Lögberg-Heimskringla - 21.05.1982, Síða 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 21.05.1982, Síða 1
Sedlabanki Islands Adalskrif stcfa Austurstraeti 11 fieykjavik Iceland 96. ÁRGANGUR pd 198k Lögberq Heimskringla LÖGBERG Stofnað 14. janúar 1888 HEIMSKRINGLA Stofnað 9. september 1886 WINNIPEG, FÖSTUDAGUR 21. MAÍ 1982 NÚMER 19 Ambitious industrial plans make headlines Courtesy News from Iceland Recent weeks saw flareups of ag- ing Icelandic controversies over the proposed development of several new industries. Described variously as holding out great promises and as white elephants, the schemes call for plants turning out rockwool, from domestic basalt; sugar, from imported molasses; common salt, from geothermal brine; and steel rods for poured concrete, from scrap metal. What triggered the simultaneous rounds of acrimonious public debate was a move by the Minister of Industry and Energy, Hjörleifur Guttormsson (People's Alliance). He announced that he favoured. Saudárkrókur, a N-Iceland village, as a site for the rockwool factory. His reasoning on this matter had a twin basis: the longstanding govern- ment commitment to regional development, and the argument that more alternatives were open to the rival bidders. That group includes a large number of municipalities in the cen- tral South. It has promoted the coastal hamlet of Thorlákshöfn for years as the only logical host to the rockwool project. Understandably, a key argument of that lobby is that community's nearness to the most densely populated part of the coun- try, the Reykjavík area. Guttermsson's announcement quickly rallied all legislators from the central South to a common cause — where political stripes, for once, played no role. These members of Althing (parliament) vowed to leave no stone unturned in the efforts to win the nod for Thorlákshöfn. A consolation deal was soon bröached: a plant using geothermal steam for extracting sugar from low- priced imported molasses, to be located in Hveragerdi, a short distance from Thorlákshöfn. Apart from the regional tug-of-war over the rockwool scheme, each of the four proposed industries draws a good deal of fire from critics who worry that the operation will be un- profitable, to say the least. While such thinking is rejected out of hand by enthusiastic pro- moters of each plan, all or most of them — curiously enough — pin their hopes on substantial state in- vestment and other official favours, such as low energy rates and, critics say, protection against cheap com- peting imports. One articulate critic of all four plans wrote, among other things, that while rockwool has been losing ground in the construction industry, the envisaged output of the factory that may rise in Saudárkrókur or Thorlákshöfn amounts to many times the current domestic re- quirements of the product. As for possible transport of rockwool from the N-Iceland village to Reykjavík, the State Shipping Authority, which cannot operate without massive subsidies, has of- fered rates that amount to just a small fraction (roughly a quarter) of what its coastal freighters normally charge. The highly tentative sugar pro- posal involves a largely untried pro- cess, though the availability of cheap heat energy from geothermal drillholes in Hveragerdi is an attractive feature of the picture by “ Fyrsta vikan í maí var óvenju köld um gervallt ísland. Á Norðurlandi snjóaði í nokkra daga og urðu vegir þar flótt ófærir vegna skafrennings. Snjómoksturstæki höfðu vart við og fylltist slóðin jafnhraðan þar sem þau fóru um. Sunnanlands var frekar hvöss norðanátt en þurrt. Frost var meira en vant er á þessum árstíma og aðfararnótt þess 6. mældist 7.6 stiga Minister of Energy, Guttorms- son addressing parliament. all accounts. While molasses im- ports for the facility would be inex- pensive, the assumed sales of the residue ,as animal feed are pro- blematic. Sugar markets globally are more or less glutted. A pilot plant for extracting sodium chloride (common salt) from super- heated geothermal brine has operated in SW-Iceland for several years. Technologically, that installa- tion is very interesting as it gets feedstock and energy from the same drill hole; a product turned out there has been used successfully on a test basis by processors salting dermersal fish for export to Mediterranean markets. frost og er það kaldasta maínótt þessarar aldar. Farfuglar hröktust til og frá, leituðu skjóls í húsagörðum og heldur fannst þeim vistin daufleg. Á Austurlandi var ástand líkt því á Norðurlandi, blindhríð í nokkra daga og allir fjallvegir ófærir. Bændur þar voru að vonum áhyggjufullir því sauðburður var Work to build on what has been achieved through the pilot project in SW-Iceland is in progress, with the state committed to a major role in the sodium chloride venture. But warnings keep coming from critics who question the profitability estimates, not least with regard to inexpensive competing supplies from Spain — salt that can be brought here at low freight rates linked to traditional shipments of fish products to the Mediterranean region. Others caution against a whole- sale switch to domestic sodium chloride in salting seafood, pointing to the danger of adverse reactions among foreign consumers ac- cumstomed to Icelandic salted fish of very specific taste and texture. Still others make mention of the growing publicity given to sodium as a health risk. A Reykjavík group (Stálfélagid) is seeking to raise capital for a small stell mill, a facility that would pro- duce most or all reinforcement rods needed in this country, where poured concrete is the basic con- struction material. While advocates of that plan say it is viable (given rates that are in line with rod costs to builders abroad), opponents fasten on the outlook for continuing steel surpluses in foreign markets. u.þ.b. að hefjast og grös byrjuð að grænka. Á Húsavík urðu götur þungfærar og sama má segja um aðra kaupstaði. Þegar þetta er ritað hefur veðrinu slotað og hiti kominn upp fyrir frostmark. Vorið er vonandi gengið í garð svo gróður taki nú við sér og farfuglar geti aldið áfram að huga að hreiðurgerð. Fyrri hluti maí óvenju kaldur á íslandi

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