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6.20.2010

Kenaf: The Small Plant with Big Potential

6.19.2010 8:00 AM

Boosters hope kenaf will replace trees in paper and other products and sequester carbon dioxide.


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By Editors of E/The Environmental Magazine

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EarthTalk is a Q&A column from E/The Environmental Magazine
Dear EarthTalk: What is "kenaf" paper? From what I've heard, it's good for the environment. But what exactly are its benefits and where can I obtain some?-- Tiffany Mikamo, via e-mail
Kenaf, a fast-growing, non-invasive annual hibiscus plant related to cotton, okra and hemp, makes ideal paper fiber as well as a great source material for burlap, clothing, canvas, particleboard and rope. Its primary use around the world today is for animal forage, but humans enjoy its high-protein seed oil to add a nutritious and flavorful kick to a wide range of foods. In fact, kenaf has been grown for centuries in Africa, China and elsewhere for these and other purposes, but environmentalists see its future in replacing slower-growing trees as our primary source for paper.
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) research shows that kenaf yields some six to 10 tons of dry fiber per acre per year, which is three to five times more than the yield of Southern Pine trees -- now the dominant paper pulp source in the U.S. And to top it off, researchers believe kenaf absorbs more carbon dioxide -- the chief "greenhouse gas" behind global warming --than any other plant or tree growing. Some 45% of dry kenaf is carbon pulled down from the atmosphere via photosynthesis.
No wonder environmentalists are so bullish on kenaf for our common future. "The more kenaf we grow, we can not only absorb significant amounts of the carbon dioxide that is responsible for global warming, but also educate the world on how to be self-sustainable through kenaf's many properties of providing food, shelter and economic opportunities," says Bill Loftus of the nonprofit Kenaf Research Farm.
As to its use for paper, 10 major U.S. newspapers have tested kenaf-based newsprint and were pleasantly surprised by how well it held up and how crisply it displayed text and pictures. And since it is already brighter than wood-based pulp, it requires less bleaching before it can be used to carry ink. But since kenaf is not mass-produced the way paper trees are on big plantations across the Southeast and West, it still costs more than regular paper and as such has not gone mass market, despite its environmental benefits.
Also, while some policymakers and many environmentalists would like to see our paper feedstock switched from Southern Pine and other trees to kenaf, entrenched timber companies with big investments in tree farms (and who employ many a Washington lobbyist) do not. And with many timber companies already suffering economically, lawmakers are unlikely to mandate changes that could make matters worse.
Even if kenaf doesn't become the paper of tomorrow, it may still have a bright future. The Kenaf Research Farm reports that Toyota is already using kenaf grown in Malaysia for insulation and interiors in some cars. Toyota is also experimenting with using kenaf to reinforce the sugarcane- and maize-based biopolymers it hopes can replace many of the plastic and metal parts in the vehicles it is designing today.
Your best bet for finding some kenaf paper is to try a specialty art supply or stationery store. One good online source is The Natural Abode. Photographers might try using kenaf photo paper, such as Pictorico's ART Kenaf, in their ink jet printers to give their snaps a unique look and a green pedigree.
GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; submit it here or via e-mail. Read past columns here and check out the recent book Earthtalk: Expert Answers to Everyday Questions about the Environment
Kenaf, a fast-growing, non-invasive annual hibiscus plant related to cotton, okra and hemp, makes ideal paper fiber as well as a great source material for burlap, clothing, canvas, particleboard and rope. Its primary use around the world today is for animal forage, but humans enjoy its high-protein seed oil to add a nutritious and flavorful kick to a wide range of foods. In fact, kenaf has been grown for centuries in Africa, China and elsewhere for these and other purposes, but environmentalists see its future in replacing slower-growing trees as our primary source for paper. 


U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) research shows that kenaf yields some six to 10 tons of dry fiber per acre per year, which is three to five times more than the yield of Southern Pine trees -- now the dominant paper pulp source in the U.S. And to top it off, researchers believe kenaf absorbs more carbon dioxide -- the chief "greenhouse gas" behind global warming --than any other plant or tree growing. Some 45% of dry kenaf is carbon pulled down from the atmosphere via photosynthesis.

No wonder environmentalists are so bullish on kenaf for our common future. "The more kenaf we grow, we can not only absorb significant amounts of the carbon dioxide that is responsible for global warming, but also educate the world on how to be self-sustainable through kenaf's many properties of providing food, shelter and economic opportunities," says Bill Loftus of the nonprofit Kenaf Research Farm.

As to its use for paper, 10 major U.S. newspapers have tested kenaf-based newsprint and were pleasantly surprised by how well it held up and how crisply it displayed text and pictures. And since it is already brighter than wood-based pulp, it requires less bleaching before it can be used to carry ink. But since kenaf is not mass-produced the way paper trees are on big plantations across the Southeast and West, it still costs more than regular paper and as such has not gone mass market, despite its environmental benefits.

Also, while some policymakers and many environmentalists would like to see our paper feedstock switched from Southern Pine and other trees to kenaf, entrenched timber companies with big investments in tree farms (and who employ many a Washington lobbyist) do not. And with many timber companies already suffering economically, lawmakers are unlikely to mandate changes that could make matters worse.

Even if kenaf doesn't become the paper of tomorrow, it may still have a bright future. The Kenaf Research Farm reports that Toyota is already using kenaf grown in Malaysia for insulation and interiors in some cars. Toyota is also experimenting with using kenaf to reinforce the sugarcane- and maize-based biopolymers it hopes can replace many of the plastic and metal parts in the vehicles it is designing today.

Your best bet for finding some kenaf paper is to try a specialty art supply or stationery store. One good online source is The Natural Abode. Photographers might try using kenaf photo paper, such as Pictorico's ART Kenaf, in their ink jet printers to give their snaps a unique look and a green pedigree.

GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; submit it here or via e-mail. Read past columns here and check out the recent book Earthtalk: Expert Answers to Everyday Questions about the Environment


--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com

Decorating,Design-TIPS-Adding Color

Decorating & Design-Adding Color

Choosing a color palette for your home is important, but where do you start? Here are some expert tips to help you out.

Start with the formal rooms
These areas include the entry hall, the dining room and the living room. Once you have chosen a palette for those rooms you can pull one color. Take that color and use it, possibly in a different shade or tone, in another room such as your bedroom.

Use the color of your clothes as a cue
People usually buy clothes in the colors that they like and feel they look good in, so use that. Use colors in rooms that look good on you. Not just on the walls but also in furniture and accents.

Decorate from dark to light
An easy way to make any space look great is to use dark color values close to and on the floor, medium values on the walls, and light values on the ceiling. This mirrors the way the external environment looks.

The color wheel
Generally, if you want to create a room of relaxation and informality or privacy, related colors work best. These are colors that are next to each other on the color wheel, say yellow and orange. To create a feeling of excitement and formality, great for entertaining, you should use complementary colors. These are colors opposite on the color wheel, such as blue and orange.

Dominant, secondary and accent colors
Use the 60-30-10 rule. Divide the colors of a space into the components of 60 percent dominant color, 30 percent secondary color and 10 percent accent color. This is a no fail equation. Typically the walls make up the most area, so use the dominant color. Then the upholstery uses the secondary color and the accessories, like throw pillows make up the accent.

One last tip
No matter what color scheme you go with, it's a good idea to put something black in every room. A picture frame, a lampshade, for example. Black helps to anchor all of the other colors in the room.




Information supplied by Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com

6.19.2010

Summer Cooling Tips

Maintain: Schedule annual preseason maintenance checkups with a licensed contractor to ensure your system is operating efficiently. Check the air filter monthly and replace it as needed. Finally, use a caulk gun to seal leaks around windows, doors, and ducts that cause drafts and make your heating and cooling system work overtime.

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Take Advantage of Shade

Reduce the load on your air-conditioner by shading east-, south-, and west-facing windows. Outside, extend roof eaves or add a trellis or awning to shade windows. Add tinted window film to lessen the effects of radiant heat and UV light while maintaining views.

Turn Up Your Thermostat

The recommended temperature setting for comfort and energy savings in an air-conditioned room is 78 degrees Fahrenheit. Resist the urge to drop the temperature for a quick cool, which taxes your cooling unit.

Insulate Your Attic

If an attic inspection reveals insulation scattered halfheartedly among the floor trusses, head to your local home improvement center to get more. If you use your attic for storage, don't remove all those boxes; simply insulate between the joints. In terms of reduced energy costs, the payback time for a few hundred dollar's worth of insulation can typically be measured in months, not years.

Put Windows to Work

Close your house tightly during the heat of the day. Don't just close windows; lock them to create an airtight seal that eliminates cool-air leaks. If outdoor temperatures are cool at night, cross-ventilate rooms by opening windows. Close them again in the morning to seal in the cool air. Also, close curtains or lower shades during the day.

Reduce Ambient Heat Culprits

Your cooling apparatus will work less -- and use less energy -- if you cut back on interior elements generating heat. Ninety-five percent of the energy an incandescent light bulb uses goes to heating the bulb; install compact fluorescent bulbs instead. Shutting down unused electronics also reduces heat (and your electricity costs). Use your dryer in the early morning or late evening, or use a clothesline instead.

Install a Whole-House Fan

It uses a fraction of the electricity of a full-blown air-conditioning system. It's best suited for areas with hot summer days coupled with cool nights, such as the Pacific Northwest. All night, the fan pulls in outside air to cool the house. Many whole-house fans can be programmed to shut off during the warmest hours of the day.

Add ImageEnter to win a Honda Insight valued at $20,510!

Scott's Contracting is available by appointment for Free Estimates with your Home Repairs and Up Grades. email:scottscontracting@gmail.com http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Eco Tip:Avoid Chemical Pesticides


Pesticides are often much more harmful than the weeds, fungi, or pests themselves.

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Pesticides include insecticides, herbicides, fungicides and any other materials that are intended to kill or otherwise harm living organisms. Pesticides are not only bad for weeds, pests or fungi, but also poison humans and animals. Some legal pesticides are even known to cause cancer in high doses. Even if you do not come into direct contact with a pesticide, it can still find its way into your body; there is pesticide residue on most of the food that we eat (unless it is organic) and most of the water that we drink.

The only way to reduce our exposure to pesticides is to stop using them wherever we can. There are lots of ways to control pests without pesticides, and the Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides has answers for specific pest problems. By fine-tuning your garden or lawn to your environment (i.e. with native plants), you can minimize the need for pesticides in the first place. Some complementary plants can actually serve as natural pest repellents for other species, so ask someone at your local nursery for their recommendations. And remember that not all "pests" are bad—dandelions, for instance, can be beneficial to your backyard ecosystem—so weigh both sides before trying to eliminate them.

 

Take Action / Next Steps

Catch and Stop-Energy Vampires

Conserve energy and save money by unplugging unused appliances around your home.

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Unplugging unused appliances or electronic devices in the off mode is an easy way to cut down on your home's energy consumption and reduce your energy bill. These devices are called "energy" or "power vampires" because they consume energy from electrical outlets even when they are not being used or are in the off mode. Although these devices appear to be off, they continue to draw electricity from outlets to keep their circuits instantly ready for the next time they are turned on.
In general, any device that has a power adapter or "power brick," or feels warm after it was been switched off for a while, is an energy vampire, including TVs, DVD players and VCRs, cable modems and rechargeable battery chargers for phones, laptops, music players and digital cameras. Individual appliances and devices only consume a few watts when not in use, but throughout a day and over an entire year, a few watts can add up to almost 20% of a home's power use. Unplugging these electronics or using an inexpensive power strip that can turn off multiple devices when not in use can significantly reduce your energy bill by $50 to $ 200 per year.

Take Action / Next Steps
  • Ready to start slaying the energy vampires in your home? Sign up for the goal on ecomii Action and track your progress.
  • Want to learn more? Click here to read about ways you can conserve energy in your home on ecomii.
  • To see if your appliance or electronic device is considered an energy vampire with low energy use in standby mode, check with the U.S. Department of Energy

Wind Turbine Gearbox Reliability:


The impact of rotor support
by Jordi Puigcorbe and Alexis de-Beaumont
Published: June 3, 2010
London As a key failure point, gearbox reliability continues to dog the wind industry and as turbines become larger the push to improve performance becomes paramount. Alstom believes it has addressed the issue by ensuring that torque transmission is performed independently of rotor support. This improves the reliability of turbine drive train components, in particular the gearbox, which is better protected and subjected to lower loads. Jordi Puigcorbe and Alexis de-Beaumont explain.
One of the biggest concerns remaining in the wind industry is the reliability of the gearbox. 'With our current wind turbine fleet currently going out of warranty period, we estimate that we are carrying a potential risk on gearboxes of about US$300 million. Failures are still relatively rare these days because our fleet is recent, but we expect this will change dramatically as our wind turbines approach their 5–7 years of operation. Our concern is such that we are even considering acquiring a company with gearbox servicing capabilities.'

This statement from a large US wind farm operator is far from being an isolated case in an industry that will see over 8000 MW of wind farm capacity go out of the warranty period every year in the US alone in the next few years.

Recently, Sandy Butterfield, a former chief wind turbine engineer at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Colorado, was quoted as stating that the wind industry expects today's gearboxes to last 7–11 years. This markedly contrasts with the 20-year design lifetime of the wind turbines. And the implications for the industry are huge, since changing a gearbox is typically a lengthy and extremely costly exercise.

The gearbox's reputation for a high failure rate is linked to the extreme engineering challenge that gearbox technology faces in wind applications, and the difficulty in properly assessing the loads – and in particular the non-torsional loads that pass through the gearbox – and how these affect bearings and gears. Some manufacturers have chosen to move to direct drive to reduce the number of moving parts in the wind turbine more exposed to wear. But this has led to wind turbine specific generator designs that are usually more expensive and often come together with a long-term maintenance contract with the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM), which does not necessarily meet the operations and maintenance (O&M) concept of flexibility expected by customers.

Of course, much has been done in the last decade to design and manufacture gearboxes ensuring a high quality, often with associated with over-engineering and increased cost. Many efforts are also being put in to performing proper monitoring and maintenance to detect and prevent any avoidable damage. These efforts have limited gearbox breakdowns in infancy, and sometimes allowed some maintenance activities to be initiated earlier than before, but they have not helped resolving a key cause of the problem: the rotor support concept, and how it distributes loads among the wind turbine structure and the gearbox.

Loads affecting the gearbox are often underestimated because state of the art aero-elastic models do not consider complex non-linear phenomena produced during transients in the drive train like inner gearbox component dynamics coupled with bearings and support parts, and the flexibility influence of the rotor support on the gearbox that causes additional loads.

Failure in Conventional Rotor Support Concepts

Traditional rotor support concepts typically feature either one or two bearings as shown below.

In a one bearing configuration, shown in the left hand image, the rotor shaft is supported by one main bearing and by the proper gearbox that is attached by two torque arms to the bedplate. Generally, the single main bearing does not absorb bending moments which result from the blades acting on the rotor shaft and, as a consequence, the planet carrier bearings transmit loads to the gearbox housing that are absorbed by the torque arms. Using this design principle, a gearbox absorbs additional loads introduced by the rotor shaft bending moment and also, to a lesser extent, those due to deflections of the bedplate and main bearing.
The single bearing concept is basically a three point suspension for the hub, one point is the front bearing and the other two are the gearbox torque arm supports. All forces produced by the wind on the rotor are going through the gearbox to the structure, and therefore the gearbox itself becomes part of this structure. Conventional gearbox design techniques used in other industries have simply been proven insufficient to deliver designs that can bear such highly variable loads in all directions over 20 years of operation.
In the two-bearing configuration B, shown above right, the rotor shaft is supported by two main bearings. With this arrangement the residual bending loads transmitted by the rotor shaft to the gearbox depend essentially on the stiffness of the double main bearing configuration and on bedplate stiffness.

The conventional double bearing concept diverts most forces to the structure, and it would actually succeed in delivering pure torque to the gearbox if the shaft, bedplate and bearings were absolutely rigid and the system perfectly aligned. Unfortunately this is never the case, and it therefore creates potentially very high internal loads. Moreover, much of the certified software for wind turbine load assessment does not take this effect into account, leading to a significant underestimation of non-torsional loads, and to premature gearbox failure.

Except in a few cases of major turbine concept issues or gearbox defects, modern wind turbines gearboxes usually do not fail in the first few years of operation. Turbines in the 1.5–3 MW class have been built on the experience of smaller machines where gearbox failure was a chronic issue, and wind turbine and gearbox designs have been improved, allowing gearboxes to work properly in the first years of operation. However, inspections after 3–5 years performed on gearboxes of these large wind turbines usually show that major gearbox overhauls or replacements will be required in the next few years.

With one or two gearbox replacements expected over the 20-year lifetime of the turbine, even more in very windy sites, many customers are required by their lenders to include risk provision for extra material breakdown in the gearbox in their project business plan. This of course has a serious impact on project profitability.

Indeed, gearbox failures are regarded as one of the most serious breakdown causes in a wind turbine for two reasons. Firstly, because of the high cost of repairing or replacing the gearbox and, secondly, because of the resulting downtime. Replacing a wind turbine gearbox involves primarily the gearbox cost itself, which typically represents around 10% of the total wind turbine cost. On top of this expense, must be added its transportation to site, crane rental and mobilisation cost, and the man-hours spent on the replacement. It means that the value can quickly reach about €200,000 – €500,000, depending on the turbine size and the wind farm's location.

A gearbox failure typically causes two to three times more downtime than any other component failure. In general, a gearbox replacement takes about a week, assuming that the required spare gearbox is available. Customers may have invested in a few spare gearboxes to handle isolated failure cases, but mobilizing the cash to keep spares in inventories for a complete fleet of wind turbines approaching the critical '7 – 11 year' milestone will be a challenge of a different magnitude for wind farm owners. This uncertainty therefore adds to the gearbox replacement cost a significant unavailability risk that is difficult to assess and include in wind farm business plans.

Improving Reliability with Novel Support Concept

As previously mentioned, the main problem of conventional rotor support structures is that the gearbox is performing structural and mechanical functions at the same time, which makes it challenging to simulate loads properly at the design stage. This is especially critical in a component as complex as a gearbox, which is basically designed to withstand mechanical loads. This challenge is illustrated by the recent debate in the US about whether gearbox failures are due to the gearbox ability to withstand the specified loads, or to the fact that real loads experienced by the gearbox are higher than those specified by the wind turbine manufacturers.
An efficient way to solve this problem is to use a rotor support concept that separates structural behaviour from mechanical behaviour. This allows designers to simplify the way the loads are transmitted in the drive train, and therefore specify the drive train components with figures that are much closer to the real loads.

The company's trademarked Alstom Pure Torque system is a unique rotor support concept protecting the gearbox and other drive train components from deflection loads. It was introduced by Alstom's wind business, formerly Ecotecnia, back in 1984, and has since been installed in more than 1600 wind turbines.

As shown in figure 2, above, the rotor, supported directly by a cast frame on two main bearings, is not supported by the gearbox, which is fully separated from the supporting structure. The two bearings divert weight and other loads to the main frame.

The key feature of this arrangement is that torque transmission is performed independently of rotor support. The shaft and gearbox are thus protected from potentially damaging bending loads. The concept decouples bedplate deflexion from the main shaft by means of a front elastic coupling that allows a certain degree of misalignment required in the system. The gearbox is allowed to pivot freely when the bedplate deflects. This ensures that only pure torque is going into the gearbox, allowing higher gearbox reliability without overdesign of the gearbox or unnecessary preventive maintenance costs.

Figure 3 Above: Deflection loads (red arrows) are transmitted directly to the tower whereas only torque (dark green arrows) is transmitted through the shaft to the gearbox

A cast frame goes entirely through the hub to support it and drive all deflection loads (red arrows) to the tower, as figure 3, shown above, illustrates. The shaft, connected to the hub at the front of the turbine, transmits pure torque to the gearbox.

Technical Validation

The technical benefits of this rotor support concept have been exhaustively validated in the field by measuring strains and displacements at several points in the structure and drive train. This experimental information has been used to complete and correlate the global virtual design models based on Finite Element Method-ANSYS and Multibody-SAMCEF design tools.
Figure 4, below shows the most relevant results of this technical analysis in which, in addition to the Alstom Pure Torque validation, the global behaviour of the entire rotor support and the drive train is compared with a standard rotor support concept when a bending load is applied to the hub-rotor. For this comparison a standard rotor support concept with two main bearings has been used. When considering the standard rotor support concept, results clearly indicate the development of strain/stress all along the drive train, mainly in the bearing-shaft contact corners, but also affecting internal parts of the gearbox. In comparison, using same nominal bending moment and colour scale, the Alstom Pure Torque concept distributes strain/stress in the structural parts, isolating the drive train from bending moments.


Above Figure 4: FEM comparison between a standard two bearing rotor support concept (top) and Alstom Pure Torque rotor support and drive train (bottom) when a bending load is applied to the hub-rotor.

Equivalent results have been obtained using multibody numerical analysis.
Results indicate a clear reduction of the radial bearing load for any relevant number of cycles when Alstom Pure Torque is considered compared with the standard configuration.

Establishing a Track Record

Alstom's competitive availability figures are in part due to its rotor support concept, because less time is required for gearbox maintenance and repair. A study of more than 200 units of Alstom's 750 kW wind turbines has shown a gearbox failure rate below 5% cumulated over the first nine years of operation. This number is remarkably low, and this statistic has the advantage of providing real life operation of the Alstom Pure Torque concept for longer periods than the megawatt class wind turbines.

Alstom also analysed the performance of its ECO80 platform, looking at the gearbox failure statistics of a representative sample of over 600 wind turbines of 1.67 MW in over 50 wind farms that have been operating for up to seven years, and performing endoscopic analysis of the wind turbines that accumulated the highest number of operating hours in the sample. Results proved comparably high reliability performance of the concept in the ECO80 platform. Based on these results, Alstom is confident that the majority of its wind turbines could operate with their original gearbox for their whole design lifetime.

Pep Prats, vice president of Advanced Technology, Wind, at Alstom, who was also one of the founders of Ecotecnia back in 1981, comments: 'We have worked with this design for a long time; we actually introduced it already in our very first turbine, a 30 kW unit that we installed in 1984. We made a short attempt to use a more conventional design in the 150–225 kW turbines we sold in the 90s, but we then decided to come back to this original design with our 600–800 kW wind turbines in the late 90s, and have since then based all our wind turbines on this concept.'

Prats continues: 'Another advantage of this concept is its scalability. Our new ECO 100 platform, with rotor swept areas of over 7800 m2, have to handle 20 years of very significant loads. This is being achieved by simply scaling up our rotor support concept, without major redesign of the shaft, support systems and the drive train to cope with the loads. It is a very unique design, with built-in reliability.'

The industry usually considers gearboxes as 'consumables', since – as mentioned previously – it is anticipated to be changed at least once, if not twice during the lifetime of their wind turbine. The Alstom Pure Torque concept gets customers away from the idea that a gearbox is a consumable.

 

BP CEO Tony Hayward's testimony before the House Energy and Commerce

British press turns on Hayward, with plenty of anti-Obama rage thrown in for good measure

Tony Hayward AP – BP CEO Tony Hayward testifies during a House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee hearing on the …

Many in the British press have slammed the U.S. government lately for demonizing BP, instead of simply holding the company accountable for the Gulf oil spill.

But that sentiment has shifted noticeably since BP CEO Tony Hayward's testimony before the House Energy and Commerce committee Thursday. Hayward's inability (or unwillingness) to answer a number of direct questions about the decision-making that preceded the spill cost him many of his job responsibilities today — together with a good deal of his erstwhile cheering section in the British press.

The Times (of London) didn't go easy on the oil executive, summing up its analysis of his performance in Washington with the headline: "From Mr. Bean to Mr. Has-been for BP's Tony Hayward."

The Times' Giles Whittell wrote that Hayward "had a chance to save his career and the good name of his company by giving forthright, detailed answers to highly specific questions submitted in advance by two of the most astute and enlightened men in Congress." Instead, Hayward, he wrote, "seemed to have prepared by taking beta blockers."

Whittell argued that Hayward stonewalled congressional interrogators, despite the executive's claims to the contrary. The Guardian clearly agreed with that assessment in its own piece on the hearing:  "BP oil spill: Tony Hayward stonewalls Congress."

Although Hayward was "carefully coached by legal and media teams and was testifying under oath," the Guardian noted, he "failed to satisfy." Also, according to the Guardian, Hayward delivered his answers "in flat, impassive tones."

In the Telegraph, PR branding specialist Mark Borkowski wrote that  "Hayward's communication skills didn't rival those of a tax inspector."

"The new age demands a front-and-centre spokesman who can make the audience feel like he is listening and actually gives a damn," Borkowski wrote. "But Tony Hayward doesn't seem to have learned a great deal about being inclusive, about engaging with the public."

"Accused of stonewalling, he stonewalled," Borkowski continued. "He couldn't, or wouldn't, answer most of the questions. In fact, he looked like a tired undertaker who was rather bored with having to look mournful."

[PHOTOS: Haunting images of the oil disaster]

Still, other British commentators had plenty of rancor left for the United States and its political leaders. Rupert Cornwell, a columnist for the Independent, added to the criticism that others in the British press have leveled against the Obama administration and Congress — that they're unfairly piling on BP even as the company tries to clean up its mess. Cornwell wrote that "yesterday's grilling of Mr. Hayward ... is a 21st-century version of the medieval stocks, public disgrace for the public villain of the moment."

While Cornwell harkened back to medieval times to describe Hayward's treatment on Capitol Hill, the Daily Mail went back even further for a historical comparison. The British paper reported that Hayward was "subjected to a grilling so savage yesterday it was more like ancient Rome than Capitol Hill."

"Wave after wave of criticism flew the way of the hapless boss and his company," the Daily Mail continued, "confirming them both as Public Enemy No. 1 in the U.S."

The Economist, more highbrow than the typical Fleet Street tabloid, came out swinging at the Obama administration in the issue on newsstands Friday. However, the Economist's ire isn't motivated by jingoism or knee-jerk America-bashing — it's far too genteel for such tabloid sport. Instead, backed by its faith in free markets and neo-liberal trade policies, the Economist  came out in support not just of a British company but of business itself, which it judged to be unfairly maligned in the spill fiasco.

 "America's justifiable fury with BP is degenerating into a broader attack on business," the Economist's editors wrote in today's lead editorial.

The Economist expressed concern that business leaders who are "already gloomy, depressed by the economy and nervous of their president's attitude towards them" will likely not be encouraged by the treatment of BP.

Because Obama's now pushing "firms into doing his bidding" — the magazine's characterizaion of efforts to hold BP responsible for an environmental catastrophe of its own making — the Economist draws parallels between the president and Russia's strong-armed former president and current prime minister. Hence the editors' new nickname: "Vladimir Obama."

So while Tony Hayward is now a tarnished British hero in the Tony Blair vein, national morale may well rebound with the prospect of a good old colonial trade war — or Cold War, as the case may be.

— Michael Calderone is the media writer for Yahoo! News.


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