‘Our biggest challenge? Lack of imagination’: the scientists turning the desert green
‘Our biggest challenge? Lack of imagination’: the scientists turning the desert green

Flying into Egypt in early February to make the most important presentation of his life, Ties van der Hoeven prepared by listening to the podcast 13 Minutes To The Moon – the story of how Nasa accomplished the lunar landings. The mission he was discussing with the Egyptian government was more earthbound in nature, but every bit as ambitious. It could even represent a giant leap for mankind.

Van der Hoeven is a co-founder of the Weather Makers, a Dutch firm of “holistic engineers” with a plan to regreen the Sinai peninsula – the small triangle of land that connects Egypt to Asia. Within a couple of decades, the Weather Makers believe, the Sinai could be transformed from a hot, dry, barren desert into a green haven teeming with life: forests, wetlands, farming land, wild flora and fauna. A regreened Sinai would alter local weather patterns and even change the direction of the winds, bringing more rain, the Weather Makers believe – hence their name.

“If anybody doubts that the Sinai can be regreened,” Van der Hoeven told the Egyptian delegates, an assortment of academics, representatives of ministers and military top brass, “then you have to understand that landing on the moon was once thought unrealistic. They didn’t lay out a full, detailed roadmap when they started, but they had the vision. And step by step they made it happen.”

Van der Hoeven is nothing if not persuasive. Voluble, energetic and down-to-earth, the 40-year-old engineer’s train of thought runs through disciplines from morphology to esoteric mysticism, often threatening to jump the tracks. But he is keenly focused on the future. “This world is ready for regenerative change,” he says. “It’s going to be a complete change of our behaviour as a species in the longer term. It is going to be a step as big as fire was for humanity.”

It sounds impossibly far-fetched, but not only is the Weather Makers’ plan perfectly feasible, they insist, it is precisely the type of project humanity should be getting its head around right now. In recent years, discussion about the climate crisis has predominantly focused on fossil fuels and greenhouse gases; now, we’re coming to realise that the other side of that coin is protecting and replenishing the natural world. There is no better mechanism for removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than nature, but in the past 5,000 years, human activity has reduced the Earth’s total biomass by an estimated 50%, and destroyed or degraded 70% of the world’s forests. As UN secretary general António Guterres put it last year: “Human activities are at the root of our descent toward chaos. But that means human action can help to solve it.”

The Weather Makers know this very well: their origins are in dredging, one of the heaviest industries there is. Over the past few centuries, dredging has helped humans alter the face of the planet on ever-greater scales. Trained as a morphological engineer, Van der Hoeven has spent the past decade in the industry, working on projects across the world, including the artificial islands of Dubai, whose creation involved large-scale dredging and land reclamation. He got sucked into the expat lifestyle there, he admits: drinking, eating, partying, “I lost a little bit of my soul.” Returning to the Netherlands in 2008, he began to reexamine his own profession: “What I could see is that the dredging industry had so much potential; we were just misusing it.”

Working for the Belgian company Deme, he devised a new method of dredging that was both more eco-friendly and more efficient. He used inexpensive sensors to model maritime conditions in real time – waves, currents, tides – so as to determine more precisely where and when it was safe to work. Trialling the system, he won over sceptical colleagues by living on the vessel with them, even cooking meals. Head office was also convinced when his technique saved a small fortune.

In January 2016, Van der Hoeven was contacted by Deme’s Egyptian representative, Malik Boukebbous, who had been asked by the Egyptian government to look into restoring Lake Bardawil, a lagoon on the north coast of the Sinai. The lake was once 20 to 40 metres deep, but today is just a few metres deep. Dredging the lake and cutting channels to allow more water in from the Mediterranean would make it deeper, cooler and less salty – all of which would boost fish stocks.

But Van der Hoeven did not want to stop there. “If I feel I’m on the right track, it’s difficult for people to distract me,” he says. He began looking at the Sinai peninsula in more detail: its history, weather patterns, geology, tides, plant and animal life, even religious texts. He took himself off other projects and spent long hours in his apartment surrounded by charts, maps, books, sketched diagrams. “People were afraid for me because I was forgetting myself. My friends were cooking for me.” The deeper he looked, the more potential he saw.

There is evidence that the Sinai once was green – as recently as 4,500 to 8,000 years ago. Cave paintings found there depict trees and plants. Records in the 1,500-year-old Saint Catherine’s monastery, near Mount Sinai, tally harvests of wood. Satellite images reveal a network of rivers flowing from the mountains in the south towards the Mediterranean.

The Sinai peninsula today, and how it could look after regreening. Composite: The Weather Makers

What turned the Sinai into a desert was, most likely, human activity. Wherever they settle, humans tend to chop down trees and clear land. This loss of vegetation affects the land’s ability to retain moisture. Grazing animals trample and consume plants when they try to grow back. The soil loses its structure and is washed away – hence the silt in Lake Bardawil. Van der Hoeven calculated the lake contained about 2.5bn cubic metres of silt. If one were to restore the Sinai, this vast reserve of nutrient-rich material was exactly what would be needed. “It became clear we had a massive opportunity,” he says. “It wasn’t the solution to a single problem; it was the solution to all the problems.”

By this stage, Van der Hoeven and Deme agreed that he would be best off working as a separate entity, so in 2017 he founded the Weather Makers with two friends: Gijs Bosman and Maddie Akkermans. Both appear to be steadying influences. Bosman, a project manager at Dutch engineering firm Royal HaskoningDHV and a friend since student days, had the ability to translate Van der Hoeven’s grand vision into actionable technical detail. Akkermans has a background in finance and economics. “Ties said, ‘I’m too chaotic. So I can’t do this alone,’” she says. “Having someone like me who could tell him the truth and keep him on track gave him the confidence to start a company.”

They consulted with experts across disciplines, in particular a handful of veterans who have been ploughing the eco-restoration furrow for decades. Van der Hoeven calls them his “Jedi”. The first of these is John D Liu, a Chinese-American ecologist with a background in broadcasting. Restoring a landscape as large and as degraded as the Sinai sounds like science fiction, but it has been done before. While Van der Hoeven was immersed in his research, a friend implored him to watch a documentary called Green Gold, which Liu had made for Dutch television in 2012. It chronicles the story of the Loess plateau, an area of northern China almost the size of France. In 1994, Liu, who was working as a television journalist in Beijing, was asked by the World Bank to film the start of an ambitious restoration project, led by a pioneering Chinese scientist, Li Rui. At that time, the Loess plateau was much like the Sinai: a dry, barren, heavily eroded landscape. The soil was washing away and silting up the Yellow river. Farmers could barely grow any crops. The plan to restore it was huge in scale but relatively low tech: planting trees on the hilltops; terracing the steep slopes (by hand); adding organic material to the soil; controlling grazing animals; retaining water. The transformation has been astonishing. Within 20 years, the deserts of the Loess plateau became green valleys and productive farmland, as Green Gold documents. “I watched it 35 times in a row,” says Van der Hoeven. “Seeing that, I thought, ‘Let’s go for it!’”

Ties van der Hoeven: ‘If we want to do something about global warming, we have to do something about deserts.’ Photograph: Judith Jockel/The Guardian

The Loess plateau project was also a turning point for Liu, he says – away from broadcasting and towards ecosystem restoration: “You start to see that everything is connected. It’s almost like you’re in the Matrix.” Despite his Jedi status, 68-year-old Liu is easygoing and conversational, more midwestern ex-hippy than cryptic Zen master. Since 2009, he has been an ambassador for Commonland, a Dutch nonprofit, and an adviser to Ecosystem Restoration Camps – a global network of hands-on, volunteer communities.

After watching Green Gold, the Weather Makers practically burst into Commonland’s Amsterdam headquarters to share their plans. “They were not going to be denied!” Liu recalls. “I said, ‘We have to work with these people, because this is the most audacious thesis I’ve ever seen.’”

Liu brought Van der Hoeven to China to see the Loess plateau first-hand. “To be in a place that had been essentially a desert where now it’s raining cats and dogs, and it’s not flooding, because it’s being infiltrated and retained in the system – it was all just so impressive to him.”

Through Liu, Van der Hoeven met another Jedi: Prof Millán Millán, a Spanish meteorologist. In the 1990s, Millán began investigating the disappearance of summer storms in eastern Spain for the European commission. “What I found is that the loss is directly linked to the building up of coastal areas,” he says. Rainfall in the region comes almost entirely from Mediterranean sea breezes. However, the breeze alone doesn’t carry enough water vapour to create a storm inland; it needs to pick up extra moisture, which it used to do from the marshes and wetlands along the coast. Over the past two centuries, however, these wetlands have been built on or converted to farming land. No additional moisture; no more storms. “Once you take too much vegetation out, it leads to desertification very quickly,” says Millán.

Such changes do not just affect the weather at a local level, Millán discovered: “The water vapour that doesn’t precipitate over the mountains goes back to the Mediterranean and accumulates in layers for about four or five days, and then it goes somewhere else: central Europe.” In other words, building on the Spanish coast was creating floods in Germany. Millán’s findings have gone largely unheeded by the European commission, he says. Now 79 and retired, he speaks with the gentle weariness of a long-ignored expert: “My criticism to them was: the old township barber would pull your teeth with pliers. It hurt, but it was effective. You’re still using those procedures, but you could save all your teeth.”

Millán’s research and Liu’s experience in the Loess plateau arrived at essentially the same conclusion. Chop down the trees, destroy the ecosystem, and the rains disappear; restore the ecosystem, make a wetter landscape, and the rains come back. Millán distilled his work down to a simple maxim: “Water begets water, soil is the womb, vegetation is the midwife.”

Regreening the Sinai is to some extent a question of restarting that “water begets water” feedback loop. After restoring Lake Bardawil, the second phase is to expand and restore the wetlands around it so as to evaporate more moisture and increase biodiversity. The Sinai coast is already a major global crossing point for migratory birds; restored wetlands would encourage more birds, which would add fertility and new plant species.

When it comes to restoring inland areas of the Sinai, there is another challenge: fresh water. This is where another Jedi came into play: John Todd, a mild-mannered marine biologist and a pioneer in ecological design. In the 1970s, frustrated by the narrowness of academia, Todd established the New Alchemy Institute, an alternative research community in Massachusetts dedicated to sustainable living. One of his innovations was the “eco machine” – a low-tech installation consisting of clear-sided water barrels covered by a greenhouse.

“An eco machine is basically a living technology,” Todd explains. The principle is that water flows from one barrel to the next, and each barrel contains a mini ecosystem: algae, plants, bacteria, fungi, worms, insects, fish; like a series of manmade ponds. As the water flows, it becomes cleaner and cleaner. “You could design one that would treat toxic waste or sewage, or you could design one to grow food. They are solar-driven, and have within them a very large amount of biodiversity – in a sense, they reflect the aggregate experience of life on Earth over the last 3.5bn years.” In the Sinai, eco machines would be used to grow plants and to produce fresh water.

Last autumn, the Weather Makers built their own eco machine on a pig farm on the outskirts of the Dutch city of s’-Hertogenbosch, where they are based. For the first step in a plan to change the world, it is not exactly prepossessing. It looks like a standard agricultural polytunnel. On a cold, drizzly day, Weather Maker Pieter van Hout gives me a virtual tour. Inside the greenhouse are six clear-sided barrels filled with water of various shades of green and brown. In some of the tanks is leaf litter and dead plant material. Van Hout points out the brown algae growing on the sides: phytoplankton, the basis of the food web, which feeds life further up the chain: insects, snails and, in one tank, fish (in the Sinai these would be edible tilapia).

The Weather Makers, from left, in their eco machine: Eduardo Vias Torres, Pieter van Hout, Maarten Lanters, Ties van der Hoeven, Maddie Akkermans, Gijs Bosman, Mohammed Nawlo. Photograph: Judith Jockel/The Guardian

Some water evaporates from the barrels and condenses on the inside skin of the greenhouse, where it is collected by a system of gutters. Even on a cold day in the Netherlands, there is a constant trickle into a container on the ground. In the heat of the Sinai, the cycle would run much faster, says Van Hout. The water feeding the eco machine would be salt water, but the water that condenses inside would be fresh water, which can then be used to irrigate plants. If the structure is designed correctly, one would only need to drum on the outside to create an artificial “rain” inside. When the plants and the soil inside the greenhouse reach a certain maturity, they become self-sustaining. The greenhouse can then be removed and the process repeated in a different spot. “The idea is that you may have 100 of these structures,” says John Todd. “And they’re spending five years in one site and then they’re moved, so these little ecologies are left behind.”

In the Sinai, the sediment from Lake Bardawil would be pumped up to the hills, 50km inland, where it would then trickle back down through a network of eco machines. The saltiness of the sediment is actually an asset, says Van Hout, in that it has preserved all the nutrients. Flushing them through the eco machines will “reactivate” them. Around the water tanks, they are now testing to see which salt-tolerant plant species, or halophytes, grow best. Van Hout proudly points out a stack of white plastic tubs containing silt freshly scooped from the bottom of Lake Bardawil. “This is what ecosystem restoration looks like in real life,” he laughs, “buckets of very expensive mud.”

Estimates of how much difference a regreened Sinai could make are hard to quantify. In terms of carbon sequestration, it would doubtless be “billions of tons”, says Van der Hoeven. But such metrics are not always helpful: if you convert atmospheric carbon into, say, phytoplankton, what happens when a fish eats that phytoplankton? Or when a bigger fish eats that fish?

Another useful measure could be global temperature. In addition to sequestering carbon, green areas also help cool the planet. Deserts are heat producers, reflecting around 60% to 70% of the solar energy that falls on them straight back into the atmosphere. In areas covered by vegetation, much of that solar energy is instead used in evapotranspiration: the process of condensation and evaporation by which water moves between plants and the atmosphere. “If vegetation comes back, you increase cover, you reduce temperature, you reduce solar reflection, you start creating a stable climate,” says Van der Hoeven. “If we want to do something about global warming, we have to do something about deserts.”

At present, the hot Sinai acts as a “vacuum cleaner”, drawing moist air from the Mediterranean and funnelling it towards the Indian Ocean. A cooler Sinai would mean less of that moisture being “lost”. Instead, it would fall as rain across the Middle East and north Africa, thus boosting the entire region’s natural potential. Van der Hoeven describes the Sinai peninsula as an “acupuncture point”: “There are certain points in this world where, if we accumulate our joint energy, we can make a big difference.”

The Sinai is also an acupuncture point geopolitically, however. Post-Arab spring, the region has become a battle zone between Egyptian security forces and Islamist insurgents. There have been numerous terrorist incidents: the bombing of a Russian airliner in 2015 killed 224 people; an attack on a Sufi mosque in 2017 killed more than 300 worshippers. Northern Sinai is currently a no-go area to outsiders, controlled by the military, and plagued by poverty, terrorism and human rights abuses. Since 2018 the military has restricted access to Lake Bardawil for local fishermen to just a few months a year, says Ahmed Salem, founder of the UK-based Sinai Foundation for Human Rights. “There’s a lot of suffering,” he says, “because they don’t have any other way to earn money and feed their families.” A restored landscape would bring tangible benefits to locals, says Salem, but it all depends on the president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi. “If Sisi really wants to help them [the Weather Makers], it will be OK for them because he’s like a god in Egypt. But if he doesn’t, they will fail.”

But the Sisi government seems to have recognised that ecosystem regeneration could fix many problems at once: food security, poverty, political stability, climate goals, as well as the potential for a green project of international renown. The government is close to signing contracts for the first phase of the restoration plan, which covers the dredging of Lake Bardawil. Subsequent phases may well require financial support from external bodies such as the EU.

As outsiders, the Weather Makers are aware their plan will require local support, cooperation and labour. Because of the military restrictions, none of them has visited Lake Bardawil, although they have forged links with an organic farm in southern Sinai named Habiba. Habiba was established in 1994, by Maged El Said, a charismatic, Cairo-born tour operator who fell in love with the region. Originally it was a beach resort, but in 2007 El Said branched into organic farming, and Habiba now connects other farms, local Bedouin tribes and academic institutions.

The Weather Makers have forged links with Habiba organic farm in southern Sinai. Photograph: Courtesy of Maged El Said

El Said has some reservations about the Weather Makers’ plan: “It’s a big shiny project, but also you’re drastically changing the environment, the flora and fauna. I don’t know if there will be side-effects.” But in terms of the larger mission, they are very much aligned: “We are all in the same boat. Desertification and climate change is happening so fast, so we need action on the ground. Enough of workshops, enough seminars, talks, talks, talks.”

On a global level, the tide is turning in the Weather Makers’ direction. Discussions about regreening, reforestation and rewilding have been growing in volume and urgency, boosted by high-profile advocates such as Greta Thunberg, David Attenborough and British ecologist Thomas Crowther, who made headlines in 2019 with research suggesting the climate crisis could be solved by planting 1tn trees (he later acknowledged it was not quite that simple).

This year marks the beginning of the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, “a rallying call for the protection and revival of ecosystems around the world”. The UN hopes to restore 350m hectares of land by 2030, which could remove an additional 13 to 26 gigatons of carbon from the atmosphere. After decades of compartmentalising environmental issues and missing its own targets, the UN, too, has come to realise that the only viable solution is to do it all at once. It particularly wants to rally younger people to the cause; its social media campaigns carry a “generation restoration” hashtag. “Ecosystem restoration is not a technical challenge; it’s a social challenge,” says Tim Christophersen, head of the Nature for Climate branch at the UN Environment Programme.

Nations and corporations are also making ever more ambitious commitments to regreening, even if they are struggling to live up to them. The UK, for example, plans to create 30,000 hectares of woodland a year by 2025. India has pledged to restore 26m hectares of degraded land by 2030. Africa’s Great Green Wall, “the world’s largest ecosystem restoration project”, aims to plant an 8,000km line of trees across the Sahara Desert, from Senegal to Djibouti (14 years on, it is only around 15% complete). Meanwhile, green companies are taking root, such as Ecosia, the Berlin-based search engine, which to date has planted more than 120m trees around the world.

“The main challenge,” Christophersen says, “is the lack of human imagination; our inability to see a different future because we’re staring down this dystopian path of pandemic, climate change, biodiversity loss. But the collective awareness that we are in this together is a huge opportunity. People don’t have a problem imagining what a four-lane highway would look like. But to imagine a restored landscape of over a million hectares – nobody knows what that would look like because it hasn’t really been done before.”

Van der Hoeven would agree. He cites Yuval Noah Hariri’s book Sapiens, which argues that humans prevailed because of our ability to share information, ideas, stories: “We were able to believe in a myth – in something which was not there yet.”

Regreening the Sinai is presently little more than a myth, just as the Apollo missions once were; but it now exists in the imagination, as a signpost for the future we aspire to. The more it is shared, the more likely it is to happen. It could come to be a turning point – an acupuncture point: “We’re not going to change humanity by saying, ‘Everything has to be less,’” says Van der Hoeven. “No, we have to do more of the good things. Why don’t we come together and do something in a positive way?”

Building a sustainable and resilient recovery from COVID-19
Building a sustainable and resilient recovery from COVID-19

This week, WHO/Europe participated in the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe’s 2021 Regional Forum on Sustainable Development. Held under the theme “Sustainable and resilient recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and action and delivery on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in the UNECE Region”, it included a specific focus on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 1, 2, 3, 8, 10, 12 and 13, and the 2020 targets.

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The first joint COVID-19 Surveillance Bulletin launched WHO Europe and ECDC
The first joint COVID-19 Surveillance Bulletin launched WHO Europe and ECDC

The first joint COVID-19 weekly surveillance bulletin was released on 19 March 2021 by WHO/Europe and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

For the first time both surveillance and vaccination data on COVID-19 in all WHO European Region countries and territories are accessible on one platform. The bulletin incorporates visualization of data on COVID-19 cases, deaths and vaccine uptake by age group, and hospitalizations.

The COVID-19 surveillance bulletin will be published on a weekly basis, presenting data reported by country for the week prior to each publication.

http://Joint ECDC-WHO/EURO Weekly surveillance report

Global Organic Bread Flour Market Insights, Overview, Analysis and forecast 2026
Global Organic Bread Flour Market Insights, Overview, Analysis and forecast 2026
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              <h2 class="fe_heading2">Global Organic Bread Flour Market Insights, Overview, Analysis and  forecast 2026</h2>
              </p><div readability="191.16943359375">

Mar 18, 2021 (Heraldkeepers) —

Bread Flour is milled from higher protein wheat making it exceptional for bread baking. This 100% organic flour is excellent for yeast breads as well as pizza crusts, rolls, and artisan breads.

Projected and forecast revenue values are in constant U.S. dollars, unadjusted for inflation. Product values and regional markets are estimated by market analyst, data analyst and people from related industry, based on companys’ revenue and applications market respectively.”

The report demonstrates detail coverage of Organic Bread Flour industry and main market trends.
The data sources include but not limited to reports of companys,international organizations and governments, MMI market surveys,and related industry news.
The market research includes historical and forecast data from like demand, application details, price trends, and company shares of the leading Organic Bread Flour by geography, especially focuses on the key regions like United States, European Union, China, and other regions.

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In addition, the report provides insight into main drivers,challenges,opportunities and risk of the market and strategies of suppliers. Key players are profiled as well with their market shares in the global Organic Bread Flour market discussed. Overall, this report covers the historical situation, present status and the future prospects of the global Organic Bread Flour market for 2016-2026.
Moreover,the impact of COVID-19 is also concerned. Since outbreak in December 2019, the COVID-19 virus has spread to over 100 countries and caused huge losses of lives and economy, and the global manufacturing, tourism and financial markets have been hit hard,while the online market increase. Fortunately, with the development of vaccine and other effort by global governments and orgnizations, the nagetive impact of COVID-19 is excepted to subside and the global ecnomy is excepted to recover.
Studying and analyzing the impact of Coronavirus COVID-19 on the Organic Bread Flour industry, the report provide in-depth analysis and professtional advices on how to face the post COIVD-19 period.

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Market Segment by Product Type
Machine Milled Flour
Stone Ground Flour

Market Segment by Product Application
Commercial Use
Home Use

Finally, the report provides detailed profile and data information analysis of leading company.
General Mills
Fairheaven Organic Flour Mill
King Arthur Flour
To Your Health Sprouted Flour
Great River Organic Milling
Ardent Mills
Doves Farm Foods
Bay State Milling Company
Bob’s red mill
Aryan International
Archer Daniels Midland(ADM)
Dunany Flour
Shipton Mill Ltd
Beidahuang
WuGu-Kang Food

Report Includes:
– xx data tables (appendix tables)
– Overview of global Organic Bread Flour market
– An detailed key players analysis across regions
– Analyses of global market trends, with historical data, estimates for 2021 and projections of compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) through 2026
– Insights into regulatory and environmental developments
– Information on the supply and demand scenario and evaluation of technological and investment opportunities in the Organic Bread Flour market
– Profiles of major players in the industry, including General Mills, Fairheaven Organic Flour Mill, King Arthur Flour, To Your Health Sprouted Flour, Great River Organic Milling…..

REPORT DETAILS :https://www.wiseguyreports.com/reports/6499935-global-organic-bread-flour-market-research-report-2021-forecast-to-2026

Research Objectives
1.To study and analyze the global Organic Bread Flour consumption (value & volume) by key regions/countries, product type and application, history data from 2016 to 2020, and forecast to 2026.
2.To understand the structure of Organic Bread Flour market by identifying its various subsegments.
3.Focuses on the key global Organic Bread Flour manufacturers, to define, describe and analyze the sales volume, value, market share, market competition landscape, Porter’s five forces analysis, SWOT analysis and development plans in next few years.
4.To analyze the Organic Bread Flour with respect to individual growth trends, future prospects, and their contribution to the total market.
5.To share detailed information about the key factors influencing the growth of the market (growth potential, opportunities, drivers, industry-specific challenges and risks).
6.To project the consumption of Organic Bread Flour submarkets, with respect to key regions (along with their respective key countries).
7.To analyze competitive developments such as expansions, agreements, new product launches, and acquisitions in the market.
8.To strategically profile the key players and comprehensively analyze their growth strategies.

Table of Contents:

Global Organic Bread Flour Market Research Report 2021, Forecast to 2026

1 Market Study Overview
1.1 Study Objectives
1.2 Organic Bread Flour Introduce
1.3 Combined with the Analysis of Macroeconomic Indicators
1.4 Brief Description of Research methods
1.5 Market Breakdown and Data Triangulation

2 Global Trend Summary
2.1 Organic Bread Flour Segment by Type
2.1.1 Machine Milled Flour
2.1.2 Stone Ground Flour
2.2 Market Analysis by Application
2.2.1 Commercial Use
2.2.2 Home Use
2.3 Global Organic Bread Flour Market Comparison by Regions (2016-2026)
2.3.1 Global Organic Bread Flour Market Size (2016-2026)
2.3.2 North America Organic Bread Flour Status and Prospect (2016-2026)
2.3.3 Europe Organic Bread Flour Status and Prospect (2016-2026)
2.3.4 China Organic Bread Flour Status and Prospect (2016-2026)
2.3.5 Japan Organic Bread Flour Status and Prospect (2016-2026)
2.3.6 Southeast Asia Organic Bread Flour Status and Prospect (2016-2026)
2.4 Basic Product Information
2.4.1 Basic Product Information & Technology Development History
2.4.2 Product Manufacturing Process
2.4.3 Interview with Major Market Participants
2.4.4 High-end Market Analysis and Forecast
2.5 Coronavirus Disease 2019 (Covid-19): Organic Bread Flour Industry Impact
2.5.1 Organic Bread Flour Business Impact Assessment – Covid-19
2.5.2 Market Trends and Organic Bread Flour Potential Opportunities in the COVID-19 Landscape
2.5.3 Measures / Proposal against Covid-19

3 Competition by Manufacturer
3.1 Global Organic Bread Flour Sales and Market Share by Manufacturer (2016-2021)
3.2 Global Organic Bread Flour Revenue and Market Share by Manufacturer (2016-2021)
3.3 Global Organic Bread Flour Industry Concentration Ratio (CR5 and HHI)
3.4 Top 5 Organic Bread Flour Manufacturer Market Share
3.5 Top 10 Organic Bread Flour Manufacturer Market Share
3.6 Date of Key Manufacturers Enter into Organic Bread Flour Market
3.7 Key Manufacturers Organic Bread Flour Key Manufacturers
3.8 Mergers & Acquisitions Planning

4 Analysis of Organic Bread Flour Industry Key Manufacturers
4.1 General Mills
4.1.1 Compan Detail
4.1.2 General Mills Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.1.3 General Mills 164 Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.1.4 Main Business Overview
4.1.5 General Mills News
4.2 Fairheaven Organic Flour Mill
4.2.1 Compan Detail
4.2.2 Fairheaven Organic Flour Mill Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.2.3 Fairheaven Organic Flour Mill Organic Bread Flour Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.2.4 Main Business Overview
4.2.5 General Mills News
4.3 King Arthur Flour
4.3.1 Compan Detail
4.3.2 King Arthur Flour Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.3.3 King Arthur Flour Organic Bread Flour Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.3.4 Main Business Overview
4.3.5 King Arthur Flour News
4.4 To Your Health Sprouted Flour
4.4.1 Compan Detail
4.4.2 To Your Health Sprouted Flour Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.4.3 To Your Health Sprouted Flour Organic Bread Flour Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.4.4 Main Business Overview
4.4.5 To Your Health Sprouted Flour News
4.5 Great River Organic Milling
4.5.1 Compan Detail
4.5.2 To Your Health Sprouted Flour Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.5.3 Great River Organic Milling Organic Bread Flour Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.5.4 Main Business Overview
4.5.5 Great River Organic Milling News
4.6 Ardent Mills
4.6.1 Compan Detail
4.6.2 Ardent Mills Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.6.3 Ardent Mills Organic Bread Flour Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.6.4 Main Business Overview
4.6.5 Ardent Mills News
4.7 Doves Farm Foods
4.7.1 Compan Detail
4.7.2 Doves Farm Foods Organic Bread Flour Product Introduction, Application and Specification
4.7.3 Doves Farm Foods Organic Bread Flour Sales, Price, Cost, Gross Margin, and Revenue (2016-2021)
4.7.4 Main Business Overview
4.7.4 Main Business Overview


….continued

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http://www.marketwatch.com/story/global-gcc-countries-wireless-bridge-market-insights-overview-analysis-and-forecast-2020-2021-03-02.

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WHO European Region: COVID-19 case incidence on the rise as deaths edge towards 1 million
WHO European Region: COVID-19 case incidence on the rise as deaths edge towards 1 million

Press statement by Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe

18 March 2021

Last week marked 1 year since WHO announced that the Public Health Emergency of International Concern declared on 30 January 2020 represented the first ever pandemic caused by a coronavirus.

Since then, we’ve seen nearly 42 million cases in this region alone, and more than 120 million globally. But we’ve also seen giant scientific leaps and the introduction of effective tools that give us power over the virus, when used.

The power of the collective. The heroism of our frontline. When I look back at the past year, I see remarkable attributes we have all expressed to limit the spread of the coronavirus. Ultimately, our behaviour is saving lives.

The danger, however, is still clear and present.

The current situation is most acute in parts of the Region that were successful in controlling the disease in the first 6 months of 2020. It is in central Europe, the Balkans and the Baltic states where case incidence, hospitalizations and deaths are now among the highest in the world.

Case incidence continues its increasing trend, and is moving eastwards. We have now seen 3 consecutive weeks of growth in COVID-19 cases with over 1.2 million new cases reported last week across Europe.

Last week, deaths in the Region surpassed 900 000. Every week, more than 20 000 people across the Region lose their lives to the virus. The number of people dying from COVID-19 in Europe is higher now than it was this time last year, reflecting the widespread hold this virus has.

We are yet to see the widespread health impact and benefits of vaccines, which I can also assure you will come. But for now, we need to remain steadfast in our application of the full range of tools to respond.

Some 48 out of 53 European countries or territories have reported the B.1.1.7 variant of concern, which is gradually becoming predominant in our region. And yet, in the context of this faster spreading variant, several countries – including but not limited to Denmark, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom – have rapidly reduced transmission with public health and social measures to levels that can, and must, be kept low.

Five countries in the Region have received vaccines from the COVAX Facility – fair and equitable access to vaccines, the overarching concept of COVAX, is happening in reality. The gap in access to vaccines in our region is narrowing, yet inequity persists, with all high-income countries having rolled out vaccination, but only 60% of middle- and lower-income countries having done so.

As of today, a total of 46 countries in the Region have administered more than 107 million doses of vaccine. Three percent of the population in 45 countries have received a completed vaccination series, and data from 23 countries indicates that 51% of health workers have received at least 1 dose.

While 27 countries are currently in a partial or full nationwide lockdown, 21 are gradually easing restrictive measures. Some are doing so based on the assumption that increasing vaccination uptake in countries would immediately lead to an improved epidemiological situation. Such assumptions are too early to make.

Let there be no doubt about it, vaccination by itself – particularly given the varied uptake in countries – does not replace public health and social measures.

With vaccination coverage in the Region ranging from less than 1% to 44%, it is also far too early to demonstrate the effect of vaccines on overall COVID-19 hospitalization and deaths. Nonetheless, early data from Israel, Scotland and the UK, linked to effectiveness against severe disease by the Pfizer/BioNTech and AstraZeneca vaccines, is promising and show lives are being saved.

As vaccine uptake increases, their broader impact will become visible, and studies like these will guide policy and improve our understanding of how the different vaccines contribute to our response. We welcome these studies, stressing that the available data is limited – and that further research is urgently needed.

The WHO Regional Office for Europe and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control have developed a robust protocol to study vaccine effectiveness in community settings to allow effective comparison of the results between countries.

A number of countries in the Region have temporarily suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine as a precautionary measure, based on reports from a few countries of rare blood coagulation disorders in persons who had received the vaccine. The detection, investigation and assessment of these cases is a testimony to strong surveillance and regulatory mechanisms.

In vaccination campaigns, it is routine to signal potential adverse events. This does not necessarily mean that the events are linked to the vaccination.
Venous thromboembolism is the third most common cardiovascular disease in the world. It happens in populations regardless of whether they are vaccinated or not. COVID-19 vaccination will not reduce illness or deaths from other causes.

As of now, we do not know whether some or all of the conditions have been caused by the vaccine or by other coincidental factors. WHO is assessing the latest safety data, and once completed, the findings will be made public. At this point in time, however, the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine far outweigh its risks – and its use should continue, to save lives.

Vaccines work, and will eventually allow a return to a new normal. But for that to happen, we need to rely on science and have confidence in the incredible protection afforded by vaccines against all vaccine-preventable diseases, including COVID-19.

Meanwhile, we have one eye fixed on the future. This week, the Pan-European Commission on Health and Sustainable Development, chaired by Professor Mario Monti, issued a call to action – to rethink policy priorities in the light of pandemics, to fix the fractures and address the conditions that allowed COVID-19 to happen. This is a concrete step towards making health a centrepiece of society, preparing for future health emergencies and making sure that the notion of health as peripheral is a thing of the past.

Stay safe. Thank you.

Global Ethical Food Market Trends, Strategies, And Opportunities In The Ethical Food Market 2021-2030
Global Ethical Food Market Trends, Strategies, And Opportunities In The Ethical Food Market 2021-2030


Global Ethical Food Market Trends, Strategies, And Opportunities In The Ethical Food Market 2021-2030 – Organic Food News Today – EIN Presswire

























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Do not use weather as a basis to relax COVID-19 control measures, UN agency urges
Do not use weather as a basis to relax COVID-19 control measures, UN agency urges

Photo: UNICEF/Habibul HaqueA young girl, accompanied by her mother – both wearing masks – at a park in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

In a new report, the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO) highlighted that infections rose in warm seasons in 2020 – the first year of the pandemic – and that “there is no evidence” that this could not happen again in 2021. 

“At this stage, evidence does not support the use of meteorological and air quality factors as a basis for governments to relax their interventions aimed at reducing transmission,” Ben Zaitchik, co-chair of an interdisciplinary and international WMO Task Team that produced the report, said. 

“We saw waves of infection rise in warm seasons and warm regions in the first year of the pandemic, and there is no evidence that this couldn’t happen again in the coming year”, Mr. Zaitchik, from the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, added. 

The report highlighted that COVID-19 transmission dynamics last year appear to have been controlled primarily by government interventions rather than meteorological factors. Other relevant drivers include changes in human behaviour and demographics of affected populations, and more recently, virus mutations. 

Infection seasonality ‘not yet well understood’ 

The report looked at the potential role of seasonality, as respiratory viral infections, like cold or influenza frequently show some form of seasonality, such as the autumn-winter peak for influenza in temperate climates. This led to speculation that, if it persists for many years, COVID-19 could be a strongly seasonal disease. 

“It is premature to draw conclusions for the COVID-19 virus”, WMO said. 

The underlying mechanisms that drive seasonality of respiratory viral infections are not yet well understood, according to the report. 

“A combination of direct impacts on virus survival, impacts on human resistance to infection, and indirect influence of weather and season via changes in human behaviour may be at work”, it said, noting that laboratory studies of COVID-19 causing SARS-CoV-2 virus “yielded some evidence that the virus survives longer under cold, dry, and low ultraviolet radiation conditions”. 

“However, these studies have not yet indicated if direct meteorological influences on the virus have a meaningful influence on transmission rates under real world conditions”, the report added. 

Air quality influence ‘still inconclusive’ 

The Task Team further noted that the evidence on the influence of air quality factors is still inconclusive. 

It said that there is “some preliminary evidence” that poor air quality increases COVID-19 mortality rates, but not that pollution directly impacts airborne transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. 

The report also noted that at present there is no direct, peer reviewed evidence of pollution impacts on the airborne viability of the virus.

Health experts give green light to Janssen COVID jab, allay clotting concerns
Health experts give green light to Janssen COVID jab, allay clotting concerns

In a virtual press conference from Geneva, SAGE hailed the one-dose Janssen shot – produced by a Johnson & Johnson subsidiary – as a safe and lifesaving addition to the three other vaccines it has already approved for use: Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca.

The expert panel also noted that clotting episodes – also known as hypercoagulable events – were a symptom of COVID-19, amid the suspension of the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccine by several European countries, pending scientific review.

‘These are lifesaving products’

“The world is in a place where there is insufficient supply to meet the requirements of people who need to be vaccinated; clearly, any of these vaccines are lifesaving products”, said Dr. Kate O’Brien, Director, Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals at the World Health Organization (WHO).

She insisted that the vaccines “need to be used as quickly as we can get them deployed. People can have confidence in their safety and efficacy and in the quality of the manufacture of the products.”

During trials for the Janssen vaccine involving nearly 44,000 people, 10 of the 22,000 people who received the blank dose developed a blood clot – or thrombo-embolic events – while 14 of the remaining 22,000 who were inoculated, developed a clot.

“This is about the same”, for both groups said Dr Annelies Wilder-Smith, SAGE Technical Advisor. “There’s a slight imbalance, but it’s still not statistically significant,”

No evidence clots related to vaccines

“As for the vaccine itself, we have not seen it in a trial, there’s no reason to think and no biological causability as far we understand now, that the vaccine could cause thrombo-embolic events itself. However, we have to be open for new events, and we have to take it seriously.”

Dr Wilder-Smith explained that those recruited for vaccine testing were intentionally chosen because they were people who were “at high risk” of developing blood clots.

“COVID really pre-disposes patients to a hypercoagulable state where indeed many of the deaths that we see in the severe cases are due to thrombo-embolic events”, Dr Wilder-Smith said, ahead of an expected announcement by the European Medical Agency (EMA) on the issue on Thursday.

In a statement released on Wednesday specifically adressing the AstraZenica suspension by some European nations, the agency said it was “good practice” to investigate the possible linkages, that the benefits of the vaccine “outweigh its risks” and WHO “recommends that vaccinations continue.”

Infections heading up

The development comes amid a rise in new cases of coronavirus infection worldwide, increasing by 10 per cent in the past week, to more than three million new reported cases.

WHO reported on Wednesday that after peaking in early January 2021 – when there were just under five million cases a week – new cases then declined to around 2.5 million in the week commencing 15 February 2021.

But the past three weeks have seen cases increasing again.

This week, the Americas and Europe continue to account for more than 80 per cent of new cases and new deaths, with rises in new cases in all regions – apart from Africa, where they remained the same as last week.

As of 17 March 2021, there have been 120,164,106 confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 2,660,422 deaths, reported to WHO.

More than 363,000,000 vaccine doses have been administered globally.

South Asia: Sharp rise in child, maternal deaths due to COVID-19-induced disruptions
South Asia: Sharp rise in child, maternal deaths due to COVID-19-induced disruptions

Disruptions in health services due to COVID-19 “may have contributed to an additional 239,000 child and maternal deaths in South Asia” – UN report

In a new report, UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), World Health Organization (WHO) and UN Population Fund (UNFPA) said that the impact also included sharp drops in the number of young children treated for severe acute malnutrition as well as in childhood immunizations.  

According to George Laryea-Adjei, UNICEF Regional Director for South Asia, the fall-off of these critical services has had a devastating impact on the health and nutrition of the poorest and most vulnerable families. 

“It is absolutely vital that these services are fully restored for children and mothers who are in desperate need of them, and that everything possible is done to ensure that people feel safe to use them”, he stressed. 

The region also suffered increased levels of unemployment, poverty and food insecurity due to the pandemic, further undermining public health, the report said 

Millions of girls unlikely to ever return to school 

The report – which covered Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – also found that about 420 million children were out of school due to the pandemic and its related control measures.  

It warned that 4.5 million girls are likely to never return to school, and are at particular risk due to deteriorating access to sexual and reproductive health and information services. 

“Given the cultural and social context of South Asia, the suspension of these services is deepening inequalities and is likely to lead to an increase in the number of maternal and neonatal deaths”, Bjorn Andersson, UNFPA Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific said.  

“There are also likely to be an additional 3.5 million unintended pregnancies in this region”, Mr. Andersson warned. 

Wider impact of COVID-19 also included increased risk of child marriage and  stunting – impaired growth and development due to poor nutrition and health. 

UNICEF-WHO-UNFPA report

Wider impact of COVID-19 on children and mothers in South Asia.

Prioritize essential health services 

The UN agencies called for prioritizing essential health services for pregnant women, adolescents and young infants, as well as strengthening supply chains for the delivery of vaccines and other essential childhood medicines. 

Poonam Khetrapal Singh, WHO Regional Director for South-East Asia, underlined that maintaining essential health services is vital for the region’s COVID-19 response strategy “as disruption would only increase the risk of deaths from preventable causes”. 

The report also called for ensuring uninterrupted and improved health services for all, helping vulnerable populations address health needs, and stepping up of key COVID-19 prevention measures. 

It also urged cash transfer programmes to support the poorest families.

Top 10 Trends in Agricultural Biologicals Market Global Forecast to 2022 By Emerging Trends, Future Growth, Top Key Players, Product Type, Revenue Analysis, Demand Forecast
Top 10 Trends in Agricultural Biologicals Market Global Forecast to 2022 By Emerging Trends, Future Growth, Top Key Players, Product Type, Revenue Analysis, Demand Forecast
            <!--UdmComment--><!--/UdmComment-->
              <h2 class="fe_heading2">Top 10 Trends in Agricultural Biologicals Market Global Forecast to 2022 By Emerging Trends, Future Growth, Top Key Players, Product Type, Revenue Analysis, Demand Forecast</h2>
              </p><div readability="146.19806212596">

Japan, Japan, Tue, 16 Mar 2021 08:10:08 / Comserve Inc. / — The agricultural biologicals market was valued at USD 5.10 billion in 2015 and is projected to have a CAGR of 12.76% from 2016 to 2022.

The increased adoption of organic products is expected to lead to the growth of the global agricultural biologicals market. Government bodies of various nations across the globe are promoting noteworthy benefits offered by agricultural biologicals, which has further boosted the growth of this market.

Leading players profiled in this report:

  • BASF SE (Germany)
  • The Dow Chemical Company (U.S.)
  • Bayer CropScience AG (Germany)
  • Isagro Spa (Italy)
  • Novozymes A/S (Denmark)
  • Marrone Bio Innovation Inc. (U.S.)
  • Certis U.S.A LLC (U.S.)
  • Koppert B.V. (Netherlands)
  • Valent BioSciences Corporation (U.S.)

Request to Fill The Form To get Sample Copy of Business Report: https://www.sdki.jp/sample-request-107817

“The Final Report will cover the impact analysis of COVID-19 on this industry (Global And Regional Market).”

“Agricultural inoculants market is expected to grow at a rapid pace from 2016 to 2022”

The agricultural inoculants market is a developing sector, wherein the growth of this market is propelled by the rise in the cost & demand for fertilizers & pesticides and rise in organic and eco-friendly farming practices. Due to the high agronomic efficiency and reduced production costs of using inoculants the demand for such products is rising. Environmental concerns such as water contamination due to nitrates, acidification of soils, and greenhouse gas emissions related to the use of nitrogen fertilizers have led to an increase in the usage of inoculants containing plant growth promoting microorganisms to increase the crop yield.

“North American biological seed treatment market led with the largest share in 2015”
The biological seed treatment market is expected to grow at a high rate in the crop protection industry. Rising demand for high potential seeds backed by higher demand for food has resulted in an increase in the growth of this market. Biological seed treatment forms a minor share in the seed treatment industry. However, this market is expected to grow due to rising health awareness among farmers with respect to the increasing toxicity of agrochemicals and strict government legislations.

“Bionematicides market to grow at a high pace globally (2016-2022)”
High level of crop infestation by nematodes, rise in biocontrol seed treatment solutions and replacement of chemical fumigants with biological products is driving the growth for this market. The European region is likely to be the fastest growing region for this market due to a higher adoption rate of biologicals for the control of nematodes.

Europe: High growth is expected in the agricultural biologicals industry”
Europe is projected to be the fastest-growing market for the period considered for this study, due to the increase in adoption of advanced biological production techniques by farmers operating in the region. Increase in demand for agricultural biological products is likely to occur owing to the increasing number of stringent regulations in the region during the forecast period.

Break-up of Primaries:

  • By Company Type: Tier 1 – 50 %, Tier 2 – 30%, and Tier 3 – 20%
  • By Designation: C Level – 28%, Director Level – 22%, and Others – 50%
  • By Region: North America – 40%, Europe – 30%, Asia-Pacific – 21%, and RoW – 9%

Request to Fill The Form To get Sample Copy of Business Report: https://www.sdki.jp/sample-request-107817

“The Final Report will cover the impact analysis of COVID-19 on this industry (Global And Regional Market).”

Research Coverage:

The report segments the top 10 trends in the agricultural biologicals industry and includes biopesticides, biofertilizers, biostimulants, agricultural microbials, agricultural inoculants, biological seed treatment, among others. In terms of insights, this research report has focused on various levels of analyses–competitive landscape, regional market analysis, and company profiles, which together comprise and discuss the basic views on the emerging & high-growth segments of the global agricultural biologicals industry, high-growth regions, countries, government initiatives, drivers, restraints, and opportunities.

Reasons to buy this report:

  • To get a comprehensive overview of the agricultural biologicals industry
  • To gain wide-ranging information about the top players in this industry, their product portfolios, and key strategies adopted by them
  • To gain insights about the major countries/regions in which the agricultural biologicals industry is flourishing

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1 INTRODUCTION 19
1.1 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY 19
1.2 MARKET DEFINITIONS 20
1.3 YEARS CONSIDERED 21
1.4 CURRENCY 21
1.5 STAKEHOLDERS 21
2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 22
2.1 RESEARCH DATA 22
2.1.1 SECONDARY DATA 23
2.1.1.1 Key data from secondary sources 23
2.1.2 PRIMARY DATA 24
2.1.2.1 Key data from primary sources 24
2.2 FACTOR ANALYSIS 25
2.2.1 INTRODUCTION 25
2.2.2 DEMAND-SIDE ANALYSIS 25
2.2.2.1 Increasing food demand by the growing population 25
2.2.2.2 Dynamic growth in the organic food industry 26
2.2.3 SUPPLY-SIDE ANALYSIS 28
2.2.3.1 Growth in biofertilizers and biopesticides markets 28
2.2.3.2 Fluctuation in raw material prices 28
2.3 MARKET SIZE +0000IMATION 29
2.4 MARKET BREAKDOWN AND DATA TRIANGULATION 31
2.5 RESEARCH ASSUMPTIONS AND LIMITATIONS 32
2.5.1 ASSUMPTIONS 32
2.5.2 LIMITATIONS 33
3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 34
4 PREMIUM INSIGHTS 37
4.1 ATTRACTIVE OPPORTUNITIES IN THE AGRICULTURAL BIOLOGICALS MARKET 37
4.2 AGRICULTURAL BIOLOGICALS MARKET: BY TYPE 38
4.3 BIOPESTICIDES 38
4.4 LIFE CYCLE ANALYSIS: AGRICULTURAL BIOLOGICALS MARKET 39
5 AGRICULTURAL BIOLOGICALS 40

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“The Final Report will cover the impact analysis of COVID-19 on this industry (Global And Regional Market).”

The dynamic nature of business environment in the current global economy is raising the need amongst business professionals to update themselves with current situations in the market. To cater such needs, Shibuya Data Count provides market research reports to various business professionals across different industry verticals, such as healthcare & pharmaceutical, IT & telecom, chemicals and advanced materials, consumer goods & food, energy & power, manufacturing & construction, industrial automation & equipment and agriculture & allied activities amongst others.

            <p>For more information, please contact:</p><b>Hina Miyazu</b><p>Shibuya Data Count<br />Email: sales@sdki.jp<br />Tel: + 81 3 45720790</p>                <p>The post <a href="https://www.comserveonline.com/news-releases/top-10-trends-in-agricultural-biologicals-market-global-forecast-to-2022-by-emerging-trends-future-growth-top-key-players-product-type-revenue-analysis-demand-forecast/10046173" rel="nofollow">Top 10 Trends in Agricultural Biologicals Market Global Forecast to 2022 By Emerging Trends, Future Growth, Top Key Players, Product Type, Revenue Analysis, Demand Forecast</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.comserveonline.com/" rel="nofollow">Comserveonline</a>.

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Keep mothers and newborns together, new health research says
Keep mothers and newborns together, new health research says

In many countries, if COVID-19 infections are confirmed or suspected, newborn babies are being routinely separated from their mothers, putting them at higher risk of death and lifelong health complications, according to the agency. 

“Disruptions to essential health services during COVID-19 have severely affected the quality of care provided to some of the most vulnerable babies, and this includes their right to the lifesaving contact they need with their parents”, Anshu Banerjee, WHO Director for Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health, said.  

According to WHO, the risk is greatest in the poorest countries where the greatest number of preterm births and infant deaths occur, and disruptions to kangaroo mother care – early, prolonged skin-to-skin contact with a parent, and exclusive breastfeeding – will worsen these risks. 

“Decades of progress in reducing child deaths will be jeopardized unless we act now to protect and improve quality care services for mothers and newborns, and expand coverage of lifesaving interventions like kangaroo mother care”, Dr. Banerjee added.    

The new research, by WHO and partners, was published in the Lancet EclinicalMedicine.  

Kangaroo mother care 

WHO said that up to 125,000 babies’ lives could be saved with full coverage of kangaroo mother care. The model of care is particularly important for babies born preterm (before 37 weeks) or at low birthweight (under 2.5 kilogrammes), where it has shown to reduce infant deaths by as much as 40 per cent, hypothermia by more than 70 per cent, and severe infections by 65 per cent. 

Queen Dube, Director of Health at the Ministry of Health in Malawi, one of the report authors, underscored the benefits. 

“Kangaroo Mother Care is one of our most cost-effective ways to protect small and sick newborns. According to our analysis, these risks by far outweigh the small chance of a newborn baby getting severe disease from COVID-19”, Dr. Dube said. 

WHO advised that mothers should continue to share a room with their babies from birth and be able to breastfeed and practice skin-to-skin contact – even when COVID-19 infections are suspected or confirmed – and should be supported to ensure appropriate infection prevention practices. 

Low COVID risk

It also noted that studies showed mainly no symptoms or mild disease from COVID-19 in infected newborns, with low risk of neonatal death, with the new study estimating the risk of newborns catching COVID-19 would result in fewer than 2,000 deaths. 

However, infection during pregnancy may result in increased risk of preterm birth, which means it is even more important to ensure the right care is given to support preterm babies and their parents during the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO added. 

Organic Fertilizers Market to Reach .9 billion by 2027, Witnessing a Growth of 11.5% from 2020- Exclusive Report by Meticulous Research® Covering Emerging Growth Factors, Latest Trends and Forecasts, and Pre and Post COVID-19 Estimates
Organic Fertilizers Market to Reach $15.9 billion by 2027, Witnessing a Growth of 11.5% from 2020- Exclusive Report by Meticulous Research® Covering Emerging Growth Factors, Latest Trends and Forecasts, and Pre and Post COVID-19 Estimates


Organic Fertilizers Market to Reach $15.9 billion by 2027, Witnessing a Growth of 11.5% from 2020- Exclusive Report by Meticulous Research® Covering Emerging Growth Factors, Latest Trends and Forecasts, and Pre and Post COVID-19 Estimates – Organic Food News Today – EIN Presswire




















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A call to action: national governments and the global community must act now
A call to action: national governments and the global community must act now
Copenhagen, Denmark, 16 March 2021

Today, the Pan-European Commission on Health and Sustainable Development called on governments, economic and social stakeholders, and international organizations to rethink their broad policy priorities, to step up investments and reforms in health- and social-care systems, and to upgrade global governance of public goods, such as health and the environment.

Unless all 3 efforts are vigorously pursued, it is unlikely that the world can avoid new, devastating pandemics or other global health crises.

The COVID-19 pandemic has thrown into sharp relief the inequalities and deep fault lines that exist in many societies. It has revealed that our existing health, financial, economic and social-care systems were ill prepared and poorly equipped to address SARS-CoV-2 effectively.

Five months since it was first convened, the Commission has delivered this call to action – the first outcome of its work – to feed into broader national and supranational discussions taking place on how to tackle the deep-rooted conditions that allowed the COVID-19 pandemic to inflict unprecedented damage on lives and economies. It provides guidance on how we should prioritize health and sustainable development now to set our systems and societies on the right track for generations to come.

Key proposals outlined in the call to action are to:

  • identify, assess and respond to risks arising from human activities, including climate change, emerging zoonotic infections and antimicrobial resistance, through the establishment of an Intergovernmental Panel on Health Threats;
  • mend fractures in society and reinvigorate trust in institutions by identifying and engaging with people who are disenfranchised, and by improving access to health and social services;
  • recognize that spending on health care, social care, education and research is an investment in the human and intellectual capital that drives progress. Specifically, incorporate One Health-related risks (across human, animal and environmental health) into the risk analyses used by international financial institutions, public authorities and the financial sector;
  • create at the G20 level a Global Health Board modelled on the Financial Stability Board to identify vulnerabilities that threaten the health of humans, animals and the environment, and promote an International Pandemic Treaty; and
  • encourage the discovery and development of medicines, medical technologies, digital solutions and organizational innovations, and enhance the transparency of public–private partnerships.

The Commission’s work will culminate in a report to be published in September 2021 with recommendations on investments and reforms to improve health- and social-care systems.

Mario Monti, Chair of the Pan-European Commission on Health and Sustainable Development, President of Bocconi University (Italy) and former Prime Minister of Italy:

“We are calling on government leaders and international organizations to fix the fractures in our societies and stop turning a blind eye to the conditions that allowed the novel coronavirus to inflict such grave damage on the world. A number of things need to change, from our societies’ views on health and social care, to whether financial systems take environmental and health risks adequately into account, and how global governance responds to the increasingly key role of public goods. We have a choice: to ignore the evidence and risk being even harder hit in future pandemics, or to heed the warnings and implement the lessons we have learned.”

Tarja Halonen, former President of the Republic of Finland:

“This pandemic has shown the weaknesses of our societies concerning political and societal resilience. Based on past experiences, we have a limited time window to bring about much-needed change. We must use the current political will and momentum to strengthen the resilience of our society to be able to withstand future pandemics.”

Roza Otunbayeva, former President of the Kyrgyz Republic:

“COVID-19 has shone a harsh light on the inequalities in our societies. Providing everyone with access to quality health services and ensuring equal participation in decision-making will go far to help restore trust in institutions, build social cohesion, drive economic growth, and strengthen security and hope. Universal health coverage is the centrepiece of sustainable societies.”

Hans Henri P. Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe:

“I welcome the call to action made by the Commission. They were tasked with rethinking health policy, extending far beyond the pre-pandemic definition of health. What I am particularly keen on seeing is that public health is no longer considered a peripheral issue. More than a year into a health emergency that has shaken societies to their very core, it should be clear to all of us that health is an investment that drives progress. This initial guidance by the Commission – a vital part of the European Programme of Work – is crucial to pave the way to deliver united action for better health.”

About the Pan-European Commission on Health and Sustainable Development

The Pan-European Commission on Health and Sustainable Development is an independent and interdisciplinary group of leaders, convened by the WHO Regional Office for Europe on the initiative of its Regional Director Hans Kluge, to rethink policy priorities in the light of pandemics.

Comprising former heads of state and government, distinguished life scientists and economists, heads of health- and social-care institutions, and leaders of the business community and financial institutions from across the WHO European Region, the Commission brings together individuals with outstanding expertise and experience.

The group of 19 commissioners is chaired by Mario Monti, President of Bocconi University, former Prime Minister of Italy and former European Commissioner. Elias Mossialos, Founder and Director of the Department of Health Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science (United Kingdom), is the Commission’s Scientific Coordinator, and its deliberations are supported by a Scientific Advisory Board.

Global Soybean Market CAGR Status 2021 Dynamics, Potential Growth, Top Key Players, Latest Trends and Drivers Forecast Period 2025
Global Soybean Market CAGR Status 2021 Dynamics, Potential Growth, Top Key Players, Latest Trends and Drivers Forecast Period 2025
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              <h2 class="fe_heading2">Global Soybean Market CAGR Status 2021 Dynamics, Potential Growth, Top Key Players, Latest Trends and Drivers Forecast Period 2025</h2>
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Mar 15, 2021 (The Expresswire) —

Global “Soybean Market” research report provides up-to-date market information of Soybean market which lets the reader discover market opportunities for growth and business development. The report offers sufficient statistical data so as to successfully predict the future Soybean market growth rate. The global Soybean market research report offers valuable data concerning the preeminent performers including their profits segmentation, business summary, and product offerings.

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Global Soybean Market: Segment Analysis

Soybean is a species ofÂlegumeÂnative toÂEast Asia, widely grown for its edibleÂbean, which has numerous uses.
Majorly fuelling demand in the global soybean market is the rising awareness among people about its health benefits. Their increasing applications in various end-use segments such as animal feed is also serving to boost demand. Serving to hamper demand in the global soybean market, on the other hand, is the dairy protein ingredients that have the first mover advantage and greater consumer acceptance.

Top Key Manufacturers in Soybean Market:

● Kerry
● Fuji Oil Group
● House Foods Group
● The WhiteWave Foods
● DuPont
● CHS
● Cargill
● The Scoular
● Archer-Daniels Midland Co.

Scope of the Soybean Market Report:

This market study covers the global and regional market with an in-depth analysis of the overall growth prospects in the market. Furthermore, it sheds light on the comprehensive competitive landscape of the global market. The report further offers a dashboard overview of leading companies encompassing their successful marketing strategies, market contribution, recent developments in both historic and present contexts.

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Soybean market research report includes analysis of industry share, market status, future trends, growth rate, sales channels and distributors.

Soybean Market by Applications:

● Food and Beverages
● Personal Care
● Pharmaceuticals
● Animal Feed
● Other

Soybean Market by Types:

● Conventional
● Organic

In this study, the years considered to estimate the market size of Soybean are as follows:

● History Year: 2015-2020
● Base Year: 2020
● Forecast Year 2021 to 2025

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● Soybean market report provides a comprehensive analysis of the market with the help of up-to-date market opportunities, overview, outlook, challenges, trends, market dynamics, size and growth, competitive analysis, major competitors analysis.
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● Uncovers potential demands in the Soybean market.
● Soybean market report provides in-depth analysis for changing competitive dynamics
● Provides information on the historical and current market size and the future potential of the market.

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This report focuses on Soybean volume and value at the global level, regional level and company level. From a global perspective, this report represents an overall Soybean market size by analysing historical data and future prospects. Regionally, this report focuses on several key regions:

Europe: UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Portugal, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Ireland, Russia, Turkey, Poland, Western Europe, Central and Eastern Europe

Key Reasons to Purchase:

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Soybean Market TOC Covers the Following Points:

1 Study Coverage

1.1 Soybean Product

1.2 Market Segments

1.3 Key Manufacturers Covered

1.4 Market by Type

1.5 Market by End User

1.5.1 Global Soybean Market Size Growth Rate by End User

1.6 Study Objectives

1.7 Years Considered

2 Executive Summary

2.1 Global Soybean Market Size

2.1.1 Global Soybean Revenue 2014-2025

2.1.2 Global Soybean Sales 2014-2025

2.2 Soybean Growth Rate by Regions

2.2.1 Global Soybean Sales by Regions

2.2.2 Global Soybean Revenue by Regions

3 Breakdown Data by Manufacturers

3.1 Soybean Sales by Manufacturers

3.1.1 Soybean Sales by Manufacturers

3.1.2 Soybean Sales Market Share by Manufacturers

3.1.3 Global Soybean Market Concentration Ratio (CR5 and HHI)

3.2 Soybean Revenue by Manufacturers

3.2.1 Soybean Revenue by Manufacturers (2014-2019)

3.2.2 Soybean Revenue Share by Manufacturers (2014-2019)

3.3 Soybean Price by Manufacturers

3.4 Soybean Manufacturing Base Distribution, Product Types

3.4.1 Soybean Manufacturers Manufacturing Base Distribution, Headquarters

3.4.2 Manufacturers Soybean Product Type

3.4.3 Date of International Manufacturers Enter into Soybean Market

3.5 Manufacturers Mergers and Acquisitions, Expansion Plans

4 Breakdown Data by Product

4.1 Global Soybean Sales by Product

4.2 Global Soybean Revenue by Product

4.3 Soybean Price by Product

5 Breakdown Data by End User

5.1 Overview

5.2 Global Soybean Breakdown Data by End User

6 North America

6.1 North America Soybean by Countries

6.1.1 North America Soybean Sales by Countries

6.1.2 North America Soybean Revenue by Countries

6.1.3 United States

6.1.4 Canada

6.1.5 Mexico

6.2 North America Soybean by Product

6.3 North America Soybean by End User

7 Europe

7.1 Europe Soybean by Countries

7.1.1 Europe Soybean Sales by Countries

7.1.2 Europe Soybean Revenue by Countries

7.1.3 Germany

7.1.4 France

7.1.5 UK

7.1.6 Italy

7.1.7 Russia

7.2 Europe Soybean by Product

7.3 Europe Soybean by End User

8 Asia Pacific

8.1 Asia Pacific Soybean by Countries

8.1.1 Asia Pacific Soybean Sales by Countries

8.1.2 Asia Pacific Soybean Revenue by Countries

8.1.3 China

8.1.4 Japan

8.1.5 Korea

8.1.6 India

8.1.7 Australia

8.1.8 Indonesia

8.1.9 Malaysia

8.1.10 Philippines

8.1.11 Thailand

8.1.12 Vietnam

8.1.13 Singapore

8.2 Asia Pacific Soybean by Product

8.3 Asia Pacific Soybean by End User

9 Central and South America

9.1 Central and South America Soybean by Countries

9.1.1 Central and South America Soybean Sales by Countries

9.1.2 Central and South America Soybean Revenue by Countries

9.1.3 Brazil

9.2 Central and South America Soybean by Product

9.3 Central and South America Soybean by End User

10 Middle East and Africa

10.1 Middle East and Africa Soybean by Countries

10.1.1 Middle East and Africa Soybean Sales by Countries

10.1.2 Middle East and Africa Soybean Revenue by Countries

10.1.3 GCC Countries

10.1.4 Turkey

10.1.5 Egypt

10.1.6 South Africa

10.2 Middle East and Africa Soybean by Product

10.3 Middle East and Africa Soybean by End User

11 Company Profiles

12 Future Forecast

12.1 Soybean Market Forecast by Regions

12.1.1 Global Soybean Sales Forecast by Regions 2019-2025

12.1.2 Global Soybean Revenue Forecast by Regions 2019-2025

12.2 Soybean Market Forecast by Product

12.2.1 Global Soybean Sales Forecast by Product 2019-2025

12.2.2 Global Soybean Revenue Forecast by Product 2019-2025

12.3 Soybean Market Forecast by End User

12.4 North America Soybean Forecast

12.5 Europe Soybean Forecast

12.6 Asia Pacific Soybean Forecast

12.7 Central and South America Soybean Forecast

12.8 Middle East and Africa Soybean Forecast

13 Market Opportunities, Challenges, Risks and Influences Factors Analysis

13.1 Market Opportunities and Drivers

13.2 Market Challenges

13.3 Market Risks/Restraints

13.4 Macroscopic Indicators

14 Value Chain and Sales Channels Analysis

14.1 Value Chain Analysis

14.2 Soybean Customers

14.3 Sales Channels Analysis

14.3.1 Sales Channels

14.3.2 Distributors

15 Research Findings and Conclusion

16 Appendix

16.1 Research Methodology

16.1.1 Methodology/Research Approach

16.1.2 Data Source

16.2 Author Details

16.3 Disclaimer

Contact Us:

Name: Mr. Ajay More

Phone: US +1424 253 0807/ UK +44 203 239 8187

Email id: sales@industryresearch.co

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COVID-19: a continued call for international solidarity and equity
COVID-19: a continued call for international solidarity and equity

28th Standing Committee of the Regional Committee (SCRC), Third Session (virtual, 10-11 March 2021)

Statement, 12 March 2021

Exactly one year after COVID-19 was characterized as a pandemic, the Twenty-eighth Standing Committee of the Regional Committee for Europe (SCRC), on the occasion of its third regular meeting on 10–11 March:

  • wishes to express its heartfelt sympathy and solidarity with all people, families and communities who have been directly or indirectly affected by this pandemic, which has to date reached the level of nearly 41 million confirmed cases and 900 000 registered deaths in the WHO European Region;
  • appreciates the dedication and sacrifice of frontline workers throughout this pandemic in protecting and saving lives wherever possible and at a high personal cost;
  • is mindful of the negative collateral impacts that the COVID-19 pandemic is having on the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care of other health conditions, including mental health and noncommunicable diseases;
  • acknowledges the devastating impact of the pandemic on all sectors, including people’s livelihoods and countries’ economies, as well as the social consequences and the setbacks for the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals;
  • is aware that the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences have exacerbated social and economic inequities and have hit severely the most vulnerable;
  • reminds that personal protection measures (frequent hand hygiene, physical and social distancing, respiratory etiquette, use of masks if ill or attending to someone who is ill, and environmental cleaning and disinfection at home) are a cornerstone for COVID-19 control and prevention;
  • welcomes the development and production of vaccines in record time, effectively protecting people from the serious health effects of COVID-19 and preventing health systems from collapsing;
  • while acknowledging the importance of vaccines as an effective measure of fighting the virus, also notes the wide gap in access to vaccines between countries in the European Region as a stark reminder of persisting inequities;
  • recalls that no single country is safe until all countries are safe and that economic and social recovery is only possible if disparities in vaccination coverage, both regional and global, are addressed; and
  • commends individual countries and subregional organizations that have demonstrated international solidarity and have effectively contributed to and supported other countries in procuring and deploying vaccines, including through the COVAX Facility.

In this context the SCRC, acting on behalf of the WHO Regional Committee for Europe, calls upon Member States to:

  • adhere to the general principles of international solidarity, multilateral cooperation and cross-country coordination at all levels to successfully contain and control the COVID-19 pandemic and mitigate its impact;
  • help wherever possible to ensure that health care workers and other frontline workers as well as vulnerable groups across the Region can be prioritized in national vaccination strategies and that national health systems are stabilized;
  • apply whole-of-government and whole-of-society approaches to contain further spread of the virus within communities and across borders;
  • within a national context, commit to early, fair and equitable access to quality and safe testing, treatment and vaccination for COVID-19, which are free at point of use, whilst at the same time maintaining access to essential health services, including mental health and non-COVID-19 related services; and
  • further step up their preparedness capacities, including the International Health Regulations (2005) core capacities, plan for the recovery phase and prepare for any future health emergencies.

Expressing its highest appreciation to the WHO Regional Director for Europe for the leading role that WHO/Europe has taken in supporting Member States throughout the pandemic and coordinating actions among them, the SCRC calls upon the WHO Regional Office for Europe to:

  • continue to use its convening power to advocate for timely and universal access to vaccines and facilitate international cooperation and solidarity in the pandemic response;
  • further coordinate action at regional and country levels to contain and control COVID 19 and mitigate its impact;
  • maintain a dual-track approach so that support is provided to countries in addressing post-COVID-19 conditions, the collateral effects of the pandemic and maintaining access to essential health services, with the aim of leaving no one behind;
  • assist Member States in improving their understanding of the virus, adopting evidence-based public health measures and providing the population with reliable and comprehensive information on COVID-19 treatment and immunization;
  • take proper account of the lessons learned in the European Region from the response to this pandemic to help end its acute phase and build resilience and better preparedness for future emergencies, using the all-hazard and hazard-specific approaches; and
  • contribute to building back better our health and social care systems in the light of current and future pandemics.

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POLITICO London Playbook: Another fine Cress — Rebellion extinct — Vac of the net
POLITICO London Playbook: Another fine Cress — Rebellion extinct — Vac of the net

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Presented by UK Fisheries.

By ALEX WICKHAM

PRESENTED BY

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Good Monday morning.

DRIVING THE DAY

ANOTHER FINE CRESS: Boris Johnson this morning backs Cressida Dick to stay in her job, with a senior No. 10 insider telling Playbook that the Metropolitan Police commissioner retains the prime minister’s “full confidence.” As the outpouring of anger continues over the Met’s violent policing of Saturday’s Clapham Common vigil for Sarah Everard, Johnson will hold crisis talks with Dick, senior ministers and the Crown Prosecution Service today. The timing is highly politically charged as a controversial policing bill comes to the Commons this afternoon — with the government, opposition and police all struggling to maintain the support of the public on fighting violence against women and girls.

PM SPEAKS: Johnson has broken his silence following Saturday’s violent scenes. The PM said: “Like everyone who saw it I was deeply concerned about the footage from Clapham Common on Saturday night. I have spoken with the Metropolitan Police Commissioner who has committed to reviewing how this was handled and the Home Secretary has also commissioned HM Inspectorate of Constabulary to conduct a lessons learned review in to the policing of the event.”

Translation: After a phone call with her yesterday, Johnson is not throwing Dick under a bus, and instead there will be two “reviews” of what happened — one by the Met marking its own homework, the other by the independent HMIC. Neither have any official timeframe (though the word is around two weeks) and there is no suggestion either will result in any serious consequences for the Met leadership.

Cress-party support: Dick’s position was undoubtedly helped by Labour leader Keir Starmer coming out on Sunday afternoon and saying she shouldn’t resign. Home Secretary Priti Patel also has full confidence in her. So far the senior politician with the sternest words for the Met commissioner is London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who says he is “not satisfied with the explanation” given to him by Dick for her officers’ behavior on Saturday (the Lib Dems are also calling on her to quit). Dick is accountable to both Patel and Khan, who as mayor has a direct mandate for policing in London.

A message from UK Fisheries: Kirkella will soon be back in Hull with no more licences to fish. We’ve updated our distant-waters fishing scorecard, but it’s still a story of missed opportunity. Talks with Norway have stalled: the government needs to seize the fantastic opportunity that is on the table before it’s too late.

Not sorry: Emboldened by the support from the government and opposition, a defiant Dick came out swinging yesterday — refusing to apologize, and doubling and tripling down in defense of the Met’s policing of the vigil. In a pretty extraordinary response to the immense public criticism, Dick insisted: “I feel for my officers. They are policing during a pandemic. I don’t think anybody should be sitting back in an armchair saying what they would do differently.”

Armchair critics latest: That statement jars somewhat with the testimony of 27-year-old Georgina, who tells Left Foot Forward’s Josiah Mortimer she was flashed on her way home from Clapham and reported it to a police officer, who allegedly responded: “No, we’ve had enough tonight with the rioters.” The Met say they’re “looking into” the incident.

Strong leadership: Johnson, Patel and Starmer are all suggesting they oppose what the police did on Clapham Common. Dick is defending what happened to the max. Yet none of Johnson, Patel or Starmer have anything to say about her having a completely different position — and all remain 100 percent behind her.

Another inconsistency: Dick said yesterday that she’d have attended the vigil herself “if it had been lawful.” Which sounds a lot like she is accusing the Duchess of Cambridge and her Met Police protection officers of breaking the law. Good luck to the prime minister’s official spokesperson having to answer whether the PM thinks Kate is a criminal at today’s Lobby briefing.

If Dick is in any doubt … as to how strongly the public feels about the events of the last week, there have been 53,000 responses since the government reopened its survey on tackling violence against women and girls on Friday. You’d have thought that might lead to ministers requiring some humility from the Met, but apparently not.

What happens next: Patel will make a statement in the Commons at 3.30 p.m. on the events of the weekend. Johnson will today chair a meeting of his Crime And Justice Taskforce “to discuss further steps to protect women and girls and make sure our streets are safe.”

Cast list: Dick, Patel, Justice Secretary Robert Buckland and Director of Public Prosecutions Max Hill.

On the agenda: The government’s strategy on violence against women and girls, “listening to the powerful experiences of people across the country”, “increased street lighting and CCTV” and other measures to make streets safer, plus an update on the government’s review into how the criminal justice system handles rape and sexual assault cases.

What Labour say: “At a moment when the country is demanding action to tackle violence against women and girls, the Conservatives have responded with yet more meetings and another consultation,” reckons Shadow Home Secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds.

GOVERNMENT SPLIT: Playbook spoke to two dozen or so ministers, Tory MPs and Whitehall officials over the weekend, and found a government divided over both Dick’s position and the police’s handling of the vigil. Several prominent Tories agreed with the police’s decision to remove women from the bandstand on Clapham Common, claiming the vigil had been “hijacked by lefties and extremists,” drawing attention to political chants from some present, and arguing that the police had to enforce coronavirus restrictions. One minister said Dick was right not to apologize and that it would not be consistent for the government to vote through COVID measures then criticize the police for implementing them.

On the other hand … a fair few senior Tories who Playbook spoke to, including some in Downing Street, were privately highly critical of Dick and the Met. A couple thought she should resign. A Whitehall source suggested Dick was not yet safe and that her statements in public and in private over the next few days could still decide her fate. One was particularly furious at the tone of the Met’s response and its failure to show any contrition in the face of public outcry. Several asked why police danced with Extinction Rebellion protesters but manhandled women at a vigil. One senior government insider said Dick had shown she was “out of her depth” and was not fit for her role, citing the Operation Midland false VIP sex abuse scandal. A Tory MP said senior colleagues were “depressed” by the general incompetence of the Met.

Clean sweep: Dick is facing “mounting pressure to quit,” according to the Mail’s splash on the “shaming of the Met” … the Times says she is “fighting to save her job” and “needs to explain what went wrong” … the Sun says the police reaction has been “utterly tone deaf” … though the Telegraph does her a favor and blames the government’s coronavirus restrictions instead.

13 months: How long Dick’s contract as Met Police commissioner has left to run.

NEW BILL FOR OLD BILL: By stunning legislative coincidence, the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill has its second reading in the Commons today and tomorrow. Labour had previously been expected to abstain but will now vote against the legislation this week, with Shadow Justice Secretary David Lammy warning it would impose “disproportionate controls on free expression and the right to protest.”

Why it’s controversial: Doughty Street barrister Adam Wagner explains that the bill would “hugely expand” police powers “to allow them to stop protests which would cause ‘serious unease’ and create criminal penalties for people who cause ‘serious annoyance.’” Wagner says: “This would effectively put the current situation where COVID regulations have given police too much power over our free speech rights on a permanent footing.”

What Labour want instead: Starmer’s team say they support several measures in the bill, such as increased sentences for terrorists and other dangerous offenders, but will vote against it due to the protest regulations and what they say is a failure to deal with the underlying issues on violence against women and girls. They’re calling for increasing minimum sentences for rapists and stalkers, creating a new street harassment law, and introducing a whole life tariff for anyone found guilty of a stranger abductor murder.

Key soundbite: Expect Labour frontbenchers to talk about how the bill is 296 pages long, with 176 clauses and 20 schedules, and that its explanatory notes make no mention of women, but do talk about statues.

How the Tories will respond: The Tories sense an opportunity to hammer Labour for voting against a series of measures that they say will protect women — Playbook would imagine Tory MPs will be banging on about this on Twitter and elsewhere for some time.

Key soundbite: Here was Tory chairman Amanda Milling last night: “Labour are voting against tougher sentences for child murderers, sex offenders, killer drivers and measures that protect the vulnerable.”

Getting nasty: A Labour insider describes this as “offensive b*llocks.” Shadow Domestic Violence Minister Jess Phillips says: “This is a disgusting and untrue statement. The Conservative Government’s Bill does absolutely nothing currently to increase sentences for rapists, stalkers, or those who batter, control and abuse women. It does nothing about street harassment and assaults.”

Point of order: Expect Tory MPs to pick up on Phillips’ catchy claims on the Andrew Marr show that “you should get more for rape than you do for defacing a statue … You can currently get more for fly-tipping than you can get for stalking.” A Tory MP tells Playbook that the government has doubled the maximum sentence for stalking to 10 years, while the maximum sentence for fly-tipping is five years.

Rebellion extinct: This could all get pretty unseemly in the Commons, but what really matters is how many Tory rebels agree with Labour that the bill oversteps on the right to protest. As of last night, government insiders were confident they had the numbers — it appears that the backbench Tory libertarian hatred of limits on free speech has been superseded by their desire to crack down on Extinction Rebellion protesters. Backbencher Steve Baker tells Tony Diver in the Telegraph: “I think you will see many Tories expressing some misgivings, especially about ‘serious annoyance’ but I don’t think you’ll see a mass rebellion. The bill is necessary to deal with radical new tactics by political protesters.”

TODAY IN WESTMINSTER

HOUSE OF COMMONS: Sits from 2.30 p.m. with an hour of defense questions, followed by any UQs or ministerial statements … Then it’s on to the main event — the second reading of the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill. The debate will last until 10 p.m.

STATS DUMP: At 9.30 a.m. the Office for National Statistics releases its “Coronavirus: A Year Like No Other” report.

JAB SURGE: 512,108 people in the U.K. got their first dose of the coronavirus vaccine on Saturday, in the first sign that the government’s much-promised March ramp-up of the jab rollout is finally here. After a relatively disappointing couple of weeks, the FT’s Seb Payne and Sarah Neville report: “The U.K. will scale up its coronavirus vaccination programme this week,” with “a significant increase over the next three weeks, although rates may drop again in April.” They’ve got hold of a letter from NHS leaders saying Britain is on course to hit 4-5 million jabs per week this month.

Stat watch: Some helpful maths from former government adviser Sam Freedman: “U.K. will hit 50 percent of adults with a dose of vaccine this week and will be the first country with a population above 10m to get there by a distance.”

Sorry to be a downer: “I have no doubt that in the autumn there will be a further wave of infections,” the ONS’ Ian Diamond told Andrew Marr yesterday.

One for the inquiry: The Telegraph’s Gordon Rayner quotes “close allies” of Boris Johnson admitting that he should have locked the country down sooner at the beginning of the pandemic, but claiming he was let down by his scientific advisers. “With hindsight it’s unarguable that we should have gone into lockdown earlier,” says a senior figure.

VAC OF THE NET: Premier League footballers will be enlisted to encourage under 30s to get vaccinated, reveals the Sun’s Kate Ferguson.

Nurses’ pay latest: Deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner has an interview with the Mirror’s Pippa Crerar in which she calls for a “significant real terms increase” in NHS staff pay. One to watch: Rayner said that while she didn’t want health unions to strike, if they were forced to then she’d back them. Starmer has previously opposed a nurses’ strike.

YESTERDAY’S UK STATS: 4,618 new cases, ⬇️ 916 on Saturday. In the past seven days, the U.K. has recorded a total 39,918 new cases, ⬇️ 2,050 on the previous week … 52 new reported deaths within 28 days of a positive test, ⬇️ 69 on Saturday. In the past seven days, the U.K. has recorded a total 1,015 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, ⬇️ 465 on the previous week.

VAX STATS: A total 24,196,211 people have received the first dose, ⬆️ 512,108. A total 1,584,909 people have received the second dose, ⬆️ 52,155.

WHERE’S WALLACE? The government’s hugely-anticipated integrated review of security, defense, development and foreign policy will finally be published tomorrow. Your best primers are from Larisa Brown and Steve Swinford in the Times on Friday — revealing that the 0.7 percent aid spending commitment will be restored and detailing how it will “build a bulwark against China” — and Tim Shipman in the Sunday Times, who says Russia will be treated as a “hostile state” and Britain’s “No. 1 danger.”

Overnight announcement: New warships will be built in Scotland and armored vehicles made in Wales, as the review seeks to strengthen the union, the government announces this morning. The Telegraph’s Lucy Fisher has the story.

NZR latest: Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe will have to wait a week to learn the outcome of her latest trial in Iran, the Times’ Catherine Philp reports.

On the buses: The government is today launching the biggest overhaul of England’s bus network in decades — with a pledge to invest £3 billion on 4,000 new zero-emissions vehicles, among other things. The BBC has the full details.

Stay tuned: Tory chairman and money man Ben Elliot faces questions over the refurbishment of the PM’s Downing Street flat when the Conservative Party board meets today, the Times’ Steve Swinford and Henry Zeffman report.

NO MORE MP ZOOM MESS-UPS: The Commons’ procedure committee has published its report and recommendations for the future of House procedures as coronavirus restrictions are lifted. Though the committee calls for virtual participation to be developed in case they are of use in the future, the committee concludes that the House should revert to “all aspects of its pre-pandemic practice and procedure” once possible. First, though, the committee says the government should ensure virtual proceedings continue until stage four of the lockdown roadmap (June 21).

HOUSE OF LORDS: Sits from 1 p.m. with questions on racism in the U.K., the Northern Ireland Protocol and steps to address the levels of self-harm among women prisoners … Peers will then debate recommendations from their procedure committee on internal business. One of the recommendations to be debated would see a 30-minute question time in the Lords put in place for David Frost, in his new role as a Cabinet minister overseeing post-Brexit relations with the EU (2 p.m.) … Then peers will move onto Day 3 of the Domestic Abuse Bill’s report stage (2.30 p.m.) — and will consider an amendment that would make misogyny a hate crime.

BEYOND THE M25

THE ROSS REVOLUTION: Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross will today outline plans for a “skills revolution” in his keynote speech to the Scottish Conservative Party’s conference this afternoon. He will accuse the SNP of focusing only on independence — as they “close doors and limit opportunity” — while unveiling a manifesto “Retrain to Rebuild” policy that would provide grants to help unemployed or low-paid workers retrain. Ross is up from 2 p.m. to close the conference.

Previously in Scottish Tory Conference … Scotland Secretary Alister Jack used his speech to hail the U.K.’s vaccine program as the “envy of the world,” as No. 10 continues its not-so-subtle effort to counter the SNP by bigging up the U.K’s vaccine success … Interim Holyrood leader Ruth Davidson told the conference that Scotland has reached “peak Nat” … and PM Johnson also bigged up the vaccine drive and U.K. government spending in Scotland, as he insisted the “dynamic duo” of Ross and Davidson would prevent an SNP majority.

SARWAR SAYS: It’s also a big day for the new(ish) Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, who will make his first major speech this morning since he won the leadership two weeks ago. Speaking from party headquarters, Sarwar will make his pitch for voters who are “prioritizing the national recovery” from coronavirus instead of returning to what he will call “the old divisions” of arguing for or against Scottish independence. The battle between Sarwar and Ross over the next month and a half will be an interesting one, with both taking different strategic paths as they seek to become the largest pro-union alternative to the SNP at Holyrood. Sarwar will also have an interesting fight with Nicola Sturgeon — who he will be standing against in her constituency in May. The Scottish Labour leader’s speech will be live on the party’s Facebook and Twitter feeds from 10.30 a.m.

IRISH VACCINE BORDER: Northern Ireland will continue to use the AstraZeneca jab despite its suspension in the Republic of Ireland. The latter’s advisory committee recommended the suspension following reports of serious blood clotting events in Norway, with Irish Health Minister Stephen Donnelly confirming the “precautionary” move. AstraZeneca have said there is no evidence of an increased risk of clotting due to the vaccine. Northern Ireland continues to operate under the guidance of the U.K.’s MHRA and Oxford jabs will continue to be administered there — full story from the BBC.

MEANWHILE IN EUROPETwo regional elections in Germany on Sunday saw a collapse in support for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU party and a great night for Germany’s Green party. POLITICO’s Matthew Karnitschnig has the story.

Here we go: The New York Times’ media pundit Ben Smith has a column out on how “Piers Morgan can’t wait to bring the worst of America home.” Smith has spoken to GB News boss Andrew Neil, who tells him Morgan would be “a huge asset for the channel.”

A message from UK Fisheries: A smart deal could rescue the government’s battered reputation on fisheries. For every below-par mark on our distant-waters scorecard, there is a ‘B’ or an ‘A’ within reach. Our coastal partners are ready to talk. The Norwegians are heavily dependent on access to our waters and our markets. The UK directly linked trade and access in its Trade and Cooperation Agreement with the EU, so there is no sensible reason for HMG not to use its full bargaining power with Norway, winning an improved deal for British fishers and setting a benchmark for productive talks with other coastal states. UK Fisheries has tens of millions of pounds to invest in the future of distant-waters fishing in the North-East, but no business will invest in a future without some degree of certainty. We currently have none at all, and the government must land a good deal NOW.

MEDIA ROUND

Policing Minister Kit Malthouse broadcast round: Sky News (7.05 a.m.) … BBC Breakfast (7.30 a.m.) … LBC (7.50 a.m.) … Today program (7.50 a.m.) … ITV GMB (8.30 a.m.) … talkRADIO (9.06 a.m.) … Times Radio (9.35 a.m.).

Shadow Policing Minister Sarah Jones broadcast round: ITV GMB (6.50 a.m.) … Today program (7.10 a.m.) … BBC Breakfast (7.20 a.m.) … Sky News (7.30 a.m.) … BBC 5 live (8.05 a.m.) … Times Radio (9 a.m.) … talkRADIO (9.20 a.m.).

Also on the Today program: One of the women arrested during Saturday’s vigil, Dania Al-Obeid (7.10 a.m.) … Martin Hewitt, chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council (7.10 a.m.) … Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group (7.30 a.m.) … Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey (8.10 a.m.)

Also on BBC Breakfast: Lib Dem leader Ed Davey (6.50 a.m.) … Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation member Anthony Harnden (7.50 a.m.) … Victims’ Commissioner Vera Baird (8.10 a.m.).

Also on Sky News at Breakfast: Welsh Health Minister Vaughan Gething (7.45 a.m.).

Also on Nick Ferrari at Breakfast (LBC): Former Met Police Assistant Commissioner Andy Hayman (7.05 a.m.) … Lib Dem leader Ed Davey (7.10 a.m.) … Daily Mail Associate Editor Stephen Wright (7.20 a.m.) … Daily Mirror royal editor Russell Myers (7.25 a.m.) … Former Home Office SpAd James Starkie (8.05 a.m.).

Also on Times Radio breakfast: Former Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable Peter Fahy (7.07 a.m.).

Also on Julia Hartley-Brewer breakfast show (talkRADIO): Women’s Equality Party deputy leader Tabitha Morton (7.05 a.m.) … Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation member Jeremy Brown (7.33 a.m.) … Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s husband Richard Ratcliffe (7.50 a.m.) … Tory MP Desmond Swayne (8.12 a.m.) … Former Lib Dem MP Norman Baker (8.20 a.m.).

Good Morning Scotland (BBC Radio Scotland): Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross (7.30 a.m.) … Scottish Deputy First Minister John Swinney (8.05 a.m.).

Politics Live (BBC Two 12.15 p.m.): Labour leader in the Lords Angela Smith … Tory MP Simon Clarke … The Guardian’s Rafael Behr … Writer Timandra Harkness.

Reviewing the papers tonight: BBC News (10.40 p.m. and 11.30 p.m.): The House Magazine editor Rosa Prince and New Statesman’s Rachel Cunliffe … Sky News (10.30 p.m. and 11.30 p.m.): The FT’s Seb Payne and broadcaster Rachel Johnson … Times Radio (10.30 p.m.): Former foreign editor at the Times Martin Fletcher and former Labour MP Ann Clwyd.

TODAY’S FRONT PAGES

(Click on the publication’s name to see its front page.)

Daily Express: ‘British spirit’ beating COVID.

Daily Mail: Shaming of the Met.

Daily Mirror: Pain & anger.

Daily Star: Cough up before you sup up.

Financial Times: Stripe rides wave of ecommerce growth to land $95bn valuation.

HuffPost UKPatel — police still have questions to answer.

i: Safer streets for women — PM acts as police chief faces inquiry.

Metro: Met chief — I’m going nowhere.

POLITICO UKOrganic food hit by U.K.’s ‘1970s’ Brexit red tape.

The Daily Telegraph: Yard chief defends vigil crackdown.

The Guardian: Defiant Met chief refuses to quit and hits out at ‘armchair’ critics.

The Independent: Met chief defies calls to quit over vigil crackdown.

The Times: Defiant Met chief fights for job after vigil chaos.

LONDON CALLING

Westminster weather: ☁️ ☁️ ☁️ Cloudy and breezy. Highs of 12C.

Jab watch: Over the weekend … Labour leader Keir Starmer … Welsh Health Minister Vaughan Gething … Tory MPs Lucy Allan and David Warburton … Shadow Defra minister Daniel Zeichner … West Midlands Mayor Andy Street … Social Market Foundation director James Kirkup … and journalist Saima Mir all received their first coronavirus vaccine. Deputy Speaker Nigel Evans also received his first jab — bonus point for the volunteering fellow MP Andrew Stephenson who administered Evans’ jab. Let us know if you’ve got or are getting yours.

New gig: The Washington Post has announced that Sara Sorcher will become the editor of the paper’s new London Hub. Read the announcement here.

Congrats to: The Times’ Patrick Maguire, who has taken on the role of Red Box editor.

Birthdays: Former Supreme Court judge Robert Carnwath … Crossbench peer David Alton … Labour peer Richard Layard … Channel 4 News Political Editor Gary Gibbon … and former No. 10 Chief of Staff Nick Timothy.

PLAYBOOK COULDN’T HAPPEN WITHOUT: My editor Emma Anderson, reporter Andrew McDonald and producer Miriam Webber.

SUBSCRIBE to the POLITICO newsletter family: Brussels Playbook | London Playbook | Playbook Paris | EU Confidential | Sunday Crunch | EU Influence | London Influence | AI: Decoded | Digital Bridge | China Direct | D.C. Playbook | All our POLITICO Pro policy morning newsletters

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Alex Wickham

Farmers union slams free pass for EU imports as UK food exports face red-tape and higher costs
Farmers union slams free pass for EU imports as UK food exports face red-tape and higher costs

The National Farmers Union has criticised the government’s approach to trade with the EU, arguing UK exporters are still facing financial losses not felt in europe.

The Farmers union is accusing the government of allowing the EU continued market access burden free, while UK exporters struggle with rising costs from border checks.

“Our exporters face additional costs and run the risk of financial losses if products are turned back or held up at the border, NFU President Minette Batters said.

“It is crucial that we achieve a level playing field with pragmatic checks on imports and exports as quickly as possible.”.

In response to the disruption, Batters is urging the UK and EU to agree a long-term arrangement as a matter of priority so trade can flow as smoothly as possible.

UK exports to the EU plunged 40 per cent between in January. With agriculture exports dropping by 56.2 per cent.

Read more: AgriDex selects L3COS and tokenisation for $9 trillion global food and agriculture marketplace

Under the government’s new border operating model, physical checks at the border will not take place on food products and high-risk plants until 1 January 2022. While checks on live animals will not take place until March 2022.

These checks were due to take place from April 2021, but have been delayed in order to ensure supermarkets remain well stocked with produce.

The EU imposed complete border controls on goods entering the bloc from the UK, when the Brexit transition period ended. However, instead Boris Johnson opted to have a transition period for goods coming the other way.

As a result, the new customs procedures caused extensive delays and product waste for some British exporters, with the seafood and meat industries particularly affected.

Read more: Tonnes of meat from UK thrown out at EU borders due to post-Brexit changes

Among recommendations set out by the Farmers Union to reduce further red tape and trade barriers include: the digitalisation of outdated paperwork requirements for organic certificates, and streamlining physical and administrative checks at the border.

Prior to leaving the EU, £9.37bn worth of food per year was exported to the EU including meat, dairy and vegetables.

With 109,000 farmers be working in the UK during 2020, the President is worried about the impact certain foods being banned or held up for checks by the EU might have.

“We also need the continued ban on exports of UK seed potatoes to be urgently addressed. While the ban remains in place, our government must set out how it will support the British growers affected,” Batters added.

Peta calls on Cyprus to switch to organic vegan agriculture
Peta calls on Cyprus to switch to organic vegan agriculture

Animal right’s organisation Peta on Thursday urged Cyprus to include organic vegan agriculture as part of reforms under the EU common agriculture policy, arguing it would  reduce greenhouse gas emissions and the outbreak of viruses.

In a letter to Agriculture Minister Costas Kadis, non-profit organisation Peta pointed out that the production of animal-derived products requires significantly more water, land, and other resources thus causing more greenhouse gas emissions.

“The EU must promote organic vegan agriculture to accomplish the environmental and climate protection measures addressed in the agricultural reform and to support farmers in sustainably cultivating the soil,” explained Ilana Bollag, Peta Germany’s campaigner on climate and food issues.

Vegan farming will also help “reduce the risk of infectious disease outbreaks and the extent of animal suffering”, Bollag added.

According to Peta, animal-derived products pose a risk to humans and other animals alike.

Animals in markets, agricultural operations, and slaughterhouses, are usually kept in small spaces amid their own waste and are killed on blood-soaked floors – often without proper stunning and at just a few weeks old – which makes these places perfect breeding grounds for potentially fatal pathogens. SARS, swine and bird flu, and even Covid-19 all originated in places where humans confine and kill animals, the animal rights’ organisation explained.

Moreover, organic vegan agriculture can counteract environmental issues like species extinction, groundwater pollution, and soil acidification.

“According to the United Nations, it will take a global switch to vegan eating to counter the worst effects of climate change. Studies show that switching to vegan foods could reduce the world’s food-related greenhouse gas emissions by 70 per cent by 2050,” Peta’s announcement added.

Organic meat production is equally as bad for the environment as producing meat using conventional husbandry systems, according to a 2020 study.

Another problem is the extensive use of antibiotics at animal operations which leads to a higher risk of infections with antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which, according to the Robert Koch Institute, cause the deaths of 33,000 people in Europe each year.

“Every vegan saves nearly 150 animal lives annually and reduces the risk of suffering from cancer, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and obesity,” Peta added.

COVID disrupts contraception services, leads to 1.4 million unintended pregnancies, says UNFPA 
COVID disrupts contraception services, leads to 1.4 million unintended pregnancies, says UNFPA 

According to new estimates from the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and Avenir Health, this has led to around 1.4 million unintended pregnancies.  

These latest figures come as many countries, particularly high-income nations, show early signs of steeply declining birth rates.  

Together, the findings demonstrate how the pandemic has severely impacted women’s control over their own reproductive health, and undermined family planning. 

Contraceptives out of stock 

Analysing contraceptive service disruptions last year in 115 lower and middle income countries, data from UNFPA, Google Mobility and other surveys, found that access to family planning was hit by travel restrictions, interrupted supply chains and overwhelmed health facilities, among other factors.  

“The results, for many women, have been life-changing”, according to the UN sexual and reproductive health agency. 

UNFPA profiled a 32-year-old Nepalese woman who married at 17, became a mother of four by age 24, and became pregnant after the nearby health centre ran out of contraceptives. Her fifth baby was born on 25 February. 

Unintended pregnancies put a great strain on families that are already struggling under pandemic-related financial burdens, the UN agency explained. 

And its consequences are not simply economic, they are also linked to increased maternal morbidity, mortality and unsafe abortions.  

UNFPA’s projections showed that family planning services were largely disrupted in April and May of last year for an average of 3.6 months.  

Earlier estimates, produced in April 2020, illustrated that serious family planning disruptions lasting six months could affect 47 million women in low and middle income countries, and result in seven million unintended pregnancies. 

Acting swiftly  

Fortunately, quick action has helped many health systems to maintain or restore essential health services, including contraceptives, said UNFPA.  

The agency pointed out that even amid rising costs and supply chain constraints, it was able to procure and deliver contraceptives and other reproductive health supplies, as well as personal protective equipment for health workers. 

Creative efforts, such as using a ride-hailing app to deliver contraceptives, SMS outreach and targeting family planning counselling to quarantine centres, also helped maintain or restore services.  

UNFPA sad that many women continue to face serious obstacles to receiving family planning and other life-saving reproductive health services.  

A growing price 

Although the total costs of the pandemic are not yet known, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 2.5 million people around the world have died from COVID-19.  

When the full toll is calculated, UNFPA upheld that it will have to include the “extraordinary consequences” borne by women and girls, including those whose futures were rewritten, bodies injured or lives lost due to disruptions in access contraception and health care.