on the contrary, one lesson of American history is that length of experience in national politics is an extremely poor predictor of presidential success. Looking at the 19 presidents since 1900, three of the greatest were among those with the fewest years in electoral politics. Teddy Roosevelt had been a governor for two years and vice president for six months; Woodrow Wilson, a governor for just two years; and Franklin Roosevelt, a governor for four years. None ever served in Congress. Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush. They had great technical skills — but not one was among our very greatest presidents. The point is not that experience is pointless but that it needn’t be in politics to be useful. John McCain’s years as a prisoner of war gave him an understanding of torture and a moral authority to discuss it that no amount of Senate hearings ever could have conferred. In the same way, Mr. Obama’s years as an antipoverty organizer give him insights into one of our greatest challenges: how to end cycles of poverty. Little Clout at Home, or Overseas WASHINGTON When President Bush finished doing his sword dances and Arabian stallion inspections, when he finished making a speech in Abu Dhabi on the importance of freedom that fell flat, when he finished lounging in his fur-lined George of Arabia robe in the Saudi king’s tent, he came home. Or he came to what was left of home. A Washington Post cartoon by Tom Toles summed it up best: “Great to be home,” W. enthuses on Air Force One, heading toward the East Coast. “Anything interesting happen while I was gone?” Hanging on the skyline of New York is a sign reading: “U.S.A. Now a Wholly Owned Subsidiary of Foreign Investors.” W. seemed dazzled by the can-do spirit of the entrepreneurs of the new Middle East. “It’s important for the president to hear thoughts, hopes, dreams, aspirations, concerns from folks that are out making a living,” he told Saudi businessmen. In Dubai, he commended young Arab leaders, saying, “The entrepreneurial spirit is strong.” In Abu Dhabi, he marveled at the royal family’s plans to build a city based entirely upon renewable energy. “Amazing, isn’t it?” W. said. You know you’re in trouble when your Middle East oil pump is greener than you are. Our addiction to oil has allowed our LEXIQUE Dans l’article “Efforts to Harvest the Ocean’s Energy Hold New Promise,” page 5: BUOY: bouée, balise TO STRAIN: ici passer, filtrer TO POUND: pilonner FORBIDDING: rébarbatif MOMENTUM: élan Years in politics may not be the best way to train a president. That front-line experience is one reason Mr. Obama not only favors government spending programs, like earlychildhood education, but also cultural initiatives like promoting responsible fatherhood. Then there’s Mr. Obama’s gradeschool years in Indonesia. Our most serious mistakes in foreign policy, from Vietnam to Iraq, have been a blindness to other people’s nationalism and an inability to see ourselves as others see us. Mr. Obama seems to have absorbed an intuitive sensitivity to that problem. In politics, Mr. Obama’s preparation is not extensive, though it’s more than Hillary Rodham Clinton acknowledges. His seven years in the Illinois State Senate aren’t heavily scrutinized, but he scored significant achievements there: a law to videotape police interrogations in capital cases; an earned income tax credit to fight poverty; an expansion of early-childhood education. The Democrats with the greatest Washington expertise — Joe Biden, Chris Dodd and Bill Richardson — have already been driven from the race. And the presidential candidate left standing with the greatest experience by far is Mr. McCain; if Mrs. Clinton believes that’s the criterion for selecting the next president, she might consider backing him. To put it another way, think which politician is most experienced today in the classic sense, and thus — according to the “experience” camp — best qualified to become the next president. That’s Dick Cheney. And I rest my case. MAUREEN DOWD : AIDE A LA LECTURE Pour aider à la lecture de l’anglais et familiariser nos lecteurs avec certaines expressions américaines, Le Monde publie ci-dessous la traduction de quelques mots et idiomes contenus dans les articles de ce supplément. Par Dominique Chevallier, agrégée d’anglais. Dans l’article “Extremists Lay Siege to a Pakistani Frontier City Gripped by Fear,” page 3: TO GRIP: saisir fermement ALLEY: ruelle TALLY: décompte STRIFE: conflit TO PIT AGAINST: opposer TO SOW (I SOWED, SOWN): semer TO SCOFF: se moquer BACKLASH: contre-coup TO COZY UP TO: essayer de devenir ami avec They all did have executive experience (as did Mr. Clinton), actually running something larger than a Senate office. Maybe that’s something voters should think about more: governors have often made better presidents than senators. But that’s not a good Democratic talking point, because the candidates with the greatest administrative experience by far are Mitt Romney, Rudy Giuliani and Mike Huckabee. Alternatively, look at the five presidents since 1900 with perhaps the most political experience when taking office: William McKinley, Lyndon Johnson, Dans l’article “Climate Challenge Drives Academics to Join Forces,” page 5: TENET: principe, doctrine GRANT: subvention TO FOSTER: encourager, promouvoir ACADEMIA: le monde universitaire SUSTAINABILITY: développement durable PALATABLE: satisfaisant TO ALLEVIATE: atténuer Dans l’article “Preserving the Sense and Skill of Balance,” page 7: TO TUMBLE OFF: dégringoler BOULDER: rocher HEEL: talon TOE: orteil TO ENHANCE: améliorer ANKLE: cheville pushers in the Persian Gulf to go on a shopping spree to buy us up. Hillary Clinton was right when she said that it was “pathetic” that President Bush had to beg the Saudis to drop the price of oil. One of the many rationales he offered for invading Iraq was the benign domino theory, that bringing democracy to Iraq would sway the autocrats in the region to be less repressive. But when W. visited Saudi Arabia and Egypt recently, he did not raise the issue. He could not demand anything of the autocrats in the way of more rights for women and dissidents, much less get the Saudis to help on oil production. He needs their help in corralling Iran, which has been strengthened by the occupation of Iraq. So he was a supplicant in Saudi Arabia. The American economy is a supplicant, too. Two decades ago, we fretted that Japan was taking over America when Sony bought Columbia Pictures and Mitsubishi bought a chunk of Rockefeller Center. But they overpaid for everything. Now, because of Wall Street’s overreaching, our economy depends on foreign oil and foreign loans to stay afloat. China and Arab countries have a staggering amount of treasury securities. And the oil-rich countries are sitting on so many petrodollars that they are looking beyond prestige hotels and fashion EXPRESSIONS Dans l’article “Efforts to Harvest the Ocean’s Energy Hold New Promise,” page 5: DOWNSIDE: On dit “the upside” pour parler des avantages, du côté positif, et de “the downside” pour parler des désavantages, des défauts, des côtés négatifs. Dans l’article “Expansion of Green Programs Raises Potential for Cheating,” page 5: GREENWASHING: invention fabriquée à partir du mot whitewashing, qui signifie blanchir à la whaux, au sens propre, mais aussi blanchir (par exemple de l’argent sale). Ainsi greenwash signifie non plus “blanchir mais verdir,” c’est-à-dire passer à la sauce environnementale pour justifier des arguments, qui bien sur sont discutables ... RÉFÉRENCES Dans l’article “Efforts to Harvest the Ocean’s Energy Hold New Promise,” page 5: OREGON: Rattaché à l’union en 1859, cet Etat du Nord Ouest pacifique faisait, auparavant partie du Oregon Territory. Traversé en 1804 par labels and taking advantage of the bargains available to buy huge stakes in our major financial institutions. Like the president, Citigroup and Merrill Lynch solicited help from Middle Eastern, Asian and American investors, for a combined total of nearly $19.1 billion, after the subprime mortgage debacle blew up their books. Citigroup, which raised $7.5 billion from Abu Dhabi in November, raised another $12.5 billion, including from Singapore, Kuwait and Saudi Prince Walid bin Talal. Merrill Lynch gave $6.6 billion in stock to Kuwait, South Korea, a Japanese bank and others. As Warren Buffett has said, we are giving ourselves a party to feed our appetite for oil and imported goods and paying for it by selling off the furniture, our most precious assets. Next to the cool, strong euro, the dollar is a comparative runt in the world’s currencies. The weak dollar lets foreigners buy up real estate in Manhattan. It is striking that the Bush scion, who has tried so hard to do the opposite of his father, also ends up facing the prospect of a recession in his final year in office. Maybe if the president had spent the trillion he squandered on his Iraq odyssey on energy research, we might have broken the oil addiction. Now it’s a race between the war in Iraq or the worsening economy to see which one will usher W out of office. l’expédition Lewis et Clarke – la première fois qu’ils entendirent l’océan Pacifique (avant de le voir) ce fut en Oregon – ce territoire était tombé sous influence britannique: la Hudson’s Bay Company y trouvait les fourrures (en particulier de castor) dont elle avait besoin pour fabriquer les hauts de forme. Lors de la fixation de la frontière au 49ème parallèle, le territoire devint américain. A partir de 1842, avec l’ouverture de la piste de l’Oregon, les habitants arrivèrent par milliers pour s’installer dans la vallée de la Willamette, migration encouragée par l’Etat Fédéral qui offrait des terrains pour une somme très modique. La forêt, couvre un tiers de la surface de l’Etat et représente une de ses grandes richesses économiques. Curieux Etat, fait de contrastes entre des lois considérées comme particulièrement à l’avantgarde (par exemple il a été le premier état à autoriser par la loi le suicide assisté) et des groupes racistes de “white supremacists,” entre des villes riches (Portland) et des villages ruraux pauvres, entre les exploitants des forêts et les écologistes ... Il a beaucoup attiré de nouveaux habitants ces dix dernières années (population prequ’entièrement blanche: il y a plus d’Indiens que de Noirs, et le taux d’Hispaniques tourne autour de 10%. SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 LE MONDE 3 WORLD TRENDS Extremists Lay Siege to a Pakistani Frontier City Gripped by Fear By JANE PERLEZ PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE NEW YORK TIMES TURKMEN. AFGHANISTAN TAJIK. MOHMAND Kabul re Area of detail as Pakistan’s battle with militants has moved to Peshawar, a city bordering the tribal region. A gun merchant, left, in the tribal area prepares to test a weapon. CHINA JAMMU AND KASHMIR AFGHANISTAN Peshawar Trib al a PESHAWAR, Pakistan — For centuries, fighting and lawlessness have been part of the fabric of this frontier city. But in the past year, Pakistan’s war with Islamic militants has spilled right into its alleys and bazaars, its forts and armories, killing policemen and soldiers and scaring its famously tough citizens. There is a sense of siege here, as the Islamic insurgency pours out of the adjacent tribal region into this city, one of Pakistan’s largest, and its surrounding districts. The Taliban and their militant sympathizers now hold strategic pockets on the city’s outskirts, the police say, from where they strike at the military and the police, order schoolgirls to wear the burqa and blow up stores selling DVDs, among other acts of violence. Suicide bombings, bomb explosions and missile attacks occurred an average of once a week here in 2007, according to a tally by the city’s police department. In 2006, while there were occasional grenade attacks and explosions, the authorities did not record a single suicide bombing or rocket attack inside the city. The proximity of Peshawar to the tribal areas where the Taliban and Al Qaeda have regrouped in the past two years makes the city a feasible prize for the militants in Pakistan’s escalating internal strife that pits the Islamic extremists against the American-backed government of President Pervez Musharraf. Though few here believe that the Taliban will rule anytime soon, the police and residents say that by the standards of counterinsurgency warfare the extremists are doing well. They have undermined public faith in the government, sown distrust and made the police fearful for their lives. “People feel the insecurity is so high, no one can fix it,” said Humair Bilour, the sister-in-law of Malik Saad, a popular Peshawar police chief who was killed in a suicide bomb attack last year. “How can the government do anything when the government itself is involved in it?” She said she and her friends were now afraid to go out. “People go to the bazaar and make jokes: ‘Is this going to be my last trip?’ ” she said. The extremists have selected the police and the army, two important pillars of the Pakistani state, as particular targets. Rockets were fired recently at an army barracks in Warsak on the city’s perimeter, a warning of the power of the militants to strike from Mohmand, a district in the tribal areas adjacent to Peshawar, an area that a few months ago was considered free of the Taliban. The army headquarters in the center of the city were struck last month by a bomber who was hiding explosives under her burqa that were set off by remote control. The assassination a year ago of the police chief, Mr. Saad, who was killed while on duty trying to control a religious procession, shook the city. “It’s asymmetrical warfare against an established state,” said Muhammad Sulaman Khan, chief of operations for the Peshawar police and a close friend of Mr. Saad. “The terrorists only don’t have Islamabad Zhob Quetta NORTH-WEST FRONTIER SOUTH PROVINCE WAZIRISTAN IRAN BALUCHISTAN SINDH PAKISTAN Kms. New Delhi PAKISTAN INDIA Karachi 80 Arabian Sea Kms. 320 THE NEW YORK TIMES to lose it, we need to win it.” At the core of the troubles here, many say, lie demands by the United States that the Pakistani military, generously financed by Washington, join in its campaign against terrorism, which means killing fellow Pakistanis in the tribal areas. Even if those Pakistanis are extremists, the people here say, they do not like a policy of killing fellow tribesmen, and fellow countrymen, particularly on behalf of the United States. The Bush administration is convinced that Al Qaeda and the Taliban have gained new strength in the past two years, particularly in the tribal regions of North and South Waziristan and Bajaur. It has said it is considering sending American forces to help the Pakistani soldiers in those areas. Mr. Musharraf has scoffed at the idea. Any direct intervention by American forces would only strengthen the backlash now under way against soldiers and the police in Peshawar, said Farook Adam Khan, a lawyer here. That reaction spread recently to Lahore, the capital of Punjab Province, where a suicide bomber killed almost two dozen policemen at a lawyers’ rally, he said. “Pakistani soldiers never used to be targets,” Mr. Khan said. “Now we have the radicals antagonized by Musharraf and his politics of cozying up to the United States. The actions taken by the army in Waziristan and Bajaur and Swat are causing the problems here.” Swat is an area 160 kilometers north of Peshawar, where the Pakistani Army is currently battling a Pakistani Taliban insurgent group with mixed results. Peshawar’s booming business in illicit Western and Indian DVDs has been another target of the militants. Many of the city’s myriad retail outlets have closed after being bombed, or threatened with violence. At the Bilal DVD Parlor, the owners, Bilal Javed and Akhtar Ali, said their sales — ranging from “Pride and Prejudice” to “Die Hard 4.0” to the latest Bollywood films and old Bruce Lee movies — had fallen by 90 percent. On a recent day, their modern retail store, fitted with polished chrome, was packed floor to ceiling with DVDs. There were no customers. They said people had been afraid to shop there since a bomb hidden in a water cooler exploded at a DVD store across the street last year, killing five people, including a 7-year-old boy who wanted to buy a computer mouse. “The police chief said, ‘We can’t secure ourselves, how can we secure you?’ ” Mr. Javed said. Welcome to Bangkok. Please Feed the Elephants. By THOMAS FULLER BANGKOK — Of all the illegal activities that animate the streets of Bangkok — the vendors who hawk pirated DVDs and fake watches, the brothels that call themselves saunas — one stands out. Elephants are not supposed to saunter down the city’s streets as they do almost every night. For at least two decades the giant gray beasts have plodded through this giant gray city, stopping off at redlight districts where prostitutes ply their trade and tourist areas where their handlers peddle elephant snacks of sugar cane and bananas to passers-by. Occasionally the elephants knock off the side-view mirrors from cars or stumble into gutters and cut themselves on sharp objects. The police shrug, politicians periodically order crackdowns and animal lovers despair. The creation of a Stray Elephant Task Force in 2006 did not keep the elephants off city streets. Nor did the team of undercover elephant enforcers who periodically cruise through Bangkok on motorcycles scouting for the beasts. “To be honest, nobody wants to do this job,” said Prayote Promsuwon, who is in charge of the Stray Elephant Task Force, which was formed after an elephant handler, fleeing the police, raced his el- ephant the wrong way down a Bangkok boulevard, causing traffic chaos. The police shy away from detaining the elephants’ handlers, also known as mahouts, because the officers fear they will not be able to control the animals on their own. “This is a dangerous job,” Mr. Prayote said. “An angry elephant can destroy cars and make trouble — and then we Elephants roaming the streets remind Thais of their society’s inequities. have responsibility for the damage.” The government says there are 3,837 domesticated elephants in Thailand today. Only a tiny fraction come into Bangkok — usually no more than half a dozen each evening — but they are hard to miss. Many Thais say they serve as a daily reminder of the inequalities in Thailand, the gap between provincial poverty and urban wealth. Mahouts bring their elephants into the city for the same reasons that the sons and daughters of rice farmers try their luck as waiters, golf caddies and massage therapists in Bangkok: they need the money. “We’ve been fined many times,” said Nattawut Inthong, a 24-year-old mahout who travels around Bangkok with his 2year-old elephant, Gra-po. Mr. Nattawut treats the fine of 300 baht, about $10, like a business expense. Most evenings he parades Gra-po through the Nana red-light district. The elephant adds to the carnival-like atmosphere. Mr. Nattawut makes about 2,000 baht a day, or about $67, selling sugar cane to passers-by, good money in a country where a typical factory wage is 8,000 baht (about $269) a month. For centuries, elephants have been considered noble here, collected by kings and used in ancient times as tanks on the battlefield. Weerasak Pintawong, the chief veterinarian at the National Institute of Elephant Research and Health Services in Surin, said it was common for elephants to be injured by cars. “Sometimes they fall into a hole,” Mr. Weerasak said. “Sometimes the elephant is frustrated at being commanded too much, and it runs away.” Elephants, Mr. Weerasak said, are PATRICK BROWN FOR THE INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE A young male elephant and his handler (not pictured) roam the tourist areas of Bangkok at night. They will both be working until the bars close. powerful, restless creatures prone to rebellion.The single most appropriate word for them, he said, is “fierce.” Eight years ago, former Prime Minister Anand Panyarachun lamented that when Thais saw elephants walking down the streets in Bangkok, “we are not only sorry for the elephant but we’re also ashamed of ourselves.” “The elephant was a symbol of honor, of dignity and leadership,” he said, “but today it has become the symbol of the failures and injustices of Thailand’s development.” 4 LE MONDE SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 WORLD TRENDS Higher palm oil prices are felt at a factory in Mumbai that uses it to fry lentils for a snack. Rising Oil Prices Make Mealtime More Expensive From Page 1 because supply has grown slowly while demand has soared. Farmers and plantation companies are responding to the higher prices, seizing land in places like Borneo from indigenous people and clearing tropical forest to replant with rows of oil palms. But an oil palm takes eight years to reach full production. A drought last year in Indonesia and flooding in Peninsular Malaysia helped constrain supply. At the same time, palm oil demand is growing steeply for a variety of reasons around the globe. They include shifting decisions among farmers about what to plant, rising consumer demand in China and India for edible oils, and Western subsidies for biofuel production. American farmers have been planting more corn and less soy because demand for corn-based ethanol has raised corn prices. American soybean acreage fell 19 percent last year, producing a drop in soybean oil output and inventories. Chinese farmers also cut back soybean acreage last year, as urban sprawl covContributing reporting were Andrew Martin in New York, Anand Giridharadas in Kale, India, and Michael Rubenstein in Mumbai. ered prime farmland and the Chinese government provided more incentives for grain. Yet people in China are also consuming more oils. China was the world’s biggest palm oil importer last year and it also doubled its soybean oil imports. Concerns about nutrition used to hurt palm oil sales, but they are now starting to help. The oil was long regarded in the West as unhealthy, but it has become an attractive option to replace the chemically altered fats known as trans fats, which have lately come to be seen as the least healthy of all fats. Across the United States, manufacturers are trying to replace trans fats, and American palm oil imports nearly doubled in the first 11 months of last year. “Four years ago, when this whole no-trans issue started, we processed no palm here,’’ said Mark Weyland, a United States product manager for Loders Croklaan, a Dutch company that supplies palm oil. “Now it’s our biggest seller.’’ Last year, conversion of palm oil into fuel was a fast-growing source of demand, but in recent weeks, rising prices have thrown that business into turmoil. Here on Malaysia’s eastern shore, a new refinery has the capacity to turn 105,000 metric tons a year of palm oil into 100,000 metric tons of a fuel called biodiesel, as well as valuable byproducts like glycerin. Mission Biofuels, an Australian company, finished the refinery in December.. But prices have spiked so much that the company cannot cover all its costs and has idled the refinery while looking for a new strategy. “We took a view that palm oil prices were already high; we didn’t think they could go even higher, and then they did,’’ said Nathan Mahalingam, the company’s managing director. Cities of the Future Prince Abdulaziz bin Mousaed Economic City Investment size Jobs created Population Saudi Arabia’s rapid population growth and high oil prices have spurred the country to invest in new industrial centers that will provide jobs for millions of young Saudis. $8 billion 55,000 300,000 Knowledge Economic City Investment size Jobs created Population Hail $7 billion 20,000 50,000 Medina King Abdullah Economic City Investment size Jobs created Population Rabigh Riyadh SAUDI ARABIA $27 billion 1 million 2 million Jazan Jazan Economic City Investment size Jobs created Population $27 billion 500,000 250,000 Kms. 400 Two other economic cities are planned but sites have not yet been determined. Source: Saudi Arabia General Investment Authority THE NEW YORK TIMES Saudi Arabia Eyes an Industrial Future From Page 1 has filled the coffers of oil producers. Oil prices have quadrupled since 2002 and reached $100 a barrel in New York this month. Persian Gulf countries earned $1.5 trillion in oil revenue from 2002 to 2006, twice as much as in the previous fiveyear period, according to the Institute of International Finance, a global association of banks that is based in Washington. As the top exporter, Saudi Arabia has been the main beneficiary. Despite all the recent headlines about Middle East investors bailing out troubled American banks like Citigroup, a growing share of today’s petrodollars are staying at home to finance megaprojects like Petro Rabigh, analysts say. That money is financing the biggest economic boom in a generation, helping to build not only the high-rises of Dubai, where the world’s tallest tower is going up, but also telecommunications networks, roads and universities throughout the Middle East. Abu Dhabi is planning to spend close to $1 billion for a new museum with the help of the Louvre, in Paris. Dubai’s latest grandiose idea is to build a smallscale replica of the French city of Lyon, complete with residential housing, a museum, a culinary school and a soccer club. In Saudi Arabia, Riyadh looks like a boom town: sprawling over 100 square kilometers, it is teeming with shopping malls, electronics stores and luxury boutiques. But while times are good today, many Saudis realize that their country is locked in a race against time to create industries that produce more than just oil in order to keep a young and growing population employed. The kingdom, which has a population of 24.5 million, including nearly 7 million foreigners, has what one analyst called a “human time bomb.” About 40 percent of Saudis are under 15, and because the country has one of the world’s highest birth rates, the population is expected to reach nearly 40 million by 2025. The region’s economies are too small to absorb all the oil riches on their own. Too much money is chasing too few assets, analysts say, forcing oil producers to invest some of their revenue abroad and diversify their holdings, either A kingdom’s petrodollars fund its effort to become an economic superpower. through state-owned investment funds or through direct private investments. But while oil-rich states are buying American Treasury bonds or military hardware from the West, analysts say the more significant trend is for a growing share of their investments to be pumped into local projects. “The vision is to turn the kingdom into a major industrial power by 2020,’’ said Jean-François Seznec, a professor at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., who is a specialist in industrial policies in the Persian Gulf. “A billion dollars here and a billion there, and soon you’re talking about real money.” One of the most noticeable illustra- tions of the industrialization push is a plan championed by King Abdullah, the 83-year-old Saudi monarch, to build six new cities throughout the country — including the King Abdullah Economic City on the western coast, near the city of Rabigh; the Knowledge Economic City, near Medina; and the Prince Abdulaziz bin Mousaed Economic City, in the north. The intent is to create industrial centers that double as housing and commercial hubs for the country’s young and growing population. The Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority, a government agency, expects these cities to add $150 billion to the country’s G.D.P. by 2020, create one million new jobs and be home to as many as five million people. The frenzied growth of the economy has had some serious downsides. Inflation has been rampant in the last year; food prices and rents have risen sharply. Traffic jams in Riyadh and other Saudi cities have become a constant affliction, while real estate values have soared and the construction sector is strained by a lack of workers. The initial public offering, for 25 percent of Petro Rabigh, raised $1.23 billion and was the largest stock sale in Saudi history. The stock is expected to begin trading at the end of the month. The project itself is still about a year away from completion. Once in operation, it will produce millions of tons of plastics a year. This venture, along with dozens of other megaprojects, will firmly anchor Saudi Arabia as one of the world’s top suppliers of chemical products as well as oil. “Saudi Aramco has a vision of itself as Exxon Mobil,” Mr. Seznec said, “except much bigger.” stroying habitat for orangutans and Sumatran rhinoceroses while also releasing greenhouse gases. The European Union has moved to restrict imports of palm oil grown in unsustainable ways. The measure has incensed the Malaysian palm oil industry, which had plunged into biofuel production in part to satisfy European demand. Many of the hardest-hit victims of rising food prices are in the MICHAEL RUBENSTEIN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES vast slums that surBiofuels accounted for almost half the round cities in poorer Asian nations. The increase in worldwide demand for veg- Kawle family in Mumbai’s sprawling etable oils last year, and represented 7 Dharavi slum, a household of nine with percent of total consumption of the oils, just one member working as a laborer for according to Oil World, a forecasting ser- $60 a month, is coping with recent price vice in Hamburg, Germany. increases for palm oil. The growth of biodiesel has been conThe family has responded by eating troversial, not only because it competes fish once a week instead of twice, selwith food uses of oil but also because dom cooking vegetables and cutting its of environmental concerns. European monthly rice consumption. “If the prices conservation groups have been warning go up again,’’ said Janaron Kawle, the that tropical forests are being leveled to family patriarch, “we’ll cut the mutton make way for oil palm plantations, de- to twice a month and use less oil.’’ Discovery May Help Brazil Become Big Energy Exporter By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO its partners — including BG of Britain RIO DE JANEIRO — While some of — have discovered in the Santos Basin the world’s largest oil producers, includ- where Tupi lies may lead the company to ing Mexico and Iran, are struggling to scale back its spending in Africa and the remain exporters, Brazil is moving in Gulf of Mexico in favor of pouring money the opposite direction. A huge under- into developing Brazil’s reserves. water oil field discovered late last year Petrobras’s success was hardly an achas the potential to transform South cident. In 1997 the Brazilian government America’s largest country into a sizable opened up Petrobras’s exploration and exporter and win it a seat at the table of production division to outside companies the world’s oil cartel. and invited in private investors. More The new oil, along with refining proj- important, the company developed exects under way by Petrobras, the national pertise in deepwater drilling that has put oil company, could eventually make Bra- it on par with Shell and Exxon Mobil. zil a larger exporter of gasoline as well. The rise of Petrobras contrasts starkThe subsalt basin that contains Tupi, ly with the decline of the other large oil the new deepwater field estimated to company in South America, Petróleos hold the equivalent of five billion to de Venezuela, the national oil company eight billion barrels of light crude oil, is of Venezuela known as Pdvsa. While creating strong interest among the world’s largest oil companies. They ESPÍRITO 250 Kms. SANTO have struggled lately to find globalBRAZIL scale projects worth investing in, MINAS even with oil touching $100 a barrel. GERAIS Tupi is the world’s biggest oil find Rio de Janeiro since a 12-billion-barrel field discovered in 2000 in Kazakhstan. São Paulo José Sergio Gabrielli, the chief exCAMPOS BASIN ecutive of Petrobras, said he was optimistic that the company could develop the oil with little outside help. Tupi area SANTOS “We think we can develop the oil BASIN faster than we thought at the begin00 0 ning,’’ Mr. Gabrielli said. “We don’t 20 600 2,0 Atlantic think we have any insurmountable 0 Ocean 0 ,0 1 challenge on the technology side.’’ BRAZIL Two years ago, even without Tupi, Atlantic Ocean Area of Brazil reached its goal of energy detail Ocean depth expressed in meters self-sufficiency, in part by expanding its domestic fossil fuel resources Gas and oil fields but also by developing an extensive Source: Petrobras ethanol industry using sugar cane. THE NEW YORK TIMES With Tupi, Brazil’s 12.2 billion barrels of proven reserves would Tupi, an underwater oil field, is the increase to some 17.2 billion, putting world’s biggest oil discovery since 2000. Brazil ahead of Canada’s 17.1 billion and Mexico’s 12.9 billion. It would fall between China and Nigeria on a Petrobras has achieved record producworld scale, according to the BP Statisti- tion, Pdvsa’s output has fallen since Hucal Review of World Energy. Venezuela, go Chávez was elected president in 1998. Mr. Chávez has all but re-nationalized by contrast, has some 80 billion barrels parts of the Venezuelan industry by imof proven reserves. Rapid economic growth and declining posing much-stricter terms on foreign oil production in oil-rich nations like In- oil companies. donesia, Mexico and Iran are hampering Mr. Gabrielli says that Petrobras will how much they can sell abroad, strain- avoid following the path blazed by Vening the global oil market. In some cases, ezuela and Bolivia. He said that he was the governments of these countries sub- in favor of imposing tougher terms for sidize gasoline heavily at home, which the subsalt basin where Tupi is located, encourages consumption. which the Brazilian Congress is now conBut Brazil sells fuels to its citizens es- sidering. But he says that Petrobras has sentially at market rates. And the huge already borne considerable exploration three-decade-old effort to turn sugar risk, making it a far smaller gamble for cane into ethanol has made Brazil the outside companies to explore further in largest consumer of plant-based biofuels the offshore area. And he adds that most major oil producing countries impose in the world. Petrobras’ biggest challenge will be stiff terms on foreign oil companies, esdeveloping Tupi into a major produc- pecially in times of high oil prices. “After the discovery we had,’’ he said tion field. Some analysts forecast that Tupi could cost more than $20 billion to of the potential profits to be earned by the oil majors, “this is like buying a windevelop. The oil frontier that Petrobras and ning lottery ticket.’’ SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 LE MONDE 5 BUSINESS OF GREEN Climate Challenge Drives Academics to Join Forces Efforts to Harvest The Ocean’s Energy Hold New Promise By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY Researchers off Oregon tested a buoy capturing wave energy, a process that fishermen say could harm their catch. By WILLIAM YARDLEY thousands of kilometers NEW PORT, Oregon beneath westerly winds, Power From the Sea — Chris Martinson and his have the potential to genThis fall, Oregon State University tested a prototype wave energy fellow fishermen catch crab erate four times as much buoy. Designed to be anchored 4 kilometers off the Oregon coast and shrimp in the same big energy from waves as in 40 meters of water, it uses the rise and fall of ocean waves to wave that one day could states on the East Coast, generate electricity. generate an important according to studies by part of the Northwest’s enthe Electric Power ReELECTRIC COIL MAGNETS ergy supply. Wave farms, search Institute. Located in a spar tethered Inside a float, they move harvested with high-tech All of the permits apto the ocean floor, it remains freely up and down buoys that are being tested proved have been in Orrelatively motionless. around the coil. here on the Oregon coast, egon, where transmiswould strain clean, renewsion lines run close to able power from the surg- ANTENNA the coast, making them ing sea. easier to tap into, and They might make a mess where state government of navigational charts, too. encourages businesses FLOAT SPAR “I don’t want it in my to explore new forms of fishing grounds,’’ said Mr. energy. Martinson, 40, who docks But some environmenhis boat, Libra, here at Yatalists and fishermen quina Bay. “I don’t want to worry that the recent be worried about driving rush for renewable enerWhen the coil around someone else’s milgy is more about politics, experiences a lion-dollar buoy.’’ big business and the next changing In the United States, the big thing than it is about magnetic field coastal Northwest is one clean energy. They warn created by the of the few parts of the West that too little is known heaving magwhere water is abundant, about what effect wave nets, voltage is but people are still fightfarms might have on migenerated. ing over it. Amid concerns grating fish and whales. about climate change and “The tendency with new TETHER the pollution caused by gentechnology is always to POWER LINE erating electricity with coal Source: Oregon State University minimize the downside,’’ FRANK O’CONNELL/THE NEW YORK TIMES and natural gas, Oregon is said Ms. Recht, of the fishlooking to draw power from eries commission, which the waves that pound its coast with for- in February to a company that wants to works with conservation agencies and bidding efficiency. study the ocean area near Reedsport, the fishing industry to protect fish populaIt might seem a perfect solution in a Oregon, about 90 kilometers south of tions. “I’m not prepared to take new risks region that has long been ahead of the here. Three more permits have since unless we’re conserving and respecting rest of the United States on alternative been approved by the Federal Energy the energy we already have.’’ energy. Yet the debate over the potential Regulatory Commission. For now, wave parks are expected to damage — whether to the environment, Major technical and financial obsta- be built several kilometers offshore. the fishing industry or the stunning cles remain, and energy generated from Supporters say they will barely be visviews of the Pacific — has become in- waves is not expected to start contribut- ible, it at all. tense before the first megawatt has been ing to the electrical grid in the United Philip D. Moeller, a member of the FedStates for several years. Yet like wind eral Energy Regulatory Commission transmitted to shore. “Everyone wants that silver bullet,’’ energy in its early stages in the 1980s, and a supporter of wave and tidal ensaid Fran Recht of the Pacific States wave energy is considered promising, ergy projects, said the commission was Marine Fisheries Commission. “The perhaps inevitable, with the potential to encouraging wave energy companies to question is, Is this as benign as everyone one day provide 5 percent to 10 percent of seek a new five-year “pilot license” the the nation’s energy supply, according to commission has created specifically for wants to say it is?’’ The first federal permit to conduct some projections. wave and tidal energy projects. Oregon, Washington and Northern testing for a wave energy farm off the “Let’s get this stuff in the water and coast of the United States was awarded California, where the Pacific Ocean first find out what it has to offer,’’ Mr. Moeller meets land in the contiguous United said. “Consumers want green power, Erik Olsen contributed reporting. States after gathering momentum for and this is an option.’’ Corporations and shoppers in the United States spent more than $54 million last year on carbon offset credits toward tree planting, wind farms, solar plants and other projects to balance the emissions created by, say, using a laptop computer or flying on a jet. But where exactly is that money going? The Federal Trade Commission, which regulates advertising claims, raised the question recently in its first hearing in a series on green marketing, this one focusing on carbon offsets. As more companies use offset programs to market their products as environmentally conscious, the commission said it was growing increasingly concerned that some assertions were not substantiated. Environmentalists have a word for such misleading advertising: “greenwashing.’’ With the rapid growth of green programs like carbon offsets, “there’s a heightened potential for deception,’’ said Deborah Platt Majoras, chairwoman of the commission. The F.T.C. has not updated its environmental advertising guidelines, known as the Green Guides, since 1998. Back then, the agency did not create definitions for phrases that are common now — like renewable energy, carbon offsets and sustainability. Consumers seem to be confronted with green-sounding offers at every turn. Volkswagen told buyers last year that it would offset their first year of driving by planting in what it called the VW Forest in the lower Mississippi alluvial valley (the price starts at $18). Dell lets visitors to its site fill their various environmental issues. Duke’s Corporate Sustainability Initiative, which is a joint venture of its earth sciences, business and environmental policy schools, is also a founding member of the Chicago Sustainable Business Alliance. Its faculty and students have already developed a wind turbine for private use, and have helped local businesses reduce their carbon footprints. Sometimes, government provides money. Mr. Fink notes that Phoenix is an example of the so-called urban heat island effect — the phenomenon in which big cities absorb heat during the day and release it at night, causing temperatures to rise. So his institute has received funds from the Environmental Protection Agency, the State of Arizona and local businesses for a project to see if certain construction materials can alleviate the problem. Companies are helping to finance the centers. Unlike traditional partnerships between business and academia, in which companies that provide funds have the right to commercialize any breakthroughs, most of these funds come with no conditions attached. Several years ago Enterprise Renta-Car donated $10 million to the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis for research on growing crops for food. This year it gave $25 million to create the Enterprise Institute in con- Business majors can advise engineers about commercial potential. junction with Danforth, to do research into biobased fuels. “Danforth understands cellulosic research, so they are best positioned to figure out how to make fuel from soy and corn,” said Patrick T. Farrell, vice president for corporate responsibility at Enterprise. Four companies — ExxonMobil, General Electric, Schlumberger and Toyota — have contributed to the Stanford University Global Climate and Energy Project, which explores new energy technologies. The Shell Oil Foundation has been financing Rice University’s Shell Center for Sustainability since 2002. Wal-Mart has promised money for an Applied Sustainability Center at the University of Arkansas. Berkeley, meanwhile, is using Dow’s gift to set up a Sustainable Products and Solutions Program within its existing Center for Responsible Business. The program is now taking applications for grants from Berkeley students and professors who want to conduct collaborative research into topics like providing clean drinking water or more efficient fuels. “Commercialization takes forever if the chemical engineers and the business types do not coordinate,” said Kellie A. McElhaney, the center’s director. “So think how much easier it will be for chemistry graduates to work inside a company if they already know how to interact with the business side.” Dell Computer lets visitors to its site balance purchases with carbon offsets. But environmental marketing faces new scrutiny. Expansion of Green Programs Raises Potential for Cheating By LOUISE STORY It is a basic tenet of university research: Economists conduct joint studies, chemists join forces in the laboratory, political scientists share ideas about other cultures — but rarely do the researchers cross disciplinary lines. The political landscape of academia, combined with the fight for grant money, has always fostered competition far more than collaboration. But the threat of global warming may just change all that. Look at what’s happening at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York. In September the school established the Golisano Institute for Sustainability, aimed at getting students and professors from different disciplines to collaborate in studying the environmental ramifications of production and consumption. “The academic tradition is to let one discipline dominate new programs,” said Nabil Nasr, the institute’s director. “But the problem of sustainability cuts across economics, social elements, engineering, everything. It simply cannot be solved by one discipline, or even by coupling two disciplines.” Neil Hawkins, Dow Chemical’s vice president for sustainability, sees it that way, too. Thus, Dow is giving $10 million, spread over five years, to the University of California, Berkeley, to set up a sustainability center. “Berkeley has one of the strongest chemical engineering schools in the world, but it will be the M.B.A.’s who understand areas like microfinance solutions to drinking water problems,” Mr. Hawkins said. More universities are setting up stand-alone centers that offer neutral ground on which engineering students can work on alternative fuels while business students calculate the economics of those fuels and political science majors figure how to make the fuels palatable to governments. “We give professors a chance to step beyond their usual areas of expertise, and we give students exposure to the worlds of science and business,” said Daniel C. Esty, director of the Yale Center for Business and the Environment, a joint effort between the School of Management and the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. In 2006, the University of Tennessee consolidated all of its environmental research programs under a new Institute for a Secure and Sustainable Environment. In 2004, Arizona State University inaugurated its Global Institute of Sustainability. The institute is run by Jonathan Fink, the university’s sustainability officer. It is impossible to quantify the growth of stand-alone centers. There is no naming convention — some are sustainability centers, some are environmental institutes and some are global warming initiatives. And many do not stand alone at all, but are neatly tucked inside an existing school. Many sustainability centers address global cultures, business ethics and corporate social responsibility along with environmental issues. Many of the centers have links to the business world. Mr. Esty said Yale was developing an “eco-services clinic” that would help companies address shopping carts with carbon offsets for their printers, computer monitors and even for themselves (the last at a cost of $99 a year). Continental Airlines lets travelers track the carbon impact of their itineraries. To manage the carbon offsets, big consumer brands are turning to a growing number of small companies, like TerraPass, and nonprofits, like Carbonfund .org. These intermediaries also cater to corporations that want to become “carbon-neutral’’ by purchasing offsets for the carbon dioxide they release. Ms. Majoras of the F.T.C. pointed out that spokesmen for events like the Super Bowl and the Academy Awards have recently started saying that their events are carbon-neutral (though the Academy Awards drew criticism for the way its offsets were handled). The F.T.C. has not accused anyone of wrongdoing — neither the providers of carbon offsets nor the consumer brands that sell them. But environmentalists say — and the F.T.C.’s hearings suggest — that it is only a matter of time until the market faces greater scrutiny from the government or environmental organizations. “Is there green substance behind the green sparkle?’’ said Daniel C. Esty, di- rector of the Center for Business and the Environment at Yale University. “The carbon market is a leading example of the challenge of making sure that when people put their money into what they hope will improve their planet, that there is real follow-through.’’ Even the companies that market carbon offsets say they have wondered if the providers were living up to their promises. When Gaiam, a yoga-equipment company, began selling offsets for shipping to consumers through the Conservation Fund, a nonprofit organization, Chris Fisher, the company’s general manager, says he insisted on visiting one of the tree sites in Louisiana. “Not only did I want to know it existed, I wanted to make sure it was being done the way they said it was being done,’’ Mr. Fischer said. “It’s not just ‘did they do it?’ — it’s ‘did they do it right?’ ’’ 6 LE MONDE SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Hope for Mankind as Monkey’s Mind Propels Robot By SANDRA BLAKESLEE If Idoya could talk, she would have plenty to boast about. On January 10, the 5-kilogram, 81-centimeter monkey made a 91-kilogram, 152-centimeter humanoid robot walk on a treadmill using only her brain activity. She was in North Carolina, and the robot was in Japan. It was the first time that brain signals had been used to make a robot walk, said Dr. Miguel A. L. Nicolelis, a neuroscientist at Duke University whose laboratory designed and carried out the experiment. In 2003, Dr. Nicolelis’s team proved that monkeys could use their thoughts alone to control a robotic arm for reaching and grasping. These experiments, Dr. Nicolelis said, are the first steps toward a brain machine interface that might permit paralyzed people to walk by directing devices with their thoughts. Electrodes in the person’s brain would send signals to a device worn on the hip, like a cellphone or pager, that would relay those signals to a pair of braces, a kind of external skeleton, worn on the legs. “When that person thinks about walking,” he said, “walking happens.’’ Richard A. Andersen, an expert on such systems at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena who was not involved in the experiment, said that it was “an important advance to achieve locomotion with a brain machine interface.” Another expert, Nicho Hatsopoulos, a professor at the University of Chicago, said that the experiment was “an exciting development. And the use of an exoskeleton could be quite fruitful.’’ In preparing for the experiment, Idoya was trained to walk upright on a treadmill. She held onto a bar with her hands and got treats as she walked at different speeds, forward and backward, for 15 minutes a day, 3 days a week, for 2 M����� �� T������ On January 10, scientists used a monkey in North Carolina to control a robot in Japan. � A 5-kilogram monkey named Idoya VIDEO SCREEN was trained to walk upright on a treadmill. � The monkey watched the robot ROBOT over a video link, and was rewarded when she made the robot walk. After an hour, the monkey’s treadmill was switched off, but her brain continued to control the robot, which continued walking. MONKEY ACTUAL MOTION MASAFUMI YAMAMOTO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES SENSOR READOUT SIGNALS CONTROL ROBOT Gordon Cheng, in Japan, with the robot he designed. A monkey in the United States controlled the robot via its thoughts. PREDICTED MOTION � Electrodes implanted in her � The brain signals were processed brain monitored the activity of 250 to 300 neurons. � Data was transmitted over a high-speed and used to predict the monkey’s leg movements, with 90 percent accuracy. Internet connection from North Carolina to a robot in Kyoto, Japan. Source: Miguel Nicolelis, Department of Neurobiology, Duke University Paralyzed people may be able to walk by directing devices with their minds. months. Meanwhile, electrodes implanted in the so-called leg area of Idoya’s brain recorded the activity of 250 to 300 neurons that fired while she walked. A special high-speed camera captured her movements on video. The video and brain cell activity were then combined and translated into a format that a computer could read. This format is able to predict with 90 percent accuracy all permutations of Idoya’s leg movements three to four seconds before the movement takes place. Earlier this month in North Carolina, an alert and ready-to-work Idoya stepped onto her treadmill and began walking at a steady pace with electrodes implanted in her brain. Her walking pattern and brain signals were collected, fed into the computer and transmitted over a high-speed Internet link to a robot in Kyoto, Japan. The robot, called CB for Computational Brain, has the same range of motion as a human. It can dance, squat, point and “feel’’ the ground with sensors embedded in its feet, and it will not fall over when shoved. Designed by Gordon Cheng and colleagues at the ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Kyoto, the robot was chosen for the experiment because of its extraordinary ability to THE NEW YORK TIMES mimic human locomotion. As Idoya’s brain signals streamed into CB’s actuators, her job was to make the robot walk steadily via her own brain activity. She could see the back of CB’s legs on an enormous movie screen in front of her treadmill and received treats if she could make the robot’s joints move in tandem with her own leg movements. As Idoya walked, CB walked at exactly the same pace. Recordings from Idoya’s brain revealed that her neurons fired each time she took a step and each time the robot took a step. “It’s walking!’’ Dr. Nicolelis said. “That’s one small step for a robot and one giant leap for a primate,’’ he added in a twist on the first words spoken on the moon. The signals from Idoya’s brain sent to the robot, and the video of the robot sent back to Idoya, were relayed in less than a quarter of a second, he said. That was so fast that the robot’s movements meshed with the monkey’s experience. An hour into the experiment, the researchers pulled a trick on Idoya. They stopped her treadmill. Everyone held their breath. What would Idoya do? “Her eyes remained focused like crazy on CB’s legs,’’ Dr. Nicolelis said. She got treats galore. The robot kept walking. And the researchers were jubilant. When Idoya’s brain signals made the robot walk, some neurons in her brain controlled her own legs, whereas others controlled the robot’s legs. The latter set of neurons had basically become attuned to the robot’s legs after about an hour of practice. Idoya cannot talk but her brain signals revealed that after the treadmill stopped, she was able to make CB walk for three full minutes by attending to its legs and not her own. “This is science fiction coming to life,’’ Dr. Nicolelis said. 0 Be Calm. Terror Fears May Raise Heart Risk. Which is more of a threat to Americans’ health: Al Qaeda or the Department of Homeland Security? An intriguing new study suggests the answer is not so clear-cut. Although it’s impossible to calculate the pain that terrorist attacks inflict on victims and society, when statistiESSAY cians look at just the numbers, they have variously estimated the chances of the average person dying in America at the hands of international terrorists to be comparable to the risk of being struck by an asteroid or drowning in a toilet. But worrying about terrorism could be taking a toll on the hearts of millions of Americans. The evidence, published this month in the Archives of General Psychiatry, comes from researchers who began tracking the health of a representative sample of more than 2,700 Americans before September 2001. After the attacks of September 11, the scientists monitored people’s fears of terrorism over the next several years and found that the most fearful people were three to five times more likely than the rest to receive diagnoses of new cardiovascular ailments. Almost all the people in the study lived outside New York or Washington and didn’t know any victims of the attacks. But more than a 10th of them reported acute stress symptoms (like insomnia or nightmares) right after the attacks, and over the next three years more than 40 percent said they kept worrying about a terrorist attack affecting themselves or a family member. Their worries were understandable, given the continual warnings from Washington. Officials repeatedly raised the color-coded level of the National Threat Advisory. About a third to a half of Americans have continued to tell pollsters that they’re personally worried about being victims of a terrorist attack, and that an attack is somewhat or very likely within several months. One of the authors of the study, Roxane Cohen Silver, of the University of California, Irvine, is a psychologist JOHN TIERNEY DR. PAUL SCHOLTE /UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM Dracaena trees, also called Dragon’s blood trees, produce a scarlet resin that was used by ancient cultures. Off Yemen, a Storied Tree Is Vulnerable SOCOTRA, Yemen — “I feel as though I’m walking through a cemetery,” said Paul Scholte, an environmental scientist who is the chief officer for the United Nations Development Program on this arid, windswept island, 320 kilometers off Yemen. He was hiking over a steep mountainside through the world’s grandest stand, and one of its last, of dragon’s blood trees, Dracaena cinnabari. The dracaenas were born 65 million years ago on the supercontinent Gondwana. After Gondwana split, forming the Persian Gulf and most of the land masses in the Southern Hemisphere, the trees thrived from the Mediterranean to the Middle East. Now they are down to a few isolated spots in areas like the Canary, Cape Verde and Madeira Islands. But nowhere are they as populous, storied and majestic as on Socotra. Cut a hole in the smooth bark, and it bleeds red, the cinnabar resin of yore, transmuted into a deep scarlet lacquer for Chinese emperors or fired into ver- milion for Persian emirs. (It is not to be confused with the other cinnabar, a heavy mineral in the mercury family.) Though dracaenas have survived long droughts in Socotra because they can retain water for years, they are vulnerable to the goats that help sustain the island’s livestock-based economy. The population is just 40,000, mainly fishermen and herders who speak an ancient, unwritten Semitic language. Though small in size, the goats eat a lot — including the shoots of young trees. Partly as a result, scientists say, the dracaena area is 20 percent smaller. A recent study projected a further loss of 45 percent in the next 80 years. The only stable tree populations are on high mountain peaks inaccessible to even the goats. Meanwhile, the United Nations and the Royal Botanic Garden of Edinburgh are helping finance a tree nursery near the coast. No one knows whether those trees will reach adolescence. JEFF ROTH who is on an advisory council to the Homeland Security Department. “I’ve regularly pointed out to the department that there are psychological consequences to the raising of the alert,” Dr. Silver said. “Now we’re demonstrating that it may have physical consequences.” Continual fear of terrorism is a strain on the social fabric, too. People become reluctant to even get together when public spaces are turned into fortified zones. Civil liberties erode and mistrust increases when the authorities keep warning of lurking terrorists and urging people to report “suspicious” activity. Even before this study, some doctors were arguing that terrorism wasn’t nearly as dangerous as the related “epidemic of fear,” as Marc Siegel called it in a 2005 book, “False Alarm.” “The fear response causes the heart to pump harder and faster, Terrorism is unlikely to kill you, but worrying about it might. the nerves to fire more quickly,” Dr. Siegel, of the New York University School of Medicine, said. “Excess triggering of this system of response causes the organs to wear down. For a person who is always on the alert, the result is a burned-out body.” What if the alerts stopped? What if the security officials looked at this new medical evidence — or at their own perfect record of false alarms — and decided that the nation did not need to be in a perpetual state of yellow alert? I guess that’s not likely to happen. No politician wants to be blamed for failing to anticipate a terrorist attack. But maybe these officials could be induced to take one more precaution. The next time they raise the threat level to orange or red, they could add, “Warning: Heeding this alert may be hazardous to your health.” LE MONDE SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 7 H E A LT H & F I T N E S S FOOTNOTES Preserving the Sense and Skill of Balance Treating Sinus Infections Sinus infections are all too familiar in the winter season. For most people, they start with a throbbing headache, swell into a fever and result in the inevitable arrival of thick nasal secretions. For years, doctors have prescribed what seemed like simple cures: a prescription for an antibiotic like amoxicillin or a steroid nasal spray. They may be the standard medications, but perhaps they are not as effective as once thought. Several studies have examined their effects and found that they are no better at shortening a sinus infection than no medication at all. The latest study, published in December in The Journal of the American Medical Association, looked at 240 cases. The subjects were assigned to four groups for different treatments: a full amoxicillin course for a week along with 400 units of steroid spray for 10 days, just the spray, just the amoxicillin or just a placebo. The treatments were no better than a placebo, a finding shown in studies of children. The reason is not entirely clear, but researchers suspect that antibiotics may not be very good at reaching the sinuses. Experts recommend other approaches like taking ibuprofen, inhaling steam or using salt water to flush the nasal cavity. ANAHAD O’CONNOR Alcohol and Cold Weather According to studies over the years, while alcohol may seem like the perfect cold-weather beverage because it creates a sensation of warmth, it actually decreases core body temperature — regardless of the temperature outside — and increases the risk of hypothermia. The normal process that makes us feel cold occurs when blood flows away from the skin and into the organs, which increases core body temperature. Alcohol reverses this process, increasing the flow of blood to the skin and setting off a sharp drop in body temperature. It also reverses other reflexes that control body temperature. A study by the Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine found that the “primary mechanism by which alcohol exacerbates the fall in body core temperature’’ is by reducing the ability to shiver, the body’s way of creating warmth. A study, published in 2005, found that after a single drink, the body tries to counteract the brief sensation of warmth caused by increased blood flow to the skin by increasing its rate of sweating, which decreases body temperature even further. Several studies have found that alcohol ingestion often plays a role in hypothermia-related injuries and deaths. ANAHAD O’CONNOR Scott McCredie is a health and science writer in Seattle, Washington, who says he “discovered” what he calls “the lost sense’’ of balance after he watched in horror as his 67-year-old father tumbled off a boulder and disappeared from sight during a hike in the Cascades. Though his father was not injured, Mr. McCredie became intrigued by what might have caused this experienced hiker, an athletic and graceful PERSONAL man, to lose his balance suddenly. HEALTH His resulting science-and-history-based exploration led to a book, “Balance: In Search of the Lost Sense,” published last June. Noting that each year one in three Americans 65 and older falls and that falls and their sometimes disastrous medical consequences are becoming more common as the population ages, Mr. McCredie wonders why balance is not talked about in fitness circles as often as strength training, aerobics and stretching. He learned that the sense of balance begins to degrade in one’s 20s and that it is downhill — literally and figuratively — from there unless steps are taken to preserve or restore this delicate and critically important ability to maintain equilibrium. Vertigo, which can be caused by inner ear infections, low blood pressure, brain injuries, certain medications and some chronic diseases, is loss of balance in the extreme. Anyone who has experienced it — even if just from twirling in a circle — knows how disorienting and dangerous it can be. Without a sense of balance, just about everything else can become an insurmountable obstacle. E�������� �� I������ ���� ������� One normal consequence of aging is a steady decline in the three Move slowly. main sensory contributors to good Hold each position for balance — vision, proprioceptors on one second. the bottoms of the feet that communicate position information to the Repeat 8 to 15 times. brain, and the tiny hairs in the semiHold onto a chair with circular canals of the inner ear that one hand for balance. relay gravity and motion informaTry no hands if steady, tion to the brain. Add to that the loss then with eyes closed. of muscle strength and flexibility that typically accompany aging and Source: ‘‘Fitness Over Fifty’’ by the National Institute on Aging you have a fall waiting to happen. But while certain declines with other daily activity” like putting on pants, walkage are unavoidable, physical therapists, physiating on uneven ground or reaching for something rists and fitness experts have repeatedly proved on a shelf. that much of the sense of balance can be preserved “Remember, balance is a motor skill,” Dr. Mofand even restored through exercises that require fat, professor of physical therapy at New York no special equipment or training. These exercises University, said in an interview. “To enhance it, are as simple as standing on one foot while brushyou have to train your balance in the same way you ing your teeth or walking heel-to-toe with one foot would have to train your muscles for strength and directly in front of the other. your heart for aerobic capacity.” Marilyn Moffat and Carole B. Lewis, physiDr. Moffat pointed out that balance is twofold: cal therapists in New York and Washington, static while standing still and dynamic when movrespectively, agree with Mr. McCredie that “baling, as in walking and climbing stairs. Two main ance is an area of physical fitness that is often routes improve balance — exercises that increase overlooked,” but they seek to correct that in their the strength of the ankle, knee and hip muscles recent book “Age-Defying Fitness.” They define and exercises that improve the function of the senbalance as “the ability of your body to maintain sory system that controls balance. equilibrium when you stand, walk or perform any JANE E. BRODY To Work Out Better And Longer, Try Abba or Green Day By STEVEN KURUTZ STUART GOLDENBERG Secondhand Smoke Damage Researchers say that for the first time, they have been able to get an image of lungs apparently damaged by secondhand tobacco smoke. The lungs of people exposed to a lot of smoke are dotted with yellow set against a red background. The problem, the researchers say, is that the yellow indicates where there may be tiny holes and extended spaces that should not be there. The scientists, who presented their findings to a recent conference of the Radiological Society of North America, do not make any broad claims. “The effects of secondhand cigarette smoke on respiratory health are still under debate,’’ they wrote. But they said the images confirmed for the first time that tobacco smoke can cause microscopic changes in the lung. The researchers, led by Chengbo Wang of the University of Virginia — now at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia — used an M.R.I. to examine the lungs of 60 people, 45 of whom had never smoked. The researchers divided that group into those with low secondhand smoke exposure and those with high exposure. To allow the M.R.I. to capture the images, the researchers asked the volunteers to inhale a helium-nitrogen mixture whose movement could be traced by the machine as it spread through the lungs. ERIC NAGOURNEY Fitness magazines and Web sites love to ask readers about their favorite workout music while presenting their playlists or suggestions from celebrities. Self.com features the “ ’80s cardio playlist,” which includes the video classic “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” by Wham! On Fitnessmagazine .com, the singer Rihanna reveals her favorite workout songs — immodestly recommending four of her own for “when you have to pick up the pace on the treadmill.” The playlist fixation has a scientific basis: Studies have shown that listening to music during exercise can improve results, both in terms of being a motivator (people exercise longer and more vigorously to music) and as a distraction from fatigue. But are certain songs more effective than others? Generally speaking there is a science to choosing an effective exercise soundtrack, said Dr. Costas Karageorghis, an associate professor of sport psychology at Brunel University in England, who has studied the effects of music on physical performance for 20 years. Dr. Karageorghis created the Brunel Music Rating Inventory, a questionnaire that is used to rate the motivational qualities of music in the context of sport and exercise. For nearly a decade, he has been administering the questionnaire to panels representing different demographics, who listen to 90 seconds of a song and rate its motivational qualities for various physical activities. One of the most important elements, Dr. Karageorghis found, is a song’s tempo, which should be between 120 and 140 beats-per-minute, or B.P.M. That pace coincides with the range of most commercial dance music, and many rock songs are near that range, which leads people to develop “an aesthetic appreciation for that tempo,” he said. It also roughly corresponds to the average person’s heart rate during a routine workout — say, 20 minutes on an elliptical trainer by a person who is more casual STUART BRADFORD Many can be done as part of a daily routine. Dr. Moffat recommends starting with strength exercises and, as you improve, adding balance training by doing some of them with closed eyes. Sit-to-stand exercises once or twice a day increase ankle, leg and hip strength and help the body adjust to changes in position without becoming dizzy after being sedentary for a long time. Sit straight in a firm chair (do not lean against the back) with arms crossed. Stand THE NEW YORK TIMES up straight and sit down again as quickly as you can without using your arms. Repeat the exercise three times and build to 10 repetitions. Heel-to-toe tandem walking is another simple exercise, resembling plank walking popular with young children. It is best done on a firm, uncarpeted floor. With stomach muscles tight and chin tucked in, place one foot in front of the other such that the heel of the front foot nearly touches the toe of the back foot. Walk 10 or more feet and repeat the exercise once or twice a day. Also try walking on your toes and then walking on your heels to strengthen your ankles. Another helpful exercise is sidestepping. In addition, the slow, continuous movements of tai chi, that popular Chinese exercise, have been shown in scientific studies to improve balance and reduce the risk of falls. Uptempo songs can motivate during exercise and help distract from fatigue. has been running to the Green Day CD “American Idiot” because, she said, “There’s no way you can run slow to Green Day.” Haile Gebrselassie, the Olympian from Ethiopia who has won the gold medal at 10,000 meters, often requested that the techno song “Scatman,” which has a B.P.M. of around 135, be played over the sound system during his races. Ms. Goldberg also includes on her playlist “Don’t Phunk With My Heart” by the Black Eyed Peas (130 B.P.M.), “Mr. Brightside” by the Killers (150 B.P.M.), and “Dancing Queen” by Abba. The musical style that seems to most reliably contain a high B.P.M. is dance music, said Richard Petty, the founder of Power Music, a company that has produced workout compilations for instructors and fitness enthusiasts for two decades. “A rock song doesn’t have that same consistency,” said Mr. Petty, a former D.J. Much of the research done on music and exercise is geared toward aerobic workouts like jogging or STEPHANIE KUYKENDAL FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES other vigorous exercise. But as anyexerciser than fitness fanatic. one who has heard Metallica blasting from a weight Dr. Karageorghis said “Push It” by Salt-N-Pe- room stereo knows, music is a motivator in strength pa and “Drop It Like It’s Hot” by Snoop Dogg are training, too. around that range, as is the dance remix of “Um“The vast majority of bodybuilders are fans of brella” by Rihanna (so maybe the pop star was heavy metal, if not in their personal life at least in onto something). For a high-intensity workout like the gym,” said Shawn Perine, a senior writer at Flex a hard run, he suggested Glenn Frey’s “The Heat magazine. Loud, aggressive music, he said, “keeps Is On.” you elevated, especially in between sets.” Music preferences are as idiosyncratic as workout Mr. Perine prefers to work out to hip-hop. “Let’s routines, of course. Allison Goldberg, a 39-year-old say you’ve done a grueling set of squats,” he said. life coach and amateur runner who lives in Texas “You’re out of breath, and L. L. Cool J’s ‘Mama Said and who trained for the recent Houston Marathon, Knock You Out’ comes on. Your energy won’t flag.” 8 LE MONDE SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 2008 ARTS & STYLES An Old Dance Mentor Teaches in a New Medium RAHAV SEGEV FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Dengue Fever, left to right: Senon Williams, Ethan Holtzman, Chhom Nimol, Paul Smith and Zac Holtzman. California Band Revives Cambodian Pop By RJ SMITH LOS ANGELES — Dengue Fever is a Los Angeles band featuring a Cambodian-born singer and five American altrockers who regularly embarrass her onstage. On the cover of its new album, “Venus on Earth” (M80), the guitarist Zac Holtzman, with a long beard and goggles, drives a scooter with the vocalist Chhom Nimol sitting demurely behind him sidesaddle, the way a good Cambodian girl would ride through the streets of Phnom Penh. Dengue Fever, which specializes in an unlikely mix of 1960s Cambodian pop, rock and other genres, is a lot like that image. Propriety and smart and sarcastic indie rock race by, blurring together. It is a band of rollicking lightness that keeps coming up with deep themes. At a recent show in the Echo Park neighborhood here, the male members were downright silly, but Ms. Chhom, singing mostly in Khmer and dressed in shimmering Cambodian silk garments she designs herself, looked like old-school royalty. After the set, when she lighted a candle onstage to honor those killed by the Khmer Rouge, her voice broke and tears ran down her face. “I think we balance each other out,” Mr. Holtzman said in a recent interview. “She’ll bring the whole place to a hush, and that would be a long night if it was just that. And then we smash the place up.” Dengue Fever formed after the Farfisa organ player Ethan Holtzman, Zac’s brother, traveled to Cambodia in 1997, discovered ’60s Cambodian pop and returned with a stack of cassettes. This was not the sort of roots-driven folk sounds ethnomusicologists crave; this was locally produced, gleefully garish trash infused with the surf guitar and soul arrangements that Armed Forces Radio regularly played across the region during the Vietnam War. It flourished until the Khmer Rouge came to power in the 1970s and dismantled Cambodian culture. Dengue Fever’s music is a tribute to that lost pop. But the six members of Dengue Fever form a quintessential Los Angeles crew, with a mix of back- The Khmer Rouge put an end to a gleefully garish style of guitar rock. grounds and interests that seems fitting in a region with the largest Cambodian population in the United States (in Long Beach, south of downtown Los Angeles) and a flourishing indie rock scene (in the hills east of Hollywood). The band offers a cultural mix; beyond the obscure Cambodian pop you can hear psychedelia, spaghetti western guitars, the lounge groove of Ethiopian soul and Bollywood soundtracks. Now Dengue Fever is starting to make its mark far from its hometown. The band recently returned from the Womex world music festival in Seville, Spain. British publications have included it in “next big thing” roundups, and Dengue Fever’s songs have been on television and film soundtracks, including the director Jim Jarmusch’s “Broken Flowers.” A new documentary, “Sleepwalking Through the Mekong,” that follows the group on its first trip as a band to Cambodia, seems likely to help it gain more attention. “The underground people are getting hip to world music, and the world music side is getting hip to how you don’t have to have a dreadlock wig and Guatemalan pants to be cool,” said the bassist Senon Williams, sitting in his backyard with Ms. Chhom and Zac Holtzman. “Now that Nimol is going to start singing more in English,” he added, “it’s making new things possible for us. Nimol really wants to connect with the American audience more now.” Dmitri Vietze, a publicist and marketer for many global music acts, sees the band as “part of a larger developmental pattern” in world music. “Can you stick them in the worldmusic bin at brick and mortar retail stores?” Mr. Vietze asked. “I don’t know. But as far as how they fit into world music in a larger philosophical context, they are a part of a huge and promising future.” He noted that the American market had been introduced to world sounds most often by American artists, like Paul Simon. Now, he said, he sees a movement toward music made and influenced by émigrés: “We’re seeing more and more bands like Dengue Fever.” The poet and dramatist Federico García Lorca in 1932. He was shot by Fascists in 1936. Artists Find Inspiration In a Spanish Poet’s Refuge By DALE FUCHS GRANADA, Spain — Federico García Lorca called it “el duende” — in Spanish, the elf — a dark, irrational muse that leads artists to tragic depths. This dangerous goblin, who delights in the “tiny weeds of death,” as the early20th-century Spanish poet and dramatist said in a lecture in Havana, haunted the streets of García Lorca’s “Poet in New York’’ and the moonlit night of “Blood Wedding.’’ It refused to take pity on the barren wombs, the weeping guitars or the silver-eyed Gypsy women of other García Lorca works. And the little imp is making trouble still. More than 70 years after García Lorca’s death by a fascist firing squad at the start of the Spanish Civil War, the shadowy elf apparently inhabits García Lorca’s country home here, La Huerta de San Vicente, where he wrote some of his most famous plays and sought refuge in the weeks before he was killed. Thirty international artists have visited the estate over the last two years seeking traces of that mysterious spirit. They stalked it in García Lorca’s bedroom, where he wrote until dawn; beside his piano, where he played for his younger siblings; and before the cold kitchen hearth, where, according to his niece, Laura García Lorca, president of the Federico García Lorca Foundation, he chatted with the servants about the Andalusian folklore that colors his verse. The product of these artists’ visits is an exhibition of García Lorca-inspired installations, titled “Everstill,’’ which opened in late November at the country estate. The García Lorca family spent summers at this traditional Andalusian home, now a museum on the edge of the city, from 1926 until the poet’s death in 1936. “I did a meditation on his bed,” said John Giorno, a New York poet and performance artist who was the subject of Andy Warhol’s 1963 film “Sleep,” at the exhibition opening. “I thought, ‘That’s where he wrote the poems, that’s where he felt lonely, that’s where he plotted the escape from the family he loved because he was a gay man like me.’ ” Mr. Giorno’s bedside rhapsody helped him write a poem dedicated to García Lorca: By JULIE BLOOM music, without the costumes, before NEW YORK — “O.K., position, ready it goes to the theater — so you see the and …” work as he envisioned it, very purely, Merce Cunningham was beginning his and there’s something very essential company class, as he does every Monday about that. It gives you a sense of the morning, in an 11th-floor studio at the identity of the works, their structure, Westbeth Building in the West Village their rhythm, and the class material is neighborhood of Manhattan. Perched very often material that is going into a on a stool in a corner of a studio, Mr. Cun- new dance.” ningham led the class of 25 dancers. DeSecond, the full 90-minute weekly spite his frailty (he turns 89 in April), he classes will be available to universities was precise in his instructions. “Curve and colleges by subscription, allowing and tilt, not fast,” he chided his dancers them to invite Mr. Cunningham into any as they followed his every direction. studio as a virtual instructor. This almost sacred ritual of class, The program’s third component is previously experienced only by Cun- preservation. Working closely with ningham dancers and selected guests, Howard Besser, director of the Moving will soon be on view to anyone with an Image, Archiving and Preservation Internet connection and curiosity. Be- Program in the Tisch School of the Arts ginning next month the Merce Cun- at New York University, the company ningham Dance Company will begin has decided to hand over all the digital recording “Mondays With Merce,” an recordings to be archived by Bobst Lionline video program featuring weekly brary at N.Y.U. episodes of Mr. Cunningham’s Monday Not all the dancers were comfortable class, on its Web site, merce.org. The with the cameras’ invasion of their class program will provide a glimpse into Mr. space, said Andrea Weber, a company Cunningham’s artistic process. member. “The idea for ‘Mondays’ was Trevor Carlson, the company’s ex- uncomfortable just because class is alecutive director, said the idea for the ways such a private affair,” she said. program was born two years ago, when For Mr. Cunningham — who has long the company was offered the opportunity to license a work to a group of students in Brazil and wanted Mr. Cunningham to be there. “Merce is not traveling as much with the company,” Mr. Carlson said, “and I thought that there might be some way, given what we’d seen at some of the other venues we’d performed at, particularly Stanford University, that there might be a way to do a live feed.” A feed was unfeasible at the time, but the idea led to “Mondays With Merce.” “The actual hope became: How can we take Merce outside our studio without actually having to take him out? How can we bring what he does ANDREA MOHIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES here, what we do here, to the outside community?” Mr. Carlson said. Videos of classes taught by Merce The program has three major Cunningham will be available online. components. First, there will be 26 episodes online beginning in September. Each will include 30 to 40 used technology in innovative ways to minutes of technique class, edited and enhance his choreography — these steps supplemented with interviews with Mr. are just part of the natural advancement Cunningham, collaborators like the art- of the art form. ists Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschen“I don’t think it’s anything that you berg and some of the original dancers control,” he said after class. “I simply from the pieces, and archival material. think that it’s something bound to hapThe episodes will show the inspiration pen, so if one can facilitate it — do somefor dances and reveal the threads that thing that makes it clearer — that is link one work to another. good. I don’t think, given the way people “If the company is performing ‘Ocean,’ see now, in this enormously expanded which is based on the circle,” said Nancy way, you can say this shouldn’t be done Dalva, a dance historian who will be di- or it should be done, because it’s going to recting these edited episodes, “we can be done one way or another.” go get archival footage of ‘Beach Birds,’ Though technology offers new opporwhich has the same circle in it, and show tunities for viewers to see his work, Mr. the same Matisse poster, which Merce Cunningham emphasized that his dancsaw in his dentist’s office before he made ers come first. “I do what I do hoping it the dance.” will help the people who are participatThese episodes are “a way to bring the ing,” he said. “It’s not for onlookers. I person at the other side of the computer don’t have a basic objection to them, but to Westbeth,” she said. “You see dance it’s not for them. It’s for the people who the way Merce makes it — without the are doing it.” I want it to rain for the rest of my life I want it to pour until the end of time. He engraved it on four “Poetry Fountains” in the estate gardens. Other artists took the inspiration of García Lorca’s bedroom more literally. Gilbert and George — Gilbert Prousch and George Passmore — photographed themselves in tweed suits on García Lorca’s narrow wood-frame bed. The suggestive title of the image, now hanging above the poet’s desk, is “In Bed With Lorca.” The two lie rigid beneath a painting of a weeping Virgin Mary, like estranged lovers or corpses at a wake. “It is about oppression, about hiding his sexuality from his mother,” George said. “If you want to become close to a subject, you have to become close to the less public part of his life,” Gilbert concluded. Beneath García Lorca’s bed, two Spanish artists, DaDALE FUCHS vid Bestué and Marc Vives, installed a puppet show reminiscent of the ones García Lorca produced with the composer Manuel de Falla for his youngest sister. These marionettes, however, take the form of mechanized insects, and their recorded lines are adapted from García Lorca’s play about a family vendetta, “Blood Wedding.” “Under the bed is where the monsters live,’’ Mr. Bestué said. “If somebody could tell the story of this house, it would be the little critters that remained there.” The American artist Sarah Morris, known for her flashy geometric designs, painted a canvas inspired by the colorful Moorish tiles in García Lorca’s bedroom. The Korean installation artist Koo Jeong-a recreated an often-photographed García Lorca suit, sized to fit her own petite frame. In the kitchen an eerie soundtrack by the flamenco singer Enrique Morente combines the bellowing of cante jondo, or deep song, that echoes in García Lorca’s writings with the tolling of bells and extended silences. “Lorca is an artist’s poet,” said the exhibition curator, Hans Ulbrich Obrist, co-director of international projects at the Serpentine Gallery in London. “Generation after generation has been inspired by him.” García Lorca displayed a postmodern distrust of the printed word, said Andrés Soria Olmedo, a professor of literature at the University of Granada. The poet exalted the spontaneity of a reading or a flamenco performance long before words like “happening” and “poetry slam” made it into anyone’s vocabulary. And that spontaneity — that willingness to struggle with the dark spirit that overcomes an artist in a moment’s burst — is what García Lorca called “duende.” It is what younger generations are still seeking, Mr. Obrist said.