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Health 24 kontor. Symbion.

Sectaurs: Warriors of Symbion was a line of action figures released by Coleco in 1984.

No. 3 - 5 Exploring: Göteborg (Gothenburg) City.

Along Rosenlund Canal to the Fiskekyrka. .

 

At the Fiskekyrka.

 

LOBSTER

 

Scientific classification

Domain: ..............Eukarya

Kingdom: .............Animalia

Phylum: ................Arthropoda

Subphylum: ..........Crustacea

Class: ...................Malacostraca

Order: ...................Decapoda

Suborder: .............Pleocyemata

Infraorder: .............Astacidea

Family: ..................Nephropidae

 

.Clawed lobsters comprise a family (Nephropidae, sometimes also Homaridae) of large marine crustaceans. Lobsters are economically important as seafood, forming the basis of a global industry that nets more than US$1 billion annually.

 

Though several groups of crustaceans are known as "lobsters," the clawed lobsters are most often associated with the name. They are also revered for their flavour and texture. Clawed lobsters are not closely related to spiny lobsters or slipper lobsters, which have no claws (chelae), or squat lobsters. The closest relatives of clawed lobsters are the reef lobsters and the three families of freshwater crayfish.

 

Biology

Lobsters are found in all oceans. They live on rocky, sandy, or muddy bottoms from the shoreline to beyond the edge of the continental shelf. They generally live singly in crevices or in burrows under rocks.

 

They are invertebrates, with a hard protective exoskeleton. Like most arthropods, lobsters must moult in order to grow, which leaves them vulnerable. During the molting process, several species change colour. Lobsters have 10 walking legs; the front two adapted to claws.

 

As arthropods, lobsters have not developed the nervous system of cephalopod molluscs, nor do they have the advantages of good eyesight. They do, however, exhibit three remarkable evolutionary advances that have led to their great success. Their exoskeleton is a strong, lightweight, form-fitted external covering and support. They display striated muscle: quick, strong, and lightweight, it enables rapid movement and flight. Finally, articulated appendages allow their limbs to bend at specific points.

 

Lobsters, omnivores, typically eat prey live: fish, molluscs, other crustaceans, worms, and some plant life. They scavenge if necessary, and may resort to cannibalism in captivity; however, this has not been observed in the wild. Although lobster skin has been found in lobster stomachs, this is because lobsters eat their shed skin after moulting.

 

Although clawed lobsters, like most other arthropods, are largely bilaterally symmetrical, they often possess unequal, specialized claws, like the king crab. The claw of a freshly caught lobster is full and fleshy, not atrophied. Lobster anatomy includes the cephalothorax which fuses the head and the thorax, both of which are covered by the chitinous carapace and the abdomen. The lobster's head consists of antennae, antennules, mandibles, the first and second maxillae, and the first, second, and third maxillipeds. Because lobsters live in a murky environment at the bottom of the ocean, it mostly uses its antennae as sensors. The lobster eye has a reflective structure atop a convex retina. In contrast, most complex eyes use refractive ray concentrators (lenses) and a concave retina. The abdomen includes swimmerets and its tail is composed of uropods and the telson.

 

Lobsters, like snails and spiders, have blue blood due to the presence of haemocyanin, which contains copper. (In contrast, mammals and many other animals have red blood from iron-rich haemoglobin.) Inside lobsters is a green viscous substance called tomalley, which serves as the hepatopancreas, functioning as both liver and pancreas.

 

In general, lobsters are 25–50 centimetres (9.8–20 in) and move by slowly walking on the bottom of the sea floor. However, when they flee, they swim backwards quickly by curling and uncurling their abdomen. A speed of five meters per second (about 11 mph) has been recorded.[6] This is known as the caridoid escape reaction.

 

Symbion

Animals of the genus Symbion, the only member of the animal phylum Cycliophora, live on lobster gills and mouthparts. To date it has only been found associated with lobsters.

 

Longevity

Recent research has led scientists to believe that lobsters may be one of a small number of species which do not die of aging. Lobsters do not slow down, weaken, or lose fertility with age. In fact, older lobsters are more fertile than younger lobsters. The reason for this infinite longevity is said to be due to telomerase, an enzyme that repairs DNA sequences of the form "TTAGGG"; This sequence is often referred to as the telomeres of the DNA. In fact, lobsters may exhibit negligible senescence, in that they effectively live indefinitely, barring injury, disease, capture, etc.They can thus reach impressive sizes. According to the Guinness World Records, the largest lobster was caught in Nova Scotia, Canada, and weighed 20.15 kilograms (44.4 lb).

 

Gastronomy

Lobster recipes include Lobster Newberg and Lobster Thermidor. Lobster is used variously, for example in soup, bisque or lobster rolls. Lobster meat may be dipped in clarified butter, resulting in a sweetened flavour.

 

Cooks boil live lobsters in water or steam. The lobster simmers for seven minutes for the first pound and three minutes for each additional pound.

 

Lobsters are also fried, grilled, or baked.

 

The American lobster contains high levels of mercury.

 

Lobsters are sold alive with claws strapped or banded to prevent them from injuring each other or people. The banding causes the claws to gradually atrophy. Lobsters may be prepared and cooked while alive; removing their claws may not kill them. As with all shellfish, lobster is not kosher. The majority of the meat is in the tail and the two front claws. The legs and torso contain smaller quantities. Freezing the lobster may toughen the meat. A common misconception is that a lobster screams when boiled; actually the whistling sound is steam escaping the shell.

 

History

The European wild lobster, including the royal blue lobster of Audresselles, is more expensive and rare than the American lobster. It was consumed chiefly by the royal and aristocratic families of France and the Netherlands. Such scenes were depicted in Dutch Golden Age paintings of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

 

In North America, the American lobster did not achieve popularity until the mid-19th century, when New Yorkers and Bostonians developed a taste; not until the invention of a special vessel, the lobster smack, did a commercial fishery flourish. Prior to this time, lobster was considered a mark of poverty or as a food for indentured servants or lower members of society in Maine, Massachusetts and the Canadian Maritimes, and servants specified in employment agreements that they would not eat lobster more than twice per week. In Canada, outside of the rural outposts lobster was sold canned. New England's fresh lobster trade extended as far as Philadelphia.

 

The lobster market changed once the transportation industry could deliver live lobsters to urban centers. Fresh lobster became a luxury food and a tourist attraction for the Maritime provinces and a luxury export to Europe and Japan where it is especially expensive.

 

Lobster's high price led to the creation of "faux lobster". It is often made from pollock or other whitefish. A few restaurants sell "langostino lobster".. Langostino translates into prawn; the actual animal may be crab. The spiny lobster is also called langouste.

 

Capacity for pain

Due to the ambiguous nature of suffering, the issue of lobster pain may be argued by analogy—that lobster biology is similar to human biology or that lobster behavior warrants assumptions that lobsters can feel pain.

 

The Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety tentatively concluded that "it is unlikely that [lobsters] can feel pain," though they note:

 

"there is apparently a paucity of exact knowledge on sentience in crustaceans, and more research is needed."

 

This conclusion is based on the lobster's simple nervous system. The report assumes that the violent reaction of lobsters to boiling water is a reflex to noxious stimuli.

 

However, review by the Scottish animal rights group Advocate for Animals released the same year reported:

 

"scientific evidence ... strongly suggests that there is a potential for [lobsters] to experience pain and suffering,"

 

primarily because lobsters (and other decapod crustaceans) "have opioid receptors and respond to opioids (analgesics such as morphine) in a similar way to vertebrates," indicating that lobsters' reaction to injury changes in the presence of painkillers. The similarities in lobsters' and vertebrates' stress systems and behavioral responses to noxious stimuli were given as additional evidence.

 

A 2007 study at Queen's University, Belfast, suggested that crustaceans do feel pain. In the experiment, when prawn antennae were rubbed with sodium hydroxide or acetic acid, the animals showed increased grooming of the afflicted area and rubbed it more against the side of the tank. Moreover, this reaction was inhibited by a local anesthetic, even though control prawns treated with only anaesthetic did not show reduced activity. Professor Robert Elwood, who headed the study, argues that sensing pain is crucial to prawn survival, because it encourages them to avoid damaging behaviors. Some scientists responded, saying the rubbing may reflect an attempt to clean the affected area.

 

In a 2009 study, Prof. Elwood and Mirjam Appel showed that hermit crabs make motivational tradeoffs between shocks and the quality of the shells they inhabit. In particular, as crabs are shocked more intensely, they become increasingly willing to leave their current shells for new shells, and they spend less time deciding whether to enter those new shells. Moreover, because the researchers did not offer the new shells until after the electrical stimulation had ended, the behaviour change resulted from memory of the noxious event, not an immediate reflex.

 

Opioids

In vertebrates, endogenous opioids are neurochemicals that moderate pain by interacting with opiate receptors. Opioid peptides and opiate receptors occur naturally in crustaceans, and although The Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety claims that “at present no certain conclusion can be drawn,” critics interpret their presence as an indication that lobsters experience pain. The aforementioned Scottish paper holds that vertebrates and lobsters' opioids may "mediate pain in the same way".

 

Morphine, an analgesic, and naloxone, an opioid receptor antagonist, may affect a related species of crustacean (Chasmagnathus granulatus) in much the same way they affect vertebrates: injections of morphine into crabs produced a dose-dependent reduction of their defensive response to an electric shock. (However, the attenuated defensive response could originate from either the analgesic or sedative properties of morphine, or both.) These findings have been replicated for other invertebrate species,but similar data is not yet available for lobsters.

 

Animal welfare issues

The most common way of killing a lobster is by placing it, live, in boiling water, or by splitting: severing the body in half, lengthwise.

 

The boiling method (also used to kill crabs, crayfish and shrimp) is controversial because some believe that the lobster suffers. The practice is illegal in some places, such as in Reggio Emilia, Italy, where offenders face fines of up to €495. The Norwegian study states that the lobster may be de-sensitized by placing it in a salt solution 15 minutes before killing it.

 

In 2006, British inventor Simon Buckhaven invented the Crustastun, which electrocutes lobsters with a 110 V electric shock, killing them in five seconds. This ensures a quicker death for the lobster. Seafood wholesalers in Britain use a commercial version. A home version was released to the public in about 2006.

 

Fishery and aquaculture

Lobsters are caught using baited, one-way traps with a colour-coded marker buoy to mark cages. Lobster is fished in water between 1 and 500 fathoms, although some lobsters live at 2,000 fathoms. Cages are of plastic-coated galvanized steel or wood. A lobster fisher may tend as many as 2,000 traps. Around the year 2000, due to overfishing and high demand, lobster farming expanded. As of 2008, no lobster farming operation had achieved commercial success.

 

In human culture

The Moche people of ancient Peru worshipped the sea and its animals. Moche art often depicted lobsters.

 

Lobsters dance a "Lobster Quadrille" in the eponymous chapter of Lewis Carroll's famous book Alice in Wonderland. It and the related lobster poems eg Will you, won’t you, will you, won’t you, won’t you join the dance?; and "Tis the voice of the Lobster; I heard him declare."

 

List of clawed lobster species

There are 48 known species in the family Nephropidae. - to see the full list please consult:

from - Wikipedia

  

Taken on September 5, 2007 at 15:17 BST

Una natura morta con protagonista il primo prototipo di cuore artificiale realizzato in campo medico. Omaggio allo stile e alla composizione tipiche delle nature morte, come un’oggetto fuori dal tempo, l’omaggio è non solo stilistico, anche scientifico, in piena fusione con l’ideologia moderna che eleva gli oggetti creati dall’uomo a pure reliquie. ( critica di Alexandra Ieni )

 

L’autore racconta

 

Ho sempre amato e studiato medicina, in particolare “neurologia” questa parte del nostro corpo per me è sempre stata importante, ora iniziano a maturare i miei studi sulla biomeccanica. Realizzando quest’ultimo lavoro ho studiato gli strumenti utilizzati in cardiochirurgia, trovandomi di fronte a video e immagini leggermente aberranti, ma soddisfacenti. Spero che questo lavoro verrà apprezzato non per la sua estetica, ma per il totale distacco dal concetto d’arte contemporanea.

 

Frammenti di storia

 

Robert Jarvik lavora congiuntamente con Kolff sul cuore artificiale Jarvik-7, un “self-contained” (autonomo), basato su modelli precedenti, in particolare quello di Paul Winchell. Non era stata trovata migliore soluzione per la trasmissione di energia transcutanea che inserire chirurgicamente due tubi pneumatici di 3 cm. Un paziente con un Jarvik-7 aveva mobilità molto limitata ma altri problemi, come l’embolia e l’infezione, venivano adeguatamente controllati. I pazienti però necessitavano ancora di farmaci, tra cui alcuni pesanti come antibiotici e altri tipi di trattamenti. Il cuore utilizzava membrane ultra sottili impilate per formare una superficie diaframmatica con un lubrificante di grafite ad intermittenza posto tra le membrane.

 

Jarvik-7

 

Il nome di Jarvik viene quindi alla ribalta nel 1982 grazie ad una ben ventilata copertura giornalistica che diffonde l’opera dell’impianto del cuore artificiale.

 

Jarvik nel frattempo era stato affiancato da un altro collaboratore personalmente scelto da Kolff, William DeVries. Insieme impiantarono il Jarvik-7 nel corpo di Barney Clark, un dentista in pensione, presso l’Università di Utah il 2 dicembre 1982. Egli sopravvisse 112 giorni,prima della morte. In questi giorni Jarvik e De Vries aggiornavano frequentemente il mondo riguardo alle condizioni del paziente tramite varie conferenze stampa. Successivamente il cuore venne migliorato e venne impiantato nel corpo di William J. Schroeder, sopravvissuto 620 giorni.

 

Più tardi, Jarvik formò l’azienda Symbion, per la costruzione di cuori artificiali, ma la perse in un cambio di gestione. In seguito fondò la JARVIK Heart e iniziò a lavorare per creare Jarvik 2000, un nuovo dispositivo che si propone di garantire assistenza ventricolare a vita. Nel 2006, Jarvik iniziò ad apparire in spot televisivi per farmaci Lipitor. Due membri del Congresso, come parte della loro campagna contro i testimonial, iniziarono un’indagine sostenendo che i suoi spot televisivi costituivano un parere medico dato senza una licenza per esercitare la professione medica. Più tardi, Jarvik ha ammesso di non aver preso Lipitor. In data 25 febbraio 2008, la compagnia annunciò che avrebbe interrotto i suoi annunci con Jarvik. ( fonti wikipedia )

www.marcogarofalostudio.com/?p=995

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Health 24, kontor i Symbion på Østerbro.

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Health 24, kontor i Symbion på Østerbro.

Energy panel moderator Stephen Sedgwick of CNBC takes a question from the audience. From left are Poppy Allonby of BlackRock, Francesco Giuliani of First Reserve, Paul Hinks of Symbion Power, Ian MacDonald of Chevron and Pierce Riemer of the World Petroleum Council.

Part of the Chevron Forum on Development

csis.org/event/presidents-africa-trip-and-power-africa-in...

With opening remarks by:

Andrew Herscowitz

Coordinator, Power Africa and Trade Africa, USAID

Featuring:

Christopher Camponovo

Director, Business Development, Symbion Power

Ben Leo

Global Policy Director, ONE

Ambassador Robert C. Perry

Vice President for International Programs, Corporate Council on Africa

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Codirector and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Moderated by:

Jennifer G. Cooke

Director, Africa Program, CSIS

Friday, July 12, 2013

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

B1 Conference Center

CSIS 1800 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006

Recent announcements by President Obama while travelling in Africa signal a paradigm shift in U.S.-Africa engagement, with greater priority given to economic growth, trade and investment, and new forms of partnership with a “continent that is on the move.” The president announced a new U.S. initiative while in Tanzania—“Power Africa”—targeting increased access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable power in Africa. The president’s announcement offers an opportunity to tackle a long-standing barrier to development and growth in Africa, as well as a major stumbling block for potential U.S. investors.

Please join CSIS for a discussion of the likely impact of the president’s trip in boosting private-sector engagement in Africa, the parameters and potential of the Power Africa initiative, and critical next steps by the administration, Congress, private-sector players, and African governments to maximize its impact. The panel will offer its views on the opportunity for the private and public sectors to coordinate their strategies and leverage their strength to achieve measurable growth in power accessibility in Africa.

This event is part of CSIS’s ongoing “Chevron Forum on Development” series, which seeks to highlight innovative approaches to global development.

This should be a timely and informative discussion.

Please RSVP to ChevronForum@csis.org.

Follow @CSIS_USLD, @CSISAfrica, and #CSISLive for live updates.

Programs

AFRICA PROGRAM, CHEVRON FORUM ON DEVELOPMENT, PROJECT ON U.S. LEADERSHIP IN DEVELOPMENT

Topics

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, GLOBAL PROSPERITY

Regions

AFRICA, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

2022-11-02: The officials addressing audience during Africa Investment Forum 2022. In frame (L-R): Paul Hinks, CEO of Symbion Power; Hon. Amadou Hott, Minister of Economy, Planning and Cooperation at Government of Senegal; Tim Turner, Senior Advisor TDB & Investment Committee Member, ILX Fund and other official.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivers remarks at the Symbion Power Plant in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on June 12, 2011. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivers remarks at the Symbion Power Plant in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on June 12, 2011. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton shakes hands with Tanzanian Energy and Minerals Minister William Ngeleja, at the Symbion Power Plant in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on June 12, 2011. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton shakes hands with Tanzania Electric Supply Company's (TANESCO) managing director William Mhando at the Symbion Power Plant in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on June 12, 2011. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivers remarks at the Symbion Power Plant in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on June 12, 2011. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]

Peter N.M. Hansteen's PF tutorial at the Symbion 12th september 2007

 

Oh, and I have to ask: Why is this horribly overexposed, boring shot the most viewed photo in the set? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?

Symbion Science Park, Fruebjergvej 3.2100 København Ø. .20170509...Photo: News Øresund - Johan Wessman.© News Øresund - Johan Wessman (CC BY 3.0).. .Detta verk av News Øresund är licensierat under en Creative Commons Erkännande 3.0 Unported-licens (CC BY 3.0). Bilden får fritt publiceras under förutsättning att källa anges. .The picture can be used freely under the prerequisite that the source is given. News Øresund, Malmö, Sweden.News Øresund är en oberoende regional nyhetsbyrå som är en del av det oberoende dansk-svenska kunskapscentrat Øresundsinstituttet...www.newsoresund.org..www.oresundsinstituttet.org

Peter N.M. Hansteen's PF tutorial at the Symbion 12th september 2007

Symbion Science Park, Fruebjergvej 3.2100 København Ø. .20170509...Photo: News Øresund - Johan Wessman.© News Øresund - Johan Wessman (CC BY 3.0).. .Detta verk av News Øresund är licensierat under en Creative Commons Erkännande 3.0 Unported-licens (CC BY 3.0). Bilden får fritt publiceras under förutsättning att källa anges. .The picture can be used freely under the prerequisite that the source is given. News Øresund, Malmö, Sweden.News Øresund är en oberoende regional nyhetsbyrå som är en del av det oberoende dansk-svenska kunskapscentrat Øresundsinstituttet...www.newsoresund.org..www.oresundsinstituttet.org

Watch out Patty Hearst, I just got some new mobile bling!

Symbion Science Park, Fruebjergvej 3

2100 København Ø. .20170509...Photo: News Øresund - Johan Wessman.© News Øresund - Johan Wessman (CC BY 3.0).. .Detta verk av News Øresund är licensierat under en Creative Commons Erkännande 3.0 Unported-licens (CC BY 3.0). Bilden får fritt publiceras under förutsättning att källa anges. .The picture can be used freely under the prerequisite that the source is given. News Øresund, Malmö, Sweden.News Øresund är en oberoende regional nyhetsbyrå som är en del av det oberoende dansk-svenska kunskapscentrat Øresundsinstituttet...www.newsoresund.org..www.oresundsinstituttet.org

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