General Actions:
Tournament | Round | Opponent | Judge | Cites | Round Report | Open Source | Edit/Delete |
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Pennsbury | 1 | Bronx Science DM | Maneo Choudhury |
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Pennsbury | 3 | NFA GP |
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Tournament | Round | Report |
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Pennsbury | 1 | Opponent: Bronx Science DM | Judge: Maneo Choudhury 1AC- Mexico Decentralized Solar (Buen Vivir) |
Pennsbury | 3 | Opponent: NFA GP | Judge: 1AC- Cuba Embargo |
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1NC Round 1 PennsburyTournament: Pennsbury | Round: 1 | Opponent: Bronx Science DM | Judge: Maneo Choudhury TInterpretation – "Economic engagement" is limited to trade of goods and services -energy is a non-economic partnershipRose, 8 — UC Berkeley Haas School of Business Administration ~Andrew, and Mark Spiegel, "Non-Economic Engagement and International Exchange: The Case of Environmental Treaties," April 2008, www.nber.org/papers/w13988.pdf?new_window=1-http://www.nber.org/papers/w13988.pdf?new_window=1~~ Mexico CPThe Federal Government of Mexico should substantially increase decentralized integrated photovoltaic electrification Mexico by itself can solve- Empirically proven Over the past quarter century, Latin America has widely adopted photovoltaic (PV) CPText: The United States federal government should provide decentralized integrated solar thermal assistance to Mexico.Solar thermal technology is more efficient solves the aff betterRichard Klein1 and Mariela Vasquez2, Spring-xx-2010, founder, Quixotic Systems Inc, inventor and entrepreneur1, engineering team, Quixotic Systems, B.A. in Mechanical Engineering @ University of Virginia2, "Solar Thermal: A New Sustainable Solution for Urban Multi-Family Buildings," http://www.quixotic-systems.com/imgs/nesea-article.pdf-http://www.quixotic-systems.com/imgs/nesea-article.pdf Advantages of solar thermal over solar electric (PV) Over the past few years PV damages the environmentMulvaney et al 1/14/09(Dustin Mulvaney, Ph.D.—Switzer Fellow, Vicki Bolam—Technical Writer, Monica Cendejas—Project Manager, SVTC, Sheila Davis—Executive Director, SVTC, Lauren Ornelas—Campaign Director, SVTC, Simon Kim—SVTC Intern, Stanford University, Serena Mau—SVTC Intern, University of California, Berkeley, William Rowan—SVTC Intern, Stanford University, Esperanza Sanz, SVTC Intern, De Anza College, Peter Satre—SVTC Intern, Stanford University, Ananth Sridhar—SVTC Intern, Stanford University, Dean Young—SVTC Intern, Stanford University. All work for Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition. "Towrds a Just and Sustainable Solar Energy Industry". http://www.etoxics.org/site/DocServer/Silicon_Valley_Toxics_Coalition_-_Toward_a_Just_and_Sust.pdf?docID=821) Silicon-based solar PV production involves many of the same materials as the microelectronics Environmental collapse causes extinctionEhrlich 26 Ehrlich 13 – Professor of Biology 26 Senior Research Scientist in Biology @ Stanford University (Paul R. Ehrlich (President of the Center for Conservation Biology @ Stanford University) 26 Anne H. Ehrlich, "Can a collapse of global civilization be avoided?," Proceedings of the Royal Society Biological Sciences, Proc. R. Soc. B 2013 280, published online 9 January 2013)HA Virtually every past civilization has eventually undergone collapse, a loss of socio-political KEnergy sharing creates justification for military conflictsLanglois-Bertrand 10 (Simon, Defence R26D Canada Centre for Operational Research and Analysis, "The Contemporary Concept of Energy Security," http://cradpdf.drdc-rddc.gc.ca/PDFS/unc101/p533868_A1b.pdf) The aff creates the myth of a "dirty, foreign" where the First World exploits the Third World.Mannathukkaren 12(Nissim, Associate Professor, International Development Studies, Dalhousie University, "Garbage as our alter ego", Nov 3, 2012, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/garbage-as-our-alter-ego/article4059003.ece) It’s try-or-die for the alternative shifting the view point to the consumer creates simplier strategiesAlexander 12Samuel, lecturer at the Office for Environmental Programs, University of Melbourne, Australia, "DEGROWTH IMPLIES VOLUNTARY SIMPLICITY: OVERCOMING BARRIERS TO SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION", Simplicity Institute Report 12b, 2012) DAGrid updates need pacingPOWERGRID International, 12/17/12 – from the editors based on an interview with Andre Begosso, managing director in the Accenture management consulting practice and is focused on the resources operating group. He has more than seventeen years of experience in the utility and energy industries and advises clients in the alternative energy, power generation and oil and gas sectors ("2013 trends for the power industry" December, http://www.elp.com/blogs/eye-on-the-grid/2012/12/2013-trends-for-the-power-industry.html-http://www.elp.com/blogs/eye-on-the-grid/2012/12/2013-trends-for-the-power-industry.html) In the absence of some major advance in energy storage, Andre said, he Decentralized solar creates instabilityJansson and Michelfelder, 8 - *Associate Professor at Rowan University in the Department Overloads the grid CAMDEN — Engineers and entrepreneurs are rushing to explore alternative sources of efficient and renewable energy in New Jersey and elsewhere in the country. ARutgers School of Business—Camden professor has strong words of caution as projects involving wind farms and photovoltaic cells proliferate.¶ With the electric-power industry poised for its most dramatic changes in decades, too little thought is being devoted to coordinating these piecemeal initiatives, warns Richard Michelfelder -http://business.camden.rutgers.edu/facultystaff/directory/michelfelder.htmin a recent edition of The Electricity Journal, the leading policy journal for the electric industry.¶ The consequence, he fears, might well be a disastrous overload of thenation’s electrical grid.¶ An assistant professor of finance at the Rutgers School of Business—Camden and former president and CEO of Quantum Consulting Inc., a national public utilities consulting firm based in Berkeley, Cal., Michelfelder comes to his assessment after a quarter-century in the energy-technology industry.¶ "When you start adding random assets to the grid, you also add the possibility of disruptions in the coordination of the flow of electricity," says Michelfelder. Blackouts cause nuclear meltdowns Long before the nuclear emergency in Japan, U.S. regulators knew that a power failure lasting for days at an American nuclear plant, whatever the cause, could lead to a radioactive leak. Even so, they have only required the nation’s 104 nuclear reactors to develop plans for dealing with much shorter blackouts on the assumption that power would be restored quickly. In one nightmare simulation presented by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2009, it would take less than a day for radiation to escape from a reactor at a Pennsylvania nuclear power plant after an earthquake, flood or fire knocked out all electrical power and there was no way to keep thereactors cool after backup battery power ran out. That plant, the Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station outside Lancaster, has reactors of the same older make and model as those releasing radiation at Japan’s Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, which is using other means to try to cool the reactors. And like Fukushima Dai-ichi, the Peach Bottom plant has enough battery power on site to power emergency cooling systems for eight hours. In Japan, that wasn’t enough time for power to be restored. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Energy Institute trade association, three of the six reactors at the plant still can’t get power to operate the emergency cooling systems. Two were shut down at the time. In the sixth, the fuel was removed completely and put in the spent fuel pool when it was shut down for maintenance at the time of the disaster. A week after the March 11 earthquake, diesel generators started supplying power to two other two reactors, Units 5 and 6, the groups said. The risk of a blackout leading to core damage, while extremely remote, exists at all U.S. nuclear power plants, and some are more susceptible than others, according to an Associated Press investigation. While regulators say they have confidence that measures adopted in the U.S. will prevent or significantly delay a core from melting and threatening a radioactive release, the events in Japan raise questions about whether U.S. power plants are as prepared as they could and should be. A top Nuclear Regulatory Commission official said Tuesday that the agency will review station blackouts and whether the nation’s 104 nuclear reactors are capable of coping with them. As part of a review requested by President Barack Obama in the wake of the Japan crisis, the NRC will examine "what conditions and capabilities exist at all 104 reactors to see if we need to strengthen the regulatory requirement," said Bill Borchardt, the agency’s executive director for operations. Borchardt said an obvious question that should be answered is whether nuclear plants need enhanced battery supplies, or ones that can last longer. "There is a robust capability that exists already, but given what happened in Japan there’s obviously a question that presents itself: Do we need to make it even more robust?" He said the NRC would do a site-by-site review of the nation’s nuclear reactors to assess the blackout risk. "We didn’t address a tsunami and an earthquake, but clearly we have known for some time that one of the weak links that makes accidents a little more likely is losing power," said Alan Kolaczkowski, a retired nuclear engineer who worked on a federal risk analysis of Peach Bottom released in 1990 and is familiar with the updated risk analysis. Risk analyses conducted by the plants in 1991-94 and published by the commission in 2003 show that the chances of such an event striking a U.S. power plant are remote, even at the plant where the risk is the highest, the Beaver Valley Power Station in Pennsylvania. These long odds are among the reasons why the United States since the late 1980s has only required nuclear power plants to cope with blackouts for four or eight hours. That’s about how much time batteries would last. After that, it is assumed that power would be restored. And so far, that’s been the case. Equipment put in place after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks could buy more time. Otherwise, the reactor’s radioactive core could begin to melt unless alternative cooling methods were employed. In Japan, the utility has tried using portable generators and dumped tons of seawater, among other things, on the reactors in an attempt to keep them cool. A 2003 federal analysis looking at how to estimate the risk of containment failure said that should power be knocked out by an earthquake or tornado it "would be unlikely that power will be recovered in the time frame to prevent core meltdown." In Japan, it was a one-two punch: first the earthquake, then the tsunami. Injustice====PV models have already been installed in Mexico for electricity and water treatment==== Mexico has enormous solar potential receiving an average of 5 kWh/m2 , and is as high as 7 kWh/m2 in states close to the Pacific reach. The country’s largest solar installations are in San Juanico (Baja California) and Agua Prieta Sonora, although solar technologies are still relatively Mexico will say no to any more decentralized energy productionHuacuz, 5 – (Jorge, Director of the Non-Conventional Energies Unit, Mexican Electric Research Institute; "The road to green power in Mexico—reflections on the prospects for the large-scale and sustainable implementation of renewable energy", Energy Policy, Vol. 33, Issue 16, pages 2087–2099, November 2005, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421504001041)//HO** Energy access doesn’t have a substantial social or economic impactCabraal et al., 5 – (R. Anil et al., Energy and Water, Energy Sector Management Assistance Program, World Bank; "PRODUCTIVE USES OF ENERGY FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT," World Bank, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTRENENERGYTK/Resources/5138246-1237906527727/5950705-1239304688925/productiveusesofenergyforrd.pdf)//HO** Toxic waste from panel production destroys arable land – means semiconductors cause wide spread hungerSchwartz 09 (Ariel, was formerly the editor of CleanTechnica and is a senior editor at Co.Exist. She has contributed to SF Weekly, Popular Science, Inhabitat, Greenbiz, NBC Bay Area, GOOD Magazine, and more. A graduate of Vassar College, she has previously worked in publishing, organic farming, documentary film, and newspaper journalism.. January 14 2009, "Danger: Solar Panels Can Be Hazardous to Your Health?", http://cleantechnica.com/2009/01/14/danger-solar-panels-can-be-hazardous-to-your-health//, 09-26-13) It’s easy to think that solar panels can do no wrong— after all, Incentivizing solar panel production is bad – waste from production kills crops and poisons Chinese villages-underrepresented groups in society are hurt the mostLiu 13 (Yingling, is manager of the China Program at the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington-D.C. based environmental research organization. January 14 2009, "The Dirty Side of a "Green" Industry", http://www.worldwatch.org/node/5650, 09-26-13) The Post article describes how Luoyang Zhonggui, a major Chinese polysilicon manufacturer, is Ethical policymaking requires calculation of consequencesGvosdev 5 – Rhodes scholar, PhD from St. Antony’s College, executive editor of The National Interest (Nikolas, The Value(s) of Realism, SAIS Review 25.1, pmuse) Role of the ballot is the evaluation of policy simulation and to maximize the lives saved. We should never sacrifice individuals for abstract market values – however, attempts to preserve lives gives equality to all rational beings – that’s key to value to lifeCummisky 96 (David, professor of philosophy at Bates College, Kantian Consequentialism, pg. 145) We must not obscure the issue by characterizing this type of case as the sacrifice Political engagement in potentially flawed discourses is paramount – refusal to directly engage admittedly corrupt politics mirrors the practice of German leftists in the 1930’s – a practice that led directly to the rise of HitlerWallace in ’96 (William, Prof. – London School of Economics, Review of International Studies, "Truth and Power, Monks and Technocrats: Theory and Practice in International Relations", 22:3, p. 307-309) Scalar PoliticsNational and International Model based approaches are useful in the context of energy politicsCraig 2 – (Paul, Professor of Engineering Emeritus at the University of California, Davis, "What Can History Teach Us? A Retrospective Examination of Long-Term Energy Forecasts for the United States," Annu. Rev. Energy Environ. 2002. 27:83–118) The applicable measure of success here is the degree to which the forecast can prompt Policymakers have an obligation to err in favor of prediction—it’s inevitable and using explicit predictions enhances decision-makingFitzsimmons 7 (Michael, Washington DC defense analyst, "The Problem of Uncertainty in Strategic Planning", Survival, Winter 06-07, online) Complexity theory leads to paralysisHendrick 9 (Diane; Department of Peace Studies – University of Bradford, "Complexity Theory and Conflict Transformation: An Exploration of Potential and Implications," June, http://143.53.238.22/acad/confres/papers/pdfs/CCR17.pdf-http://143.53.238.22/acad/confres/papers/pdfs/CCR17.pdf) Squo Solves-Mexico is leading the indigenous peoples political participation in Latin AmericaMunoz 12 (Herald, is a UN Assistant Secretary-General and UNDP’s Director for Latin America and the Caribbean. 23 May 2012, "Indigenous peoples’ political inclusion enriches democracy in Latin America | Heraldo Muñoz", http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/ourperspective/ourperspectivearticles/2013/05/23/la-inclusion-politica-de-los-pueblos-indigenas-enriquece-las-democracias-en-america-latina.html-http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/ourperspective/ourperspectivearticles/2013/05/23/la-inclusion-politica-de-los-pueblos-indigenas-enriquece-las-democracias-en-america-latina.html, 09-26-13) Mexico, for example, is advancing the ’coexistence’ of indigenous peoples’ legal systems Plan fails – our evidence contextualizes your affirmativePractical Action 6 – (provides practical power: renewable, locally-sourced sustainable energy solutions which lift people out of poverty, "Decentralised energy schemes," 5/8/06, http://practicalaction.org/decentralised-energy-http://practicalaction.org/decentralised-energy**)** Appropriate options include renewable energy schemes: solar photovoltaic (PV) systems, small Plan can’t solve gendered aspect of energy poverty – broader agenda is keyParikh et al., 99 – (Jyoti et al., writers for Economic and Political Weekly, citing numerous studies; Economic and Political Weekly, Vol. 34, No. 9, pages 539-544, 5 March 1999, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4407707?seq=3)//HO** Solvency====No Linkage between energy and poverty==== In recent years attention has risen again regarding the issue of rural access to electricity supply and regarding the relation between energy (electricity) and poverty. Cecelski (2000) reviews several "success factors" in widening rural access to electricity, including subsidies, ====PV systems are expensive-Germany proves==== Against my instincts I have come to oppose solar photovoltaic power (PV) in ====Can’t solve-nobody wants to make PV systems-best studies==== During Q3’12, utilization rates for cell and module capacity had to be reduced considerably | 2/12/14 |
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