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Friday, August 12, 2011

World's fastest solar car of the Philippines is ready to Fly to Australia

Philippines will lead from First Solar Powered boat to Solar powered car as the Worlds’ fastest

Sikat II, the country’s third solar powered car made by Filipino students, made its first public appearance via a test run at the 83-kilometer North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) in preparation for the 2011 World Solar Challenge in Australia on Oct. 16 to 23.

Ramon Agustines, president of the Philippine Solar Car Challenge Society Inc., said the presence of solar cars shows that solar energy is now being utilized in the country.

Agustines said Sikat II has the potential to top the World Solar Challenge due to some improvements in its design and mechanical features.

It sports a sleek and aerodynamic body made of lightweight carbon fiber-honeycomb composite.

It is lighter compared to Sinag which joined the same competition in 2007.

“Sikat II only weighs 170 to 180 kilograms compared to Sinag,” Agustines said, citing that the latter placed 12th in the 2007 race.

“This means that Sikat II can reach top speed in shorter time and can reserve more energy during the race which is needed in increasing speed,” he said.

For his part, Jack Catalan, team leader of Sikat II and a professor of the De La Salle University - Philippines, said like Sinag, Sikat II can reach a top speed of 120 to 130 kilometers per hour.

“We used the same motor for Sinag and Sikat, but Sikat II is lighter and will have more energy during the race,” he said.

Catalan said they held the test run at the NLEX because they want to simulate the 3,000-kilometer stretch between Darwin and Adelaide in Australia where the race will be held.

“We thank the Manila North Tollways Corporation for allowing us to have our test run along the NLEX,” Catalan said, adding that this will help them identify problems in the car or improvements that have to be made.

“We used the same motor for Sinag and Sikat, but Sikat II is lighter and will have more energy during the race,” he said.

Catalan said they held the test run at the NLEX because they want to simulate the 3,000-kilometer stretch between Darwin and Adelaide in Australia where the race will be held.

“We thank the Manila North Tollways Corporation for allowing us to have our test run along the NLEX,” Catalan said, adding that this will help them identify problems in the car or improvements that have to be made.

He, however, noted one limitation of Sikat II – it cannot run when it is raining because it was designed and built for the Australian race.

“We gave more priority to the design and sleekness and less attention on the waterproofing because there is less rain where the race will be held,” he said.

Catalan also said building Sikat II highlights the capability of Filipinos to lead in terms of sustainable energy technology.

While it was pioneered by the Philippine Solar Car Society, it was designed and developed by 22 students and three professors from the Mechanical Engineering and Electronics Engineering departments of DLSU.

This project is also supported by First Gen Corporation, First Philec Solar, Energy Development Corp. and Sunpower - Philippines.

Better solar cells Made in the Philippines

Recently, the The world’s largest and most advanced solar-powered boat, the M/S Tûranor Planet Solar, is proof that energy harnessed from the heat of the sun can power practically everything—from pocket-sized calculators to cruise ships.

The Solar powered ship is exclusively powered by 38,000 high-efficiency solar cells all produced in the Philippines at the manufacturing facilities of SunPower Corporation. Already, it has won two accolades – the fastest crossing of the Atlantic by a solar-powered vessel and the longest distance covered by a solar-powered electric vehicle, according to WWF.

Now, the Philippines is taking a move for the solar powered car to be the “Worlds Fastest Solar Car with the speed of 120 to 130 Km/h.

But aside from better design, Catalan said the Philippines has a chance of inching away from competing countries—which would include the US, the Netherlands, Belgium, the United Kingdom, France, Japan, Taiwan and Singapore, among many others—due to the new solar cells fitted into the car, which he claims is more efficient in harnessing solar power.

"The Sikat II now sports better efficiency solar cells from SunPower. We expect our chances to be better this year because in previous races, the teams who couldn't afford such silicon-type cells were at a disadvantage," Catalan explained.

SunPower is a multinational company that manufactures solar cells in its two wafer plants in Laguna and Batangas, Philippines.

The more than 300 solar cells used by the Sikat II solar-powered car are the same ones fitted into the MS Tûranor, the world's largest solar-powered boat, which made a stopover in Manila in late July, some members of Team Solar Philippines confirm.

According to SunPower's website, its high-efficiency cells are believed to be 50 percent more efficient than traditional solar cells.

Catalan revealed that in building the car alone, the team spent some P7 million pesos, much less than the minimum amount spent by most teams, which is pegged at about $600,000.

"But we're hoping that may not be a constraint," he stressed.

In the bi-annual competition, Sikat II's mettle will be tested against various elements as it makes its way through the 3,000-kilometer track on the Stuart Highway, a road that extends from Darwin, the capital of the North Territory, to Adelaide in South Australia.

In 2007, the Dutch Nuon Solar team from the Netherlands brought home the top crown with their Nuna 4 car, while Tokai University Solar Car team from Japan brought home the top prize in 2009 with their “Tokai Challenger" car.

In 2009, the Philippine Solar Car Society and the DLSU likewise led the design of Sikat II's predecessor, Sikat I, but it was only used for a road show around the country to promote the country's bid for the this year's solar car race.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

America urged to boost the Philippines Military Armaments amid Spratlys dispute

The vintage WWII warships and poor armed Philippines stands-up in spite of china’s bully. The country is in trouble to find sources of fund to upgrade their armaments to gain respect from the invading neighbors and were forced to ask help from the Washington through MDT which signed last August 30, 1951.

Recently, the cutter class was turnover by the USA to the Philippines and gains China’s revulsion and warned the Philippines from arm building in the Spratlys – Philippines Territory.

China has already erected structures in the Philippines Territory  the Spratlys which the Philippines government could not push them back as they are equipped with more sophisticated war weapons.

The Philippines indeed is the only rusting bolt that hinder china from controlling all over Asia. Without and Philippines; China would already control all over spratlys and around ASEAN countries. The Philippines serves as the remaining gateway of the ASEAN countries which needs to be strengthen to stand against china’s invasion in the region.

A key official of the Heritage Foundation, a Washington D.C.-based think tank, exhorted the United States’ policymakers to “help provide the Philippines the military wherewithal to withstand Peoples’ Republic of China pressure."

Walter Lohman, director of the Asian Studies Center of the Heritage Foundation, said in a “WebMemo" that the U.S. “may very well find itself in a position where it cares more about the security of the Philippines" than the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

The policy commentary comes less than three weeks after the U.S. Coast Guard turned over a Hamilton class warship to the Philippines. The Philippines bought the 115-meter cutter for about P450 million with funds from the Malampaya natural gas project royalties.

Lohman acknowledged ASEAN as “the most logical, neutral forum for regional diplomacy," but he also criticized it as a multilateral grouping that “consistently wins on engagement and loses on substance."

“That is not a formula can trust with its interests," according to Lohman.

Lohman urged U.S. officials to pursue “more direct avenues… which prudent use of ASEAN Forums can supplement."

“America’s principal interest in the South China Sea is freedom of navigation, and its most effective instrument in this regard is the U.S. Navy," Lohman stressed.

He said ASEAN has “deeply ambivalent" stance about China’s ascendance as a regional power and affects the regional group’s effectiveness in addressing conflicting territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

Lohman also disparaged the ASEAN’s Bali agreement, forged only last July, as a set of confidence-building measures that produced only “meager results" and conceded to China’s approach to “vociferously" reject multilateral solutions.

“All the 2002 [Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea] agreement did was provide the opportunity to set aside ASEAN’s disagreements with China for the cause of broader, lucrative economic engagement. The July 2011 Bali guidelines simply kick the can down the road again. And for this, ASEAN Secretary General Surin Pitsuwan called it an “historic" achievement," Lohman opined.

He also noted that effectiveness of ASEAN is also affected by the fact that its chairmanship is rotated “through a number of cautious and/or China-deferential countries, such as Cambodia, Brunei, Burma and Laos."

The Heritage Foundation official advised America to “keep its alliance network front and center" and urged U.S. officials to “look for ways to expand bilateral strategic partnerships, with Vietnam and India in particular."

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