Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Using snow to design safer streets

Sneckdown: Using snow to design safer streets

Commuters make their way under a snowfall on January 21, 2014 in Washington, DC

Massive snowfalls like the one that hit the US east coast this week usually spell trouble for traffic. But critics of America's car-centric transport network are using the snow - and Twitter - to demonstrate how roads should be redesigned to make them safer for pedestrians.

Fast-falling snow can lead to unsafe driving conditions, massive pile-ups, delayed trains, cancelled flights and slippery sidewalks.

But advocates for safer streets say the snow can also help illustrate how conditions can be improved.

"The snow is almost like nature's tracing paper," says Clarence Eckerson Jr, the director of StreetFilms, which documents pedestrian- and cycle-friendly streets across the globe. He says that snow can be helpful in pointing out traffic patterns and changing street composition for the better.

"When you dump some snow on this giant grid of streets, now you can see, visually, how people can better use the streets," he says.

A neckdown in Melbourne, Australia An example of more a permanent neckdown, created with cobblestone, is found in Melbourne

The best example of this is what Eckerson calls a snowy neckdown.

Neckdowns, protrusions of pavement that give pedestrians a safe place to stand as they wait to cross the street and make street crossing easier, have long been a tool for traffic planners, says Stefanie Seskin, deputy director of the National Complete Streets Coalition.

"It's a terrible name for a really great concept," says Seskin, who prefers the name "curb extenders".

Streets should be designed for everyone who uses them, not just drivers, she says. Neckdowns are one way to help make roads more inclusive.

"You extend the pedestrian area into the intersection to make the crossing distance shorter and give a greater level of visibility to people who are driving."

The wider curbs allow pedestrians to spend less time crossing the street, since the driving lanes are narrower. The neckdowns also force cars make slower, safer turns into intersections. By discouraging drivers from parking close to a corner, they give motorists a better view of the intersection as they head into a turn.

Though popular with those who favour more pedestrian-friendly streets, neckdown critics say they take needed street space away from cars and slow emergency vehicles and cause traffic delays.

After a winter storm, snow ploughed to the side of the road creates temporary neckdowns and demonstrates the principle in action.

"When that snow piles up at a lot of intersections in neighbourhoods, you see that space where they could put a curb extension," says Eckerson. "The cars still can make the turn, including trash trucks and school buses, but you see the slow, more deliberate turn around the corner instead of cutting it."

Marking out safer streets

City street in the snow
  • Snow-ploughing creates narrowed roads, illustrating possible space for parking, pedestrians or bike lanes.
  • Curved snowbanks create wider pavements and indicate how much road space cars need when turning
  • Cleared snow on pavements shows pedestrian patterns
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He first started documenting snowy neckdowns in the 1990s, when opposition to neckdowns in his New York City neighbourhood was intense.

"It's free. You don't have to do a crazy expensive traffic calming study. It provides a visual cue into how people behave in transportation," says Eckerson.

A video he made a few years ago illustrating these natural neckdowns continues to grow in popularity, especially after a storm. This January accounts for almost 20% of the video's views. Now, fans of his work have coined the Twitter hashtag #sneckdown - a shorter version of snowy neckdown.

Using this hashtag, people across the US have posted photos showing how snow is changing their streets.

Snowy intersection A Twitter user uploaded this photo of a Detroit intersection as an argument against a designated right-turn lane

"Each time we have a snowstorm, it seems there are more #sneckdown photos then last," he says. The most recent storm was no exception.

"It's like watching an experiment in progress. It's a chance to learn from what people actually do in some circumstances," says David Ramos, a Washington DC resident with an interest in urban planning. He's followed the #sneckdown hashtag with interest, and posted his own example this week.

"In fair weather, cars come screaming off 16th St, but #sneckdown has drivers slowing to make wider turns," he wrote, with a photo of cars on a busy Washington street leaving a wide arc in the white snow.

The snow, he says, helps illustrate an important fact about human behaviour that he sees in his job in web design.

Snowy intersection This photo taken by the Tri-State Transportation Campaign shows pedestrians standing in a snowy neckdown created in New York's most recent snow storm

"It's a lot like some testing methods we use. Instead of asking people what they want, you watch what they actually do. Often times, people's voiced preferences aren't what they actually act on."

Indeed, the paths cut through the snow help illustrate pedestrian traffic, and early dustings of snow show that cars, on average, use far less of the road than is allocated to them even without snow banks blocking the street.

For urban planners, the attention paid to snowy neckdowns is a welcome one - and one that could bring on change without much cost or risk.

"It's a great opportunity to try some things out on a temporary basis in a residential area," says Seskin.

"Most people see that it works, but it's temporary - if it doesn't work, wait a few days and it's gone."


How fixed-term Parliaments have changed politics

How fixed-term Parliaments have changed politics

Tony Blair 1997

Fewer general elections

We know that the next election will be in May 2015, five years after the last one. But the average length of time between general elections since 1945 has been three years and 10 months. Now, as a result of fixed term parliaments we are going to get one every five years. That means over the next 100 years there could be six fewer general elections. Good news for political phobics (ie everybody outside Westminster). But what about democracy?

No more "zombie" governments

Zombies at Universal Studios

In the old days, when governments went into a fifth year you could almost smell the decay and desperation - the sense that the incumbents were just hanging on in the hope that something - anything - would turn up to transform their dismal electoral prospects. That does not happen any more. But some fear the paralysis in government will be just as bad - but for a different reason...

Very long election campaigns

David Cameron kissing baby 2010

Far from keeping campaigns to a tightly focused few weeks before polling day, which was the original idea, fixed-terms appear to have had the opposite effect. It is still possible for a general election to be held before the five years is up if two thirds of MPs - 429 - back a "no confidence" vote in the government. But that seems unlikely. What seems more likely is that we are in for 16 months of steadily escalating electioneering. Lucky us.

The media have lost one of their favourite games

The Sun front page

The tabloid press used to go to extraordinary lengths to get hold of the date of the next election. The Sun, in particular, used to pride itself on scooping the competition. Not any more.

More coalitions

Nick Clegg and David Cameron

Without a fixed-term Parliament the coalition may have broken up by now, or at least been buffeted by a frenzy of press speculation about snap elections. In fact many insiders reckon it is unlikely the Lib Dems and Conservatives could have got together in the first place without first agreeing to make fixed term parliaments a key policy.

Better planning

George Osborne visits construction site

Civil servants love stability - and knowing exactly when the general election is going to be held takes a lot of the uncertainty out of long-term planning. Single party governments with a decent majority are likely to gain the most, according to constitution expert Peter Riddell in a 2011 select committee inquiry.

Boring party conferences

Lady Thatcher at 1983 Tory conference

Without the tension created by an election that could happen at any time these annual shindigs seem to have become even more stale and stage-managed. Particularly in the mid-term period. It might just be coincidence, but where is the drama?

The incumbent loses a key advantage

Gordon Brown

The power to choose the date of the election is traditionally seen as handing a huge advantage to the party in power. But it can prove a curse as well as a blessing. Just ask Gordon Brown, whose last minute decision not to go to the country in 2007, after allowing speculation to grow that he would, probably cost him his best shot of winning a mandate of his own.

Ad men and pollsters out of pocket

Tony Blair 'demon eyes' Tory poster

Spending on election advertising actually went down at the 2010 general election to a total of £31.1m, thanks largely to a big drop in the amount Labour managed to raise under Gordon Brown. It is likely to go down further still when the parties no longer have to block book poster sites for weeks on end in preparation for a likely poll. And then there are the opinion pollsters. Election speculation is their bread and butter too.

Less accountability?

Ed Miliband, Nick Clegg and David Cameron

Some argue that a four-year fixed-term - which is the norm in many countries and the devolved assemblies in Wales and Northern Ireland - would fit in much better with the natural rhythm of British politics and give voters more opportunity to hold politicians to account for their mistakes. Scotland used to have a four year term but moved to five years to avoid clashes with Westminster elections. Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg pushed for five years for UK-wide elections, arguing it provided greater stability. And that is where we are, unless a future government decides to change it...


VIDEO: Collymore on tackling Twitter trolls

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Stan Collymore: 'Twitter a vacuum for abuse'

22 January 2014 Last updated at 09:24 GMT

Former footballer Stan Collymore has accused Twitter of not doing enough to combat abusive messages after he was targeted by internet trolls.

Mr Collymore said he received offensive messages and death threats after he suggested Liverpool striker Luis Suarez dived to earn a penalty in last Saturday's match against Aston Villa.

He spoke to BBC Breakfast to explain why he wants Twitter to do more to tackle the issue of trolls.

He said police were "banging their heads against a brick wall" because of the way Twitter operated, and accused the company of providing a "vacuum" in which abuse of all kinds was published.


VIDEO: Rob Ford in fresh video row

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Toronto mayor Rob Ford in fresh video row

22 January 2014 Last updated at 12:34 GMT

A new video of Toronto mayor Rob Ford has emerged apparently showing him drunk and slurring his words.

The mayor, who has been dogged by scandal since he admitted smoking crack whilst in a "drunken stupor", had previously said that he had given up drinking.

When questioned by reporters about the video, Mr Ford denied it was offensive and said that what he did in his personal life was private.


VIDEO: BBC reporter 'harassed' at China trial

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BBC reporter 'harassed' at Chinese activist trial

22 January 2014 Last updated at 04:59 GMT

Xu Zhiyong, a prominent human rights lawyer who campaigned against corruption, has gone on trial in China. Mr Xu is charged with "gathering crowds to disrupt public order".

Martin Patience reports from close to the courthouse in Beijing - until he is moved on by a group of men.


VIDEO: Syrian refugees with 'nowhere to go'

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Syria conflict: The refugees with 'nowhere to go'

21 January 2014 Last updated at 23:06 GMT

The number of Syrian refugees in Lebanon has reached one million.

There is growing concern for the refugees a day before peace talks are due to begin in Switzerland.

The BBC's Quentin Sommerville reports from the village of Wadi Khaled on Lebanon's northern border with Syria.


VIDEO: BBC journalist 'sees Ukraine body'

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Ukraine: BBC journalist witnesses police 'dragging lifeless body'

22 January 2014 Last updated at 12:53 GMT

A BBC journalist has described seeing Ukrainian police drag a "lifeless body" away during a surge on protesters on Wednesday.

The journalist, who was filming from a hotel window, said: "I saw the riot police at the front of the attack using their rubber bullet guns to shoot at the protesters."


VIDEO: Snow blast returns to US east coast

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Polar vortex: Snow blast returns to US east coast

22 January 2014 Last updated at 07:24 GMT

The US east coast has been hit by the second major winter storm of the year, with up to 12in (30cm) of snow, blowing wind and bitter cold forecast.

The storm comes two weeks after a weather pattern known as the polar vortex brought heavy snow and record low temperatures to the eastern half of the country.

More than 3,000 flights have already been cancelled in the US and authorities warned of hazardous road conditions as snow fell along major motorways.

Mariko Oi reports.


US-Iranian accused of jet data theft

Iran-American Mozaffar Khazaee indicted for F-35 document theft

An F-35 Lightning II, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter, flies over California in May 2010 The in-development F-35 Joint Strike Fighter programme is believed to have cost $400bn

An Iranian-American engineer accused of attempting to ship stolen documentation on a high-tech military plane to Iran has been indicted, US authorities say.

A grand jury in the US state of Connecticut charged Mozaffar Khazaee, 59, with two counts of transporting stolen goods.

He was arrested on 9 January for trying to smuggle thousands of pages of F-35 Joint Strike Fighter documents.

If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison.

Mr Khazaee is accused of transporting, transmitting and transferring in interstate commerce goods obtained by theft, conversion or fraud, according to court documents.

He is said to have stolen the sensitive materials from defence contracting companies where he was employed, Connecticut US Attorney Deirdre Daly told US media on Tuesday.

The engineer is an ex-employee of military contractor Pratt & Whitney and in that capacity was responsible for carrying out strength tests on engine parts, US media have reported.

He was made redundant from a defence contractor in August, prosecutors said.

'Household goods'

The investigation began in November, when customs officials and homeland security agents intercepted a shipment Mr Khazaee sent from Connecticut to a freighter in Long Beach, California, bound for Hamadan, Iran, according to court records.

The shipment was marked as containing household goods, but officials instead found boxes of documents containing technical manuals and proprietary material related to the F-35 programme.

Mr Khazaee was arrested on 9 January at the airport in Newark, New Jersey, on his way to Iran.

The former Connecticut resident is reportedly being detained in New Jersey pending his arraignment.

The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter - the most expensive defence programme in history - is estimated to have cost approximately $400bn (£242bn).


Sharp fall in Scottish jobless total

Sharp fall in Scottish jobless total

Job centre exterior The unemployment rate in Scotland now stands at 6.4%

Unemployment in Scotland has fallen to its lowest level for almost five years following a sharp drop towards the end of last year, according to official figures.

The number of jobless fell by 25,000 between September and November and now stands at 176,000.

The unemployment rate fell by 0.9% over the quarter to 6.4% - its lowest level since January-March 2009.

The latest figures showed an average rate of 7.1% for the whole of the UK.

The data follows official estimates released last week which indicated that the Scottish economy grew by 0.7% in the third quarter of last year.

The latest Office for National Statistics figures showed employment in Scotland increased by 10,000 over the three months to November, to stand at 2,559,000.

Over the past year, the number of employed women has risen by 62,000 - the largest annual increase on record.

However, Scotland's overall economic inactivity rate rose by 0.8%.

The number of people claiming Job Seeker's Allowance (JSA), fell by 1,900 from November to 113,800 in December - down by 24,100 on December 2012.

'Extremely encouraging'

Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael said: "It is extremely encouraging to see unemployment in Scotland at its lowest level in nearly five years and employment increasing by 90,000 over the past year.

"The number of people in work in Scotland is close to the record highs seen before the recession and there has been a big fall in the number of people claiming Jobseeker's Allowance.

"Every new job created and every person getting back into work is to be welcomed."

He added: "Today's figures reflect how well Scotland is doing as part of the UK."

'More positive news'

Finance Secretary John Swinney said: "Today's labour market figures provide more positive news for the Scottish economy, with the number of people in employment in Scotland continuing to increase, following on from last week's strong GDP results.

"Scotland has a higher employment rate and lower unemployment rate than England, Wales or Northern Ireland.

"Consistent increases in employment levels show that the policies of the Scottish government to create jobs and boost the economy are making progress."

He added: "With the limited powers over the economy that we have at our disposal, Scotland's economic health is improving but without the full powers of independence we cannot secure the greater levels of growth and employment that we need."

'Welcome boost'

Scottish Labour's finance spokesman Iain Gray said the latest figures were a welcome boost but the Scottish government needed to commit to further action.

He added: "We also need to be confident that these additional jobs are sustainable and will lead to increased consumer spending.

"However in amongst the figures there is likely to be a large proportion of jobs that are seasonal, temporary or part-time and we cannot depend on this as a long-term solution.

"We need to look behind the headlines and make sure the opportunities that are available are full-time and secure and give people the scope to plan for their future and put our economy back to pre-recession levels."

Scottish Chambers of Commerce said Scottish businesses were gaining in confidence and creating new job opportunities.

Chief executive Liz Cameron said: "There is an increasing weight of evidence that the Scottish economy is at last entering a period of sustained growth and that GDP levels might soon return to their pre-recessionary mark.

"Rising levels of employment and falling unemployment are further indicators that businesses are sufficiently confident of future prospects that they feel secure in investing in new staff."


VIDEO: 'Need to cherish and value Green Belts'

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Green Belt protection needed says naturalist Ray Mears

22 January 2014 Last updated at 10:59 GMT

Green Belts are the Britain's 'greatest unofficial national parks" which need to be cherished and valued, said the naturalist Ray Mears.

He said they were designed to prevent urban sprawl, make the air healthier and cities happier places to live. The survival expert added the UK has been asked to sign up to the concept of a Big Society and this was an opportunity for politicians to act.

Mr Mears will debate this film on Wednesday's Daily Politics on BBC Two, and the discussion will be on iPlayer for seven days after transmission.

More from the Daily Politics: Watch full programmes from the last seven days via BBC iPlayer; 'like' us on Facebook page or 'follow' us on Twitter


British meth smuggler gets 14 years

Indonesia drug smuggler Andrea Waldeck jailed for 14 years

Andrea Waldeck attends a hearing for drug trafficking charges in Surabaya, Indonesia Andrea Waldeck (right) was said to have looked tense in the hearing

A British woman who smuggled 1.4kg (3lb) of crystal methamphetamine into Indonesia has been sentenced to 14 years in prison.

Former PCSO Andrea Waldeck, 43, from Gloucestershire, was found guilty of smuggling and also fined £100,000.

Her lawyer previously told the court she was "a victim" of a drugs gang.

Waldeck, who is originally from Talgarth in Powys, had faced a possible death sentence after being arrested at a hotel in East Java in April.

Last year, she told a court in Surabaya city that she had been coerced into carrying the drugs from China.

Police found the drugs hidden in her underwear in black bags, the court heard.

Indonesia has some of the toughest anti-drug laws in the world but death sentences are rarely carried out.

Andrea Waldeck attends court sentencing in Surabaya, Indonesia Waldeck was handed the sentence by a court in Surabaya city, East Java

Following the verdict, Waldeck's lawyer Roberto Kaligis said: "As her lawyer I truly objected to the judges' decision.

"An Indonesian national who's connected to her case received a 10-year sentence last week. So we were hoping for the same sentence."

A decision is yet to be taken about whether the sentence will be appealed, he added.

The BBC's South East Asia producer, Alice Budisatrijo, said an appeal could be risky as the Indonesian justice system was quite unpredictable.

"In some cases, especially drug-related cases, the higher court gives a harsher sentence than the lower court, so they [Waldeck and lawyer] need to really think about what sort of evidence they can present if they decide to appeal," she said.

Ms Budisatrijo, who was in court for the sentencing, added it was unclear where Waldeck would serve her sentence.

"In general, the Indonesian prison is known for its overcrowding and poor sanitary conditions," Ms Budisatrijo said.

"Fights between inmates often take place and there is a shortage of prison guards to maintain order.

"There has also been reports of corrupt practices of prison guards taking bribes in exchange for better living conditions for the inmates.

"And so those who are able and willing to pay can often get a rather lavish facility, but for those who don't things can really get quite rough."

Gloucestershire Police confirmed Waldeck worked for them as a police support worker until February 2012.

The chairman of Up Hatherley Parish Council, near Cheltenham, said he submitted a witness statement to the Indonesian court last year.

"I wrote a witness statement in her defence last year about her work within the parish, most especially with young people," said Stuart Fowler.

"It would be good if she could serve it back in her own country.

"I don't believe that she is a criminal. When she worked in the parish, she was always industrious and keen - I certainly had no complaints."


Vicky Pryce gets Cable adviser role

Vicky Pryce to advise Vince Cable on the economy

Vicky Pryce

Vicky Pryce - who was jailed for taking ex-husband Chris Huhne's speeding points - has resumed her role on a panel advising Business Secretary Vince Cable on the economy.

Ms Pryce first joined the panel more than 10 years ago when she was chief economist at the business department.

She was chosen for the unpaid role for her macroeconomic expertise, said a source at the department.

Ex-Lib Dem minister Mr Huhne was also jailed for his part in the deception.

He has quit Parliament and resumed his former career in journalism as a columnist for The Guardian newspaper.

Ms Pryce will join the Monitoring the Economy Panel meets, which meets three times a year.

It is chaired by Lib Dem Mr Cable and has around 25 members including economists from Deutsche Bank, the Office for Budget Responsibility and the Treasury.

A BIS source said: "Vicky Pryce was appointed to the department's monitoring the economy panel over ten years ago when she was chief economist at the DTI.

"As a distinguished economist, she continued to be part of this panel after leaving the department.

"She has now resumed her unpaid position as part of this panel after serving her sentence, which in no way brought into question her ability or judgement as an economist."


Girl 'raped every week by father'

Girl 'raped every time she visited her father'

Coleraine courthouse The alleged victim told Coleraine Crown Court she was sexually abused between the age of six and 14

A young girl was raped every time she stayed at her father's house, a court in County Londonderry has heard.

The alleged victim also told Coleraine Crown Court that her father and uncle occasionally took turns to rape her, sometimes recording the abuse on video.

The allegations came on day two of the trial of three men accused of sexually abusing two siblings during the 1990s.

They allege they were abused by their father, uncle and a family friend, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

The alleged victims are a brother and sister from Northern Ireland.

On day two of the trial, the defence completed its cross-examination of the alleged male victim.

A defence lawyer asked him why he had not made a full disclosure of the abuse to social services in 1997.

The witness replied it had become obvious to him that a social worker he had spoken to did not believe his claims.

His sister then took the witness stand.

Her voice breaking with emotion, she told the court her father began to sexually abuse her when she was six years old.

She said that he continued to abuse her on a frequent basis over the next eight years.

'Cruelty'

The witness added that after her parents separated she was raped on a weekly basis during visits to her father's home.

She said the abuse got worse over the eight-year period and by the time she was 14, she was being raped during house parties at his property.

The witnessed also claimed she had suffered serious physical abuse, saying her father had stubbed out cigarettes on her stomach and back.

She told the court that her father had referred to her as his "ashtray".

Between them, the three defendants are facing 56 charges, including multiple counts of rape, gross indecency and cruelty.

The accused cannot be named in order to protect the identities of the alleged victims.


Roache 'shocked by rape arrest'

William Roache trial: Star 'shocked by rape arrest'

William Roache The trial heard William Roache seemed "visibly shocked" when he was arrested

Coronation Street star William Roache told police he was "absolutely surprised" and "amazed" when he was first arrested, a jury has heard.

The actor appeared "visibly shocked and broke into a sweat" as he was detained on suspicion of rape, his trial heard.

During police interview, he said it was "against my nature, I'm a very peaceful person", Preston Crown Court was told.

Mr Roache, 81, from Wilmslow, Cheshire, denies two rapes and five indecent assaults between 1965 and 1971.

The charges relate to five women who were aged 16 and under between those dates.

Mr Roache, who plays Ken Barlow in the ITV soap, was arrested and cautioned at his home on 1 May last year.

He was then taken in an unmarked vehicle to a police station where the circumstances of the allegations were outlined.

The actor told officers he would "never do anything like that" and when the rape allegation was put to him said: "I totally deny that."

The jury heard Mr Roache told police he did not remember the girl who had accused him of raping her.

The court heard he told them: "It didn't happen because I'd remember it if it had."

Mr Roache told police he had "no recollection" of inviting the girl to his then house in Haslindgen, Lancashire.

'Absolutely horrified'

The jury was told Mr Roache also denied having "any kind" of relationships with any girls during that period.

When asked in the police interview whether he could remember whether any young girls would "come on to you", the actor said women would but young girls were just "excited children".

Mr Roache said there may have been a "flirty comment" in getting an autograph "but not in a sustained way", the court heard.

Police asked Mr Roache why the woman may have made the allegation, and he said: "A lot of people are coming out and accusing celebrities of these things for various reasons."

He said the woman may want a "moment of fame" and said: "There's some hope of selling articles to the newspaper".

He added: "I was always polite and friendly with the viewers and people in the street. I have no idea why she would come up with this."

"I don't know what the motivation might be I'm absolutely horrified at the whole thing," Mr Roache said to police.

The trial continues.


EU outlines 2030 climate goals

EU outlines 2030 climate goals

wind turbine The Commission has outlined new targets for renewables that will be binding at EU level but not for member states

The European Commission has outlined its plans for climate and energy policy until 2030.

The Commissioners want a binding target to reduce carbon emissions by 40% from 1990 levels.

Renewables will need to provide 27% of EU energy by 2030, but while the target will be binding at EU level there will be no mandatory targets for member states.

The policy proposals are subject to review by heads of government.

Green groups have said the new targets lack ambition and the 40% emissions cut is "dangerously low".

This wide ranging White Paper will have a significant impact on the way Europe generates its power from 2020 onwards.

The Commission wants to give clarity to investors in renewable energy while at the same time maintaining their leadership role in global climate negotiations.

A critical part of that is the headline figure on emissions cuts. The target that was set for 2020 was 20% but the EU as a group had almost reached the goal by 2012.

Some countries including the UK urged the Commission to propose a bigger target of 50% by 2030, others held out for 35%.

Climate commissioner Connie Hedegaard said that, given the economic climate, the 40% target was a significant advance.

"A 40% emissions reduction is the most cost-effective target for the EU and it takes account of our global responsibility," she said.

"If all other regions were equally ambitious about tackling climate change, the world would be in significantly better shape."

Officials emphasised that the 40% target would have to be achieved "through domestic measures alone", meaning that member states couldn't offset their reductions by paying for carbon cutting in other countries.

Binding targets

The move was welcomed by investors. According to the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change, who's members manage 7.5 trillion euros, the new target was a good first step.

"A 40% emissions reduction target is the minimum necessary to keep Europe on course for a low-carbon economy as outlined in the EU's 2050 Roadmap," said chief executive Stephanie Pfeifer.

"Achieving this target is well within member state capabilities and crucial for long-term policy certainty."

Despite this, many environmental campaigners were unhappy.

Brook Riley from Friends of the Earth said the target would make the goal of avoiding dangerous climate change, defined as going above 2C, difficult to achieve.

"We say 40% is really dangerously low. This goal means there's about fifty-fifty chance of going over 2 degrees of global warming," he said.

As well as the headline cut in emissions, the other key plank of the White Paper is renewable energy.

The 2007 targets required 20% of all energy to come from solar, wind or other renewable sources.

Connie EU climate commissioner Connie Hedegaard has been criticised by green groups

Germany, which is in the middle of a huge transition to solar and wind, was keen to see these binding targets continue after 2020.

Others, including Poland, Spain and the UK, were keen on greater flexibility in the energy mix. The UK was keen to use nuclear energy as a way of meeting its own emissions reduction goal.

The result is a proposal for a binding target across the EU to provide "at least 27%" of energy from renewable sources.

"It is not just an aspirational thing, it's not just a nice intention, it is a binding target we are proposing," said Ms Hedegaard.

But crucially, there are to be no binding targets for individual member states.

Sensitive issue

The Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said that shale gas was changing the energy landscape in a dramatic way.

There would be no binding EU wide regulations, he said. Instead the EU would set minimum core principles for fracking on environmental safety and health.

There would be a scoreboard for each member state to show how they were meeting the requirements.

"It's a good demonstration of the role the EU should play, setting the cross border rules for environmental health and safety but not meddling in the energy mix that is to be chosen by member states," he said.

This part of the package will have been well received in the UK and in Poland as both countries believe that shale gas will play an important part in providing energy in the future.

The White Paper also details a plan for fixing the EU emissions trading scheme. The price of a tonne of carbon has fallen dramatically in recent years as a result of an oversupply of permits on the market. The Commissioners now argue for a new system that would automatically adjust the supply.

Another element that will upset green campaigners is the proposal to drop the 6% target for greenhouse gas emissions cuts from transport fuels, from 2020.

Nusa Urbancic of campaigning group Transport & Environment believes this move will lead to the end of the Fuel Quality Directive, which she says is a major disappointment.

"The Commission is using the climate and energy package as an excuse to quietly scrap the FQD - the best EU law aimed at lowering emissions from transport fuel," she said.

"This is good news for oil companies and Alberta, with its high-carbon tar sands, but bad news for Europe in our move towards a more sustainable transport system."

All of the proposals put forward by the Commission will now be reviewed by the European Council in March. It is not expected that formal legislative proposals will be agreed before 2015.

Follow Matt on Twitter.


First killings in Ukraine protests

Ukraine protests: Two people killed in Kiev clashes

BBC journalist: "I saw a body right beneath the window"

Two people have been killed in clashes between police and protesters in the Ukrainian capital Kiev.

Prosecutors confirmed the two had died from bullet wounds. They are the first fatalities since protests began in November at the government's rejection of a planned treaty with the EU.

Wednesday's clashes began after police moved in to dismantle a protest camp.

President Viktor Yanukovych is reportedly meeting opposition leaders to discuss the crisis.

The clashes come on the day that new anti-protest laws come into force. Parliament approved the laws last week, triggering renewed protests, which spilled into violence on Sunday night.

Hundreds of people have been injured, though some of the violence has been blamed on a little-known far-right group, Right Sector.

Meanwhile, the US embassy in Ukraine says it has revoked the visas of "several Ukrainians who were linked to the violence". It did not give names, but said it was "considering further action against those responsible for the current violence."

Fireworks

Wednesday's violence began in a small area around Hrushevskyy Street, a road leading to government buildings and also close to the main protest encampment at Maidan (or Independence Square).

Shortly after 08:00 (06:00 GMT) - after a relatively peaceful night - police stormed the protesters' barricades on Hrushevskyy Street.

The police later fell back to their positions after fierce clashes with protesters, but by the afternoon had pushed on through the barricades.

Protesters again hurled petrol bombs and stones while riot police responded with stun grenades and rubber bullets, the BBC's Duncan Crawford reports.

Meanwhile thousands of protesters have gathered in Independence Square.

There was a crush at one of the narrow entrances into the square when protesters trying to get in met protesters who were trying to get out to fight the police, our correspondent says.

At least two ambulances were seen carrying away the wounded.

Black smoke caused by the burning of tyres is now billowing over Kiev, while footage shows armoured vehicles moving into the area.

Officials confirmed the deaths of two people, found with gunshot wounds earlier on Wednesday. The general prosecutor said their bodies were found in a national library close to the scene of the clashes.

Medics for the activists say at least one person had multiple wounds and claimed he had been killed by a police sniper.

A third activist was also reported to have died on Wednesday from injuries sustained after falling from the top of the Dynamo football stadium.

But a spokeswoman for Kiev's health department said the man had survived the fall and was being treated in the hospital.

'Systematic violation'

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov denied the police would have been responsible for the deaths as they were not carrying live ammunition.

They "remain on the consciousness and responsibility of the organisers and certain participants of mass disturbances," he said.

Many of the protesters have been wearing helmets and face masks in defiance of the new laws, that ban the wearing of such headgear at protests.

The laws also prescribe jail terms for anyone blockading public buildings and outlaw unauthorised tents in public areas.

European Union leaders has expressed shock at the deaths and called on all sides to halt the violence.

"If there is a systematic violation of human rights, including shooting at peaceful demonstrators or serious attacks to the basic freedoms, then we have to rethink our relationship with Ukraine," said Jose Manuel Barroso, the president of the EU Commission.

Russia has accused the EU and US of "outside interference" in Ukrainian affairs.

"The extremist part of the opposition is crudely violating the country's constitution," Russia's deputy foreign minister Grigory Karasin told Interfax news agency.

Man waves Ukrainian flag in front of riot police in Kiev on 22 January 2014 Police have retreated since moving in on a camp in Hrushevskyy Street early on Wednesday, but a tense stand-off remains.
Protesters by a burning bus in Kiev, Ukraine (22 Jan 2014) Firebombs were thrown by both sides as the violence broke out
Protester throws burning tyre in Kiev (22 January 2014) Demonstrators were setting tyres on fire and throwing them at security forces
Protester in front of police lines in Kiev (22 Jan 2014) Many protesters were wearing masks and helmets, breaking the new protest laws
Protester holds a pneumatic gun during clashes Some were seen brandishing handguns
Protesters under shields in Kiev, Ukraine (22 Jan 2014) The clashes are taking place amid heavy snowfall
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Clegg: We 'mishandled' Rennard row

Lord Rennard: Clegg admits failings over harassment claims

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg: "The party did not react. Alarm bells didn't go off."

The Lib Dems have mishandled the sexual harassment allegations made against Lord Rennard, Nick Clegg has admitted.

Mr Clegg said the Lib Dems had "not responded in the right way" in the past and he took full responsibility for a lack of "proper leadership".

But he defended his actions in recent days and said it was only fair to ask the Lib Dem peer to apologise.

He also said media reports suggesting his wife had pressed him to act against the peer were "total garbage".

Lord Rennard is considering legal action after he had his party membership temporarily suspended.

'Messy and difficult'

The former party chief executive denies claims that he sexually harassed female party members but has been asked to apologise for the distress that he caused a number of women.

Speaking on his weekly phone-in on LBC 97.3, Mr Clegg acknowledged failings in the party in dealing with the allegations, some of which date back nearly a decade, and that "leadership was not executed properly in the past".

"I accept the way we handled it last year was not great, it was not ideal"," he said.

He accepted it was a "messy and difficult" situation and the party needed to "turn a page and introduce a new culture" when it came to the treatment of women.

But he said he had been right to insist on an apology from Lord Rennard after an independent report recommended it. The peer's failure to do so was "not fair to the process, not fair to the women and not fair to Lord Rennard himself".

'Furious'

While Lord Rennard had been a "huge figure" in the party for many years, Mr Clegg said the dispute was now threatening to "overshadow his achievements".

Asked about claims that his wife Miriam was the driving force behind the party's hardening stance against Lord Rennard, Mr Clegg said this was "totally untrue" - adding that he did not want his family to be brought into the dispute.

The Daily Telegraph reported that Miriam Clegg was "furious" at the peer's refusal to apologise.

Lord Rennard insists he has done nothing wrong and is expected to seek a court order within days to try to halt disciplinary proceedings against him.

Alison Smith, one of the women who has accused the peer of making unwanted sexual advances and touching them inappropriately, said she was "open" to some form of mediation but only if the Lib Dem peer was willing to confront his actions.

'Enough is enough'

"Chris Rennard would need to come to the table within an open mind and, at the moment, he does not seem to be in that mindset," the former activist, who is now a lecturer at Oxford University, told BBC Radio 4's Today.

She suggested the peer needed to understand his actions were an abuse of power and "why it matters that he (Lord Rennard) had control over women's careers when he was making advances on people".

She added: "We would not have to start with an apology but what is at stake here for me is the principle of what is acceptable behaviour in the workplace."

The reaction of some Lib Dems, she suggested, seemed to be "just a hand down the back of the dress, what are the girlies worrying about".

"The issue is, of course, women in the 21st century are saying enough is enough and I think that is one of the reasons why this story has resonated so much."Clegg: We 'mishandled' Rennard row

Lib Dems peers in the House of Lords are to meet for the first time later on Wednesday since the row over Lord Rennard's future with the party began.

The BBC understands Lord Rennard has instructed a senior QC to advise him on the lawfulness of the party's action in suspending him following the allegations.

The party's original internal investigation, led by senior barrister Alistair Webster QC, concluded the claims against Lord Rennard by four women could not be proved beyond reasonable doubt.

But it also said the evidence of the women who lodged complaints was "broadly credible" and urged the peer to apologise.

Lord Rennard has expressed concerns that an apology would be an admission of guilt and make him liable to potential legal proceedings by his accusers.


Bitter exchanges as Syria talks open

Syria Geneva II peace talks begin with bitter exchanges

 

Syria's foreign minister and the National Coalition president delivered angry statements

Syria's government and main political opposition have traded bitter accusations as a major peace conference began in Switzerland.

The opposition and US said President Bashar al-Assad had no legitimacy and must step down from power.

Syria's foreign minister had a terse exchange with the UN's Ban Ki-moon over the length of his speech and said only Syrians could decide Mr Assad's fate.

The conflict has left more than 100,000 dead and millions displaced.

The summit is discussing the Geneva communique which lays out a political transition plan for Syria.

It will hear from about 40 foreign ministers on Wednesday before direct Syrian talks are scheduled to begin in Geneva on Friday.

This would be the first face-to-face meeting between the Syrian government and the main opposition - the National Coalition - since the conflict began in 2011.

'Inflammatory rhetoric'

The BBC's Paul Wood, in Montreux, says there were some extraordinarily ill-tempered scenes and some very direct language as the conference got under way.

Syria's Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said some states attending the talks had "Syrian blood on their hands" and were trying to destabilise the country.

Addressing US Secretary of State John Kerry, he said: "No-one in the world has the right to confer or withdraw the legitimacy of a president, a constitution or a law, except for the Syrians themselves."

Mr Muallem ran far over the allotted 10-minute slot for each speaker, ignoring Mr Ban's attempts to intervene.

"You live in New York. I live in Syria," Mr Muallem told the UN secretary general. "I have the right to give the Syrian version here. After three years of suffering, this is my right."

The US state department condemned Mr Muallem's remarks as "inflammatory rhetoric", and urged the government to take "real, concrete steps to increase humanitarian access and improve the lives of the people suffering the most".

Security around summit venue in Montreux (21 Jan 2014) The summit is taking place amid tight security in a Montreux hotel
Pro-Assad protesters in Montreux (22 Jan 2012) Outside the conference venue, supporters of President Bashar al-Assad staged a protest
Anti-government protest in Montreux (22 Jan 2014) Anti-government protesters staged a mock funeral, calling for an immediate ceasefire

The head of the National Coalition, Ahmad Jarba, said in his speech it had not been the opposition's choice to take up arms, but "was the choice imposed by the Syrian regime".

He displayed a photograph taken from a report by three war crimes investigators which alleged "systematic" torture and execution of opposition detainees in Syria. The report was released on Tuesday but dismissed as not credible by Damascus.

Mr Jarba called on the government to immediately sign the Geneva document and transfer power to a transitional authority.

"For the Syrians, time is now blood."

Our correspondent says that when the talks go behind closed doors there will perhaps be a more constructive tone - with discussion of practical matters such as ceasefires and access for humanitarian aid.

In his opening speech, Mr Ban urged all parties to engage "seriously and constructively".

"Let me not mince words - the challenges before you and before all of us are formidable. But your presence here raises hope," he said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the talks "will not be simple, will not be quick", but that there was "a historic responsibility on the shoulders of all participants".

He also repeated his insistence that Iran should be involved.

The UN withdrew its invitation to Iran this week over its refusal to back the Geneva communique.

Iran's President Hasan Rouhani said on Wednesday that the "lack of influential players" attending meant he doubted "its ability to resolve the Syria crisis".

Mr Kerry used his opening remarks to remind the conference the uprising had begun as a peaceful process, but said the government had responded "with ever-increasing force".

"We see only one option: negotiating a transition government born by mutual consent," he said. "There is no way, no way possible, that a man who has led a brutal response to his own people can regain legitimacy to govern."

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said "thousands more innocent Syrians will pay the price" if the talks fail. The government, he said, "bears a particular responsibility for this crisis and can do the most to end it".

International delegates to Geneva II have played down hopes of a breakthrough, saying the talks should be seen as the first step in a process.


Inspired Federer ends Murray hopes

22 January 2014 Last updated at 12:11

Andy Murray loses to Roger Federer in Australian Open

Four-time champion Roger Federer ended Andy Murray's Australian Open hopes with a dramatic win in the quarter-finals.

The Swiss, 32, won 6-3 6-4 6-7 (6-8) 6-3 in three hours and 20 minutes to set up a semi-final against world number one Rafael Nadal.

Federer had been on the verge of wrapping up a faultless three-set performance but failed to serve out the match, and then missed two match points in the tie-break.

Murray was fighting to stay alive in only his second tournament since back surgery, and saved six break points in a marathon 19-minute game early in the fourth set.

But the Scot was constantly playing catch-up and eventually he could no longer hang on, as Federer brought his man into the net at 4-3 and flipped a backhand past the 26-year-old for the decisive break.

"I was proud of the way I fought," said Murray.

"I changed my tactics a little bit, started playing a little bit more aggressive, and that was maybe my undoing a little bit at the end, because I really started going for my shots to get myself back into the match.

"Then when I got broken in that fourth set, I went for three balls. Maybe one or two of them weren't there to be hit."

Federer was relieved to come through to clinch an 11th consecutive Australian Open semi-final place.

"Andy played well and put the pressure on me so I'm happy to get the win," he said.

"I probably miss more break points than other guys but I kept my composure and kept the poker face and tonight it worked."

The first two sets saw Federer pick up where he had left off against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on Monday, serving magnificently and moving forward at every opportunity.

Playing with a larger, more powerful racquet this year, and under the guidance of six-time Grand Slam champion Stefan Edberg, his game was simply too strong for Murray.

By the time he closed out the second set, after only 80 minutes, he had been taken to deuce just once on serve.

Murray was unable to dominate from his home turf of the baseline and could not get his return game going when second serves came his way - and his evening looked as good as over when two errors saw him drop serve at 4-4 in the third.

Federer had not faced a break point all evening but, when the moment arrived to close out the match, the 17-time major winner looked more like the fragile player that had slipped down the rankings last year.

After smashing away a first break point he fired long on the second, and the crowd came alive as Murray yelled in delight at his unexpected second life.

They headed into a tie-break and again Federer took charge, but once again Murray refused to buckle.

Swinging freely from 6-4 down, the Wimbledon champion forced two errors from Federer on match points before powering through to take the set.

The night session on Rod Laver Arena was suddenly electrified as one-way traffic turned into a dogfight, and Murray's battling qualities made for an absorbing fourth set, but it was Federer's attacking instincts that eventually prevailed.

A loud "Come on!" echoed around the stadium when the Swiss finally converted his 10th break point of the set and, given a second chance to serve out the match, he did not blink.

Federer fired a thunderous ace out wide to seal victory, and a real chance to win an unprecedented 18th Grand Slam title.

"It's really a big pleasure for me being back in the semi-finals," added Federer. "I think I've played semis here all the way since 2004.

"For me it's an amazing result again to be in the semis. This one feels different because of the tougher times I've had in Slams, Wimbledon, at the US Open.

"It's nice to be back in the semis and defend my points from last year. Not that it matters at my age."