Paris airports closed as high winds lash France

A picture taken yesterday shows an oyster fishing boat in a field of Port du Pave, near Charron western France.

Hurricane force winds lashed France yesterdayPARIS: Hurricane force winds lashed France yesterday, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of households and prompting the closure of Paris’s two international airports for the first time in 34 years.Wind gusts of up to 140kph were recorded on France’s Atlantic coast, with forecasters saying they could reach up to 160kph.Some 300,000 households in western France were without power yesterday morning, the electricity grid operator ERDF said.With gusts of up to 100kph expected to hit the Paris region, the authorities closed Paris’s airports from 8pm on Monday until 10am yesterday.The airport reopened at 10am, but Air France reported major delays for all incoming and outgoing flights.All flights to and from the city’s two main airports, Charles de Gaulle (Roissy) and Orly, were cancelled and travellers were asked not to head to either of them.Charles de Gaulle is one of the busiest airports in Europe.It’s annoying because I work tomorrow, but it’s for security reasons, said Jean-Pierre Niros, 57, an Air France passenger at Charles de Gaulle who was supposed to return to the southern city of Nice on Monday.Air France said it had put up 3,000 clients in some 2,200 hotel rooms near Charles de Gaulle for passengers, but airport authorities said some 100 passengers spent the night in transit lounges.Regional airports in Nantes, Brest and Rennes remained opened, although several flights were cancelled.The storm comes just two weeks after another that left 11 dead in the southwest.The long Atlantic coast was expected to be worst hit, with heavy rain and powerful winds, but the entire west and north of the country was in the storm’s path, weather forecasters said.Ferries between Brittany and nearby islands were suspended, operators Oceane and Penn Ar Bedd said, while Brittany Ferries postponed the inaugural sailing yesterday of its service from Roscoff to Plymouth in southern Britain.Dispatchers in coastal regions said that emergency services had received dozens of calls for fallen trees and electricity cuts, and several for roof damage, but that the situation was under control.School bus services were cancelled in some regions over fears of fallen trees, and truck traffic was prohibited near Bordeaux due to the wind.The French navy has put three rescue vessels on standby to sail to the aid of any shipping in difficulty in the mouth of the Channel, while sandbags have been deployed on sea-fronts exposed to potential flooding.

A picture taken yesterday shows an oyster fishing boat in a field of Port du Pave, near Charron western France.

Hurricane force winds lashed France yesterdayPARIS: Hurricane force winds lashed France yesterday, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of households and prompting the closure of Paris’s two international airports for the first time in 34 years.Wind gusts of up to 140kph were recorded on France’s Atlantic coast, with forecasters saying they could reach up to 160kph.Some 300,000 households in western France were without power yesterday morning, the electricity grid operator ERDF said.With gusts of up to 100kph expected to hit the Paris region, the authorities closed Paris’s airports from 8pm on Monday until 10am yesterday.The airport reopened at 10am, but Air France reported major delays for all incoming and outgoing flights.All flights to and from the city’s two main airports, Charles de Gaulle (Roissy) and Orly, were cancelled and travellers were asked not to head to either of them.Charles de Gaulle is one of the busiest airports in Europe.It’s annoying because I work tomorrow, but it’s for security reasons, said Jean-Pierre Niros, 57, an Air France passenger at Charles de Gaulle who was supposed to return to the southern city of Nice on Monday.Air France said it had put up 3,000 clients in some 2,200 hotel rooms near Charles de Gaulle for passengers, but airport authorities said some 100 passengers spent the night in transit lounges.Regional airports in Nantes, Brest and Rennes remained opened, although several flights were cancelled.The storm comes just two weeks after another that left 11 dead in the southwest.The long Atlantic coast was expected to be worst hit, with heavy rain and powerful winds, but the entire west and north of the country was in the storm’s path, weather forecasters said.Ferries between Brittany and nearby islands were suspended, operators Oceane and Penn Ar Bedd said, while Brittany Ferries postponed the inaugural sailing yesterday of its service from Roscoff to Plymouth in southern Britain.Dispatchers in coastal regions said that emergency services had received dozens of calls for fallen trees and electricity cuts, and several for roof damage, but that the situation was under control.School bus services were cancelled in some regions over fears of fallen trees, and truck traffic was prohibited near Bordeaux due to the wind.The French navy has put three rescue vessels on standby to sail to the aid of any shipping in difficulty in the mouth of the Channel, while sandbags have been deployed on sea-fronts exposed to potential flooding.

Source: http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=272234&version=1&template_id=39&parent_id=21

Storm forces closure of Paris airports

Storm forces closure of Paris airports | Ireland.com

A storm swept across northern France today, cutting off more than 600,000 homes from the power grid and forcing the closure of the airports in Paris.It was the second major storm to hit France in less than three weeks after gale force winds killed four people and left close to 2 million homes without power on January 24th in the southwest of the country.In an unusual precautionary measure, authorities halted all air traffic in the Paris region yesterday evening.

Planes were scheduled to start flying again from 9am this morning.Meteo France, the weather forecast agency, said winds of up to 140 kph had buffeted the northwestern coast, while inland gusts of up to 120 kph had been recorded.The manager of the power grid, Electricite Reseau Distribution France, still struggling to mend power lines in the southwest after the first storm, said a total of 608,000 homes were cut off across the northern regions of the country as trees and electricity pylons fell down.The worst-hit areas were a belt of regions along the centre of the country, the coastal Pays de la Loire, where Nantes is located, the region around Orleans, just to the east, and Burgundy, further east.Meteo France said the weather was less intense than the January 24th storm but affected a wider swathe of the country and would last longer.

It expected the storm to move east of France 6pm.In Brittany and along the Vendee coast, bridges to certain islands were shut down because they were too risky in the winds, but few other transport disruptions were reported.Reuters

Source: http://www.ireland.com/home/Storm_forces_closure_Paris_airports/maxiview.ie?mx_fast_NEWS_irishtimes.com_uuid=223959_irnewsirishtimes

A Coulommiers, la France a commencé à basculer vers la télé tout …

A Coulommiers, la France a commencé à basculer vers la télé tout numérique – Technologies | Multimedia – MSN – Actualités Rechercher sur le web : AFP – mercredi 4 février 2009, 21h24 A Coulommiers, la France a commencé à basculer vers la télé tout numérique Dans un café à Paris en octobre 2008 Le passage à la télé tout numérique, gage d’un choix de chaînes accru et d’images de meilleure qualité, a débuté mercredi à Coulommiers (Seine-et-Marne), prélude à sa généralisation à toute la France d’ici fin 2011.Pour la première fois en France, le signal analogique, un mode de diffusion aussi vieux que la télévision elle-même, a été éteint et remplacé par un signal numérique peu avant 18H45 pour une zone de 7.600 foyers installés dans une partie de Coulommiers et de neuf communes voisines.”C’est la première étape de la révolution numérique”, a déclaré sur place Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, secrétaire d’Etat au Développement de l’économie numérique.

“C’est une très grande étape et c’est à Coulommiers que cela se passe”, a renchéri la ministre de la Culture et de la communication Christine Albanel.Le passage au numérique permet de diffuser beaucoup plus de chaînes qu’en analogique, notamment des chaînes locales, des chaînes en haute définition avec une haute qualité d’images, et il ouvre la voie à la télévision mobile personnelle ainsi qu’à la diffusion de radios par voie numérique.

Ce basculement nécessite l’installation d’un boîtier spécifique — intégré dans les postes de télévision vendus depuis mars 2008 –, quelques réglages sur le poste télé et, dans le cas d’un immeuble, une adaption de l’antenne collective.”Dans les jours à venir, Coulommiers va permettre de transmettre l’expérience acquise”, a relevé Mme Kosciusko-Morizet, en résumant les quelques accrocs recensés: problèmes de réception dans certains immeubles collectifs, dispositif d’aide financière insuffisamment utilisé et travail d’explication à approfondir “pour convaincre de l’intérêt du passage au tout numérique”.Depuis le 8 novembre, les équipes du groupement d’intérêt public France Télé Numérique se sont activés sur le terrain pour aider les habitants à s’équiper.

Mais elle cohabite à ce jour avec la télévision analogique, à l’exception donc désormais des 7.600 foyers de Coulommiers.Une deuxième opération-pilote doit être menée au printemps prochain à Kaysersberg (Haut-Rhin), une commune frontalière avec l’Allemagne, qui pose par conséquent des questions d’ajustement de fréquences entre les deux pays.Viendra ensuite le 18 novembre l’opération, beaucoup plus vaste, de l’extinction de l’analogique pour la ville de Cherbourg et le Nord-Cotentin, soit près de 200.000 téléspectateurs.Pour la suite, l’extinction du signal analogique devrait se dérouler, région par région (il s’agit des régions de couverture de la chaîne régionale France 3) du début 2010 jusqu’au 30 novembre 2011, date fixée par la loi pour l’extinction définitive de l’analogique en France.

Source: http://news.fr.msn.com/multimedia/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13715795

France Biotech Reports a 79% Fall in Equity Investments in French …

- reform of the research tax credit (the “CIR”) has led to an average annual reduction of 56% for biotech companies incorporated within the last 5 years, in view of changes in tax rates and the exclusion of OSEO refundable advances as eligible expenditure for the rebate.

Its mission is to help to raise the French life science industry to the leading rank in Europe.

France Biotech is a driving force for change; it lobbies public authorities, economic organizations, academic research, the media and, particularly, the investor community in order to encourage the emergence of biotechnology as a top-priority, hi-tech industry and to improve the economic, legal, regulatory and managerial environment of these businesses.

The association’s corporate members account for the vast majority of the investments, employees and innovative products in France’s life science sector.

Source: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/france-biotech-reports-a-79,707274.shtml