Australian DJs Behind Prank Call Under Fire













An outpouring of anger is being directed today at the two Australian radio hosts after the death of a nurse who was caught in the DJs' prank call to hospital where Kate Middleton was treated earlier this week.


Lord Glenarthur, the chairman of King Edward VII's Hospital - the U.K. hospital where the Duchess of Cambridge was receiving treatment, condemned the prank in a letter to the Max Moore-Wilton, chairman of Southern Cross Austereo, the Australian radio station's parent company.


Glenarthur said the prank humiliated "two dedicated and caring nurses," and the consequences were "tragic beyond words," The Associated Press reported.


DJs Mel Greig and Michael Christian, radio shock jocks at Sydney's 2Day FM have been taken off the air, but the company they work for did not fire them or condemn them.


"I think that it's a bit early to be drawing conclusions from what is really a deeply tragic matter," Rhys Holleran, CEO of Southern Cross Austereo told a news conference in Sydney. "I mean, our main concern is for the family. I don't think anyone could have reasonably foreseen that this was going to be a result."


Nurse Jacintha Saldanha was found dead Friday morning after police were called to an address near the hospital to "reports of a woman found unconscious," according to a statement from Scotland Yard.


Circumstances of her death are still being investigated, but are not suspicious at this stage, authorities said Friday.


Following news of Saldanha's death, commentary on social media included posts expressing shock, sadness and anger.








Nurse Duped by 'Queen's' Prank Call Found Dead Watch Video









Jacintha Saldanha, Nurse at Kate Middleton's Hospital, Found Dead Watch Video







A sampling of some of the twitter posts directed at the DJs included: "you scumbag, hope you get what's coming to you" and "I hope you're happy now."


The hospital said that Saldanha worked at the hospital for more than four years. They called her a "first-class nurse" and "a well-respected and popular member of the staff."


The hospital extended their "deepest sympathies" to family and friends, saying that "everyone is shocked" at this "tragic event."


"I am devastated with the tragic loss of my beloved wife Jacintha in tragic circumstances, she will be laid to rest in Shirva, India," Saldanha's husband posted on Facebook.


The duchess spent three days at the hospital undergoing treatment for hyperemesis gravidarum, severe or debilitating nausea and vomiting. She was released from the hospital on Thursday morning.


"The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are deeply saddened to learn of the death of Jacintha Saldanha," a spokesman from St. James Palace said in a statement.


On Friday, Greig and Christian had been gloating about their successful call to the hospital, in which they pretended to be Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles and were able to obtain personal information about the Duchess's serious condition.


"You know what they were the worst accents ever and when we made that phone call we were sure a hundred people at least before us would have tried the same thing," said Grieg on air. She added with a laugh, "we were expecting to be hung up on we didn't even know what to say [when] we got through."


"We got through and now the entire world is talking, of course," said her co-host Christian.


When the royal impersonators called the hospital, Saldanha put through to a second nurse who told the royal impersonators that Kate was "quite stable" and hadn't "had any retching."


The hospital apologized for the mistake.


"The call was transferred through to a ward, and a short conversation was held with one of the nursing staff," the hospital said in a statement. "King Edward VII's Hospital deeply regrets this incident."


"This was a foolish prank call that we all deplore," John Lofthouse, the hospital's chief executive, said in the statement. "We take patient confidentiality extremely seriously, and we are now reviewing our telephone protocols."


The radio station also apologized for the prank call.






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YouTube reorganises video with automated channels









































The world's most popular video website is quietly transforming itself. YouTube's massive archive of video is being automatically organised into niche channels that cover seemingly everything, from daredevil wingsuit flying to an odd style of finger dancing called "tutting".












A redesign launched yesterday will make these automated channels – not the same as existing channels that belong to users – a core part of what people experience when they log on. It's all part of parent company Google's efforts to get you to watch more videos online. Put simply, Google wants YouTube to be the future of television.












"It's somewhat unlikely that someone will go out there and program 24 hours a week of wingsuit flying," says Noam Lovinsky, director of product management at YouTube. "But we want to make sure there is a channel for that."












Algorithms build the automated channels by tracking user activity. When someone enters a term like "wingsuits" into YouTube, for example, the site records how a user navigates the search results, which video they end up clicking, which clips they go on to after that, and so on. It then scans user comments for each video, looking for words that help describe the clip.












Software also watches as users program their own channels, gathering metadata which, when aggregated over millions of users, can be used to build an interesting channel for everyone.











Content analysed













Even the content of videos is analysed by machine vision and listening software to help assign them to channels (see "Operation Finding Bieber"). Detecting laughter in a clip will help refine the automated comedy channels in the new YouTube, for instance. "We can tell that there's music in the video, or laughing, whether it's shot outside or inside," says Christos Goodrow, YouTube's head of search and discovery.












YouTube will also be pushing its users to tag video using labels from a structured library called Freebase. The idea is ultimately to make it easier for newly uploaded videos to find their way into a channel. The company hopes this will compel users to stay longer and watch more video, so it can serve more advertisements.












To help spark interest in the new channels, YouTube is aping a concept that's been around in traditional TV for years: the DVR box. As of 6 December, a personalised panel called "The Guide" has begun following users around on YouTube, gently pushing channels to them based on their activity, as well as helping keep track of new content from channels they already follow. A user who searches for videos about the US Open tennis tournament, then proceeds to watch nothing but Roger Federer clips, might be pushed to subscribe to the Roger Federer channel.












Ultimately, YouTube's engineers are trying to create a new formula for building television channels, one that relies on the entire YouTube-watching community for programming advice. But first it needs to classify its vast amount of content.












"Discovery is the absolute number one challenge for YouTube," says Rich Greenfield of BTIG Research the research arm of investment firm BTIG in New York City. "Automated channels is their attempt to simplify it."












In many ways, the site is at the same point now as cable television was back in the early 90s, he adds. "If you'd asked people back then whether cable television would ever have the same level of content as broadcast, they'd have laughed." His guess is that "it won't take YouTube 30 years" to assert itself as a major competitor with today's television channels.




















Operation Find Bieber







The X-Factor musical talent quest of the future may be judged by a machine. While interning at Google in Mountain View, California, Eric Nichols of the University of Indiana in Bloomington developed a system that analyses the quality of the music in home videos uploaded to YouTube. The system analyses the audio for harmonious chords and tight rhythms, and is able to make a basic distinction between high and low quality music.









































If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.




































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Kate hospital hoax call staffer in found dead






LONDON: A staff member at a hospital which treated Prince William's pregnant wife Catherine was found dead in a suspected suicide Friday, days after being duped by a hoax call from an Australian radio station, reports said.

British police confirmed that they were investigating the "unexplained death" of a woman whose body was discovered at a property near the King Edward VII hospital in central London.

Several British newspapers reported the death of a staff member but there were conflicting reports as to what role the woman had at the hospital.

In what it billed as the "biggest royal prank ever", two presenters from Sydney's 2Day FM station called the hospital on Monday pretending to be Queen Elizabeth II and William's father Prince Charles.

They asked to speak to the former Kate Middleton and a hospital receptionist then put them through to a nurse who gave the presenters private details of the Duchess of Cambridge's severe morning sickness.

The Daily Mail newspaper quoted an unidentified source as saying that the woman appeared to have killed herself at an address just metres away from the hospital.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said: "Police were called at 9:25 am this morning to reports of a woman unconscious at an address in Weymouth Street, W1.

"London Ambulance Service attended and a woman was pronounced dead at the scene. Inquiries continue to establish the circumstances of the incident. The death is being treated as unexplained."

A source in the emergency services told AFP that while the death was being treated as unexplained it was not thought to be suspicious.

Presenters Mel Greig and Michael Christian said sorry earlier this week for the call, even as the station was milking the publicity for it.

"We were very surprised that our call was put through. We thought we'd be hung up on as soon as they heard our terrible accents," the presenters said in a statement.

"We're very sorry if we've caused any issues and we're glad to hear that Kate is doing well."

Kate was admitted to hospital on Monday with acute morning sickness and left on Thursday, saying she was feeling much better.

Her admission to hospital was the first the world knew of her pregnancy. It will be the couple's first child and will be third in line to the British throne after Charles and William.

- AFP/jc



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Sony begins testing online Entertainment Network Store



Sony has started testing a new online marketplace to buy games, movies, and television shows.


The Sony Entertainment Network Store popped up on the Web today, and was discovered by Eurogamer. For now, the marketplace appears to only be available to customers outside the U.S. When folks get to the site and choose a country and language, a U.S. option is not available.


Sony has not formally announced the marketplace, but in a comment on a blog posted to the EU
PlayStation site, Sony Computer Entertainment Europe blog manager Fred Dutton said that the company is "testing a new Web store, which we look forward to announcing and launching to the PlayStation/Sony community shortly."



Although the site was accessible earlier this morning, those who attempt to access it now find an error message saying that it's "not available." It's not clear when the site might come back and allow users to make purchases.


The Sony Entertainment Network business is in the process of a transition. Last month, Sony announced that the division's boss Tim Schaaff is retiring at the end of December, and will be replaced by Sony Computer Entertainment President and CEO Andrew House. Schaaff was instrumental in establishing the Network's full suite of multimedia marketplaces.


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Space Pictures This Week: Lunar Gravity, Venusian Volcano









































































































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Missing Woman Survived on Tomatoes and Snow













The woman who was stranded in the Sierra Nevada mountains survived for six days by eating tomatoes and snow until she was found by her brother, who was part of a team searching for her and her boyfriend.


Paula Lane, 46, was rescued Wednesday. Her boyfriend, Roderick Clifton, died.


He had left her to find help after their Jeep got stuck in the snow as they drove from Clifton's mother's home in Citrus Heights, Calif., to their own home in Gardnerville, Nev., Nov. 29.


They were reported missing the following day after Lane failed to meet her mother for a planned dinner and wasn't reachable by cellphone, according to KXTV, an ABC TV affiliate in Sacramento.


The couple are believed to have taken their Jeep Cherokee off-roading when they became stuck off Highways 88-89 in Alpine County.


The area where they got stuck was so remote that cellphone service was limited. The couple were unable to call for help, and police couldn't locate them using their cellphones.


Clifton, 44, never returned to Lane. His body was found Wednesday, several miles from the highway. Police have not yet confirmed how he died, but they don't believe foul play was involved.






Citrus Heights Police Dept.











Missing Nevada Couple Found, Boyfriend Dead Watch Video









Lane had set out to find help after her boyfriend failed to return.


Lane's family is happy she is alive.


"It's been a rough haul, waiting all those days, trying to know if she'd made it or not," Lane's older sister, Linda Hathaway, said at a news conference Thursday at Carson Tahoe Regional Hospital, the Carson City, Nev., facility to which Lane was taken and treated for first-degree frostbite and malnourishment.


Police had launched a manhunt for the missing couple, but bad weather at times prevented authorities from sending up planes or helicopters.


Hathaway had given up hope, and said she had prepared her sister's 11-year-old twin sons for the worst.
"We sat them down to tell them that their mother may not come back," she said.


But the women's brother kept searching along the route that Lane would have taken home. Lane and Clifton routinely made the drive from Citrus Heights to Gardnerville.


Hathaway said her brother eventually found Lane crawling along Highway 88.


"I took the call and to hear him say, 'I found her, I found her,'" Hathaway said.


When she was reunited with her sister, Hathaway recalled: "I gave her the biggest kiss that I could without hurting her."


Hathaway described her sister as tenacious.


"I tell you, my sister may be little, but she is mighty and she's a survivor and loves life," she added.


Dr. Vijay Maiya, Lane's physician, said his patient had apparently found shelter by "hiding out in a hollow tree," in addition to eating the tomatoes they had with them.


"She is medically stable. She's recovering nicely," Maiya said at the news conference, adding that 25 percent of Lane's recovery would be physical and 75 percent would be "emotional."


Maiya expects to keep Lane in the hospital through the weekend to monitor her recovery.


ABC News' Russell Goldman contributed to this report.



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The UK's new dash for gas is a dangerous gamble






















The British government's new emphasis on gas power and fracking puts the climate and consumers at risk, says an environmental policy researcher






















Following hard on the heels of the British government's Energy Bill, with its apparent incentives for large quantities of new power from nuclear and renewables, UK chancellor George Osborne has now unveiled his gas generation strategy – building up to 40 new power plants – and given a clear nod to potential shale gas and the fracking that will be needed to extract it.












Often described as a second "dash for gas", it may be as much a cause for perplexity as anything else. Do we really need these two large government initiatives tailing each other like London buses?












In light of the go-ahead for gas, it is worth asking whether the government remains committed to carbon emissions reduction targets and to the advice of the Committee on Climate Change which it set up. The CCC wants a lesser role for new gas generation.












The secretary of state for energy and climate change, Ed Davey, a member of the Liberal Democrat party that forms a minority within the coalition government, says yes. The chancellor, a member of the Conservative party which dominates the coalition, demands delay and a review of crucial decisions, which implies no. The prime minister David Cameron, a fellow Conservative, appoints climate and renewables sceptics to key positions and vetoes the appointment of the chief executive of the CCC, David Kennedy, to head up the government's Department for Energy and Climate Change.












You have to draw your own conclusions. Less clarity over government policymaking is hard to imagine.












If investment in renewables and nuclear power materialises, their costs, and carbon emissions, will fall, perhaps encouraging a future government to reaffirm the UK's commitment to carbon reduction targets. If that happens, any gas-fired stations built today will either have to fit carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology or operate at ever-lower capacities and lower marginal returns on electricity.












An investor in such a gas plant, perhaps faced with rising gas prices, would stand to lose money unless paid simply to be there for when the wind was not blowing or the nuclear stations were being serviced. Perhaps the capacity payments envisaged in the Energy Bill will do that. The detail is still to be revealed.











Keeping gas













If, on the other hand, there is little investment in nuclear and new renewables, then the gas-fired power stations will need to run and run to keep the lights on. Without CCS, the UK will miss emissions targets by a large margin.












Leaving aside the abdication of the high ground of climate change mitigation this would represent, there is the issue of gas prices and security of supply.












Optimists imagine that the bonanza of shale gas in the US will spread to Europe and the rest of the world, prices will fall, and the UK will see a new age of cheap energy. There is no evidence that this is likely.












Most experts suggest that even where shale gas exists in quantity – not as common as the initial euphoria about shale gas imagined and current commentary asserts – its extraction would be limited by factors such as public opposition to the local environmental impact and lack of the huge quantity of water that fracking needs.












Burgeoning global demand from India, China and other emerging economies would eat up new gas supplies as fast as they became available, so prices would remain high and supplies potentially constrained. In this scenario, UK households and industry would be tied to a highly unpredictable roller coaster of gas prices that are generally high and can spike higher due to volatility, and be vulnerable to geopolitical disruptions to supply.











Responsible option













For my money, the climate-responsible, economically prudent and relatively secure energy trajectory for the UK is the low-carbon route, based largely on renewables and the efficient use of energy, but perhaps with some new nuclear for a diminishing base load.












Despite the risks, we will still need some of the gas-fired power stations that the government's gas generation strategy envisages. They are relatively cheap to build and their owners would be increasingly paid through the 2020s to back up the low-carbon energy when it is not available. But that role would diminish as energy storage options for renewables develop and electricity grids across Europe become more inter-connected – as is envisaged.












What seems to have become clear in the last few weeks is that the chancellor and prime minister do not care much about climate responsibility, and have been persuaded by the gas industry and other voices that large-scale gas use is a relatively safe bet. This seems to me a dangerous conclusion for the UK, with little foundation in evidence. A future government should reverse it.






















































If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.




































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All 13 Singaporeans on board stranded Indonesian ferry safe






SINGAPORE: All 13 Singaporeans on board a Singapore-Tanjong Pinang ferry which ran aground off Lobam island on Wednesday night are safe.

Ferry operator Sindo Ferry and Indonesia's Search and Rescue Agency, BASARNAS, gave this update in response to queries from Channel NewsAsia.

Of the 97 passengers, one Indonesian lady is still in hospital for medical attention.

The ferry, MV Sindo 31, left Singapore from Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal at 6.20pm on Wednesday.

At about 8pm, Sindo Ferry (formerly known as Penguin Ferry) received a call from the captain of the vessel that the ferry had ran aground off Lobam island.

The passengers and crew were stranded for around two hours.

Before help arrived, an Indonesian woman, accompanied by two family members were sent to a nearby hospital by local maritime police for urgent medical attention.

At about 10pm, two smaller local ferries, each with a capacity of 40 people, arrived to pick up the stranded passengers.

With combined efforts by the Tanjung Uban Sea and Coast Guards and BASARNAS, the passengers were ferried to Tanjung Uban, where they boarded a standby vessel , MV Penguin 7, and arrived at Tanjong Pinang near midnight.

The stranded ferry was not damaged and is currently moored at Tanjong Uban for further investigations.

Sindo Ferry says the stranded ferry is seaworthy and it is investigating the cause of the accident.

Weather conditions and low-tide are believed to have caused the accident.

- CNA/de



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Samsung Galaxy Admire 4G arrives at MetroPCS



It may look much more like the Samsung Galaxy S3 than the original Samsung Galaxy Admire, but the Samsung Galaxy Admire 4G, available today from MetroPCS, does boost the Admire name.


Namely, it adds LTE connectivity, which brings must faster data transfer compared to Metro's 2.5G network.


However, those hoping to brandish a high-end smartphone won't get one in the Admire 4G. Instead, the specs stack up to a small, but affordable entry-level device.


Let's start with the 3.65-inch HVGA screen, which is minuscule by today's standards. Then add the 1GHz processor, and top it off with
Android 2.3 Gingerbread, which is already a few versions old at this point.


The Admire 4G also carries a 3-megapixel rear-facing camera and a VGA front-facing camera for video chats. While I fully expect this phone to satisfy the requirements of budget smartphone-seekers on MetroPCS' network, I am disappointed that the phone isn't a little more high-powered with Android 4.0 Gingerbread and a faster dual-core processor.


MetroPCS begins selling the Admire 4G online today for $169 with no contract requirement. It goes on sale in stores beginning tomorrow.


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High-Voltage DC Breakthrough Could Boost Renewable Energy

Patrick J. Kiger


Thomas Edison championed direct current, or DC, as a better mode for delivering electricity than alternating current, or AC. But the inventor of the light bulb lost the War of the Currents. Despite Edison's sometimes flamboyant efforts—at one point he electrocuted a Coney Island zoo elephant in an attempt to show the technology's hazards—AC is the primary way that electricity flows from power plants to homes and businesses everywhere. (Related Quiz: "What You Don't Know About Electricity")

But now, more than a century after Edison's misguided stunt, DC may be getting a measure of vindication.

An updated, high-voltage version of DC, called HVDC, is being touted as the transmission method of the future because of its ability to transmit current over very long distances with fewer losses than AC. And that trend may be accelerated by a new device called a hybrid HVDC breaker, which may make it possible to use DC on large power grids without the fear of catastrophic breakdown that stymied the technology in the past.  (See related photos: "World's Worst Power Outages.")

Swiss-based power technology and automation giant ABB, which developed the breaker, says it may also prove critical to the 21st century's transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources, by tapping the full potential of massive wind farms and solar generating stations to provide electricity to distant cities.

So far, the device has been tested only in laboratories, but ABB's chief executive, Joe Hogan, touts the hybrid HVDC breaker as "a new chapter in the history of electrical engineering," and predicts that it will make possible the development of "the grid of the future"—that is, a massive, super-efficient network for distributing electricity that would interconnect not just nations but multiple continents. Outside experts aren't quite as grandiose, but they still see the breaker as an important breakthrough.

"I'm quite struck by the potential of this invention," says John Kassakian, an electrical engineering and computer science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "If it works on a large scale and is economical to use, it could be a substantial asset."

Going the Distance

The hybrid HVDC breaker may herald a new day for Edison's favored mode of electricity, in which current is transmitted in a constant flow in one direction, rather than in the back-and-forth bursts of AC. In the early 1890s, DC lost the so-called War of the Currents mostly because of the issue of long-distance transmission.

In Edison's time, because of losses due to electrical resistance, there wasn't an economical technology that would enable DC systems to transmit power over long distances. Edison did not see this as a drawback because he envisioned electric power plants in every neighborhood.

But his rivals in the pioneering era of electricity, Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse, instead touted AC, which could be sent long distances with fewer losses. AC's voltage, the amount of potential energy in the current (think of it as analogous to the pressure in a water line), could be stepped up and down easily through the use of transformers. That meant high-voltage AC could be transmitted long distances until it entered neighborhoods, where it would be transformed to safer low-voltage electricity.

Thanks to AC, smoke-belching, coal-burning generating plants could be built miles away from the homes and office buildings they powered. It was the idea that won the day, and became the basis for the proliferation of electric power systems across the United States and around the world.

But advances in transformer technology ultimately made it possible to transmit DC at higher voltages. The advantages of HVDC then became readily apparent. Compared to AC, HVDC is more efficient—a thousand-mile HVDC line carrying thousands of megawatts might lose 6 to 8 percent of its power, compared to 12 to 25 percent for a similar AC line. And HVDC would require fewer lines along a route. That made it better suited to places where electricity must be transmitted extraordinarily long distances from power plants to urban areas. It also is more efficient for underwater electricity transmission.

In recent years, companies such as ABB and Germany's Siemens have built a number of big HVDC transmission projects, like ABB's 940-kilometer (584-mile) line that went into service in 2004 to deliver power from China's massive Three Gorges hydroelectric plant to Guangdong province in the South. In the United States, Siemens for the first time ever installed a 500-kilovolt submarine cable, a 65-mile HVDC line, to take additional power from the Pennsylvania/New Jersey grid to power-hungry Long Island. (Related: "Can Hurricane Sandy Shed Light on Curbing Power Outages?") And the longest electric transmission line in the world, some 2,500 kilometers (1,553 miles), is under construction by ABB now in Brazil: The Rio-Madeira HVDC project will link two new hydropower plants in the Amazon with São Paulo, the nation's main economic hub. (Related Pictures: "A River People Await an Amazon Dam")

But these projects all involved point-to-point electricity delivery. Some engineers began to envision the potential of branching out HVDC into "supergrids." Far-flung arrays of wind farms and solar installations could be tied together in giant networks. Because of its stability and low losses, HVDC could balance out the natural fluctuations in renewable energy in a way that AC never could. That could dramatically reduce the need for the constant base-load power of large coal or nuclear power plants.

The Need for a Breaker

Until now, however, such renewable energy solutions have faced at least one daunting obstacle. It's much trickier to regulate a DC grid, where current flows continuously, than it is with AC. "When you have a large grid and you have a lightning strike at one location, you need to be able to disconnect that section quickly and isolate the problem, or else bad things can happen to the rest of the grid," such as a catastrophic blackout, explains ABB chief technology officer Prith Banerjee. "But if you can disconnect quickly, the rest of the grid can go on working while you fix the problem." That's where HVDC hybrid breakers—basically, nondescript racks of circuitry inside a power station—could come in. The breaker combines a series of mechanical and electronic circuit-breaking devices, which redirect a surge in current and then shut it off.  ABB says the unit is capable of stopping a surge equivalent to the output of a one-gigawatt power plant, the sort that might provide power to 1 million U.S. homes or 2 million European homes, in significantly less time than the blink of an eye.

While ABB's new breaker still must be tested in actual power plants before it is deemed dependable enough for wide use, independent experts say it seems to represent an advance over previous efforts. (Siemens, an ABB competitor, reportedly also has been working to develop an advanced HVDC breaker.)

"I think this hybrid approach is a very good approach," says Narain Hingorani, a power-transmission researcher and consultant who is a fellow with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. "There are other ways of doing the same thing, but they don't exist right now, and they may be more expensive."

Hingorani thinks the hybrid HVDC breakers could play an important role in building sprawling HVDC grids that could realize the potential of renewable energy sources. HVDC cables could be laid along the ocean floor to transmit electricity from floating wind farms that are dozens of mile offshore, far out of sight of coastal residents. HVDC lines equipped with hybrid breakers also would be much cheaper to bury than AC, because they require less insulation, Hingorani says.

For wind farms and solar installations in the Midwest and Rocky Mountain regions, HVDC cables could be run underground in environmentally sensitive areas, to avoid cluttering the landscape with transmission towers and overhead lines. "So far, we've been going after the low-hanging fruit, building them in places where it's easy to connect to the grid," he explains. "There are other places where you can get a lot of wind, but where it's going to take years to get permits for overhead lines—if you can get them at all—because the public is against it."

In other words, whether due to public preference to keep coal plants out of sight, or a desire to harness the force of remote offshore or mountain wind power, society is still seeking the least obtrusive way to deliver electricity long distances. That means that for the same reason Edison lost the War of the Currents at the end of the 19th century, his DC current may gain its opportunity (thanks to technological advances) to serve as the backbone of a cleaner 21st-century grid. (See related story: "The 21st Century Grid: Can we fix the infrastructure that powers our lives?")

This story is part of a special series that explores energy issues. For more, visit The Great Energy Challenge.


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