Darren Criss, John Boyega star in scripted podcast ”There Be Monsters” – Outlook India

Los Angeles, Aug 4 (PTI) Hollywood stars Darren Criss and John Boyega are set to feature in sci-fi thriller podcast "There Be Monsters".

According to Deadline, the podcast hails from iHeartRadio, FlynnPictureCo, Psychopia Pictures and UpperRoom Productions.

The 10-part narrative series is about Jack Locke (Boyega), a mysterious hero with a vendetta who infiltrates a Silicon Valley body hacking startup run by an enigmatic CEO Max Fuller (Criss), whose highly secretive creations promise to enhance human biology in incredible ways.

"There Be Monsters" is produced byBeau Flynnof FlynnPictureCo,Dan Bushof Psychopia Pictures and Boyega''s UpperRoom Productions.

It will be available on iHeartPodcast Network later this year.

Boyega, best known for his role of Finn in the "Star Wars" franchise", will next star in drama "Naked Singularity", alongside Olivia Cooke, Bill Skarsgard, Ed Skrein, Linda Lavin and Tim Blake Nelson.

Criss most recently starred in Ryan Murphy''s Netflix series "Hollywood" and war drama "Midway". PTI RB RB

Disclaimer :- This story has not been edited by Outlook staff and is auto-generated from news agency feeds. Source: PTI

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Darren Criss, John Boyega star in scripted podcast ''There Be Monsters'' - Outlook India

Elon Musk’s Mysterious Neuralink Chip Could Make You Hear Things That Were Impossible to Hear Before – Tech Times

The mysterious Neuralink chip was previously in the headlines when the founder of the company, Elon Musk, said that the chip will be able tostream musicstraight into the wearer's brain--and now, the tech CEO has revealed more details about it.

(Photo : Hannibal Hanschke/REUTERS)Elon Musk shared new detail about the mysterious Neuralink chip.

Hear Beyond Frequencies and Amplitudes

In a report by Independent, Musk revealed that the chip will allow the wearer to hear things that they weren't able to hear before as it was out of a human's hearing range, meaning the Neuralink chip can be used to "extend range of hearing beyond normal frequencies and amplitudes."

Additionally, and perhaps even more interesting and exciting, is that the mysterious chip will apparently be able to help restore movement for people with a fully severed spinal cord.

If that proves to be true, it could help millions of people who have had spinal injuries and were unable to move since then, providing the best and perhaps the only cure available on the market.

Read Also: iPhones Can Soon Process Credit Card Payments With a Simple Tap as Apple Acquires Mobeewave for $100M

How will the Neuralink Chip Work?

But what is this Neuralink chip, exactly?

Elon Musk founded the company back in 2016, but until now, the CEO has only made one major presentation about how the technology they are developing will work.

Ultimately, the company's goal is to create a direct link between the brain and a computer.

They will be able to do this by using a "sewing machine-like" device that will "sew" threads to the implanted brain chip, which would then connect to a single USB-C cable that enables "full-bandwidth data streaming" to the brain.

This is based on the research paper that the company's scientists have published last year.

Furthermore, the company's CEO plans to enhance the chip's capabilities and allow mankind to compete with artificial intelligence.

Nevertheless, their first iterations of the Neuralink chip is to help people with neurological issues and brain disorders like Parkinson's and depression and anxiety.

As of now, Musk has only been sharing snippets of the Neuralink chip's prowess through a series of tweet, but he is planning on holding an event on August 28 that will hopefully talk more about the mysterious chip and will finally provide the public with more information on its features and the technology behind it.

The Goal to Overcome AI

Besides the chip's capability to stream music straight to our brain, it apparently could help regulate hormone levels of the wearer and provide "enhanced abilities," such as relief from anxiety and greater reasoning skills.

Through the mysterious chip, Musk believes humanity could overcome AI.

He had always been vocal about his fear that humanity could be wiped out or overcome by artificial intelligence in a theory known as the Singularity.

In an interview with theNew York Times, Musk predicted that AI could overtake humans in the next five years based on the current trends, but he also said that it "doesn't mean that everything goes to hell in five years. It just means that things get unstable or weird.

"My assessment about why AI is overlooked by very smart people is that very smart people do not think a computer can ever be as smart as they are," he said. "And this is hubris and obviously false. We are headed toward a situation where AI is vastly smarter than humans and I think that time frame is less than five years from now."

Read Also: China Reportedly Weighing Antitrust Probe Into WeChat Pay and Alipay

This article is owned by TechTimes.

Written by: Nhx Tingson

2018 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

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Elon Musk's Mysterious Neuralink Chip Could Make You Hear Things That Were Impossible to Hear Before - Tech Times

US offshore energy industry releases economic impact study of offshore wind auctions – WorldOil

8/4/2020

WASHINGTON - The United States has an opportunity to accelerate offshore wind energy growth, and benefit from 28 new gigawatts of clean energy and $1.7 billion in U.S. Treasury revenue by 2022, a new study released today from research group Wood Mackenzie finds.

Findings from this study confirm additional lease areas are needed to meet demand, reduce energy costs, increase competition, and ultimately generate thousands of jobs and billions in investment. Additionally, the findings offer guidance to decision-makers about new offshore wind leases, which can be a short-term solution to jump start recovery from a coronavirus pandemic-driven economic slowdown.

Commissioned by four energy industry groups, American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA), New York Offshore Wind Alliance (NYOWA), and the Special Initiative on Offshore Wind (SIOW) at the University of Delaware, the study dives into the economic impact of offshore wind activities as a result of potential Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) lease auctions in 2020, 2021 and 2022. Based on existing activities and policy assumptions for future offshore wind development, two million acres of federal waters in the New York Bight, which includes parts of New Jersey, as well as California and the Carolinas, could be auctioned for commercial leases as early as this year as well as in 2021. Such leasing could support 28 GW of offshore wind development and generate $1.2 billion in U.S. Treasury revenue. Other auctions for lease areas in the Gulf of Maine and areas in California could happen in 2022 and would generate an additional $500 million in U.S. Treasury revenue.

Significant capital investment will be put into the U.S. economy to support offshore wind activities. Total investment in the U.S. offshore wind industry will be $17 billion by 2025, $108 billion by 2030 and $166 billion by 2035. From 2022 to 2035, capital investment of $42 billion will go to turbine manufacturers and the supply chain, $107 billion will go to the construction industry, and $8 billion will go to the transportation industry and ports. Annual capital investment for O&M activities will increase to $2.4 billion in 2035.

In addition to delivering clean energy to millions of households, the offshore wind industry will also contribute a variety of economic benefits to the U.S. economy, including supporting tens of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in capital investment. If the assumed BOEM auctions in 2021 and 2022 happen, total full time equivalent (FTE) job creation from the resulting offshore wind activities, including development, construction and operation will be approximately 80,000 jobs annually from 2025 to 2035.

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US offshore energy industry releases economic impact study of offshore wind auctions - WorldOil

Amendment requiring 6000 MW of offshore wind by 2035 clears Senate – Wicked Local Bridgewater

TuesdayAug4,2020at4:34PMAug4,2020at4:34PM

Dean of the Massachusetts Senate Marc R. Pacheco, D-Taunton, filed an amendment unanimously passed by the Massachusetts State Senate July 29 requiring a total solicitation of 6000 MW of Offshore Wind by 2035.

Offshore Wind is a critical source of renewable energy and a major piece to the foundation of our clean energy future here in the Commonwealth, said Pacheco, founding chair of the Senate Committee on Global Warming and Climate Change. According to recent estimates, Vineyard Wind and Mayflower Wind together offer approximately $2.5 billion in direct savings for Massachusetts ratepayers, over 9,000 new local jobs and the elimination of approximately 3.3 million metric tons of CO2 annually the equivalent of taking 675,000 cars off the road. I am extremely pleased to have secured the passage of this offshore wind amendment that will create new jobs, improve our public health with cleaner air, and help drive down greenhouse gas emissions.

The commonwealth currently has authorization to procure a total of 3200 MW of offshore wind under existing law, but the two 800MW projects by Vineyard Wind and Mayflower Wind already under agreement account for half of that capacity. Although Massachusetts was an early leader among the states to solicit offshore wind, New York, New Jersey and other states on the Atlantic coast have begun to contend for their own share of the offshore wind marketplace.

Amendment 139 of An Act enabling partnerships for growth sponsored by Pacheco, Offshore Wind Development, would upgrade the states procurement limit by requiring the solicitation of a total of 6000 MW of offshore wind by 2035, raising the existing level an additional 2800 MW.

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Amendment requiring 6000 MW of offshore wind by 2035 clears Senate - Wicked Local Bridgewater

Indonesia: COVID-19 – New Presidential Regulation Disbands the Offshore Loan Coordination Team (PKLN) – Lexology

In brief

Disbanding of the Offshore Loan Coordination Team (PKLN)

On 20 July, the government issued Presidential Regulation No. 82 of 2020 on the Handling Committee for Corona Virus Disease (COVID-19) and the Recovery of the National Economy ("PR 82"). Under PR 82, the government officially disbanded several government institutions, one of which is the Offshore Loan Coordination Team ("PKLN Team"). The PKLN Team was formed under Presidential Decree No. 39 of 1991 on Coordination of the Management of Offshore Loans ("PD 39").

The functions of the PKLN Team include coordinating the management of offshore loans of the government, state-owned enterprises and private companies, and determining the priority of offshore loans for development projects. In carrying out its functions, the PKLN Team (i) received periodical reports of offshore loans and (ii) provided approval to, among others, offshore loans related to government projects or provided to state-owned entities.

We understand that the functions of the government institutions that are disbanded under the regulation will be transferred to the relevant government bodies or ministries. PR 82 stipulates that the functions of the PKLN Team will be transferred to the Ministry of Finance ("MOF").

PR 82 also revokes PD 39 but it does not revoke Presidential Decree No. 59 of 1972 on Obtaining Offshore Loans (PD 59). Under PD 59 (i) offshore loans obtained by state- or regional-owned entities need prior approval from the MOF and (ii) offshore loans need to be reported periodically to the MOF.

Key takeaways

Since PD 39 has been revoked and the PKLN Team disbanded, it is possible that the MOF will enhance its role as stipulated in PD 59 to issue approvals for certain offshore loans and receive reports on offshore loans. It is unclear whether or not the MOF will conduct its functions using PD 59 (and its implementing regulations) as a guideline, or issue new implementing regulations to align the procedure in PD 59 with the current market conditions. We will provide further updates once there is an implementing regulation, socialization or further development of this regulation.

PR 82 was issued to deal with the impacts of COVID-19 in Indonesia and the recovery of the national economy by forming new task forces and committees such as (i) the Policy Committee, (ii) the COVID-19 Task Force and (iii) the Recovery and Transformation of the National Economy Task Force.

PR 82 also disbands several government institutions and revokes several regulations related to those institutions because (i) the duties and functions of those government institutions may overlap with the duties and functions of other government institutions, or (ii) because the functions of those institutions can be more efficiently performed by other government institutions. The disbanding of some government institutions and the revocation of several regulations by PR 82 would also help the government to reduce the state budget expenditure.

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Indonesia: COVID-19 - New Presidential Regulation Disbands the Offshore Loan Coordination Team (PKLN) - Lexology

German Offshore Wind to Hydrogen Project Takes Off – Offshore WIND

rsted and its partners have secured funding for the Westkste 100 renewable hydrogen project in Germany.

The partners received funding confirmation from the German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy as the first large-scale hydrogen project in Germany within the Reallabor (real-world laboratory) framework.

The Westkste 100 project aims to research and develop an approach to produce green hydrogen from offshore wind energy and to use the resulting waste heat and oxygen. The purpose of the project is to make industrial processes, aviation, construction, and heating more sustainable in the future.

Westkste 100 is our third hydrogen project and the first one in Germany found eligible for public funding, and were very excited about the prospects of supporting heavy industries and heavy transport with clean alternatives based on renewable hydrogen, Martin Neubert, Executive Vice President and CEO, rsted Offshore, said.

The project has a total budget of EUR 89 million. The approved funding for the project, starting on 1 August 2020, amounts to EUR 30 million.

A total of ten partners have joined forces to form the consortium: EDF Germany, Holcim Germany, OGE, rsted, Raffinerie Heide, Stadtwerke Heide, Thga, and thyssenkrupp Industrial Solutions, together with the Region Heide Development Agency and the Fachhochschule Westkste (West Coast University of Applied Sciences).

This project is unique because it uses offshore wind power for large-scale hydrogen production. Only offshore wind can provide such a reliable renewable source of green power for the electrolysis, Volker Malmen, Managing Director, rsted in Germany, said.

This requires that the expansion of renewables and offshore wind power is balanced with the increased demand for hydrogen production. We believe that renewable hydrogen is key to decarbonize industrial sectors. The Westkste 100 project is a cornerstone in our efforts to lead the way in renewable hydrogen as we are doing in offshore wind, to create a world that runs entirely on green energy.

Phase 1 Can Now Start

With the grant approval from the German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy, the Westkste 100 project can now enter its first phase which includes a number of elements.

A newly founded joint venture, H2 Westkste GmbH, consisting of EDF Germany, rsted, and the Heide refinery, intends to build a 30-megawatt electrolyser.

This can produce green hydrogen from offshore wind energy and provide information on the operation, maintenance, control, and grid services of the plant.

Furthermore, pipeline transportation of hydrogen and the use of hydrogen in existing and new infrastructure around Heide will be tested.

The consortium will also initiate the work to develop the vision of a large-scale sector coupling including a 700 MW electrolyser system into a concrete project. This will require a significant R&D and engineering effort, the partners said.

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German Offshore Wind to Hydrogen Project Takes Off - Offshore WIND

Digital projects to reduce costs and offshore manning levels are progressing – News for the Oil and Gas Sector – Energy Voice

Despite its rich heritage of engineering ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit, the oil and gas industry has been traditionally slow to adopt new technology. However, following the protracted downturn in recent years, this changed dramatically with companies much more open to collaborate on new technology and keen to embrace digital innovation in a bid to reduce costs and deliver ever-greater efficiencies.

The drive towards the energy transition and the quest to achieve net-zero operations has fuelled this renewed appetite for digital and data-driven applications. Moreover, the coronavirus-imposed lockdown has forced the whole industry to work remotely, further accelerating the use of data-driven, digital platforms and solutions.

This fast-changing landscape is providing fertile ground for Scotlands data and AI innovation centre, The Data Lab. With a mission to help Scotland maximise value from data, we are on-hand to help the energy industry innovate through data.

Every organisation generates and gathers data; its what you do with it that can be truly transformational. Collaboration is the most effective way to break new ground using data science. But applying data science to solve energy-related solutions can be challenging. Working collaboratively with energy companies, we can provide the cutting-edge skills and in-depth knowledge to make the most of their data. Leveraging our network, we can match businesses with the right academic or specialist partners to deliver multi-party collaborations, to scope and manage a specific project, wherever a company is in its data journey, and to help access external sources of funding.

There are some great examples of project-specific data projects in the energy industry, whether its virtual inspections or detecting equipment malfunctions through to using data to drive efficiencies in bed-space offshore. However, the business transformation models which can be achieved across an entire organisation with a joined-up approach, rather than just a project by project basis, have yet to be fully realised. And this is where The Data Lab can come in. We can work with energy companies on two levels: firstly through our leadership training which equips leaders with the skills they need to devise a data strategy and secondly through our new advisory business service, TORCH, to then accelerate data-driven innovation and change.

With many new data science technologies less than five years old, companies are often unaware of the latest trends and developments. Our leadership training interactive workshops take people beyond the hype surrounding data and AI and demonstrate how companies can drive real value across their business through better use of data. Armed with this know-how, business leaders can then develop and de-risk data strategies which are wholly applicable to their own business.

TORCH enables those who have developed a data strategy to overcome the challenges faced when embarking upon new data projects. By investing effort into the early stages of a data project, the quality of the outcomes can be improved, and risks reduced, of particular importance in the later and more expensive phases of any data journey.

Navigating the complex data technology and services marketplace can be confusing and time-consuming. In response to this, our experts support clients by acting as a critical, unbiased friend, partnering organisations with a network of Scottish-based companies that have proven expertise in delivering solutions.

It was recently reported that dozens of projects run by the Oil and Gas Technology Centre (OGTC) are facing delays or cancellation due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Nearly half of the 150 live schemes underway from the Aberdeen technology accelerator have been affected by the virus, as operators who help test them defer non-essential spending. Those focussed on exploration and helping to produce more oil and gas, particularly those requiring offshore trials, have been hit hardest. However, digital projects like robotics, wearable technology, and predictive modelling, helping to reduce costs and offshore manning levels, are still progressing. The Data Lab is keen to support companies in taking these types of projects forward, whatever their size and wherever they are on their data journey

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Digital projects to reduce costs and offshore manning levels are progressing - News for the Oil and Gas Sector - Energy Voice

This hybrid offshore wind farm will be a green energy supergroup – Electrek.co

Oil giant Shell and Dutch utility Eneco have won a tender to build a super-hybrid offshore wind farm in the Netherlands. It will consist of two sites located 11.5 miles (18.5 km) off the west coast, near the town of Egmond aan Zee.

The Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy selected the Shell/Eneco consortium, CrossWind, to build the Hollandse Kust (noord) project. CrossWind will pair the offshore wind farms with floating solar facilities and short-duration batteries. They will also generate green hydrogen via an electrolyzer, according to GreenTech Media.

Hollandse Kust (noord) is expected to be operational in 2023 with an installed capacity of 759 MW, generating at least 3.3 TWh per year.

Maarten Wetselaar, director of Shell Integrated Gas and New Energies, said:

Offshore wind will play a pivotal role in the worldwide energy transition. It will also be another important next step in our ambition to become a net-zero emissions energy business by 2050 or sooner, in step with society.

The Hollandse Kust (noord) is one of three offshore wind areas the Dutch government chose to develop by 2023. The Netherlands intends to reach around 11GW of installed offshore wind capacity by 2030.

Shell wants to reach net zero by 2050 by selling more green energy to reduce its carbon emissions, as Electrek reported in April. It wants to build a green hydrogen plant in Rotterdam, and the Hollandse Kust (noord) offshore wind project is part of that plan.

It also wants to use Hollandse Kust (noord) to power a 200-megawatt electrolyzer for one of its ownrefineries. Thats part of its larger plan to develop anumber of green hydrogen plantson the Dutch coast to feed multiple refineries this is its transition that Wetselaar refers to above.

And dont underestimate the power of money or lack thereof. Shells earnings report today was dire: The companys profits plummeted 82% in the second quarter. Yet its CEO, Ben van Buerden, said, I am very pleased that we have weathered what was probably the most difficult quarter in living memory very well.

So if it wants to survive, it must reposition itself quickly, and this is what its doing here with this new offshore wind project and plans for green hydrogen. But a truly credible transition plan from Shell would mean that it stopped drilling for oil and gas entirely.

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This hybrid offshore wind farm will be a green energy supergroup - Electrek.co

Energi Coast to Map North East England Supply Chain – Offshore WIND

North East Englands offshore wind cluster, Energi Coast, is starting a project which aims to produce a comprehensive report of the regions supply chain capabilities in the offshore wind industry.

The supply chain mapping project will identify the range of capabilities available throughout North East England to support offshore wind developers and contractors identifying locations with extensive supply chain expertise to base onshore operations, or to tap into the collaborative capabilities of North East England companies, Energi Coast said.

In addition, the project aims to identify innovations being developed and where transference of skills from other sectors can be utilised for the future of the offshore wind industry, as well as pinpointing any gaps that might exist in the regions capabilities.

The project will be managed by energy sector business development organisation NOF working with a dedicated task group, which includes Energi Coast Chairman James Ritchie, and representatives from developers Equinor, RWE and SSE Renewables, alongside GE Renewable Energy and ORE Catapult.

North East England has become a key region for the offshore wind industry both in terms of developments such as the 3.6 GW Dogger Bank Wind Farm and the RWE Sofia Offshore Wind Farm, and its supply chain cluster.

We welcome this initiative, it presents a good opportunity to demonstrate what the region can deliver to the offshore wind industry, Halfdan Brustad, Vice President for Dogger Bank Wind Farm project, said.

This project will assist us in navigating the regions broad range of capabilities, which is deeply needed for us as new entrants. The Dogger Bank projects will be located at Port of Tyne, and this mapping will give us a valuable insight into the capabilities and innovation potential for our industry.

Sofia Offshore Wind Farm Project Director David Few said that the 1.4 GW project has ambitions for more than 50 per cent UK content.

Few has encouraged the North East England suppliers to engage with the supply chain mapping work which would give as broad a picture of the region as possible and understand what goods and services can be sourced from the area.

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Energi Coast to Map North East England Supply Chain - Offshore WIND

Scarecrow Saves Offshore Wind Farm Substation from ‘Carcinogenic’ – Offshore Engineer

A scarecrow system designed to prevent the costly issue of seabird droppings on offshore wind farms has proved successful in a year-long trial with Galloper Wind Farm, Scaretech Global, the developer of bird deterrents said.

Per Scaretech, Seabird poo or guano is a huge problem for the global offshore wind industry as it poses a serious health risk, "due to its highly carcinogenic qualities," and is extremely expensive and unpleasant to remove.

A Scaretech system was installed on the substation at Galloper Offshore Wind Farm, 27km off the Suffolk Coast, in July 2019 to address the guano problem.

According to the company, the scarecrow has reduced guano on the structure from approximately 50-60% coverage "to virtually nothing."

Galloper Offshore Wind Farm, which is operated by RWE Renewables, comprises 56 wind turbines and powers more than 380,000 UK homes.

Kieron Drew, Interim Operations & Maintenance Manager at Galloper, said: There is an abundance of seabass around our Galloper site, which attracts large numbers of seabirds. These in turn generate significant quantities of guano, which poses an unpleasant health and safety hazard for us.

We were looking for a solution and, after considering more expensive options, decided to trial Scaretech. This is a new innovation for the wind industry and it certainly worked for us. Once we installed the Scaretch device, we saw dramatic reductions in the amount of guano. In fact, the problem is now almost non-existent," Drew said.

Scaretech is extremely robust, maintenance-free and solar-powered so after installation, we were able to just forget about it. Its been a fantastic asset and has saved us a considerable amount in clean-up costs and technician time.

This is the second time Scaretechs guano solution has been successfully trialed, with an initial four-week pilot also showing strong results, Scarerech said.

Rent-a-Scarecrow

The Scaretech device is based on a traditional scarecrow concept - used successfully for centuries to keep birds off crops - and adapted for the harsh offshore environment of a wind farm or oil platform. Designed to look like an offshore wind worker in full protective clothing, Scaretech is manufactured from steel, flexible foam, and PVC and powered by solar panels. It is fixed to the offshore structure so it can operate in extreme weather conditions.

As well as simulating a human, Scaretech emits sporadic loud noises and high-intensity strobe lights which deters seabirds from landing on the structure.

Terry Christie one of the developers of the ScareTech scarecrow, said: This trial with Galloper wind farm is a game-changer for us and shows once and for all that Scaretech is an extremely effective, long-standing solution for the guano problem.

We knew of the systems potential from our previous trial but this data now proves that just one Scaretech can protect an area as large as a substation or helideck from guano for 12 months and longer. Over time, the birds never become accustomed to the device and simply stay away from it.

This is fantastic news for the offshore industry. Any health and safety matrix highlights the need to eliminate hazards if at all possible, and Scaretech certainly does this for guano.

Weve taken the simple bird deterrent of a scarecrow- tested over hundreds of years - and updated it with the latest, state-of-the-art technology to enable it to withstand the extreme weather conditions offshore. Scaretech works beyond everyones expectations and we now plan to launch a low-cost monthly rental option to enable the offshore sector to benefit from this proven solution.

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Scarecrow Saves Offshore Wind Farm Substation from 'Carcinogenic' - Offshore Engineer

Drilling reveals further resources at Yellowtail offshore Guyana – Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

The drillship Stena Carron has completed appraisal drilling at Yellowtail-2 offshore Guyana.

(Courtesy Stena Drilling)

Offshore staff

NEW YORK Two contracted drillships have resumed operations on the Stabroek block offshore Guyana, according to partner Hess.

Operator ExxonMobil had temporarily halted operations due to COVID-19 related travel restrictions in Guyana.

Recently the Stena Carron completed appraisal drilling at Yellowtail-2, 1 mi (1.6 km) southeast of the Yellowtail-1 discovery.

The well identified two additional good-quality reservoirs, one adjacent to, and the other below the Yellowtail field. The partners are assessing this additional resource to help support a possible future development.

Discoveries offshore Guyana.(Map courtesy Hess)

Earlier this month Noble Don Taylor spudded the Redtail exploration well, 1.25 mi (2 mi) northwest of Yellowtail-1. Two more drillships, the Noble Bob Douglas and Noble Tom Madden, are drilling and completing the Liza Phase 1 and Phase 2 development wells elsewhere on the block.

07/29/2020

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Drilling reveals further resources at Yellowtail offshore Guyana - Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Third option for president, and her name is Dr. Jo Jorgensen. – Holmes County Times Advertiser

FridayJul31,2020at12:01AM

Dear Editor,

The 2020 presidential election is both an important one, and (already) a discouraging one in terms of its outlook. Neither major party seems to be in touch with the interests of ordinary Americans. However, there is a third option, and her name is Dr. Jo Jorgensen.

Dr. Jorgensen is the Libertarian Party candidate for president, and she will be on the ballot in Florida. Her platform is essentially about maximizing freedom and bringing government back to within its Constitutional limits. Among her positions are: abolishing the federal DOE, DHS, and ATF (to name just a few agencies); eliminating penalties for victimless crimes such as drug possession; bringing the troops home from overseas and ending U.S. involvement in foreign wars; eliminating the federal deficit; and abolishing the federal income tax so that Americans can keep more of their hard-earned money.

Dr. Jorgensen is formerly a lecturer and professor of psychology at Clemson University, and has also been a homemaker as well as a founding CEO of a technological software corporation. Her achievements speak for themselves. Most importantly, however, she would provide a fresh voice to a broken system of government that has done little to better the lives of its citizens. And for that reason, I would urge those reading to consider her as you think of who to cast your vote for in November. Her website can be viewed at http://www.jo20.com. Thank you.

John Gibson, Vernon

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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Third option for president, and her name is Dr. Jo Jorgensen. - Holmes County Times Advertiser

Two Arrested in Connection with Organized Retail Crime – The Daily Ridge

On July 24, 2020, the PCSO Organized Retail Crime Unit arrested two suspects who stole merchandise from a Home Depot and a Lowes located in Lakeland. The investigation began when loss prevention personnel from the stores contacted detectives about a series of organized retail thefts that occurred on three different occasions.

On April 22, 2020, security video footage from Lowes in Lakeland shows 44 year-old Shenicka Whittington leaving the store with Yeti brand coolers and laundry detergent totaling $552.89. Whittington did not pay for the merchandise.

On May 21, 2020, Whittington was seen removing several Yeti brand items from the same Lowes store without paying for the merchandise. The stolen merchandise totaled $209.97.

On July 24, 2020, detectives responded to Home Depot where they observed Whittington exit the store with a shopping cart full of merchandise. Her boyfriend, 55 year-old Joseph Lamar was standing next to a vehicle waiting for Whittington.Through witness statements and video surveillance, detectives learned Whittington and Lamar had entered the Home Depot store a total of three times on this day. They removed fuel boxes, a gas pressure washer, chainsaws, a reciprocating saw, Bluetooth headphones, and other items totaling $3,028.83. These items were found in Whittingtons shopping cart and the couples vehicle.

Retail theft is not a victimless crime. It hurts businesses and consumers in the wallet. We are holding these thieves accountable they are both career criminals. Just one look at the long list of charges, and the fact that Whittington is already on probation for the same thing, and you know they have no respect for the judicial system. These are serious crimes and there will be serious consequences.Grady Judd, Sheriff

Lamar was charged with Coordinated Retail Theft (F-3). Lamars criminal history includes 17 felonies and 18 misdemeanors, which includes 4 prior theft convictions.

Whittington was charged with Coordinated Retail Theft (F-3), False Name to Law Enforcement (M-1), and Violation of Probation Felony Petit Theft/3rdConviction (M-2). Whittingtons criminal history includes 41 felonies and 34 misdemeanors, which includes 23 prior theft convictions. Whittington is also being detained on warrants for theft out of Orange and Hillsborough Counties.

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Two Arrested in Connection with Organized Retail Crime - The Daily Ridge

Pima County Candidates Battle Over Whether the Prosecutor’s Office Needs an Outsider to Achieve Reform – The Appeal

Political Report

In this Arizona county with over one million residents, two career prosecutors are facing off against a former public defender in the Aug. 4 Democratic primary, which will decide the election.

Update (Aug. 4): Laura Conover prevailed in this primary election.

The prosecutors office in Pima County, home to Tucson and over one million residents, is sure to change hands this year. Whether that coincides with policies more amenable to criminal justice reform remains to be seen.

Barbara LaWall, who has run the powerful county attorneys office and its $40 million budget for nearly 25 years, is stepping down. Three Democrats, and no other candidates, are running to replace her, so the Aug. 4 Democratic primary will decide her successor.

During her 24 years in office, LaWall helped fill state prisons with punitive practices toward substance use and sentencing; she also fought legislative efforts to reduce the states harsh sentencing statutes. Last summer, for instance, she joined the Republican county attorney in Maricopa County (Phoenix) to successfully urge the states GOP governor to veto a bipartisan reform that would have prevented prosecutors from alleging Hannah priorsa practice unique to the state in which prosecutors are allowed to charge people as repeat offenders if their indictment includes multiple charges, even if they have never been convicted of anything in the past.

Some meaningful policy differences have emerged among the three candidates who are attempting to replace LaWall, and at least two are voicing support for upending some of her approach. Still, none of them are making the sort of bold commitments to shrink the scope of criminal justice seen in other prosecutor elections, including in neighboring Maricopa County.

Instead, the most significant contrast between them may be their professional backgrounds, and how their past activities shape their credibility to change Pima Countys culture.

Two of the candidates, Mark Diebolt and Jonathan Mosher, are longtime deputy prosecutors in Pima County. Diebolt has been a deputy county attorney for 23 years. Mosher is currently the chief criminal deputy in LaWalls office.

Laura Conover, the third candidate, is a criminal defense attorney and former public defender. She told The Appeal: Political Report that the fact that she has not prosecuted a case in LaWalls office is my strength, not my weakness, since they need a person from outside to shift that culture. Some progressives around the country are making a similar case that achieving criminal justice reform requires electing people without a prosecutors background.

Indeed, aspects of Diebolt and Moshers records in the county attorneys office have drawn rebuke, or sparked worries among some local proponents of reform.

Diebolt has received multiple reprimands while at the county attorneys office, including for not disclosing exculpatory evidence and for failing to respond to motions by defense counsel. He did not answer repeated requests for comment from the Political Report. His website mixes some support for diversion programs with conventional tough-on-crime rhetoric promising to go after the worst of the worst.

Mosher, meanwhile, is making some commitments that conflict with past decisions he has made, and with the policies of LaWall, who has endorsed him.

He has pledged not to seek the death penalty if elected, but he signed a death notice in a case as recently as February 2019. He says that he supports assigning special prosecutors to investigate police use-of-force cases, but he was the chief criminal deputy when a Pima County sheriffs deputy was not criminally charged for body slamming a teenager with no arms or legs at a group home in November. A spokesperson for Mosher told the Political Report that Mosher had taken a leave of absence to run for office by the time the decision not to file charges was made, though he was still at work during the first few months of the investigation. Mosher says he would greatly expand deflection and diversion programs for drug possession cases, and points out that he used to struggle with addiction himself, but for years he has held a leadership role in an office that filed a thousands of felony cases last year for drug offenses (nearly three-fourths of those involved less than two grams).

Mosher told the Political Report that he would lobby for criminal justice reforms if elected, as did Conover.

An analysis of the candidates policy positions, and phone interviews with Conover and Mosher, also unearthed contrasts in their stated goals. (Diebolt did not reply to requests to elaborate on his views.)

The Pima County Attorneys Office has a history of being especially punitive when it comes to drug-related crimes. Drug cases have been the most common type of felony charge in the county for 14 out of the last 17 years, according to the public defenders office.

All three candidates have said they would not prosecute people for personal possession of marijuana, and all three talk of expanding diversion and deflection programs as a way to keep people struggling with substance use out of prison. However, none of the candidates indicated another type of drug charge they would decline to prosecute.

Conover talks less about reducing the prison population or about reducing the scope of things that are criminalized than about shifting the priorities of the office.

We will be reframing that $40 million budget so we are going after those who are harming our community, which is going to move us away from all this low-level, victimless stuff, she told the Political Report. She mentioned drug paraphernalia as an example of a charge her office wont be prioritizing. When asked what she meant, Conover explained that her office would still be bringing charges for such offenses, but would steer defendants toward social services and out of the criminal justice system.

Conover uses similar language when asked about decriminalizing behaviors besides substance use. For example, she said that prosecuting sex work would not be a high priority for her office. Consensual adults, we are not spending resources on that under my watch, she said.

Some other candidates who have run for prosecutor on a progressive platform have taken more clear-cut commitments to not prosecute sex work, or drug possession up to a certain quantity. Our courts are the least healthy way to treat people struggling with addiction, a medical issue, Will Knight, who is running in Maricopa County, told the Political Report three weeks ago.

Mosher also did not say he would decline to prosecute any charges other than marijuana possession, and he has raised concerns about the safety implications of going further in decriminalization, stating for instance that that the county still must protect our children from drug sales and drug use, and we must protect our roadways from impaired drivers. He has said that he wants to expand diversion and treatment opportunities for people arrested for drug possession, and also for other offenses that stem from poverty such as loitering, to avoid incarceration.

I have already begun working to develop a new pre-indictment drug diversion program for those arrested on felony drug possession charges, Mosher said in an ACLU questionnaire. This would allow arrestees to avoid ever being indicted and charged with a felony crime, creating an earlier exit from the criminal justice system than is available under the current Felony Drug Diversion Program. Mosher told Political Report that there would be no fee to participate in the pre-charge diversion program for people arrested on felony drug possession charges, and that he expected at least 1,600 and perhaps as many as 2,000 participants per year, depending upon the numbers of arrests for drug possession made by law enforcement officers.

Neither Conover nor Mosher ruled out prosecuting overdose deaths as homicides, a punitive reaction to the overdose crisis that public health advocates decry but LaWall has used.

As county attorney, LaWall lobbied against efforts to curb mandatory minimum sentences and to limit other practices that lead to especially harsh sentences.

Earlier this year, she filed a lawsuit challenging a ballot initiative that would give judges greater discretion in sentencing, expand opportunities for early release to some prisoners, and end the use of Hannah priors, which allow prosecutors to charge people who have never been convicted of a felony as repeat offenders.

Mosher has distanced himself from LaWall on expanding early release. He supports the Second Chance Initiative, and says he even circulated petitions to help get it on the ballot. (Conover supports it as well.)

More broadly, Mosher and Conover both told the Political Report they would use their position to lobby for such criminal justice reform measures at the legislature, flipping LaWalls history of using the office to push against them.

When asked what steps they would take as prosecutors to reduce very long sentences, Conover and Mosher have said they would move away from certain practices, like stacking charges, which means bringing as many charges as possible against a person or alleging every historical prior felony conviction in an effort to increase the sentence.

But neither committed to instructing their office to never seek such charges, again stopping short of commitments taken by some Democrats in neighboring Maricopa County. (Diebolt did not respond and has not elaborated upon his stances on this issue elsewhere.)

We can create policies that require our prosecutors to seek justice and not vengeance, Conover told the Political Report. Stacking charges, seeking consecutive sentences, and historical priors have all been used questionably. Id like to put an end to all of those practices. She later clarified that she would allow highly trained and mentored prosecutors to retain discretion to use such practices.

Mosher similarly said he opposes alleging historical priors or stacking charges, and he too qualified his response, allowing that he may use those practices if pursuing that approach is both legally correct and necessary to protect community safety while increasing the opportunity for rehabilitation. Similarly, he said he would prefer judges to have discretion to deviate from mandatory minimums when those minimums are clearly inappropriate, but also seemed wary of allowing judges to have such discretion, noting that it is what let Stanford swimmer Brock Turner off the hook with a lenient punishment for sexual assault.

Conover has earned the endorsement of Mass Liberation, a group that seeks to end mass incarceration in a state that has one of the highest incarceration rates in the country. (Mass Liberation has advocated for extensive sentencing reforms in the legislature in recent years.)

All three candidates have publicly stated that they would not seek the death penalty if elected. Arizona is one of 28 states that still allows the sentence. Since 1992, the state has executed 37 people; 13 of those people have come from Pima Countymore than any other county in Arizona.

This is another issue where the candidates track records differ greatly. In the 1990s, Conover was the education chairperson of the Coalition of Arizonans to Abolish the Death Penalty, and she says this was her entry point into activism.

Mosher calls the death penalty a waste of taxpayer money. On Feb. 8, 2019, though, he signed a notice stating the county attorneys office will seek the death penalty against Christopher Matthew Clements, who is charged with first-degree murder, kidnapping, and sexual exploitation of a minor in relation to the deaths of two young girls.

Asked how that action squares with Moshers stated opposition to the death penalty now, his spokesperson told the Political Report, Those actions dont show that he would seek it at all. They show that he is a person who has a boss [LaWall]. That was her decision. Mosher added that he argued against the death penalty in this case in internal deliberations.

LaWall has historically opposed criminal justice reform, said Joel Feinman, who serves as the chief public defender in Pima County. (Feinman emphasized that he was speaking in his personal capacity as a criminal defense attorney and not on behalf of the public defenders office.) Their policy clearly is they put the highest priority on prosecuting low-level drug offenses. Thats a horrible policy. Thats exactly the opposite of what we should be doing. That just shows you are not a good steward of public budgets, and you do not understand substance abuse.

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Pima County Candidates Battle Over Whether the Prosecutor's Office Needs an Outsider to Achieve Reform - The Appeal

These states are happiest with their standard of living – YouGov US

There is a clear correlation between household income and happiness with one's standard of living.

According to YouGov data, satisfaction with living standards does get more likely as household income rises, but it appears to level off after the $200,000 mark, suggesting diminishing returns the more money one makes.

However, money doesnt always seem to equal happiness: nearly all states whose residents are most likely to say they are happy with their standard of living have median household incomes below the national average, according to the United States Census. Residents of these states are also either less likely to be worried or as worried as the rest of the country about serious personal financial issues because of the pandemic.

Residents of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, New Mexico, and Arizona are most likely to be happy with their standard of living, according to a survey of 60,886 Americans between July 2019 and July 2020.

According to YouGov state-level data, three-quarters (75%) of North Dakota residents agree with the statement I am happy with my standard of living. The midwestern state, whose resource-based economy has hinged on volatile oil prices, has seen a lower-than-national-average unemployment rate. While that number has increased during the COVID-19 crisis, it still is lower than the rest of the country. North Dakota also has a higher median household income than the rest of the United States. Ongoing data collected by YouGov regarding COVID-19 concerns shows a little more than half (56%) of North Dakotans are worried their finances will be severely impacted by the virus, which is in line with the rest of the country in general (54%).

South Dakota has lower-than-average median household incomes, but lower unemployment than the rest of the country. Most (74%) of residents of the agricultural state say theyre happy with their standard of living. South Dakotas financial worry around COVID-19 is roughly in line with the US in general, YouGov data shows.

Most residents of Montana, also heavily dependent on oil, say theyre happy with their standard of living (74%). While median income falls below the national average, YouGov data shows Montana residents (46%) are less likely than the general US population to be worried about their finances or personal health because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Moving further southwest, 72 percent of residents of New Mexico say theyre happy with their standard of living. Trading higher incomes for warmer weather, New Mexico has a median household income below the national average, though its unemployment rate has generally been under the national figure. As the coronavirus-fueled recession takes hold, financial worry in New Mexico is line with the rest of the country.

Next door, most residents of Arizona also seem pleased with their lot in life, with 71 percent saying theyre happy with their standard of living. The Grand Canyon States unemployment rate is slightly below that of the United States but has a median income below the national average. Despite that, Arizona residents (52%) are less likely than the country to be worried about their finances because of COVID-19.

At the bottom end, residents of Kentucky (60%), Nevada (60%), Arkansas (59%), Rhode Island (58%), and Oklahoma (56%) are less likely to be happy with their living standards.

Tell your own story with data from YouGov. Contact uspress@yougov.com for more about our datasets.

Methodology: Standard of living data is based on a sample size of 60,886 US Adults aged 18+ who were asked their agreement level with the statement: I am happy with my standard of living. Response options: Definitely agree, tend to agree, neither agree nor disagree, definitely disagree. Responses were collected between July 2019 July 2020. The responding sample is weighted to provide a representative sample of the United States. Financial worry is based on a sample size of 94,683 US Adults aged 18+ who were asked: How much are you worried that each of the following might occur as a result of COVID-19 (coronavirus) outbreak? (That my finances will be severely affected) Response options: Very worried, fairly worried, not very worried, not at all worried, N/A - this does not apply to me, dont know. Responses were collected between May July 2020. The responding sample is weighted to provide a representative sample of the United States.

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These states are happiest with their standard of living - YouGov US

Here’s how we can make health a core part of the global economy – World Economic Forum

Our obsession with GDP, globalisation and economic growth has failed to take into account the impact on health and the environment.

We need to recover from this collapse in a way which is good for people, planet and the economy. We need a Great Reset. Could "currencies" based on health and well-being be the answer to creating the thriving cities of tomorrow?

GDP has come to dominate economics at the expense of many other things that make life worth living. GDP is powerful because money serves both as a day-to-day means of exchange understood by everyone and a unit of account at national and international levels. Money, therefore, links the worlds of micro-economics and macro-economics of money in our wallet and national policies and politics.

However, GDP is not a good measure of progress. We propose now that health be the currency for the Great Reset. We are working to adapt the concept of "quality adjusted life year", or Qaly, to give us a measure of well-being that links individual health to global health the new worlds of micro-health-economics and macro-health-economics.

There is nothing more important to us as individuals than our health, happiness and wellbeing. Happiness and wellbeing may be more elusive to define, but health has been defined by the World Health Organisation as a state of complete physical, mental and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity. The word health itself comes from the Old English for a state of wholeness.

Every action we take and every transaction we make can improve or reduce our own health or the health of others, either directly or indirectly. Some effects are obvious; eat more green vegetables and your chances of cancer are reduced. Smoke a cigarette and you can harm both your health and the health of those in your immediate vicinity. Some are less obvious; invest in education and you invest in better health outcomes. Buy local food and you reduce the risk of diseases spreading through a globalized economy. Things are more complex than this, of course, but you get the idea.

We have long recognised that social and economic factors affect our health. If you are well-educated and wealthy, generally your health is better. But the importance of environmental factors is becoming increasingly recognised. At a local level, air pollution affects respiratory health. At a global level, climate disruption is now considered by many public health professionals as the single biggest threat to health far bigger than even the coronavirus. It will increase mortality and morbidity more than any other single factor. Likewise, we are recognising that loss of biodiversity (and other planetary boundaries) can have thresholds that, when exceeded, destabilize the biosphere, affect everything from water availability to crop yields and thus, in turn, impact on our health. Leading health institutions such as the Wellcome Trust now talk about Planetary Health.

We now have huge amounts of data on every conceivable part of our social, economic and environmental systems. Conceptually at least, we can track every transaction in our economy and link it to likely health outcomes. We know what is likely to increase health for the individual, the community and the planet. We can also see the possibility to steering our transactions in the direction of that elusive sweet spot where individual, community and planetary health are all maximised.

To implement our emerging knowledge of planetary health, we have two types of options: using information for down-top direction of our economies to generate health (eg through taxation or regulation), or bottom-up based on the information in transactions in a free-market type operation. The former might be considered easier and is in line with conventional socialist doctrine where the state corrects for externalities. The latter is a new form of market economy based on information embedded in each transaction. In practice, we should deploy both mechanisms for maximum benefit.

For a health-generating free market to work, we need to able to account for the health generated or destroyed by any transaction, so we can value transactions on their health-generating potential. Where for instance that organic fairtrade cup of coffee can be valued properly. This needs a new unit of account to go alongside money, implemented perhaps as a loyalty points system rewarding transactions which boost health by building social and natural capital. But what unit of account could possibly account for impacts as diverse as climate change and cancer caused by smoking a cigarette? And could any such unit of account remain sufficiently robust in the face of scientific scrutiny for it to useful for international governance?

We are working to adapt the Quality Adjusted Life Year or Qaly to serve this function. One Qaly is one year in perfect health. It has been developed by the health profession to help decide, in a resource-constrained world, which medical treatments it can afford and which it cant afford. Of course, it is not the only decision-making mechanism, but it is a useful tool it gives us an indication of what will probably bring more health and what will bring less.

Conceptually, we can imagine calculating the impact on an individuals Qalys from smoking a cigarette, or the impact on the health of the global population of carbon emissions resulting in climate disruption. Every transaction from buying a cigarette to buying a litre of gasoline or that fairtrade organic cup of coffee can be valued in terms of Qalys. In this way, health becomes the currency of the new economy. As data grows and knowledge improves, our estimates of Qalys improves too. Our economy gets better and better at generating health. Individual, national and global Qaly accounts link micro-economics to macro-economics, individual choice to government policy.

We live in the strangest of times. We have increasing data and knowledge, yet the future has never looked less secure. We have been tied to an economy which drove inequality, exposure to fast-spreading disease and environmental destruction to the extent of existential crisis. We have an unprecedented opportunity. We need the Great Reset. Imagine an economy where, alongside financial information, health information is carried too. Just as free operation of markets create financial efficiency, so being able to value and trade in health can create health efficiency.

Imagine then, a world where health is the currency.

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Here's how we can make health a core part of the global economy - World Economic Forum

Tawazun to build, develop Satellite Assembly, Integration and Testing Centre – Emirates News Agency

ABU DHABI, 5th August, 2020 (WAM) -- Tawazun Economic Council has formed a collaboration with Airbus and the National Space Science and Technology Centre, NSSTC, from UAE University, to build and develop a Satellite Assembly, Integration and Testing, AIT, Centre with the aim of manufacturing components and assembling, integrating and testing small to medium satellites.

The AIT Satellite Centre will develop and build communication, navigation and hyperspectral satellites ranging in size between 50 and 250 kilogrammes and it is planned to commence operations at the beginning of 2021.

The Centre will be based at the NSSTC facilities in Al Ain, with Airbus supporting NSSTC during the design, outfitting and commissioning of the facility. Airbus will also manage the procurement, installation and operational qualification required for the equipment.

The collaboration was established and facilitated by Tawazun as part of its important role as an industry enabler dedicated to driving a collaborative defence and security ecosystem, securing and progressing technology development, and building national competencies and skills within the UAE.

"This is our second project after Yahsat, and there are many more projects to come, as Tawazun works to further develop the UAE space sector," said Matar Ali Al Romaithi, Chief Economic Development Officer of Tawazun. "The UAE is building and acquiring the knowledge required to become a regional hub for space activities and advanced research and development. This Centre is an integral part of those plans and consequently Tawazun has worked to make sure that it operates as a sustainable resource for the next five to seven years with a view to becoming permanent."

"We also value the significant contribution that Airbus is making to the Centres sustainability, as well as to the increase and development of our Emirati resource and expertise. NSSTC will accumulate critical knowledge from Airbus through this project, and our national competencies and skills will increase significantly," added Al Romaithi.

"The space industry is an important and strategic sector for the UAE, as it enables the development of high-level skills and drives innovation," said Mikail Houari, President Africa and Middle East, Airbus.

"Airbus remains committed to supporting the advancement of all key elements of the UAEs aerospace industry. For many years, we have worked closely in partnership with the nations leading industrial entities to help create new technological solutions and provide global expertise and experience to local talent. This new collaboration will support the future growth of the UAEs space and satellite sector, contributing to the countrys economic diversification strategy. It will also support the continued efforts around Emiratisation, which will be vital for ensuring long-term sustainable development of the sector," added Houari.

Currently the UAE space sector has provided 3,000 jobs at 50 space related entities, five space research and development centres and three universities offering space degrees. This new project will create 32 new jobs (at least 22 of whom will be UAE nationals) with significant know-how transfer and training being conducted at Airbus facilities in France as well as locally.

Saeed Ahmed Ghobash - Chancellor of the United Arab Emirates University - emphasised the importance of the scientific research collaboration with Tawazun, which he says is aligned to the vision and strategic direction of the University. The NSSTC is an entity created by the UAE University alongside the UAE Space Agency, and Chancellor Ghobash said that UAEU has established a credible standing and reputation amongst national, regional and international institutes because of its continued strive for excellence.

"This is in line with the vision of the UAE government, achieving the goals of the national agenda through the implementation of contemporary, sustainable developmental projects," said Ghobash, "UAEU possesses distinctive scientific and technical capabilities that enable it to keep abreast of global trends in applied scientific research, the fourth industrial revolution, the requirements of artificial intelligence, and space science and technology. The universitys work contributes to the development of a knowledge and digital based economy."

"Part of the mandate for NSSTC was to develop satellite AIT capability, and it is a pleasure to form this partnership with Tawazun and Airbus to achieve that very objective," said Dr Khaled Al Hashmi, Director of NSSTC. "The UAE will soon have a fully autonomous AIT satellite capability, and this will benefit the countrys satellite programmes as well as further enhancing space-related skills within the country. The NSSTC will become the centre where the knowledge that Airbus has imparted will come together to support the UAE space sector."

The UAE Space Agency is funding the first two projects that will be completed under the management and operation of NSSTC. The first project will be a satellite that will augment navigational capabilities for the UAE and the second will be the Arab 813 Satellite; a project announced by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai. Both projects are currently underway with the support of Airbus and will be completed at the new facilities.

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Tawazun to build, develop Satellite Assembly, Integration and Testing Centre - Emirates News Agency

Crowns and Hops Brewing Launches 8 Trill Pils Initiative to Support Black-Owned Craft Breweries – Brewbound.com

Eight trillion dollars.

This almost unfathomable sum of money could be added to the U.S. economy in the next 30 years if not for racial disparities baked into social and economic structures, according to The Business Case for Racial Equity a Strategy for Growth, a paper Ani Turner wrote for the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

The number left an indelible mark on the minds of Beny Ashburn and Teo Hunter, co-founders of Inglewood, California-based Crowns & Hops Brewing, one of only about 60 Black-owned breweries in the U.S. (According to the Brewers Association (BA), the total U.S. brewery count stood at 8,341 through June.)

We found it to be such an incredible stat, Hunter said. Looking at our own industry and seeing how there was a lack of diversity, it just seemed like a really good opportunity for us to build the strategy around.

Ashburn and Hunter today announced the launch of the 8 Trill Pils Initiative, a fund that will support Black entrepreneurs in the craft brewing industry. Craft brewery owners and employees are notoriously homogeneous, a fact that has been further underscored by the reckoning taking place across the country this summer following protests against systemic racism.

In her paper, Turner defined the categories in which racial inequity needed to be achieved to unlock economic growth: healthcare, education, criminal justice, housing and employment/entrepreneurship. As craft beer entrepreneurs themselves, Ashburn and Hunter knew they could make an impact under that tentpole.

We know first hand some of the struggles, pitfalls that come with building a craft beer brand, and we know how hard it was to identify some of those resources, be it financially or just simple educational opportunities, Ashburn said. With 8 Trill Pils Initiative, we want to create and support that resource for other breweries, specifically Black-owned breweries.

The fund kicked off today with a $100,000 grant from Scotland-based BrewDogs development fund, which also provided funding to Crowns & Hops last year.

As a global craft brewer, it is our responsibility to use our voice as a force for good, BrewDog co-founder James Watts said in a press release. In the case of racial equity, that means literally opening and supporting more Black-owned breweries like Crowns & Hops so that Black people are not only represented in the business of beer, but are also successful.

Since June, several initiatives have been launched to diversify both owners and employees in the beer industry. Brooklyn Brewery brewmaster Garrett Oliver announced the Michael Jackson Foundation for Brewing and Distilling, which will provide educational grants and scholarships for Black, Indigenous and people of color. Constellation Brands announced its venture capital arm would invest $100 million in Black-owned beverage alcohol startups over the next decade.

Last month, craft beer lifestyle brand Beer Kulture reorganized itself as a nonprofit organization to introduce craft beer to communities of color, which would bring about a necessary change to the drinker base. Crafted for All, a platform founded by Dr. J. Nikol Jackson-Beckham, works to promote inclusion and equity in craft beer workplaces.

National trade group the BA announced it would draft a new code of conduct for members after being criticized on social media for its inaction in the wake of racist incidents at member breweries.

Ashburn and Hunter see 8 Trill Pils as a complement to these projects, one arrow in a quiver aimed at a more inclusive industry. Using their experience as entrepreneurs, they want to ensure that more business owners in beer who look like them can find similar success.

There is a lot of attention and energy spent around diversity and inclusion in a model that is already there, Hunter said. Im not sure theres been as strong a conversation around racial equity, which is ensuring that Black-owned breweries are successful.

When you look at this country, Black people do make up more than 1% of the country, so in not just our industry, but in industries all over the United States, we need to be looking at how we achieve racial equity as a way of the strategy for economic growth, industry growth, he continued. By doing that we ensure that Black patrons are able to immediately recognize themselves in a brand, in a product and in ownership.

Even a single-digit percentage increase in Black-owned breweries would be significant, Ashburn said.

Its really crazy when you think about 8,000 [craft breweries], and then you think about 63, which is the number of Black-owned breweries, she said. Even if we were to go up by 4%, 5%, it still makes a marginal difference in comparison to where were at right now, so we definitely want to see more Black-owned breweries successful Black-owned breweries and business models and the various points of entry to craft beer.

Crowns and Hops won the 2019 Brewbound Pitch Slam competition at Brewbound Live in December.

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Crowns and Hops Brewing Launches 8 Trill Pils Initiative to Support Black-Owned Craft Breweries - Brewbound.com

Would a government-backed social credit scoring system like China’s ever fly in the US? – ABA Journal

Business of Law

By Rich Acello

August 1, 2020, 12:45 am CDT

Illustration by Sara Wadford/Shutterstock

Among the casualties of COVID-19 was the planned 2020 rollout of the Chinese social credit system.

In development for years and already in use in several Chinese cities, the social credit system is a way for the government to use the capabilities of cellphones to monitor, track, observe and ultimately judge Chinese citizens as they go about their daily lives. The system uses both carrots and sticks to reward and punish behavior. Donating blood or other community activities might rate a carrot, but bad behavior could prevent the offender from taking trips on high-speed trains or airplanes or engaging in e-commerce.

Thanks to Chinas restrictive internet policies, most functions of Chinese society can be conducted on a few apps, including the ubiquitous WeChat, and all of this is discoverable by the government.

However, COVID-19 forced the government to push the pause button. According to reports, the government had to assure individuals and businesses that tax defaults or other things that would ordinarily dent ones credit would not be held against them while the pandemic raged on.

Nevertheless, observers of the rapid rise of China are intrigued by the system and wonder if it would fly in the U.S.

There are arguably pieces of it in place alreadynotably the credit rating system, which uses computer-stored data to assign consumers a credit score regardless of whether theyve requested it.

Additionally, selling platforms such as eBay require a net positive or neutral score; social media platforms can shut down posters for abusive behavior; and ride-share services can exclude riders with low ratings.

In a society where users already routinely use social media to shame others for behaviors that offend them, what could go wrong?

Plenty, according to Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst for the Speech, Privacy and Technology Project of the American Civil Liberties Union. The concept of taking credit scores and applying it to other areas of life is ominous, he says.

Experts who spoke to the ABA Journal agree there would be massive constitutional obstacles for any centralized credit scoring system.

Stanley points to constitutional protections in the Fifth Amendment for due process, and Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.

Ben Winters calls a potential U.S. social credit system a solution to a problem that doesnt exist. Photo by Joy Asico.

However, Dean Cheng, an Asian Studies Center senior research fellow within the Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy at the Heritage Foundation, argues such a system would run afoul of the First, Fourth and Fifth Amendments.

Ben Winters, an attorney for the Washington, D.C.-based Electronic Privacy information Center, calls a potential U.S. social credit system a solution to a problem that doesnt exist and agrees with Cheng and Stanley that the Constitution would rule out such a centralized system.

Additionally, there are cultural reasons why such a system might fly in China but not here.

Because the Chinese have been under a dictatorship for 70 years, they have very little expectations of privacy, Cheng points out.

Dean Cheng: Because the Chinese have been under a dictatorship for 70 years, they have very little expectations of privacy. Photo courtesy of Heritage Foundation.

Meanwhile, Winters adds: In China, cameras show if youre jaywalking, and with 100% enforcement, you could say efficiencies will be achieved in law enforcement. But in America, with constitutional rights and civil rights laws, there are protections against that type of thing. However, Winters cautions that these protections must be accompanied by a meaningful enforcement mechanism, which this country lacks, underlying the need for comprehensive data legislation and protection.

But what about a system that is driven by private businesses and industries?

Cheng doubts it is in any businesss commercial interests to undertake the project. And if such a system arose, participation in the platforms that support it are optional.

I dont have a Facebook or Twitter account because I choose not to, he says. I never bought or sold anything on eBay, either. You can choose to participate or not.

However, Stanley disagrees, arguing that opting out in order to maintain privacy becomes less meaningful over time. Try living a normal life without a credit card, he says.

This article first appeared in the August/September 2020 issue of the ABA Journal under the headline Whats Your Score? Some U.S businesses already require consumers to maintain a certain social credit score, but a government-sponsored system is unlikely.

Whats Your Score? August-September,contained a quote from Ben Winters, an attorney for the Washington, D.C.-based Electronic Privacy information Center, about constitutional rights and protections against governmental surveillance. The quote has been clarified to emphasize that these protections lack a sufficient enforcement mechanism.

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Would a government-backed social credit scoring system like China's ever fly in the US? - ABA Journal

Morning Missouri Primary Election Voting Pace in Livingston County Brisk – Chillicothe Constitution Tribune

Voters casting ballots in Republican or Democratic party primaries at county, state, federal (U.S. House) levels, as well as one statewide issue

By PAUL STURM, C-T Staff Writer

CHILLICOTHE, Mo. With Livingston County Clerk Sherry Parks having projected, only days before election day, that 40-45% of registered county voters would participate in today's (Aug. 4, 2020) Missouri party primaries and one-issue election, virtually-ideal weather and an envigorated electorate anecdotally seemed to have morning balloting on a brisk pace which would make the clerk's "prediction" attainable.

With the polls at the nine county voting locations (serving 19 precincts) having opened at 6 a.m. and remaining open until 7 p.m., local (Livingston County) voters are deciding only four contested county office races eastern district commissioner, sheriff, collector-treasurer, public administrator that will set the November 3 general election ballot. All four of those contested primaries are on the Republican ballot.

Additionally, there are contested races in both the Democratic and Republican parties for the nominations for U.S. House of Representatives sixth district representative, as well as the statewide offices of Governor and Lieutenant Governor. The Democrats also have a two-person contest for Attorney General, while each of those parties, along with the Green and Libertarian parties, have only one candidate each for the State Treasurer and Secretary of State posts. One statewide-office (Secretary of State) candidate appears under the Constitution Park banner.

Additionally, the Republicans and Libertarians each have a single candidate for the 21st district seat in the Missouri Senate.

On the county level, Democrats J. Scott Lindley (coroner), Teresa Sykes (collector-treasurer), and Steve Ripley (assessor) are unopposed today, as is Republican Josh Daniel (coroner). With no Republican running for assessor, veteran incumbent Ripley is assured of reelection in the November vote, barring unforeseen developments affecting his candidacy in the interim.

In addition to the office elections being conducted today, all Missouri voters have the opportunity to decide whether to amend the state constitution to adopt Medicaid Expansion, as set forth in the federal Affordable Care Act.

The candidates involved in the four contested Livingston County office races are:

Eastern District Commissioner Alvin Thompson (incumbent), Roger Barnes

Sheriff Steve Cox (incumbent), Richard "Rick" Knouse

Collector-Treasurer Diana Havens, Kaley Holmes

Public Administrator Geri Curtis, Whitney Ballard

The Constitution-Tribune will be at the Livingston County Courthouse as official election results are released this evening and will be posting them online as time and opportunity permit on this http://www.chillicothenews.com website and on Twitter via reporter Paul Sturm's@CTSportsPSturm account.

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Morning Missouri Primary Election Voting Pace in Livingston County Brisk - Chillicothe Constitution Tribune