Sonoma Biotherapeutics launches with $40 million in Series A funding to advance regulatory T cell therapy in autoimmune and degenerative diseases -…

Company founded by four pioneers of Treg cell biology and cell therapy and financed by a syndicate of leading biotech investors

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. and SEATTLE, Feb. 6, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Sonoma Biotherapeutics, a privately held company developing regulatory T cell (Treg) therapies for autoimmune and degenerative diseases, launched today in South San Francisco, CA and Seattle, WA with $40 million in its Series A financing. Sonoma brings together next-generation research, development and manufacturing capabilities in cell therapy and genetic engineering with an accomplished team of executives, scientists, board members and investors with extensive experience in the fields of cell therapy and drug discovery.

"With this team and our assembled expertise and technologies, we are in an ideal position to move adoptive cell therapy beyond cancer, to establish safe, effective and long-lasting treatments for a range of conditions where current drugs and biologics are simply not good enough," said founder and CEO Jeffrey Bluestone, PhD. "As the immune system's master regulators of protecting the body against self-destruction, Treg cell therapy is perhaps the ideal means to shut down unwanted immune reactions and provide meaningful treatment for patients."

The financing involves an investor syndicate that includes Lyell Immunopharma, ARCH Venture Partners, Milky Way Ventures and 8VC. "Treg therapies have the potential to transform the treatment of autoimmune and degenerative diseases," said Robert Nelsen, managing partner and co-founder of ARCH Ventures Partners. "Sonoma Biotherapeutics has assembled the team and capabilities required to make this vision a reality for patients and their families."

The goal of Treg therapy is to restore a state of self-tolerance by halting harmful inflammatory responses in autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and multiple sclerosis, along with degenerative diseases including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer's. Over 50 million Americans currently live with an autoimmune disease, and millions more with some form of degenerative diseases. For many, existing therapies are ineffective at controlling their disease.

Tregs have a clear role in many of these conditions. These cells' natural ability to migrate to inflamed tissues and control harmful immune responses make them ideal for treating a range of conditions. In addition, the ability to engineer Treg cells to target specific disease-causing antigens reduces the potential for unwanted systemic effects. The role of Tregs in tissue maintenance and repair offers the potential for effective, durable and restorative treatments.

Sonoma Biotherapeutics is co-founded by four of the foundational scientists in the Treg field:

Collectively, the founding team brings expertise and proprietary methodologies across the Treg drug discovery and development process, including selection, manipulation, editing, regulation and translation for clinical use. Together, Drs. Bluestone and Tang have pioneered adoptive Treg cell therapy in some of its first clinical uses in type 1 diabetes, lupus and organ transplantation. Drs. Rudensky and Ramsdell co-discovered FOXP3, a critical transcription factor for Treg development and function, and in 2017 were awarded the Crafoord Prize by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for their landmark studies. They are complemented by an experienced senior management team and seasoned board of directors.

"The Sonoma Biotherapeutics leadership are responsible for a significant portion of our understanding of the nature of Treg cells, their role in disease and their potential for use as a cell therapy," said Dr. Rick Klausner, CEO of Lyell Immunopharma and newly appointed Chair of the Sonoma Biotherapeutics Board of Directors. "Perhaps more importantly, they understand the requirements of a successful cell therapeutic and the corresponding challenges in defining the pathway to market. We look forward to a strong partnership between Lyell and Sonoma Biotherapeutics."

In this regard, Sonoma Biotherapeutics has entered into a strategic partnership with Lyell that provides both parties with access to technologies and know-how to enhance the durability, stability and specificity of cell therapies in their respective indications of focus. This partnership will further enable Sonoma's rapid translation of Treg therapies from target identification and discovery, through preclinical and clinical development.

Senior Management Team

Jeffrey Bluestone, PhD, Founder, CEO & PresidentFred Ramsdell, PhD, Founder & CSOPeter DiLaura, Chief Business & Strategy OfficerJoshua Beilke, MBA, PhD, VP Translational Development

Board of Directors

Rick Klausner, MD (Chair) Founder & CEO, Lyell Immunopharma, Inc.Maggie Wilderotter CEO, Grand Reserve Inn; former board member, Juno TherapeuticsToni Hoover, PhD Director, Strategy, Planning and Management for Global Health, Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationTerry Rosen, PhD CEO, Arcus BiosciencesDavid Moskowitz, PhD Principal, 8VC (observer)Jeffrey Bluestone, PhD, CEO & President, Sonoma Biotherapeutics

About Sonoma Biotherapeutics

Sonoma Biotherapeutics is a privately held, San Francisco and Seattle-based company leading the development of adoptive Treg therapies cell for autoimmune and degenerative diseases. Using next generation genome editing and target-specific cell therapy, Sonoma is focused on developing its best-in-class platform across the entire spectrum of Treg cell therapeutic capabilities. Founded by pioneers in Treg biology and cell therapy, the company brings together leading expertise and proprietary methodologies for the discovery and development of disease modifying and curative therapies.

Contact: media@sonomabio.com

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SOURCE Sonoma Biotherapeutics

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Sonoma Biotherapeutics launches with $40 million in Series A funding to advance regulatory T cell therapy in autoimmune and degenerative diseases -...

Brighton girls school welcomes boys for the first time – The Argus

BOYS will study at all-girls Roedean School for the first time in its 135-year history but only on a Wednesday evening.

The school has been a bastion of exclusively female education since it was founded in the 19th century to prepare girls for the rigours of newly opened Cambridge womens colleges Girton and Newnham. It has produced a stream of actors, politicians, journalists, human rights campaigners, scientists and artists, many achieving firsts in their fields.

But 2020 has seen the arrival of boys at its imposing wooden doors overlooking the English Channel as they take part in the schools Roedean Academy programme.

The programme invites Year 10 children from across Brighton and Hove to participate in lessons that stretch them beyond the national curriculum including genetic engineering, cryptology and the psychology of crime.

Each Wednesday evening 14 boys and 39 girls from local secondary schools visit Roedean to settle down to language code-breaking, philosophy and stats and hard maths sessions.

Stanley Bradley-Scott from Dorothy Stringer School said: I think that Roedeans academy is incredible there is a massive range of modules, so you can be super sciency or you can be the complete opposite. My friends are curious to see what its actually like we drive past here a lot and see this incredible building, but we never knew much about what was going on.

Kumi Kemp from Longhill School said: I thought Roedean would be a bit uptight with everyone following the rules exactly, but its completely different everyones really friendly. Its got opportunities for everyone, no matter what you want to do.

Roedean pupil Lola Clarke loves the co-ed nature at the academy. She said: Its great to participate in discussions with people who are bringing in new ideas and new perspectives. I think that Old Roedeanians would be really proud that we are able to have this experience of working with boys sometimes.

Headteacher Oliver Blond said: We have been running the Roedean Academy for quite a few years now and we just saw no reason why boys from the city couldnt start enjoying the classes too. They are tackling subjects that stretch and challenge them and go beyond whats on the curriculum and what they need to know to pass GCSEs. Its learning just for the love of it something Roedean has done throughout its history and we have seen children absolutely loving it.

However, there was one hiccup. Blond laughed: When I was giving a welcome talk, one boy raised his hand to ask where the toilets were and it only then occurred to us that there were no boys toilets in the school at all.

Staff toilets, of course, were made available.

More:

Brighton girls school welcomes boys for the first time - The Argus

Brighton girls school welcomes boys for the first time in 135 years – Brighton & Hove Independent

Pupils from schools across the city are taking part in the Roedean Academy programme

The pupils will attend the school on Wednesday evenings to take part in the Roedean Academy programme which invites Year 10 students from across the city to participate in extra-curricular lessons; from genetic engineering, to cryptology, and the psychology of crime.

Every week, 14 boys and 39 girls from local secondary schools will study a range of interesting social and STEM subjects.

Headteacher Oliver Blond said: We have been running the Roedean Academy for quite a few years now and we just saw no reason why boys from the city couldnt start enjoying the classes too.

They are tackling subjects that stretch and challenge them and go beyond whats on the curriculum and what they need to know to pass GCSEs.

Its learning just for the love of it something Roedean has done throughout its history and we have seen children absolutely loving it.

The school was founded in 1885 to prepare girls for the newly-opened womens colleges at Cambridge, Girton and Newnham.

However, a small issue dawned on the headteacher following an innocent question from one of the visiting students.

When I was giving a welcome talk, one boy raised his hand to ask where the toilets were and it only then occurred to us that there were no boys toilets in the school at all. he said.

Thankfully, visiting male students have been allowed to use the staff toilets during their time at the school.

Stanley Bradley-Scott, from Dorothy Stringer School, said: I think that Roedeans academy is incredible there is a massive range of modules, so you can be super-sciency or you can be the complete opposite.

My friends are curious to see what its actually like we drive past here a lot and see this incredible building, but we never knew much about what was going on.

Roedean pupil Lola Clarke loves the co-ed classes, she said: Its great to participate in discussions with people who are bringing in new ideas and new perspectives.

I think that Old Roedeanians would be really proud that we are able to have this experience of working with boys sometimes.

Kumi Kemp from Longhill School said: I thought Roedean would be a bit uptight with everyone following the rules exactly, but its completely different everyones really friendly.

Its got opportunities for everyone, no matter what you want to do.

Link:

Brighton girls school welcomes boys for the first time in 135 years - Brighton & Hove Independent

10 games that would make perfect TV shows – GamesRadar

Although Hollywood studios have tried to make a buck on live-action film adaptations of video games for decades, aside from a collection of best video game movies, rarely do these attempts give us the kind of movie worth caring about as much as the games we play and love.

TV, on the other hand, seems to be ahead of the curve, especially with the recent success of The Witcher Netflix series. Granted, the series was inspired by Andrzej Sapkowskis written works which, in turn, became the basis of CD Projekt Reds acclaimed action RPG trilogy. But, lets face it, The Witcher entered Netflixs radar thanks to the success of the games. Even Henry Cavill got himself cast as mutated monster hunter Geralt of Rivia, in part, because hes a gamer who cant get enough of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. Which made us think, which games or game series would be perfect for TV adaptation?

It has to be those with interesting characters, storylines and the kind of deep lore that sometimes needs more room to breathe than the two-hour runtime of a feature film. So here are the top 10 games that would be absolutely perfect for TV adaption.

NOTE: Spoilers to follow, so tread lightly.

This was obvious even before God of War director Cory Barlog suggested his critically-renowned PS4 exclusive would lend itself well to a Netflix-style series, but his endorsement certainly helps.

The original games - also exclusive to Sony consoles and set among the myths of ancient Greece - were never heavy on characterization and story. Sure, Kratos had his tragic reasons for setting out to murder every man, god, and titan who got in his way, and Greek mythology is rife with sordid, gripping tales. But, when you get down to it, the original God of War trilogy worked chiefly because it was fun to slash apart satyrs with some sweet looking swords attached to chains and pummel Zeuss head into mush.

Thats not great TV. But heres what is: a father trying to raise an adolescent son he kept at arms length for too long, largely because of his bottled rage and shame for his past sins. That level of pathos introduced in Sonys 2018 franchise reboot makes all the difference. Plus, that instalment opened up all sorts of possibilities to explore ancient gods from cultures across the globe, all while telling a human story of a father, a son, and the boys mysterious mother Faye.

Picture the use of Arrow-like flashbacks to tell parallel stories featuring Kratoss origins in Greece or even explore Fayes journey before Kratos arrived among her others from Norse mythology. Theres so much untapped potential within the relationship between Kratos and young Atreus, and TV has what it takes to bring their story to the masses the right way.

From Big Boss to Solid Snake, and all the clones and doppelgangers in between, Hideo Kojimas beloved tactical espionage action series is full of lore and political intrigue that screams binge-watching session.

Across all the Metal Gear games produced by Konami under the guidance of Kojima since 1987, the series explores ethical conundrums few games had considered either before or since. Nuclear proliferation, the ethics of cloning and genetic engineering, nanotechnology, and Cold War politics all would make for interesting themes to see breathe and be deconstructed during full seasons of TV, rather than crammed into a film or two.

Notorious for its lengthy cutscenes and long sections of little else but dialogue, Metal Gear feels readymade for a TV show, as it imagines a world where walking tanks are armed with nuclear missiles and super soldiers are just pawns in a greater game. Its cast of over-the-top villains across five decades worth of story would work well in an episodic setting, too, in much the same way Netflixs The Witcher gave Geralt something to resolve within each episode.

Ever sit down to watch the 2016 film starring Michael Fassbender? It wasnt great. Film just isnt the right medium for the millennia-old rivalry between the Assassins and the Templars. Its sci-fi elements really need more explanation than a movie would ever allow for. Better for a TV series to show how the Animus permits modern-day humans to experience the memories of their ancestors in order to track down artifacts of great power. Teasing out these Pieces of Eden and their origins over 10 episodes could build some serious intrigue from pilot to series finale.

Even if a show based on the popular Ubisoft series dropped the present-day meta story altogether, Assassins Creed would be ripe for an anthologized season structure. One season could go back to the Italian Renaissance, following the charismatic Ezio Auditore on his path to becoming one of the most revered assassins. Another could visit the American Revolution and the father-son struggle between Assassin Connor and his British Templar father Haytham Kenway. Theres no shortage of already established stories from various time periods to revisit.

As historical fiction, an Assassins Creed series could contextualize the past for modern audiences, especially those unfamiliar with, say, The Crusades or the Bolshevik Revolution.

Remember the game that taught children of the 80s and 90s about all the myriad diseases that claimed the lives of mid-1800s frontiersmen, who were just heading toward a place to make a better life? Yep, The Oregan Trail is perfect for a TV series.

Most people buy into the myth that the Old West as little more than a bunch of outlaws and lawmen firing repeaters and revolvers at one another. The reality was much tamer than John Wayne and Clint Eastwood films would have us believe, although no less hard for the bankers from Boston or carpenters from Ohio who set out toward the Pacific Northwest in search of a new life.

Oregon Trail would make for a nice limited-run miniseries, delving into the hardships and beauty of the time and place in American history. Picture a group of pioneers from all walks of life, travelling with the shared goal of beginning anew as the show explores what drives people to take a leap of faith and start from scratch.

A show like this would require top-notch dialogue from skilled writers, a truly talented cast of actors to carry the weight, and just the right amount of tension each week. Who wouldnt be on the edge of their seats waiting to see if the would-be settlers will successfully ford the river? We all know how badly that can go.

OK, so all that stuff about the real Old West not being full of outlaws and gunfights? Still true, but also true is people love outlaws and gunfights in their westerns. Thats where the story of the Van Der Linde gang comes into play.

Red Dead Redemption and its prequel - Red Dead Redemption 2 - are crowning achievements for Rockstar Games, building a well-developed collective of outlaws including protagonists John Marston and Arthur Morgan, gang leader and father figure Dutch Van Der Linde, revenge-minded widow Sadie Adler, and so many more. The proper approach to a TV series would be to put John, his wife Abigail and son Jack at the center of an ensemble thanks to their critical role throughout both games, while still devoting plenty of screen time to Arthur and the rest of the two-dozen strong gang.

Change is the thematic throughline of the games, and this should be central to any adaptation. In the case of the first Red Dead Redemption, we witness a world that violently paves over itself in the early 1910s without a care for what came before. And for the glass-half-full crowd, the actions of both Arthur and John show that its never too late to change your ways and attempt to right the wrongs of the past.

With so many interesting individuals and quirky characters to go along with thought-provoking themes as relevant to the 1800s as the 2000s, TV is the only way to do justice to this band of thieves.

Lets get this out of the way right now: Would you kindly couldnt possibly have the same effect in non-interactive media. But BioShock was always more than a mind-blowing mid-game twist. How many games heavily borrow from the works and objectivist philosophies of Ayn Rand? For that matter, how many TV series do that?

The murky Rapture of the first two BioShock games, with its distinct undersea art deco architecture and dimly lit environments at the bottom of the ocean, is the perfect setting for a season of claustrophobic, dystopian sci-fi/horror. Unlike film, a TV series will allow Jack to slowly discover the depravity that destroyed Andrew Ryans world.

Likewise, Columbia and its racist denizens among the clouds offer the type of biting satire thats all too relevant in 2020. A season based on BioShock Infinite wouldnt need heavy-handed writing to make the clear link to modern issues. Plus, the narrative following dimenson-hopping heroine Elizabeth and ex-Pinkerton agent Booker DeWitt deserves patience for their unique relationship to develop before that ending alters our understanding.

BioShock, from creator Ken Levine and published by 2K Games, would work best if the seasons are anthologized in much the same way as American Horror Story, with breadcrumbs along the way as connective threads between the flawed uptopian societies of Rapture, Columbia, or perhaps more worlds yet to be explored.

Horrors, both human and mutant, awaiting unsuspecting Vault dwellers emerging into the American wasteland long since ravaged by nuclear war. How will the Lone Wanderer survive the feral ghouls, deathclaws, super mutants and overall awful folks who prey upon one another? Tune in next week to find out!

Fallouts vision of a radiated United States centuries from now is its central character, unlike most games on this list who lean on established individual heroes and villains. That offers plenty of freedom to tell original stories about morality in the face of survival that could surprise and shock even fans of the games, with no need to tell a story weve all played before.

You could argue that The Walking Dead has tread similar ground, with its post-apocalyptic setting and savagery in the face of survival, and feral ghouls really are just zombies no matter what theyre called. But key differences would allow a Fallout series to stand on its own. The Fallout games posit that their hellish world was doomed by humanitys own need for conflict. Its a recurring theme of the series, in which the survivors of post-war America fight amongst themselves over resources and beliefs.

Ever-present atomic radiation and 200 years of rebuilding society, and its the same story throughout the Bethesda-produced games. War, it seems, isnt the only thing that never changes.

No film adaptation of a Final Fantasy game shall prosper. A TV series, on the other hand, offers a much better shot at making a successful transition for the long-running RPG titan from Square Enix.

Each season should take the same approach as the numbered games, telling unrelated stories but still maintaining all the little things that make a Final Fantasy game different from anything else Chocobos are a requirement, but they arent the only must-have. As such, the anthology route is the way to go with epic stories set among worlds filled with randomly-encountered beasts and powerful mana.

Not every game in the series told a riveting story, but the hypothetical showrunner would still have plenty of strong candidates. Most will be clamoring for Cloud, Sephiroth, and Aerith in Season 1, but a bolder and better choice would be the steampunk-heavy Final Fantasy 6 and its edge-of-your-seat plot twists (Kefka, anyone?). The masses who only discovered this franchise when it hit the original PlayStation with Final Fantasy 7 will be in for a narrative treat, and then we can travel to Midgar for Season 2.

But why stop at just bringing the numbered games to live-action television? Final Fantasy Tacticss plot ranks among the finest of the series. Its time for Ivalice to reach a new audience, too.

The Battlefield series from EA has bounced all over world history, but the tales contained in 2016s Battlefield 1, set during Earths first true global conflict, make for a brilliant jumping off point for a unique TV series.

World War 1 is ripe for a TV treatment. If recent Oscar-nominated films from Steven Spielberg (War Horse) and Sam Mendes (1917) have taught us anything, its that heart-wrenching tales from The Great War can resonate with modern audiences. Even Wonder Woman, in her critically lauded smash hit film, took to the Western Front to shatter German High Command.

A WW1-set Battlefield show would be grounded in human stories, much like the ones depicted in Battlefield 1s single-player campaign. The game drew praise for telling brief, disconnected stories from all over the globe throughout the four-year conflict.

Thats exactly how a TV series should play out. One season could deal with the infamous Gallipoli campaign, as was the case with the campaign story titled The Runner. Another could examine the legendary Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen, and his exploits for the German Air Force. Hes more than just Snoopys nemesis, you know.

It would be hard to approach Band of Brothers-level accolades, as the World War 2 drama from HBO remains a classic nearly two decades later. But the world seems ready for a deeper exploration of the stories of the so-called war to end all wars to be depicted on the small screen.

Of all the games on this list, Horizon Zero Dawn might have the most breakout potential of all for mainstream audiences. Guerrilla Games created quite a world in its 2017 PlayStation exclusive. More importantly, the studio birthed one of the strongest protagonists of the current console generation in Aloy, the child outcast who comes of age to become the hero of a post-apocalyptic world dominated by dangerous machines.

What makes Aloys odyssey so incredible isnt just that shes slick with a bow and arrows, chopping down hulking machines like a super soldier. Its not even the fact that shes a clone because, come on, how many clones have we seen in film, TV and games?

No, her appeal comes from how relatable this heroine and the internal struggle that drive her are. She wants to understand where she came from to make sense of who she is. We can all relate to that on some level.

The world Aloy inhabits is full of fascinating lore, and to condense her epic journey for a single film treatment would be downright criminal. Give her the air she deserves, stretch her story out over several TV seasons, and bring her story to the masses for both gamers and non-gamers alike.

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10 games that would make perfect TV shows - GamesRadar

Cell-based meat in focus: In conversation with Meatable, Finless Foods, New Age Meats – FoodNavigator-USA.com

Despite all the hype, most startups in the space are still working in a laboratory (as opposed to a factory), although several have recently raised more substantial sums (Memphis Meats: $161m, Future Meat Technologies: $14m, Wild Type: $12.5m, Aleph Farms: $12m, Meatable: $10m) to support the construction of pilot-scale facilities.

Maastricht-based Mosa Meat which is gearing up for a small scale commercial launch in 2022 assuming it has cleared regulatory hurdles - recently joined forces with Nutreco (which has invested an undisclosed sum in the firm along with Lower Carbon Capital) to work on growth media; San Diego-based BlueNalu has also partnered with Nutreco; while Jerusalem-basedFuture Meat Technologies plans to release hybrid products in 2021 and a second line of 100% cell-based ground meat products suitable for burgers and nuggets at a cost of less than $10 per pound in 2022.

However, the recent $161m investment in Memphis Meats - which says it has a pretty clear path to achieving cost parity with conventional meat has given the whole sector a confidence boost, says Krijn de Nood, CEO at Dutch cell-based meat startup Meatable.

Its a huge positive for the industry, it shows there are very serious investors that have done their due diligence and think this is really going to happen.

Meatable - which is working with porcine and bovine induced pluripotent stem cells [iPSCs] recently raised $10m from existing investors and a couple of new angel investors, and a grant from the European Commission, which we are pretty proud of, says de Nood.

While this is dwarfed by Memphis Meats latest round, it was a meaningful vote of confidence in a sector where most startups have not raised more than a couple of million, he says.

Defendibility is definitely important to investors and we have IP around the differentiation of the cells, the hardware we use to grow the meat in, on reducing the costs on a lot of components. We have one patent thats granted, and a couple of others in the making.

Were comfortable that by late summer we can present our first prototype product, a tenderloin. Were aiming to present a product that has a meat-like texture with fat and muscle, with edible scaffolding, although I cannot disclose the materials at this point.

In the beginning of 2022 we should have a small pilot facility online, enabling some consumers to get familiar with our product. By 2025, we hope to have an industry scale facility online when we can become more cost competitive with traditional meat.

He adds:Weve worked on stabilizing the cell lines, culturing them in suspension and optimizing the proliferation speed.

Our cells can grow in an FBS-free [fetal bovine serum-free]medium and weve made good progress on reducing dependency on expensive growth factors.

As for market entry, Meatable is currently building a dossier to make a Novel Food application [to access the EU market], but also exploring the potential of market entry in Singapore, he says.

Cell-based fish co Finless Foods, which has a team of 11 people in Emeryville California, raised $3.5m in 2018, but is now gearing up to raise a series A round, says CEO Mike Selden.

While the startup co-founded by Selden and Brian Wyrwas, molecular biologists who met at theUniversity of Massachusetts, Amherst has experimented with multiple species, they have focused on Bluefin tuna because its under threat (populations today are a fraction of what they were in the 1960s) and because its expensive (reaching price parity with a broiler chicken could take far longer).

Investors are looking for a unique IP angle, as well as well-rounded teams and proof youre doing regulatory the right way and not just moving fast and breaking things, says Selden.

Now were gearing up for a Series A, we think there are some interesting things we can file [patent]and not have stolen from us, but were never going to file our media formulation [which would remain a trade secret].

As to how Finless stacks up vs the competition, he says, I wont pretend to know exactly what all of the others are doing; there are something like 40 cell-based meat companies and six cell-based seafood companies that Im aware have been funded. But I do think were not only competitive but actually I think youll see in the next few months at the forefront, as we release more information about what weve been working on.

Were the tuna people, so it will be very difficult to work on tuna outside of Finless Foods, plus we can take varieties of seafood that Americans have no real access to and localize them to the American market; things that are only eaten in Japan because no ones figured out how to farm, or theyre only available in small quantities in the wild.

Right now, Finless is focused on muscle and fat cells, says Selden. Its easy to have the muscle and fat cells turn into connective tissue, so we dont need a separate culture for fibroblasts.

As for getting the cells to proliferate indefinitely (so you dont keep having to go back to the source), he says, The concept of immortalization isnt super-relevant for seafood; fish cells naturally have an extremely high amount of telomerase [an enzyme which helps prevent the shortening of the telomeres, repetitive DNA sequences at the ends of chromosomes].

Put more simply, every time cells divide, their telomeres shorten, which eventually prompts them to stop dividing and die, he explains. Telomerase prevents this decline in some kinds of cells by lengthening telomeres, which is why people interested in slowing cellular aging are so interested in it.

It basically means we dont have to do genetic engineering to immortalize the cells.

As for the growth medium that feeds the cells, he notes, We currently have multiple cell lines and bluefin populations that are growing out in completely serum-free media, no FBS, no FCS (fetal calf serum). The key ingredients are salts, sugars and proteins. Right now, were getting these proteins from recombinant microbial systems [ie. expressing proteins in microbes such as bacteria, yeasts and other hosts].

There is some research thats happening both inside of Finless Foods and out, on what I consider to be better, more efficient ways of doing that, but I wont pretend that its come to fruition yet at least internally, but I know that others have had success such as [Tokyo-based cell-based meat co]Integriculture, which has been able to use conditioned media [spent cell culture media that includes secreted factors that have accumulated in the medium over time, including growth factors] instead [of recombinant growth factors] to feed their cells.

At Finless Foods, he explained, Our costs have come down massively, but as were working on Bluefin tuna [a very expensive fish]we dont face quite the same challenges [as companies trying to make, say, cell-based chicken, beef or pork].

Asked about bioreactors, he says, Were creating different divisions of the company working on different types of bioreactors to see what scales up the best, but as of right now, weve had more success in single systems, where the proliferation happens in one bioreactor and instead of moving the cells to a different bioreactor for the differentiation phase, you basically just replace the media from growth media to differentiation media and leave the cells in the same tank.

As for different ways to culture cells in the growth/proliferation phase, he says, one division of the company is working on suspension culture, where the infrastructure is already in place; while the other is working on attachment culture [where cells attach to food grade materials], which has never been scaled up, but has the potential for higher efficiencies. In suspension we have some experiments where the cells are attached to beads and others where the cells are just free-floating.

Were also exploring both approaches [suspension and attachment] in the differentiation phase, but there isnt a scenario where the cells are proliferating in a single cell suspension, but then differentiating attached.

When it comes to creating more structured, steak-like products, its potentially easier to recreate the structure/texture of tuna, which is more like a gel, compared with something like beef steak, he notes.

The first wave of cell-based products is going to attract a premium, which makes launching at a small scale in high-end restaurants - a place where consumers may be more willing to try something novel - a good way to test the waters, he says.

We definitely face more regulatory and technical challenges than plant-based meat companies,but brands such as Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat have paved the way for us to some extent by getting consumers - but also chefs - open to the idea of eating meat without slaughtering animals. Theyve also made foodtech cool and sexy, so were really grateful for that.

Asked about terminology, which has proved a bone of contention in the nascent industry, he said:I like the term cell-based because its neutral and accurate. Yes, we know that everything is made of cells[including meat from slaughtered animals], but we think its the best term out there.

I dont really get the term cultivated meat[a term emerging from Mattson/GFI research last year],but if there was a ton of evidence to support it, or if stakeholders in the animal ag industry were all behind it, I could be convinced, as Im not super ideological about this.

But the North American Meat Institute has signed off on cell-based and the government seems pretty OK with using it [editor's note: USDA and FDA have yet to issue any formal declaration on terminology].

At fellow startup New Age Meats,which has just raised $2.7m in a round led by ff Venture Capital to fund its cell-based pork operation, founder Brian Spears says investors are looking for clear evidence that yields are going up, and costs are going down.

While investors understand that cell-based meat is a longer-term bet than plant-based meat, and fits more into the high risk, high reward category given its novelty, the total addressable market for both is clearly enormous provided the products are good and the price is right says Spears, a chemical engineer with a background in industrial automation.

Were very focused on automation, data science and bioprocess, and showing that the cost of making cultivated meat is continuing to decrease. Weve got a high throughput platform that optimizes media, and weve validated different types of bioreactors, one of which was 200 liters, which I think is the biggest bioreactor that has been made specifically for cultivated meat.

While the nascency of the industry has meant most cell-based meat companies are vertically integrated, more third parties are now creating platforms to help cell-based meat startups, he says:

Weve seen a lot of players step in, so 3M has a whole team dedicated to optimizing media for cultivated meat, while Black & Veatch is interested in working with companies on industrial scale manufacturing.

New Age Meats is looking at pork belly, bacon, and sausages, some of which present greater technical challenges than others, says Spears.

In all cases, he says, [animal]fat is crucial, its where the flavor is, the mouthfeel, the smell. Just growing muscle and then adding a plant-based fat gives you a very different experience. Right now the most, straightforward solution if youre making a simple product like a sausage is to grow muscle and fat cells separately, and then combine them at the end, but there are pros and cons to each method.

Asked about more structured products such as pork belly, he said:There are a lot of ways to create a 3D structure; people think you have to make this edible scaffolding or matrix, flow the cells in, they adhere to it and they grow and mature on that, but there are other methods of doing this.

There are some processes New Age Meats could patent, but at this point, given the expense, its not top of the priority list, says Spears, who has adopted the term cultivated meat.

Patents give an easy signal to investors, but some of the patents in this space are absolutely worthless.

Read the rest here:

Cell-based meat in focus: In conversation with Meatable, Finless Foods, New Age Meats - FoodNavigator-USA.com

The Joy of Collecting Stamps From Countries That Don’t Really Exist – Atlas Obscura

The postage stamp looks like a postage stamp is supposed to look: white, perforated edges, and part of a circular cancellation mark in the corner. It also has the country and postage clearly printed, though its depiction of the pirate Blackbeard during an attack might be more dramatic than most philatelic subjects. But its not a postage stamp, not really, because its country of origin is Sealanda metal platform about the size of a tennis court, off the English coast. Sealand is one of the quirky, strangely numerous states known as micronations, or self-proclaimed polities with no legal recognition. Some of them, to simulate legitimacy or at least make a little money, have issued their own flags, passports, coins, and yes, postage stamps.

Laura Steward, curator of public art at the University of Chicago, who organized an exhibition at the 2020 Outsider Art Fair in New York of stamps from micronations and other dubiously defined places, believes that these tiny squares are more than a toss-off: Theyre art, proof of imagination, and rather sophisticated bids for public recognition. A postage stamp is a small but mighty symbolic emissary from one particular nation to the rest of the world, Steward writes in text accompanying the exhibit. A functioning postal service, made visible in stamps, is an unmistakable expression of national legitimacy. As a result, the postage stamp is an excellent vehicle for spurious, tenuous, or completely fictitious states to declare their existence.

Steward, whos a stamp collector herself, refers to these types of stamps as Bogus Cinderellas. They are bogus because they dont represent officially recognized entities, and Cinderellas because they are stepchildren to genuine postage. Most serious stamp collectors consider them illegitimate despite their extraordinary ability to conjure an entire nation on a tiny piece of paper, Steward wrote. Some collectors are fascinated by them nonetheless, and so micronations (and other not-quite-places) keep putting them out. The Republic of Molossia issued some as recently as 2019.

Atlas Obscura spoke with Steward about the wonders of discovering and collecting stamps from these rather curious, suspect places.

I was working on an exhibition of unusual forms of currencies in support of a scientific conference, and came across Sealands currency, and then Sealand itself.

Stamps are routinely used to reify state power. If your states existence is rather tenuous, making a stamp is a gesture of legitimacy and seriousness. It is an opportunity to visualize your states identity and share that with others.

My favorite stamps are from Heliotown, which is more like an art project than a micronation. It is easiest to think of Heliotown as a parallel reality, and there are two portals to it in Santa Fe, New Mexicoone downtown, one at the Santa Fe Institute, the independent research institute that created it.

Im drawn to Celestia, the Nation of Celestial Space. James Thomas Mangan, founder of Celestia, registered the acquisition of outer space with the Recorder of Deeds and Titles in Cook County, Illinois, on January 1, 1949. Magnan laid claim to outer space to prevent any one country from establishing hegemony there. Later in 1949, he banned all atmospheric nuclear tests, and notified the United Nations of his decision.

For me, the appeal of the stamps is their ability to stand for the political culture of an entire nation in just one square inch. And I love to think about micronationsthe boldness of the project, the many decisions that must be made to invent an entire nation and culture out of nothing. And to then express such a vast project in such a tiny form is something I find enchanting to think about it. I love the handmade qualities of many stamps, which show us the character of their makers.

Continued here:

The Joy of Collecting Stamps From Countries That Don't Really Exist - Atlas Obscura

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Canadian HEIs to support the green economy in the Caribbean – The PIE News

The five-year program will focus on increasingthecapacity oflocaltraining institutions to deliver gender-sensitive skills training programsthat meet economic and environmental needs in theregion, by leveraging the expertise of Canadian colleges andinstitutes.

We look forward to this continued collaboration to tackle pressing challenges linked to climate change

The ultimate goal of the program is a more qualified labour force for employment in key economic sectors vulnerable to climate change.

A total of 10 Canadian colleges and institutes will partner with twelve local Caribbean partners across the SAGE programs six countries of focus: Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, and St. Lucia.

The CAD$15 million program is funded by the Government of Canada through Global Affairs Canada.

We are incredibly pleased to launch this new program, which builds on a proud history of partnership between Canadian and Caribbean TVET institutions, said Denise Amyot, president and CEO of CICan.

This includes our own CARICOM Education for Employment Program that concluded in 2018 and helped roughly 2,000 students across 12 countries graduate from new TVET programs.

We look forward to this continued collaboration as we work together to tackle pressing challenges linked to climate change while investing in the resilience of Caribbean learners, post-secondary institutions, and businesses,Amyot added.

A three-day orientation session will follow the program launch to provide an opportunity for all participants to develop a shared understanding of the SAGE program.

Presenters will focus on the required partnership outcomes and frameworks in place fortheundertaking of gender analysis, projection of green skills, development of occupational standards, the awarding of Caribbean vocational qualifications, and curriculum development.

Excerpt from:

Canadian HEIs to support the green economy in the Caribbean - The PIE News

Utah Royals’ new coach draws inspiration from his time in the Caribbean – Salt Lake Tribune

Herriman Craig Harrington wanted a challenge.

The newly minted Utah Royals FC coach had experienced success a decade ago when he was part of the academy system with the L.A. Galaxy for three years. He worked for the Galaxy at a time when the organizations pro team won back-to-back championships.

Harrington, in his late 20s at the time, enjoyed it, but wanted a more direct piece of the action. He longed for more of an influence on winning. He wanted to matter.

I probably had a bit of arrogance about me, Harrington said.

So following the advice of a mentor, the England native went searching for his next opportunity. The Turks and Caicos Islands Football Association answered his call.

The Turks and Caicos Islands are a British territory in the Caribbean, about 620 miles southeast of Miami. Harrington became the associations new technical director in 2014, at a time when both the mens and womens side wasnt very competitive.

He helped the TCI mens team to its highest-ever FIFA ranking and led its attempt to qualify for the 2018 World Cup. TCI lost in the first round of qualifying.

But it was his work with the women both on and off the field that made the most impact on his career.

It really branched and opened me up to the game of women, Harrington said of his TCI experience.

One of the endeavors Harrington embarked upon was entering his womens team into the 2014 Caribbean Womens Cup, a new competition at the time that served as a qualifier for the CONCACAF Womens Championship, a tournament where the winner qualified for the 2015 FIFA Womens World Cup.

Harrington told soccer website The Equalizer that he was using the competition to assess his program.

The tournament will be a benchmark for us to see where we are at, not just from the players point of view, [but] the infrastructure, coaching, management and medical, Harrington told the website.

Turks and Caicos lost all three games in its group.

He remembers watching the 2015 Womens World Cup with his wife and eldest daughter, drawing inspiration from American Carli Lloyd as she scored goals against Japan.

Harrington has always wanted to be a head coach and said hes been ruthless in his pursuit of that goal one he has now accomplished.

While life with TCI didnt come with titles upon titles like his time with the Galaxy did, Harringtons takeaway from that period is more all-encompassing. He learned to be a better communicator. He overcame cultural differences. He built positive and useful relationships all throughout the organization. He united everyone under a common goal.

I think thats what that environment gave me, Harrington said. It led me to get me to understand how I can do that better.

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Utah Royals' new coach draws inspiration from his time in the Caribbean - Salt Lake Tribune

Con Alma spices up its South America, Mexico, Caribbean flavors with nightly live jazz – PGH City Paper

click to enlarge

CP photo: Jared Wickerham

The interior of Con Alma in Shadyside

Con Alma has the feel of a grungy, well-traveled club with a lively, chaotic energy that fills the bar as musicians and diners compete to be heard. With this kind of ambience, the Shadyside restaurant, cocktail bar, and venue on Ellsworth Avenue pays tribute to Pittsburghs musical past while exploring the relationship between food, drinks, and live music.

The restaurant is a project of executive chef Josh Ross, general manager Aimee Marshall, and world-renowned guitarist John Shannon. Ross and Marshall teamed up with Shannon to return jazz to its rightful place at the forefront of the local music scene, while providing patrons with some of the best food and drink the city has to offer.

Ross menu takes influence from South America, Mexico, and the Caribbean, creating a list of innovative yet grounded Latin-inspired fare. Theres macaroni pie from the Bahamas, traditional Peruvian ropa vieja, and Cuban lechon asado.

A simple Jamaican beef patty was a highlight on a Latin jazz Sunday. Ross ramped up the humble, homey spices of a traditional hand-pie into something crisp and flaky, expertly engineered to avoid any seepage from the filling. A smoky, bright mojo rojo (tomato sauce) added a welcome vibrancy.

On a Saturday, Neo Soul-backed visit, pulpos al ajillo (octopus) stole the show. The robust red garlic sauce proved a brilliant pairing for the light, perfectly cooked octopus. A piece of warm roti was an unexpected component that worked surprisingly well.

CP photo: Jared Wickerham

Con Alma's roasted brussel sprouts

For the Chinese-Peruvian fried rice dish arroz chaufa, Ross swapped the traditional hot dogs for pork belly, stir-frying the meat with vegetables, egg, and a blend of soy sauce, hot peppers, and spices. It was, like many of Ross' dishes, both casual and elevated

The only misstep I noted was the jackfruit enchiladas, topped with poblano mole, salsa roja, and Oaxacan cheese. Maybe it was just by comparison to all the other rich, flavorful dishes, but these enchiladas felt a little flat and muted.

All the cocktails on the menu were solid, though the refreshingly drinkable East of the Sun tequila, yuzu, lemongrass, Thai basil, and ginger beer was a quick favorite. And since there was no in-house dessert, I turned to a second cocktail made with hazelnut espresso vodka, Maggies Farm Rum coffee liqueur, demerara, and orange bitters for a sweet finish.

Food and drink aside, it's the focus on jazz and history that makes Con Alma stand out. The restaurant has live music every night, with lineups ranging from swing to jam sessions to classic jazz. Here, it's the music that provides heart to the space, transforming it from just another Pittsburgh bar to an intimate, underground hideaway worth seeking out.

CP photo: Jared Wickerham

Cocktails at Con Alma: Carrot Sangria, Blue In Green, Satchmo's Sipper, and How High The Moon

Favorite Features

3.LeonasDessert might not be made in-house, but it is supplied by the wonderful team at Leonas Ice Cream Sandwiches.

Con Alma. 5994 Ellsworth Ave., Shadyside. conalmapgh.com

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Con Alma spices up its South America, Mexico, Caribbean flavors with nightly live jazz - PGH City Paper

20 Caribbean Destinations Where It’s Better (And Cheaper) Not To Stay At An All-Inclusive Resort – TheTravel

In desperate need of some vitamin-sea? Score a deal with these cheap (but awesome) Caribbean gems!

The Caribbean has continuously captivated tourists with its exotic charm and countless unique paradise islands. Sometimes, all-inclusive resorts just don't cut it and tourists, in turn, fail to appreciate the real beauty of the Caribbean. Believe it or not, most visitors are prone to getting ripped-off in more commercialized regions in Puerto Rico and Trinidad.

For this list, we scoured the map and unearthed some hidden and less-commercialized landmarks that can top even the best resort experience in the Caribbean. Another great thing is that they don't cost an arm and a leg (everything costs less than a hundred bucks on this list).

Find out, read on and we hope to sea you real soon in these 20 Caribbean destinations where it's better not to stay at an all-inclusive resort.

The Dominican Republic is often overlooked despite having the most alluring landmarks and attractions in all of the Caribbean. With the top-rated hotel starting as low as $40 bucks per Trip Advisor, tourists will find no problem when it comes to accommodations. Don't forget to sail your way across the coast or enjoy yachting with friends and family too.

According to SmarterTravel, Curacao is not your typical Caribbean island (it has a more European feel to it). You will be reluctant to leave once your foot hits the sand. The bubblegum-colored houses are also perfect as your social media backdrop and the region is home to over 65 dive sites and 35 beaches.

Vieques' Mosquito Bay literally outshines the other beaches with its bioluminescent spectacle every night (the brightest in the world, according to Guinness), making it the most romantic place for a night out with your special one. The main highlight, however, is how affordable it is ($50 per person).

Situated in Negril's West End, the Cliffs were once used as a backdrop in a James Bond film. Also located here are the best hotel in Jamaica (The Cliff Hotel) and the world-famous Rick's Cafe wherebrave souls dare to jump 40 ft. into theturquoise, coral-rich waters below.

Sulphur Springs Park also hides the world-famous and only drive-in volcano.There are also mud baths all over the island if you fancy some natural skin rejuvenation. St. Lucia however, is the most mountainous region in all of the Caribbean (and the most IG-worthy).

Anything is possible in the Caribbean as shown in the photo above. If you want to fully experience St. Thomas in all its glory, why not try the Nautilus Submarine Tours or the Underwater Scooter for less than a hundred bucks?

The true beauty of Turks and Caicos lies under the crystal waters so you must be prepared to get wet to fully appreciate the island. You don't need to book a thousand dollar resort to enjoy its splendor. All you need to do is book a cheap (but quality) hotel near Regent Village, just walking distance to the beachfront (Grace Bay Beach).

Only in Cozumel you can find the most affordable packages, according to Viator. The Cozumel Buggy deal includes snorkeling, a Mayan heritage tour, and a Mexican lunch by the beach for only $78. If you're on a budget, why not try the $30 glass bottom boat ride with snorkeling instead?

Nothing comes close to the serenity of Bottom Bay in Barbados. This is one of the Caribbean's hidden gems: no people, no buildings in sight, nothing but peace. It almost feels like a deserted island. Swimming, however, is only recommended for more experienced divers (the waves are brutal).

Saona Island is simply beautiful and a big slap to all-inclusives in more commercialized areas: travel by motoconcho across the island and feast on the $10 local (and delicious) meals, and finish the day by watching the sunset at Paradise Beach. Don't forget to take snaps of starfish all over the beaches.

Another "cast-away" type of island is Bonaire. According to Forbes, Bonaire is the Caribbean Island that no one knows it exists. If you want to escape civilization, come to Bonaire (where flamingos outnumber humans). This is a diver's dream: the reef-lined coast makes it a unique expedition.

Related:10 Of The Most Unbelievable & Amazing Coral Reefs

"Excellent value for money," a Trip Advisor reviewer recalled his adventure of river tubing down the rapids. Grenada's capital is known for its tropical rainforests and the Balthazar River, where thousands of tourists flock to enjoy cascading down, stopping by some natural pools and enjoying a glass of rum punch at the end.

Guadeloupe's most famous dive spot is located at Jacques Cousteau's Underwater Reserve. Aside from the optional rum-tasting tour, tourists get to dive down to underwater monuments while observing marine wildlife at its most beautiful form. Glassbottom boats are also available if you fancy a more relaxing experience.

Martinique's main ingredient is its scenery: plantations and palm trees, aside from its culinary tradition. It is a very clean island too. Don't expect a laid-back town, however (everything moves fast here), and the nightlife at Fort-de-France is really "invigorating" and a must-try.

Related:20 Warm Weather Tropical Spots To Visit (If You're Fed Up With American Winter)

To experience the best of Jamaica, Ocho Rios is where it's all at. You've got Dunn's River Falls and Park (the #1 best out of all the things to do in Jamaica according to Trip Advisor). Tourists get a taste of climbing the falls, which are perfectly safe and there is Konoko Park, which has a botanical garden and a zoo. Ocho Rios is aimed at families.

Rincon is all about surfing. As such, the beaches are small enough and built for water sporting types of tourists. There are also plenty of cheap (but quality) inns all around the island. Airbnb rentals are also common. This island is a joy for adrenaline junkies.

Saint Croix should be on everyone's bucket list. Not too fancy, not too boring either. Vacationers often overlook the "big island," as tourists like to call it and what it has to offer: Rainbow Beach and Point Udall (a neat monument). Rent a car and explore the island for $50 a day.

Related:Florida Vs The Caribbean: 20 Reasons To Choose One Over The Other

Saint Kitts and Nevis is a wonderful getaway that has a romantic aura. A great escapade for young couples: SKN features lagoons, the world-famous Bat Caves, and lagoons. According to Trip Advisor, there are over 200 natural landmarks in the region and Expedia states that hotels start from just $95 a night.

If there ever is a nightlife capital, Santa Clara would be a top contender. The old Cuban flair never gets old. Indulge in the different dive bars all over town (whilst enjoying live poetry reading, daiquiri on hand) or drink some coffee on an outdoor terrace.

This 2 mile stretch of fine powdery sand is lined up with restaurants and shops and is the perfect backdrop for the crystal clear ocean. This is the best out of all the Caribbean beaches and is in a convenient and safe area. Trip Advisor also states that the best hotel in the region starts at $85 per night which makes it arguably the perfect beach in all of the Caribbean.

Next:15 Caribbean Destinations That Are Overrated (As Shown In These Real Tourist Photos)

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20 Caribbean Destinations Where It's Better (And Cheaper) Not To Stay At An All-Inclusive Resort - TheTravel

CNN’s Rick Santorum is going on a Caribbean cruise to help a group that attacks CNN as fake news – Media Matters for America

Cruises have been a popular money-making vehicle for right-wing organizations such as MRC and National Review. MRC cruises feature the organizations staff and various right-wing personalities such as Saturday Night Live alum Joe Piscopo, Duck Dynastys Alan Robertson, and conservative columnist Cal Thomas.

Santorum is set to join the latest MRC cruise, this time to the Caribbean in February 2021. An MRC email touting his appearance suggested that guests could potentially hear Santorum trashing his employer, with an MRC marketing officer writing that the former Republican senator works at CNN, so Im sure hell have some stories to tell about what its like working in the belly of the beast!

Santorum is helping fill the coffers of an organization that echoes President Donald Trump in frequently referring to CNN as fake news. MRC has also supported restrictions on CNNs reporting. When the White House revoked CNN chief White House correspondent Jim Acostas press pass for a period in 2018, MRC ran a campaign demanding that he be kept out of the White House and asked followers to sign a petition and stand up to the entitled bullies at CNN.

Discussing CNN, Bozell recently stated on Fox Business: If they are not going to report the news, if they are not going to investigate any story, if they are not going to tell the truth, I hope it does collapse.

Santorum is one of several pro-Trump commentators that CNN has on its payroll. Two others, David Urban and Sean Duffy, acted as Trump surrogates at campaign events in the past few weeks (Urban also regularly advises his campaign).

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CNN's Rick Santorum is going on a Caribbean cruise to help a group that attacks CNN as fake news - Media Matters for America

In the Afro-Caribbean heart of Puerto Rico, locals fight erosion, government indifference – USA TODAY

Vctor Rodrguez-Velzquez, Report for America Published 7:00 a.m. ET Feb. 6, 2020

Loza, Puerto Rico, is filled with palm trees, unassuming bars, bomba music, beautiful beaches and strong-willed locals who refuse to be forgotten.

LOZA, Puerto Rico The waves crashed loudly on the collapsed ruins of the Paseo del Atlntico, a walkway that once partially protected residents here from the volatile ocean. Erosionalong this northernmost coast of Puerto Rico, nearly 20 miles east of San Juan, precipitated the promenade's destruction for more than a decade and, in 2012, it finally fell into the Atlantic, exposing the Parcelas Surez neighborhood to the water's edge.

Its 1,560 localsnow fear dailyfor their homes and lives.

Parcelas Surez straddles Lozas gloried waterfront. Its largely Afro-Caribbean communityhas little choice but to be active in the fight for its futureand holdthe federal and local government responsible for bad decision-making in planning their communities, developing projects on the coasts and the lack of follow up.

The mayors office keeps a running tally of the towns community leaders currently 32 as they search for assistance, claims and services for the nearly 25,000who reside in Loza.

In Loza, when something is missing, we work together, community leader Modesta Irizarry says. She recallsthe recovery from Hurricane Maria, in 2017, when the womenjoined forces to prepare food for people in shelters and worked to financially support their families by making and selling handicrafts.

They also joined forces to demand that the Army Corps of Engineers decide on what kind of project they would develop to protect Parcelas Surez from falling into the ocean.

A community center that was destroyed by the coastal erosion in Loza, Puerto Rico, in June 2019.(Photo: Vctor Rodrguez-Velzquez/Centro de Periodismo Investigativo)

Alexis Correa Allende, 35, witnessed the Paseo del Atlnticos ruination, along with a prized community center, and has served as his neighborhoods community board spokesman in Loza since 2012. Allende doesnt have a formal education in public administration or politics; he is driven by concern for the safety of his neighbors and by his outrage at how the government continues to turn its back on his town.

Report for America: I returned home to report on poverty in California. We're strained, but not broken.

He carries a folder of plans, coastal erosion studies and federal proposals alongside meeting notes, letters, emails and arguments he has made on behalf of the community before the Department of Natural Resources and Lozas municipal government, as well as the resident commissioner, Jenniffer Gonzlez-Coln, Puerto Rico's sole representative to the U.S. Congress.

As spokesman, Allende pushed the Corps of Engineersto allocate $5.2 millionin funds for the construction of a breakwaterto protect the coastline and residents here. That money was allocated in 2018, but construction has yet to break ground.

Meanwhile, the waves continue to encroach.

The Lozamunicipality is a place of narrow streets and pastel corners, each of which lead inevitably to the ocean. The city is filled with palm trees and "chinchorros,"traditional, unassuming bars or shops where residents, called Loiceos, drink together and sell fried local food and natural coconut water.

The Loiceos are noble people, fighters who descend from enslaved Africans brought to this Spanish colony from the early 1500s.Most were located in towns on the coasts, such as Loza, to work the sugarcane fields. Rare amid Puerto Ricos jibaro culture,which imagines a white, Puerto Rican countryman ideal,the Loiceos defend fiercely their African heritage.

As opposed to11% of all Puerto Ricans, 38% of Loza residents identify as black, a conservative figure, according to several community leaders.

Report for America: Connecticut's 'monument' to tough-on-crime era sits almost empty as justice reforms shine

Historically, Loza is largely forgotten by the government, private industry, the news media and Puerto Ricans themselves. Over 50%of its population lives in poverty, according to 2019 Census estimates. But its crystal beaches, lively gastronomy and culture survive, such as "bomba,"a traditional dance and musical style rooted in the island's history of slavery, and which has evolved into an expression of Afro-Puerto Rican culture.

People here have long fought for their communitys future. Like the coconut seller who asked a reporter to move as he knocked fruit from the tree, locals find creative ways to maintain their livelihood, to survive. And they attribute that survival to their African heritage. It can be seen in the colors of their clothes: yellow, green and red. Or in the turbans some women use in their hair. But this heritage can also be glimpsed in Lozas cuisine, in which fish, salmorejo (a tomato puree), juice, cassava, banana and coconut standout.

Modesta Irizarry, a community leader, in Loza, Puerto Rico, in June 2019.(Photo: Vctor Rodrguez-Velzquez/Centro de Periodismo Investigativo)

In Loza, the cradle of black culture in Puerto Rico, dishes are eaten by the sea after theyve been worked with a kind of Afro-Tano technique, then cooked on a buren, a clay surface heated by stones. Here, the coconut trees and gastro tradition are as fundamental to the areas identity as the sea. But it hasnt been easy to maintain the richness of that heritage as the community simultaneously battles poverty, a declining population,eroding coasts and the ever shifting challenges of U.S. presence in Puerto Rico, where it has had authority since 1898, only one year after the island established self-rule from Spain.

The sea demands the space that we take away, says Irizarry, sitting before an eroding Loza beach. Parcelas Surez"has been struggling for years."

Whether it can persevere in sustaining the community and culture that distinguish Loza is to be seen.

Vctor Rodrguez-Velzquez covers finance and government for Centro de Periodismo Investigativo. This dispatch is part of a series called On the Ground with Report for America, an initiative of The GroundTruth Project. Follow him on Twitter: @Viktor_Rodz

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In the Afro-Caribbean heart of Puerto Rico, locals fight erosion, government indifference - USA TODAY

Microplastics Are New Homes for Microbes in the Caribbean – Lab Manager Magazine

The different plastic types in jars, cut into micro-sized pieces before deployment in the ocean.

Kassandra Dudek

With 5 trillion pieces of plastic in the oceans, the dynamics of marine environments are shifting in ways that are yet to be discovered. Over time discarded plastics, such as sandwich bags and flip-flops, have degraded into small particles, called microplastics, which are less than 5 mm long. Kassandra Dudek, a former Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) fellow and doctoral student at Arizona State University, looked at how marine microbial communities colonize microplastics in Panama.

She took the six common plastic types found in most household items, such as water bottles or milk cartons, and cut them into tiny pieces before submerging them in the tropical waters of Almirante Bay, at STRI's Bocas del Toro Research Station. Since Panama acts as a catch basin for marine debris in the Caribbean due to its geography and interaction with oceanic currents, it is a prime location for the study of plastic pollution.

"The major goal of the study was to assess differences among plastic types, and I wanted to ensure these plastics were also environmentally relevant," Dudek said. "Consumer items found in everyday households are the plastics polluting our beaches and oceans. It is estimated that roughly 4.8-12.7 million tons of plastic enter the marine environment annually."

After a month and a half, she noted that marine bacteria were not picky about the surfaces where they chose to settle. They formed biofilmsbuildups of bacteriaon all plastic types, using them as artificial reefs and creating 'plastispheres,' a type of ecosystem found on human-made plastic environments.

The research platform at the Bocas STRI station, where the microplastics were deployed.

Kassandra Dudek

However, some diatoms, which are photosynthetic microalgae, did exhibit a preference for plastic type. Research has shown that hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria, or bacteria that may be capable of degrading plastics, can be associated with diatoms. This dynamic may ultimately prove convenient, as it could potentially promote the degradation of microplastics.

"I wish to further explore this diatom-hydrocarbon degrading bacteria relationship and assess if diatoms help to recruit hydrocarbon degrading bacteria to a plastics' surface," Dudek said.

Dudek speculated that microplastics could also serve as a vehicle for toxic and disease-causing organisms. These contaminated microplastics could potentially be dragged from the coasts to the open oceans via currents, to be swallowed by fish or sink and affect the benthic communities on the ocean floor, but much research remains to be done regarding the role microplastics play in the transportation of pathogens.

"Only about one percent of marine plastic debris is recovered at the ocean's surface, meaning the other 99 percent likely either sinks or is consumed by marine organisms," Dudek said. "I am currently exploring the role microplastic biofilms have in a microplastic's degradation and sinking capacity in different marine environments."

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Microplastics Are New Homes for Microbes in the Caribbean - Lab Manager Magazine

Costa Rica’s Caribbean Region, Exotic and Full of Fun Waiting for You to Visit – The Costa Rica News

The Caribbean region of Costa Rica is probably one of the most beautiful and least known areas of Costa Rica. With a warm and rainy climate, this is a place where you will find tropical nature with amazing wildlife, fantastic adventures, exciting cultural events, incredible beaches and comfortable and varied accommodations for your enjoyment.

The Caribbean region of Costa Rica is located in the province of Limn, which goes from the southern border with Panama to the San Juan River that divides Costa Rica from Nicaragua. Its three main areas are the north, Puerto Limn and the south that reaches the border of Panama.

North Caribbean, Colorado:

The Barra Del Colorado is a 92,000-hectare refuge composed of tropical rainforest and wetlands that host a great diversity of flora and fauna. Traditionally Colorado has been very popular among fishermen.

Tortuguero National Park.

To the north, a small but impressive labyrinth of canals in the middle of lush rainforest, full of exotic wildlife, Tortuguero is a paradise for nature lovers and a national symbol for its stunning landscapes. It is also well known for giant sea turtles that reach the 22km long coast, especially from July to September to dig their nests in the sand and lay their eggs.

Puerto Limn.

This is the main town of the province; it has a port where thousands of cruise ships arrive constantly during the fall and winter months. Thus it is always full of incredible activities that can be enjoyed without enduring large crowds.

Getting there.

If you want to go to the Caribbean region by air, you can use the routes available from San Jos airport. There are three main airports on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica. Colorado, Tortuguero, and Lemon. To the south, in Costa Rica, you will not find any commercial airport or airfields. In Bocas Del Toro there is an international airport. The distance from San Jos to Tortuguero is 130km. To get to Tortuguero and Colorado by land, you have to take route 32 or the road through the town of Turrialba.

History.

Although Christopher Columbus visited these lands in 1502, Costa Rica was originally colonized only on the Pacific side. The dense exuberance of the rainforests of the Caribbean coast and the harsh conditions of the mountain landscape in addition to the very brave indigenous resistance at that time made it impossible for the Spanish to enter on this site. The fact that our land had very little gold compared to other American lands such as Peru or Mexico also discouraged early colonization.

In the colonial years, there were some attempts to grow cocoa in the region but the continuous invasions of English privateers and pirates who raided the Caribbean coast eventually turned it into an isolated and uninhabited place with what remained of the indigenous populations to live in the mountains.

The climate.

The Caribbean side of the country has a hot and humid climate throughout the year; its average temperature is 30 degrees celsius, however on a hot September day it can go all the way up to 40. The sunny season occurs in March-April and then again in September-October, although sometimes it happens that the sun season begins in January or February and only gets rainy if there is a strong cold front coming from the north. And even in the rainiest part of the season, there are long periods of sunny days with sudden storms and downpours.

We encourage you to pack your bathing suit, shorts and sandals, the Caribbean region of our country will be waiting for you with its arms open.

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Costa Rica's Caribbean Region, Exotic and Full of Fun Waiting for You to Visit - The Costa Rica News

How the USVI Is Rebranding St Croix – Caribbean Journal

St Croix, the US Virgin Islands largest island, is getting a new tourism identity.

USVI tourism officials have launched a full-fledged rebranding of St Croix, with a new push aimed at educating travelers on the unique features of the island.

The USVI is calling it St Croix: A Vibe Like No Other, and, more importantly, its a new approach for the USVI giving each of the islands in the territory a unique brand.

We believe that St. Croix is going to be the big new attraction for tourism in the Caribbean, said United States Virgin Islands Commissioner of Tourism Joseph Boschulte, who said the people, cuisine, history and culture of the destination, coupled with its laid-back vibe, will help position St. Croix as a go-to Caribbean destination throughout a new marketing campaign.

Through the eyes, art and expertise of Crucians we can present the breadth and depth of experiences the island has to offer. Through chefs, mixologists, musicians, tour guides, artisans and other professionals we will explore the Crucian vibe, Boschulte. I am excited to roll out our marketing strategy to position St Croix as a destination with its own identity and one whose tourism potential is limitless.

The rebranding comes as St Croix is in the midst of a tourism renaissance, from new hotels like The Fred in Frederiksted to reimagined historic properties like Company House in Christiansted and what is one of the hottest culinary scenes in the Caribbean.

Indeed, St Croix saw a 7.9 percent increase in tourist arrivals in 2019 compared to the previous year, the commissioner said.

This year the island is poised for more growth, with two of its major resorts set to reopen for the first time since Hurricane Maria.

That includes the all-inclusive Divi Carina Bay and the Renaissance St Croix Carambola Beach Resort (which is opening this year, according to Marriott).

After the hurricanes of 2017, impacted islands saw major dips in arrivals with reduced accommodations inventory, said Boschulte, who was speaking at a briefing at the recent CHTA Caribbean Travel Marketplace conference in Nassau. However, two years later, airline capacity on St. Croix is actually ahead of pre-storm levels; with continued hard work and focus, we expect that trend to continue.

That includes a third American Airlines daily flight set to launch from Miami in June.

The news also comes as St Croix was recently named the number one destination to visit in the Caribbean in 2020 in Caribbean Journal.

We like what St Croix has to offer, Boschulte said.

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How the USVI Is Rebranding St Croix - Caribbean Journal

Turks and Caicos Is Getting Its First Dream Hotel – Caribbean Journal

Turks and Caicos Is Getting Its First Dream Hotel

New York-based Dream Hotel Group is planning a big expansion in the Caribbean, and that will now include a hotel in Providenciales, Turks and Caicos.

The company will be opening The Bight by Dream Hotel Group in Provo, with plans to debut in 2022.

The by Dream Hotel Group moniker is a new brand for the company, which has a collection of marques from Time to Unsripted to Chatwal, among others.

The Bight will actually be one of two new By Dream Hotel Group projects in the region, along with a recently-announced hotel in the pipeline in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. (Indeed, Dream Hotel Group is planning an even broader expansion in the Caribbean across several of its brands, including Unscripted Hotels.)

The residential resort will be set in West Grace Bay, the brainchild of Turks and Caicos EA Group.

EA Groups roots are based in the Turks and Caicos. They have an intimate knowledge of the culture, as well as extensive expertise and understanding of the market. They are innovators with a vision to bring something new, fresh and authentic to the region, saidDream Hotel Group CEO Jay Stein.

The residential resort will have 66 units across six levels, with custom interiors and elevated views over Turks and Caicos most iconic beach.

It will be a hip, fresh alternative in Provo, with everything from a vegetable garden to a gym to an event space called The Barn.

Ryan Jones, director of EA Group, said the hotel was designed to be an authentic, experiential project.

For our key feeder markets, especially New York City, this is a powerful push not just in terms of the hospitality factor but also the desirability of the real estate product, said Joe Zahm, president of Turks and Caicos Sothebys International Realty, which is handling the real estate component of the property.

Caribbean Journal first reported the launch of The Bight last year.

As one of the most sought after and naturally beautiful destinations in the world, the Turks and Caicos Islands have proven year over year to be the market leaders for hotel tourism and real estate sales in the Caribbean, addedJeff Donnelly, Vice President of Development, Dream Hotel Group. The Bight by Dream Hotel Group is an exciting collaboration between some of the best minds in hospitality, and Im thrilled to bring this partnership forward.

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Turks and Caicos Is Getting Its First Dream Hotel - Caribbean Journal

Greening Finance: Averting the climate crisis existential threat to the Caribbean – South Florida Caribbean News

By Meegan Scott

TORONTO, Canada At the Toronto Centres climate finance talks in Ottawa, Timothy Antoine, Governor of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) said theclimate crisis is an existential threat to the Caribbean.

With climate risk emerging as thehot and urgent issuefacing theglobal financial sector,leaders and citizens of the region have good reason to be on edge.

Antoine and fellow panelists Nezha Hayat, Chairperson and CEO of the Moroccan Capital Market Authority (AMMC) and Anthony Nyong, Director of Climate Change and Green Growth at the African Development Bank (AfDB) recently called for thespeeding up of efforts to green financewithin Caribbean and African countries in order to ward of the catastrophic threats posed to the regions by global warming and the resulting climate crisis.

Antoine cited the case of Dominica where tropical storm Erika wiped out 90% of GDP in 2015; fast on its heels in 2017 hurricane Maria caused damage totaling 226% of its GDP.

Monster storms, now devastate across countries instead of sections of them. Those typical 100-year phenomena have not only intensified, they now occur in two-year periods. Next to no time is being left for financial or ecological recovery.

He further pointed out that some Caribbean islands would be under water by the 2100s, if financial resources were not rechanneled to provide more and new climate finance to the region.

The panel of financial regulators pressed home the need for developed countries including top emitters like Canada to live up to their moral obligations to reduce their investments in the brown economy. That is economic development or brown growth that relies on the use, production of and trade in fossil fuels such as coal, oil, gas and related activities that dramatically increases carbon emissions and are environmentally damaging.

The speakers expressed gratitude to Canada for its significant contribution in helping them to tackle the challenges posed by climate change, but were steadfast in their call for Canada to do more.

Each panelist highlighted the work that their region is carrying out to combat the crisis including greening finance.

They stressed their need for help with developing strategy guidelines, roadmaps, legal infrastructure, financial risk assessment, awareness creation within their financial sectors, and general how-to, in addition to finance in order to deliver the needed and desired results that could save their countries.

High on their wish list was more capacity building support from the Toronto Centre for Global Leadership in Financial Supervision (Toronto Centre). They were speaking at the fireside chat Greening Finance: Climate Change and its Impact on the Worlds Financial System.

The event was hosted by the Toronto Centre in celebration of International Development Week (IDW) which was observed between February 2-8, 2020.

This year marks the 30thedition of the celebrations which are convened by Global Affairs Canada. The theme of this Years celebration isGo for the Goals.

Greening finance requires the alignment and direction of financial flows towards sustainable low-carbon industries and the climate change targetsincluding the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The need to better manage environmental and social risks, take up opportunities that delivers both a decent rate of return and environmental benefit as well as greater accountabilityis a fundamental part of the process (United Nations Environmental Programme, UNEP).

Delivering SDG 8,decent work and economic growth and upholding the duty of fair share inbenefits and burdens necessary to win against the dangers of climate change presents a sustainability and growth dilemma for developed and developing countries.

Case in point is Canada, relies heavily on the brown economy for its growth. Figures presented by theCanadian Energy Research Institute (CERI, July 2019), shows that while Canada champions combating climate change it invests heavily in oil sands development which is expected to contribute over $1.0 trillion to the Canadian economy from 2019 2029. The investments are also expected to generate growth from 332,847 jobs in 2018 to 532,673 jobs in 2029. Government will use taxes from these activities to finance healthcare, education and public infrastructure (CERI).

All disastrous outcomes which are neither farfetched nor in the distant horizon.

Last November, Canada made headlines on the reputational risk front when The Riksbank, became the worlds first to exit public debt because of climate exposure, when it sold sub-sovereign notes from Queensland, Western Australia and Alberta, Canada as a result of their high levels for carbon emissions.

Ignoring the call of developing countries to reduce emissions could present sudden existential threats to developed countries.

In last months report the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), warned that A future climate disaster orgreen swaneventcould bring down the global financial system a sentiment echoed during the discussions by Babak Abbaszadeh, President and CEO of the Toronto Centre. Like the monsters storms in the Caribbean the green swan event comes like a violent thief in the night.

Despite the herculean challenge Caribbean and African countries made it clear that they were not about playing a blame game in the battle against climate change, even though they are carrying 80% of the burden while contribution under 4% of emissions.

Nyong, says Africa is a solutions provider, 54 African countries have signed their commitments to reduce emissions. They have established knowledge sharing hubs, legal support for matters relating to climate change, and disaster reduction strategies.

The Caribbean now has the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF) which payouts in 14 days after a disaster; and disaster linked hurricane clauses which provide a loan repayment holiday after a disaster; they are also pursuing geo-thermal energy market development as part of owning their responsibilities.

Besides Jamaica the pursuit of catastrophe bonds (cat bonds) have not been successful, Antoine wants to see more citizens investing in the Eastern Caribbean Stock Exchange for wealth and capturing the opportunities presented by cat bonds.

Antoine cited further barriers such as the use of income per capita as a measure for financing which does not work for the region. He illustrated, when hurricane Katrina hit the USA the cost was 4% of GDP, but the monster storms in Dominica and another country cost more than 200 % of GDP. An entire island gets destroyed. He argues for change and was unapologetic in stating that the US $100 bn commitment made by 197 countries at21stConference of Parties (CoP21)in 2015 was not enough.

Nezha Hayat and Christine Hogan, moderator and Deputy Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Government of Canada, made case of SDG 5 (Gender equality). Hayat has delivered remarkable results in that regard, but she points out the importance of political commitment and the changes implement under King, Mohammad VI with the 2004 family code in making the changes possible. Hogan says, the business case for gender equality is there but challenges exist.

The bottom line: developed countries must reduce emissions, developing country and developed country leaders in the financial sector, citizens and the private sector can no longer ignore the risks posed by climate change to the financial sector and their economies.

The Toronto Centre is funded by Global Affairs Canada, The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA), The IMF and World Bank.

About the author: Meegan Scott, B.Sc. Hons, MBA, ATM-B, CL, PMP., is Jamaica-born Strategic Management Consultant, at Magate Wildhorse Consulting in Toronto & New York. This is a syndicated article.

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Greening Finance: Averting the climate crisis existential threat to the Caribbean - South Florida Caribbean News

Digital Nomad: Poker players of the Caribbean – Daily Maverick

Image by Pixabay

La vida loca baby. The crazy life.

Here on Caye Caulker, the little island off Belize where Im living. (My intended stay of two days has stretched into three weeks. Its hard to leave paradise.)

Wake up at 6.30. Have a smoke on the balcony and check out the tequila sunrise splotching the sky. Theres always a lone great white egret standing Masai-like on one leg in the sea. It hangs around the same spot all day, and I wonder what its story is.

Waiting for its long-lost mate? Scrounging fish from the nearby boats? Nothing better to do and nowhere better to go?

Whatever the story, I guess it lives with no egrets. (Ahem)

Then I walk down to Beans and Ice and order a large dark with milk. Gaze at the Caribbean Sea, flick glances at the young women swaying in hammocks attached to palm trees, finish my cup of jolt and walk through the mangrove swamps to South Pointe at the far end of town.

Turn around at the end of the dirt track and head back to Lenas, the ramshackle clapboard turquoise structure that I call home.

By now its 9am and time to work. Subediting for Daily Maverick, which involves wrestling with issues of great import.

Is our style SONA or Sona? Should this which not be a that? Square brackets or curved? eSwatini or Eswatini? Subeditor or sub-editor?

Interestingly, the authorities are divided on the last question, with the Oxford Dictionary and Collins Dictionary favouring subeditor, and the Cambridge Dictionary sub-editor. The Guardian and Observer Style Guide has it as subeditor, and in the section under that heading notes:

WP Crozier said of CP Scott: As a subeditor he got rid of the redundant and the turgid with the conscientiousness of a machine that presses the superfluous moisture out of yarn. The man who passed seaward journey to the great metropolis, and when the copy came back to him found written in firm blue pencil voyage to London, knew what sort of English CP liked.

At 3pm (11pm South African time) works over, and its time to head to the Barrier Reef Sports Bar for lunch and a beer. Or two. Happily, its Happy Hour (3pm-6pm) and a draught Belikin beer costs only four Belizean dollars about R30.

Theres always a colourful crowd of regulars at the bar, many of them Canadian swallows who come here during the brutal northern winter. Its minus 30 degrees Celsius at home today, theyll gleefully tell you, beads of sweat rolling down their face and globules of condensation sliding down their beer glass.

Theres a couple of women knocking back tequila shots, they stagger or wend their wobbly way home on bicycles at four in the afternoon; theres Mandingo, a giant dreadlocked man who wears knee-length striped socks, shorts and an Ancient Greek-looking helmet made of palm fronds. They say Mandingo is the village shaman, and for sure, he has the otherworldly look of a man who communes with the spirits. Or smokes heaps of ganja.

Boozers, losers, assholes, angels, rogues, renegades, seekers, speakers, thinkers, doers, jokers, smokers, wannabes and has-beens everyone here has a story, theyre all interesting for at least five minutes. Some for a lot longer than that, and Ive made a couple of friends at this bar.

One of them, former Rifleman Gary Rifle of the Queens Own Rifles of Canada, introduced me to the poker game thats played here. Its Texas Hold-Em, tournament-style, with a 50 Belizean dollar buy-in. Tournament-style means that the blinds the compulsory bets posted by the two players to the left of the dealer go up every half hour, so that if you havent amassed a sizeable stack of chips midway through the game, you can no longer afford to play and have to take outrageous risks in a last-ditch bid to remain.

A lot like life, come to think of it.

Unlike life though, in poker you are expected to dissemble, to misrepresent, to beguile, bamboozle and deceive, to hoodwink, dupe, delude, mislead and entrap. In other words, you gotta get real.

However, its also expected that you win graciously and lose gracefully. Theres no place at the table for blowhards and sulkers, but you can get away with a short-lived grin of triumph or a brief moment of petulance. If you really must.

The players at the game on Caye Caulker are a mixture of Canadians, Americans, and locals: Tommy, who deals in real estate and is one of the islands renowned musicians, singing his heart and lungs out at jam sessions and Karaoke Evening. Angie, his wife, blonde and buxom. Chris with the corkscrew curls and impish sense of humour. Dirty, a loud American, who seems to bluster his way through the game and then traps you with a move straight out of David Slanskys Hold Em Poker for Advanced Players .

The locals, most of them young and lean: Baby, Daniel, Major, Norman. Then theres Harry, an old guy who plays an unorthodox but strangely effective game that seems to rely on intuition and precognition. The young men call him Mr Harold.

We play upstairs at Tappers Sports Bar theres a wall camera focused on the table, and they can watch us in the bar downstairs. When one of us wants a fresh drink he waves his glass or bottle at the camera, and pretty soon a fresh libation arrives a bottle of Belikin beer with a slice of lemon squeezed in its neck, rum punch, Cuba Libre, mojito, whatever

Someone once said, The man who invented poker was smart, but whoever invented chips was a genius. He was right. Our chips are weapons that conduct exploratory feints, instruments of war that frighten and pulverise; they are questions that demand answers; swaggering braggarts that kick sand in your face.

And the story with chips is, you gotta speculate to accumulate. You dont play, you cant win.

The game itself, as the late, great Norman Best an old warrior and former diplomat I played poker with back in Cape Town once said, is a microcosm of the macrocosm. He meant that it mirrors life, with its highs and lows, its waves of fortune and ill-fortune, the feelings of joy and despair that it engenders.

They play poker just about every day and most nights on Caye Caulker, and soon the days took on a well-defined shape. Sunrise, coffee, walk, work, lunch, beer(s), swim, nap, poker.

At some stage, I realised that I was down a few hundred dollars in the game, and that it was time to leave paradise.

Former Rifleman Gary Rifle hired a 44, and we headed for San Ignacio, a little town in the jungle. Its famed for its weekly farmers market and as the gateway to a number of natural attractions.

Next morning we drove for a couple of hours along jungle dirt roads and headed for the Mountain Pine Ridge Forest Reserve. Where the film director Francis Ford Coppola has an upmarket lodge, and we stopped there for a couple of beers.

The place was reminiscent of a movie set, and we could have been actors in a Coppola film, but, alas, not the leading men. Perhaps two renegades, battle-crazed and war-weary, styling it up in some south-east Asian jungle lodged appropriated from a heroin-addled Frenchman. Or a couple of old Mafia consiglieres hiding from the young capos who wanted to make us swim with the fishes.

Then we headed for Rio On, a place of little waterfalls and beautiful river pools. There were many young women there, basking in their bathing costumes, laughing, flicking their long hair, sirens if ever there were.

I knew they were sirens when they called me, their beautiful voices floating on the wind like wisps of smoke:

Sugar Daddy Sugar Daddy Sugar Daddy, they said.

I gave a wry grin, and advanced no further. I knew from reading the Odyssey and watching the movie Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? what would happen if I did:

Them si-reens will kill you, boy. ML

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Digital Nomad: Poker players of the Caribbean - Daily Maverick

UN Official: Virus Will Cause Supply Shortages in Caribbean – The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) A senior official of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) says Latin America and Caribbean countries (LAC) will suffer disruptions to their supply chains as Chinese production of goods has come as a result of the coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak that has killed more than 1,000 people in the Asian country.

Notably, today the Chinese government announced that it will delay reporting its January trade data. Commodity prices will also likely be impacted by a slowdown of the Chinese economy. Chinese oil demand, for example, is already being reported to have dropped by 20 per cent by some news outlets, said Luis F Lopez-Calva, the UNDP Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Lopez-Calva, who is also the UN Assistant Secretary-General, said that resilience is one of the main pillars of UNDPs regional and Caribbean narrative and key foundation to promoting sustainable development in the region.

History demonstrates that in the region volatility is the norm and not the exception, and that the development trajectories of countries are not monotonic. Resilience is the ability to return to a predetermined path of development in the shortest possible time after suffering from an adverse shock.

He said that a new source of potential volatility has emerged and while it is too early to fully grasp its impact, a recent threat to the macroeconomic stability of the region is the 2019-nCoV.

How strong will the impact of the virus be on Chinese growth, how it will translate to a slowdown in the region, and how prepared is the region to weather these impacts, are all questions to be determined, he said, noting that what we know so far is that the coronavirus is spreading at a rapid pace and has resulted in a halt of economic activity in China, as the government limits the mobility in and out of the country.

He said while more than 31,000 have been infected, over 600 casualties and cases reported in 28 countries, it is very likely that the impact of the virus on Chinese growth and commodity prices will represent a shock to the region.

Lopez-Calva said Latin America and the Caribbean is significantly exposed to China, as economic relations between the two have soared in the past decades, particularly through trade and FDI and lending.

He said trade between China and LAC increased from US$12 billion in 2000 to US$306 billion in 2018 and is indeed Latin Americas second-largest trading partner.

He said three years ago China represented already nine per cent of Latin Americas total exports and 18.4 per cent of total imports.

Similarly, foreign direct investment (FDI) and lending from China have surged in Latin America and the Caribbean over the past decade.

Between 2005 and 2017, Chinas investment in the region represented five per cent of total FDI, more than US$90 billion.

According to Inter-American Dialogue, China has positioned over US$141 billion in loans into the region since 2005, which represents more than the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the CAF Development Bank of Latin America combined.

The full extent of the impact of the coronavirus will ultimately depend on how well the outbreak is contained, but it is expected that Chinese growth in the first quarter of the year to fall sharply and rebound later in the year, Lopez-Calva said.

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UN Official: Virus Will Cause Supply Shortages in Caribbean - The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer