Oregon fishermen protest offshore wind farm proposal in Coos Bay – Jefferson Public Radio

Members of the fishing industry are planning a protest Tuesday night to voice their concerns over offshore wind development in Oregon, and to ensure they are involved in choosing the location of turbines.

Offshore wind energy production remains fairly untapped throughout the country. No offshore wind farms have been built off the West Coast. That could soon change with President Biden's goal of developing the equivalent of 30 gigawatts of offshore wind turbines by 2030.

Three of those gigawatts could be built off the Oregon coast, enough to power over two million homes. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, or BOEM, is the federal agency that leases ocean waters for oil drilling and renewable energy production.

BOEM recently began calling for commercial wind energy producers to show their interest in developing offshore wind in Oregon. The agency identified over 10,000 square miles of ocean it says are ideal for wind farms.

Those miles are split into two "call areas", one west of Brookings and the other off of Coos Bay.

While these wind farms could help the state meet its green energy goals, commercial fishermen have concerns about the effects these wind farms will have on fish stocks.

We are talking about the ocean frontier, says Mike Graybill, a marine biologist and the former manager of South Slough Reserve in Charleston. And we are talking about, in Oregon, one of the most productive ocean areas on the planet, that already is a source of very, very important economic activity and is also an important source of our global food supply.

Graybill says hes been looking into what effects wind farms may have on the wildlife in the region. He says its important to look at these effects thoroughly because the West Coast is a prime location for fishing.

The West Coast lies in an eastern boundary current, where high winds blowing parallel to the coastline creates an upwelling current, forcing nutrient-dense water up to the surface.

Just five of these eastern boundary currents around the world produce almost a quarter of the worlds marine fish catch. The other four are off the coasts of Chile, Somalia, Northwest and Southern Africa.

Everything from plankton to whales to seabirds to fish is associated with the fact that when wind blows over the oceans, it moves the water, says Graybill.

That means offshore wind farms and fishing will likely clash, as both industries are connected, in some way, to wind.

Were very concerned that its going to lead to environmental and cumulative impacts that arent even being evaluated at this point, says Lori Steele, director of the West Coast Seafood Processors Association. Steele helped to organize Tuesday's rally.

A map of the call areas identified by BOEM off the Oregon Coast for potential wind energy farm development

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Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

Steele says the fishing industry isnt opposed to alternative energy. But, she says, the push for offshore wind energy isnt being done responsibly and alternatives, such as onshore wind or solar farms, could be just as effective and cheaper than offshore wind.

While 10,000 square miles of ocean for wind farms seems like a lot, that entire area wont be used for offshore wind. BOEM says the call areas are a broader identification where the agency is interested in leasing out to wind farm developers, and the actual size of the wind farms themselves will be smaller.

That call area will also be whittled down as the agency goes through the public comment period and identifies areas where wind farms may not be feasible, or where they would conflict too much with the fishing industry.

BOEM says coordination with the National Marine Fisheries Service, the Pacific Fishery Management Council and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is already ongoing, and discussion will continue to help further reduce conflicts between wind power and fishermen.

According to Graybill, offshore wind turbines design makes fishing around them difficult and the locations must be picked carefully.

Graybill estimates up to 750 miles of cable could be needed to hold 200 wind turbines in place in deep water. The turbines float in the water and are each anchored by three cables attached to the seafloor.

You wont be able to tow a net that has 700 miles of mooring cables and 350 miles of electrical cables, he says.

In Europe, where offshore wind has been in place since the '90s, fishermen frequently clash with energy companies to share the sea. They argue the exclusion zones around wind farms means more fishermen are competing for less space.

BOEM says itll continue to work with the fishing industry throughout this call process to avoid conflicts.

The agency is accepting public comments through June 28th. Members of the public can also look at interactive maps on BOEMs website showing the specific call areas, and overlays of fish populations, existing underwater infrastructure and more.

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Oregon fishermen protest offshore wind farm proposal in Coos Bay - Jefferson Public Radio

Gov. Baker proposes $3.5 billion legislation to bolster offshore wind – Cape Cod Times

BUZZARDS BAY The Massachusetts Maritime Academy welcomed Gov. Charlie Baker Tuesday afternoon, along with Lt. Governor Karyn Polito, and other state energy officials to talk about a $3.5 billion bill to revitalize Massachusetts in a post-pandemic world. They specifically focused on the parts of the legislation regarding clean energy investments.

Massachusetts has a vital role to play in the offshore wind industry, Baker said in comments to a group of about 80 people, half of whom are cadets at school.

The big goal here is to make sure that we dont miss the opportunity to be a national and, in some ways, a global leader in offshore wind, he said. He highlighted the states achievements in scientific research, such as being a major player in the development of COVID-19 vaccines. He said that Massachusetts could be a hub for the transition from fossil fuel-based energy to clean energy.

After the governorasked a cadet why Tuesdays were special at the academy, (its the day chicken patties are served in the cafeteria), Bakerspoke about new legislation filedby the Baker-Polito administration.

A new industry: Competition fierce for offshore wind's a 'once in a generation opportunity'

FORWARD, or An Act Investing in Future Opportunities for Resiliency, Workforce, and Revitalized Downtowns, would be funded with $2.3 billion of ARPA money and about $1.256 billion in capital bond authorizations. Much of the bill focuses on using this money to strengthen infrastructure, revitalize downtowns, support climate resiliency and preservation efforts, and bolster workforce efforts such as unemployment funding.

Part ofthe money in the bill $750 million would be dedicated to clean energy, including money for higher education and workforce training forthe clean energy industry.

Job opportunities: What you need to know about offshore wind jobs, training and business opportunities

The offshore wind industry cannot only boost the economy by providing jobs,it could helpMassachusetts to reach its net-zero emissions goal, Baker said. Currently,there are three proposals to provide 1.6 million homesacross the state with energy from offshore wind, he added.

He spoke about the need for thousands of people to work in the offshore wind industry and highlighted the importance of educational institutionssuch as Massachusetts Maritime Academy, in training the next generation of skilled workers. In fact, part ofhis proposed legislation wouldappropriate $10 million to Massachusetts Maritime Academy for workforce training for the offshore wind industry.

'Pioneering a new era': Markey, Keating experience Mass Maritime's wind energy efforts

When offshore wind began to emerge in this space where maritime meets energy, Massachusetts Maritime stood at the forefront, Rear Admiral Francis McDonald, president of the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, said.

Massachusetts Clean Energy Center CEO Jennifer Daloiso said a well-trained, diverse workforce would be needed since the offshore wind industry is being built right off of the South Coast.

After the speeches concluded, attendees journeyed outside to view a wind liferaft crew demonstration.

Secretary of the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs Bethany Card, earlier had said that she hopes education inoffshore wind becomes a part of the traditional curriculum, just like rescue and sea training.

Contact Asad Jung at ajung@capecodonline.com. Follow him on Twitter: @asadjungcct.

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Gov. Baker proposes $3.5 billion legislation to bolster offshore wind - Cape Cod Times

Awarded Contracts Power Start of NJ’s First Offshore Wind Project – The SandPaper

Engineering, procurement and construction contracts have been awarded for New Jerseys first offshore wind farm, to be constructed south of Long Beach Island, off the coast of Atlantic City.

Ocean Wind 1, a joint venture between rsted and Public Service Enterprise Group, is expected to be operational in 2024 and will produce enough electricity to power more than 500,000 homes, deliver thousands of jobs and ramp up supply chain initiatives, like the EEW monopile manufacturing facility at the port of Paulsboro, all while helping the state meet its clean energy goals, the companies said in a joint statement announcing the contracts.

JINGOLI Power LLC, based in Lawrence Township, and Missouri-based Burns and McDonnell Engineering Co. Inc. won the contracts, which include the installation of two high-voltage substations and nearly 9 miles of underground cable that will connect the offshore wind farm to onshore electric grids at two landfall points,

The awarding of these contracts mark significant milestones in moving the states first offshore wind project forward, said Grant van Wyngaarden, head of procurement for rsted North America. We are focused on doing all we can to meet the states timeline for delivering the Ocean 1 project, hiring locally, creating job opportunities, and encouraging supply chain growth to help the offshore wind industry mature in New Jersey.

Engineering for the project began during the first quarter of this year. Construction could begin as early as September 2023.

Together, these contracts will support the creation of approximately 275 family-sustaining jobs in New Jersey, including more than 200 high-paying, union construction jobs, the companies said.

Burns and McDonnell is slated to install a substation in Upper Township, including an interconnection to a nearby Atlantic City Electric substation. It will also construct a substation at the former Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station in Lacey Township, once the nations oldest operating commercial nuclear power plant. An interconnection will be run to a nearby First Energy substation. The company will also install an underground export cable from the landfall to the onshore electric substation.

Under its contract, JINGOLI Power is expected to install an underground expert cable from the landfall to B.L. England, the site of the onshore electric substation in Upper Township. The company will also engineer, procure and install a duct bank/manhole system to house the export cables, officials said.

Ocean Wind 1 proves we dont have to choose between creating good jobs and fighting climate change, said Joseph R. Jingoli Jr., CEO and co-founder of JINGOLI Power. We can do both. Were extremely honored to have been selected.

In addition to awarding contracts for Ocean Wind 1, rsted recently announced a project labor agreement to construct the companys U.S. offshore wind farms with an American union workforce. The agreement is with North Americas Building Trades Unions and is the first of its kind in the country.

The National Offshore Wind Agreement sets the bar for working conditions and equity, injects hundreds of millions of dollars in middle-class wages into the American economy, according to a statement announcing the agreement, which includes all of rsteds contractors and subcontractors for its offshore wind projects from Maine to Florida.

Sean McGarvey, president of NABTU, called the agreement unprecedented and historic not just for the workers, but also for future energy needs.

This partnership will not only expand tens of thousands of career opportunities for them to flourish in the energy transition, but also lift up even more into the middle class, he added.

Industry projections expect offshore wind projects to directly create roughly 80,000 jobs with millions of union work hours and tens of thousands more in indirect careers in manufacturing, maritime work, logistics and clean energy technology.

The National Offshore Wind Agreement we signed with NABTU sets the industry standard from the beginning. Were going to build an American offshore wind energy industry with American workers, family-sustaining wages, and robust and equitable training programs to achieve this critical vision, said David Hardy, chief executive officer of rsted Offshore North America.

Gina G. Scala

ggscala@thesandpaper.net

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Awarded Contracts Power Start of NJ's First Offshore Wind Project - The SandPaper

Hexicon and Elia to Optimise Floating Offshore Wind Farm Transmission Connection – Offshore WIND

Sweden-based Hexicon and Elia Grid International (EGI) have joined forces to connect the wind energy produced by floating offshore wind farms to the onshore grid.

Under the agreement, the partners will develop concepts and projects to integrate large-scale floating offshore wind farms into the onshore power systems.

By doing so, the two companies expect to create the opportunity to harvest the full potential of floating offshore wind to provide clean energy to millions of households and accelerate the energy transition.

The five-year-long cooperation consists of two phases, covering the provision of expertise during the projects pre-development and development phases.

The ability to early plan and design an efficient and robust electrical system is key to the business case and successful projects. Hexicons and EGIs competences are fully complementary and very well matched, said Marcus Thor, CEO of Hexicon.

EGI brings unsurpassed global experience within electrical transmission and large-scale RES integration projects. While Hexicon offers profound deep sea and floating wind knowledge.

According to the partners, they will design the power transmission part of floating wind farms and optimise the connection to onshore power systems.

By solving the technical challenges related to floating offshore wind projects, EGI and Hexicon are hoping to turn floating offshore wind into an attractive market for investors.

Connecting offshore wind technology to the electrical grid system is a complex and costly endeavour. With this cooperation, EGI is committed to providing state-of-the-art expertise and proposing innovative solutions that will unleash the development of cost-efficient, large-scale renewable energy, said Didier Wiot, CEO of EGI.

Potential geographies for the cooperation include the Mediterranean as well as the Baltic and Atlantic Sea basins.

Work is expected to start in June 2022.

Hexicon has its own patented technology TwinWind which consists of a floating foundation with two turbines. The twin-turbine design is said to enable more turbines per sea area, which increases the energy yield and reduces the environmental impact.

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Offshore wind farm bill coming – Kathimerini English Edition

Greeces declared national target for the installation of offshore wind farms adding up to 2 gigawatts by 2030 has mobilized the interest of international investors as well as some of the countrys biggest energy groups that are patiently waiting for the regulatory framework to open the way for their business plans.

The bill to that effect has been delayed for at least a year, since the original announcements by the Energy Ministry, and it has been six months since the its main elements were presented to the cabinet last November.

In the last couple of months, under pressure from the Finance Ministry too (given that its introduction is among the prior actions required for the disbursement of the second tranche by the Recovery and Resilience Facility), the competent authorities of the Energy Ministry are now scrambling to make the deadlines for the bill to clear Parliament by June.

Kathimerini understands the bill will provide for a mixed model for the development of offshore wind farms, with the state selecting the broader zones for installation and proceeding up to a certain level with the licensing process. Parts of those blocks will then be conceded to interested investors through tenders.

The projects will be selected based on the financial bids regarding their revenues for the energy produced, as is also the case with onshore wind farms and photovoltaics.

According to an Energy Ministry study, the Aegean Sea could host fixed wind farms of some 10 GW, and another 30-40 GW of floating facilities. The ideal areas for the floating farms are considered to be the Cyclades, the northern Aegean (between Limnos and Agios Efstratios), the Dodecanses (between Ikaria, Patmos and Leros), and between Crete and Karpathos.

International market leaders which have partnered with Greek energy groups discern opportunities for their expansion to Greeces seas. Norways Equinor, the worlds biggest offshore wind park developer, was among the first to express an interest in Greece. Terna Energy has reached a deal with Ocean Winds (a venture of EDP Renewables with ENGIE), as has Mytilineos with Copenhagen Offshore Partners.

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Offshore wind farm bill coming - Kathimerini English Edition

Energy Security and Energy Transition: Highs and Lows in the Offshore Rig Market – IHS Markit

To paraphrase Charles Dickens: these are the best of times,these are the worst of times. The fate of the offshore rig marketis inexorably linked to oil prices. And since Russia made itsincursion into Ukraine in February 2022, Brent has consistentlypushed well above USD 100 a barrel, giving hope to a rig industrythat has been languishing since the offshore downturn in 2014, thata meaningful turnaround lies ahead.

But these are also different times. The last two years has seenthe world turned upside down by the pandemic and the climatecrisis, and this turbulent period has made it increasingly clearthat the Energy Transition is, as planet-busting movie villainThanos calls himself, inevitable. In response to these globalupheavals, pivotal shifts in the social, policy and market arenasare driving fundamental change towards a low-carbon world. The wartoo, has clarified to some countries like Germany that it might bebetter to be weaned off oil and gas.

As it affects the rig market, however, these two forces - EnergySecurity versus Energy Transition - pull in opposite directions. Onone hand, the high oil price and improved economics for oil and gasexploration beckons oil operators to go forth and drill. At thesame time, these C-suite decision makers are facing pressures fromstakeholders, activist investors and the public alike for moreclimate accountability. It is a balancing act for oil companies, tomaintain or increase profitability while decreasing emissions andre-structuring towards a more sustainable portfolio.

In the near term, the choice is clear as energy security is theimmediate concern. With Russian energy supplies uncertain and theneed to alleviate pain at the pumps urgent, governments like theUnited States' have been imploring oil and gas producers toincrease their output. Offshore projects are expected to pick up,but they will take time to put together and cost inflation - forcrew, equipment and other services - is already setting in.

The chart above shows how closely offshore rig demand tracks oilprice over the last decade. The rig market - comprising drillships,semisubmersibles and jackups - fell hard from its last height in2014, but has remained relatively resilient over the last two yearsdespite the logistical chaos caused by the pandemic and the 2020oil price crash. That year alone, there were 79 rig contractcancellations. The lone region that saw demand grow during thistrying period, while the rest shrank, was Latin America, which isrecording strong demand from Brazil, Guyana and Suriname.

The Middle East, too, is forecast to see incrementalrequirements from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emiratespush rig numbers from 126 jackups to about 140 units over the nextyear. On aggregate, for the unfolding 12 months ahead, IHS MarkitPetrodata anticipates worldwide jackup demand to improve fromaround 332 units now, to 361 units; semis from 39 units currentlyto 56 units; and drillships from 63 units to around 72.

Even when the going was tough, many rig contractors took measureof the times and worked to get their rigs 'greener'. Since 2020,they have been exploring different ways to optimise drilling, aswell as utilise alternative energy systems and innovate with newcleantech to improve efficiency and reduce emissions. An example isthe Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system, an emissionscontrol technology that injects ammonia to convert noxious oxidesinto harmless water and nitrogen, now installed on 16 rigs. So far,the progress is mostly limited to rigs working in Northwest Europewhere more governments offer support for such green initiatives. Todate, just 36 out of the over 700 rigs worldwide have greennotations by classification societies.

The momentum for the Energy Transition has already resulted inreduced investments in upstream oil and gas projects, prompting anumber of traditional oil and gas operators like Chevron todiversify into greener ventures like offshore wind. Even yards likethe newly merged Keppel-SembMarine are jumping on the bandwagon.Keppel is spinning off its remaining unsold drilling assets, whilethe new combined entity has pledged to focus on buildingsustainable offerings like floating carbon capture storages andhydrogen-driven vessels.

In the long run, there will no doubt only be more cutbacks ondrilling projects. But in the meantime, the road to a net-zeroworld is a long one. Green tech is still relatively nascent andwill take time to become commercially viable at scale. And withglobal oil inventories at an all-time low, the world still needs tofuel its energy requirements while the world figures out the pathto meet optimistic temperature targets.

For now, the robust oil price will definitely help invigoratethe rig market, even though any up-cycle potential for increaseddrilling will likely be tempered by the opposing push to reduce ourcarbon footprint through efficiencies and power generation.Ultimately, how things pan out will also depend on the geopoliticallandscape after the dust settles when the war in Ukraine is over.Hopefully, it is not one where partisan blocs dominate and lessco-operation takes place, for while such an unstable outcome mayprop up the oil price that supports offshore drilling, it couldwell accelerate the world towards a truly unimaginable worst oftimes.

For more data and insight on the global offshore drillingmarket, usePetrodataRigs by IHS Markit.

Posted 11 May 2022 by Yun Yun Teo, Principal Analyst, Offshore Rigs, IHS Markit

This article was published by S&P Global Commodity Insights and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.

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Energy Security and Energy Transition: Highs and Lows in the Offshore Rig Market - IHS Markit

and Tampnet bring IoT to offshore industries – Ericsson

With the management capabilities of Ericsson IoT Accelerator, the latest sensors and remote monitoring equipment can be deployed to people and places in a variety of remote offshore use cases and connected in real time.

Frode Stldal, President of Tampnet Americas says: Through our partnership with Ericsson, we are bringing the same IoT connectivity benefits to the offshore industry and enterprises, that land-based companies are benefitting from. In many instances, Tampnet is pioneering new services and business models offshore that are later adopted onshore. Together, we are truly digitalizing the high seas as part of the fourth industrial revolution. These are exciting times for our customers.

Headquartered in Norway, Tampnet owns andoperatesthe largest offshore high-capacity, low latencycommunication networks in the world, including the largest in the North Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.Tampnetsoffshore customersspan the offshore oil and gas, wind energy and maritimeindustries, as well as the carrier market.

More than 8,500 enterprises globally already benefit from the Ericsson IoT Accelerator-powered capabilities offered by CSP partners.

Kyle Okamoto, General Manager IoT, Ericsson, says: Our partnership with Tampnet shows that Ericsson has the capability of delivering IoT management to any enterprise or industry customer, in any work environment. We will work closely with Tampnet to ensure that its customers benefit from Ericsson IoT Accelerator just as we are doing with more than 8,500 other enterprises around the world.

HOW IT WORKS

Through the use of SIM cards, wearables can be deployed to employees, equipment and other assets, enabling instant actions on real-time data and the optimization of planning operations through Tampnets 4G LTE network.

Operations, asset integrity and maintenance teams can collect live data, connect with remote specialists, and turnaround work scopes efficiently with the assurance that all quality checks can be completed and verified in real time.

The level of collaboration possible for day-to-day tasks as well as specialist scopes greatly reduce downtime, improves coordination of people on board and optimizes pre-scope planning, safety and preparation tasks.

PARTNERSHIP

In addition to IoT connectivity management, Ericsson is a long-standing technology partner to Tampnet, providing robust and secure private networks.

Ericsson 4G and 5G private networks - with low latency, high availability, and high performance - are designed to make Industry 4.0 a reality. Ericssons private networks connect industrial sites and assets for greater efficiency and control and people for a safer worker experience.

Meet Tampnet and Ericsson at The Oil & Gas IoT Summit event (12-13 May, Altis Grand Hotel, Lisbon, Portugal)

About TampnetTampnet was founded in 2001 in Stavanger, Norway and operates the worlds largest offshore high capacity communication network in the North Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, serving customers within oil & gas, wind energy, maritime and carrier sectors with first class telecommunications. The company employs more than 100 people, is headquartered in Stavanger, Norway and has offices in the UK, the Netherlands, USA, and Brazil.

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and Tampnet bring IoT to offshore industries - Ericsson

Onshore Wind Farm to Be Built Using Offshore Techniques – Offshore WIND

Dutch energy company Eneco has started the construction of the Maasvlakte 2 onshore wind farm in the Rotterdam harbour area, with a portion of turbine components to be installed using offshore installation techniques.

The wind farm covers a total length of approximately 7.5 kilometres.

The 2.5-kilometre-long hard sea defences consist of a dyke body with a paved surface on top and large boulders in the surf.

The 5-kilometre soft sea defences consist of beach and sand dunes. The wind turbines on the hard sea defences will be positioned on the land side of the dyke. The wind turbines on the soft sea defences will be erected on the beach in front of the sand dunes.

The first monopiles will be transported to the beach of the Maasvlakte industrial area in May, where they will be installed using offshore techniques, Eneco said.

Preparatory construction works such as dune access points and temporary roads started in February. The first crane locations are now ready for use and the work area is ready to start the construction of the turbines, Eneco said.

This is said to be the first time ever that offshore installation techniques such as using monopiles and driving them into the ground using a hammer will be used on an onshore wind farm project.

Using this innovative construction method is necessary in order to create a sufficiently solid base for the 12 wind turbines that will be located on the beach, Eneco said.

Together with turbine manufacturer Vestas, Ballast Nedam is realising the wind farms 22 wind turbines on both hard and soft sea defences.

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Onshore Wind Farm to Be Built Using Offshore Techniques - Offshore WIND

Shell Sets Sights on Offshore Wind in Spain and Portugal – Offshore WIND

Shell and the Spanish energy company Capital Energy have signed an agreement to analyze the joint development of projects in the offshore wind energy sector in Spain and Portugal.

Leveraging their complementary skills and strengths, both companies will explore opportunities in line with their interest in these countries, especially in the field of floating offshore wind power, Capital Energy said.

Shell has more than two decades of experience in the development of wind infrastructure, as well as more than half a century in the field of marine engineering in the North Sea.

Capital Energy, based in Madrid, has, for its part, ambitious growth plans in this sector, with approximately 2,000 MW under development. The company has also signed several agreements with shipyards and other relevant industrial agents in the Canary archipelago.

This agreement demonstrates our firm commitment to offshore wind power and together with Shell we will not only be able to supply green and affordable energy, but also to promote the socio-economic development of those regions where we operate our wind farms, Pablo Alcn, Head of Offshore at Capital Energy, said.

Spain has recently approved a roadmap for the development of offshore wind which calls for the development of 3 GW of floating offshore wind capacity by 2030.

The country plans to carry out its first offshore wind auction, in the Canary region, in 2023.

The roadmap for offshore wind energy in Spain, proposed in December 2021, represents a great opportunity to explore the development of projects in the country that align with our strengths and strategic ambition to be an integrated energy leader. We are very excited to collaborate with Capital Energy in exploring those opportunities, Natalia Latorre, president of Shell Spain, said.

Portugal reportedly plans to hold its first offshore wind auction this summer, with between 3 GW and 4 GW of floating wind capacity expected to be auctioned off.

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Shell Sets Sights on Offshore Wind in Spain and Portugal - Offshore WIND

Unique features of the offshore wind market in Japan – Lexology

The large earthquakes felt earlier this year were an unnecessary reminder of the need for alternative energy sources in Japan. Coupled with the Governments move to shift away from Russian oil, renewable fuels such as offshore wind energy (OSW) have never looked more attractive. However, the developing Japanese OSW market, which has recently seen the entry of several big-name players, presents its own unique challenges.

OSW building momentum in Japan

OSW development in Japan has made serious strides in recent years. In 2018, the precisely named Act on Promoting the Utilization of Sea Areas for the Development of Marine Renewable Energy Power Generation Facilities established the legal framework for occupying outside port areas that have potential for OSW. The Act sets out the stages for the selection, designation and auction of areas for OSW projects (summarised below):

Significantly, 2021 saw the first winners of OSW auctions (Stage 5 above the first stage when an OSW project can be said to have intrinsic value for a developer) announced: in June 2021, a consortium led by Toda Corporation won the first floating OSW auction (for Goto City, Nagasaki Prefecture); and in December 2021, consortia led by Mitsubishi Corporation stunning their rivals and the wider market by offering unexpectedly low tariff rates won all three of the first bottom-fixed OSW auctions (two in Akita Prefecture, one in Chiba Prefecture).

With a number of other areas already designated a promotion zones (Stage 4 above), and an ambitious 30-45 GW target of OSW output capacity by 2040 set by the Japanese Government, the OSW space will be an exciting one to watch in the years ahead.

Unique features of Japans OSW market

In our experience advising international clients on OSW deals, we have noticed the following somewhat distinctive features in the Japan market:

The future is bright for Japan OSW, but new entrants to the market should be aware of the unique challenges to navigate, as well as the opportunities. Both regulation and market practice of the OSW selection process continues to change year-by-year, and we expect the market to continue to evolve in what will be a defining decade for renewable energy in Japan.

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Unique features of the offshore wind market in Japan - Lexology

Sustainable Scotland: UK on verge of "something big" in offshore wind – The Scotsman

Scott McCallum, a Partner and renewable energy expert with law firm Shepherd and Wedderburn, examines the challenges facing offshore wind in the latest episode of the Sustainable Scotland podcast.

The UK Government has set an ambition to have 50 Gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind power installed by 2030 - a tough target with only 11GW currently installed and 10GW under construction (or close to it).

McCallum said: "Projects which are in their infancy are going to have to contribute towards those 2030 targets. It can only happen if we manage to deploy offshore wind consistently over a longer period of time.

"We can't afford to have the peaks and troughs we've had to date because we will lose the supply chain, we will lose the developers. And well lose the potential benefits to clean energy that can be achieved within the next few years if we get it right."

The speed at which large offshore wind projects were consented (approved) had to improve, McCallum said.

Some projects are taking a decade or more to be consented - and McCallum said challenging issues, like the impact of wind farms on birds, had to be addressed earlier, at the so-called 'pre-application' stage.

"There are a few big issues, where the Government can give more of a steer," he said. "The big one is the impact on birds and in particular, impacts on European protected sites. That's been a reason for a lot of delays because people argue over the science. They argue over the cumulative impacts and whether all the different projects together are having an adverse effect on some protected sites.

"There is an opportunity to take a more holistic approach to protecting the environment, and protecting birds, and put in place measures to create a better environment for birds in the round."

McCallum also said a more strategic approach was needed to get the power generated by offshore wind into the electricity grid.

"There's a real desire to take a more coordinated approach to the grid - to ensure that every new generating station, every new offshore wind farm that comes along, isn't getting its own grid connection," he said.

"The difficulty just now is that its stalling projects getting started because applicants don't know where they're going to be connecting."

McCallum said both consenting issues and grid connections had to be resolved quickly - but if they were, the future was bright.

He concluded: "The UK has a fantastic wind resource. All the world's main offshore wind developers are very focused in trying to develop projects in the UK. We have a very supportive UK Government, and a very supportive Scottish Government.

"All the parts are there to make this work. There are loads of hurdles we're going to have to overcome but if everyone is aligned in trying to find solutions, I think we can achieve something big where offshore wind can genuinely contribute massive amounts to the energy mix in the UK - in terms of clean energy, affordable energy, and security of supply."

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Sustainable Scotland: UK on verge of "something big" in offshore wind - The Scotsman

Heerema Joins Equinor and BP on US Offshore Wind Projects – Offshore WIND

Equinor has, on behalf of the 50-50 partnership between Equinor and bp, selected Heerema Marine Contractors as a strategic supplier for the development of offshore wind projects on the US East Coast.

Equinor and Heerema intend to enter into a Strategic Supplier Agreement for the transportation and installation services of wind farm foundations and offshore substations for the projects.

This agreement will include the Empire Wind and Beacon Wind wind farms and will cover a firm period of seven years.

Throughout this period, Equinor, bp as 50 per cent joint venture partner, and Heerema will collaborate as exclusive partners in the preparation and Jones Act compliant execution of the projects.

Together, Heerema and Equinor will focus on optimizing the economic benefits the projects can generate for the New York State communities, the Dutch company said.

The award of this unique agreement is yet another chapter in a long history of working together globally with both Equinor and bp on often challenging offshore installation projects, Heeremas CEO Koos-Jan van Brouwershaven said.

We are proud to be selected to join Equinor and bp once again in a frontier market and region. The future of offshore wind relies on strong forward-looking partnerships that recognize the need to secure transport and installation capacity.

The 2.1 GW Empire Wind 1 and 2, and the 1.2 GW Beacon Wind are being developed by a 50-50 partnership between Equinor and bp. Equinor will be the operator through the development, construction, and operations phases of the projects.

Empire Wind, for which Equinor acquired the lease in 2017 and is developing it in two phases, is located 15-30 miles (24-48 kilometres) southeast of Long Island, in water depths of 65-131 feet (20-40 metres).

Beacon Wind is located 60 miles (almost 97 kilometres) east of Montauk Point and 20 miles (32 kilometres) south of Nantucket. The lease was acquired in 2019 and has the potential to be developed with a total capacity of more than 2.4 GW.

We are very pleased to have developed a contractual framework together with Equinor that enables true partnership. Together we have established a basis of mutual trust and transparency as core values, and I am excited to see the benefits of this innovative agreement materialize for both our client and Heerema, Heeremas Director Wind, Jeroen van Oosten, said.

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Heerema Joins Equinor and BP on US Offshore Wind Projects - Offshore WIND

Bayu Undan decommissioning this year as Santos accelerates giant CCS plan offshore East Timor – News for the Energy Sector – Energy Voice

Australian operator Santos (ASX:STO) is preparing to decommission the floating storage and offloading (FSO) facility, as well as platforms, at Bayu Undan offshore East Timor, as soon as possible, as it accelerates plans for a giant carbon capture and storage (CCS) hub at the mature field.

The FSO, which is due to be disconnected by December latest, could be decontaminated offshore or it might be moved to East Timor, also known as Timor Leste, for treatment. After decontamination the vessel will most likely be shipped to Turkey for decommissioning, industry sources told Energy Voice.

Santos is keen to pull forward decommissioning activities as there is a lot of money at stake to get the production equipment removed as soon as possible with plans to transform Bayu Undan into a giant CCS facility, an industry source close to the project told Energy Voice.

The whole infrastructure needs to be dismantled, including the subsea pipelines, added the source. The Bayu-Undan offshore facilities consist of a floating storage and offloading facility (FSO) and three fixed platforms, a remote wellhead platform (WPI), a compression, utilities, and quarters platform (CUQ) and a drilling, production, and processing platform (DPP).

Gas-liquids production from the Bayu-Undan field in the Timor Sea will likely cease towards the end of this year, operator Santos reported in its latest operational review in April. The continued decline is in line with expectations, said Santos.

Santos is looking at methods of cleaning the Bayu Undan facilities offshore as a base case with an option to bring the FSO into Tibar port in East Timor for further clean up in preparation of going to Europe for final decommissioning, said a Dili-based source.

Santos has always identified that handling of any waste in Timor Leste would have to be done in accordance with Australian / international standards. Currently, there are no facilities to handle all the waste types in Timor Leste, however this is being looked at as part of the decommissioning work scope, added the source.

Local content in East Timor will also be a focus, added a separate industry source.

Bayu-Undan is located 500km offshore Darwin, Australia, in the Timor Sea, and is 250km south of East Timor in waters 80 metres deep.

Santos has proposed to use the Bayu Undan reservoir for capturing and storing carbon dioxide (CO2) from a new field it is developing off northwestern Australia, the $3.6 billion Barossa project, where the gas has a very high CO2 content compared to other projects in the region. Gas from Barossa will be processed at the Darwin liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in northern Australia for export to countries, such as Japan and South Korea, which are demanding cleaner gas to meet their net-zero aspirations.

Barossa is due to start pumping gas in 2025, and Santos has said it expects Bayu Undan CCS to be ready when the field starts up. It sees the Bayu Undan reservoir eventually being able to store 10 million tonnes of CO2 a year.

Santos South Korean partner in Barossa, energy company SK E&S, is under increasing pressure from Korean financiers to ensure the project has CCS locked in.

Santos aims to take a final investment decision (FID) in 2023 on the CCS project, which it claims has the potential to be the largest in the world. In March, Santos announced it had started front-end engineering and design (FEED) work for the proposed CCS project.

More information on the Bayu Undan decommissioning and contracting scope of work is available here.

Santos has a 43.4% operated interest in Bayu-Undan and Darwin LNG. The remaining interest is held by SK E&S (25%), INPEX (11.4%), ENI (11%), JERA (6.1%) and Tokyo Gas (3.1%).

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Bayu Undan decommissioning this year as Santos accelerates giant CCS plan offshore East Timor - News for the Energy Sector - Energy Voice

Can I invest in an offshore account, then after some years withdraw all the capital? – Moneyweb

Thank you for your question and for providing clarity as to why you wish to invest offshore. It is important that the decision to invest offshore is not taken as a knee-jerk response to local bad news, so knowing your long-term intention to remain in South Africa is certainly helpful.

Offshore investing is a great way of diversifying your investments across international markets and economies so as to create a distribution of risk and volatility in your portfolio that is less concentrated than a purely South African allocation.

Where an investor is likely to incur expenses in foreign currency, it would make sense for them to build an offshore portfolio in the jurisdiction in which they plan to live and spend. However, you have noted your intention to remain in this country and to use the funds locally. An option therefore may be for you to consider externalising your funds offshore through rand-denominated funds often referred to as indirect offshore investing.

Indirect offshore investing means that no rands are physically transferred by the investor, and their investments remain domiciled in South Africa. There are several global feeder funds offered by various local asset managers who will then invest your funds abroad on an asset swap basis according to the funds investment mandate. These indirect investments can be implemented and allocated relatively quickly and efficiently as you will be making use of the asset managers capacity to externalise funds.

These feeder funds allow you to build offshore exposure into your portfolio while also providing an exchange hedge against currency fluctuations. Any withdrawals and/or disinvestments from such accounts will need to be paid into a South African bank account.

As there is no direct transfer of funds abroad, you will not need to use your Single Discretionary Allowance (SDA) or Foreign Investment Allowance (FIA).

On the other hand, if you intend to use the funds in a foreign jurisdiction such as if you intend to work or study abroad, you may want to consider investing directly offshore using foreign-domiciled investments. This involves the physical transfer of ones rands out of the South African jurisdiction, exchanged into foreign currency, such as the US dollar, and onto an investment platform listed abroad. Once on the foreign platform, your investment may be allocated to the global funds listed and available on such a platform.

To do this, you would need to use either or a combination of your SDA and your FIA, depending on how much you intend to invest. Your SDA is limited to R1 million per calendar year and may be used at your discretion without the need for a tax clearance certificate or other supporting documents. Your FIA allows you to transfer a further R10 million offshore over and above your SDA, although to do this you will need to obtain a tax clearance certificate which, once issued, is valid for a period of 12 months.

Once you have invested directly offshore, withdrawals can generally be paid into an international account in your name provided the account can accept transfers in the domiciled currency of your investment. The funds do not need to move back into or through a South African account unless you so choose.

Depending on the amount you wish to invest keep in mind that offshore platforms have minimum contributions required to establish an account. If these minimums are more than your available funds then the option to use the locally based feeder funds may serve your objective to specifically have offshore exposure. It is, however, important to do your research in respect of investment fees and to select a strategy that is appropriate for your timeline.

It is also important to understand the tax implications of investing through such a structure, together with the consequences that withdrawing or disinvesting will have on your overall financial plan.

Ideally, such an investment should be viewed holistically as part of your overall financial plan to ensure that it is fully aligned with your goals and objectives.

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Can I invest in an offshore account, then after some years withdraw all the capital? - Moneyweb

‘Mama’s boy’ is a flex, not an insult, for a new generation of men – NPR

Vystekimages/Getty Images/Photononstop RF

Vystekimages/Getty Images/Photononstop RF

It's a simple schoolyard insult.

For eons, people often men hurled "mama's boy" at each other as an emasculating put-down. To be called the son of a mother suggested an essential unmanliness. "Mama's boys" were comically inept, even pathological, in movies and television shows ranging from the pathetic Buster Bluth in Arrested Development to The Waterboy's Bobby Boucher to Norman Bates in Psycho.

Looking way, way back, Beowulf's Grendel could even be called the mother of literary mama's boys.

But a new generation of men seems to be rejecting the toxic masculinity inherent in the phrase and radically reinventing it.

"I am a proud mama's boy," declares Sahil Bloom. The glamorous 31-year-old tech entrepreneur is now awaiting the birth of his own infant son. "I expect him to be a mama's boy, in the same way. In the old sense of the phrase, it was about being a wuss or weak. But there's nothing more powerful than a mother's love."

Tech entrepreneur and proud mama's boy Sahil Bloom poses with his mom. Sahil Bloom hide caption

Tech entrepreneur and proud mama's boy Sahil Bloom poses with his mom.

"I am definitely a mama's boy because I love my mom," agrees college soccer star Shaquan Reid. The 21-year-old Chicago State University sophomore says he owes everything to his mother's encouragement and care. "I like having her around, motivating me, consoling me."

Reid adds that plenty of athletes are self-proclaimed mama's boys, and that's certainly true of such NFL stars as Victor Cruz, John Elway, Terrell Davis, Kurt Warner, Donovan McNabb and Michael Strahan. All starred in mama's boy-themed ads for Campbell's soup. Not long ago, Miami Dolphins linebacker Jerome Baker went viral when he couldn't find his mother in the stands during a 2019 game.

"It's OK to be a mama's boy. There's nothing wrong with it," Baker told NPR. "Everybody knew I was a mama's boy [growing up]. People did try to make fun of me. But I was different. I was proud. Lots of people wasn't proud to be a mama's boy."

"I don't see anything wrong with being a mama's boy," says Shaquan Reid, a soccer star and accounting major at Chicago State. The 21-year-old is pictured with his mom, Jenese Anglin. Shaquan Reid and CSU Athletics hide caption

These days, plenty of strong, loveable male characters who are confidently close to their moms populate screens and pages. Proud fictional mama's boys range from Percy Jackson, of Rick Riordan's young adult series, to Detective Jake Peralta in Brooklyn Nine-Nine to Luke Smith in The Sarah Jane Adventures. Mama's Boy pride is the subjects of songs and speeches.

All this is a far cry from when psychologist and bestselling author Harriet Lerner, the bestselling author of books such as The Mother Dance, first started her practice.

"During my career, mothers received the message, including from therapists, that her closeness to her sons, her failure to 'separate' and to 'let go' of her son, especially around his adolescence and then onward that that would be a danger to the boy," she says. "That could turn him into a mama's boy and damage her son in his journey to manhood. Another false belief that shamed mothers and made mothers even more anxious was the belief that single mothers or households without a man could not raise sons. Because who would teach that boy to become a man?"

Such sexist double standards, Lerner suggests, can also be gleaned from comparing long-held cultural assumptions about "mama's boys" and "daddy's girls."

"Being a daddy's girl is seen as a good thing," she observes. "It means you're adorable and loved, and know how to flirt with men."

Back in the 1980s, when Lerner's two sons were children, Lerner often saw cute little girls wearing t-shirts reading 'Daddy's girl.'

"I didn't know why there weren't any t-shirts that said 'mama's boys,' " she says dryly.

These days, such shirts for boys are easy to find. In fact, Google searches for "mama's boy shirt" have notably climbed for the past few years.

Men who include 'momma's boy' on their profiles have a 7% higher probability of exchanging phone numbers with another user.

Michael Kaye, OkCupid

It wasn't difficult to find data proving we've evolved in our use of the phrase "mama's boy." After all, this is 2022. Every single thing is tracked by some major company, it seems, and "mama's boy" is no exception.

"There's been over 3 million mentions of terms like 'momma's boy' on people's profiles over the past few years," wrote Michael Kaye, the associate director of global communications at OkCupid, in an email. "Between December and April there was a 20% increase in these terms being mentioned. Men who include 'momma's boy' on their profiles have a 7% higher probability of exchanging phone numbers with another user."

Kaye (who also was quick to identify himself as a proud mama's boy in a phone interview) said sure, seven percent might not seem like much. "But when you think about there being millions and millions of people on dating apps like OkCupid, it's actually a pretty high success rate," he points out.

"It's a very clever strategy," agrees Helen Fisher. She's chief science advisor for Match.com. Fisher did not crunch any numbers specifically for the term "mama's boy," but she checked Match.com data about men who reference their moms in their profiles.

"It's only 1.4 percent of men who actually used the terms 'my mother,' my mom' or 'my mamma' but those 1.4 percent of men had a 26 percent increase in the likelihood to resign from the site because they had met somebody," she announced.

That sounds about right to Garret Watts, a 32-year-old YouTube personality and proud mama's boy. When he sees guys using that self-descriptor on dating apps, there's really just one word that comes to mind: honest.

After all, Watts points out, the vast majority of men are technically mama's boys, including himself. "Go ahead and call me a mama's boy," he says. " You're just calling me a human. You're just calling me a base-level emotionally responsible human."

Watts is pleased more people are reclaiming the expression "mama's boy" as a point of pride, but he says fundamentally, it's antiquated. "Let the stigma go," he says. "I say, let the phrase 'mamma's boy' burn. That belongs in the past."

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'Mama's boy' is a flex, not an insult, for a new generation of men - NPR

Reckoning With Harvard’s Ties to Slavery Requires Prison Divestment and Prison Education | Opinion – Harvard Crimson

The recent Report of the Committee on Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery is a necessary work of scholarship and thought which is long overdue. While in awe of the authors and their superior knowledge of both Harvard and slavery, I remain troubled by something that is missing.

The report discusses the legacies of slavery that remained after the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution conferred emancipation nationwide in 1865. However, it stops short of addressing the full text of the 13th Amendment, wherein slavery is abolished except as a punishment for crime, and makes no mention of Harvards current role in the system that emerged from this exception.

In reality, slavery has never been completely banned in this country or in Massachusetts. The path from slavery and slave patrols to our racist carceral and policing systems is well-documented.

I will not attempt to instruct the reader in the history and horrors of prisons, jails, and detention centers in the United States and Massachusetts, or the violent policing that accompanies them. I have only been arrested and locked up overnight after protesting outside such a facility and know that my treatment was much better than average. It took weeks for me to heal both physically and psychologically from just that little bit, yet others endure much harsher treatment for longer or even die at the hands of this system, which is bolstered by racism.

Incarcerated people are compelled to perform what can best be described as slave labor and the bodies of the criminalized are commodified in business calculations and deals even inside prisons which are not operated by private corporations. I struggle to understand what it can mean for an academic institution to redress its legacy of slavery while ignoring its own ongoing role in perpetuating these unbearable wrongs.

Harvard affiliates and alumni continue to incarcerate other human beings through their work in government and the legal profession. How many advance their careers by producing intellectual justifications for legalized slavery? While other Harvard affiliates already do outstanding work for abolition, what could the institution do to make that the norm?

Although the report recommended many actions Harvard could take to reckon with its historical role in slavery, it did not offer much about present-day abolition. Harvards first step towards abolition must be a commitment to never again invest in corporations that implement or benefit from incarceration, taking guidance from the Harvard Prison Divestment Campaign. The most visibly harmful of these investments are in private prison corporations, but there are many others that exploit prison labor or provide goods and services necessary for the operation of government-run carceral institutions. Without prison divestment, is it not fair to say that slavery continues to fund Harvard University and that Harvard funds slavery?

For as long as slavery continues to exist by any name, abolition demands that we work to liberate those who are not free. Where we cannot yet physically liberate, we must still advance the freedom and dignity of incarcerated people. The students I met while teaching in the Education Justice Project the University of Illinois college-in-prison program offered the most eloquent endorsements of the liberatory value of education that I have ever heard. I can attest to the fact that there are excellent, overachieving students hungry for knowledge, who are locked up with only limited access to reading material and limited study time due to their aforementioned labor.

Several institutions of higher learning offer college-in-prison programs, but potential college students in the carceral system remain overwhelmingly underserved. Some are entirely deprived of their human right to higher education, and others can only access correspondence classes or programs offered by Christian colleges that eschew secular accreditation. It is time to establish a for-credit Harvard-in-prison program which would offer a superior education to the talented students incarcerated in the region.

At present, only a tiny percentage of free people enjoy access to a Harvard education. But is anyone ever admitted to Harvard College from prison? As we continue the work of abolition, why not offer the liberatory power of a Harvard education as one of our efforts? If the institution would support a college-in-prison program, I would, along with other faculty and students, help to make it a reality. Could some of those $100 million dollars allocated towards reckoning with Harvards legacy of slavery be directed towards the liberation of people who are still not free?

Sara M. Feldman is the preceptor in Yiddish in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations.

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Reckoning With Harvard's Ties to Slavery Requires Prison Divestment and Prison Education | Opinion - Harvard Crimson

Making space for abolition in the university The Metropolitan – The Metropolitan

Keno Evol

Guest Opinion

Black Table Arts Art is the future event, April 24th, 2021. Credit: Uche Iroegbu.

The ongoing project to create abolitionist space in the university, at root, is a desire to be in communion; to be with others on terms not of the institution. As we venture to create these fugitive spaces, one could be reminded of the words of Harvard professor and Brazilian philosopher Roberto Mangabeira Unger in his lectures: Its like we created a space out of our rebellion but what fills the space? How we answer that question has everything to do with the task we take up to carve out places of belonging under conditions of constraint within the university.

When we refer to Black ontology, it seems, we are also thinking of spaces of abolitionwhich is to say, spaces whose existence constitute a combative imagination. The term combative imagination that I offer here speaks to ways of thinking and belonging that undermine state power and, more broadly, systems of authority.

When looking into the labyrinth of Black literature, we find such episodes of this kind of imagination. I am particularly interested in exploring these episodes of Black ontology inside the literary works of Toni Morrison, but also within the lived activism of Cedric Robinson, a political theorist and historian who, in organizing circles, we typically associate with the term racial capitalism. What I am interested in is the kind of ways of being together we find in Black fiction and also the lives of particular activists who clue us into how to keep spaces of abolition flowing inside the university as we recognize it is a place of constant constraint.

If we zoom in on, for example, Toni Morrisons Beloved, that in some ways can be seen as various episodes of Black ontology within each chapter; we see the kind of togetherness that can inform ways of belonging within the university. We can identify within the world of Beloved sensibilities that made relational bonds strong in the antebellum period that can instruct us on how to be together within the university as we try to challenge its power.

Beloved is in many ways a love story situated within terror. It is also a ghost story and a grief story. It tells a nonlinear narrative of Sethe and the consequences that haunt her. As it has been written about for decades, Sethe is a Black woman who, after a life in bondage, escapes to Ohio and now lives with her daughter, Denver, and elderly mother-in-law, Baby Suggs. Some moments of Black ontology that may be able to clue us into ways of getting together in the university are brought to us by way of Sethes daughter, Denver. There is a moment in the novel that almost seems like its own adventure where Denver remembers sneaking away from her home, house number 124; the house in some ways a character unto itself. She ventures to the other house where the other children were, and in this moment of the novel, we see Denver practice what could be described as Black fugitivity towards an education bound up in abolitionist practice as she seeks out the home of Lady Jones:

Once upon a time she had known more and wanted to. Had walked the path leading to a real other house. Had stood outside the window listening. Four times she did it on her owncrept away from 124 early in the afternoon when her mother and grandmother had their guard down, just before supper, after chores; the blank hour before gears changed to evening occupations. Denver had walked off looking for the house other children visited but not her. When she found it she was too timid to go to the front door so she peeped in the window.

What I want to suggest is that, like Denver, this is how we as students and faculty get to places of abolition in the university. In some ways we often feel like were in the woods seeking out other homes. Where the other children, or other students, are. We creep into these places, too timid at times to knock on the front door. We may be new to abolitionist vocabulary and frameworks. We may be unsure of the practical application of a more militant position inside an institution that may seem like an immovable block. What I want to put forward are ways of knowing we may be able to pick up from students like Denver. Morrison continues:

Lady Jones sat in a straight-backed chair; several children sat cross-legged on the floor in front of her. Lady Jones had a book. The children had slates. Lady Jones was saying something too soft for Denver to hear. The children were saying it after her. Four times Denver went to look. The fifth time Lady Jones caught her and said, Come in the front door, Miss Denver. This is not a side show.

So she had almost a whole year of the company of her peers and along with them learned to spell and count. She was seven, and those two hours in the afternoon were precious to her. Especially so because she had done it on her own and was pleased and surprised by the pleasure and surprise it created in her mother and her brothers. For a nickel a month, Lady Jones did what whitepeople thought unnecessary if not illegal: crowded her little parlor with the colored children who had time for and interest in book learning.

Within this episode of Black ontologywhich is to say, Black togetherness we see themes that resonate in Black abolitionist zones within the walls of the university. Denver sees her time spent in the parlor of Lady Jones as precious. Not only, I would say, because shes learning, but also because shes doing so with others in the context of bondage and constraint. Within this example we can see Lady Jones, a light skinned Black woman, being combative toward the state by the very nature of the activity happening within a context of surveillance and terror. Morrison reminds us the attitudes of the white gaze are such that they think the learning of Black children is unnecessary, if not illegal. But also within this moment of ontology, we get a vocabulary of pleasure and surprise. These kinds of zones that are organized by Black women such as Lady Jones instill sensibilities that the enslaved are outlawed in having; later in the book, Denver reminds us that slaves not supposed to have pleasurable feeling of their own; their bodies not supposed to be like that.

Within the happening of the crowded parlor in the woods, we see a practice of fugitive activity. There is also a pedagogy within Lady Jonesto welcome Denver, the outsider by the window, the onlooker who belongs to the dispossessed. This is also an abolitionist sensibility; its an abolitionist sensibility because abolition has always required collective study. And to be clear its not abolitionist first and foremost because theyre studying abolitionist theoryrather because the activity of study by those who are enslaved undermines the authority of the antebellum state. Also, to speak to claritythe goal it seems within the parlor located in the woods of Ohioit isnt first and foremost to overthrow the state, but merely to practice the activity of study outside the gaze of the state. How might our spaces of abolition in the university be transformed and exhalewhich is to say breathe betterby this reframe of the goal? This is not to say we cant imagine learning zones that abolish the university. It is to say that the goal of the spaces we organize within the university need not take on such expectation in order to fulfill its meaning.

The sensibilities we are able to take from Morrisons example of the parlor in the woods are in many ways the kinds of fugitive practices Cedric Robinson dedicated his lifework to. I think it is appropriate to speak about Cedric Robinson as a steward of what he called the Black radical traditionone who traced the origins of flight and fugitivity by Black people across the diaspora. He taught within the university but was first and foremost forged with the people outside the university in taking up the task of liberation. Within the account of his life in works such asCedric Robinson: The Time of the Black Radical Tradition, written by Howard professor Dr. Joshua Myers, we see an embodiment of fugitive practice that relates to Lady Jones. We see this particularly when we look at the ways in which Cedric taught at the University of Michigan in the 1970sfrom the Myers book:

Being in ear shot of Detroit Black radicalism provided important examples to study and engage. Black Studies scholars could not afford to ignore this movement as it provided direct answers to questions of revolutionary organization. It was an instant and example of praxisIn fact, as an early example of Black Studies practice, the entire semester featured both former and current organizers as presentersTeaching at the University of Michigan in both the political science and afro-american and african studies gave Cedric necessary classroom experienceThough the university tried to stop the practice, Cedrics..1972 political science course featured a segment called community control of prisons that was taught by John Sinclair the authority of the prisoner was the perspective that would reveal the prison as a side of oppression and brutality. Perhaps remembering his own experience working for Alameda County, Cedrics discussions closely resembled those we would later describe as prison abolitionists.

Like Lady Jones, Cedric Robinson does the work of Black ontology outside the gaze of authority. Within the university, Cedric is a steward of relationality which emerge abolitionist currents before a vocabulary of abolition entered institutions of education in the 1970s. These spaces of Black togetherness require their stewardswhich is to say those who care for and cultivate the relationships between the people that enter these fugitive spaces.

When thinking particularly about the context in which we find ourselves amidst a district-wide strike in Minneapolis, educators and paraprofessionals are bringing grievances to bear to improve their conditions within the ongoing labor of local education. To carve out abolitionist space in the university is to be in communion with those on strike. To be a steward of Black ontology, and by extension Black abolitionist space in the university, is to be a steward of relations that fill space that is indebted to rebellion outside the university. The desire held within these spaces are impulses first and foremost that seek to sustain the practice, the ongoing-ness, not the institution. To sustain these spaces is to undermine the authority of the institution because theyre not supposed to exist. Its within this ongoing-ness we find a hope to rely on. Joshua Myers reminds us of this in his work on Cedric Robinson:

Cedrics contribution to this theorizing was a talk he titled, Toward Fascism? Race, The Two reservations, and the Materiality of TheoryHe continued: The homeless have developed a knowledge of how to survive and help others survive; they are an enormous resource. I say that we cannot invent this stuff from some university, we can only hope it along.

About the author:

Tikkun Bambara is a writer and arts organizer. He is currently pursuing a degree in Ethnic Studies, and is a student of Black studies and Black poetics. His work zeros in on Black ontology and the Black radical tradition as curricula for the future. He is the founder of a local art cooperative in South Minneapolis for Black artists.

Bambara received the 2022 Minnesota Campus Compact Presidents Student Leadership Award from the Institute for Community Engagement and Scholarship, the Verve Grant, the Beyond the Pure fellowship, The Emerging Writers Grant, and The Spoken Word Immersion Fellowship for his work. His essays are available at MNArtists.com through the Walker Art Center.

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Making space for abolition in the university The Metropolitan - The Metropolitan

How American Exclusion Created the Chinese Church… – ChristianityToday.com

Chinese Protestant Christianity was born in the crucible of Chinese interaction with European and American missionaries in the 19th century. This was an era marked by the expansion of British and American commercial and military power. After the Opium Wars (18391842 and 18561860), Great Britain successfully pried open China to the West and to Protestant missionaries. Before the United States acquired Hawaii and the Philippines, it was engaged in territorial expansion in North America. This territorial expansion was accompanied by rapid economic development that created a tremendous demand for labor. The abolition of slavery in the British territories (1807) and the United States (1863) only intensified the need for cheap labor globally.

These historical developments explain, in part, the growth of the Chinese diaspora and Chinese immigration to the United States and Canada. A small but significant presence in the Spanish, Portuguese, and Dutch colonies in the 16th through 18th centuries in Asia, the Chinese diaspora grew rapidly during British expansion. Chinese labor was crucial for the growth of the North American West. Much of Californias agricultural industry as well as US and Canadian railroads were built by Chinese contract workers from Guangzhou.

What about the Christians? Most were delighted that the British and American powers had pried China open for the spread of the evangelical faith and cultural uplift. Abolitionists, who fought to eradicate slavery and trafficking, saw new opportunities to share the gospel of liberty and equality globally.

In the 1850s, when Chinese immigrants started to come to the United States in significant numbers, the Western Protestant missionary presence in China was limited to Hong Kong and five treaty ports. American mission societies saw an opportunity to build a transpacific Chinese Christian network that could reap the benefits of American Christianity. But even before the first Chinese church in North America (todays Presbyterian Church in Chinatown, San Francisco) was started in 1853 by four Chinese Christian merchants, obstacles arose that would decisively shape the character of Chinese American Christianity.

First, Chinese immigrants almost immediately faced hostility. Like European immigrants, the first Chinese immigrants were adventure seekers who saw an opportunity to become rich through mining or commerce shortly after the news of gold strikes in California in 1849 spread to China. But in 1852, the state of California passed discriminatory taxes and later attempted to force Chinese out of the mines and stop Chinese immigration.

Image: WikiMedia Commons

Left: Presbyterian Church in Chinatown, San Francisco, started in 1853 by four Chinese Christian merchants. Right: A lily vendor in Chinatown between 1896 and 1906.

Protests from the Chinese associations (including a self-described naturalized citizen and Christian merchant, Norman Asing) could not stem the growing animosity. Even the advocacy of missionaries and mission agencies could do little to prevent the US (and later, the Canadian) government from passing discriminatory immigration and naturalization laws in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Second, the transient, geographically scattered, and male-dominant Chinese immigrants made it nearly impossible to form stable faith communities. This was especially true during the 1850s and 1860s when most Chinese worked in mines scattered across the American West. As the mines dried up, many settled in adjacent small towns. Some started shoe - and cigar-making companies; others entered domestic service.

The construction of the Central Pacific Railroad in the 1860s brought a new wave of contract laborers. Many later worked on railroad construction in Canada, the American South, and the Northeast. A number of white congregations reached out to their new Chinese neighbors through language schools; however, they could not retain them because of cultural-linguistic barriers and Chinese work transience. An attempt to plant a Chinese Baptist church in Sacramento in 1854 was quickly abandoned. Even the Presbyterian mission in San Francisco, the only free standing Chinese Christian church in North America at the time, became inactive by 1860.

In the 1870s, however, a series of events gave birth to North American Chinese Christianity. As the Chinese population nearly doubled to 63,000 by 1870 and approached 105,000 by 1880, animus toward the Chinese intensified. They were blamed for the 1870s economic downturn in the West. Lacking the legal protection that comes with citizenship, Chinese were driven out of mining towns and many were killed. As they fled into Chinatown enclaves, they created segregated urban slums. Fueled by the backlash against Reconstruction in the South, the anti-Chinese movement quickly grew into a national movement leading to the passage of the Chinese exclusion acts of 1882, 1892, and 1902.

During this time, American missionary agencies renewed their efforts to build up and support the Chinese Christian community. Beginning in 1868, Methodist, Congregationalist, Baptist, and Episcopalian missionaries and Chinese pastors were assigned to San Franciscos Chinatown. Before long, women missionaries accompanied them and established English language schools, community centers, and womens rescue homes.

A number of white missionaries gained notoriety for their fearless advocacy of the rights of the Chinese. William Speer (18221904) not only helped plant the Chinese Presbyterian mission in San Francisco, but he also left important testimony in the California state records defending the Chinese in the face of racial prejudice. His successors, Augustus W. Loomis (18161891), Ira M. Condit (18331915), and Donaldina Cameron (18691968) have all left important legacies as supporters of the Chinese in North America. Otis Gibson (18251889), an unflinching ally who started the Chinese Methodist work, set the tone for Protestant advocacy for racial justice. Congregationalist William C. Pond (18301925) was supported by the abolitionist American Missionary Association. He and the Chinese Congregationalist pastors were among the most passionate preachers of the gospel of human equality. Together, these missionaries and Chinese Christian leaders provided stability for the community and channeled denominational attention and support.

The first Chinese converts were clearly drawn to the egalitarianism of an abolitionist-inspired evangelicalism. In a speech at an anniversary celebration of the Methodist Chinese Mission in San Francisco in 1875, Ma See connected the Christian view of a Creator God and Chinese rights: If this world was created by the one universal God; if it belongs to God; if men are all created equal; if all men come from one family; if these things be so, and they are so, then the Chinese, of course have the same right to come to this land and to occupy the land, that the people of any other nation have.

They also distinguished between what they perceived to be authentic and false Christianity. In the North American Review (1887), Yan Phou Lee noted that when the Chinese were persecuted some years agowhen they were ruthlessly smoked out and murderedI was intelligent enough to know that Christians had no hand in those outrages; for the only ones who exposed their lives to protect them were Christians.

While white missionaries have been rightly accused of racial paternalism, they were among the few who protested anti-Asian violence and fought exclusionary and discriminatory legislation, albeit unsuccessfully. They modeled a postmillennial zeal that made public witness an indelible mark of Christian faithfulness. Despite their unequal collaboration with missionaries, Chinese Christians embraced a spirituality that wedded personal connectedness to God with social and political engagement. Together they built a Christian transnational network that envisioned racial uplift and national salvation.

Timothy Tseng is the Pacific Area Director for InterVarsity Christian Fellowships Graduate and Faculty Ministries (GFM) and Co-Executive Director of New College Berkeley. He has served as a seminary professor, founder of a non-profit organization, and pastor. His PhD dissertation was titled Ministry at Arms Length: Asian Americans in the Racial Ideology of American Mainline Protestantism, 18821952.

Originally published on ChinaSource. Used with permission under a content-sharing agreement.

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How American Exclusion Created the Chinese Church... - ChristianityToday.com

Resident calls for council to be abolished over high costs and lack of work – The Northern Echo

A MARSKE resident has called for the abolition of his local parish council.

Peter Finlinson claims Saltburn, Marske and New Marske Parish Council is not representative as less than two thirds of its members have stood for election, the remainder having been co-opted onto the council.

Mr Finlinson also said the council was not accountable for the money it collected and spent through its parish precept, and attendance by members was in decline.

He said: Parish councils have been dissolved in other parts of the country and savings made.

There are five parish councils across the borough with a combined budget of more than 500,000.

The 80-year-old, a former civil engineer, addressed an annual assembly of the parish council and said a poll of residents living in the parish was required to determine their views.

But the proposal did not win any formal support.

Mr Finlinson was told that all members of the council were hard-working and how regular audits took place.

A statement on behalf of the parish council and its chairman, Councillor Stan Glover said: The overwhelming view of those members of the public who spoke was that the parish council was doing a good job in supporting local groups and that its abolishment would be detrimental to the parish.

Mr Finlinsons proposal received no support from those present and there was no suggestion of it being seconded, so it failed on that basis without the requirement for a vote.

Peter Finlinson, of Marske

Local electors can petition the principal council in their area in this case Redcar and Cleveland for a review to consider the abolition or dissolution of a parish council.

Meanwhile, a poll could be used, for example to ask residents if they maintain confidence in the parish council.

But it would not be binding on the council and would simply express the views of the electorate who vote in it.

Mr Finlinson said: There have been problems with the parish council for a long time, if you make a complaint about them it never gets anywhere.

I am entitled to speak at the parish assembly and entitled to ask for the dissolution.It is wrong to say there is no support, people came up to me after the meeting and asked why they [the council] didnt ask for a vote.

Nobody votes for anybody on the parish council, I dont think people actually know what the parish council do, and even the members themselves I think some of them go for a gossip or a chat, rather than do any particular work.

Mr Finlinson described the parish council as a cost centre which he said could be absorbed into the borough council and done away with.

He said: You wouldnt be dealing with two tiers of local government, which in my view is too many.

I think the general public need to wake up, if you like, to the fact we have another tier of government, which I dont think is working, and which has been replaced in other parts of the country and savings have been made.

Councillor Stuart Smith, left, with current chairman, Councillor Stan Glover

Redcar and Cleveland councillor Stuart Smith, who represents the Saltburn ward and is also a Saltburn, Marske and New Marske Parish councillor, said: Peter has his own personal views.

All parish councillors are volunteers, we dont get paid, and we all are trying to seek to improve the communities in which we live.

We do levy a precept although it hasnt increased for seven or eight years but it does back into the community by awarding groups grants, who would struggle without this funding.

We have a warden in Saltburn, Marske and New Marske, who does a lot of work and also helps the borough council with work they cant do.

If you didnt have the parish council, the burden would go back onto the borough council who would struggle to cover with cutbacks what the parish do now.

Cllr Smith said it was a sad reflection that some people did not want to give up their time to represent their community, but it was also understandable.

They would complain, Im sure, if services the parish council provides disappear, other examples being the Christmas lights switch on and Britain In Bloom, he added.

Parish and town councils are the most local tier of government in England.

They have a range of powers, but these largely extend to local matters such as looking after community buildings, open space, allotments, play areas, some street lighting, bus shelters and car parks.

They can raise money through council tax the parish precept and are required to hold elections every four years.

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Resident calls for council to be abolished over high costs and lack of work - The Northern Echo

What we know about Louisiana abortion bill to charge mothers with murder – Daily Advertiser

SCOTUS draft opinion on Roe v. Wade sparks protests around the country

Protests around the country were ignited by the leaked draft opinion from the Supreme Court on Roe v. Wade.

Damien Henderson, USA TODAY

A Louisiana bill that could charge people who have abortions and those who help them terminate pregnancy with murder has garnered national attention.

The bill comes as the debate surrounding abortion heats up following a leaked opinion from U.S. Supreme Court JusticeSamuel Alito that seems to indicate the overturning of Roe v. Wade, which provides abortion rights.

The bill, which says the unborn should be protected,was moved out of committee earlier this month and heads to the House floor for debate.

Here's what we know about the bill.

House Bill 813, sponsored by Rep. Danny McCormick (R-Oil City) andnamed the "Abolition of Abortion in Louisiana Act of 2022," would define "life" as beginning at fertilization.

It would allow state prosecutors to bring homicide charges against anyone who terminates a pregnancy, including medical personnel.

The bill defines a person as a "human being from the moment of fertilization" and an unborn child as "an individual human being from fertilization until birth."

Related: At Louisiana anti-abortion rally, angst over bill to charge those who get abortions with murder

Louisiana abortion showdown: What's next with bill that could charge mothers with murder?

The bill also directs the state to ignore the U.S. Supreme Court if it disagrees with any high court decision on abortion. It declares that any federal statute, regulation, treaty, executive order or court ruling that tries to supersede the bill's changes would be in violation of the U.S. and Louisiana constitutions and therefore void.

Any Louisiana judge who tries to enjoin, stay, overrule or void any provision of the bill would be subject to impeachment or removal if the bill passes.

The entire text can be read here.

If the bill were to pass, it could criminalize some forms of birth control, emergency contraception and in vitro fertilization (IVF), a complex series of procedures that help with fertility.

The original text of the bill would define "life" as beginning at fertilization.

Fertilization usually happens within 24 hours after sexual intercourse, but the womanmust be ovulating at the time. If ovulation is not happening at that time,fertilization can still occur up to six days after intercourse because the sperm cells can stay in the uterusand fallopian tube for that long.

Birth control works by using hormones to safely stop ovulation. If that doesn't work, birth control will prevent sperm from joining the egg and if that fails, it will thin the uterine wall to prevent implantation.

Plan B and other forms of emergency contraceptives work similarly to standard birth control.

IVF works by collecting mature eggs from ovaries and fertilizing them with sperm in a lab, according to Mayo Clinic. The fertilized embryo or embryos are then transferred to a uterus. The number of embryos transferred depends on the age and number of eggs retrieved.

Shreveport doctor explains: What's the difference in Plan B, birth controls pill?

'We can't wait on the Supreme Court': In Louisiana, abortion could become a crime of murder

McCormick told the USA TODAY Network he doesn't think there's a difference between a womanaborting herpregnancy or killing her2-year-old child.

"Murder is murder,"McCormicksaid."It's real simple. We're having the debate about whether the pre-born have the same protections as the born."

McCormick said the goal of the bill isn't to put people in jail but to "providethe same protections to the pre-born as the born."

Despite abortion restricting bills usually finding support in the Louisiana Legislature, many lawmakers and an anti-abortion group think McCormick's bill goes too far.

"I'm unapologetically pro-life from womb to tomb, but I can't support a bill that could charge the mother with murder; that bill is intense," said Democratic Sen. Katrina Jackson of Monroe.

Jacksonauthorized a constitutional amendment declaring there is no right to and no funding of abortion that was overwhelmingly supported by voters in 2020.

Louisiana Right to Life, the state's largest anti-abortion rights advocate, came out in opposition to McCormick's bill. The group argued it isunnecessary and contradictsits goals.

"Our position has always been women should not be treated as criminals," said Benjamin Clapper, executive director of Louisiana Right to Life, in an interview with USA Today Network. "We believe Louisiana is already prepared to protect every baby from abortion if the Supreme Court overturns (Roe v. Wade)."

More: Louisiana residents more supportive of abortion than previously, survey suggests

Right to Life: Louisiana Right to Life opposes bill that could charge women who have abortion with murder

The bill advanced earlier this month from the House Criminal Justice Committee on a 7-2 vote. It is scheduled to be taken up Thursday on the House floor.

The action taken on the bill by the Louisiana legislature can be tracked on the state's website.

Contact Ashley White at adwhite@theadvertiser.com or on Twitter @AshleyyDi. Reporters Greg Hilburn and Meredith G. White contributed to this report.

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What we know about Louisiana abortion bill to charge mothers with murder - Daily Advertiser