Jobs in coal are plummeting across Europe as countries
shift to renewable energy sources – WWF is calling
for EU countries to phase out their coal power by 2030 to
fight the climate crisis and uphold the Paris
Agreement. Phasing out fossil fuel-based electricity
generation, especially coal, is a prerequisite for
fulfilling the European Union’s commitment to the Paris
Agreement and the leadership role the EU strives to have in
global climate policy. Such a major change must be
accompanied by a comprehensive Just Transition
Strategy to minimise hardships for workers and
their communities in the associated industries through
active political and financial support, as well as shifting
local economies towards sustainable economic activities.
This is particularly significant for the coal producing Stara Zagora, Pernik and Bobov Dol regions of
southwestern Bulgaria.
The European
Commission has set up a €17.5 billion Just Transition Fund
to help mediate the social impacts of the shift from coal in
regions whose economies have been based on it. Communities
can access the fund by drawing up plans which are submitted
by their government to the European Commission. The Fund –
and its sister schemes under the Just Transition Mechanism,
in combination with the national and private funds, are a
huge opportunity to shift to a durable, climate-neutral
economy. The new WWF report, Europe’s
Coal Regions: Boosting Employment, Environment and Economy
through ‘Just Transition’ takes an in-depth look
at the problems and opportunities in the Stara Zagora,
Pernik and Bobov Dol regions of southwestern Bulgaria;
Silesia and Eastern Wielkopolska in Poland; and Western
Macedonia and Megalopolis in Greece.
The report finds
that planning, local participation, transparency and a
commitment to end fossil fuels are crucial aspects for all
the regions which, alongside the financing, can turn coal
communities into sustainably and economically thriving
places to live.
“The analysis in Bulgaria shows
that 15,600 direct coal sector employees will easily find
jobs in existing economic sectors, but they will be lower
paid. Only 2,850 jobs will be created based on innovations
and new technologies generated by the Just Transition Fund
that will pay higher than current levels. That is why it is
crucial that the Fund’s resources are directed to
sustainable and innovative economic activities which will
allow a real Just Transition.” – Georgi Stefanov,
Chief Climate and Energy Expert, WWF Bulgaria
Just
Transition in Central and Eastern Europe
(CEE) will
contribute to achieving EU climate neutrality and the local
development of target regions by having a positive impact in
all the important aspects of the transition process –
social, economic and environmental. For example, the total
coal reserves in Southwest Bulgaria are estimated to be
relatively small –
less than 15% of the country’s
overall reserves; 5% of which is extracted. The two
operational thermal power plants (TPPs) in the region, TPP
Bobov Dol (Bobov Dol municipality) and TPP Republika (Pernik
municipality) burn about 2.5% of the coal, and generate
approximately 5% of Bulgaria’s annual electricity
production. Closing down these two coal-fired power plants
will leave an annual 903,781 MWh energy gap that will need
to be filled by alternative sustainable sources and energy
saving measures.
For example, there are over 150
protected areas of all types in Southwest Bulgaria,
including two of the country’s three national parks: Rila
National Park (the largest in Bulgaria) and Pirin National
Park (also a UNESCO World Heritage Site). These conditions
favour economic alternatives such as the development of
various forms of tourism, organic farming, organic
stock-breeding, sustainable forestry and fishing. Moving in
this direction would also comply with the desire that
economic activities should be compatible with the
conservation of valuable species, habitats and nature in
general. This fact should be a prerequisite for a
sustainable future and be considered when deciding on
alternative, Just Transition Mechanism-funded economic
investments in the region.
“The lessons for the EU are
clear. We can get this right, but to do so, the EU Just
Transition Mechanism must only be used in ways that support
a transition to a net-zero carbon economy, like by investing
in job-creating renewable energy or the circular economy –
and not in anything that would undermine it or create
stranded assets, like the false solution of fossil gas.
What’s more, the EU Commission must check local level
plans aim for zero fossil fuels and are drawn up in a
participatory, transparent and fair way.” – Katie
Treadwell, WWF European Policy Office
The report also
finds that:
Job numbers in mining are
falling and many more are at risk.
In Silesia, Poland,
15,000 to 18,000 workers in mining-related companies are at
risk of losing their jobs by 2030 [1] . 2,200 coal jobs in Greece are under imminent
threat;
The impacts go beyond employment
numbers.
Local communities in Western Macedonia,
Greece, will suffer income losses of some €3.1 for every
€ 1 taken off lignite-fired activity;
However in
many regions, sustainable jobs can more than replace those
lost.
Up to 22,000 jobs could be created in Poland’s
Eastern Wielkopolska region alone, making up for the jobs
lost in the coal lignite sector and related sectors;
and
To enable a successful Just
Transition, the Just Transition Mechanism should prioritise
investments linked to the net-zero carbon
economy.
This will help use the skills of
former coal workers and take advantage of the growing demand
for technologies and products in a low-carbon
economy.
When approving Territorial Just
Transition Plans, the Commission should:
Verify
that the “Partnership Principle” has been upheld. Verify
that investments will not prolong fossil fuel extraction and
use, and that a clear end date for coal is
set;
Verify respect for the Polluter Pays
Principle;
Seek to promote transparency by sharing
and publicising draft plans;
Ensure that plans set
out a framework of support for all workers affected;
and
Emphasise the importance of all pillars of the
Just Transition Mechanism and other national and EU public
funds such as the broader cohesion funds, to implement
plans.
The foreseen Action Plan on
Social Economy and the implementation of the European Pillar
of Social Rights should take particular account of
the needs of regions in transition and particularly coal
regions; and
The Commission should ensure
that the Territorial Just Transition Plans are consistent
with other EU funds – including the main recovery
fund, the “Recovery and Resilience Facility” (RRF) –
and in line with the EU Sustainable Investment Taxonomy and
the Do No Harm Principle.
20 years of independent publishing is a milestone, but your support is essential to keep Scoop thriving. We are building on our offering with thedig.nz our new In-depth Engaged Journalism platform. Now, more than ever sustainable financial support of the Scoop Foundation for Public Interest Journalism will help to keep these vital and participatory media services running.
Describing the “joy” felt by children and aid workers as classrooms reopened on Monday after more than 14 months of COVID-19 restrictions, Mads Oyen, UNICEF’s chief of field operations, explained that going back to school was about more than just learning.
Bells are ringing????in #southsudan to mark the reopening of schools. “We share in the excitement of the children, their teachers & the parents that finally the doors of our schools can reopen for children to learn, play and enjoy their right to safe education.” @HamidaLassekopic.twitter.com/owyBrZxKVd
“Especially in a country like South Sudan, where we’re also faced with humanitarian emergencies in many parts of the country”, he explained. “Schools are places for children to be safe and to be protected and also to access basic services, school feeding and so on.”
Despite the welcome development, the UNICEF official noted that many children had not been able to return to class, their future development held up by a chronic humanitarian emergency, fuelled by ongoing violence and climate shocks.
Malaria one threat among many
The warning comes ahead of the upcoming rainy season, which brings with it a higher risk of cholera, malaria and respiratory infections.
There has already been a near-doubling of outpatient admissions in the last weeks, likely from malaria infections or reinfections, Mr Oyens said.
“(It’s) about controlling malaria, it’s about controlling any measles outbreaks, it’s about providing clean water to kids”, he explained, before highlighting the “multiple risks” that children face.
These include “violence, exploitation and abuse (and) recruitment by armed groups, still going on, psychosocial distress and family separation”.
Fewer that one in 10 children has access to child protection services, the veteran UNICEF worker said, noting that between January and March this year, the agency scaled up treatment to more than 50,000 children who were suffering from severe acute malnutrition.
The recovery rate was more than 95 per cent “in some of the most difficult-to-operate areas of the world”, he added.
Health threat to 800,000
In a related development, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) warned on Tuesday that life-saving healthcare for more than 800,000 South Sudanese, may have to be cut if funding is not found urgently.
“Internally displaced persons, returnees and conflict-affected populations already living in dire conditions may soon face even greater danger to their lives and health due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the onset of the rainy season and floods”, the UN agency said.
Come June, primary healthcare services may no longer be available for women and children, the elderly and those living with disabilities.
These services range from maternal and child health, including the screening of under-fives to detect malnutrition, sexual and reproductive health services and testing and treatment for HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.
‘A right and necessity’
“Health is not a luxury, it’s a right and a necessity. We must mobilize to ensure no one is left behind,” said Jacqueline Weekers, Director of Migration Health for IOM.
“In the past year, we have learned the hard way that when some people don’t have access to health services, everyone can be at risk.”
Before COVID-19, South Sudan’s health system was already heavily dependent on humanitarian actors who now face worrying funding shortfalls, IOM said, in an appeal for $744,175 per month to continue providing life-saving care.
Essential health services are provided in former UN Protection of Civilian sites, host communities as well as remote and hard-to-reach locations serviced by the IOM’s mobile rapid response teams
Genomics researchers and the agriculture industry have welcomed the publication of a long-awaited report recommending EU legislation on genetically modified organisms be updated to allow the use targeted gene editing in crops.
In the study, the European Commission acknowledges the potential of gene editing and notes most research into commercial applications is taking place outside the EU.
The Commission carried out the study at the request of member states, to assess if gene editing can be used safely for agriculture, industrial and pharmaceutical applications. The report is based on expert opinions from the Commission’s in house science and policy advice services, the Joint Research Centre and the Scientific Advise Mechanism, and contributions from member states and stakeholders.
Precision breeding of plants through gene editing is banned in the EU following a 2018 ruling by the European Court of Justice, which found these techniques are subject to the 2001 EU directive banning genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
“The GMO directive is not up to date with new technologies. Finally, we are happy to see that the Commission comes to similar conclusions,” Petra Jorasch, manager of plant breeding innovation at the industry group Euroseeds told Science|Business.
Oana Dima, science policy manager at EU-SAGE, a group of scientists from 134 European plant science institutes and societies agreed, saying, “We are happy that the Commission sees that the current regulatory framework has negative implications for research in Europe.”
Researchers and the agriculture industry are calling for an update to the GMO legislation so that crops developed by modern plant breeding techniques that do not involve the introduction of genes from other species are excluded. Gene editing using Crispr-Cas9 and related techniques can improve plant characteristics without introducing foreign DNA.
According to the report, technologies such as Crispr-Cas9 can help the EU make food production more sustainable, with new plants that are more resistant to diseases and harsher environmental conditions and which do not require the use of pesticides and fertilisers.
The EU has a grand plan to make the continent carbon neutral by 2050 and sustainable agriculture is a big part of this. The Commission’s farm to fork strategy aims to reduce the use of fertilisers by 30% and turn 25% of agricultural land over to organic farming. The Horizon Europe research programme will fund projects to improve soil health and reduce the use of pesticides and antibiotics in agriculture.
“New genomic techniques can promote the sustainability of agricultural production, in line with the objectives of our farm to fork strategy,” said Stella Kyriakides, EU commissioner for health and food safety.
The biotech industry has warned before that the current GMO legislation is way behind the times and hitting Europe’s global competitiveness in food production. “It’s time for a change that ensures innovation leadership to market, not just in the lab,” said Claire Skentelbery, director general of industry group EuropaBio.
Argentina changed its laws to allow genome editing in crops in 2015. Other countries, such as US, Canada, Australia and Japan, soon followed suit. The debate is ongoing in the UK, Russia, China, India and South Africa. The EU remains the only major region in the world where genome edited crops are regulated as GMOs.
Legal proposal
The Commission will present the results to the EU council next week and member states are likely to come up with a position in the coming weeks. They will then consult the European Parliament and should set out a legal proposal later this year. “Any kind of legal proposal would need support from parliament and council,” said Jorasch.
The EU27 largely agree the current legislation is not fit for purpose but have yet to agree on a common approach to gene editing. Jorasch said the negotiations will be difficult because the decision in member states could fall between agriculture and environment ministries. “There is still need for further discussion,” she said. “Ministers of agriculture are more likely to be supportive, whereas minsters of environment are more critical.”
As one case in point, last week Germany’s environment minister Svenja Schulze said the current EU law on GMOs should continue to be applied to gene editing, so that products continue to be tested and labelled for risk. However, Germany’s agriculture minister Julia Klöckner said the Commission’s report signals the need for an, “overdue modernisation” of EU GMO legislation.
In addition to potential hurdles in some member states, organic food producers are opposed to any changes to the GMO legislation, arguing the benefits of gene editing are hypothetical and achievable by other means.
Organic farmers’ associations say novel genomic techniques should be treated with caution and warn that allowing gene editing in agriculture would undermine the farm to fork strategy. “A weakening of the rules on the use of genetic engineering in agriculture and food is worrying news and could leave organic food systems unprotected,” said Jan Plagge, president IFOAM Europe, an international association of organic farmers.
The environmental lobby group Friends of the Earth warns food products based on gene editing would not be labelled as GMOs on shelves and new legislation could exempt a new generation of genetically-modified crops from safety checks.
However, Dima said organic farmers and conventional farmers could both thrive under a new legal framework. “I think there is some common ground, in view of what we want to achieve,” she said. “We need to find a way to ensure coexistence.”
Speaking during the regular briefing by the World Health Organization (WHO), and ahead of next month’s G7 summit, Mr. Brown, who is the UN’s Special Envoy for Global Education, said inaction will only lead to greater global division.
“Thank you Gordon, and thank you once again for your clear and powerful call to world leaders.”-@DrTedros
— World Health Organization (WHO) (@WHO) May 3, 2021
A life or death choice
“By our failure to extend vaccination more rapidly to every country, we are choosing who lives and who dies”, he warned.
“And I say the world is already too deeply divided between rich and poor to allow a new unbridgeable divide to become entrenched between the world’s vaccinated who live, and the under-vaccinated who are at risk of dying.”
As Prime Minister, Mr. Brown hosted the G20 summit in 2009, where the world’s major economies committed an additional $1.1 trillion to address the fallout from the global financial crisis, He is now on a campaign to galvanize support to demand that the G7 “deploy its wealth to end the disease.”
More COVID-19 cases were reported in the past two weeks than in the first six months of the pandemic, with India and Brazil accounting for half, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told journalists.
“The G7 countries are the world’s economic and political leaders. They’re also home to many of the world’s vaccine producers. We will only solve the vaccine crisis with the leaders of these countries”, he said.
Shared threat, shared solutions
Tedros reported that the landmark global collaboration developing and delivering COVID-19 vaccines to countries worldwide, known as the ACT Accelerator, remains $19 billion underfunded. Up to $45 billion will be needed next year to inoculate most adults.
“We face a shared threat that we can only overcome with shared solutions”, he said. “Sharing financial resources, sharing vaccine doses and production capacity, and sharing technology, know-how and waiving intellectual property.”
Formula for ‘burden-sharing’
For Mr. Brown, mass global vaccination is not an act of charity, but “the best insurance policy for the world”. Though costing billions now, the result will be “trillions of additional economic output, made possible when trade resumes in a COVID-free world.”
The $60 billion in funding is required not only for vaccines, but also for vital medical supplies, diagnostics and medical oxygen “currently and shamefully in short supply in India and elsewhere”.
He provided a formula for rich countries to shoulder the cost, based on national income, current wealth and benefits from the resumption of trade.
The breakdown would see the United States covering 27 per cent, Europe 23 per cent, Japan six per cent and the UK five per cent. Australia, Canada and South Korea would pay two per cent each.
“I say to the G7…you have the power and the ability to pay for nearly two-thirds of the cost and secure a historic breakthrough by agreeing an equitable burden sharing formula that could cover global health provision”, he said.
Mr. Brown added that the world’s major economies, the G20, could cover more than 80 per cent of the cost and donate urgently needed vaccine doses, while the world’s 30 richest countries could pay for more than 90 per cent.
“And the same burden-sharing formula could also be applied so that instead of the familiar pandemic cycle of panic now and neglect later, the world invests now when there is a cash shortfall, and for the future in pandemic preparedness …to ensure that even if future outbreaks happen, pandemics become preventable.”
The virus – an often-fatal illness spread through contact with bodily fluids, which kills, on average, around half of those infected – re-emerged in February, nine months after another outbreak in the same province was declared over.
Heartfelt congratulations to the people of #DRC???????? for ending the latest #Ebola outbreak! Huge credit to the expertise of local health workers & the national authorities for their prompt response, tenacity & hard work. https://t.co/d7f599RrAV
In a press release, WHO congratulated the health authorities in DRC, and the health workers “on the ground for their swift response which built on the country’s previous experience in tackling Ebola outbreaks.”
Eleven confirmed cases and one probable case resulting in six deaths and six recoveries were recorded in four health zones in North Kivu, from 7 February, when the Ministry of Health announced the resurgence of Ebola in Butembo.
Results from genome sequencing conducted by the country’s National Institute of Biomedical Research, found that the first Ebola case detected in the outbreak was linked to the previous outbreak, but the source of infection is yet to be determined.
‘Huge credit’ to local workers
“Huge credit must be given to the local health workers and the national authorities for their prompt response, tenacity, experience and hard work that brought this outbreak under control”, said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa. “Although the outbreak has ended, we must stay alert for possible resurgence and at the same time use the growing expertise on emergency response to address other health threats the country faces.”
The response was coordinated by the Provincial Department of Health in collaboration with WHO and partners.
With nearly 60 experts on the ground, WHO helped local workers to trace contacts as soon as the outbreak was declared, providing treatment, engaging communities and vaccinating nearly 2,000 people at high risk, including over 500 frontline workers.
“Today’s declaration of an end to the latest Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is a testament to the professionalism, sacrifices, and collaboration by hundreds of true health heroes, in particular the Congolese responders,” said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, in a statement released later on Monday. “The World Health Organization is committed to helping national and local authorities, and the people of North Kivu, prevent the return of this deadly virus and to promote the overall health and well-being of all at-risk communities.”
Insecurity factor
The response was often hampered by insecurity due to armed groups in the restive region, close to the border with Uganda, and social unrest, according to WHO, “which at times limited the movement of responders”.
There were concerns too, over the potential cross-border spread of the outbreak. However, due to the effective response the outbreak was contained within North Kivu province.
“While the 12th outbreak is over, there is a need for continued vigilance and maintaining a strong surveillance system as potential flare-ups are possible in the months to come”, said WHO.
It is important to continue with sustained disease surveillance, monitoring of alerts and working with communities to detect and respond rapidly to any new cases and WHO will continue to assist health authorities with their efforts to contain quickly a sudden re-emergence of Ebola, the UN health agency added.
COVID, measles, cholera
WHO continues to work with the Government of DRC to fight other public health problems such as outbreaks of measles and cholera, and of course, the COVID-19 pandemic.
Latest figures from WHO show more than 22,000 cases and 144 deaths attributable to the coronavirus.
The 2018–2020 outbreak was the 10th in the DRC and the country’s deadliest, with 3,481 cases, 2,299 deaths and 1,162 survivors.
An ongoing Ebola outbreak also erupted in Guinea, West Africa, beginning in February.
“The Green Deal itself covers many sectors (of the European economy) directly, and literally every sector indirectly. This requires a huge policy review and overhaul across many areas of European legislation,” a lengthy, complicated process, said Alan Hardacre, director of public affairs for CropLife Europe, which represents Europe’s crop industry.
<p>Further, the EU Farm to Fork Strategy, a key part of the Green Deal, is just beginning to be implemented, and figuring out its potential impact, particularly on U.S. agriculture, isn't easy, he said.</p> <p>"It's quite difficult to tell what the full impact of the whole package will be until all of the items are in fact concluded," he said.</p> <p>Hardacre was among the panelists during a April 27 webinar on<i> </i>"Understanding the EU Farm to Fork Strategy and Its Implications for U.S. Agriculture." The event, sponsored by the Farm Foundation, which says "it accelerates practical solutions for agriculture," was open to the news media.</p>
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</div> <p>Other speakers were Tassos Haniotis, director of Strategy, Simplification and Policy Analysis, Directorate General for Agriculture and Rural Development of the European Commission; Marta Messa, director of Slow Food Europe; and Jayson Beckman and Maros Ivanic, economists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service, or ERS.</p> <p>Here's the background of the European proposal:</p> <p>The initiative, sometimes known as "Farm to Fork and Biodiversity Strategies," is proposed by the European Commission, the executive body of the European Union — the political and economic union of 27 primarily European countries with a combined population of about 450 million. </p> <p>The proposal is part of an EU "Green Deal" that aims to promote sustainability in ag. It calls for a 20% reduction in the use of fertilizer and 50% reductions in the use of pesticides and antimicrobials. It also calls for 10% of existing farmland to be removed from ag use, all by 2030. The proposed reductions would be from 2020 levels.</p> <p>A recent ERS<a href="https://www.agweek.com/business/agriculture/6920315-European-Union-ag-proposal-has-global-significance-USDA-report-says" target="_self" rel="nofollow noopener"> report</a> concluded that the initiative threatens to drive up global food prices, cut into trade worldwide and worsen food insecurity around the world. Beckman and Ivanic were among the authors of that report.</p>
<p>Since the report was published, the report's authors have received feedback from Europeans who question some of its assumptions and conclusions.</p> <p>During the webinar, Haniotis said he disagreed with parts of the report. For example, the EU proposal would boost innovation, not stifle it, which would offset some of the negative impacts projected by ERS, he said.</p> <p>Beckman acknowledged that the ERS report didn't take some important factors, including labeling, pesticide risk, animal welfare, organic production and environmental considerations, into account.</p> <p>He and Ivanic said the ERS has adjusted some of its assumptions, and the results weren't quite as negative as before. </p> <p>Messa, with Slow Food Europe, called the EU initiative "an important stepping-stone. We need to move swiftly."</p>
<p>Her organization, founded in 1989, describes itself as "a global, grassroots organization" that "envisions a world in which all people can access and enjoy food that is good for them, good for those who grow it and good for the planet.</p> <p>Messa said while Slow Food Europe isn't opposed to science or innovation, it believes there's too much attention on productivity. For example, curtailing food waste would eliminate at least some of the need to raise productivity to feed the world's growing population, she said.</p>
Ensuring sustainable food security is a vital element of Sri Lanka’s
agriculture sector and the country’s economy at large. The COVID-19 pandemic has
highlighted the importance of a robust and resilient food system that can
function in all circumstances and can ensure access to a sufficient supply of affordable
food for all. The current pandemic is just one example. The increasing recurrence
of droughts, floods or new pests are a constant reminder that our food systems
must become more sustainable and resilient.
The European Union (EU) has developed its ‘Farm to Fork’ (FtF) Strategy to
support sustainable food systems in Europe and its partner countries. This
initiative maps a new sustainable, inclusive growth trajectory for the
development of fair, healthy, and environmentally friendly food systems. The
Farm to Fork Strategy is part of the EU’s ambitious Green Deal that lays out a vision
for a sustainable climate-neutral and resource-efficient future by 2050.
As Sri Lanka gears up for its participation to the United Nations (UN)
Food Systems Summit scheduled to be held in September 2021, the EU’s Farm to
Fork Strategy provides useful guidance for improved food systems considering all
sustainability dimensions.
The ‘Farm to Fork’ strategy as well as the agricultural challenges and
opportunities faced by Sri Lanka, were the subjects of the webinar ‘Farm to
Fork: How EU and Sri Lanka are moving towards a more sustainable food system?’
organised by the EU Delegation in Sri Lanka and the EU-funded “Technical
Assistance to the Modernisation of Agriculture” programme (TAMAP). The event
brought together a panel of experts that discussed the new strategic approach
towards food system sustainability, the EU’s role in contributing to more
resilient and sustainable food systems, and challenges and opportunities faced
by Sri Lanka in moving towards sustainable farming.
Launching the webinar, the Head of Cooperation at the EU Delegation to
Sri Lanka and the Maldives Frank Hess stated that “agriculture and rural development are among key priorities of the EU’s
partnership with Sri Lanka. For nearly a decade, the EU has been supporting the
national authorities, local communities and farmers to move towards a more
inclusive, modernized and sustainable agriculture.” Dr Olaf Heidelbach, lead
speaker on behalf of the European Commission, explained the ‘Farm to Fork’ strategy
by highlighting that “when it comes to
integrating environmental, social and economic sustainability in agriculture
policy developments, there are many similarities between the EU’s and the Sri
Lankan food systems”. For these reasons, the EU would like to collaborate
with the Sri Lankan government to further enhance the global impact of the EU’s
‘Farm to Fork’ strategy.
Ms Champa Magamage (Horticultural Crop Research and Development
Institute, HORDI), Dr Sumith (Registrar of Pesticides), Ms Disna Rathnasinghe (Department
of Agriculture), and Ms Ranmalee Gamage (GIZ Sri Lanka) addressed the current
issues faced by Sri Lanka’s agriculture and food industry, including practical concerns
and regulatory efforts related to the use of chemicals in food, food labeling
and certifications, and promotion of organic agriculture practices.
The presentations and the subsequent discussion highlighted that, while
many efforts have been already made, Sri Lanka is still facing several challenges
in guaranteeing sustainable food security to its people. Better access to and affordability
of safe, nutritious and high-quality food, capacity in implementing solutions
identified, or better consumer awareness are just few areas in which Sri Lanka could
strengthen its strategy framework for sustainable food system development.
The World Food Programme (WFP), Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), in coordination with Sri
Lanka’s Ministry of Agriculture, will soon be launching a series of national
consultations to prepare for Sri Lanka’s participation to the UN Food Systems
Summit to be held in September 2021. In a recent policy brief on ‘Sustainable
Food Systems’, WFP Sri Lanka provides policy recommendations to deliver
sustainable food systems, noting that the agricultural sector needs to
transform and adapt its existing policies and practices in order to move
towards a sustainable food system which delivers economic, environmental and
social benefits. The ‘Farm to Fork’ strategy serves as a powerful example for such
a transition towards a more sustainable agriculture sector.
MIAMI – Celebrity Cruises President and CEO Lisa Lutoff-Perlo unveiled the company’s third ship in the company’s industry-transforming “new luxury” Edge Series – Celebrity Beyond. Designed to give guests endless opportunities to disconnect from the world – while simultaneously reconnecting with the world that surrounds them – Celebrity Beyond goes further than imagined possible for a cruise ship, creating a new world of wonder and luxury.
Inspired by a vision to take the cruise industry into the next era of luxury, Lutoff-Perlo assembled a dream team of modern lifestyle icons to bring to life extraordinary experiences that allow guests to connect with each other, the sea, and their journey. Celebrity Beyond showcases the design talents of multi-award-winning British designer Kelly Hoppen CBE; celebrated American designer Nate Berkus; and lauded Paris-based design firm Jouin Manku; the innovation of British architect Tom Wright; and the culinary gifts of Michelin-starred chef and restaurateur Daniel Boulud. The ship will also feature experiences and products from goop CEO and founder Gwyneth Paltrow, the brand’s new Well-Being Advisor.
Redefining luxury again, Celebrity Beyond builds on the features and design of its award-winning predecessors Celebrity Edge (2018) and Celebrity Apex (2020) by creating innovative spaces that set the brand apart from others in the industry. Every element of Celebrity Beyond’s look and feel has been carefully curated with re-imagined spaces and more luxurious versions of the brand’s most popular signature spaces, including:
The Retreat, an exclusive resort-within-a-resort area for suite guests, highlighted by a new two-story sundeck;
Transformed accommodations from modern two-story villas with private plunge pools to staterooms with infinite verandas, blurring the boundaries between indoor and outdoor living;
An expanded Rooftop Garden and stunning Resort Deck featuring unique cantilevered float pools;
A multi-level, multi-terraced Sunset Bar redefining the ship’s aft;
A first-ever Daniel Boulud fine-dining restaurant at sea;
A boldly redesigned Grand Plaza spanning three decks, creating an airy and open indoor space;
And, the return of the Magic Carpet®, an engineering feat soaring cantilevered above the sea, offering guests uninterrupted vistas while sipping cocktails or having dinner.
“Celebrity Cruises has always been an innovator at sea, and now we have challenged the status quo with a vessel that goes beyond expectations, beyond imagination,” said Lutoff-Perlo. “Celebrity Beyond shatters any and every preconceived notion of the cruising experience. This exquisite ship offers a journey at the intersection of elegance and approachability filled with what’s important to our guests today: forward-thinking design, culinary excellence, unparalleled well-being and incomparable service.”
“With Celebrity Beyond, we saw an opportunity to take the extraordinary features of Celebrity Edge – like the focus on the connection with the ocean and the grand spaces – and really amplify them,” said Richard Fain, Chairman of Royal Caribbean Group, parent company of Celebrity Cruises. “We focused on providing more openness, height and spaciousness throughout the ship’s most popular spaces. The end result is a next generation ship that embodies the intersection of architecture and design.”
The Retreat: A Resort In and of Itself One of the most sought-after interior designers in the world, Kelly Hoppen CBE, has reimagined aspects of the design for The Retreat, the unrivaled and exclusive resort space for suite guests, including all new suites, and brought her globally renowned style to outdoor venues such as the Rooftop Garden and the main pool area on the Resort Deck.
The new, two-story Retreat Sundeck will offer more unadulterated outdoor bliss and ways to rejuvenate in the fresh ocean air with secluded cabanas, chic new seating areas, additional water features and the exclusive Retreat Bar. The warm and inviting Retreat Lounge is a newly stylish space to unwind; while Hoppen’s new take on the adjacent private restaurant Luminae, now at the front of the ship, becomes a space where every corner provides a new experience with each visit, in keeping with the daily changing menu.
An array of contemporary suite accommodations featuring fresh color palettes and design details by Hoppen await guests of The Retreat, including the redesigned two-story Edge Villas with outdoor plunge pools, and Celebrity’s famous Iconic Suites, the largest in the fleet, offering better views than the captain’s quarters.
Connecting Two Worlds Nowhere is more rejuvenating than the open sea, and Celebrity Beyond ensures guests are able to take full advantage of both the luxurious design of the ship while soaking in the world around them.
Perhaps best known for designing the world-famous Burj Al Arab Hotel, lead architect Tom Wright of WKK has expanded the exterior spaces on Celebrity Beyond, transforming them into serene outward-facing sanctuaries leveraging endless ocean vistas and breath-taking panoramas of the extraordinary places the ship will visit. His design both lengthens the ship by 20 meters and raises the ship to 17 decks tall, allowing for the reimagination of The Retreat, the Resort Deck, and the Rooftop Garden – outdoor spaces increasingly important to today’s traveler.
The main open deck, 40 percent larger than on previous Edge Series ships, features an enormous living Rooftop Garden designed by Hoppen and includes increased seating offering new private nooks and more spaces for movie watching, enjoying live music and outdoor dining at the expanded Rooftop Grill. A highlight of this area is Wright’s incorporation of two spectacular floating pools cantilevered six and a half feet over the side of the ship, taking guests beyond the water’s edge.
On the Resort Deck, guests will enjoy a stunning asymmetrical space with a 25-yard lap pool surrounded by a terraced pool deck and new sunken seating areas designed by Hoppen.
Wright also designed the signature Edge Series Magic Carpet, a tennis-court sized cantilevered platform that scales the side of the ship and transforms from open-air lounge or restaurant hovering above the ocean along higher decks to a tender platform for going ashore on lower decks. Featured on Celebrity Beyond, it debuted on Celebrity Edge in 2018 and is still considered one of the most unique design innovations ever for a cruise ship.
Celebrity Cruises’ Edge Series Design Ambassador Nate Berkus stepped into the role of designer himself, to imagine one of the most anticipated venues on Celebrity Beyond – the Sunset Bar. Inside this space that is nearly twice as large as previous iterations, Berkus has created a chic, Moroccan-inspired escape that is reminiscent of a modern-day Casablanca.
Guests will enter through a pergola-covered entrance to enjoy one of the hottest spots at sea. With more conversation niches and covered enclaves to allow guests to connect in a more intimate way, the Sunset Bar’s cascading terraces will combine to provide the perfect place to soak in spectacular views and create unforgettable memories.
Luxury in Every Detail The core of Celebrity Beyond’s vision of luxury is the Grand Plaza, a transformational place at the center of the ship designed by Jouin Manku – the team responsible for designing the Jules Verne restaurant in the Eiffel Tower – and offering a different experience with every visit. Inspired by the piazzas of Italy that serve as life centers of towns where architecture and social connection become one, the Grand Plaza spans three decks at the heart of the ship, boldly declaring it is the place to see and be seen.
Larger than Grand Plazas on its sister Edge Series ships, the Celebrity Beyond Grand Plaza has an airier atmosphere with more room for intimate seating. The added space allowed designers to move the Martini Bar into the center of the venue as a full, circular bar.
Hanging proudly above the new Martini Bar, the Grand Plaza’s iconic chandelier boasts a new, organic shape with hundreds of individual LED lights that cast an inviting glow at all hours—taking center stage with talented bartenders at night during their exciting and theatrical Flash Flair Fusion performance.
Connected to the Grand Plaza is the top table of culinary excellence at sea, the new, intimate 50-seat restaurant by world-renowned chef Daniel Boulud. Aptly named Le Voyage, travel is the inspiration for the globally inspired flavors within, designed to transport guests to the very places that inspire the Michelin-rated chef. Complementing the menu, world-class sommeliers will pair the perfect wine with every dish from Celebrity Cruises’ “most awarded” wine collection at sea.
Complementing Chef Boulud’s world-class menu is the restaurant’s ambiance, which is also the result of Jouin Manku’s creative talents. Intimate seating cocoons are surrounded by luminous portals highlighting the themes of journey and travel, while graphically lit “glass flutes” provide layers of light and texture to create an enchanting experience.
Providing a sense of occasion and flow, the Le Voyage experience begins with a dedicated entrance and concludes with a customized sweet prepared in Daniel’s own farewell boutique as guests are wished ‘au revoir.’
Rethinking Wellness at Sea Luxury didn’t stop at the architectural design and culinary experience, but extended into how Celebrity Cruises thought of wellness on Celebrity Beyond. New to the ship are AquaClass SkySuites, an immersive living experience that helps guests find their center. From floor-to-ceiling ocean views, private verandas, luxurious bedding and other wellness amenities, Celebrity Beyond has thought of everything to nourish its guests’ mind, body, and spirit on vacation.
Celebrity Beyond also sets sail with a new partnership with actress and entrepreneur Gwyneth Paltrow, serving as the line’s new Well-being Advisor. All Aqua Class guests across the entire Celebrity Cruises fleet (excluding Galapagos sailings) will be treated to onboard wellness offerings, including fitness kits from Paltrow’s modern lifestyle brand goop, aimed at enhancing self-care and collective well-being. Paltrow and her team at goop will also curate onboard wellness programming and participate in the line’s new Women in Wellness initiative.
Welcome Beyond Celebrity Beyond will depart on her maiden voyage on April 27, 2022 from Southampton, England, on a 10-night Western Europe cruise visiting Bordeaux, France; Lisbon, Portugal; and Seville, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca and Barcelona, Spain. She will then offer a variety of Mediterranean journeys including nine-night Italian Riviera and France itineraries and 10-night Greek Isles itineraries through early October, when she then heads to the Caribbean. Voyages are on sale as of April 28, 2021 at 3p.m. ET.
Like her industry-changing sister ships, Celebrity Edge and Celebrity Apex, the former of which was named one of TIME Magazine’s “World’s Greatest Places” following her 2018 debut season, Celebrity Beyond will connect guests to the breath-taking world around them like never before. Celebrity Cruises’ onboard and onshore experiences stand it apart as a new luxury travel brand without comparison.
Hungarian wines could have been a household word today, but two world wars and 40 years under communist rule forced a major pause on this once-formidable wine-producing country.
“Wines from Hungary were considered the best in the world!” a wine store owner excitedly replied when I inquired whether he carried any. He didn’t that day because Hungarian wines in the United States are hard to come by.
A look at the world map shows that Hungary in central Europe is about the size of the state of New York and shares the same viniculture-friendly latitude and Mediterranean climate with Austria, Switzerland and France to its west. Historical records indicate that Hungarians began making wine before the Romans. Its acclaimed Tokaji Aszu dessert wine comes from Tokaj, the oldest classified wine region in the world and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It was a favorite of King Louis the 14th of France, who called it the “wine of kings, king of wines.”
During communism Hungary, the largest wine-producing country in the Eastern Bloc, exported huge amounts of wine to the Soviet Union, which was more interested in quantity than quality. When communism ended in 1989, land was returned to rightful owners, including winemaking families and others keen on being a part of Hungary’s winemaking renaissance. The late 1990s marked the rebirth of fine winemaking throughout the country.
Covering three-quarters of the country, Hungary’s 22 wine regions flourish in climate conducive for growing grapes and lush romantic landscapes ranging from basal-vulcanite mountains to the lowlands and plains rich in volcanic limestone, clay and sandy soils. Its four most popular winemaking regions stretch across the country: Nagy Somlo in the west, Villany in the south, then Eger and Tokaj (Hungary’s crown jewel) in the north.
Hundreds of grape varieties — from indigenous to international — grow throughout the country. The most popular white grapes include Furmit, Harslevelu, Irsai Oliver Juhfark, Keknyelu and Olaszrizling. Cabernet Franc, Kekfrankos, Kadarka and Portugieser are some of the celebrated reds.
While the COVID-19 pandemic put restraints on travel, it didn’t stop me from finding Hungarian wines online, thanks to Taste Hungary, Hungary’s most successful tourism operation, based in Budapest.
Founded in 2008, co-owners Carolyn and Gabor Banfalvi (she’s American, he’s Hungarian) shared a passion to “reintroduce” visitors to Hungary, its re-emerging wine culture and “culinary paradise.” Carolyn holds a culinary school degree and is a Hungarian food book author (“Food Wine Budapest”).
By 2014 the Banfalvis opened a wine cellar, The Tasting Table, in Budapest and soon after a wine shop across the street for clients and the public to sample and buy wines produced throughout the country.
In a most intuitive move before the pandemic, they decided in 2019 to offer an online wine shop in the United States for their American clients back in the States who longed to enjoy Hungarian wines they had learned to love, not to mention Hungarian ex-pats thirsty for wines from the homeland. Its popularity helped them survive the lockdowns.
At first glance, the online offerings were dizzying, and the labels were in Hungarian. But I closed my neophyte eyes and went for it — two whites (from Tokaj and Somlo) and a red (from Villany). The English description of one of the whites —- Erszebet, Lunee, 2019 ($19.90) — had me hooked: “There are few places in the world where Muscat Blanc makes such exciting wine” and “Mexican food and light spicy food are a perfect match!” At first sip the floral character jumped out with delicious flavors of grapefruit zest, elderflower, passion fruit and mango.
“Hungary has quite a big and long history of winemaking,” Carolyn Banfalvi explained to me over the phone, “but it is still one of the unknown countries in the U.S. Travelers are blown away when they discover a whole new wine culture … and Americans who like discovering new wine love it here because there are so many native grapes that are only found in Hungary.”
Growing more fascinated with Hungary’s wine culture, I also connected with Athena Bochanis, owner of Palinkerie Fine Hungarian Imports in New York. She focuses exclusively on Hungarian wines and spirits.
“I became enthusiastically entranced with Hungary’s culture, food and wine,” said Bochanis, who lived a year in Hungary during law school — and learned to speak perfect Hungarian.
A few years later, in 2013, after in-depth research and combing small wineries around Hungary, Bochanis took the leap of faith and founded Palinkerie to promote exciting wines produced by Hungary’s younger and less-represented generation of winemakers.
Bochanis describes the winemakers she partners with — some second-, third-, fourth- and seventh-generation winemakers — as “a great blend of knowing what’s going on in the world” and willing to invest in new methods of winemaking such as pet-nats, natural and organic wine. But coming from the long tradition of winemaking families, they still want to work with classic styles and traditional grapes to make wines that “tell you they are from Hungary even if they have a modern sensibility.”
The benefit of being a small operation, says Bochanis, is that “I have an opportunity to import some of the best wines.”
Winemaking in Hungary is back.
WHEN YOU GO
To learn more about Hungarian wines, view virtual wine-tastings and purchase wines online, visit www.tastehungary.com and www.palinkerie.com.
The Szekszard vineyard in southern Hungary is one that is putting Hungarian winemaking back on the map. Photo courtesy of Taste Hungary.
(SET CAPTION2) Athena Bochanis of Palinkerie Fine Hungarian Imports (right) and Hungarian winemaker Tamas Kis of Somloi Vandor Winery partner to provide Hungarian wines for American audiences. Photo courtesy of Taste Hungary. (END CAPTION2)
Iconic Hungarian stuffed cabbage pairs beautifully with the Hungarian wines that are re-emerging on the world market. Photo courtesy of Taste Hungary.
Athena Lucero is a freelance writer. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
The Szekszard vineyard in southern Hungary is one that is putting Hungarian winemaking back on the map. Photo courtesy of Taste Hungary.
AH, SPRINGTIME. The trees are ridiculously colorful, tulips spill out of bushels at the farmers markets, little peas take center stage and a kaleidoscope of birds is migrating. Chefs are, too. Just as WFH executives were drawn to life in the sticks as the pandemic settled in, many of the country’s notable chefs—facing restaurant closures, indefinite furloughs and notoriously thin profit margins—have heard the call of the country. Specifically, country hotels.
Last spring, when April Bloomfield first saw Mayflower Inn & Spa, the newly renovated 58-acre posh compound in Washington, Conn., she took a deep breath. “It looked so bright and airy, and it was exactly where I wanted to be at that moment,” said the chef, best known for the Spotted Pig and the Breslin in New York City. A four-month residency at the Mayflower, an Auberge Resort, that started in fall 2020 has now turned into a long-term, post-Covid gig—with a kitchen about three times as large as any she’s toiled in since she started cooking at 16 in her native England. “It’s nice for me to be able open the back door, step out and look at the colors, listen to the birds, see the sunset,” she said. “It’s a gift.”
Parker Brothers could make an excellent board game out of the exodus of city chefs to pastoral hotels—due in part to the pandemic. Call it, say, the Fork Ran Away With The Spoon. The arrangements include full-time posts, three-month residencies and one-off weekends, and they’ve opened up a whole new landscape for people who travel, in some measure, for good food.
Dan Silverman, who started his career under star chef David Bouley, spent years in celebrated New York City kitchens before leaving Minetta Tavern in Greenwich Village for points north. He’s set himself up at Hutton Brickyards, a 31-cabin-and-suite hotel, spa and events retreat on 73 rolling acres in Kingston, N.Y., due to open in May. There he’ll run the River Pavilion, an open-air restaurant that relies solely on wood-burning heat sources and has views of the Hudson unblocked by crowds or tall buildings. “It’s gorgeous, right on the river,” said Mr. Silverman, from the house in Catskill that he and his wife presciently bought in 2019. It’s a 35-minute drive to Hutton Brickyards. “Before, we lived in Brooklyn and I worked in Manhattan. My commute was longer then.”
Mads Refslund, a founder of Noma in Copenhagen who is now based in New York, bounced around between resorts—foraging in Aspen, diving for clams in Cabo—before signing on to oversee the food and conduct workshops at Shou Sugi Ban House, a Japanese-influenced wellness enclave in the Hamptons hamlet of Water Mill on New York’s Long Island. “When I’m in this paradise, I realize how happy I am,” said Mr. Refslund. “When you’re in the city, you forget. I’m very connected to nature—the produce, the farmers and the fishermen. I always come up with new things and cook randomly.” Among the random creations: Mr. Refslund’s roasted lobster with green strawberries and pickled rhubarb.
Despite action and progress against HIV in some places and population groups, HIV epidemics continue to expand in others, the report revealed. It was launched just weeks ahead of a major UN General Assembly meeting on AIDS.
“It is imperative to break out of an increasingly costly and unsustainable cycle of achieving some progress against HIV but ultimately not enough to bring about an end to the pandemic”, the Secretary-General said in the report.
“Inequalities are the key reason why the 2020 global targets were missed. By ending inequalities, transformative outcomes can be achieved for people living with HIV, communities and countries.”
New infections triple
In 2016, the UN General Assembly set the target of having fewer than 500,000 new HIV infections by 2020. Last year, the figure was 1.7 million, or three times the target. Similarly, the 690,000 AIDS-related deaths in 2019 far exceed the goal of less than 500,000 deaths a year.
“Ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030 is still within reach—many countries are showing that rapid progress against HIV is possible when evidence-informed strategies and human rights-based approaches are adopted”, said Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director of UNAIDS, which is leading the global fight against the disease.
“But it requires bold political leadership to challenge and address the social injustices and inequalities that continue to make certain groups of people and entire communities highly vulnerable to HIV infection.”
Address inequalities, prioritize prevention
The report underscores that addressing social and structural factors that perpetuate inequalities is key.
For example, gender inequality, anchored by harmful gender norms, restricts women’s use of HIV services, and sexual and reproductive health services. This can impact decision-making, including the ability to refuse unwanted sex or to negotiate safer sex.
Vulnerable, marginalized and criminalized communities also remain at higher risk of HIV infection because they are not receiving essential information and HIV services, whether for prevention or care. These groups include gay men and other men who have sex with men, people who use drugs, sex workers, transgender people, prisoners and migrants.
Get back on track
The 10 recommendations for putting the world back on the path to ending AIDS cover issues such as addressing inequalities and reaching all people at risk of HIV infection.
The goal is to keep new infections to under 370,000, and AIDS-related deaths to under 250,000, by 2025.
They call for closing gaps in HIV testing and treatment, and putting “gender equality and the human rights of women and girls in all their diversity” at the centre of efforts to mitigate risk.
Other steps call for prioritizing HIV prevention to ensure that 95 per cent of people at risk have prevention options by 2025, and eliminating new infections among children.
Lessons in preparedness
The report also outlined how the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed social inequalities and health system weaknesses.
The Secretary-General said the world should leverage experience from responding to the AIDS crisis to strengthen health systems and improve pandemic preparedness.
He also appealed for more global solidarity, including to increase annual HIV investments in low and middle-income countries to $29 billion by 2025.
We spoke with Dr. Ove Jakobsen, Professor of Ecological Economics at Nord University and Ecological Economics Projects Coordinator for Bodø2024 – BodøEuropean Capital of Culture 2024.
Welcome! Please introduce yourself to our readers.
“My name is Ove Jakobsen and I’m a professor of Ecological Economics at Nord University in Bodø.
“I’ve been working with topics such as business ethics, environmental management, philosophy of science, political philosophy… for years. Now, I’m trying to connect all of these different topics in one important field: ecological economics.
“I’m also Coordinator of the Ecological Economics project for Bodø2024 European Capital of Culture. That started in January of this year and it’ll last until 2024. So I have three years to come up with more research [laughs].”
What is “ecological economics”?
“In my interpretation, ecological economics is completely different from the traditional economy we have today. Ecological economics is about reaching revolutionary goals with evolutionary means. For example, we have ideas about how to solve the problems outlined in the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals – by introducing what we should do more than focusing on what we shouldn’t do.
“Ecological economics focuses on developing local societies in a direction where we focus upon the enjoyment of life and quality of life for humans and all other living entities on Earth.
“One of the questions at the core of ecological economics is: How can we share resources on Earth to satisfy the basic needs of human beings without disturbing the balance of the ecosystems? And then we apply that to a change in the economy.
“We want to ensure a fair share of goods and an economy that’s not growth-focused – because after all, the planet we live on is not growing. So, it’s not logical to continue using more and more resources in ecosystems that are not growing.”
How long have you been working in ecological economics?
“The field of ecological economics was first introduced as a university topic in the USA at the University of Maryland in 1989.
“We started with ecological economics at Bodø Business School in 1995. We were very early here in Bodø, in Norway. I think we’re still the only school in Norway with courses in ecological economics, doing research on the topic.
“Other business schools are working more on the ‘green economy’ and the ‘green shift’. The ‘green shift’ is a kind of economy where we try to reduce the negative symptoms of the existing system – without actually changing the system.
“So, they’re trying to develop a green economy… But within the rules of the existing game. In ecological economics, we challenge the rules of the game directly.”
Are the “green shift” and “ecological economics” the two main types of sustainable economics in place today?
“Yes.
“Then there’s the traditional economy where there is no focus on environmental or social problems at all.
“Most companies and most leaders in the political world talk about sustainability all the time… But it’s a question of what they actually mean; it could be nothing, they could actually be questioning the system, or it could be just reducing negative symptoms within the system.”
In your opinion, where is Norway on the list of most sustainable countries?
“Norway thinks that they are in the forefront, but I’m not so sure.
“Many other countries are working on experiments of the ecological economics type. New Zealand, Scotland, Finland, Iceland, and others.
“But there are also areas – not necessarily a whole country – doing well. Eco-regions in Italy, for example, work in the same directions as ecological economics. There is also the US-based Sustainable Connections organization and the English Transition Towns movement. So there are initiatives in many different countries. Things are clearly changing and I hope Norway will join.
“Maybe the problem in Norway is that we have too much money from oil and so on. So we say Ok, we’ll just pay for the symptoms. The Norwegian government is still very green and not very ecological.
“There is hope for Norway, though. We’re working on international cooperations – including a few potential upcoming ones for Bodø2024. I’m trying to arrange for the local authorities here in Bodø to meet people in Minnesota working on similar initiatives. Maybe that’s not very surprising because Minnesota and that part of America have many people from Norway living there [laughs].
“But we also have cooperations with people in Hungary, Italy’s eco-regions, and so on. For some places, we see the whole country is moving in the right direction but in most countries, we only have small groups and regions working in this positive direction.
“There is absolutely hope for change, though.”
Let’s talk accountability. Who do you think is accountable for the lack of sustainability: the average consumer, governments, corporations? Where do small businesses stand?
“The way I see it is that the people in the local society must be participants and co-creators. If people are co-creating their own future, they will also be co-responsible.
“Look at the distance between top and bottom, the gap between rich and poor, the gap between the politicians at the top and ordinary people… The bigger it is, the less responsible people will be.
“So, in ecological economics, we talk about a more democratic way of developing society. People should be more involved in the processes.
“It should be a combination of bottom-up initiatives and top-down common rules for certain things (like the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals). We need some rules [chuckles] for the whole Earth internationally.
“In our perspective, global society is an integration, a network, of local societies. This is why the focus on local societies is key. And the thing that we’re missing most today is engagement from the bottom. People must participate in the development of their own local societies.”
So how can individuals be motivated to participate in ecological economics?
“We’re currently working on that. One of our activities is fostering participation by arranging dialogue meetings. We use a mix of many different methods (socratic dialogue, open-space dialogue, and so on) which we call a utopian dialogue.
“Much of our inspiration is from Karl Mannheim [1893-1947], a Hungarian sociologist, and Paul Ricoeur [1913-2005], a French philosopher. And now also Ruth Levitas [b. 1949], an English professor of sociology working with utopian research.
“So, this is how it goes. We invite different people in local societies to come together and have a dialogue. First, we ask them to use their own experiences, their histories, to try to synthesize values and principles that they have in common. In the second stage, we ask them to develop concrete projects to materialize their ideas and principles. And in the third stage we try to combine it all; to create cooperation between different projects and to make them more easily implementable in practice.
“Our goal, though, is that these processes become self-organizing in the future. Institutions shouldn’t always have to organize such things. Therefore, we also offer courses in different dialogue methods.”
How can corporations and governments be motivated to participate in ecological economics?
“I have no answer for that – that’s the main problem [laughs].
“We see some bosses, for example, having meetings with private jets, and being well connected; they have contact with the military or they have a very strong economical background. These enormous, mega-sized global businesses are above the political level in a way. It can be hard to do something to combat that.
“I do not think we can do it with a violent revolution – it must be peaceful and it must be step-by-step. If we do it peacefully, build up, and find solutions others can learn from it. I truly think that local society connections can be the driving forces.
“When people ask this question, this key question, I always say it’s better to work in a positive direction. It’s more inspiring to do that.
“I think that in countries all over the world, people are already going in the direction of ecological economics and they might not even know it. They might have other names for it. But the local initiatives are key – ‘Local food for local markets’, a project we’re working on, for example, is mentioned in many UN reports. It deals with healthy, good food grown in an ecological way by reducing[ the distance between production and consumption.
“So, I think if we can succeed in developing many good examples, their power can be far-reaching.”
How much time do we have, in your opinion, before we run out of resources?
“There are different prognoses about that…
“But I think we have to start as soon as possible with the change process.
“In fact, it has started already.
“Many people are working in the right direction. Not always under the same name – they don’t always call it ecological economics, it could be called other things. In India, they call it Buddhist economics, there’s also cooperative economics and new economics… There’s any number of ways to call it.”
What would you say to someone who says: “We only have XY years to save the planet. We have to act more quickly and more radically”?
“I would say that we agree on one thing: we need revolutionary goals. But we cannot change everything at once. We have to take it step by step. And if we start today, it’s better than waiting ten years.
“Maybe we do need stronger actions. Some people argue about rebellion and think we need to do something very big very fast and very dramatic. But it’s not a good idea to start killing each other to make changes. That’s a very bad idea. A violent revolution is not a good thing.
“I think people are more motivated when we’re working towards something positive than just focusing on not doing all these negative things. If you’re doing all these positive things, then you don’t have time to do the negative things. So the problem will, in a way, be smaller. But we’ll see if that’s enough [chuckles].
“Also, there must be different solutions for different countries. We have different ecosystems and different cultures – we should stimulate the development of the local traditions connected to the local ecological conditions and cultural conditions. We should not look backward but forwards, and hope they will use this to make a better world in a way. And a better world is not a world where everything is similar – it must be different.
“For example, in cooperation with Nordland County, we could engage the population (through decentralized networks) to participate in planning of concrete activities.
“Freedom is a very important part of it. We must be free to develop our own directions within some common rules.”
Are there any historical examples of ecological economists?
“Ecological economics ideas are not new today; we can find them in ancient history, too. The first person recorded talking about such ideas was Aristotle, over 2000 years ago. He said Economy should use resources in a way that is best for human beings. Aristotle pointed out the problems of chrematistics – which is finance today. In terms of trade, he noticed that it was dominated by finance; not by real products, but by money. The ancient Greeks were already buying and selling money and earning a whole lot of profit back then [laughs]. But this specific way of profiting was a bad thing in a good economy, according to Aristotle.
“Critical voices have said for centuries that we cannot go on in a competitive economy based on growth. Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner and Russian philosopher and anarchist Peter Kropotkin were also already talking about such themes in the 19th century. Kropotkin spoke about the development of local societies based on cooperation and fairness; peacefully of course. He was a pacifist and likely one of the inspirations behind Gandhi‘s peace philosophy.
“Kropotkin said We have to change from mechanistic to organic thinking after studying the development of different countries from an ecological perspective. He discovered that organic thinking was the basis for a change in a more fair direction and a more ecological direction.
“Then in the 1970s these ideas really exploded in the Western world. Alternative economists emerged from all parts of the world. Some were young, some were old. Women, men. And all of them had one idea in common: that we have to develop an economy and society that is based on ethical principles and fairness; that does not disturb the ecosystems.
“American ecologist and economist Herman Daly, one of the most important people in the development of ecological economics in the late 1980s, used the example with Aristotle to make a distinction between real economy and chrematistic, that is, finance-based economy. We need finance in the new economy, too, but it shouldn’t be used as a means to get the economy working.
“We have to have a good economy, but economy should be used for the common good, not for maximizing individual profits.
“How this will end up is impossible to say today – because we’ve decreased usage of even physical money in favor of internet-based transactions. Maybe we can come into a society without money, some talk about that, too.”
So, a Star Trek society ???? Was there a point in history up until which all humans lived sustainably or ecologically?
“The Industrial Revolution was a turning point, but in the wrong direction in a way.
“We do need industry – but we have to find a new direction in which to do it.
“That’s especially interesting in these corona times. Do we go back to how things were before corona, or do we look forward to find out how we can change things and come into a better path in the future?
“I think we must take a step forward and ask new kinds of questions like what are the main ideas in a good society, a fair society, a society where people want to live?”
If there was an ideal world where ecological economics were in place, what would that look like?
“That’s also a very interesting question.
“We are actually not trying to describe an ideal world but rather a process that’s changing all the time. So when we talk about a Utopia, it’s very important that we define it. ‘Utopia’ is not a description of an ideal society – it’s a description of a process.
“Instead of talking about how the future will be, we ask the question how we want the future to be; and how we want the future to be will change. So if we ask a local society today if they want to develop in this or that direction, and then ask again in ten years, maybe the answer will be different.
“We have to focus more on Utopian thinking than on a prognosis. A prognosis is descriptive: ‘The future will be…’. On the other hand, when you work with Utopian methods you ask, ‘In what direction do we want to go?’ And then you start working in THAT direction. But, it’s really a question of both and not one or the other.
“The answer is – I don’t know what the future will be but I hope it will be different in different places. That is, that local solutions in Australia, India, South Africa, the USA, Norway, etc. will be different. Even on a micro-local level, that community solutions will be different.
“This is something that we learn from nature. A strong ecosystem is an ecosystem characterized by diversity. Diversity leads to resilience, and the same thing can be applied to a social dimension and an economic dimension. There’s a book called The McDonaldization of Society illustrating how many things are similar all over the world… To combat the negative effects of this, we try to develop different solutions based upon the values, characteristics, and peoples living in their specific local societies.
“Another thing here, Ruth Levitas has a very interesting thought: she says that people criticize you for coming up with ideas that seem utopian.
“You can answer that the utopian solutions are less impossible than following the same route we’re on now – THAT’S what’s impossible! We cannot use more and more resources. Exponential growth on a globe that is not growing is logically impossible.
“In order words, utopian ideas are less impossible than continuing on in the same direction.”
What are some of the biggest projects you’ve worked on to actually implement these ideas so far?
“Currently, it’s the Bodø European Capital of Culture 2024.
“Then there are three projects.
“One is Local food for local markets. The second is the Dialogue Society where we try to implement and stimulate dialogue-based processes in local societies – not only Bodø but all around the country. The third is making networks of SMEs to foster participation in the development of local societies.
“So these are three projects I’m currently working on implementing in Bodø2024, as well.
“I hope that by 2024, these projects will be growing, working and that they will develop into the future.
“As the EU panel said in the answer to Bodø’s application for European Capital of Culture 2024: Ecological economics in Bodø is interesting in a broader European context as well.
“The corona pandemic has made it a bit difficult now in the start – we cannot have meetings with many people in person. We can do certain things online, but it’s very important that people participating in the movement can come together physically and have a more direct dialogue. So let’s hope that the pandemic is over very soon and that we can start these physical meetings.
“Norway can learn from Europe, and Europe can learn from Bodø European Capital of Culture 2024. So let’s start learning!”
Jori White PR has been appointed by NewMedia Creative Technology Studio, the Argentinian Tourism Ministry’s designated European agency, to help drive UK visitor numbers to Argentina in the post-pandemic landscape. The agency has been tasked with delivering a digital campaign to highlight all that Argentina has to offer in food and drink, culture, fashion and adventure.
SteelEye, a provider of compliance solutions for financial services firms, has appointed Boldspace as its retained PR agency. Boldspace will deliver strategic communications support and press office delivery, increasing awareness of the regtech firm with key market media.
Popcorn has been appointed by The British Honey Company as its consumer PR agency across its collection of spirits brands.
Channel marketing agency Boutique has been appointed by Nottinghamshire-based sun blind specialists, Car Shades, to manage its digital PR, organic and paid social media strategy.
Common Industry has been brought in by London-based fintech, ikigai, to launch their digital banking and wealth management offering. The remit includes running an integrated launch campaign for the business, Crowdcube consultancy, production, PR strategy and media relations.
InstaVolt, which operates a network of public rapid electric vehicle chargers, has hired The PHA Group for a press office and strategic communications brief, which includes promoting InstaVolt’s consumer offering and public profile.
Diageo has appointed United Partners as strategic culture and entertainment partner to its Eastern Europe marketing team.
The Film and TV Charity is seeking an agency partner to deliver a behaviour change campaign, as part of its work to tackle the mental health crisis in the film, TV and cinema industries. The campaign will launch in late summer, with an indicative budget of £150,000. More information is available on this web page.
Espresso has won a brief for Ultimate Travel Club. The agency will support its crowdfund via PR and business profiling of key figures at the business, as well as support the launch of Ultimate Travel Club in the summer.
Maison Communications has won a global PR brief from interior design and architecture Conran and Partners.
Love Brownies has appointed Leeds-based integrated agency Umpf to drive traffic to their website and footfall to their stores.
Birmingham-based EAST VILLAGE has been appointed to launch Treetop Adventure Golf in the Bullring this summer. The agency has also won brief for The Cross Guns Inn.
Gabrielle Shaw Communications has added digital beauty concierge Ruuby to its wellness and beauty practice.
ROME (Reuters) – The European Union is billing its 750-billion-euro pandemic Recovery Fund as the opportunity of the century to transform the region’s economy and help it lead the world in reducing carbon emissions.
But a closer look by environmentalists at the spending plans prepared by Italy – the biggest recipient of EU cash – raises questions about how green Rome’s contribution will be, how it will be measured and even what investments can be classed as “green”.
They have criticised the plan presented to parliament this week as falling well short of the revolution that was promised.
Mario Draghi’s government aims to submit the 273-page document to Brussels on Friday to obtain more than 200 billion euros ($242 billion) from the kitty aimed at making the bloc’s 27-member states more ecological, digital and resilient.
The EU requires the largest slice of the investments in each country – some 37% – to go towards projects that will green the region’s economy. But ecological lobbyists and think tanks say Italy’s plan does not meet the threshold.
“A not very green Plan,” is the headline of a report by Greenpeace Italia, which gathered outside parliament this week with other Green advocates to protest against what they see as a lack of ambition on the environment.
Draghi’s document offers 59 billion euros of EU money under the ecological transition heading, to be spent over the six years of the plan – some 10 billion less than the draft prepared by his predecessor Giuseppe Conte, who lost power in January.
That amounts to 31% of the EU funds, versus the 37% prescribed. Draghi has topped this up with 9 billion euros of separate government borrowing, but lobbyists point out this money will not be subject to Brussels’ scrutiny and can therefore easily be revoked.
Draghi told parliament this week green policies feature in several of the six chapters of his plan, not just the “Green Transition” one, meaning that Brussels’ 37% target was met.
The European Commission has two months from the moment it gets a national scheme to check it meets the criteria. EU finance ministers then have another month to evaluate them.
One official said this week many countries were planning to spend as much as 50% of their funds on green projects but that in any case, all plans would be carefully scrutinised.
ELECTRIC TRANSPORT
More specifically, objectors say Draghi’s plan offers little for conversion to electric transport, vital for the cities of Italy’s industrial north which are among the most polluted in Europe, or for a conversion to organic, less intensive farming.
The plan provides just 750 million euros to develop charging stations for electric cars and 300 million for electric buses.
Rome has raised doubts about forcing the pace on electric cars if batteries are not charged by power from renewable sources.
Ecological Transition Minister Roberto Cingolani argues that with a polluting public transport system and ageing car pool, Italy’s priorities are clear. “We need to fix public transport first,” he told Reuters. “That’s an absolute emergency.”
Yet Greenpeace Italia said that is not even being done. Draghi’s plan to extend Italy’s urban public transport lines by some 240 kilometres (150 miles) is adequate for Rome alone, it said.
Germany will receive much less EU Recovery Fund money than Italy, but plans to use more than 5 billion euros of it for measures to favour electric and hybrid vehicles.
Electric transport is also a cornerstone of the Spanish plan, which dedicates 6.5 billion euros to “sustainable, secure and connected mobility” in cities.
“Draghi has allocated just 3.6 billion euros to developing public transport lines and 24 billion to high-speed trains without any CO2 impact assessment,” said Matteo Leonardi, co-founder of Italian energy and climate change think-tank ECCO.
ECCO also accuses the government of having “no strategy for renewable energy.”
Its goal to install 4,200 extra megawatts from renewable power sources is only sufficient to ensure Italy meets the quota of renewable energy recommended by the EU for a single year, the think tank said in a report.
SLOW PROCESS
Italian energy firms say the real problem is a labyrinthine process which means it can take years to get permits for new solar and wind capacity.
Italy’s biggest utility Enel reckons at current rates it would take some 100 years to reach solar power targets for 2030.
“We have the strength to install 6-8 gigawatts a year but to do that we have to change the rules… and now,” says Cingolani.
Much of the Recovery Plan’s energy strategy is based around the use of hydrogen, but environmentalists complain it does not spell out how the gas must be produced.
Hydrogen is not necessarily “green” because it can be generated from fossil fuels that Italian energy companies continue to invest in.
Green hydrogen, made by electrolysis using renewable power from wind and solar, is currently too expensive for widespread use and Enel has previously said electrolysers need to cost six times less to make it viable.
ECCO said that with no decisive push towards renewable energy or electric transport, Italy’s plan risked being mere
“greenwashing, in the interests of state companies that aim to maintain a system based mainly on fossil fuels.”
On taking office Draghi created a new Ecological Transition ministry headed by Cingolani, a prominent physicist who was previously head of innovation at Italy’s state-owned defence company Leonardo.
Cingolani’s illustrious scientific career has focused on areas such as robotics and nanotechnologies rather than climate change. Some observers suggested he may have been a better fit at the infrastructure ministry which went to Enrico Giovannini, who is instead a prominent expert in sustainable development.
In his maiden speech to parliament in February Draghi said “we want to leave a healthy planet, not just a healthy currency.” Some environmentalists doubt the former European Central Bank chief’s Recovery Plan matches that commitment.
($1 = 0.8280 euros)
(Reporting by Gavin Jones in Rome, Stephen Jewkes in Milan; Additional reporting by Jan Strupczewski in Brussels; editing by Mark John and Elaine Hardcastle)
Watering the lawn has not been on anyone’s list lately. The ample, if not excessive, rain has placed a temporary hold on this necessary task to maintain most home lawns and landscapes.
It is true the spring weeds are enjoying the liquid bounty supplied from above. Flowerbeds and gardens have new residents peeking through the mulch and soil’s surface daily with tiny green leaves intent on staking out new territory for their species.
If monitoring their real estate holdings, the Madison County homeowner can at least witness the slow but steady progress of the uninvited plants. Sometimes, however, there are sudden surprises which stand in stark contrast to green pallet of domestic bliss.
As if by magic and seemingly overnight, the lawn is home to a collection of mushrooms. Even more startling, the fungi are arranged in a circular pattern which reflects some forethought and organization by an unknown hand.
These mysteriously appearing shapes are collectively known as fairy rings and have been reported in meadows, paddocks and pastures for more than a millennium by reputable members of society. Depending on the location and culture, the name and meaning of these abrupt appearances have a variety of meanings.
During the medieval period in Western Europe the superstitious residents explained this apparent anomaly as the site of dancing fairies the previous night. Other cultures in Eastern Europe and Western Asia assigned much more sinister meanings to the toadstools and their placement.
Reality and rationality have a benign, if somewhat boring, and much less ominous explanation for this apparent enigma.
Fairy rings can be caused by multiple fungi. Among these are Chlorophyllum spp., Marasmius spp., Lepiota spp., Lycoperdon spp., and other basidiomycete fungi.
These fungi and mushrooms are categorized as one of two diverse divisions of the subkingdom Dikarya and commonly identified as the higher fungi. To the homeowner who is surprised by the sudden blemish on their lawn, the new arrivals are just a pest.
Fairy rings are most commonly seen during the warmer months. It is usually during this time of year when north Florida receives the majority of its rainfall.
The mushrooms occur when large quantities of cellulose based organic matter, such as tree stumps, roots and limbs are naturally located in or have been buried under a lawn. The fungi feed on and grow supported by this material decaying in the subterranean environment.
The mushrooms, which can be all sizes and shapes, are the fruiting stages of these fungi. The species emerging is based on the spores which randomly landed there at a point in the past.
Some of the mushrooms, such as Chlorophyllum, are toxic to mammals so mushrooms should be carefully removed and destroyed if there is a potential exposure to children or pets. The use of rubber gloves is recommended when handling all unknown mushrooms.
The rings will disappear naturally overtime, but can recur if the decaying debris remains buried in the lawn. Removal of the wood based nutrient concentrations can be done, but at the sacrifice of damaging the lawn’s appearance.
While the mythical fairies may leave real surprises in the lawn, at least homeowners do not have to feel like trolls when cleaning up after the dainty sprites.
To learn more about mystery mushrooms in the City of Madison, Cherry Lake and Madison County, contact the nearest UF/IFAS County Extension Office or visit https://sfyl.ifas.ufl.edu/find-your-local-office/. To read more stories by Les Harrison vsit:Outdoorauthor.com and follow me on Facebook.
Celebrity Cruises has unveiled its latest Edge series ship, Celebrity Beyond, which it claims ‘defies imagination’.
The ship will embark on her maiden voyage from Southampton in April 2022 and guests onboard will enjoy a vast array of features.
Some of the hottest highlights include two-storey villas with private plunge pools, wellness programmes devised by Gwyneth Paltrow and the ‘Magic Carpet’. This Celebrity Cruises speciality is a tennis-court-sized cantilevered platform that moves up and down the side of the ship.
Celebrity Cruises has unveiled its latest Edge series ship, Celebrity Beyond. Pictured is a rendering of the ship’s Rooftop Garden
The Retreat Sundeck on Celebrity Beyond, which will offer ‘unadulterated outdoor bliss and ways to rejuvenate in the fresh ocean air with secluded cabanas and chic new seating areas’. The ship will embark on her maiden voyage from Southampton in April 2022
The Grand Plaza, which will span three decks and be at the centre of the ship. Celebrity Cruises says it is inspired by the piazzas of Italy
Inside one of the ship’s two-storey luxury villas. Each of these villas comes with a private plunge pool
The Sunset Bar onboard Celebrity Beyond, which has been designed by American interior designer Nate Berkus
Gwyneth Paltrow is Celebrity Cruises’ new wellness advisor. Along with her team at her lifestyle brand goop, she will curate onboard wellness programming
On the accommodation front, as well as the villas, the liner will boast staterooms with ‘infinite verandas, blurring the boundaries between indoor and outdoor living’ as well as ‘Iconic Suites’ that are ‘the largest in the fleet, offering better views than the captain’s quarters’.
The vessel will also have AquaClass SkySuites, which Celebrity Cruises says are an ‘immersive living experience that helps guests find their centre’. They feature ‘floor-to-ceiling ocean views, private verandas, luxurious bedding and other wellness amenities’.
These amenities include ‘fitness kits from Paltrow’s modern lifestyle brand goop, aimed at enhancing self-care and collective well-being’.
Meanwhile, Paltrow, the cruise line’s new wellness advisor, and her team at goop will also curate onboard wellness programming and participate in Celebrity Cruises’ new Women in Wellness initiative.
When it comes to stretching the legs and breathing in the sea air, guests are well catered for.
Architect Tom Wright of WKK – best known for designing Dubai’s Burj Al Arab – has ‘expanded the exterior spaces… transforming them into serene outward-facing sanctuaries leveraging endless ocean vistas and breathtaking panoramas of the extraordinary places the ship will visit.’
Inside one of the vessel’s Iconic Suites. They are ‘the largest in the fleet, offering better views than the captain’s quarters’
The cruise liner will boast staterooms, pictured, with ‘infinite verandas, blurring the boundaries between indoor and outdoor living’
On the Resort Deck, guests will ‘enjoy a stunning asymmetrical space with a 25-yard lap pool surrounded by a terraced pool deck and new sunken seating areas designed by Kelly Hoppen’. The deck will also boast a huge elephant sculpture.
Meanwhile, the Rooftop Garden, which will be 40 per cent larger than on previous Edge series ships, will feature ‘private nooks and more spaces for movie-watching, enjoying live music and outdoor dining at the expanded Rooftop Grill’.
Celebrity Cruises adds: ‘A highlight of this area is Wright’s incorporation of two spectacular floating pools cantilevered six and a half feet over the side of the ship, taking guests beyond the water’s edge.’
Wright also designed the Magic Carpet platform that ‘transforms from open-air lounge or restaurant hovering above the ocean along higher decks to a tender platform for going ashore on lower decks’.
The Resort Deck, pictured, is a ‘stunning asymmetrical space with a 25-yard lap pool surrounded by a terraced pool deck’. The deck will also boast a huge elephant sculpture
One of the sunken seating areas on the Resort Deck. They have been designed by interior designer Kelly Hoppen
The two spectacular floating pools in the Rooftop Garden, which are cantilevered six and a half feet over the side of the ship
The sundeck in the Retreat – an ‘unrivalled and exclusive resort space for suite guests’
Celebrity Cruises president and CEO Lisa Lutoff-Perlo says: ‘Celebrity Beyond shatters any and every preconceived notion of the cruising experience.’ Pictured is the Retreat Sundeck
The Retreat Lounge, which Celebrity Cruises describes as ‘warm and inviting’ and a ‘stylish space to unwind’
Celebrity Beyond will have a Magic Carpet platform that moves up and down the side of the ship. Here is the same feature pictured on sister ship Celebrity Edge
The cruise line explains: ‘Featured on Celebrity Beyond, it debuted on Celebrity Edge in 2018 and is still considered one of the most unique design innovations ever for a cruise ship.’
Also on board is The Retreat, which is described as an ‘unrivalled and exclusive resort space for suite guests’, with aspects of the design by Hoppen.
The Retreat Sundeck will offer ‘unadulterated outdoor bliss and ways to rejuvenate in the fresh ocean air with secluded cabanas, chic new seating areas, additional water features and the exclusive Retreat Bar’.
This area also features the ‘warm and inviting Retreat Lounge’, which is described as a ‘stylish space to unwind’. Adjacent is the private restaurant Luminae, where ‘every corner provides a new experience with each visit, in keeping with the daily changing menu’.
At the centre of the ship will be the Grand Plaza, designed by Jouin Manku – the team responsible for designing the Jules Verne restaurant in the Eiffel Tower.
Inspired by the piazzas of Italy, the Grand Plaza spans three decks and is larger than the Grand Plazas on its sister ships.
Celebrity Cruises explains: ‘The Celebrity Beyond Grand Plaza has an airier atmosphere with more room for intimate seating. The added space allowed designers to move the Martini Bar into the centre of the venue as a full, circular bar.
‘Hanging proudly above the new Martini Bar, the Grand Plaza’s iconic chandelier boasts a new, organic shape with hundreds of individual LED lights that cast an inviting glow at all hours, taking centre stage with talented bartenders at night during their exciting and theatrical Flash Flair Fusion performance.’
Inside Le Voyage, an intimate 50-seat restaurant by world-renowned chef Daniel Boulud. He is best-known for his two-Michelin-starred New York restaurant, Daniel
Luminae, pictured, will be a private restaurant in the Retreat area of Celebrity Beyond
At Luminae, pictured, ‘every corner provides a new experience with each visit, in keeping with the daily changing menu’
Connected to the Grand Plaza will be Le Voyage, an ‘intimate 50-seat restaurant’ by world-renowned chef Daniel Boulud – best-known for his two-Michelin-starred New York restaurant Daniel.
According to Celebrity Cruises, ‘travel is the inspiration for the globally inspired flavours within, designed to transport guests to the very places that inspire the Michelin-rated chef’.
The restaurant itself will have ‘intimate seating cocoons’ that are ‘surrounded by luminous portals highlighting the themes of journey and travel, while graphically lit “glass flutes” provide layers of light and texture to create an enchanting experience’.
Meanwhile, another venue onboard will be the Sunset Bar – designed by American interior designer Nate Berkus.
The Sunset Bar, pictured, is described as a chic, Moroccan-inspired escape that is reminiscent of a modern-day Casablanca
Celebrity Cruises says the Sunset Bar’s cascading terraces will ‘combine to provide the perfect place to soak in spectacular views and create unforgettable memories’
Lutoff-Perlo says: ‘This exquisite ship offers a journey at the intersection of elegance and approachability filled with what’s important to our guests today: forward-thinking design, culinary excellence, unparalleled well-being and incomparable service.’ Pictured is the Sunset Bar
Celebrity Cruises says: ‘Inside this space, which is nearly twice as large as previous iterations, Berkus has created a chic, Moroccan-inspired escape that is reminiscent of a modern-day Casablanca.
‘Guests will enter through a pergola-covered entrance to enjoy one of the hottest spots at sea. With more conversation niches and covered enclaves to allow guests to connect in a more intimate way, the Sunset Bar’s cascading terraces will combine to provide the perfect place to soak in spectacular views and create unforgettable memories.’
Celebrity Beyond will depart on her maiden voyage from Southampton on April 27, 2022, on a 10-night Western Europe cruise.
She will visit Bordeaux, Lisbon, Seville, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca and Barcelona.
On her maiden voyage – a 10-night Western Europe cruise – Celebrity Beyond will visit Bordeaux, Lisbon, Seville, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca and Barcelona
The vessel will then offer a variety of Mediterranean journeys, including nine-night Italian Riviera and France itineraries and 10-night Greek Isles itineraries until early October 2022, when she will head to the Caribbean.
Celebrity Cruises president and CEO Lisa Lutoff-Perlo says: ‘Celebrity Cruises has always been an innovator at sea, and now we have challenged the status quo with a vessel that goes beyond expectations, beyond imagination.
‘Celebrity Beyond shatters any and every preconceived notion of the cruising experience.
‘This exquisite ship offers a journey at the intersection of elegance and approachability filled with what’s important to our guests today: forward-thinking design, culinary excellence, unparalleled well-being and incomparable service.’
Richard Fain, chairman of Royal Caribbean Group, the parent company of Celebrity Cruises, adds: ‘With Celebrity Beyond, we saw an opportunity to take the extraordinary features of Celebrity Edge – like the focus on the connection with the ocean and the grand spaces – and really amplify them.
‘We focused on providing more openness, height and spaciousness throughout the ship’s most popular spaces. The end result is a next-generation ship that embodies the intersection of architecture and design.’
Based on confirmed cases, 5.5 per cent of the entire European population has now had COVID-19, while 7 per cent has completed a full vaccination series.
But WHO Regional Director for Europe, Hans Kluge said in a video message, “the virus still carries the potential to inflict devastating effects”.
“As a matter of fact, close to half of all COVID-19 infections in the Region since January last year were reported to WHO during the first 4 months of this year”, he added.
Shaping the pandemic’s course
Although new cases fell significantly last week, for the first time in two months, infection rates across the region remain “extremely high”, according to Dr. Kluge, who noted that individual and collective public health and social measures in most countries, remain “dominant factors in shaping the pandemic’s course”.
Crucially, national governments in the region are slowly but surely vaccinating those most at risk.
“To date, some 215 million doses of vaccine have been administered”, said the WHO official.
Approximately 16 per cent of the region’s population has had a first vaccine dose, as well as 81 per cent of health workers in 28 countries throughout the region.
Hospital admissions are decreasing and death rates are falling in high-risk groups with the highest vaccination rates.
“Vaccines are saving lives, and they will change the course of this pandemic and eventually help end it”, said Dr. Kluge.
‘Clearest path to normal’
The WHO Regional Director maintained that vaccines alone will not end the pandemic but along with strong public health measures, they offer “the clearest path back to normal”.
He underscored the importance of continuing to share information, engage communities and maintain surveillance, saying otherwise “we can’t identify new variants”.
“And without contact tracing, governments may need to reimpose restrictive measures”, Dr. Kluge warned.
Vital immunizations
Every year during European Immunization Week, WHO highlights that for over 200 years, vaccines have protected against life-threatening diseases.
“Today they help protect against more than 20 diseases, from pneumonia to cervical cancer and now also COVID-19”, said Dr. Kluge.
Vaccines are bringing us closer to ending this pandemic, eradicating polio and eliminating measles, cervical cancer and other vaccine-preventable diseases.
And they are helping to edge populations into a world without the threat of antibiotic resistance.
“The fact that the countries of the European Region on average reached 96% of children scheduled to receive their first dose of measles vaccine in 2019, is testament to the commitment of governments in the Region to eliminate measles”, he said.
“We now need that commitment to vaccinating against the SARS-CoV-2 virus”.
Beyond COVID
To keep an upper hand on vaccine-preventable diseases, health systems must provide essential primary health care, including routine inoculations while controlling the pandemic.
Dr. Kluge recalled that faltering immunization rates in 2019 led to more than 100,000 measles cases, warning that that when routine immunization services are temporarily interrupted – as also witnessed a year ago in European countries hardest hit by the first wave of COVID – infectious disease outbreaks may flare up further down the line.
“Hard-earned success can slip away fast”, he said urging “high immunization coverage with routine vaccines”.
For vaccines to again change the course of history, they must be injected into people’s arms, he added.
“Ultimately, it is us, the people who receive them, who make them work for the good of all”.
And with acute malnutrition rates continuing to rise, urgent action is required to address this unfolding humanitarian crisis, the World Food Programme (WFP) warned.
“If we don’t reverse this crisis, if we don’t get food to the people in the south of Madagascar, families will starve and lives will be lost”, Amer Daoudi, WFP’s Senior Director of Operations, said, after visiting one of the worst affected areas, Sihanamaro.
Evolving catastrophe
Most districts in the South are in the throes of a nutrition emergency with Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) levels in children under five, nearly doubling over the last four months – touching an alarming 16.5 per cent – the Ministry of Health reported.
Children with acute malnutrition are four times more likely to die than healthy youngsters.
And in the worst affected district of Ambovombe, GAM has risen above 27 per cent, putting the lives of many children at risk.
Meeting needs, saving lives
Over the next six months, WFP needs $74 million to save lives in the world’s second-largest island State.
“We have witnessed heart-breaking scenes of severely malnourished children and starving families”, said Mr. Daoudi, appealing for “money and resources…to help the people of Madagascar”.
After the alarm was raised across Amboasary district, the UN agency has been progressively assisting up to 750,000 people through food and cash distributions each month.
State of peril
Consecutive years of drought in the South have left at least 1.35 million people in need of emergency food and nutrition assistance, according to WFP.
Since last September, the start of the lean season, the situation had turned critical as families had already depleted their food supplies and gone through vital seed stocks, leaving nothing for the November/December 2020 planting season.
Currently, up to 80 per cent of the population in certain areas in the south are resorting to desperate survival measures, such as eating locusts, raw red cactus fruits or wild leaves.
Moreover, with a lack of rain during the last planting season, prospects for the 2021 harvest are poor, indicating another longer tougher lean season from October to March 2022.
WFP said that food production this year is expected to be “less than 40 per cent of the last five-year average”, which only adds to the difficulties faced by communities already on the brink of survival to feed themselves.
At the same time, semi-arid conditions in southern Madagascar, combined with high levels of soil erosion, deforestation and unprecedented sandstorms, have transformed arable land into wasteland across the region.
The findings add to increasing evidence of the health consequences of air pollution from petroleum extraction and refining.
Types of cancer risk
The review identified an increased risk of mesothelioma, skin melanoma, multiple myeloma, and cancers of the prostate and urinary bladder, and conversely, decreased risk of cancers of the oesophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, and pancreas.
Offshore petroleum work was associated with an increased risk of lung cancer and leukaemia.
Living close to petroleum facilities was also associated with an increased risk of childhood leukaemia.
Scientists in the Environment and Lifestyle Epidemiology Branch of the agency carried out 41 cohort studies, 14 case–control studies, and two cross-sectional studies to compile their review.
Their findings have been published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
More research needed
The authors point out that further studies on the effect of exposure to petroleum and its closest derivatives (e.g. benzene) are needed in order to identify how they modify cancer risk.
In particular, there is a need for targeted studies in under-researched areas of high petroleum production with presumably higher exposures.
The scientists argue that the best way forward may be an international consortium to guide new studies in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, in order to harmonize how studies are carried out and how exposure is assessed.
Another crisis, another lagging recovery for Europe, and again the size of fiscal stimulus is a factor. But Germany isn’t the obstacle it once was, and the rise of its Green Party could further push both country and continent toward the U.S. model of aggressive government stimulus.
<p>Angela Merkel, the conservative chancellor who has led Germany since 2005, has already eased some of her past opposition to borrowing. She isn’t running for re-election this September and polls put the Greens in second place, close behind Ms. Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union-led alliance. They could emerge as either junior partner or even leader of the next governing coalition.</p>
The Greens have evolved from an antinuclear pacifist party to a pragmatic left-of-center group that regularly participates in coalitions federally and in Germany’s states, called länder. The party still has its hard-line environmentalist wing, but leadership is in the hands of its moderate wing, which includes Annalena Baerbock, the 40-year-old parliamentarian nominated last week to run as chancellor this fall.
“Many people formerly thought the Greens would never do economic policy—they only want to do organic farming and vegan Yoga courses,” Sven Giegold, a Green member of the European Parliament and a party spokesman on economic issues, said in an interview. “But these times are over. We are in government already in 11 of 16 länder and in one of them, the prime minister. We are not naive. We know how governing works.”
As the Greens have moderated, the rest of the world has moved left, particularly on climate. Thus, the Green platform wouldn’t look out of place in many mainstream liberal parties. They want to slash carbon emissions faster by raising carbon prices and phasing out coal and the internal combustion engine, boost taxes on the rich and multinational corporations and promote industries of the future, such as renewable energy and artificial intelligence.
Unlike right-wing populist parties, they are staunchly globalist, supportive of global agreements on trade, human rights and the environment. They are tougher toward China and Russia than Ms. Merkel, citing similar reasons as the U.S.: geostrategic rivalry and human rights.
The Greens also differ from Ms. Merkel on something that would be utterly unremarkable in any other country: a willingness to run budget deficits.
Germany’s prevailing economic ideology, ordoliberalism, treats debt as almost immoral. A constitutional debt brake requires länder to balance their budgets and limits structural federal deficits to 0.35% of gross domestic product. By comparison, eurozone members’ (frequently breached) deficit limit, enshrined in the Stability and Growth Pact, is 3%, and the U.S. federal deficit averaged 5% from 2009 to 2019.
Ms. Merkel’s government long boasted of its “black zero”: deficit-free budgets that actually paid down debt. Such fiscal discipline was historically prudent, but not in the last decade when the world was chronically short of demand.
The eurozone has a built-in bias toward austerity because of the Stability and Growth Pact and because a heavily indebted country like Italy can’t borrow as much when it no longer controls its own currency. In the last decade Germany amplified that bias by resisting joint efforts to bail out Greece, backstop the region’s banks or borrow via Eurobonds to support the region’s growth.
In the last year, though, Germany has changed. Ms. Merkel threw her support behind a €750 billion ($907 billion) European Union recovery fund, financed by Eurobonds, a big step toward a U.S.-style fiscal union. Her government also suspended the debt brake to pump pandemic aid into the economy.
These steps were meant to be temporary; the Greens would make them permanent. “Germany has a bigger problem than debt,” Mr. Giegold said. “The biggest problem is the lack of investment [that] is risking our competitiveness.”
The Greens would like to amend the debt brake to allow borrowing for public investment, which they argue is economically astute since German interest rates are negative. “The smart entrepreneur doesn’t save, they invest. The smart state does the same,” the party platform declares.
The party has proposed investing €50 billion a year on faster internet, research and development, charging stations, expanded railways, emission-free buses and urban development.
That is comparable to President Biden’s infrastructure plan when measured as a share of economic output. But the Greens don’t share the U.S. left’s more expansive embrace of deficits. They are “pragmatic, not dogmatic,” said Marcel Fratzscher, president of DIW Berlin, a German think tank. “I would not put them in any [economic] camp, even Keynesian.”
The Greens want to make the EU’s recovery fund permanent, expand the EU’s budget financed by its own taxes, and reform the Stability and Growth Pact so that “excessive pressure to save is prevented and investments in the future can be further increased,” according to its platform.
The obstacles are considerable. Even if the Greens come out on top in September, they will lack the votes to amend the constitution. Indeed, the rise of the Greens doesn’t reflect a leftward shift in German politics, but rather disintegrating support for the Social Democrats, Ms. Merkel’s current junior governing partner.
Across Europe, traditional centrist parties have leached voters, often to antiglobalist movements on the right. The EU has already lost Britain to an antiglobalist backlash.
For now, though, leaders in France and Italy are once again watching the U.S. race ahead and keen to mimic its fiscal formula. Germany seems ready to join them.
This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.
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