Why Zola from The Witcher looks so familiar – Looper

WhileThe Witcher isn't exactly a period piece it's set somewhere and some time that vaguely resembles medieval Europe, just with magic and mythical monsters Plowman is well-versed in that particular genre, having appeared on showsset in eras and places without smartphones, adequate plumbing, and women's liberation.

In 2003, the New Zealand native had a small part as Melinda on the BBC drama Cambridge Spies, which tells the the true story of a group of Brits who spied for the Soviets before, during, and after World War II. A year later, Plowman appeared on another BBC period drama:He Knew He Was Right, based on an 1869 novel by author Anthony Trollope. She portrayedCaroline Spalding, an American woman who marries a wealthy son of an English lord. In 2006,she played a murder victim on an episode of Agatha Christie's Marple, a reboot of the beloved British detective series Miss Marple.

Fast forward nine years, and Plowman was still being cast in roles that demanded corsets and a stiff upper lip. In 2015, she made an appearance on the BBC dramaFather Brown, a detective series set in a small English village in the 1950s. The trend continued in 2016, but on a larger scale: Plowman appeared on seasons 3 and 4 of the swashbuckling high-seas-and-higher-drama pirate saga Black Sails, playing the chambermaid-turned-spy Mrs. Hudson. This also marked the third time she'd appeared onscreen alongside her real-life husband, British actorToby Stephens, whom you may know as John Robinson on Netflix'sLost in Space.

See the original post here:

Why Zola from The Witcher looks so familiar - Looper

Dr Disrespect reveals his favorite streamers and why summit1g is "top" – Dexerto

Dr Disrespect scooped the award for Streamer of the Year at the official Esports awards 2019, but when asked by fans during his first stream of the New Year, he had another personality in mind for the accolade - summit.

The self-proclaimed best video gamer in the world has spent the last year improving his production value and trying out a number of different games to grow his channel's following or as he calls them, members of his Champions Club.

His entertaining streams have been recognized not just in awards ceremonies but by many fellow streamers on Twitch during the course of the last year. Although, given the choice, he revealed during a January 1 broadcast that he actually wouldn't pick himself for streamer of the year.

At first, it appeared that the Two-Time blockbuster video game champion was going to reveal his favorite three streamers. However, he said he needed to think a little more about second and third place, with one name standing out for the top spot.

Doc admitted that his decision was chiefly made on the basis that he wouldn't like to sit down and watch his own streams back, but if he had to pick somebody else, it would be Jaryd 'summit1g' Lazar.

"In my opinion for 2019, [if I had to choose] my personal top streamer to watch because obviously watching my own vods probably comes off weird and selfish, you know, especially if Mrs. Assassin comes in and I'm watching a video of myself every single night, it would just be weird," he said. "The number one would be summit."

Dr Disrespect gave honorable mentions to Turner 'Tfue' Tenney, Tim 'TimTheTatman' Betar, and Flix 'xQc' Lengyel, but went on to explain his decision to pick summit over them.

"Summit1g for me. The reason why? He's just got a great blend of everything you can get from a streamer, in terms of energy levels, his gameplay is obviously high level, and number three and I think this is an important one," he said. "He popularized a variety of games that weren't, I don't know, that popular. Let's be honest."

A great example of that would be Sea of Thieves, a pirate game released on Xbox and available on PC platform too, where the streamer was drawing around 80,000 viewers to sail around the high seas not to mention the GTA RP craze he helped contribute towards on Twitch.

Whether or not summit1g will go on to scoop an award for streamer of the year next time around remains to be seen, yet the levels of success he's achieving on the platform is highly commendable. So much so that we included him in our Top 10 streamers of the decade list, and clearly Dr Disrespect is also a huge fan of his work.

The rest is here:

Dr Disrespect reveals his favorite streamers and why summit1g is "top" - Dexerto

Below Deck reunion special: Who is coming together to celebrate the 100th episode? – Monsters and Critics

31st December 2019 5:30 PM ET

Sign up now for your TV newsletter!

Former Below Deck crew members are reuniting to honor the 100th episode of the Bravo show. Captain Lee Rosbach and Kate Chastain will join several of their past colleagues on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen for an unforgettable look back at the reality TV series.

On Monday, January 6, Captain Lee and Kate will sit down with Cohen, as well as some of the shows most loved and hated cast members. Ben Robinson, Eddie Lucas, Kelley Johnson, Amy Johnson, and Nico Scholly are scheduled to take part in the sitdown that will look back on 100 episodes of Below Deck.

Fab lineup for Watch What Happens Live when it return in 2020! #WWHL

Stars from #RHOA, #BelowDeck, #PumpRules, #RHONJ, #RHOD and more stop by the clubhouse! pic.twitter.com/LhUacps4Sr

IsntDaveOne (@IsntDaveOne) December 20, 2019

No, those are not the only alums from the hit Bravo show returning to discuss seven outstanding seasons. According to Bravos The Daily Dish, there will be several surprise guests appearing on WWHL. The site also promises the yachties will look back on the craziest, most demanding guests, steamiest hookups, and dramatic moments that have occurred on the high seas.

There have been so many jaw-dropping moments to unfold on Below Deck it will be interesting to see which ones make the cut. Season 7 alone has given fans several scenes, fights, and conversations that left viewers shaking their heads at the end of the episode.

Along with taking a look back, all those involved in the 100th episode reunion special will spill what they have been up to since their season. It will serve as a nostalgic reminder and revelation of where cast members are now.

Considering all the drama that has taken place on Below Deck, viewers might be in for a reunion special full of controversy. There is no question that Cohen is in for a challenge when it comes to keeping order among the past cast members. Then again, he knows how to wrangle those Real Housewives casts, so he should have no problem keeping his guests focused on the task at hand.

The Watch What Happens Live with past Below Deck crew members taking a trip down memory lane is less than a week away.

Will you be tuning in for the reunion show?

Below Deck airs Mondays at 9/8c on Bravo.

More:

Below Deck reunion special: Who is coming together to celebrate the 100th episode? - Monsters and Critics

Dame Edna Rules the Waves, BBC1, review: Dame Edna was resplendent in fire-alarm pink on a gilt throne – inews

CultureTVSharon Osbourne and Rick Stein were among the guests but this was, as ever, all about Dame Edna

Tuesday, 31st December 2019, 10:02 pm

Dame Edna Rules the Waves, BBC One, 9.05pm

Talk shows can go one of two ways. You can create a welcoming space where your guests can kick their shoes off and start telling daringly revealing anecdotes. Alternatively, theres the Dame Edna formula, where the guests are cannon fodder for the host.

At 85, the Dame isnt as laser-sharp as she was 20 years ago, but you wouldnt dare play poker with her. The fiction on Dame Edna Rules the Waves was that she had taken to the high seas on the cruise ship Ocean Widow to safeguard her ill-gotten earnings, having been inappropriately touched by the taxman. Otherwise it was business as usual, though Ednas erstwhile mute companion Madge Allsop is now deceased (shes no longer with us but the chair is still damp, quipped the gross-out Dame) and has been replaced by her sister Mabel, a husk of a woman easily mistaken for a corpse.

i's TV newsletter: what you should watch next

Resplendent in fire-alarm pink on a gilt throne, Edna chewed through her guests like a wood-chipping machine. First up was Sharon Osbourne, a woman feared for her volcanic temper and a vocabulary that would make Snoop Dogg blush, but reduced to simpering coyness in the presence of the Dame. Edna was taking no prisoners. Of course I recognise you, she said sympathetically, but youve been to the panel-beaters a few times, havent you? Osbourne admitted shed had four facelifts, and was forced to agree that an intimate part of her anatomy has been surgically overhauled.

But Sharon was failing to hold Ednas attention, so chef Rick Stein was dragged out for a brisk working-over (there was room for improvement at his Padstow restaurant, he was informed). Judge Rinder fared slightly better, but Emily Atacks stories about loving mermaids and eating cheese were idiotic, while Joe Sugg (social media star and Strictly finalist in 2018) had the impact of a feather landing on a rice pudding. In truth, wed have got better value from Edna doing a 50-minute monologue before the finale of Chic playing Le Freak, but maybe shes getting bashful in her dotage.

Excerpt from:

Dame Edna Rules the Waves, BBC1, review: Dame Edna was resplendent in fire-alarm pink on a gilt throne - inews

Editorial: In this new decade, set the bar high – Concord Monitor

Published: 1/5/2020 5:45:39 AM

Modified: 1/5/2020 5:45:12 AM

Which law will prevail in the decade that began this week, that of Moore or Murphy?

The former, named for computer pioneer Gordon Moore, posits that computer processing speed will double every two years. It is now used to describe the inexorable advance of technologies that mostly improve life.

Murphys Law, whose origin is less clear but linked to the early years of rocket science, is commonly quoted as, Anything that can go wrong will. That too could be what the years between 2020 and 2030 have in store.

Moores Law is fundamentally optimistic: Science will save the planet. Murphys Law pessimistic: Technology deployed to combat global warming will go awry and broil the Earth or cause another Ice Age. Which will it be? All we know for sure is that we dont know.

Who, a decade ago, would have predicted the rise of Uber, Instagram, the iPad, Airbnb, cheap DNA testing and President Trump? We dont know what will happen in the next 10 years but we do know, limiting the list to the conceivable, what wed like to see occur.

First up, an end to the politics of division and a rekindling of the sense, felt in the aftermath of the 9-11 attacks, that we are all in this together. Rising seas, raging wildfires, earth-scouring storms and deadly heat waves threaten our very existence, and we will need to act, locally and as a nation, to reduce the burning of fossil fuels, tax carbon (as a bill before New Hampshires Legislature seeks to do), and support conservation and renewable energy research.

Wed like to see the rediscovery of kindness and its power to heal both giver and recipient. Wed like to see a return to civility in discourse and a time when cooperation was seen as a sign of strength and maturity, not weakness. We want facts to take precedence over gut feelings and vainglorious dreams. We wanted to see science valued for what it is, a method to explore reality and discover how and why things are as they are. We want the rule of law to apply fairly and impartially to all.

Can such lofty goals be achieved? We believe they can and so, in the next decade, can less lofty things. Among those are common-sense gun laws laws that could reduce needless gun deaths and the frequency of mass shootings that last year occurred at the rate of more than one per day.

The next decade should see the enactment of comprehensive immigration reform and a path to citizenship for the millions of law-abiding immigrants who are contributing to society and paying taxes yet live in fear of deportation.

Reform of the nations so-called health care system will be on the agenda, along with the need to end profiteering and reduce the cost of drugs.

The nations tax code will need to change in the next decade if income inequality is to be reduced and meaningful work created for the growing number of people whose jobs will be replaced by automation. Americas infrastructure should be rebuilt.

The fall election will be a test of the electoral system and the impact on the outcome of dark money, foreign interference and voter suppression. Major changes, including the reversal of court decisions that treat corporations as people and even the end of the Electoral College, may be necessary. To keep government honest there will need to be a revival of local and state journalism.

Murphy or Moore? Both will be at work. Our money is on Moore and Americas ability to double the pace of its efforts to solve its host of problems.

See the article here:

Editorial: In this new decade, set the bar high - Concord Monitor

Santa takes to the high seas – Eternity News

This Christmas, thousands of invisible workers will spend the day miles away from their family and perhaps even from the nearest land. These often forgotten workers are seafarers, who spend an average of eight to 11 months at sea as they ship cargo around the globe.

In their remote, watery world, many seafarers not only spend the entire Christmas season away from those they love, but they often miss the most significant moments in family life.

Separation from family is the number one problem. Garry South

You can just imagine telling your wife and your children Ill see you next year. Thats a really hard thing for some of them, especially if their wife is expecting. They miss the birth. Theyre on board for another four or five months and they see pictures of their new baby, but they cant hold them, chaplain Garry South explains to Eternity.

South is one of the few people who has regular contact with up to 38,000 seafarers each year as they pass through Port Hedland Seafarers Centre, on the north coast of Western Australia. These workers power the ships that visit the port to export the Pilbara regions lithium and iron ore resources to China and beyond. Port Hedland is the worlds largest mineral export port, and also Australias biggest port based on total annual tonnes shipped from it.

For the past nine years South has served there as port chaplain for Mission to Seafarers a worldwide ministry of the Anglican Church that provides practical and pastoral care to seafarers and their families in more than 30 Australian ports. Over the years South has discovered the toll that demanding conditions and isolation take on seafarers and their loved ones.

Separation from family is the number one problem if their children are sick or things happen at home, they cant go home. And then if a seafarer is injured or sick on board, they dont always get help because theyre too far out to sea. You sometimes have deaths on board.

South gives another example of a young Japanese cook who discovered his sister was gravely ill just one month after his contract started. Within two months, his sister passed away but he said he couldnt go home because I have a wife and a three-year-old daughter, and if I go home I lose my contract.

So, basically, he had to stay on board.

While employment conditions are not as bad as they used to be, according to South, the chaplain says theres still a lot of improvement to be made. In particular, he singles out support for the mental health of seafarers.

I go to the hospital and visit those that have been injured or sick and its just really sad. Theyre worried about how theyre going to survive because theyre worried their contract will be cancelled For the seafarers, having someone to show them a little bit of interest and try and help them, it lifts them up.

Its about trying to identify with whats going on in their world When we finish work we can go for a walk or go to the supermarket; when they finish work they can only go to their cabin. Garry South

On an average day, South hops into a launch boat and visits at least two ships anchored in the port, staying on each vessel for a couple of hours to chat to the crew. He also takes the opportunity to hand out Bibles, which are funded by Gideons and Bible Society Australia.

Im finding a lot more Myanmar crew coming to Port Hedland now A lot of them are Buddhist and Im giving out lots of childrens Bibles. The Filipinos and Myanmar crew are quite happy to receive a childrens Bible. When they get home, theyll send me a picture of them with their children and wife.

South continues: Recently I was on board a vessel and I spoke to a Myanmar captain. I think he was trying to convert me to Buddhism. It was an interesting conversation because in Buddhism, there is no forgiveness. So I was able to tell him that my Gods into forgiving.

Garry South (centre front) with crew from Myanmar

Souths conviction about the ability of chaplains to change lives comes from a place of personal experience. As a young man he was converted by a chaplain during a 15-minute conversation in a hospital, after a motorbike accident.

God really got my attention then it was a turning point, says South, who afterwards began attending an Anglican church in his home town of Forbes in central-west NSW.

He later entered into church ministry in Narooma on the south coast of NSW, then worked in chaplaincy for a juvenile justice centre in Wagga Wagga in the NSW Riverina and in a drug rehabilitation centre near Coffs Harbour in northern NSW. Then he received a phone call inviting him to take up the chaplaincy position at Port Hedland.

This year, South and his wife Kathy have also taken over management of the local visitors centre to help fund the chaplaincy work. The importance of the couples contribution hasnt gone unnoticed, with South winning the 2019 International Seafarers Personality of the Year award.

For South, it is a labour of love. With most of his three daughters and grandchildren living far away, he says, we understand seafarers a little bit because we only get to go back once a year to visit [our family]. Its about trying to identify with whats going on in their world. What I try and do is to take my shoes off and put theirs on. When we finish work we can go for a walk or go to the supermarket; when they finish work they can only go to their cabin.

And so, South is quite prepared year after year to spend his Christmas serving seafarers.

Since November 30, staff at Port Hedland Seafarers Centre, along with community volunteers, have been packing 2000 Christmas gift bags to give to seafarers. The bags, largely funded by mining companies, each contain souvenirs from the centre (such as a cap and drink bottle), as well as practical items (like toothpaste and a toothbrush) and Christian literature. This year they will also contain beanies hand-knitted by nursing home residents and provided through a local Rotary club.

Crew receive gift bags via helicopter

We start giving the Christmas bags out to each individual seafarer around December 21 for vessels leaving our port then, South explains. Then on Christmas Eve day, I usually fly out to an anchorage which is 16 miles out. So we land the helicopter on a ship there and the crew come and meet us on the helipad, and we give them the bags and then we fly over to the next vessel. Last year I went to about 36 vessels out there.

Then on Christmas Day, we go around the harbour and deliver direct to the vessels that are alongside. Theres 19 berths, so we go around the harbour on the launch boat to each vessel and drop off the Christmas bags.

While Garry admits this outreach is full-on and exhausting, he adds, I have the seafarers thanking me for the presents for the whole of the next year.

But for Garry, the biggest payoff is just seeing the seafarers actually getting looked after.

To find out more or support the Mission to Seafarers visit mts.org.au. To visit the Port Hedland Seafarers Centre directly head to phseafarers.org.

Read more from the original source:

Santa takes to the high seas - Eternity News

Investigating salmon mysteries on the high seas – National Observer

On a late night last February, oceanographer Brian Hunt walked onto the deck of the RV Professor Kaganovskiy and looked out upon the unseasonably calm waters of the Gulf of Alaska. What he saw in the night ocean surprised him: the ship was surrounded by glowing golden jellyfish, their bell-shaped hoods illuminated by the ships floodlights.

It was a mega swarm of Chrysaora melanaster, also known as the northern sea nettle. They're a species of jellyfish often found in the Bering Sea, with heads the size of dinner plates and stinging tentacles that trail for three metres.

I never expected to see that, says Hunt, who has participated in research expeditions covering five oceans. Ive seen jellyfish mega swarms in coastal waters several times, but I have never seen anything like that in the open ocean. It was a phenomenon.

Hunt, an assistant professor of oceanography at UBC's Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries, was part of a team of 21 international fisheries researchers on the Russian research shipall trying to understand better why some salmon survive their time at sea, and some dont.

Northern sea nettles have a voracious appetite for the same small aquatic creatures on which many salmon also rely. Their presence in these waters about 1500 kilometres from Vancouver added to researchers questions about the survival of the estimated 55 million Pacific salmon present in this part of the northeast Pacific.

The high-seas science conducted on the Professor Kaganovskiy last February by the International Gulf of Alaska Expedition is currently providing the sharpest snapshot ever taken of the areas ecosystem. The diverse crew included genomic experts, physical and biological oceanographers, biologists, hydrologists, and more, all hailing from five salmon-bearing nations of the Pacific Rim: Canada, Korea, Japan, Russia, and the US.

Scientists know that all six Pacific salmon species enter the Gulf of Alaska for years at a time, before some return to natal fresh water streams around the Pacific Rimbut what happens during their multi-year ocean migrations remains one of the great mysteries of nature.

Other than data from a series of remote weather stations and a limited 2006 Japanese survey, very little is known about the ecosystem of this vast area of ocean.

Climate changeincluding phenomena like the oceanic heatwave dubbed "the Blob that spiked temperatures throughout the northeast Pacific beginning in 2013is complicating this already shaky understanding of oceanic conditions.

The economic stakes are high when it comes to understanding the lives of salmon. Russian and American fisheries alone caught a combined total of over 950,000 tonnes of Pacific salmon species in 2018a catch worth billions of dollars.

Meanwhile British Columbia's Fraser River sockeye fishery, one of Canada's most valuable (and part of a wild Pacific salmon industry worth over $55 million annually), had the lowest returns on record in 2019. This crash coincided with massive salmon returns to Alaska's Bristol Bay, the biggest sockeye run on earth. Scientists and fisheries managers need to know why these booms and busts are happening, and the high seas are where many answers may be hiding.

Part of the reason the Gulf of Alaska is something of a black box is the risky nature of taking expedition vessels there: in winter, waves can build over thousands of kilometres of uninterrupted ocean to 20-metre swells, amid winds that can gust to 185 kilometres per hour. Undaunted by the risks, the international team set out to sample more than 60 locations on a grid set across 700,000 square kilometres of open ocean.

The insights they gathered will be shared among them, and enriched by similar survey data gathered elsewhere in the Pacific, mainly by Russian researchers.

A big part of my interest in this expedition was the idea of having an international body of scientists come together, says Kristi Miller, one of the worlds foremost marine genetic molecular scientists and head of Applied Diagnostics, Genomics and Technology at Nanaimos Pacific Biological Station.

Its an opportunity to really build bridges between the salmon and oceanographic research groups in all of these different countries, and possibly beyond the Pacific.

As it turned out, the weather was on the researchers sidemostly. The worst they experienced were winds of 110 kilometres per hour and 10-metre waves.

Laurie Weitkamp, a salmon biologist with the Northwest Fisheries Science Center at Newport, Oregon, says that was plenty bad enough. She compares the experience to the ship being strapped to a bucking bronco.

The month-long expedition began in the middle of February. Researchers chose the dead-of-winter timeframe because that season is the least-studied time of year in the high seasand because the first winter spent in the open ocean is thought to be the leanest for young salmon in terms of food availability.

If a salmon is to survive to return and spawn, the theory goes, their first winter at sea is the most critical test.

Once out on the high seas, researchers dragged a trawl net at over 60 separate sampling locations. Weitkamp oversaw the recording of data at many of the sample points. She remembers excited clusters of scientists, regardless of discipline, crowded around to get a first glimpse of what the trawl net brought in.

Chum, coho and sockeye were the most abundant salmon that came up in their nets. Along with them came 16 non-salmonid fish species and 11 types of squid, but the majority of biomass brought on boardwhich fits with Brian Hunts night-time swarm sightingwas jellyfish.

There were other surprises. Coho salmon are generally thought to prefer coastal areas, but researchers found them in significant numbers over a thousand kilometres offshore. Pink salmon, on the other handexpected to be plentiful this year, especially in southern watersdidnt show up in great numbers.

Significant, confusing variations turned up when scientists looked in the stomachs of the fish, says Weitkamp. For example, multiple skinny, starving chum salmon were caught alongside chum that had full bellies and were apparently healthy.

We were like, Where have you guys been? What are you doing thats so different?

Perhaps the biggest surprise for Weitkamp and her colleagues was the near-total absence of large predators of salmon in the sample trawls. In addition to salmon sharks, thought to be abundant, they expected to see sleeper sharks and possibly even great whites, although no one is sure that the latter range that far north.

When we go sampling off the Oregon coast we get a lot of dogfish, we get blue sharks, nurse sharks, and in the summer there are thresher sharks. But out there we didnt get any big sharks, so its really puzzling, says Weitkamp.

An additional point of interest came not from animals but from pollution. Gennady Kantakov, an oceanographer with the Moscow-based Far Eastern Ecological Center, used a specially-designed near-surface net to measure microplastics, and found lower plastic particles than expected.

His collaborator, Matthias Egger, the lead field scientist for the Netherlands-based group The Ocean Cleanup, says they found an average of 9,000 plastic particles larger than 0.5mm per square kilometre; by contrast, concentrations in the North Pacific subtropical gyre, also known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, are more than 100 times higher: over one million pieces per square kilometre.

A possible explanation is that the sea surface currents in the Gulf of Alaska turn counter-clockwise and tend to expel material, unlike the subtropical oceanic gyres that typically capture and retain drifting surface materials.

Hunt remains puzzled why there were so many jellyfish in the Gulfby his calculations, about 1.2 million tonnes of them, mostly concentrated in the northern part of the sampling area. He now believes that the jellyfish originated from shallower waters near the Aleutian Islands, from which they ride currents into the Gulf of Alaska.

Id love to know if this is normal or something anomalous, he says of the mega swarm. We dont have the information to get at that yet.

For Hunt and some of his collaborators, a next step post-expedition is to create a map of the Gulf of Alaska marine food webone that would shed more light on the complex network of interactions and predator-prey relationships in the ecosystem. By tracking a specific nitrogen isotope that persists in the bodies of all marine life, Hunt will be able to create a first-ever picture of what salmon and many other creatures in the Gulf of Alaska eat over time.

The expedition was the brainchild of Fisheries and Oceans Canada Scientist Emeritus Dick Beamish, who worked with Pacific Salmon Foundation CEO Brian Riddell to privately raise funding from the Canadian federal government, the BC provincial govermment, NGOs, industry and private donors. The expedition was recognized as a signature project of the International Year of the Salmon (IYS), a global framework for salmon conservation and awareness led by the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC) and other partners.

Beamish and Riddell hope to pull together another voyage in 2020, and in 2021 the NPAFC and partnersincluding all five member countriesare planning a five-ship pan-Pacific expedition. The Canadian government and the province of BC have contributed $3 million over three years towards the 2021 cruise as part of the BC Salmon and Innovation fund. These two expeditions would allow a deeper exploration of the data and anomalies seen on the first voyage and help researchers understand how things change over time, and over the full breadth of the North Pacific.

Hunt hopes to be among the researchers on future missions, as does Weitkamp, who says it will take at least five consecutive trips to be able to put this years findings in any sort of context.

We went out there just this one time in winter. Imagine going to New York City on New Years Eveyoure going to get a very different perspective of what the city is like than if you go to the same place on a Monday night in November.

Editor's note: This story was made possible by support from Tides Canada, the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission and the Pacific Salmon Foundation.

Don't miss out on the latest news

The rest is here:

Investigating salmon mysteries on the high seas - National Observer

Spill and Run: Brazil Struggles to ID Tanker Behind Oil Pollution – The Maritime Executive

Government employees clean oil from Japaratinga beach in Brazils Alagoas state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

By China Dialogue Ocean 12-20-2019 02:00:00

[ByManuela Andreoni,Letcia Casado and Lo Malafaia]

After a long day collecting what felt like tonnes of crude oil from one of the most beautiful beaches in the Brazilian state of Pernambuco, Vandecio Sebastio Santana was tired and frustrated.

This oil is coming from the high seas. Not from near here, he yelled. Do you think our work here in the sand is enough? Its not.

Santana is one of thousands of volunteers who have been cleaning Brazils beaches since mysterious oil patches started staining them in late August. They have been battling to protect the ecosystem that gives them fish to eat and sell and beautiful scenery to attract tourists. Their oiled hands and legs have featuredin mediaacross the country and the world.

What looked at first like a small leak has now become one of Brazils most serious environmental disasters. Hundreds of beaches have been polluted in 11 states, covering more than half of the countrys coastline. At least 106 animals, mostly sea turtles, have died.

Investigators have come to believe that Venezuelan oil leaked from a ship travelling in international waters hundreds of kilometres off Brazils coast. But the culprit remains elusive.

Gaps in governance

The disaster has highlighted the challenge of enforcing global shipping industry rules across the vastness of the ocean. Leaking vessels have caused several catastrophes at sea.

In 2002, the oil tankerPrestige sankoff the coast of Spain, causing the worst environmental disaster the region had ever seen. In 2010, theDeepwater Horizonoffshore drilling rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, causing the largest-ever spill in US waters. Last year, an Iranian tanker carrying one million barrels of oilcrashed into a freighterin the East China Sea, raising fears for marine life.

A crab trapped in oil on Japaratinga beach, Alagoas state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

While many experts agree the laws governing the global shipping industry are comprehensive, enforcement is highly fragmented. Inspecting ships is sometimes the responsibility of three separate countries: the flag state that registered the ship; the port state where the ship docks; and the state in whose waters the ship is sailing.

Its still common for vessel owners to go for a so-calledflag of convenience, which means registering the ship in a country with weak regulations. Many of these countries have vastly improved their inspections in recent years. But some of the most popular flag countries, such as Panama and Greece, have thousands of ships to inspect, which can overwhelm them.

The framework is pretty good, said James Kraska, a professor of international maritime law at the US Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. Whats not good is compliance. There are a few problem states undermining the system. And then there are the illegal networks, the criminal networks.

These networks are commonly involved inillegal fishing. But they have also become a concern around countries suffering from trade sanctions, which have more reasons to turn a blind eye to smugglers.

The networks often usedark ships ships that turn off transponders to make themselves invisible to monitoring systems. They have been found smuggling Venezuelan oil to evade US sanctions, raising concerns among Brazilian officials that they may be behind the disaster.

But that is speculation. The origin of the spill remains a mystery. Leandra Gonalves, a researcher at the University of So Paulos Institute of Oceanography, says the fragmented system of governance means some problems, such as the leak, never get reported. Fixing it is key to strengthening the international safety net.

There is a gap in the international governance of oceans, she said. And this gap must be closed.

Stopping the black tide

Santana was born and raised in Cabo do Santo Agostinho, a small beach town in the northeast of Brazil. Aged 36, he works as a paddleboard teacher, catering to thousands of tourists each year.

Not everyone has studied [or] has a job here, he said. We depend on tourism.

Vandecio Sebastio Santana manually cleans oil from mangroves in the Massangana river estuary, Pernambuco state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

When the China Dialogue team met Santana, he had been cleaning the beach for 17 days. Atop his paddleboard, he collected the oil wearing four pairs of gloves to avoid contamination.

The thousands of Brazilians that, like Santana, gathered to desperately clean beaches were mostly improvising. Without proper equipment or guidance, they struggled to clean blobs of highly viscous crude oil off the sand, mangroves and rocks.

Across the two states China Dialogue Ocean visited, there were dozens of empty fish stalls and restaurants. Sales, shop owners said, had dropped 80%.

Clients think the fish and shellfish are contaminated, Demtrio Melo, who works at a fishmongers in the city of Olinda, said. They are scared.

The problem is made worse because many fishermen here live in poverty and depend on the fish they sell. This is the case with Maria do Socorro, a 51-year-old who lives with her husband and daughter in a 20 square metre wooden house with a dirt floor in the beach town of Nova Cruz.

The fish are oiled, she said. No one will buy them.

The scale of the damage to the environment is still unknown, but more than 10 nationally-protectedenvironmental reserveshave been poisoned. Valmir Ramos da Silva, director of environment in the city of Barreiros, Pernambuco, left his office to help other residents clean up.

We are mostly worried about the river, the estuary, he said. This is one of the least polluted estuaries in Brazil. This wont only affect biodiversity, but also fishermen. That is their ncome.

An improvised floating barrier to block oil contaminating the Boca da Barra estuary, Pernambuco state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

From August to late November, the oil has reached more than 800 beaches, little by little. On several, volunteers were able to clean most of the oil only to see it show up again a few weeks later.

As Santana worked under the sun with no pay, he watched many in his town go hungry because they couldnt fish. But he also knew nothing they did would be enough to stop the black tide.

This work we are doing needs to be the last one, Santana said. But we dont have vessels to go to the high seas. And we have no structure to hold off the oil that is coming.

Frustrationatslow government response

Fishermen, environmentalists and academics alike were frustrated with what they saw as government inaction.

Officials in cities werediscarding the oilcollected from the beaches in landfills and abandoned buildings, ignoring environmental standards. Volunteers didnt get medical attention and there wasnt enough equipment to clean up the oil.

Skips full of oil-contaminated sand collected on Boca da Barra beach, Pernambuco state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

Many accused the government of far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, of not doing enough. Bolsonaroonly orderedan investigation into the matter on 5 October, 41 days after the disaster began.

On18 October, federal prosecutors even went to court to force the government to act.

The government insists on saying everything is alright. Its not, prosecutor Ramiro Rockenback told reporters. Whats happening is very serious.

Mission impossible: finding the source

The source of an oil spill of this magnitude would seem easy to identify. Its pretty easy to see an enormous tanker struggling at sea as tonnes of oil spills out of it. Companies generally report it, and an aircraft would easily be able to see it.

Not this time. Researchers believe the spill happened roughly a month before it reached the Brazilian coast. By then, a ship, even if it was struggling, would already be gone.

The satellites that roam over us have a limited capacity for collecting and storing data. Over the high seas, their images cannot capture the surface in enough detail to reveal the texture of an oil spill. Anything smaller than 500 square metres is pretty much invisible.

Many, including Brazils national environmental protection agency, said it was impossible to catch the culprit using satellites. But some tried regardless.

Leonardo Barros runs a company called Hex that specialises in geospatial technology. He and his team volunteered to help the government.

There is no doubt the biggest challenge is the availability of data, Barros said. This makes the work more complex and even innovative.

Oil-covered boots used by volunteers at the governments clean-up base on Itapuama beach, Pernambuco state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

Using models to determine the ocean currents and winds, they identified a rough area where the oil could have spilled: the South Equatorial Current, which comes from Africa and splits nearer Brazils eastern tip, travelling north and south of the coastline. Other researchers agreed.

They then collected the images of satellites belonging to Nasa and the European Space Agency, and processed them. Roughly 700km away from Brazils coast, they spotted an indication of a stain over 200km long, and a ship they couldnt identify.

The next step was to collect ship location data using the automatic identification system, which tracks all ships that have turned on their transponders, as they are obligated to do. Hex was able to find four ships in the area at the time they thought the spill occurred. Only one was carrying Venezuelan oil the Greek-flagged Bouboulina.

Hexs report was the basis for a federal police investigation in early November that fixed the Bouboulina as the main suspect. But the Greek company that owned it, Delta Tankers, strongly denied any oil had leaked from its ship.

A tourist tries to remove oil from her foot on Japaratinga beach, Alagoas state (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

This week, Pedro Binelli, a representative of Brazils environmental protection agency, Ibama, told Congress his team believes the stain spotted by Hex was nothing but chlorophyll, a green pigment that indicates the concentration of microscopic organisms called phytoplankton in the water.

Researchers, Binelli said, were now looking for the culprit even further away, closer to Africa.

The more time goes by, the harder it becomes to find the origin of the oil stains,he toldthe G1 news website.

Other researchers working independently came up with more theories. At theFederal University of Alagoas, a professor pointed to a ship called Voyager 1. The American NGOSkytruthlooked suspiciously at a ship called the Amigos. Both backtracked from their initial discoveries days later.

Barros explained his companys report was only one element to help the investigation, and that a dark ship could also have been the culprit.

In that time period, in that place there were four vessels, he said. Does that eliminate the possibility that an unidentified vessel was also there? No.

Who pays for the pollution?

The investigation seems stuck. But there are mechanisms to protect member states of a few international conventions against oil spills even when the source is unknown.

One of them, which establishes theInternational Oil Pollution Compensation Fund, guarantees payment of damages to countries that suffer from spills if the shipping company responsible cant pay or the victim cant find the guilty ship.

But Brazil has not ratified this convention, meaning if it doesnt find the guilty ship, it will get no compensation.

A soldier rests on Japaratinga beach in Alagoas state after working all morning clearing oil (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

Brazil lacks a robust monitoring system for its seas. In the Brazilian navy, many officials agreed that Brazil should have done a better job of protecting itself, but that would have cost billions.

Whose fault is it? What failed? Brazil is the victim of an assault, one official said, asking his name not to be printed. This could happen to any country.

Beyond national jurisdiction

While fishers and residents of hundreds of Brazils beach cities feel the effects of the spill, environmentalists are still struggling to measure its impact.

We cant estimate impact without knowing the location and the amount of oil that was spilled, said Thiago Almeida, who heads Greenpeaces climate and energy campaign in Brazil.

Despite the clear up effort, patches of oil continue to appear on the coast of Alagoas state. (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

Almeida explained coastal ecosystems are the most vulnerable, as they store most of the nurseries of marine life. But life in the high seas has likely been damaged too.

There, no one can claim compensation. Thehigh seaslie beyond the jurisdiction of any one country. They cover over half the planet and are home to 90% of marine life.

Countries are negotiating more protections to the high seas,through a UN treatythat would protect marine biodiversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction.

Among other things, a treaty could increase the number of sanctuaries in the high seas; currently only 1% is protected. It could also create a framework for environmental impact assessments in international waters.

Though the world finally seems ready to talk about the ocean, damage to the high seas is largely absent from discussion of the spill in Brazil. That doesnt mean it wont affect humans for a long time to come.

Spots of oil stain the feet of a volunteer helping to clean oil near Suape beach, Pernambuco state. (Image: Lo Malafaia/China Dialogue)

Oil is extremely toxic and carcinogenic, Almeida said. It slowly dissolves and, as it does, its ingested by sea creatures, going up the food chain.

Meanwhile, Santana continues to clean his beach. He reported seeing a fresh batch of oil arrive in Cabo de Santo Agostinho only two weeks after China Dialogue Ocean visited the city.

Residents, he said, were fishing again, even as scientists warned the fish could be poisoned.People are fishing and eating the fish, he said. They arent experts. They dont want to believe.

This article appears courtesy of China Dialogue Ocean and may be found in its original form here.

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Maritime Executive.

Go here to read the rest:

Spill and Run: Brazil Struggles to ID Tanker Behind Oil Pollution - The Maritime Executive

The Navy Has A New Stealth Destroyer, But It Is No True Battleship (At Least Not Yet) – The National Interest Online

Key point: The DDG-1000 isnt a stealth battleship. But it should be. Andsuitably armedit could be.

Over the years its become commonplace for writers to sex up their descriptions of guided-missile destroyer (DDG) Zumwalt, the U.S. Navys newest surface combatant. Commentators of such leanings depict the ultra-high-tech DDG-1000 as a battleship. Better yet, its a stealth battleshipa fit subject for sci-fi!

Not so. And getting the nomenclature right matters: calling a man-of-war a battleship conjures up images in the popular mind of thickly armored dreadnoughts bristling with big guns blazing away at one another on the high seas, pummeling shore targets in Normandy or Kuwait, or belching smoke and flame after Nagumos warplanes struck at Pearl Harbor.

Such images mislead. Battleships were multi-mission warships capable of engaging enemy surface navies, fighting off swarms of propeller-driven aircraft, or pounding hostile beaches with gunfire. The DDG-1000 is a gee-whiz but modestly armed surface combatant optimized for one mission: shore bombardment. The shoe just doesnt fit.

Now, theres no problem affixing the label stealth to Zumwalt, which at present is undergoing its first round of sea trials off the New England coast. Shipbuilders went to elaborate lengths to disguise the ship from radar detection. Radar emits electromagnetic energy to search out, track and target ships and aircraft. It shouts, then listens for an echo from hulls or airframesmuch as sightseers shout and listen when visiting the Grand Canyon.

Quieting the echo is the trick. This 15,000-ton behemoth displaces half-again as much as a Ticonderoga-class cruiser yet reportedly has just one-fiftieth the radar cross-section of the fleets workhorse Arleigh Burke-class DDGs. While not entirely undetectable, DDG-1000 will look like a fishing vessel or other small craft on enemy radar scopesif its picked up at all. Blending into surface traffic is no mean feat for an outsized destroyer.

How did shipwrights pull this off? For one thing, the geometry of the DDG-1000s hull, superstructure, and armaments deflects rather than reflects electromagnetic energy. Right angles and surfaces perpendicular to the axis of EM radiation bounce back energyboosting an objects radar signature. Accordingly, the DDG-1000 design includes few right angles. Everything slopes. And while radar antennae, smokestacks, and other fittings clutter the decks of conventional warships, such items are mostly concealed within Zumwalts hull or deckhouse. That accounts for the vessels clean, otherworldly look.

For another, radar-absorbent coatings slathered on the ships external surfaces muffle such radar returns as do occur. While hardly invisible to the naked eye, this big ship will prove hard to detectlet alone track or targetwhile cruising over the horizon.

If stealth is an accurate adjective, though, dubbing Zumwalt a battleship conveys false impressions. First of all, theres the matter of linguistic hygiene. Its all too common among laymen to use battleship as a generic term for any ship of war. Indeed, I got my start as a columnist in 2000 precisely because reporters took to labeling the destroyer USS Cole a battleship. An explosives-laden small craft struck that unfortunate vessel in Aden, blowing a massive hole in her side. How could that happen if Cole was a battleship? Battlewagons are ruggedly built, with vulnerable spaces sheathed in a foot or more of armor. They were built on the assumption that they would take a punch in a slugfest with enemy battleships.

Destroyers arent built on that assumption. Describing Cole as a battleship obscured a basic fact about modern warships. U.S. mariners try to bring down the archer, namely a hostile ship or warbird, before he lets fly his arrow, a torpedo or anti-ship missile. Thats because few ships are built to withstand battle damage. Crewmen call them tin cans for a reason: its easy to pierce an American ships sides should an enemy round evade the ships defenses. So it should have come as no surprise that a small craft packed with shaped-charge explosives could land a crushing blow against one of the U.S. Navys premier combatants. Again: calling things by their proper names constitutes the beginning of wisdom.

Second, those who portray Zumwalt as a dreadnought seem to be thinking of dreadnoughts not in their prime but in their age of senescence. This too blurs important facts. Aircraft carriers supplanted battleships as capital shipsthe fleets heaviest and rangiest hittersduring World War II. Dreadnoughts found new life as auxiliary platforms. They pummeled enemy beaches during amphibious operations. They rendered escort duty, employing their secondary batteries to help screen carrier task forces against aerial attack.

The DDG-1000 is optimized for that sort of auxiliary duty. In particular, the vessel sports a couple of long-range guns optimized for bombarding foreign shores, along with eighty vertical launchers capable of lofting land-attack cruise missiles hundreds of miles inland. The vessel thus meets the navys need to supply offshore fire support to troops fighting in coastal areas. Gunfire support is a capability that lapsed when the last battleship retired in 1992. In a narrow sense, then, its fitting to liken the Zumwalts to battlewagons.

But battleships never fully relinquished their multimission character. In their days of nautical supremacy, they dueled hostile battle fleets to determine who would command the sea. They then protected cruisers, destroyers, and amphibious craft that fanned out in large numbers to exploit maritime command. Dreadnoughts retained that primacy until the flattop and its air wing came into their own during World War II.

But they remained hard-hitting surface-warfare platforms even after being eclipsed. Carrier aviation didnt render them obsolete. For example, the battleships Washington and South Dakota played a pivotal part in the naval battles off Guadalcanal in 1942. The Pearl Harbor fleet got some vengeance in a surface gun battle in Surigao Strait in 1944. Surigao Strait comprised part of the Battle of Leyte Gulf, historys last major fleet action. Iowa-class battlewagons resumed their surface-warfare function during a short-lived revival during the 1980s and 1990s. Equipped with Harpoon and Tomahawk anti-ship missiles to complement their nine 16- and twelve 5-inch guns, they formed the core of surface action groups while also discharging shore-bombardment missions.

In short, battleships remained multimission vessels throughout their service liveseven after technological progress relegated them to secondary status. The Zumwalt is one-dimensional by contrast. Each ship is armed with two advanced gun systems capable of raining precision firealbeit with lightweight projectiles compared to battleships 1,900- and 2,700-lb. roundson land targets some 83 nautical miles distant. Marines will welcome the backup.

It remains unclear, however, how capable the advanced gun will prove against enemy surface fleets. For example, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service pays tribute to the guns long-range land-attack projectiles but makes scant mention of how the DDG-1000 would fare in surface warfare. The guns manufacturer touts the weapons highly-advanced gunfire capabilities for anti-surface warfare, yetlike the ships other boostersoverwhelmingly emphasizes the littoral-combat mission. To date, then, surface action appears to be an afterthought for the DDG-1000sunlike their dreadnought forebears. Thats another nuance masked by the moniker stealth battleship.

In that vein, its fair to say the DDG-1000 suffers from the same problem bedeviling the rest of the U.S. Navy surface fleet. Assume the advanced gun system eventually boasts the same range against warships it boasts against land targets, eighty-three nautical miles. Guns can disgorge a large volume of fire, to the tune of hundreds of rounds, compared to the ships eighty-round missile magazine. Thats good.

But it matters little if the ship never gets within range to fire its guns. However impressive for a gun, eighty-three nautical miles is only a fraction of, say, the range sported by Chinas YJ-18 anti-ship cruise missile. Currently being deployed aboard Peoples Liberation Army Navy ships and subs, the YJ-18 can strike at targets 290 nautical miles distant. Nor, apparently, will the Zumwalts carry Harpoons, whose range falls short of the advanced gun systems in any event.

Like the rest of the surface warships, then, the DDG-1000 will find itself sorely outranged by the missile-armed submarines, warplanes and surface combatants that comprise the core of naval fighting forces around the Eurasian perimeter. Chinese or Russian forces can blast away from beyond the reach of American guns or missiles. And if U.S. forces try to close the gap, they will do so under firefire that will enfeeble them on the way.

In that the DDG-1000s plight does resemble the battleships plight after Pearl Harbor. Its a heavy hitter whose reach is woefully short. Defense firms are developing new long-range anti-ship cruise missiles. The U.S. Navy has experimented with repurposing land-attack cruise missiles for surface warfareresurrecting a capability the leadership shortsightedly allowed to lapse after the Cold War.

Lets get some long-range weaponry out therepronto. No, the DDG-1000 isnt a stealth battleship. But it should be. Andsuitably armedit could be.

James Holmes is Professor of Strategy at the Naval War College, coauthor of Red Star over the Pacific, and the last gunnery officer to fire a battleships big guns in anger. The views voiced here are his alone. This article first appeared several years ago.

Continue reading here:

The Navy Has A New Stealth Destroyer, But It Is No True Battleship (At Least Not Yet) - The National Interest Online

Cinderella Stars Santino Fontana and Laura Osnes Will Reunite for The Big Time Concert – Playbill.com

The new Princeton Pops series, a collaboration between the Princeton Symphony Orchestra and McCarter Theatre Centre, will continue January 31, 2020, with a concert reading of the new musical comedy The Big Time at McCarters Matthews Theatre.

Tootsie Tony winner Santino Fontana and Tony nominee Laura Osnes, who co-starred in Rodgers + Hammersteins Cinderella, will be part of a cast that also features Tony winner Debbie Gravitte (Jerome Robbins Broadway, Chicago), Jackie Hoffman (Fiddler on the Roof, Feud), Michael McCormick (Wicked, Hello, Dolly!), Bradley Dean (The Phantom of the Opera, Dear Evan Hansen), and Raymond Bokhour (Chicago).

The Big Time, featuring a book by Douglas Carter Beane (Sister Act, Xanadu), music and lyrics by Douglas J. Cohen, and music direction by Fred Lassen, is set during the height of the Cold War when Russian spies take over an ocean liner holding all of NATO. Leave it to lounge singers on board to save the day by teaching the communists to put down their Kalashnikovs and pick up singing, dancing, and comedy.

Describing the shows genesis, creator Beane says, I am a big fan of NATO. I also happen to be a big fan of Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme. I believe the three will save the world. Or maybe, just maybe, a long time agoso long ago just about everyone forgot itthey actually did. From there, I just started writing.

For tickets, visit PrincetonSymphony.org.

Fontana, Osnes, and more have been special guest performers on Playbill Travels Broadway on the High Seas cruises. Cabins are now on sale for Broadway in the Great Northwest, Playbill Travels first domestic cruise featuring Kate Baldwin, Tedd Firth, Aaron Lazar, Beth Leavel, and Faith Prince (April 26May 4, 2020), and for Broadway on the Mediterranean (August 31September 7, 2020), featuring Audra McDonald, Will Swenson, Gavin Creel, Caissie Levy and Lindsay Mendez, and for Broadway on the Nile (December 27, 2020January 7, 2021) and Broadway on the Caribbean (February 1522, 2021), with performers soon to be announced. To book a suite or stateroom, call Playbill Travel at 866-455-6789 or visit PlaybillTravel.com.

See the original post here:

Cinderella Stars Santino Fontana and Laura Osnes Will Reunite for The Big Time Concert - Playbill.com

Step Aside Fires, Drought And Crazy Weather. Sea Level Rise Is Slowly Getting Its Day In California. – Capital Public Radio News

People love the Golden State because of the coastline. There are all sorts of songs about the vibe California embodies think California Gurls by Katy Perry, Californication by the Red Hot Chili Peppers and California Love by 2Pac.

But the ocean's response to climate change is threatening that very identity.

"It's part of what you often hear described as being Californian, said Christine Whitcraft, director of Cal State Long Beach's Environmental Science and Policy program. Threats from sea level rise are important for economics, but they're also important for the intrinsic value they have to us as Californians."

She says sea level rise is on the minds of leaders across the state because people have started to see impacts in their daily lives or in their yearly time frame.

Thats led to an increased awareness at the personal level, which translates to an increase in awareness to the state and policy level, said Whitcraft.

The sea could rise by half a foot by 2030 and as much as seven feet by the end of the century, according to a high-level report from the state's Legislative Analysts Office. That could have a huge impact on the millions of Californians who live along the coast.

We could lose two-thirds of our beaches absent any action, said Rachel Ehlers, a principal fiscal and policy analyst with the LAO. She is also the lead author of the report intended to guide lawmakers in 2020 as they prepare budgets and create bill.

"It's not just wealthy people who will be impacted, said Ehlers. There's a lot of vulnerable communities that have a lot of folks with lower incomes, folks who don't have cars. So, they may not be able to get out when there's flooding.

"The researchers also found a gap in how the state wants to address sea level rise and how localities are dealing with it. Ehlers says finding funding at the local level can be tough because the full effects of sea level rise wont be seen for years.

There are many communities around the state that are planning, but very few that have moved on to the phase of taking action, said Ehlers. We need to do that both because the water is coming, but also this is a key time to test out strategies.

Mark Stacey is an environmental engineer at UC Berkeley who studies sea level rise in the Bay Area. He says the reason there is so much talk about sea level rise in the state right now is because more storm events coupled with gradual sea level rise are happening more often.

This makes the risk of disruption more real for people and has them realize we have to stop and do something about this, said Stacey. For instance, he says the highest high tides in the San Francisco Bay disrupts traffic half a dozen times a year instead of once or twice a year.

Are we ready today? No. But are the right conversations happening to get ready? Id say yes.

Partnering To Prepare

There are places that are preparing for the surge in the coming decades. Some are working across city and county boundaries to prepare regionally, which the LAO report recommends.

But Ehlers, with the LAO, says there is a lack of forums or partnerships taking place around the state.

We know that sea level rise wont stop at the city or county line, she said. In fact, what actions one city takes might negatively influence their neighbors. If one city puts up a lot of sea walls, that waters going to slosh over to the neighboring jurisdiction and erode all the beaches over there.

Leaders in San Mateo County south of San Francisco with the Bay on one side and the open ocean on the other want to prevent that very scenario from taking place.

Our county is the most exposed county in the entire state in terms of value of property at risk, said San Mateo County Supervisor Dave Pine. We have tremendous exposure on the Bay side, and on the coast side we are already seeing very significant coastal erosion, which threatens infrastructure.

Pine says the county has modeled out what three feet of sea level rise means.

That would cause upwards of $40 billion in losses to property," he said. "In San Mateo everything east of Highway 101 would be inundated. It would be a massive blow to the county.

Thats why San Mateo County is planning ahead. Pine says there are lots of projects in the works to prevent big issues with sea level rise, including 10 miles of levees at San Francisco International Airport.

The county and 20 cities in San Mateo have formed a partnership the Flood and Sea Level Rise Resiliency District to protect the region from the negative impacts of sea level rise. It goes into effect January 2020.

The thinking is that no single jurisdiction can deal with this by itself and we need to position ourselves to compete for state funds, said Pine.

Theres an awful lot of shoreline to protect and we still have a lot of work to do.

Working 'Generation To Generation'

Sea level rise doesnt lend itself to one type of solution or masterplan. Levees near one community, moving people from where water will rise or building sea walls near another arent universal answers, said Pine.

We have put so much carbon into the air and we will see seas rise for centuries to come, said Pine. Its impossible to know at what rate they will rise, but we will have to work on this from generation to generation.

Pine admits that humans arent very good at taking action to prevent problems until the issue becomes severe. But waiting means the costs would greatly exceed that of planning and preparing for sea level rise.

On the coast near Long Beach Christine Whitcraft, director of CSULBs Environmental Science and Policy program, is experimenting by creating beds of California native Olympia oysters and sea grass to make a living shoreline.

CSULB scientists are experimenting with adding beds of oysters and sea grass to help reduce the erosion of the shoreline. Close-up (left) and aerial photo (right) of oyster beds in Southern California. Courtesy of Danielle Zacherl (left) and Nick Sadrpour (right)

She says the patches of oysters help reduce shoreline erosion by holding down the mud it sits on and helps protect the land behind it from storm surges and waves.

I dont think oysters or eel grass alone can prevent all the damage to the communities behind it, but I think they are part of the solution, Whitcraft said.

She also has her students take pictures of where sea water floods parts of the coast when high tides occur. For them, she says, the idea that the sea is already inundating places they often visit was surprising.

To help the public understand how sea level rise could inundate their communities the city of Santa Cruz is offering virtual reality simulations at a local library. (Check out his NPR article for more).

We look at the three different areas and as you pull sliders to the right you see the sea level rise inundating our low-level areas, said Tiffany West, the citys Sustainability and Climate Action Manager. It allows you to get a real understanding of where the water would go.

The product is only available on-site, but West says an app of the project will be available in six months.

What people dont realize is that we are already experiencing these impacts, especially during King Tide situations, West said. A lot of this discussion is so abstract around sea level rise that this makes it much more concrete.

A similar project is in progress for Long Beach where a strip of beach homes is at risk.

We also developed a card game called Cards Against Catastrophe its really meant to give residents a feel for tradeoffs and decision-making local leaders face, said West.

CapRadio provides a trusted source of news because of you. As a nonprofit organization, donations from people like you sustain the journalism that allows us to discover stories that are important to our audience. If you believe in what we do and support our mission, please donate today.

Visit link:

Step Aside Fires, Drought And Crazy Weather. Sea Level Rise Is Slowly Getting Its Day In California. - Capital Public Radio News

These Are The 5 Best Battleships To Ever Sail The 7 Seas – Yahoo News

Key Point:Only eight dreadnoughts remain, all in the United States.

The age of the steel line-of-battleship really began in the1880s, with the construction of a series of warships that could carry and independently aim heavy guns external to the hull. In 1905, HMS Dreadnought brought together an array of innovations in shipbuilding, propulsion, and gunnery to create a new kind of warship, one that could dominate all existing battleships.

Although eventually supplanted by the submarine and the aircraft carrier, the battleship took pride of place in the navies of the first half of the twentieth century. The mythology of of the battleship age often understates how active many of the ships were; both World War I and World War II saw numerous battleship engagements. These are the five most important battles of the dreadnought age.

Battle ofJutland:

In the years prior to World War I, Britain and Germany raced tooutbuildeach other, resulting in vast fleets of dreadnought battleships. The British won the race, but not by so far that they could ignore the power of the German High Seas Fleet. When war began, the Royal Navy collected most of its modern battleships into the Grand Fleet, based atScapaFlow.

The High Seas Fleet and the Grand Fleet spared for nearly three years before the main event. In May 1916, AdmiralReinhardScheerand Admiral JohnJellicoelaid dueling traps;Scheerhoped to draw a portion of the Grand Fleet under the guns of the High Seas Fleet, whileJellicoesought to bring the latter into the jaws of the former. Both succeeded, to a point; Britishbattlecruisersand fast battleships engaged the German line of battle, before the arrival of the whole of the Grand Fleet put German survival in jeopardy.

The two sides fought for most of an afternoon. The Germans has sixteen dreadnought battleships, six pre-dreadnoughts, and fivebattlecruisers. Against this, the British fielded twenty-eight dreadnoughts and ninebattlecruisers.Jellicoemanaged to trap the Germans on the wrong side of the Grand Fleet, but in a confused night action most of the German ships passed through the British line, and to safety.

Read the original article.

Story continues

See original here:

These Are The 5 Best Battleships To Ever Sail The 7 Seas - Yahoo News

Tony Winner Paulo Szot to Join Broadway Cast of Chicago – Playbill.com

Tony winner Paulo Szot will join the Broadway production of Chicago beginning January 6, 2020, at the Ambassador Theatre.

The opera star will step into the role of Billy Flynn for a four-week run through January 31. He begins his engagement the same day singer and Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Erika Jayne starts performances as Roxie Hart. Szot will later return to the company for a nine-week run March 16May 19.

Szot made his Broadway debut as Emile de Becque in Lincoln Center Theaters South Pacific in 2008, winning Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, and Theatre World Awards for his performance. He has performed at the Metropolitan Opera, Scala di Milano, Paris Opera, Teatro Real (Madrid), London's Barbican, and more.

Jayne and Szot will be joined onstage by by Amra-Faye Wright as Velma Kelly, Raymond Bokhour as Amos Hart, NaTasha Yvette Williams as Matron Mama Morton, and R. Lowe as Mary Sunshine.

See What Else Is Coming to Broadway in the Near Future

With a book by Fred Ebb and Bob Fosse, music by John Kander and lyrics by Ebb, Chicago is now the longest-running American musical in Broadway history. Produced by Barry and Fran Weissler, the staging is the winner of six 1997 Tony Awards including Best Musical Revival and the Grammy Award for Best Musical Cast Recording.

Directed by Tony winner Walter Bobbie and choreographed by Tony winner Ann Reinking, Chicago features set design by John Lee Beatty, costume design by Tony winner William Ivey Long, lighting design by Tony winner Ken Billington, sound design by Scott Lehrer, and casting by Stewart/Whitley.

Szot has been a special guest performer on Playbill Travels Broadway on the High Seas cruises. Cabins are now on sale for Broadway in the Great Northwest, Playbill Travels first domestic cruise featuring Kate Baldwin, Tedd Firth, Aaron Lazar, Beth Leavel, and Faith Prince (April 26May 4, 2020), and for Broadway on the Mediterranean (August 31September 7, 2020), featuring Audra McDonald, Will Swenson, Gavin Creel, Caissie Levy and Lindsay Mendez, and for Broadway on the Nile (December 27, 2020January 7, 2021) and Broadway on the Caribbean (February 1522, 2021), with performers soon to be announced. To book a suite or stateroom, call Playbill Travel at 866-455-6789 or visit PlaybillTravel.com.

See the rest here:

Tony Winner Paulo Szot to Join Broadway Cast of Chicago - Playbill.com

Public warned of rip currents and high seas – Saipan Tribune

Privacy Settings

This site uses functional cookies and external scripts to improve your experience. Which cookies and scripts are used and how they impact your visit is specified on the left. You may change your settings at any time. Your choices will not impact your visit.

NOTE: These settings will only apply to the browser and device you are currently using.

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy preferences, logging in or filling in forms.

You can set your browser to block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable information.

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy preferences, logging in or filling in forms.

You can set your browser to block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable information.

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy preferences, logging in or filling in forms.

You can set your browser to block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable information.

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy preferences, logging in or filling in forms.

You can set your browser to block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable information.

Read the rest here:

Public warned of rip currents and high seas - Saipan Tribune

Eyeing DoD Biz, Inmarsat Buys Airborne Terminals Breaking Defense – Defense industry news, analysis and commentary – Breaking Defense

Inmarsats Global Xpress

WASHINGTON: With an eye on increased DoD interest in commercial satcom, Inmarsat Government is buying airborne terminals for use with its Global Xpress network from Israeli firm Orbit Communications Systems Ltd.

The new terminals, to be delivered next year, are Very Small Aperture Terminals (VSAT) designed to connect drones, aircraft and helicopters to communications satellites. An Inmarsat spokesman said the companies are not releasing the exact value or volume of the buy, but that it involves a large number of new terminals.

Called Multi-Purpose Terminal (MPT) 46WGX, the Orbit systems are small and designed to be fully interoperable with military Ka-band systems and optimized for use over Inmarsats Global Xpress constellation, according to a joint Orbit-Inmarsat press release.Airborne satcom terminals are essentially mini-ground stations, with antennas and various levels of internal data processing capability.

Inmarsats Global Xpress satellites are the companys newest models, providing military- and commercial-grade Ka-band services in Geostationary Orbit. The fifth one, GX-5, was launched on Nov. 26 and provides service across Europe and the Middle East.

The new satellite has more capacity in that single satellite than all four of our current Global Xpress satellites but its 25 percent of the size, Rebecca Cowen-Hirsch, senior vice president for government strategy and policy at Inmarsat Government, told me earlier this week.

The company is already working on the next-generation of the GX, she said.

Inmarsat GX7 through GX9 are being built by the German firm Airbus Defence and Space using agile manufacturing techniques. They should launch in 2023. The three new GX satellites will represent the first software-defined constellation for global mobile connectivity, according to Inmarsat.

Each satellite will deliver twice the total capacity of the entire current GX network. Their ability to simultaneously generate thousands of independent spot beams of different size, bandwidth and power that can be reconfigured and repositioned across the globe means we will be able to respond to peaks in customer demand instantaneously and with pinpoint accuracy, and stack up overlapped capacity over regional hot spots, the companys website explains.

Breaking D readers may remember that Inmarsat, along with its contemporaries in the field including Hughes, Viasat, SES and Eutelsat have been pushing DoD to move toward buying so-called managed services (kinda like your average mobile phone or cable TV/Internet plan) rather than leasing commercial bandwidth in fits and starts for short periods of time.

When you start looking at it at a SATCOM as a service, an end-to-end capability anend-to-end capability, you look at it very, very differently than DoD does today, Cowen-Hirsch explained. And you can get those attributes of cybersecurity, committed information rates you know youre going to have your always-on quality of service.The things that we as consumers expect from our telecommunication service provider, the military should expect and demand that and more.

As I reported in October, DoD is on the cusp of releasing a SATCOM Vision, crafted by Air Force Space Command (soon to be folded into the new Space Force) aimed at creating a seamless network of military and commercial comsats in all orbits, accessible to troops, vehicles, ships and aircraft via ground terminals and mobile receivers that would automatically hop from one satellite network to another.

The ability to maintain connectivity between sensors, especially satellites, and shooters i.e. military platforms in the air, at sea and on land is the central goal of DoDs evolving Multi-Domain Operations (MDO) concept.

DoD also completed in June an internal analysis of alternatives (AoA) for DoDs future satcom architecture, according to a Government Accountability Office review released yesterday.The AoA concluded the US military needs a hybrid architecture including both purpose-built DoD satellites such as the current Wideband Global Satcom (WGS) system built by Boeing for secure milcoms and a mix of commercially provided bandwidth.

DoD concluded in the Wideband AoA that integrating purpose-built satellite systems and commercially provided systems into a hybrid architecture would be more cost effective and capable than any single purpose-built or commercial system alone, the GAO report said.

However, the AoA also found that DoD needed more information before pursuing satcom as a service. DoD needed to further explore whether to add new commercial constellations in Low Earth Orbit (such as those being launched by OneWeb and SpaceX) to into the mix.

And GAO found that the Pentagon does not yet have any strategy for implementing the AoAs findings, expressing some concern that the ongoing musical chairs regarding space acquisition is making complicating decision-making. This includes the establishment of Space Command, the launch of the Space Development Agency and the new Space Force.

DOD and Congress are taking steps designed to ultimately streamline decision-making and clarifyauthorities for space; however, it will likely take several years to implement such changes, GAO found.

Inmarsat has been providing telecom services to the US government since its start up in 1979 including the US military. The company is one of the oldest satcom firms, originally designed as the International Maritime Satellite Organization (INMARSAT), a non-profit intergovernmental organization at the behest of the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the United Nations maritime body, to provide connectivity for ships on the high seas out of reach of many land-based radio networks.

Our largest business unit if you will, is maritime because we are a commercial operator and our origins were started with maritime. And that continues to be our largest business area, Cowen-Hirsch said. The United States government, however, is our single largest customer.

See original here:

Eyeing DoD Biz, Inmarsat Buys Airborne Terminals Breaking Defense - Defense industry news, analysis and commentary - Breaking Defense

15 Of The Best Holiday Treats From Disney Parks Around The World – Delish

It's no secret that the Disney parks have some amazing foods for the holidays (hello, have you seen this cotton candy Santa hat??) but it turns out if you're only looking at the stuff in the U.S. parks, you're sorely missing out. The Disney Parks Blog shared some of the most amazing holiday treats from the parks around the world, and they've given us some serious food envy. Here are just a few of our favorites.

1Minnies Puf Surprise, Disneyland Paris

Finally, Minnie gets her due with this beautiful vanilla choux pastry decorated with a wreath that is rocking her iconic bow on top.

2Sparkling Donuts, Disneyland Paris

You can snag one of these babies at some of the food carts and kiosks around the park.

3Cream Nougat Flavored White Chocolate, Shanghai Disney

Shanghai Disney is all about Frozen 2, and we can't get over this super cute drink made with marshmallow, cream, nougat syrup and white chocolate, with Olaf hanging out on top.

4Japanese Pancake with Vanilla Ice Cream, Shanghai Disney

All pancakes should be served with ice cream...and an Anna cut-out from Frozen 2.

5Orange Bird Christmas, Walt Disney World, US

Who could eat this? It's too beautiful! Although once you hear it's made with orange-scented white chocolate mousse filled with orange curd, citrus almond cream cake, and buttercream leaves, you kind of get it.

6Cinnamon-Apple Lunch Box Tart, Walt Disney World, US

This portable Christmas treat is made with cinnamon apple pie filling and topped with red cinnamon fondant featuring Santa himself.

7Tons of Treats, Hong Kong Disneyland

There is no shortage of sweets at Hong Kong Disneyland. Just pictured here, we have Snowman and Olaf cupcakes, Christmas, as well as Mickey and Minnie cookies and donuts.

8Mickey and Minnie Souffl Pancakes, Hong Kong Disneyland

You can practice your baking and decorating skills by filling these mini pancakes with sprinkles, chocolate, and pretty much anything delicious.

9Holiday Drinks, Hong Kong Disneyland

If you're thirsty in Hong Kong Disneyland, you can pick up a Christmas Coconut Mojito, made with coconut milk, lime, soda, mint leaves and pomegranate, or a Chamomile Pear Tea.

10Hot Chocolate Beignets, Disneyland, US

A winter take on a classic treat, these are served with hot chocolate sauce and whipped cream and can be found at, where else? Caf Orleans.

11Plant-Based Shepherds Upside-down Pie, Disneyland, US

This plant-based take on a classic is made with mashed potatoes and vegetables and topped with a mickey-shaped pie crust.

12Chocolate and Pistachio Mousse, Tokyo Disney

This sweet and chocolate treat is as decorative as it is decadent. I mean, look at that topper that features the Disney gang in Santa's sleigh!

13Strawberry Crpes, Toyko Disney

These sweet Strawberry and Cranberry Crpes are bright pink and even topped off with a Minnie bow.

14Christmas Tree Cakes, Disney Cruise Line

These are decorated better than most real Christmas trees.

15Santa Cupcakes, Disney Cruise Line

You can find these sweet Santa cupcakes if you venture out on the high seas this holiday season. They're toped with chocolate frosting a sweet rendering of St. Nick himself.

Read the rest here:

15 Of The Best Holiday Treats From Disney Parks Around The World - Delish

Cruise: Cruisers can enjoy discounts and exclusive experiences with this little known tip – Express

Cruise ships boast all kinds of amenities for holidaymakers to enjoy these days. Along with the traditional luxury spa, five-star restaurants, and on-deck swimming pool options, modern ships also boast an array of exciting amenities you wont find anywhere else. Royal Caribbean, for example, is home to an onboard surfing experience called the Flow Rider, meanwhile Celebrity Cruises recently introduced its own 2-story martini glass hot tubs to its Celebrity Edge ship.

However, with the latest ABTA report showing that cruise holidays are booming in popularity, ships filled with passengers can mean many travelers find themselves missing out on popular activities.

Luckily, two cruise experts have revealed a helpful hack that not only will give cruisers first-dibs on many of the most-loved amenities, they could also see some sizeable discounts.

Ben and David are a pair of cruise enthusiasts who run their own Youtube channel Cruise with Ben and David where they share their experiences sailing the high seas.

Having traveled on cruise ships countless times, they have amassed a host of tips that can increase the onboard experience.

READ MORE:Cruise: Travellers invited on Ponant Antarctic expedition [CRUISE]

And the spa also offers some really big discounts that most people dont know about; because there are not many people on the ship it's a great time to enjoy some of the amazing ship's facilities.

However, this doesnt mean that you have to miss out on the onshore excursions.

You dont have to do a full day, adds Ben.

You could even just do a half-day, so maybe get off the ship later in the afternoon or first thing in the morning and spend half the day on the ship enjoying the facilities by yourself.

David continues: On sea days and when people are between ports it can be really busy, all of the activities can be really busy: waterparks, the slides the climbing walls, the flow rider, whatever, can be really busy.

So it is a great opportunity to do these on a port day.

Passengers who dont want to miss out on a full day onshore, but still want to save money, are also in luck.

Ben Better, a cruise and travel expert, has revealed that cruisers can save up to 50 percent if they avoid taking part in excursions arranged by the cruise line.

In his book Secret Cruise Tips for the First Time Cruiser, he explains that cruise organised tours are significantly pricier than do it yourself tours.

He claims that they can be anywhere between 20 percent and 50 percent more expensive compared to DIY tours. Hence the main reasons why many people swear by DIY tours.

See the rest here:

Cruise: Cruisers can enjoy discounts and exclusive experiences with this little known tip - Express

5 Times North Korea Provoked a Crisis (And Why They Keep Doing It) – The National Interest Online

Key point:Pyongyang uses threats to gain concessions and make other powers take them seriously.

Lets get one thing out of the way. North Korea is not crazy.

News pundits, talking heads and headline writers love to deride the North Korean leadershipand leaders Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un in particularas crazy, whacko or just plain insane.

The leadership is a lot of things. Mass murderers, gangsters, terrorists and con artists come to mind. Crazy they are not.

The Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea is a different kind of place by design.

The state operates in an alternative universe in which engaging in shootouts on the high seas, bombarding islands and torpedoing shipsall meant as gesturesmake some kind of weird sense.

Everything Pyongyang does, it does for a reason. That includes the occasional killings of foreign sailors and marines.

What follows isnt a comprehensive account, but its the story of North Koreas deadliest recent attacks, and the curious events that might have triggered Pyongyang into risking all-out war.

The First Battle of Yeonpyeong:

It began with bumping. It ended with shooting. On June 8, 1999, seven North Korean gunboats repeatedly crossed the two countries sea boundary near Yeonpyeong Island.

Seoul sent 16 patrol boats to eject the North Koreans, but the tiny flotilla initially pulled back to avoid a confrontation.

The next day, the incident escalated into physical bumping between the two sides, as South Korean ships attempted to forcefully push the North Korean vessels back across the border. This damaged four North Korean ships, two of them seriously, while three South Korean ships took damage.

On June 15, the shooting began. The day started with more bumping between North and South Korean patrol vessels. Suddenly, one North Korean gunboat, PT-381, found itself double-teamed by two South Korean warships. PT-381 opened fire with its machine guns and 25-millimeter cannon.

The larger, better-armed South Korean ships returned fire with a 76-millimeter Oto Melara cannon, 40-millimeter No Bong dual-purpose guns and 20-millimeter Gatling guns, the same gun installed on U.S. Navy ships.

Heavily outgunned, the North Korean sailors paid dearly for striking first. The South Korean ships sank one North Korean torpedo boat and damaged five others, including a 420-ton patrol ship. At least 30 North Korean sailors died.

The shootout damaged five South Korean ships. Nine sailors suffered injuries.

What triggered the attack? A difference of opinion on where the sea boundary between North and South Korea actually lay. Decades before the battle, Washington and Seoul jointly agreed on the Northern Limit Linea sea border between North and South on the west coast of the Korean peninsula. The NLL extends three miles from the North Korean coastline.

North Korea recognizes a line much farther south in which five islands inhabited by southerners, including Yeonpyeong, are within its territorial waters.

Neither the U.S. nor South Korea consulted North Korea when drawing up the NLL, and Pyongyang has been unhappy about it ever since. In 1999, it began pushing its sea boundary claim, with violence as its method. North Korean patrol vessels and fishing boats began making forays south of the NLL. A clash was inevitable.

The Second Battle of Yeonpyeong:

The North Korean military doesnt forget its lossesit learns from them and finds ways to strike back.

On June 29, 2002, two North Korean patrol boats crossed the Northern Limit Line and opened fire on two Chamsuri-class South Korean patrol boats. One of the DPRK boats, armed with an 85-millimeter deck gun, opened fire at a distance of 500 yards.

The South Koreans, outgunned this time, returned fire with 20-millimeter and 30-millimeter cannons. The two boats fought for their lives, many of the crew on PKM-357 badly wounded from a direct 85-millimeter hit to the ships cabin. Within minutes, two South Korean Pohang-class corvettes arrived to turn the tide of battle, and the North Korean ships withdrew.

Patrol boat PKM-357 succumbed to damage and sank. South Korean casualties amounted to six killed and 18 wounded. The navy alleged the North Korean patrol boat 684 caught fire and may have sank, with 13 sailors killed and 25 wounded.

For its part, the North Korean navy denied any of casualties or damage to its own forces.

Pyongyang carried out a premeditated ambush at sea. But why would the regime risk a major war?

At the time of the attack, South Korea was co-hosting the 2002 FIFA World Cup. It was yet another confirmation of South Koreas status as a developed nation, a recognition of how far the country had come in the 49 years since the end of the Korean War.

Pyongyang hates it when Seoul looks good internationally. If it can, the regime often plans provocations in such a way to steal the limelight or embarrass its southern neighbor.

The second battle of Yeonpyeong was no different. Handing South Korea a defeatduring the World Cup no lesswould show the world who the stronger Korea was. Thats at least how North Korean officials would see it, if they were the rest of the world.

There were also rumors that North Korean leader Kim Jong Il had been plotting revenge for the losses his navy incurred three years earlier.

The Sinking of ROKS Cheonan:

By far the most deadly attack by North Korea in recent history was the torpedo ambush and sinking of the ROKS Cheonan.

A Pohang-class corvette of the kind that saved the day at the first battle of Yeonpyeong, Cheonan was on patrol off the coast of Baengnyeong Island on March 26, 2010, when the South Korean navys Second Fleet Command sent a warning to the ship.

A North Korean submarine and six support ships had disappeared from the port of Nampo.

Submarines is why ships like the Cheonan exist. An anti-submarine corvette, the ship was 289 feet long, displaced 1,200 tons and had a crew of 95 sailors. Cheonan packed a 76-millimeter gun, four Harpoon anti-ship missiles and six Mk.46 anti-submarine torpedoes. Plus depth charges.

Then at 9:22 p.m. local time, the rear of the warship exploded. Within five minutes of the blast, Cheonan broke in half and sank. Forty-six sailors died.

A South Korean investigation into the attack placed the blame on Pyongyang. In particular, they found fragments of a CHT-02D guided torpedo with No.1 written on it in Hangul, the Korean alphabet.

Government sources told South Koreas Chosun Ilbo newspaper that two North Korean miniature submarines also took part in the attack.

North Korea denied responsibility, but the general consensus among international experts solidified around North Korea being responsible. But why would it sink a corvette? There are two possible reasons.

At the time of the attack, South Korea and the U.S. were holding the annual Foal Eagle and Key Resolve military exercises. North Korea objects to exercises because they strengthen U.S.-South Korean defense cooperation. Attacking a ship such as Cheonan makes the argument that the alliance cannot protect Seoul from attack.

Another theory proposed that Kim Jong Un planned the attack as a way of padding his military resume. Although he is a marshal of the North Korean army and supreme commander of its military, he has no actual military service.

Writing a resume with blood isnt an unprecedented move in North Korean history. His father similarly masterminded the 1987 bombing of Korean Airlines Flight 858 to give himself credibility in state and military matters.

The Shelling of Yeonpyeong Island:

In 2010, North Korea again turned its focus toward Yeonpyeong Island. This time with an artillery bombardment.

There were plenty of targets on the tiny island. Yeonpyeong is a mere 2.8 square miles in size, with a civilian population of 1,780 and a garrison of 1,000 South Korean marines.

On November 21, South Korean intelligence detected the movement of a North Korean battalion armed with multiple-rocket launchers to within firing range of Yeonpyeong. The battalion possessed 18 122-millimeter multiple rocket launchers mounted onto trucks, similar to the Soviet Katyusha weapon systems made famous during World War II.

At 2:34 p.m. on Nov. 23, the battalion unleashed a barrage containing an estimated 150 rockets. In military terminology, the shelling was a time on target attack, a technique pioneered by the U.S. Army in World War II. In such an attack, the gunners coordinate their shells and rockets so that instead of landing in a steady pattern, they impact all at once.

After a 15-minute pause, a second barrage of 20 rockets again struck the island. Each rocket carried a high-explosive warhead weighing 41 pounds. A fire swept the island, destroying several civilian buildings.

The marine garrison, equipped with six K-9 Thunder 155-millimeter howitzers, and an American-made AN/TPQ-37 artillery-locating radar, swung into action.

But unfortunately for the marines, two of their howitzers were out of commission for repairs, and the radarwhich can track rockets and artillery shells to their sourcefailed to work.

The four working howitzers executed a pre-planned strike on mainland targets. The radar then came back online, and the marines identified the source of the North Korean barrage. The marines shifted targets and began firing on the multiple-rocket launchers.

See more here:

5 Times North Korea Provoked a Crisis (And Why They Keep Doing It) - The National Interest Online

The Role of the Arctic in Chinese Naval Strategy – The Jamestown Foundation

Introduction

In her recent China Brief article, Dr. Anne-Marie Brady examined the prospect of China deploying military power to the Arctic (China Brief, December 10). Applying the methods she used in her pathbreaking 2017 book, Brady draws from authoritative Chinese sources to demonstrate the growing importance of the Arctic in Chinas strategic calculus. [1] She also cites a host of other indications that Beijing intends to send naval forcesespecially submarinesnorth through the Bering Strait. Her research provides important context for an oracular 2019 U.S. Department of Defense claim that China could be laying the foundation for naval operations in the Arctic (Department of Defense, May 2).

Building on the excellent work done by Brady and others, this article argues that the available evidence allows for more categorical conclusions about Chinas Arctic intentions. Specifically, the Chinese Navy has formally decided to incorporate Arctic ambitions into its naval strategy, and Chinese scientists and engineers are already conducting research to help it realize these ambitions.

From the Near Seas to the Two Poles

In China, naval strategy (, haijun zhanle) serves two key purposes. It defines the principles guiding how the fleet will be used today, and it outlines the plans for building the capabilities needed to meet the requirements of tomorrow. [2] Chinas first official naval strategy dates to the mid-1980s, when the services chief preoccupation was restoration of Chinese-claimed islands (including Taiwan). Called near seas defense (, jinhai fangyu), it instructed the Peoples Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) to prepare to seize and maintain command of the sea in waters within the first island chain, a capability the PLAN already possessed vis--vis its weakest neighbors. It also catalogued the equipment and training needed to enable the service to achieve these wartime aims in scenarios involving more capable navies. [3]

By 2015, Chinas naval strategy had officially changed to near seas defense, far seas protection (/ / jinhai fangyu, yuanhai fangwei/huwei). [4] The new strategy reflected trends that had been evident for years. The PLANs maritime defense mission remained preeminent. But the service was also increasingly tasked with operating in waters beyond East Asia, in the far seas. This began with an epochal 2008 decision to send successive task forces to counter Somali piracy in the Gulf of Aden, but soon extended to a whole range of other functions, often lumped under the rubric of protecting overseas interests.

The Arctic did not figure in either of these strategies. But we now know that it will in the next strategy. This fact was omitted from Chinas 2018 White Paper on Arctic Policy (State Council Information Office, January 26, 2018) and its 2019 National Defense White Paper (State Council Information Office, July 24) authoritative documents largely meant for foreign consumption. However, the political commissar of Dalian Naval Academy, Senior Captain Yu Wenbing (), revealed the name of the next strategy in a July 2018 essay. Published in the PLANs official newspaper, Yus essay discussed his institutes role in training and educating the leaders of the future navy. To provide context for his advocacy, he pointed out that the PLANs strategy was transitioning to a new concept: near seas defense, far seas protection, oceanic presence, and expansion into the two poles (, jinhai fangyu, yuanhai fangwei, dayang cunzai, liangji tuozhan ). [5]

Senior Captain Yu did not indicate when this transition would be completebut a more recent source does. In mid-2019, Ni Hua (), a PLAN engineer posted to the Military Representative Office in Yichang City (Hubei Province) published an article about the need to boost Chinas ability to counter the threats posed by foreign sea mines. Ni began by discussing the strategic concerns shaping Chinas mine warfare needs. After citing the growing importance of the maritime domain to Chinese national security, he stated that by 2030 the navy willpromote the construction and development of equipment according to the strategic requirements of near seas defense, far seas protection, presence in the two oceans, expansion into the two poles. [6]

Most recently, the new strategic concept was broached during a presentation by Deng Aimin (), Director of the Ship Development and Design Center of the 701 Research Institute, part of the state-owned China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (CSIC). At an October 2019 event in Shenzhen, Deng spoke on the topic of Chinas planned nuclear-powered icebreaker, which his team was designing. He offered some brief remarks on the strategic drivers behind his work: Everyone should be fairly clear about our national strategy. One aspect is the strategic position of the poles. Another is expansion into the two poles [7]

Clearly, then, the PLA has decided that the next naval strategy will bring the service to the Arctic. Perhaps as a result of this decision, the PLA strategic studies community has grown increasingly candid about discussing the militarys future role in this new arena. For example, in a 2017 article, three analysts from the PLAN Submarine Academy examined the increasing out-of-area requirements of Chinas submarine force. They argued, Chinas submarine forces must not only operate in the Pacific Ocean; they must also operate in the Indian Ocean. In the future, they must even operate in the Atlantic Ocean and the Arctic Ocean. [8]

A more thorough treatment of this subject was published by PLAN Captain Zuo Pengfei (), a lecturer at Chinas National Defense University. In his 2018 volume entitled A Study of Polar Strategy, Captain Zuo forthrightly discusses the military value of the Arctic to China and calls for deploying Chinese naval forces to the region. He writes, As the world becomes hotter, the Arctic passages will increasingly become important areas for the operations of Chinas maritime forces. Once [Chinese] forces normalize their presence in this region, they will not only be able to effectively pin down great powers like the U.S. and Russia; they will greatly reduce pressure from primary opponents in our other strategic directions. [9]

Possible PLAN Missions

Broadly speaking, the PLAN would have two missions in the Arctic. The first mission would be to protect Chinas maritime rights/interests in the Arctic Ocean. As Brady writes, these include Chinas interest in unfettered navigation through Arctic waters, and access to living and non-living resources in high seas areas. PLA sources no longer demur from discussing the need to be able to protect these interests. For example, the 2015 edition of Science of Military Strategy, an authoritative volume published by Chinas National Defense University, has several chapters discussing military struggle in the new domains (, xin xing lingyu) of Chinese national security, including the polar regions. The authors state that The poles have become important directions in which Chinas national interests have expanded overseas and into new and distant frontiers, and they have presented new topics and tasks for our employment of military forces. [10] Just three months after this book was published, China revised its national security law, charging the PLA with responsibility for protecting Chinese interests in the polar regions. In the section on tasks for safeguarding national security, the law declared that China persists insafeguarding the security of our nations activities, assets, and other interests in outer space, international seabed areas, and the polar regions (Ministry of National Defense, July 1, 2015).

The PLANs second mission would be to conduct nuclear deterrence patrols. This has nothing to do with Arctic interests per se. Rather, it offers a means for China to better ensure its second-strike capability. The Science of Military Strategy describes the Arctic as an ideal hiding place for strategic nuclear submarines. [11] Captain Zuo discusses this point at length. Operating under the Arctic could improve the survivability of Chinese submarines. In his words, The Arctics bad weather and thick ice prevents all sensors from tracking and monitoring the situation under the ice. This [would] enable our ballistic missile submarines to operate with stealth, improve their survivability, and help to increase our second-strike capability. He also writes, Once our forces achieve forward presence in the Arctic, well be able to increase the suddenness of our strikes and increase difficulties for the adversarys strategic early-warning.This will reduce the strategic pressure posed by Americas missile defense systems. [12]

Science in the Service of Strategy

Chinese scientists and engineers are already conducting the research needed to make possible PLAN operations in the Arctic. Brady highlights the need for bathymetric surveys to produce navigational charts. This is the most dual-use of Arctic activities: yes, future naval forces will need them, but so will Chinese civilians operating in the arctic for commercial and scientific purposes. However, Chinese scientists are also conducting research that is much more closely associated with military purposes.

One area of research is Arctic acoustics. To be effective, submarine forces require a detailed knowledge of the underwater acoustic environment in a given area of operations. Sound propagates differently through water depending on a number of factors, such as temperature, depth, and salinity. To maximize the performance of PLAN sonar in the Arctic, Chinese scientists need to develop models for sound propagation and improve them with in situ data. They must also reckon with acoustic phenomena that are particular to the Arctic Ocean. The Arctic ice pack generates lots of background (or ambient) sound, which can pose challenges when trying to listen for the much quieter signals emitted by enemy submarines.

Chinese scientists have only just started researching Arctic acoustics. In the November 2014 issue of the Journal of Applied Acoustics, ten Chinese acousticians published a call to arms entitled Arctic Underwater Acoustics: An Attractive New Topic in Ocean Acoustics. The authors cited the military importance of this new field. In their words, Conducting research on Arctic acousticsis a major capability requirement for ensuring our navys information advantage in future mobile operations in the Arctic and an important basic research requirement for our submarines to conduct nuclear deterrence patrols and ensure the navigational safety of our warships in the Arctic [13] The first author of this article was Dr. Li Qihu (), a Princeton-educated acoustician at the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) whose career has largely focused on applied acoustics for national defense. [14]

When Li et al. submitted their article, Chinese scientists were just then completing the countrys first Arctic experiments. [15] From July to September 2014, members of the sixth Arctic Expedition, operating from Chinas only icebreaker, the Xuelong, collected basic data required for acoustics modeling. [16] Members of the seventh Arctic Expedition (2016) conducted more sophisticated experiments, led by scientists from the CAS Institute of Acoustics. At least one PLA scientist was involved in experiment design. [17] In 2018 (Chinas eighth Arctic Expedition), an expert named Han Xiao () from the Harbin Engineering University collected under-ice sound velocity profile data (China Ocean News, October 15, 2018). Harbin Engineering University is a key center of undersea warfare research for the PLAN, and Han has personally received awards for his national defense acoustics research (Harbin Engineering University, undated).

Conclusion

Chinese naval strategy has evolved through two periods. Each period has brought PLAN ships, boats, and planes further away from the Chinese coast. Chinas military strategists have clearly decided that the third period will bring the service to the Arctic Ocean. PLAN ships and boats will go there to show Beijings commitment to protecting its claimed rights and interests in the Arctic Ocean. This prospect is not remote, as Chinese warships have already operated in the Bering Sea in 2015 and 2017 (Department of Defense, May 2018). In time, Chinese submarines could also sail to the Arctic Ocean to conduct nuclear deterrence patrols. This prospect is more remote, as Chinese ballistic missile submarines have yet to conduct a deterrence patrol in Chinas coastal waterslet alone the remote Arctic. But with intensifying strategic competition with the United States, it is probably the more urgent of the two Arctic missions. Before this can happen, Chinese scientists will need to overcome a number of scientific and engineering challenges. This process has already begun in earnest. With the commissioning of Xuelong 2 and a third ice-breaker on the way, these efforts should accelerate in the coming years.

Ryan D. Martinson is a researcher in the China Maritime Studies Institute at the Naval War College. He holds a masters degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, and a bachelors of science from Union College. Martinson has also studied at Fudan University, the Beijing Language and Culture University, and the Hopkins-Nanjing Center. The views expressed here are his own, and are not intended to represent those of any U.S. Government institution.

Notes

[1] Anne-Marie Brady, China as a Polar Great Power (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2017)

[2] [PLA Dictionary of Military Terms] (Beijing: Academy of Military Science Press, September 2011), p. 888.

[3] Zhang Xiaolin, [Mao Zedongs Active Defense Strategic Thinking and Chinas Near Seas Defense Naval Strategy] [Military History Research], No. 2 (1992), pp. 13-19.

[4] The 2015 National Defense White Paper uses the term . The 2019 National Defense White paper uses the term . Both can be translated as far seas protection.

[5] Yu Wenbing, [Take Advantage of the Situation to Build a World-class Military Command College] [Peoples Navy] July 13, 2018, p. 3.

[6] Ni published this article with several experts from the CSICs 710 Research Institute, which is also located in Yichang city. Ni Hua, Zhao Zhiping, Guan Hong, and Ai Yanhui, [Discussion of Capacity Building of Chinas Mine Countermeasure Support Ships] [Digital Ocean & Underwater Warfare] No. 2 (2019), p. 2.

[7] Deng spoke at a forum held as part of the 2019 Marine Economy Expo. The author attended this event.

[8] Hu Dongying, Huang Rui and Cai Guangyou, [Several Thoughts on Advancing the Submarine Force to the Ocean], [Ship Electronic Engineering] No. 1 (2017), p. 2.

[9] Zuo Pengfei, [A Study of Polar Strategy] (Beijing: Shishi Press, December 2018), p. 14.

[10] Xiao Tianliang, ed. [Science of Military Strategy] (Beijing: National Defense Univ. Press, 2015), p. 157.

[11] Xiao Tianliang, ed. Science of Military Strategy, p. 158.

[12] Zuo Pengfei, A Study of Polar Strategy, pp 14-15.

[13] Li Qihu, Wang Ning, Zhao Jinping, Huang Haining, Yin Li, Huang Yong, Li Yu, Xue Shanhua, Ren Xinmin, and Li Tao, : [Arctic Underwater Acoustics: An Attractive New Topic in Ocean Acoustics] [Journal of Applied Acoustics] No. 6 (2014), p. 475.

[14] Zhang Chunhua, [The Maturation of an Acoustician in New China] [Physics] No. 12 (2009), p. 926.

[15] Li Qihu, Huang Haining, Yin Li, Wei Chonghua, Li Yu, Xue Shanhua, and Luan Jingde, [New Progress and Trends in Arctic Acoustic Research ] [Acta Acustica] No. 4 (2018), p. 428. Co-author Luan Jingde works at the Naval Research Institute.

[16] Liu Hongning, Lv Liangang, Liu Na, Yang Guangbing, Jiang Ying, Yang Chunmei, Liu Zongwei, and Lin Lina, [Study of Volume Backscattering Strength in Summer Marginal Ice Zone of the Canada Basin] [Acta Oceanologica Sinica] No. 11 (2015), pp. 127-134.

[17] Co-author Xu Quanjun works at the PLA Special Office of the Marine Environment. Wei Chonghua, Huang Haining, Yin Li, Liu Na, Yang Chenghao, Xu Quanjun, and Li Qihu [Analysis of Low-Frequency Environmental Noise Distribution in Dual-duct Waveguide] [Acta Acustica] No. 4 (2019), pp 418-428.

Excerpt from:

The Role of the Arctic in Chinese Naval Strategy - The Jamestown Foundation

Fuel Cells to Lower Harmful Emissions on the High Seas – Advanced Science News

Share

Share

Email

Cruise ships are currently under criticism as these large, floating cities require several tons of heavy oil each day. Heavy oil contains 3500 times more sulfur than is permitted on Europes roads and CO2 and NOx emissions as well as fine dust pollution produced by this fuel source are also devastating to human health and the environment. Passenger numbers continue to rise for many cruise ship companies, and a long-term solution is needed to curb the detrimental effects of this form of transportation.

Meyer Werft, based in Papenburg, Germany, was founded in 1795 and is one of the first cruise ship companies to test fuel cells as an alternative source of energy on board its ships. The company has made strides by making the AIDAnova the first cruise ship in the world to operate completely with low-emission liquefied natural gas (LNG). Now, their project is now entering its next phase with the aim to investigate and develop a decentralized energy network and a hybrid energy system with a new generation of fuel cells for use on passenger ships.

The fuel cell is powered by hydrogen, which is formed from methanol, which can be generated in the long term with regenerative energies. According to the team, these new fuel cells offer the opportunity to lower emissions even more than is currently possible with LNG, and operate with low emissions, low noise, and low vibration. The cells also display high durability, where initial tests have shown a service life of more than 35,000 operating hours.

In addition to the development of the fuel cells, the entire energy systems and its decentralized integration on board will also be investigated. The development of all energy grids and energy management as well as ecological and economic analyses are also part of the project, said Gerhard Untiedt, Head of Energy and Environment Group at Meyer Werft Research & Development. The current project phase will run until the end of 2021.

After intensive tests on land, the fuel cells are to be tested for the first time in real operation onboard AIDAnova beginning in 2021.

Link:

Fuel Cells to Lower Harmful Emissions on the High Seas - Advanced Science News