COP 25 in Madrid and the Limits of Climate Diplomacy – State of the Planet

The 25thConvention of the Parties went overtime in Madrid last weekend to once again try to make progress on meeting the goals of the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. In 1992 (yes, 1992), the nations of the world agreed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and ever since then theyve been negotiating about how to bring about those reductions. These global meetings have value in calling attention to the climate crisis and bringing climate experts and advocates together, but they will never result in a binding treaty that will end global warming. Twenty-five years of futility have demonstrated that to be the case. Sovereign nations will never cede decision-making about something as important as their energy system to an authoritative worldwide body enforcing a global agreement. Energy is central to national economic well-being and national economic well-being is central to the maintenance of a political regimes power and legitimacy. Unless nations believe that reducing greenhouse gas emissions is in their national self-interest, they will never reduce those emissions. And if they ever do believe that such reductions are in their self-interest, they wont need a treaty to encourage them to reduce emissions.

The fossil fuel-based energy system has transformed our way of life and resulted in technologies that enable us to live lives that would have seemed like a fantasy two centuries ago. But the inefficiency, cost and environmental destruction of that system will cause it to collapse. Fossil fuels must be extracted from the earth at great environmental and financial cost, shipped or piped at great environmental and financial cost and then burned at great environmental and financial cost. Technology can reduce these costs, but the fundamental problem with fossil fuels is that they are finite and they pollute. While theres plenty left, the low hanging fruit has already been picked and the cost and complexity of extraction are increasing. The business model of fossil fuels is ripe for disruption and renewable energy will be the cause of that disruption.

Contrast the fossil fuel dilemma to the advantages of renewable energy. Renewable energys basic fuel is the sun and it will last longer than humans will be around, and no one charges us to use the energy generated by the sun. The fuel is free. We simply have to capture it and store it. The technology of capturing solar energy directly through solar cells and indirectly through wind turbines continues to improve. Battery technology continues to improve. Renewable energy is already competitive with fossil fuels and over the next decade will become even less expensive. Like computer and communication technology: it is rapidly getting better and cheaper.

The economies that decarbonize first will have a cost advantage over those that maintain their old, inefficient, expensive fossil-fuel-based energy system. The global economy may be under attack, but for corporations, the logic of an efficient global supply chain remains. The nations that build renewable resource-based smart-grids will attract business because their energy will be lower cost and more reliable. The fact that they do not emit greenhouse gasses is a byproduct rather than the main product of this more modern energy system. But the national self-interest in economic growth will result in the reduction of greenhouse gasses envisioned in 1992. The issue will be the pace of decarbonization, a great danger as greenhouse gasses accumulate in the atmosphere.

While the meeting in Madrid was a frustrating mess, climate progress can be found in other places. A number of American cities and states have begun efforts to reduce the use of fossil fuels. We also see this trend in Europe. Global corporations from Ikea to Walmart are also reducing their use of fossil fuels. While they are not shy about promoting their green credentials, these companies are pursuing renewable energy because at the scale that they operate, it is less expensive than the alternative.

The trend toward renewables is underway and will continue to accelerate. Except in those poor nations that cannot afford a new energy system or are seen as a place to off-load the now lower-value parts of the fossil fuel-based system. China is building coal-fired power plants all over the world. A greenhouse gas emitted from a poor country is just as destructive as one emitted from a rich country. The global policy issue that I anticipate will replace the current issue of national greenhouse gas reductions in wealthy nations will be methods of encouraging developing nations to leapfrog fossil fuels and jump directly into renewables.

If the issue is framed as banning fossil fuels from the developing world, self-interest, national sovereignty and pride will prevent an agreement. If the issue is framed as providing incentives from the developed world to build a carbon-free energy system, there is a good chance that an agreement could be reached. There will be money to be made in building and managing energy infrastructure and political pressure on developing country governments to bring about the lifestyles built on reliable and inexpensive energy technology.

The disagreement and disarray of COP 25 was partially a function of Americas policy of climate denial under President Trump, but in my view was even more related to the triumph of positions that are an outgrowth of narrow and short-sighted interpretations of national self-interest. Appeals to global and intergenerational ethics are of limited usefulness in international relations. The over half-century long ban on the use of nuclear weapons and policies to limit nuclear proliferation are examples of the possibility of global cooperation in the interest of national survival. But the failure of nuclear disarmament is an example of the limits of moral and ethical arguments in international diplomacy.

In the aftermath of COP25, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez referred (on her Twitter feed) to the meeting as:

An utter failure. #COP25 & conferences like it are intended to be actual negotiations to urgently drawdown global carbon emissions not cocktail parties to make politicians feel better about themselves as they squash dissent & sell off our futures to fossil fuel interests.

She may be correct that these conferences are intended by some to be actual negotiations, but after twenty-five years, Ive come to expect far less from these discussions. They have value but are limited and perhaps have finally come to the end of their usefulness. A nationally-driven renewable energy/smart grid focused version of Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortezs Green New Deal would have far more impact on greenhouse gas reduction than the type of international agreement that might now be feasible.

Our focus should be on the development and implementation of renewable energy technologies. A non-ideological consensus could be created around the goal of Modernizing Americas Energy System. Pushing for more reliable, lower priced and less polluting energy has a higher probability of success than a direct attack on fossil fuel companies. I question the ability of fossil fuel interests to prevent the transition to a renewable energy economy. Its not that some wont try, but the more competent ones will redefine themselves as energy rather than fossil fuel companies. And those that wont change will be driven out of business by those that do.

Lets not be discouraged by the failure of COP25 or the climate policies of Americas national government and return to Rene Dubos classic admonition to think globally but act locally. The action is in our homes, communities, companies, institutions, cities and states. I remain optimistic about the technologies of renewable energy and the economic opportunities presented by our need to decarbonize and modernize our energy system.

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COP 25 in Madrid and the Limits of Climate Diplomacy - State of the Planet

The Triad of Commoning – Resilience

This excerpt is the Introduction to Part II: The Triad of Commoning from Free, Fair, and Alive by Silke Helfrich and David Bollier. You can find out more about the book and read excerpts from it here.

Over the years, there have been a number of attempts to conceptualize commons with greater clarity. But no one has yet imagined a framework thatat oncespeaks to the mundane realities of self-organization, the inner transformations that commoning catalyzes, and how these might transform the political economy over time. That is the challenge that we take up in the next three chapters by offering a comprehensive framework for commons and commoning. We hope to get beyond the growing confusion and faux-populism associated with these terms, and provide a more rigorous conceptualization. If the notion ofcommonsis used as a buzzword for everything in the world we would like to see shared, it loses its transformative power.

Frameworks are gateways. They subtly but deeply influence the ways that we perceive the world. They usher us into a specific interpretation of the world, much as opening a door takes us into one room and leaves others unexplored. Frameworks structure worldviews. They provide an analytical scaffold and a language for making sense of what we can observe. For these reasons, we provide in Chapters 4, 5, and 6 a scaffold and language for looking at the world of commons and commoning.

Our framework builds on the insights about the role of subjectivity, relationality, and language described in Part I of this book. OurTriad of Commoning: Social Life, Peer Governance, and Provisioningis based on the premise that commoning is primarily about creating and maintainingrelationships among people in small and big communities and networks, between humans and the nonhuman world, and between us and past and future generations. Thisrelationalunderstanding of the world will necessarily bring about new ways of thinking aboutvalue. It also helps us escape from standard economic and policy frameworks, and from overly economistic, resource-based understandings of the commons, both of which fail to express its social dynamics.

Two years before writing these lines, when we began to think about this book, we didnt aspire to propose a new framework. However, as we progressed, we felt increasingly uncomfortable with the ontological premises and languages used by most of the commons literature. They often did not come to terms with many of the things we had observed in the contemporary commons world. After a year of wrestling with this unease, we decided to start from scratch. In March 2017, we began to reflect more deeply and imagine a framework one step at a time, slowly, iteratively that could blend theory and practice. It was as if we were changing the point of departure for a journey. To explore the outskirts of Paris, for example, we could depart from either of the citys two most important train stations Gare du Nord or Gare de lEst, each only a stones throw away from the other. Choosing Gare du Nord would take us towards Lille in northern France, or to St. Quentin in the Hauts-de-France region. But were we to instead enter Gare de lEst, just five hundred steps away, a whole new set of destinations would be possible: Mulhouse in Alsace or Stuttgart in Germany, along with dozens of others. The distance between the gates is trivial, but the actual point of departure makes a huge difference in what kinds of worlds we can travel to. So it is with the frameworks we choose to interpret the world. The more a framing structure is true to our humanity and aligned with our aspirations and circumstances, the more likely that it will take us to destinations that are right for us.

Our framework aspires to articulate the deep correspondences among the bewildering diversity of the commons. Despite vivid differences among commons focused on natural resources, digital systems, and social mutuality, they all share structural and social similarities. Their affinities have just never been adequately identified and set forth in a coherent framework. Our idea was to make visible that which connects commons experiences in medieval times and today, in digital and analogue spheres, in cities and the countryside, in communities dedicated to water and to software code. Unraveling the tangled genetic history of commons to identify these connections can help explain why the commons is as old as mankind and as modern as the internet.

The structural commonalities that we identify are based on the recurring elements and relationships that we call patterns. Patterns help us see the common core of diverse world-making commons without ignoring their differences. A patterns approach recognizes that each commons develops and evolves in a different context, in different spaces and times. Each is shaped by different people, in different societies and environments. It is thus entirely logical that every commons will enact patterns according to its singular context. To fairly allocate water in the Swiss Alps in the sixteenth century requires a different set of rules than to fairly share bandwidth in the twenty-first. To govern a commons within a modern capitalist society is a different challenge than doing so within an Indigenous culture. What matters in each instance is for participants to produce a fair share for all.

When you have a closer look at how things are done in diverse commons, you begin to discover a world ordered by patterns. Using a patterns-based approach, we can grasp the idea that commons are enacted in myriad ways, without being merely arbitrary or accidental, and without ever being implemented exactly the same way twice. We can identify recurrent features of commons that are often not explicitly named. John C. Thomas has written that patterns are one way to capture what is invariant while leaving the flexibility to deal with the specifics of geography, culture, language, goals, and technologies. In this respect, patterns resemble DNA, a set of instructions that are underspecified so that they can be adapted to local circumstances. Does the DNA contain a full description of the organism to which it will give rise? asks Christopher Alexander in his book The Nature of Order. The answer is no. The genome contains instead a program of instructions for making the organism a generative program in which cytoplasmic constituents of eggs and cells are essential players along with the genes like the DNA coding for the sequence of amino acids in a protein.

Principles and Patterns

In describing the critical dimensions of a commons, what is the difference between a principle and a pattern? And why do we prefer to speak about patterns rather than principles of commoning? When patterns are expressed in a succinct form as in Ritualize Togetherness and Practice Gentle Reciprocity the phrase sounds like a principle. But patterns and principles are not the same. Each points to a different way of understanding the world and bringing about social change.

A principle points to an ethical or philosophical ideal that everyone should follow. It implies a universal, invariant truth. Thou shalt not kill and the separation of church and state are two familiar examples. Principles bring to mind scientific axioms, a term that comes from the Greek word axma which means that which is thought worthy or fit and that which commends itself as evident. Axioms are considered so self-evident that they dont need to be justified or explained. The same idea applies to principles, whose adherents regard their general claims about moral or political truth as beyond argument.

A pattern, by contrast, describes a kernel idea for solving problems that show up again and again in different contexts. The pattern will be the same, but concrete solutions will be different. For example, managing a cooperative in a German city will face similar problems as a co-op in an American city, but each will require approaches that take account of different legal, economic, and cultural realities. The idea of using patterns derives from the pioneering work of Christopher Alexander and colleagues in the 1970s in the field of architecture (see Chapter 1). A pattern isnt an ethical or philosophical ideal, but a concept that distills the essence of a variety of successful solutions that people implement because they work well and are life-enhancing.

Principles tend to make universal claims. This is problematic because it is virtually impossible to find the same institutional structures, cultural beliefs, and social norms in different places and contexts. By contrast, universal patterns of human interaction already exist. Take marriage: as a pattern it describes a universal social practice with countless variations in which people declare their commitment to each other (or have it declared for them). A pattern does not overspecify the details of marriage, such as the sex of the people involved or the conditions under which it occurs. It is a kernel idea for working solutions derived from observing real-world situations. In this sense, patterns describe, they dont prescribe. They start with the need to deal with tensions that cause problems. And tensions are omnipresent in our lives. A formal pattern description frankly recognizes the positive and negative forces that affect a given situation and does not assume that these forces can be resolved by invoking principles. The discourse of principles is less concerned with addressing these messy, complicated forces than in asserting a golden, inviolate ideal. In addition, a principle is usually presented as a standalone truth that need not take account of other principles with which it may conflict. For example, invoking freedom of expression does not address the tensions of that principle with the principle of respect for privacy and the dignity of others.

By contrast, patterns amount to design tools that help us address our practical challenges while speaking to our inner ethical, aesthetic, and spiritual needs. Patterns serve as a vessel for helping aliveness blossom. They are not a configuration of rules and metrics for how things can be controlled and regularized, nor abstract statements of principle with moral or normative meanings like solidarity or sustainability. This is not to say that there is no underlying ethics; its just that patterns recognize that ethical aspirations must take account of situational realities. This helps explain why no pattern is complete unto itself and necessarily relates to others.

Our framework naturally draws on the robust scholarly literature exploring the commons a body of work that has proliferated since Professor Elinor Ostrom won the Nobel Prize in Economic Science in 2009 for her pioneering studies of collective resource management. The International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC) and its journal continue this valuable work. Ostroms famous eight design principles for enduring commons institutions set forth in her 1990 book Governing the Commons and developed over the past generation with hundreds of colleagues represent a major beachhead of understanding. But these principles do not say much about the inner life of commons or the complexities of what it means to common. (They do speak strongly to issues of governance, which we take up in Chapter 5.)

Our Triad framework points to the idea that commoners are engaged in world-making in a pluriverse because that phrase captures the core purpose of commoning: the creation of peer-governed, context-specific systems for free, fair, and sustainable lives. At the heart of the Framework is what we call The Triad the three interconnected spheres of Social Life, Peer Governance, and Provisioning. Or, in more conventional terms: the social, the institutional, and the economic spheres. We find it useful to structure our thinking around these realms, which doesnt mean that they are separate and distinct. Each sphere of the Triad simply provides a different perspective for looking at the same phenomena. Each is deeply interconnected with the others, as the accompanying image suggests.

It is reasonable to ask, how we can possibly generalize about the commons, knowing that there is no such thing as cultural universals? Is a coherent, general understanding of the phenomenon really possible? We believe it is if such an understanding acknowledges the immensely varied on-the-ground realities and distills their essential regularities! Thats what patterns do. They avoid the trap of reductionism, dont oversimplify messy realities, and help to avoid a totalizing way of understanding the world. Patterns provide a way to generate insights while relying on situated knowing peoples experiences, know-how, and intuition. And, most importantly, they help us create an open framework that is adaptable by design, and certainly not the last word. We therefore offer a flexible template, not a blueprint, and a commons vocabulary, not a classical, prescriptive taxonomy.

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The Triad of Commoning - Resilience

What the United Arab Emirates can teach resource-rich countries in Africa – Brookings Institution

By now, many observers are familiar with the broad outlines of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) economic story: a relatively small country rising above its region as a stand-out economic performer. By almost every major index including theWorld Economic Forum Competitiveness Index, theWorld Banks Doing Business Index, and theGlobal Innovation Index the UAE stands at or near the top of its region.

Dubai, the UAEs most populous city, is now an international trade and business hub, with an economy organized around four pillars: trade, transport, tourism, and technology. Abu Dhabi, the capital city, is home to the vast majority of the UAEs oil wealth. Abu Dhabis oil is the reason the UAE holds some $1 trillion in assets and reserves through two of its major sovereign wealth funds, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) and Mubadala. For comparison, $1 trillion is about one-third of the continent of Africas total GDP. Dubai, on the other hand, has sparse oil supplies, and oil accounts for about only 1% of Dubais GDP (although oil once contributed to 50% of Dubais GDP).

The UAEs long-term economic strategy with its four-pillar approach could serve as a model in some ways for African economies, including at the city, regional, and national level. The scope of this analysis is on possible economic lessons, not political ones; importantly, countries in Africa should keep seeking accountable governance, in addition to growing their economies.

Given the rich endowments in natural resources but limited economic diversification of numerous African countries, what might African countries learn about stimulating economic growth and diversification from the UAE, and particularly Dubai? This is particularly relevant given the adoption of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

The UAEs special economic zones offer examples of successful measures to boost trade, manufacturing, and development.

The Jebel Ali Free Zone Authority (JAFZA) is an economic colossus that accounts for $93 billion in annual trade and nearly one-quarter of Dubais GDP. It is the classic free trade zone model, with a twist: It is directly attached to the Jebel Ali Port, which gives it easy access to one of the most active shipping networks in the world. Thousands of companies use the zone as their base for logistics warehousing and/or light manufacturing. For example, the Tea Center within the Dubai Multi Commodities Center (based in the zone) handles over53 million kilograms of tea per year. Abu DhabisKhalifa Port is likewise a major hub.

Recent research projects that business-to-businessspending in manufacturing in Africa will reach $666.3 billion by 2030. As Africas manufacturing sector develops and industrialization increases, the continent has the potential to become a strategic link for trade. African countries with geographic advantages, such as South Africa or Nigeria, should look to develop free trade zones similar to JAFZA or the Khalifa Port. Numerous ports in Africa have potential, given their geographic positions and strategic importance: the port of Durban in South Africa, of Djibouti in Djibouti, of Lagos in Nigeria, of Mombasa in Kenya, of Tema in Ghana, of Abidjan in Cote dIvoire, of Douala in Cameroon, and of Tangier in Morocco, for example.

The entry into force of theAfrica Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)in May 2019 offers a unique opportunity: Building world-class and infrastructure would accelerate industrial development and boost intra-African and global trade.

Strong transportation infrastructure connects the UAE to the world. African countries should focus on fixing the infrastructure gap and better connect with one another and the rest of the world.

The UAE is well-placed to serve as a trade, services, and transport hub given its strategic location between Asia and Europe, and its proximity to Saudi Arabia. Dubais Jebel Ali Port is theninth-busiest container terminal port in the world. It includes alarge, semi-automated container terminalthat uses remote technology to operate cranes and has huge stocking capacity. The Dubai-based DP World, the majority state-owned ports operator, has78 operating marine and inland terminals in 40 countries across six continents.

DP World is also present in Africa,with a number of ports from Senegal in the west to Mozambique in the east. In July 2018, DP World announced a$50 million investment in inland logistic facilities in Mali, and the company is currently supervising the building of the port of Somaliland, to be completed by June 2019, for atotal lease amount of $442 million.

According to the African Development Bank, high-quality infrastructure is critical for raising economic productivity and sustain growth on the continent, as well as achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and the African Unions Agenda 2063 for transforming Africa into a global powerhouse. African countries can learn from the UAEs effective infrastructure development techniques, including particularly the semi-automated and technologically advanced container port, with remote and automated operation of cranes. Now that AfCFTA has come into force, it is crucial for African countries to enhance their maritime and inland trade facilities, especially as transport is one of the biggest barriers to the improvement of intra-African trade.

Developed by the African Union, the New Partnership for Africas Development (NEPAD), and the African Development Bank, the Program for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) isplaying an important role, but it still needs to deliver onfurther mobilization of the private sectorfor resources and a more effective role on infrastructure delivery and expansion. Resources mobilized through PIDA can be supplemented through partnerships with companies such as DP World where appropriate.

Tourism and the business environment are booming in the UAE, and African countries should take note.

With almost 16 million international visitors in 2018, Dubai is the fourth-most visited city in the worldby international tourists, surpassing New York or Tokyo, and beat out only by Bangkok, London, and Paris.Dubais tourism strategy is partly based on its purposeful building of tourist attractions, from the worlds tallest tower to beach hotels and theme parks. The Dubai-based Emirates Airlines feeds into this strategy as one of the largest international carriers in the world.Ethiopian Airlines, Africas largest and most successful airline, is already enhancing travel to and within the continent it has at least121 aircrafts, 127 destinations, and 10.6 million passengers in 2017-18, with a revenue of $3.1 billion but many more African companies should follow their footsteps.

As for business, Dubai allows companies to benefit fromfree repatriation of capital. Other business-friendly measures include specific incubators and long-term visas forinvestors and entrepreneurs. Similar mechanisms could permit African countries to consistently attract entrepreneurs and companies, even if corporations and citizens should pay their fair share of taxes to reinforce state capacity to deliver public goods and services. To do so, African countries also need to further promote their growing and highly competitive sectors, such asagribusinessand financial services.

Countries in Africa and around the world must acknowledge that disruptive innovation and technology will drive the future.

The UAE ranks first in the Arab States region in the 2018World Digital Competitiveness Index, outperforming Germany, New Zealand, France, Japan, Spain, Portugal, and many other traditional leaders. This is bolstered by a strategy around the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), the appointment of a minister of state for artificial intelligence,government initiatives aroundartificial intelligence and the supportive infrastructure,andlarge investments in schools for robotics and artificial intelligence.

Recent information communication technology developments in Africa have the potential to give African countries similar opportunities to take advantage of new technologies. For example, the recent ITU Telecom Forum, which was hosted by South Africa in Durban in September 2018, paved the way for thecreation of 5G networks, artificial intelligence and cybersecurity projects, and initiatives to connect unconnected citizens.Africa should build upon developments such as this forum and follow the UAE example by investing further in the private sector to scale up digital skills training.

There are significant differences between African countries and the UAE, particularly higher oil production per capita as well as larger oil reserves than any African country; the strategic location between Asia and Europe that facilitated the creation of a globally competitive trade, transport, and service hubs; and the ultimate concentration of the executive, judiciary, and legislative powers in the hands of rulers. Moreover, wealth in the UAE is concentrated in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, with development disparities across the seven emirates. There is perhaps a lesson there, though: The less wealthy emirates such as Ajman, Al Fujayrah, and Umm al Qaywayn rely on generous financial support from Abu Dhabi, and are therefore not left behind. This lesson of sub-national solidarity could be learned by some African countries as well.

The impressive economic history of the UAE is also accompanied with challenges (some of which are similar to those of African countries), including the exposure to the volatility of oil prices, the limited flexibility of monetary policy, the real estate volatility (oversupply, in particular, which has lead to a drop in prices), the rising cost of living, a fiscal deficit which has led the country to introduce a value added tax (in 2018, 5%) to diversify revenues (boost non-oil income) and address the deficit, and the lack of harmonized business start-up rules and regulations across the country, as each of the seven emirates in the UAE can have its own rules and regulations, among others.

Despite these differences and challenges, many of the UAEspoliciescould be replicated to enhance the continents economic growth. It is not just about having strategies or creating new infrastructure: It is about effective delivery and implementation, and constant innovation and efficiency to push the frontier of success, with checks and balances andaccountable leadership.

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What the United Arab Emirates can teach resource-rich countries in Africa - Brookings Institution

Newport, R.I. Looks to Protect its History From Climate Change – Government Technology

(TNS) Following another Newport downpour on the night of Tuesday, Nov. 5, about 20 community members gathered at Innovate Newport for a public forum about elevating historic structures.

Andy Bjork, the chair of Newport's Historic District Commission, presented potential solutions to combat the increasing flood issues in Newport. The new solution brought up aspects of an ongoing conversation about how to implement changes while keeping the past in tact.

"Seas are rising faster in Rhode Island than the global average, and will continue to do so in the future," said Janet Freedman, a coastal geologist and a speaker for the Providing Resilience Education for Planning in Rhode Island program. According to Freedman, the sea level in Newport today is 10 inches higher than it was in 1930. The 2014 National Climate Assessment predicted the sea level to rise anywhere from one to four feet in the Northeast by 2100. The increasing predictions create concern for the community's historic character.

Newport's history is "the fabric of the city and tourism," said Bjork. In a 2018 Rhode Island preservation report from Preserve R.I. and the Preservation Society of Newport County, over 10% of day visitors and about 20% of overnight visitors travel to Rhode Island for its historic sites and landmarks. The tourism created by Newport's history results in significant economic gain for the city.

In 2013, the Preservation Society of Newport County reported in their community impact study how the organization contributed over $236,000 directly to the city of Newport and city services, including the RIPTA trolley. Along with the direct payment to the city, the 2018 preservation report stated how, "$100 million flows into the city and state's economy as a direct result of the Preservation Society's operations." The money includes factors such as creating jobs and visitor spending at local businesses when traveling to Newport. Along with attracting tourists, historic preservation draws new residents to the community. Historic districts in Rhode Island are growing in popularity more than other areas of Rhode Island, according to the preservation report.

The effects of climate change, including altered climate, sea level rise and intensified storms, have the potential to harm the history which makes Newport appealing, attractive and unique. To give a glimpse of the potential damage, over 230 historic-contributing buildings are within the Point Neighborhood's flood zone alone according to projections from the Federal Emergency Management Agency presented by Bjork. The Point is one of many sections of Newport on the waterfront and potentially prone to climate damage. Adverse effects of climate change would not only be detrimental to the specific area, but ultimately Newport as a whole.

With historic homes, monuments and landmarks being a drawing point to Newport, historic and preservation organizations throughout the city work to create solutions to climate change concerns so the sea doesn't damage local history.

"There's reason to believe those historical resources are vulnerable."

The Newport Restoration Foundation has been a front-runner in the discussion of how historic preservation responds to climate change. In 2016, the Newport Restoration Foundation initiated the "Keeping History Above Water" conference, and the issues discussed then continue to drive the actions of the organization.

"We're always actively thinking and working in the area of the 'Keeping History Above Water' initiative," said Mark Thompson, the executive director of the Newport Restoration Foundation. The organization works with the city and outside consultants to be informed on new developments and intervention strategies to protect both their properties and ones in the surrounding community.

"We share the same level of concern everybody has," Thompson said. "This is a city with incredible historical resources, and based on what we're learning and, based on what we're hearing, there's reason to believe those historical resources are vulnerable."

According to the Newport Restoration Foundation's website, 21 of their properties lay within the Point Neighborhood. Thompson noted how flooding at any rate is an issue with historic preservation with a larger concern being the flood waters reaching as high as the first level. Along with sea level rise, Thompson considered increased storms and wind as threats to the organization's properties. In addition to foundation's properties, Thompson mentioned how climate change affects the community at large.

"I think it would be everybody's preference that we not regularly have flooded streets, and that we not regularly have flooding in our homes," Thompson said.

The Newport Restoration Foundation has been active in the recent conversation of elevating historic properties as a potential solution to flood concerns. The acceptance of elevating houses is a new norm to many historic preservationists.

"There was probably a time where the thought of elevating houses would be considered absolutely contrary to the point of historic preservation, but increasingly, in light of this threat that we're facing, preservationists are starting to realize that there will be cases that, perhaps, elevating a resource is just what they're going to need to do," Thompson said. Although elevation may be needed, historic integrity is as well. An important aspect to consider when elevating is to be sensitive to the nature of the historic property, Thompson said, who has seen both successes and failures of elevation. Elevating may not be ideal, but it may be necessary.

"What I recognize is around the country, preservation organizations are increasingly coming to grips with the fact that some properties may very well need to be elevated, and, perhaps, our focus now needs to be on the right and wrong ways of elevating properties and how we can preserve what is historical about the property."

The Newport Restoration Foundation prepares, strategizes and innovates solutions with the goal of preventing the city-by-the-sea's history from being damaged by the nature which surrounds it.

"All of us hope the outcome is we find some way to encounter this threat in which the historic feel of Newport remains in tact," Thompson said. "Nobody wants to see us lose this wonderful, historic landscape that is Newport, so I think the point now is that all of us are working towards finding solutions so that we can preserve what's here."

"There's an entire spectrum of risks..."

The other side of the city is home to the majority of the Preservation Society of Newport County's properties between Bellevue and Ochre Point avenues. The bulk of the Preservation Society's properties may be further from the sea level rise concerns of the Point Neighborhood, but the organization recognizes climate threats of their own.

"Climate change is one of our top concerns because historic preservation is a battle to keep the water out," said John Rodman, director of museum experience at the Preservation Society. Rodman noted how severe storms not only contribute to water infiltration, but also create damage from wind, hail and falling trees. The damage to the trees is also a critical concern to the organization as it is a certified arboretum.

"When talking about climate change and storm events, we have buildings [over] 250 years old, so you're looking at buildings that weren't necessarily designed to last 250 years," Rodman said. "Buildings like The Elms and Marble House are set up high or right on the water, exposed to wind and falling tree limbs. With wood frame structures you're worried about wind damage, but also fire in a severe storm event. There's an entire spectrum of risks that our historical structure can be exposed to or made worse by the storm component of climate change."

According to Rodman, the Preservation Society already had storm plans implemented, including itemized lists of how to protect artifacts at the different properties. The plans go as far as having contracts in place to transport and store objects if and when needed.

"You name the problem, there is a scenario for moving objects from place to place, moving to a secure setting [and] moving from high tides," Rodman said.

The organization's current objectives are to create solutions to protect the properties long term. Roof repairs were completed on both The Breakers and Kingscote, and the latest was for the servant's quarters at The Elms. The next two properties scheduled for roof replacement are the Marble House and Rosecliff. The Preservation Society is also working to put in storm windows at the properties, the most recent being at The Breakers.

The organization also implemented climate control technologies in several of the properties in order to minimize humidity. Rodman mentioned how humidity is another concern because the more fluctuation, the more damage there is to the materials including the metal, stone and gilding. So far, The Breakers, Marble House and Rosecliff have climate control technology along with climate maintenance at Hunter House and Chepstow, Rodman said.

"The amount of climate control you can manage varies depending on how it was built: you can't get 21st century [air conditioning] in an 18th-century building."

The Preservation Society has found ways to enact new changes in older structures, a recent example being the geothermal system used at The Breakers. The original systems of the property were utilized to support modern geothermal technology, which dramatically reduced the carbon footprint for maintenance of the mansion, according to Rodman.

Although the Preservation Society is taking action to protect their properties from climate change, there are some components out of their control. Hunter House, the organization's founding property, is a colonial structure located in the Point Neighborhood and thus threatened by sea level rise and flooding. Rodman noted how the concern with Hunter House potentially flooding is because of both the structure itself and the mid-18th-century artifacts contained within: mitigation in some form will be necessary.

"To some degree, it's out of our hands, but that doesn't excuse us from taking every available step," Rodman said. "Forecasting the future is not easy, but you have to plan for the worst case, and then develop the most cost-effective strategies. Resources are not unlimited, so we will protect to our best ability, and that's what we're committed to doing."

"It becomes harder to predict."

In June 2019, the Alliance Franaise de Newport completed a restoration project of the Rochambeau Memorial at King Park. Prior to completion, the monument stood covered and strapped to save the statue from falling in on itself due to decomposition. According to Andrew Snook, the president of the Alliance, age and seawater were the primary contributing factors to the monument's damages. The organization spent over five years fundraising for the restoration project, which cost approximately $250,000.

"The project had to happen because the condition of the memorial had deteriorated to such a point where it was unsafe," Snook said. The seawall on the southwestern side of the monument needed to be repaired, along with an extension of the wall by another 70 to 100 feet.

"Whenever there's a storm surge and the water comes up over that sea wall, it runs back towards the monument and floods the whole area out," Snook said.

"The restoration is significant," Snook said, but he mentioned ongoing operation and maintenance is a must.

"We're doing a good job of offsetting some of the immediate concerns... but as you look forward to medium and longer term it becomes harder to predict," Snook said. The Alliance is putting efforts in to protect the monument, but recognizes Rochambeau has a modern-day battle ahead.

"It's a dynamic system."

"While we're not scientists, we will accept the science," Bjork said regarding climate change at the "Elevating Historic Buildings" forum.

As residents consider options to protect their property in the face of climate change, historic organizations consider how to not only protect, but preserve.

"It's a dynamic system," Rodman said. "Dynamic systems are influenced in ways we can't always predict, so we have to continue to do absolutely everything we can do to mitigate climate change."

Climate change may bring the community and historic organizations a myriad of unknowns, but Newport's historic community attempts to create the best possible solutions with what is.

"We realize this is not a time to sit on our hands," Thompson said.

2019 Newport Daily News, R.I.

Visit Newport Daily News, R.I. at http://www.newportdailynews.com

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Newport, R.I. Looks to Protect its History From Climate Change - Government Technology

This Teacher Makes $40,000 A Year. This Lawyer Makes $210,000 A Year. That Explains The American Economy. – BuzzFeed News

Chicago Tribune / Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Thousands of Wisconsin teachers, state workers, and union members protest Gov. Walker's legislation, in the State Capitol in Madison, Wisconsin, Feb. 18, 2011.

At 6:30 a.m. every weekday, Ethan Floerke wakes up for his full-time job teaching language arts to 100 seventh graders at Lake Mills Middle School in Wisconsin. Almost nine hours later, at 3:05 p.m., he sets down his books and puts on a uniform. Its time to deliver pizzas, many of which go to the families of his students. Floerke works the part-time job about 25 hours a week.

Its an exhausting grind, but its still not enough for the 29-year-old to pay his loans and bills while also setting aside savings. In the summer, Floerke teaches summer school, delivers pizza, and also works for the parks department as a security guard on the public beaches. I am working 70-plus hours a week during the summer, he told BuzzFeed News.

This is Floerkes sixth year teaching. One of five children, he graduated college in December 2013 with $30,000 in student loans and began teaching at a salary of about $32,500.

After working for over a year, he bought a used 2010 Jeep Patriot, taking out a $14,000 loan. Two months later, it died. He bought another car, and within a few weeks, his debt for cars alone had skyrocketed to $30,000.

That one decision, that terrible car decision, and I'm $60,000 in debt. It was terrifying, he said.

Thus began Floerkes adult life.

Ethan Floerke at home in Lake Mills, Wisconsin, Dec. 6. James works multiple jobs in an effort to pay down debilitating student debt.

On the other side of the country, in New York, another young man was starting his life. Hes asked to be called Tom for this story, to protect his privacy.

Floerke and Tom have many similarities. Both are well-educated millennial American men born who grew up in low- to middle-income families. But they differ in one respect: Floerkes income puts him in roughly the 40th percentile of American income. (That is, 60% of the country makes more than he does, 40% makes less.) Toms base salary, which today is $210,000 a year, places him in the 92nd percentile.

And on this one difference, an entire decade turned.

Nothing has been felt more profoundly by Americans over the last decade than the widening gulf in wealth. The gap between the richest and poorest Americans is at its highest levels in 50 years, according to the US Census Bureau. The wealthiest 10% of Americans now hold two-thirds of all household net worth, and everyone else the other 90% share the other third.

In 1986, roughly when Tom and Ethan were born, the Gini index, the standard measurement of income inequality, stood at 0.375 in the United States. In 2018, that number reached 0.49, the highest measurement ever recorded in this country. (0.0 means a perfectly equal distribution of income, while 1.0 means a single person would receive all the income.)

Only a very small number of potential items on the national agenda actually come to dominate our political life. And at the opening of the decade, it looked unclear that economic inequality would be one of them. In 2011, the Occupy movement came and went an inchoate venting of collective anger that seemed to disappear without a trace. Yet it shaped the Dickensian lens through which we viewed the rest of the 2010s.

Inequality has become the centerpiece of American national politics.

Ethan Floerke was in high school, his older twin siblings in college, when his father lost his job. His mother, a nurse, would soon face with her own health problems. That's really when the credit cards started coming into play, he recalled. For the last 10 years, [my dad] was so negative: Oh, I'm never going to be able to retire. This is this is my life now. And he was exhausted, just completely stressed and wrecked.

Meanwhile in New York, Tom graduated from law school in 2009 with six figures in student loan debt. The most my mom ever made was, like, $30,000, he told BuzzFeed News. A job offer from a law firm, where he worked as a summer associate, evaporated when the economy crashed, so he was working as a waiter at a Chinese restaurant, earning $150 on the rare good day and $35 on a bad day. But Tom had married the daughter of a doctor and a lawyer. He didnt know it yet, but that would change his life.

The soil in which the two men were planted was the Great Recession, an 18-month period from late 2007 to mid-2009 when the economy slowed, the housing market collapsed, joblessness rose to levels not seen since the 80s, stock markets crashed, and the financial industry was thrown into turmoil.

A fence surrounds a site where new home construction has been suspended in El Centro, California, March 12, 2009.

Just one month into his presidency, President Barack Obamas plan to help people facing foreclosure the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan drew outrage from CNBC editor Rick Santelli, who ranted on Squawk Box that the government was promoting bad behavior and subsidizing the losers mortgages and proposed a Chicago tea party where were going to be dumping some derivative securities into Lake Michigan.

Within hours, OfficialChicagoTeaParty.com was live. The media dubbed it the rant heard around the world.

In Wisconsin, the recession led to deep cuts in state government spending.

The recession has hit Wisconsin harder than most state governments, especially when it comes to lost tax revenues and the size of the hole in its budget, according to a Pew report in 2009. On top of that, unemployment is climbing as the states largest sector manufacturing sputters. Wisconsins history of budget shortfalls and pattern of borrowing frequently to cover operating expenses, among other measures, made it poorly positioned to weather the most recent severe economic downturn.

Floerke was pursuing a degree in education at the time. I remember teachers that have been teaching for 20-plus years telling us, You need to do something else. This is not a profession to get into right now. And you would hear these stories every single day, he said.

When Republican Scott Walker became governor of Wisconsin in 2011, he proposed Act 10, the "Wisconsin budget repair bill," which called for major cuts in state aid to school districts, increased the amount employees paid for their health insurance and pensions, and eliminated many collective bargaining rights for public employees.

Teachers and other state workers protested for months in 2011. Tens of thousands of them swarmed Madison on Feb. 16, chanting Kill the bill and Hey hey, ho ho / Scott Walker has to go! On March 12, after Walker signed the bill, the crowd outside the Wisconsin State Capitol swelled to 85,000 to 100,000 people, bigger than the protests in Madison during the Vietnam War. Farmers drove in 50 tractors to participate in the protests. "This is what democracy looks like," people cheered.

We had teachers and professionals from all walks of life across state lines that would come and help advocate with us, Floerke recalled. Among education students at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, everyone just decided, in solidarity, we were going to walk out of class.

In Washington, DC, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau an agency authorized by the 2010 DoddFrank bill but originally proposed in 2007 by thenHarvard Law School professor Elizabeth Warren launched in July. This agency is ready to be a cop on the beat for American families and I couldnt be prouder, said Warren, whom Obama had named a special adviser for the bureau.

Occupy Wall Street participants stage a protest on Times Square in New York, Oct. 15, 2011.

Then on Sept. 17, 2011 three days after Warren announced her candidacy for a Massachusetts Senate seat the Occupy Wall Street movement took off. After a call for action by the Canadian magazine Adbusters, nearly 1,000 people, who had organized on social media, staged a demonstration in Zuccotti Park in Manhattans Financial District. Signs floated amid the crowds with messages like People Not Profits and End the Oligarchy.

Demonstrators set up sleeping bags and tents. They did mass yoga. Soon, there were drum circles. Crosby & Nash did an acoustic performance. The protesters were largely affluent, white, and highly educated, according to a study by the City University of New York. Anthropologist and activist David Graeber described them as young people bursting with energy, with plenty of time on their hands, every reason to be angry, and access to the entire history of radical thought.

The New York protesters remained in Zuccotti Park for two months before they were ousted by police. Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the health and safety conditions became intolerable.

Tom, who had tried to start his own law firm with very little success, was waiting tables during Occupy. I was trying to get a job, and my view on it was, man, these people aren't even fucking trying to work and Im busting my ass up here, he said. Quite honestly, I thought, I bet youre going to tip me poorly later.

That fall, Tom received a call from his wifes uncle, offering him a job at the same law firm that wasnt able to hire him after graduation.

Amid protests against the 1%, capital rapidly accumulated on the West Coast, as American tech recovered from the dot-com bust and began its incredible decade. Instagram had just launched its iOS app. Apple exceeded ExxonMobil as the most valuable company in the world in August. Uber commenced its expansion from a San Franciscobased service to cities around the country and, by December, had made its way to Paris.

In 2012, as the country prepared for another presidential election, Facebook pulled off the largest-ever tech IPO in May, raising $16 billion. At age 28, Mark Zuckerbergs net worth shot up to $19.1 billion, making him the worlds 29th richest person.

A woman watches Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaking in a promotional video ahead of the company's IPO, in Washington, May 8, 2012.

But the unemployment rate was still above 8%, and it was already time for another election. In his campaign kickoff speech, Obama said, Too many of our friends and family are still out there looking for work. The housing market is still weak, deficits are still too high, and states are still laying off teachers, first responders. This crisis took years to develop, and the economy is still facing headwinds. And it will take sustained, persistent effort yours and mine for America to fully recover. He went on, This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and weve been through too much to turn back now.

His Republican opponent, business executive Mitt Romney, had his own take on what the US needed. Weeks before the election, Mother Jones released a video in which Romney told a closed-door meeting of donors that he believed that 47% of Americans are people who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it.

[M]y job is is not to worry about those people, said Romney.

Inequality continued to worsen in Obamas second term. According to a report by the economist Emmanuel Saez, the incomes of the richest 1% of households increased by 31.4% between 2009 and 2012, representing 95% of all new income gains, while the remaining 99% of households captured the other 5%.

Floerke graduated from college in December 2013 and worked as a substitute teacher before taking a job at Lake Mills School District. I quickly realized just how far $30,000 actually goes. After paying his bills, he usually had $20 to $30 left in his bank account at the end of the month.

To keep costs down, Floerke rented a one-bedroom unit in an old farmhouse for about $600 a month. At first when I started living there, I'm like, oh, this looks so cool because it was old. I've got this room off my bedroom and I call my Narnia room because it's got a really small door that opens up behind a bookcase. But it's lost its charm after six years, he said. Im freezing at night because the heater units in the middle of the apartment and that's the only place where heat comes out, so it's really cold in the bedroom.

In 2013, Tom and his wife bought an apartment in New York for $225,000, borrowing the 10% down payment from her parents. We bought in an up-and-coming neighborhood. And then the neighborhood came, he said. Two years later, they sold it for $402,000, allowing them to repay her parents and buy a two-bedroom apartment, where they are now raising their children.

The next year, Warren, now a senator, shared a stage with the economist Thomas Piketty, who was touring the United States to promote his book Capital in the Twenty-First Century, to discuss income inequality. The game right now in America is rigged. It is rigged so that those at the top keep doing better and better, and everyone else is under increasing pressure, is under increasing economic strain, Warren said.

As concerns about rising inequality grew, there were also signs that the economy was turning a corner. People began buying houses again, fueled by low interest rates, falling unemployment, and improved consumer confidence. But as confidence rose, so did debt. Total mortgage debt climbed to $8.17 trillion in the first quarter of the year from $7.93 trillion during the same period in 2013, according to data from the New York Federal Reserve. Student loans, meanwhile, continued their steady ascent. Students' average debt at graduation rose 56% from 2004 to 2014, from $18,550 to $28,950, according to the Institute for College Access and Success. The class of 2014 was dubbed the most indebted ever.

There was no clear, good decision of what to do next because there was uncertainty everywhere, said Floerke. There was a lot of criticism about people going back and living with their parents. And older generations might have criticism about millennials not taking responsibility for their lives. But the reality is, they are trying to start their lives in the most uncertain, difficult times. No wonder that theyre their back home with their parents because they can't make an actual run of it yet.

Parade participants protesting against high student loan burdens are preparing to take part in the annual 4th of July parade at Ashland, Oregon, July 4, 2015.

In July 2015, Amazons market value exceeded Walmarts, fueled by the boom in third-party marketplace sellers on the platform. In October, former Amazon Prime Now drivers sued the company, claiming they should have been classified as employees rather than contractors. It was just one of several labor classification lawsuits filed against tech companies that expanded using contract workers, dodging the need to offer consistent pay, benefits, and other worker protections.

Amazon is not significantly different than Walmart: Its workers are a resource, and resources are expected to maximize output at the lowest possible cost, the New Republic wrote. There are some reasons to feel good about thisno company is more committed to making it easier for consumers to buy thingsand a lot of reasons to be troubled.

That year, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos net worth shot up by nearly $30 billion to $58.4 billion.

The economy had been growing for years, but the distribution of wealth had become more unequal. In 2016, the median wealth of upper-income families was seven times that of middle-income families, a ratio that has doubled since 1983, according to Pew.

By 2016, it was clear that millennials especially older millennials were still struggling with the impact of the Great Recession. Wealth in 2016 of the median family headed by someone born in the 1980s remained 34% below the level we predicted based on the experience of earlier generations at the same age, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve.

Older Americans, meanwhile, experienced a stronger recovery. On balance, wealth has shifted away from younger families toward older families, the St. Louis Fed reported.

Donald Trump who pegged his own net worth at more than $10 billion had his own angle on inequality, blaming the leadership class in Washington, DC, during a campaign speech in Wisconsin: Arent you tired of a system that gets rich at your expense? Arent you tired of big media, big businesses, and big donors rigging the system to keep your voice from being heard? Are you ready for change?

It would be Trumps bleak message of American carnage that would win over Americas rust belt and suburbs, its farmers and older voters not Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clintons. In his own way, the poor mans idea of a rich man was himself a product of American inequality as much as Warren.

In August, on the campaign trail for the Democratic nomination for president, Warren laid out her case. More and more working families today are hanging on by their fingernails in a country with an economy and a government that works only for those at the very top, she said. This crisis didnt start when Donald Trump walked into the Oval Office. And it wont just magically disappear the day he walks out of it.

Warren talked about the fight for the middle class: benefits for full-time, part-time, and gig workers, the Fight for $15, protecting unions, childcare and universal pre-K, affordable health care, and debt-free college.

This fight is our fight! she declared to a standing crowd, noisy with applause.

In 2019, Toms base salary is now $210,000. If you're born poor, you have to have a lot of things really go right in order to get out of it, he said. I wouldn't say there is necessarily a ceiling to how high you can go I've seen some people get very, very wealthy. But you have to have so much go right. And truth be told, I'm one of those people. Those who are born wealthy, on the other hand, he said, have a floor that they can't really get below. They can fuck up and still be perfectly fine.

And although Floerke hasnt fucked up, he is far from fine.

In Wisconsin, the median compensation for teachers fell by 12.6% in inflation-adjusted terms during the five years after Act 10 was passed. Floerke fell ill in 2017. I couldn't breathe. I was working late at night and my colleague had to call an ambulance for me. I was put on a stretcher and rolled out of the school. I needed my gallbladder removed, he said. Even with the schools health insurance, he owed thousands of dollars. When he recovered, he started delivering pizza, a job at which he earns $8.25 an hour plus tips.

Floerkes teaching salary finally crossed the $40,000 line in 2018, a fifth of what Tom makes, not counting the pizzas. Without these part-time jobs, I would be living paycheck to paycheck because I'm certainly not making enough teaching to put money away, said Floerke.

As Floerke drives around Lake Mills to deliver pizza, he sees the income disparities every single day. Many of their families seems far worse off than he is. I feel guilty talking about my situation because it's nothing compared to what these families are dealing with. And I think, My goodness, how are they making it?

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This Teacher Makes $40,000 A Year. This Lawyer Makes $210,000 A Year. That Explains The American Economy. - BuzzFeed News

OP/ED: What the Linn County Lawsuit Really Means – Tillamook County Pioneer

By Tillamook County Commissioner David YamamotoAfter a monthlong trial, after hearing more than 100 hours of testimony and reviewing hundreds of exhibits, some going back to the early 1900s, the Linn County jury deliberated for only a few hours before returning with a verdict. The jury determined that the State had indeed breached a long-standing contract with the 13 plaintiff forest trust counties and awarded full damages of $1.065B.

Tillamook County is the largest recipient of this award at $332M with almost going to 20 taxing districts which include all 3 school districts, Tillamook Bay Community College, 911 District, North County Recreation District, Transportation District, NW Regional Education Service District, all 3 Port Districts, and many others.Of the 15 Trust Counties, Clatsop County Commissioners opted out of the lawsuit, although the majority of their taxing districts decided to stay in and are entitled to $243M, and Judge Thomas McHill determined that Klamath County forests operate under a pre-2001 forest management plan and removed them from the lawsuit. This left 13 Counties and 151 taxing districts found to be harmed and eligible for compensation.The 1941 Forest Acquisition Act created the idea of Greatest Permanent Value (GPV) to mean managing these forest trust lands to return timber revenue to the Counties, taxing districts, and the Oregon Dept. of Forestry (ODF). It was in 1998 that the Board of Forestry decided to change the definition of GPV, and for the last 20 years, timber revenue suffered while the State instead prioritized going far above the mandates of the Federal Endangered Species Act and directing funds to increasing recreational opportunities.While these are admirable goals, these shortfalls over the last 20 years were being born entirely by the trust counties. What the jury found is that the trust counties have been shorted $1.065B to provide these additional services to all residents of Oregon and it is only fair that we be fairly compensated for these services. Over the last 20 years, trust counties have had to cut public safety, education, emergency services, road maintenance, healthcare, libraries, and other essential services.When it comes to natural resource-based industries, Tillamook County is blessed with dynamic timber, dairy, and fishing opportunities. Some think that increasing timber harvest will harm the environment. As a Tillamook County Commissioner, I am proud to be able to say that when it comes to clean water, habitat restoration, and fish recoveryno Oregon County does these things better than Tillamook County.Over the decades, our timber, dairy, and fishing partners in Tillamook County, have collaborated with our Tillamook County public works department, watershed councils, OR Watershed Enhancement Board, Tillamook Soil & Water Conservation, Tillamook Estuaries Partnership, Salmon SuperHwy, and others to provide continuing improvements to our watersheds.

We recently completed a 600+ acre, $11M habitat restoration project called Southern Flow Corridor. In Tillamook County, we have over 3500 culverts, which often, due to increased fish passage rules, need to be replaced with a bridgewhich is an expensive proposition. This is one of the reasons we have a bridge for every 3 miles of roadway. A difficult environment for a small rural county, but a true success story in Oregon.Our victory in Court does not mean we can or should diminish our commitment to our environmental responsibilities. As I explained above, Tillamook County is the State leader in clean water, habitat restoration, and fish recovery. ODF cannot disregard the Endangered Species Act, or Clean Water Act, but I feel this jury verdict clearly specifies that the State should not go above and beyond to the detriment of the trust counties.Timber revenue is but one part of the economic and social sustainability of rural Oregon Counties. It must also be understood that jobs in the woods, mills, and truck transportation are some of our rural counties best paying, fully benefited jobs.In the State of Oregon, the Total Private Sector Average Annual Wage is $52K. This same classification of jobs in Tillamook County is $37K. Yet, when you look at forest products industry (FPI) jobs in Tillamook County, we have Forestry and Logging at $55K, Wood Products Mfg at $59K, and Truck Transportation at $47.5K. These are family wage, fully benefited jobs. Tillamook County has 852 FPI jobs which adds over $43.5M to the Tillamook County economy.In the State of Oregon, there are over 60,000 FPI jobs paying an average of $53.5K. This total FPI employment in Oregon adds more than $3.2B to the State economy. Every County in the State has some economic activity generated by the forest sector. Total wood product sales in Oregon exceeded $10.34B in 2016. The total number of wood processing facilities in Oregon was 360 in 1988 and was down to 172 in 2017. When looking at sawmills in Oregon, number have decreased by 53% during the period 1988 to 2017, down to 78 sawmills in 2017.The jury award underestimates the real social cost which was caused by the States breach of contract. According to the States own figures, each additional million board feet of harvest results in 9.8 family wage jobs. 3.6B board feet of foregone harvest meant 3700 jobs lost. Imagine what those lost jobs would have meant to the trust counties, not only in terms of the productive lives of its residents but of the economic multiplier which would have attached to all the purchasing power those jobs would have resulted in.It is important to note that interest at the State mandated rate of 9% accrues on this damages award which equates to $260K per day. It is expected that the State will appeal this verdict to the Oregon Court of Appeals and then possibly to the Oregon Supreme Court, taking years for these court decisions.No one should blame the trust counties for this situationhad the State performed the contract as originally promised, the Counties would be in a much better financial condition and ODF would also have had the financial means to properly manage the State Forests. It is not right to expect rural Counties to shoulder the burden to benefit the entire State.

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OP/ED: What the Linn County Lawsuit Really Means - Tillamook County Pioneer

Enbridge to create 300 new jobs for T-south pipeline expansion – Business in Vancouver

The demand for natural gas as a source of heat and the need for a reliable pipeline system to transport that resource is about to spur the northern B.C. economy.

Beginning next spring, Enbridge will begin a project to install three new compressors in the Prince George region along its Transportation South (T-South) pipeline which runs from just south of Chetwynd to the United States border.

In a presentation to Prince George city council Monday night, the Calgary-based company announced its plans for the T-South reliability and expansion program, which will create as many as 300 jobs for 18-24 months.

The compressors will be placed near McLeod Lake, Summit Lake and Hixon and Prince George will be the service centre for all three construction sites.

"That's great news," said Mayor Lyn Hall, "because we know that those workers will probably keep their families here in Prince George and they'll probably live here and commute to wherever the job site is. It will also help those smaller communities near where the pipeline is close to."

The project, on land already permitted by the company, also includes a gas cooler, with compressors also to be installed at Kersley and 150 Mile House. Enbridge received approval from Canadian Energy Regulator this fall and the land where the compressors will be situated has already been cleared. The project is expected to be operational by late-2021.

In her presentation, Catherine Pennington, Enbridge's lead of Community and Indigenous Engagement provided council an update on the October 2018 natural gas pipeline rupture and explosion 13.5 kilometres north of Prince George, near the Lheidli T'enneh First Nation community.

Since that incident, Enbridge has implemented a pipeline integrity safety program with enhanced inspections using more advanced new-generation inline tools which run the length of the pipeline. The company has increased the number of integrity digs in which the pipeline is uncovered to allow detailed visual inspections. There were 144 digs conducted on the line in 2019, double that of previous years.

"At Enbridge, no incident is acceptable ever, and when an incident does occur we do take quick and decisive action to ensure the continued operation and safety of our pipeline program," said Pennington.

Since the rupture was repaired, reduced volumes of natural gas were running through the T-south pipeline and Pennigton said it was returned to full capacity in late-November.

"Undertaking this systemwide now has ensured the T-south (B.C.) pipeline is 100 per cent inspected," she said. "Every segment of the B.C. pipeline system would have experienced a tool run or multiple tool runs this last year. We commenced the inline inspection program and this new integrity program immediately following the incident, so every segment would have received an inspection tool and a new generation with double the sensors we would have seen in the past."

A lawsuit filed in February by the Lheidli T'enneh First Nation against Enbridge remains before the courts. LTFN alleges the explosion and its aftermath have "caused serious and constant distress and anguish within the Lheidli T'enneh community," also claiming the pipeline trespasses on its territory, saying Enbridge never adequately consulted the band over its construction and failed to consult with the band prior to bringing it back into operation.

Prince George Citizen

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Enbridge to create 300 new jobs for T-south pipeline expansion - Business in Vancouver

Capitalism and the Limits of Greening – CounterPunch

Photograph Source: Backbone Campaign CC BY 2.0

The idea of a Green New Deal, including the one proposed by a group of Democrats led by New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is hardly novel on the world scene, though potentially consequential for American politics. European Green parties, for example, introduced far-reaching policies in support of an ecological (sustainable) model of development as early as 1980. A few other European leftist parties later arrived at their own greening initiatives to mitigate climate disruption. The much-smaller U.S. Greens followed suit. Even the authoritarian Chinese government has introduced its own program to curb greenhouse emissions while theoretically reducing fossil-fuel consumption.

The American proposals could bring real change, assuming federal legislative consensus is within reach currently not the case. The main goal is a 100 percent carbon-free economy by 2050, to be achieved by gradually substituting green energy sources (solar, wind, thermal) for oil, gas, and coal, a project that could mean restructuring of the U.S. (and global) economy. Huge areas of the natural habitat would be restored, from tree-planting to river protections, water renovation, and massive recycling campaigns. Most crucially, a vigorous Green New Deal said by many to require wartime-level resource and labor mobilization would demand a broader, revitalized public infrastructure. While initially costing several trillion dollars (estimates vary widely), the program would eventually generate new sources of economic growth, jobs, social programs, and environmental renewal all worth celebrating.

Green New Deal sponsors have promoted their initiatives as both a moral and political imperative. After all, IPCC reports suggest the time frame for reversing the ecological crisis is narrowing rapidly, with perhaps no more than a decade to avoid the fearsome Tipping Point. While the U.S. Congress has been nowhere close to passing such legislation, with Republicans stuck in a know-nothing trance, strong green reforms have been advanced in nearly a dozen states and many cities across the country. New York state unveiled its Green New Deal in summer 2019, calling for rapid proliferation of solar panels, building retrofits, wind turbines, and electric cars, its target at least 70 percent electricity from renewable sources by 2030. According to the state Climate Action Council, the program would fully transform the way New Yorkers work, live, and play. In July 2019 Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti announced a Green New Deal replete with solar panels on every building, new water recycling systems, fully electrified public transport, and expanded public infrastructure. The plan would eliminate all carbon-based energy by 2045, simultaneously attacking poverty, homelessness, urban pollution, and a mounting public-health crisis. At present no fewer than 88 American cities have embraced some variant of a Green New Deal.

It appears that Bernie Sanders greening proposals are most robust among presidential candidates, at a projected cost of roughly $16 trillion over ten years. His hope is for 70-percent fossil-free emissions by 2030, made possible by rebuilding the American economy starting with the energy sector. He would enlist participation of labor, including the AFL-CIO with its millions of workers involved directly or indirectly in the fossil-fuel industry, although the U.S. labor movement has never favored a Green New Deal authored by Sanders or anyone else. There is fear of enormous job losses as important sectors are reduced or shut down: mining operations, utilities, oil and gas production among others. What disruptive impact might a post-carbon society have on millions of relatively good-paying jobs? Would alternative energy systems furnish enough new employment to compensate for massive losses? Those are questions nowadays central to labor organizations everywhere.

A Green New Deal for the U.S. would presumably follow in the tracks of Franklin Roosevelts New Deal that brought American society nearer to the orbit of European social democracy. Many Democrats foresee a system both more equitable and sustainable than what exists. Yet, while proposals differ, none seem ready to challenge the basic firmaments of corporate power, including agribusiness and Wall Street not to mention the military-security state. A decisive question, therefore, is just how far architects of a Green New Deal are willing to challenge the summits of power. To be sure, serious greening of the corporate-state system would be a much-welcomed step beyond familiar carbon offset plans such as cap-and-trade and direct carbon taxation. But a reform scenario as such could never begin to reverse the path toward ecological disaster. As formulated by Democrats, such greening could undoubtedly help alleviate the American carbon footprint, however slightly. If the transnational corporate order remains intact, however, it is hard to see how a fossil-fuel economy embedded in American capitalism will be materially weakened, given its many trillions of dollars invested in deeply-embedded modes of production and consumption. The sad truth is that global oil, gas, and even coal extraction is nowadays proceeding at record levels.

The problem runs deeper yet: in the U.S. greening proponents have mainly looked to a Democratic Party that, against all logic, is projected as the key instrument of sustainability. As the Dems remain wedded to corporate and military interests, all reforms are sure to be constrained by what ruling elites are prepared to tolerate. In the end, greening architects would be facilitators of an ecological Keynesianism, meaning new efforts to stabilize capitalism on more progressive footing that is, a program of distinctly liberal reforms.

Naomis Kleins recent book, On Fire, lays out an especially urgent case for a Green New Deal. Inspired by the emergent youth climate movement, Klein sees a revitalized green strategy as the last alternative of humanity to avert climate barbarism, a move bringing institutional leverage to the recent cycle of sit-ins, blockades, protests, and demonstrations drawing millions of people around the world. As with the Paris accords, her aim is for the U.S. (with other advanced industrial nations) to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2040.

Klein envisions a rising cohort of Democrats soon taking over the White House and Congress, rolling out a plan for rapid decarbonization, then implementing those reforms as a template for worldwide ecological renewal. Referring to AOC and her supporters, Klein writes: If the IPCC report (of October 2018) was the clanging fire alarm that grabbed the attention of the world, the Green New Deal is the beginning of a fire safety and prevention plan. A mixture of technological and market reforms will be crucial, departing from the belief in free-market fundamentalism and market euphoria she views as pervading the landscape. Klein believes these proposals are both novel and radical, though neither is true: as noted, more ambitious Green New Deals have been around the public sphere in Europe, the U.S., and elsewhere for several decades.

While for Klein (as for the Dems) a Green New Deal signifies sweeping industrial and infrastructure overhaul, in fact there is no stated break with established power, in the U.S. or anywhere else. We have instead a litany of reforms perfectly compatible with neoliberal corporate globalism in other words, a greener variant of social democracy. To be sure the fossil-fuel giants might have to be confronted, but the details remain elusive. With the Dems presiding, it seems worth asking just how the familiar capitalist pursuit of profits, growth, and expropriation of the natural habitat might be restricted, much less overturned.

One daunting roadblock to reversing the crisis the U.S. military-industrial colossus could be responsible for five percent of the global carbon footprint, a problem never systematically addressed by Klein or the Dems. In On Fire we find a call for 25-percent reduction in worldwide military spending, but that exhausts discussion of the matter. For many decades the U.S. military has served as protector of transnational corporate interests, none perhaps more crucial (to the U.S.) than fossil fuels. Future resource wars, bound at some point to involve U.S. armed forces, will surely involve reserves of oil and natural gas further aggravating climate change along with the lethal environmental impact of warfare in all its dimensions.

In fact-Kleins Green New Deal entirely skirts the larger issue of resources that is, the extent to which the planet faces steadily-declining natural resources (above all water, land, soil, forests, oceans, scarce metals). Economic predictions indicate that leading industrialized nations (U.S., China, India, the EU, Russia, Japan) could easily double their GDP output within the next two or three decades. It is delusional to believe vulnerable ecosystems could endure such overburdening development very far into the future. One specter is that intensifying global resource competition, endemic to the logic of both perpetual growth and geopolitical rivalry, could be what most hastens planetary disaster.

Resource wars will proliferate through widening rivalry over precarious food sources a topic Klein strangely evades in both On Fire and This Changes Everything. Environmentalists of all stripes know that the increasingly destructive, unsustainable global meat complex is responsible for massive greenhouse emissions (perhaps 30 percent of the total), owing to its vast reliance on fossil fuels, water, and land across every phase of economic activity. Meat and dairy products on average exhaust several times the amount of land, water, and fossil fuels utilized by plant-based foods considerably more when the McDonaldized fast-food sector is taken into account.

Kleins Green New Deal seems oblivious to the reality that ecological sustainability must clash with the logic of capitalist expansion. A liberal greening project might help reform the American economy, but Klein and the Dems are myopic in thinking such initiatives will do much to counter the global-warming trajectory. In fact, no government or corporate elite on the planet is likely to accept mandatory cuts in fossil-fuel consumption. Sustainable development is inconceivable without tranformative changes in production and consumption. One problem is that CEOs and corporate boards not to mention banking operations are scarcely accountable to society in general, or to any long-term ecological priorities. They are responsible to private shareholders obsessed with returns on capital investment, whatever its harm to the natural habitat. No corporate structure in the world will put its enterprise out of business in order to save the planet. Meanwhile, any systematic attack on the fossil-fuel sector would bring severe, perhaps irreversible worldwide economic collapse.

At a time when corporate behemoths are destroying the planet, greening programs like those envisioned by Klein and the Dems no matter how urgently conceived cannot offer durable solutions to climate change. No amount of policy, market, or technological measures can deter the headlong march toward global disaster. At present humanity has no choice but to find a path toward a post-capitalist ecological society.

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Capitalism and the Limits of Greening - CounterPunch

Taking Up Second Committee Reports, General Assembly Adopts 47 Resolutions, including Texts to Combat Protectionism, Unilateral Economic Measures -…

GA/12233

GENERAL ASSEMBLY PLENARYSEVENTY-FOURTH SESSION, 52ND MEETING (AM)

As waning multilateralism and burgeoning inequalities threaten to side-track the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the General Assembly today adopted 47 resolutions and four related decisions aimed at bolstering nations efforts to reach agreed goals.

By a text on International trade and development, adopted in a recorded vote of 176 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States) with no abstentions, the Assembly emphasized the urgent need to combat protectionism and rectify trade-distorting measures going against World Trade Organization (WTO) rules.

It further urged the international community to eliminate unilateral economic, financial or trade measures unauthorized by United Nations organs, inconsistent with international law or contravening the multilateral trading system.

Adopting another resolution on Commodities in a recorded vote of 177 in favour to 1 against (United States) with no abstentions, the Assembly stressed the special challenges developing countries face as lower prices for commodities threaten sustainable growth and debt burdens. It strongly encouraged international financial institutions and development banks to assist developing countries in managing the effects of price volatility.

A further text on Unilateral economic measures as a means of political and economic coercion against developing countries was adopted in a recorded vote of 122 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States), with 51 abstentions. By that text, the Assembly called on the international community to condemn and reject using such measures to politically or economically coerce developing countries, impeding full achievement of economic and social development.

Other macroeconomic policy texts the Assembly adopted focused on illicit financial flows, international Conferences on Financing for Development, financial inclusion, promoting investments for sustainable development and the international financial system.

Taking up sustainable development, the organ adopted a resolution on Protection of global climate for present and future generations of humankind, by which it expressed profound alarm that emissions of greenhouse gases continue to rise globally. It also remained deeply concerned that vulnerable countries are already experiencing increases in persistent drought, extreme weather events, land degradation, sea level rise, coastal erosion, ocean acidification and retreating mountain glaciers.

By a related text on Combating sand and dust storms, the Assembly reaffirmed that climate change is among the greatest challenges of our time and a serious challenge to sustainable development. Adopting the resolution in a recorded vote of 177 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States), with 1 abstention (Australia), it recognized that such storms cause numerous human health problems in different regions worldwide, especially in arid and semi-arid regions.

According to a further resolution on Agricultural Technology for Sustainable Development, adopted in a recorded vote of 154 in favour to 2 against (Syria, Venezuela), with 26 abstentions, the Assembly urged Member States, relevant United Nations organizations and other stakeholders to strengthen efforts to develop sustainable agricultural technologies, as well as their transfer and dissemination to developing countries.

Other sustainable development texts spotlighted the Lebanese oil slick, tourism in Central America, coastal zone management, munitions waste at sea, tourism in Central Asia, small island developing State conferences, sustainable development conferences, disaster risk reduction, desertification and drought, biological diversity, education, United Nations Environment Assembly, harmony with nature, energy access and mountain development.

Turning to poverty eradication, the Assembly adopted a resolution on Eradicating rural poverty to implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in a recorded vote of 126 in favour to 49 against, with 2 abstentions (Palau, Turkey).

By its terms, the Assembly expressed deep concern that progress in reducing poverty remains uneven, with an unacceptable 1.46 billion people still living in multidimensional poverty. It further emphasized that economic growth continues to leave rural dwellers behind, noting that 79 per cent of people living in extreme poverty are in rural areas and 41 per cent of sub-Saharan Africas population lived on less than $1.90 per day in 2015.

Adopting a related text on Agriculture development, food security and nutrition, the Assembly stressed the need for urgent and concerted action to accelerate efforts to end hunger and malnutrition, tackling both its causes and effects. It also underscored the need to address child stunting, which remains unacceptably high, with nearly 149 million children under 5 years of age, or over 21.9 per cent, affected by stunting in 2018.

By a further resolution on Information and communications technologies (ICT) for sustainable development, the Assembly recognized uneven growth in ICT use, expressing concern over the 122 mobile broadband subscriptions per 100 people in developed countries, compared with 75 in developing States and 33 in the least developed countries.

As in previous years, it adopted a text on Permanent sovereignty of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and of the Arab population in the occupied Syrian Golan over their natural resources in a vote of 160 in favour to 6 against (Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, United States), with 15 abstentions.

By its terms, the Assembly demanded that Israel cease exploiting, damaging, causing loss or depleting and endangering natural resources in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and in the occupied Syrian Golan. It further stressed that the wall and settlements Israel is constructing in the Occupied Palestinian Territory are contrary to international law and seriously deprive the Palestinian people of their natural resources.

The Assembly also adopted resolutions highlighting new international days and years, deciding to designate 21 May as International Tea Day, 7 September as International Day of Clean Air for Blue Skies, 29 September as International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste and 2021 as International Year of Creative Economy for Sustainable Development.

Remaining texts focused on globalization and interdependence; science, technology and innovation; culture; cooperation with middle-income countries; conferences on landlocked and least developed countries; the Third United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (20182027); women; human resources; natural plant fibres; United Nations operational activities; and South-South cooperation.

Two decisions the Assembly adopted addressed the 2020 venue of the fifteenth session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the eighth United Nations conference on restrictive business practices. Two further decisions focused on the Second Committees programme for the General Assemblys seventy-fifth session.

Committee Rapporteur David Mulet (Guatemala) introduced its reports.

In other business, the Assembly adopted a resolution on International Year of Fruits and Vegetables 2020-2021, noting that daily consumption of these foods mitigates diseases and other health problems. It also designated 4 December as the International Day of Banks in a like-named resolution, underscoring the role of banks and financial institutions in sustainable development.

Action on Draft Resolutions

DAVID MULET LIND (Guatemala), Committee Rapporteur, introduced the reports of the Second Committee (Economic and Financial) containing 47 draft resolutions and 4 draft decisions.

The Assembly first took up the report Information and communications technologies for sustainable development (document A/74/378), adopting without a vote the eponymous resolution (A/C.2/74/L.70) contained therein.

By the text, it called on all stakeholders to keep the goal of bridging digital divides an area of priority concern, continue to focus on propoor information and communications technology (ICT) policies and applications, including access to broadband at the grassroots level, with a view to narrowing the digital divides among and within countries, building information and knowledge societies.

Next, the Assembly took up the report Macroeconomic policy questions (document A/74/379), which contained two draft resolutions.

Next, it adopted resolution I International Year of Creative Economy for Sustainable Development, 2021 without a vote. By its terms, the Assembly encouraged all Member States and United Nations organizations to observe the International Year to raise awareness, promote cooperation and networking, and promote an enabling environment at all levels.

It first adopted resolution II on Promoting investments for sustainable development without a vote. In doing so, the Assembly called on Member States to reduce tensions and other risk factors and foster environments conducive to scaling up longterm and sustainable investments, characterized by open, transparent and nondiscriminatory investment policies.

The Assembly then considered the report Macroeconomic policy questions: international trade and development (document A/74/379/Add.1), which contained two draft resolutions and two draft decisions.

The Assembly first adopted resolution I titled Unilateral economic measures as a means of political and economic coercion against developing countries by a recorded vote of 122 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States), with 51 abstentions, urging the international community to adopt measures to eliminate unilateral economic, financial or trade measures that are unauthorized by relevant United Nations organs, inconsistent with international law or the Charter of the United Nations or contravene basic principles of the multilateral trading system.

Following that, the Assembly adopted resolution II on International trade and development by a vote of 176 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States) with no abstentions. By that text, the Assembly emphasized the need to combat protectionism in all its forms and rectify tradedistorting measures going against World Trade Organization (WTO) rules.

Next, the Assembly adopted without a vote decision I on Venue of the fifteenth session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), in 2020, recognizing the offer of the Government of Barbados to host the fifteenth session of UNCTAD and the offer of the Government of the United Arab Emirates to host the World Investment Forum and an electronic commerce week for Asia.

Acting without a vote, the Assembly adopted decision II Eighth United Nations Conference to Review All Aspects of the Set of Multilaterally Agreed Equitable Principles and Rules for the Control of Restrictive Business Practices, in 2020. By that text, the organ decided to convene in 2020 the eighth United Nations Conference to Review All Aspects of the Set of Multilaterally Agreed Equitable Principles and Rules for the Control of Restrictive Business Practices.

The Assembly then considered the report Macroeconomic policy questions: international financial system and development (document A/74/379/Add.2), containing a draft resolution International financial system and development. Adopting the text by a recorded vote of 179 in favour to 1 against (United States) with no abstentions, it stressed the importance of a stable, inclusive and enabling global economic environment for advancing sustainable development and implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, mobilizing public and private as well as domestic and international resources.

The representative of Iran, speaking in explanation of vote after the vote, said his country is not party to the Financial Action Task Force and therefore disassociated itself from the relevant paragraph.

Following that, it turned to the report Macroeconomic policy questions: external debt sustainability and development (document A/74/379/Add.3), containing a draft resolution on External debt sustainability and development. Adopting the text without a vote, the organ urged the international community to remain vigilant in monitoring the debt situation of developing countries, including least developed countries, landlocked developing countries and small island developing States, and continue to take effective measures, preferably within existing frameworks, to address the debt problem of those nations.

Next, the Assembly considered the report Macroeconomic policy questions: commodities (document A/74/379/Add.4), which contained a draft resolution on Commodities. Adopting the text by a vote of 177 in favour to 1 against (United States) with no abstentions, it stressed that developing nations, including African countries, least developed countries, landlocked developing countries and small island developing States, face special challenges as lower prices for the commodities that they produce threaten the sustainable growth and the debt positions of such countries.

The Assembly then turned to the report Macroeconomic policy questions: financial inclusion for sustainable development (document A/74/379/Add.5), containing a draft resolution Financial inclusion for sustainable development. Acting without a vote, it adopted the resolution, by which the organ recognized the growing importance of financial technology actors and new instruments and platforms, including mobile banking and peertopeer platforms, which have enabled access to financial services for millions of people.

Following that, the Assembly took up the report Macroeconomic policy questions: promotion of international cooperation to combat illicit financial flows and strengthen good practices on assets return to foster sustainable development (document A/74/379/Add.6), adopting without a vote the resolution Promotion of international cooperation to combat illicit financial flows and strengthen good practices on assets return to foster sustainable development contained therein.

By the text, it expressed concern that proceeds from offences under the United Nations Convention against Corruption have yet to be disposed of in favour of the requesting States parties, their prior legitimate owners and victims of the crimes, and decided to deter, detect, prevent and counter corruption, increase transparency and promote good governance.

Next, it turned to the report Followup to and implementation of the outcomes of the International Conferences on Financing for Development (document A/74/380), adopting an eponymous resolution contained therein without a vote. By that text, the Assembly emphasized the need to work towards full and timely implementation of the Addis Ababa Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development. It also urged the full, effective and timely implementation of the intergovernmentally agreed conclusions and recommendations of the 2019 Economic and Social Council forum on financing for development followup.

The organ then took up the report Sustainable development (document A/74/381) containing eight draft resolutions. It first adopted resolution I, Oil slick on Lebanese shores, by a recorded vote of 162 in favour to 7 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, United States), with 7 abstentions (Cameroon, Cte dIvoire, Guatemala, Honduras, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Vanuatu). By the text, the Committee considered that the oil slick has heavily polluted the Lebanese and partially polluted Syrian shores and consequently has had serious implications for livelihoods and Lebanons economy, owing to the adverse implications for natural resources, biodiversity, fisheries and tourism, and for human health in the country.

By further terms, it reiterated its request to the Israels Government to assume responsibility for prompt and adequate compensation to the Lebanon for the aforementioned damage and to other countries directly affected by the oil slick, such as Syria, for the costs of repairing the environmental damage caused by the destruction, including restoration of the marine environment.

The Assembly adopted resolution II, International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste without a vote, designating 29 September as the International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste.

It then moved to draft resolution III, Strengthening cooperation for integrated coastal zone management for achieving sustainable development. Prior to taking action on the draft as a whole, the Assembly first decided, by separate recorded vote, to retain two paragraphs.

Deciding to retain preambular paragraph 2 by recorded vote of 168 in favour to 4 against (Colombia, Iran, Turkey, Venezuela), with 4 abstentions (Cambodia, China, El Salvador, Zambia), the Assembly reaffirmed the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which provides the legal framework for ocean activities and emphasized its fundamental character, conscious that the problems of ocean space are closely interrelated and need to be considered as a whole through an integrated, interdisciplinary and intersectoral approach.

In deciding to retain operative paragraph 12, by a recorded vote of 110 in favour to 5 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Japan, United States), with 49 abstentions, the Assembly decided to include in the provisional agenda of its seventysixth session, under the item titled Sustainable development, the subitem entitled Strengthening cooperation for integrated coastal zone management for achieving sustainable development.

It then adopted, without a vote, resolution III as a whole, emphasizing that use and implementation of the integrated coastal zone management approach and other areabased management approaches can contribute significantly to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. It also highlighted that coastal areas are essential ecological and economic resource needing an integrated management approach.

Following that, adopting without a vote resolution IV, Sustainable tourism and sustainable development in Central America, it stressed the need to promote further development of sustainable tourism, especially through the consumption of sustainable tourism products and services, and to strengthen the development of ecotourism.

Next, the organ turned to draft resolution V, International Day of Clean Air for blue skies, adopting it without a vote. By the text, the Assembly designated 7 September as the International Day of Clean Air for blue skies, to be observed starting in 2020.

Addressing draft resolution VI, Cooperative measures to assess and increase awareness of environmental effects related to waste originating from chemical munitions dumped at sea, the Assembly adopted the text without a vote, as orally revised.

By that resolution, it invited Member States and relevant international and regional organizations to keep under observation the issue of waste originating from chemical munitions dumped at sea, to continue outreach efforts to assess and increase awareness of environmental effects related to that issue and to cooperate on risk assessment, monitoring, informationgathering, risk prevention and response to incidents.

Acting without a vote, the Assembly then adopted resolution VII, Sustainable tourism and sustainable development in Central Asia, encouraging those countries to unite their efforts on the widespread introduction of active types of tourism, including mountain tourism, ecotourism, sport fishing and car and bicycle travel.

Following that, adopting resolution VIII, Agricultural technology for sustainable development, by a recorded vote of 154 in favour to 2 against (Syria, Venezuela), with 26 abstentions, the Assembly urged Member States, relevant United Nations organizations and other stakeholders to strengthen efforts to improve the development of sustainable agricultural technologies and their transfer and dissemination under mutually agreed terms to developing countries, in particular at the bilateral and regional levels.

The representative of Turkey, speaking after the vote to address the resolution on Sustainable cooperation for integrated coastal zone management for achieving sustainable development said that preambular paragraph 2 did not present a legal framework for regulating oceans and seas.

The representative of Iran, addressing the same resolution said his country is not party to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and disassociates itself from preambular paragraph 2 as well as operative paragraph 12.

The representative of Colombia said his country is not party to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and is not convinced it is the right body to determine issues being discussed in resolutions addressing seas and oceans.

The representative of Afghanistan, addressing the resolution on Agricultural technology for sustainable development, said his country voted in favour of the text.

The representative of Venezuela said his delegation is not party to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and disagrees with references to it the texts on Sustainable cooperation for integrated coastal zone management for achieving sustainable development and, Cooperative measures to assess and increase awareness of environmental effects related to waste originating from chemical munitions dumped at sea.

Next, the Assembly took up the report Sustainable development: implementation of Agenda 21, the Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the World Summit on Sustainable Development and of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (document A/74/381/Add.1), containing a draft resolution on Implementation of Agenda 21, the Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the World Summit on Sustainable Development and of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development.

Adopting the resolution by a recorded vote of 131 in favour to 2 against (United States, Israel), with 49 abstentions, the Assembly urged the full and effective implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals and other internationally agreed development goals and commitments in the economic, social and environmental fields to support the full and effective implementation of the 2030 Agenda.

The organ then considered the report Sustainable development: follow-up to and implementation of the SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action (SAMOA) Pathway and the Mauritius Strategy for the Further Implementation of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States (document A/74/381/Add.2), containing a draft resolution on Follow-up to and implementation of the SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action (SAMOA) Pathway and the Mauritius Strategy for the Further Implementation of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States.

Adopting that text without a vote, the Assembly called for urgent and ambitious global action, in line with the Paris Agreement, to address the threat and impact of climate change on small island developing States.

It then turned to the report Sustainable development: disaster risk reduction (document A/74/381/Add.3), adopting without a vote the resolution Disaster risk reduction contained therein. By the text, it stressed that States should conduct inclusive and multihazard disaster risk assessments that consider climate change projections to support evidence-based disaster risk reduction strategies and guide risk-informed development investments by the private and public sectors.

Following that, the Assembly took up the report Sustainable development: protection of global climate for present and future generations of humankind (document A/74/381/Add.4), containing a draft resolution on Protection of global climate for present and future generations of humankind. Prior to acting on the draft as a whole, it first decided, by a recorded vote of 118 in favour to 49 against with 3 abstentions (Iceland, Switzerland, San Marino) to retain operative paragraph 9, emphasizing the need for collective efforts to promote sustainable development in an innovative, coordinated, environmentally sound, open and shared manner.

It then adopted, without a vote, the resolution as a whole.

Next, the Assembly took up the report Sustainable development: implementation of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa (A/74/381/Add.5), adopting, without a vote, a resolution on Implementation of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa contained therein.

By the terms of the text, it strongly encouraged parties to the Convention to apply and align with the 20182030 Strategic Framework of the Convention in their national policies, programmes, plans and processes relating to desertification, land degradation and drought, and to implement the Strategic Framework.

The Assembly then considered the report Sustainable development: Convention on Biological Diversity (A/74/381/Add.6), containing a draft resolution titled Implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity and its contribution to sustainable development. Acting without a vote, it adopted the text, urging parties to the Convention to ensure the coherence and complementarity of the post-2020 global biodiversity framework with other existing or upcoming international processes.

Following that, the organ turned to the report Sustainable development: report of the United Nations Environment Assembly of the United Nations Environment Programme (A/74/381/Add.7) containing a draft resolution on Report of the United Nations Environment Assembly of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). The Assembly adopted the text without a vote, encouraging Member States to advance innovative pathways to achieve sustainable consumption and production, in line with resolution 4/1 of 15 March 2019 of the United Nations Environment Assembly of UNEP.

Next, it took up the report Sustainable development: education for sustainable development (A/74/381/Add.8), containing the draft resolution Education for sustainable development in the framework of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

The Assembly first decided, by recorded vote of 173 in favour to 4 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, United States) with 2 abstentions (Georgia, Japan), to retain operative paragraph 13, by which it invited United Nations organizations, to support States in developing their national capacities to promote education for sustainable development.

Following that, it adopted the resolution as a whole without a vote. By its terms, the Assembly called on the international community to provide inclusive and equitable quality education at all levels so that people may have access to lifelong learning opportunities that help them acquire the knowledge and skills needed to exploit opportunities to participate fully in society and contribute to sustainable development.

The organ then adopted the resolution as a whole without a vote.

The representative of Iran, speaking in explanation of vote after the vote, said the 2030 Agenda was non-legally binding and his delegation is not committed to those aspects that are in contradiction with its policies, cultural and religious norms and, therefore, has no legal obligation to implement them. He also disassociated his delegation from the operative paragraph.

Next, it took up the report Sustainable development: Harmony with Nature (A/74/381/Add.9) containing a draft resolution Harmony with nature. Adopting the text by a recorded vote of 134 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States), with 45 abstentions, the Assembly called for holistic and integrated approaches to sustainable development that will guide humanity to restore the health and integrity of the Earths ecosystems.

It then turned to the report Sustainable development: ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all (A/74/381/Add.10) containing the draft resolution Ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all. Adopting the text without a vote, the Assembly called for access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all, as such services are an integral part of poverty eradication measures, human dignity, quality of life and economic opportunity, along with wider environmental benefits, including disaster risk reduction and resilience, climate change mitigation, social inclusion and gender equality.

Following that, the Assembly took up the report Sustainable development: combating sand and dust storms (A/74/381/Add.11) containing the draft resolution Combating sand and dust storms. Adopting the text by a recorded vote of 177 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States), with 1 abstention (Australia), it reaffirmed that climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time and, among other factors, is a serious challenge to the sustainable development of all countries, including those affected by sand and dust storms.

Next, it took up the report Sustainable development: sustainable mountain development (A/74/381/Add.12) containing the draft resolution Sustainable mountain development.

The representative of Kyrgyzstan, speaking in explanation of vote, said her delegation saw sustainable mountain development as a crucial element and commended Italy and other delegations for their work on the resolution.

Acting without a vote, the Assembly adopted the text, stressing the special vulnerability of people living in mountain environments, particularly local communities and indigenous peoples, often with limited access to health, education and economic systems and particularly at risk because of the negative impact of extreme natural phenomena.

The organ then turned to the report Globalization and interdependence (A/74/382), which contained no draft resolutions or decisions.

Following that, it considered the report Globalization and interdependence: role of the United Nations in promoting development in the context of globalization and interdependence (A/74/382/Add.1), which contained a draft resolution Role of the United Nations in promoting development in the context of globalization and interdependence.

The Assembly first decided to retain preambular paragraph 9 by a recorded vote of 111 in favour to 49 against with 4 abstentions (Japan, Norway, Republic of Korea, Turkey).

Adopting the text as a whole by a recorded vote of 134 in favour to 2 against (Israel, United States) with 44 abstentions, it reiterated the need for inclusive, transparent and effective multilateral approaches to managing global challenges.

The Assembly then took up the report Globalization and interdependence: science, technology and innovation for sustainable development (A/74/382/Add.2), adopting without a vote the resolution Science, technology and innovation for sustainable development contained therein. By the text, it called upon Member States and the United Nations development system to continue to initiate, implement and support measures to improve the level of participation of scientists and engineers from developing countries.

Turning to the report Globalization and interdependence: culture and sustainable development (A/74/382/Add.3), the Assembly then adopted, without a vote, the resolution Culture and development contained therein. By that text, it called for promoting education to protect natural spaces and places of memory whose existence is necessary for expressing the intangible cultural heritage. By other terms, it expressed deep concern that cultural property, including religious sites, shrines and cemeteries, are increasingly targeted by terrorist attacks and vandalism, condemning such attacks.

Next, the Assembly took up the report Globalization and interdependence: development cooperation with middle-income countries (A/74/382/Add.4), containing the draft resolution Development cooperation with middle-income countries.

Acting without a vote to adopt the text, it recognized that 73 per cent of the worlds poor population is concentrated in middle-income countries, meaning development cooperation, policy dialogue and partnerships with those countries can contribute to achievement of internationally agreed development goals, including the Sustainable Development Goals and targets.

Following that, the Assembly turned to the report Groups of countries in special situations (A/74/383), which contained no draft resolutions or decisions.

It then considered the report Groups of countries in special situations: follow-up to the Fourth United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (A/74/383/Add.1), adopting without a vote the resolution Follow-up to the Fourth United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries contained therein. By that text, it expressed concern that bilateral official development assistance (ODA) to least developed countries declined by 3 per cent in real terms in 2018 compared with 2017 after increasing by 4 per cent in 2017 compared with 2016.

Next, the Assembly addressed the report Groups of countries in special situations: follow-up to the second United Nations Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries (A/74/383/Add.2), adopting the resolution therein Follow-up to the second United Nations Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries without a vote.

By that text, the Assembly called for renewed and strengthened partnerships to support landlocked developing countries in diversifying their economic bases and enhancing value addition to their exports to eradicate poverty and achieve sustainable, inclusive and sustained economic growth.

Following that, it considered the report Eradication of poverty and other development issues (A/74/384), which contained no draft resolutions or decisions.

It turned then to the report Eradication of poverty and other development issues: implementation of the Third United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (20182027)) (A/74/384/Add.1), adopting, without a vote, the resolution Implementation of the Third United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (20182027).

In so doing, the organ expressed deep concern that, despite progress in reducing poverty, 1.3 billion people still live in multidimensional poverty, a significant and unacceptably high figure. It expressed further concern over high levels of unemployment and underemployment, with 172 million people unemployed globally in 2018, which is expected to increase to 174 million in 2020.

Next, the Assembly took up the report Eradication of poverty and other development issues: women in development (A/74/384/Add.2), which contained a draft resolution Women in development. It decided to retain operative paragraphs 18 and 19 in a recorded vote of 152 in favour to 15 against, with 6 abstentions (Algeria, Brunei Darussalam, Colombia, Guatemala, Jamaica, United Arab Emirates).

The representative of Hungary, speaking in explanation of vote after the vote, said her delegation had concerns and would have welcomed a more neutral language in preambular paragraph 11.

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Taking Up Second Committee Reports, General Assembly Adopts 47 Resolutions, including Texts to Combat Protectionism, Unilateral Economic Measures -...

Business movers: The biggest appointments in Irish business to kick off 2020 – BreakingNews.ie

The Irish economy has enjoyed a very positive 2019. Here is a selection of people who start 2020 in challenging new roles.

Miles Karemacher has been appointed as general manager of Coca-Cola HBC Ireland and Northern Ireland, leading the workforce of 760 people.

Mile Karemacher

He replaces Matthieu Seguin, now the firms GM for Nigeria. Miles joins the Irish business from Coca-Cola HBC Italy where he was commercial excellence director, leading the acquisition of Lurisia, a premium natural mineral water and adult sparkling beverages business. Miles previously held senior roles at SAB Miller and Coca-Cola Amatil. He holds a commerce degree, an MBA, while he is also a certified practising accountant.

Pat Rigney, managing director and founder of The Shed Distillery in Co Leitrim, maker of Drumshanbo Gunpowder Irish Gin, has been appointed chair of representative body Drinks Ireland|Spirits.

Pat Rigney

Pat, who was previously vice-chair, will take over as chair from Aoife Clarke, senior director of international public affairs at Beam Suntory. Bryan Fallon, director of TJ Carolans has been appointed as vice-chair. The group was established in 1997 and acts as a voice among national and EU policy makers for issues such as taxation, trade and ongoing protection of Irelands Geographic Indicators.

Ita Hodder has been appointed as HR executive search manager with recruitment and HR services company Collins McNicholas.

Ita Hodder

She joined the firm as a recruitment consultant in 2006. She will specialise in seeking out and recruiting highly-qualified HR candidates for senior and executive roles in Dublin region. Ita, who has a degree in social science, a post-grad diploma in business studies and a law degree, has vast experience working with indigenous and multinational companies across the HR sectors. Founded in 1990, Collins McNicholas has a offices in Dublin, Cork, Athlone, Galway, Limerick, and Sligo.

Lorraine McCarthy has been promoted to chief people and culture officer (CPCO) at Spearline, a technology company headquartered in Skibbereen, Co Cork, and with offices in Waterford, Romania, and India.

Lorraine McCarthy

In 2018, Lorraine joined the Spearline team as HR and operations manager and within 12 months was promoted to CPCO. She was previously a financial services professional, working 20 years in banking. As CPCO, Lorraine is responsible for all human resource functions at Spearline as well as developing and maintaining the Spearline culture across its global offices.

Tudor Pitulac has been named as manager of research projects with OpenSky, the Irish GovTech transformation provider of automated solutions to public sector bodies.

Tudor Pitulac

He brings 15 years PM experience. Previously a university professor at the Petre Andrei University and a consultant for the Community Learning and Development Department of North Ayrshire Council. As well as a background in Sociology and Political Sciences, he holds an MA in Project Management and a PhD in Philosophy. He is

PMP certified since 2012.

Fintan McGovern has been announced as chairman of Co Louth-based health, wellbeing and sports tech company Metrifit.

Fintan McGovern

He was enlisted to help drive global expansion and assist with the companys Series A funding round. He is ex-CEO and co-founder of IoT company Firmwave. A former officer with the Irish Defence Forces of 15 years and former GAA intercountry player for Cavan, he exited Firmwave earlier this year following its acquisition by Taoglas. Metrifit, a sports tech company that boosts athlete performance by data analytics, was launched by CEO Peter Larkin and chief technology officer Ann Bruen in 2016.

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Business movers: The biggest appointments in Irish business to kick off 2020 - BreakingNews.ie

Gilgit Baltistan: a peace of heaven! – Daily Times

There are tons memories concerning the plight of 1.3 million individuals of Gilgit-Baltistan (GB), who stay in fragile surroundings at the mercy of nature. Beauty, peace, tranquillity and serenity are the terms related to this some distance-flung region of West Pakistan. GB is loosely described as a centrally-administered, partially-empowered and economically-based part of West Pakistan. With all its natural endowments of gemstones, and mineral and water resources, the location is one in every of the simplest tourist locations of the planet.

In step with a conservative estimate, GB has the ability to generate annual revenue of $1 billion from its natural resources and tourism, and fetch the once a year revenue of $10 billion through renewable power. In this foundation, GB isnt always nearest impartial but conjointly has the ability to emerge as the maximum critical sales generator for Pakistan economy.

With all its ability of prosperity, GB is marred by way of a lease-in search of, corrupt and inept political device that runs through an inflated paperwork and a disempowered local regulation-makers. The Empowerment and Self-Governance Order 2009 defines the legislative, administrative and felony capabilities of governance in GB together with the precept of separation of powers some of the native parliament, judiciary and forms. Although the 2009 order offers authority of regulation to the local assembly on key topics of economic, political, cultural and criminal affairs, it does no longer outline the procedures that would affirm the link with the federation vis--vis monetary developing.

As there is no formulation of resource allocation and distribution supported by the appearance and recommendations of the local regulation-makers. Having no provincial repute inside the constitutional framework, GB isnt always eligible for the National Finance Commission (NFC) award. Considering budgetary allocations area unit preset and high down, they neutralize the effect of nearby law. This pinnacle-down approach of political management has decreased the capability, power, will and dedication of the GB government to devise an organic procedure roadmap for the place. Subsequently, there is a large disconnect between the GB government and additionally the national on vital matters relating to local development.

For instance, with the devolution of powers to provinces beneath the eighteenth change, GB stands nowhere in the countrywide development coverage. For the reason that vicinity isnt ruled underneath the constitution, there are not any empowering edges of the eighteenth change for it. More notably, after the devolution of powers to provinces, the federal government doesnt appear to own any comprehensive political strategy of integration GB into this devolved mode of political governance. The GB government and various ministries of the federal government have their own interpretations of position and duties once the eighteenth change. there may be no resource allocation components additionally as development making plans apart from the transfer of finances to GB as a legal responsibility of the countrywide.

Then again, the 2009 order affords a complex system of useful distribution of body powers among federal and native forms. The cutting-edge political and administrative setup lacks the institutional arrangement of answerableness, transparency and inclusivity on important subjects of public interest cross from financial aiming to benefit-based hiring of employees on development comes.

There have been political appointments on key positions of foreign-funded improvement tasks. As an example, the IFAD-funded Economic Transformative Initiative (ETI) granted to the GB government is a 5-yr included monetary development programme of worth $120 million. The ETI shows how political appointments end result into unskillfulness and corruption, and collusion for evading tracking and accountability. This challenge ought to carry concerning transformative modifications by means of establishing powerful agricultural really worth chains and development programmes to assist local farmers improve their effective functionality.

Delays and irregularities in the implementation of the mission display inadequate expert credentials of venture control. The ETI is being carried out thru the coming up with and development division unitedly with the task organizer under the supervising of the Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan. That is the biggest overseas-funded development programme inside the place with the ability to deliver entrepreneurial opportunities and enhance the first-rate of dwelling. Despite the fact that, the undertaking has not been able to meet its development targets. Fraught with delays in implementation, the undertaking does no longer have a robust best assurance and commentary perform to make certain transparency of fund allocation and its utmost utilization.

Constructing new economic zones for CPEC will profit West Pakistan in the means of business development and make employment opportunities for native individuals of Gilgit Baltistan

The untapped development capacity of this place is a hazard for investors in enterprise alternate, energy, minerals and border substitute. GB has the capacity of generating 70,000 megawatts of renewable strength from its hydrological resources, but most of its districts location unit plunged in darkness. The maximum vital tourist destinations, consisting of Hunza and Skardu, lack simple infrastructure to deal with vacationers. There may be quite 16 hours of loadshedding on each day in Hunza by myself with surprising power outages including salt to damage.

Final year, a million vacationers visited the location notwithstanding the very reality that there has been no incentive or facilitation from the GB authorities. The neighborhood hoteliers and visitor residence homeowners used excessive electricity diesel and gasoline turbines to form up for the dearth of electricity. This turned into quite damaging to the natural environment and uncovered local citizens to metastasis sicknesses. Maximum of the vacationers visited the Khunjerab pass, which become turned, into a garbage net web page within the absence of a solid waste disposal machine.

Within the context of mounting improvement in demanding situations, the sensible coverage choice for the federal authorities is that the integration of GB in the national improvement programme below the constitutional framework. This will, optimistically, result in stepped forward accountability, efficiency and political authorization.

Thus, it is proposed as Gilgit Baltistan is the Bottle-neck, so to say, is located on the corridor. Consequently, its far crucial to ensure that the bottleneck doesnt cripple the ability of this corridor. The government must set up an inexpensive economic improvement in Gilgit Baltistan to reinforce the economy of individuals. The dry port should not shift to Havalian to guard native enterprise and jobs. The authorities must sell neighborhood manufacturing and exportation of culmination of Gilgit Baltistan within the worldwide marketplace. To attain economic development, it is going to be necessary to stay in thoughts the balance between the ecological footprint (useful resource call for) and additionally the bio-potential (aid supply) in Gilgit Baltistan. The ecological footprint throughout the planet has been growing inevitably as its ability has dwindled, main to a state of deficit. To be able to avoid the poor fallouts of improvement resulting from the projected corridor a special bill of citizens rights ought to be introduced. Each event would like to introduce a belongings development determine to shield the environment of Gilgit Baltistan from all terrible elements of the corridor.

So as to shape CPEC a hit, there are some simple issues, that ought to be looked after which location unit covered; coercion, provision of environmental safety, advent of latest special economic zones, and unique attention needed at the environmental impacts of this task on Gilgit Baltistan, and so forth. Executive has to adopt more complete policies as for Gilgit Baltistan regulation-makers. Leaving the tradition and parochial mentality of taking the covert and unilateral choices, GBs leadership must be taken on board on each call developing related to the China-Pakistan economic corridor. There is immediately need of training the younger era in numerous trades applicable and wanted for economic corridor linked professions in Gilgit Baltistan. Constructing new economic zones for CPEC will profit West Pakistan in the means of business development and make employment opportunities for native individuals of Gilgit Baltistan.

Therefore, for effective implementation of Special Economic zones in GB there should be status quo of smooth development mechanism cellular, sustainable land control, set up of weather surveillance measuring tool at GB, carbon neutral GB and country wide Biogas Plan within the area. Moreover, there are environmental issues in GB that include the pollution of air and water resources, erosion of soils, melting of glaciers, an increase of temperature, and the upward thrust of the flood through warming, because there is loss of biodiversity and increase the amount of greenhouse gases effect.

The writer is Advisor (PITAC, Lahore operated under Federal Ministry of Industries and Production, Islamabad)

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Gilgit Baltistan: a peace of heaven! - Daily Times

Look Back 2019: PM Lee reaches out to Singapore’s key partners – The Straits Times

Against the backdrop of airspace and maritime disputes in the months beforehand, and ongoing adjustments following the Pakatan Harapan coalition's surprise win last year, came the ninth Malaysia-Singapore Leaders' Retreat in April in Putrajaya.

It marked the first retreat together as heads of government for Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. The spotlight was on the meeting and what it might signal for the neighbours' relationship.

Indeed, progress was made: They reaffirmed strong economic ties and their commitment to resolve issues of concern in an amicable and constructive manner. Outstanding matters tabled included the maritime border issue, the 1962 Water Agreement, flights in the Pasir Gudang airspace and the postponement of the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore High-Speed Rail project.

PM Lee's sojourns over the year included notable visits to Indonesia for President Joko Widodo's inauguration for his second term, as well as to China and the United States.

Financial cooperation was high on the agenda when Mr Lee and Mr Joko met in Singapore for their annual leaders' retreat in October. Both countries agreed to renew a US$10 billion (S$13.6 billion) bilateral financial arrangement between the Monetary Authority of Singapore and Bank Indonesia, to support monetary and financial stability. They also agreed to boost tie-ups in the digital economy, industrial parks, tourism and infrastructure, and to strengthen the flow of trade and investments.

Farther afield, Mr Lee visited China in April to attend the second Belt and Road Forum. He met Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang to discuss the progress of government collaboration projects, as well as developments like the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP). Both sides inked agreements to collaborate on trade, law enforcement and projects under the Belt and Road Initiative.

September saw Mr Lee making his first address to world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly since becoming Prime Minister in 2004. He called on them to push harder against the tide of isolationism and uphold multilateralism, and stressed the need to work together to deal with complex global problems like climate change.

He also met US President Donald Trump, and both leaders signed an amendment to the 1990 Memorandum of Understanding Regarding the US Use of Facilities in Singapore, a landmark agreement that underpinned the US' security presence in the region for almost 30 years.

Singapore's relationship with Indonesia strengthened substantially over Mr Joko's first term as President. His second term, which began at the end of October, is a chance to build on this and iron out longstanding bilateral issues on airspace management and military training.

With Malaysia, tourism, bilateral trade and investment remain strong. Both countries are each other's second-largest trading partner, and there is scope for companies to collaborate on the digital economy, among other areas. The challenge is to keep communication channels open, and have exchanges on mutually beneficial cooperation.

Opportunities abound to meet foreign counterparts during bilateral visits, as well as at multilateral meetings and conferences.

As Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat said at The Straits Times Global Outlook Forum last month, through these meetings, leaders develop a good personal understanding of one another so that even difficult bilateral issues can be discussed amicably. He had noted: "This is crucial because we have more common interests than differences."

Against the backdrop of anti-globalisation and anti-trade rhetoric, continued cooperation on trade pacts such as the RCEP is also important. The 10 Asean nations and five other countries - Australia, China, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea - concluded negotiations on all 20 chapters and market access issues of the RCEP trade pact earlier last month, with the intent to sign it next year.

For the Republic and its like-minded partners, such pacts help to create jobs through greater trade and investment flows. They also signal continued commitment to strengthening the rules-based multilateral trading system.

Next year marks the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations between China and Singapore, and the bilateral relations face new opportunities for development.

In addition to partnerships at the government level, companies on both sides can explore joint projects in third countries in sectors such as infrastructure, logistics, and financial and legal services.

The milestone renewal of the 1990 defence pact with the US allows American forces access to Singapore's air and naval bases for another 15 years until 2035.

Following Malaysia's request - its third - to extend the suspension of the Rapid Transit System (RTS) project, Singapore and Malaysia will need to sign three agreements by the end of next April on the cross-border RTS Link.

President Halimah Yacob is also slated to make a state visit to Indonesia. Following her meeting with Mr Joko in Singapore in October, there is room to deepen ties in areas such as trade and investments, human resource development, tourism, education and culture.

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Look Back 2019: PM Lee reaches out to Singapore's key partners - The Straits Times

Our Top Infographics of 2019 – Visual Capitalist

This year, we published more than 300 posts on Visual Capitalist, getting well over 30 million views along the way.

Many of these graphics are visually stunning, but theres only room for 19 posts on the annual list of our best work. Below, youll find the Top Infographics of 2019 list, which contains our most popular infographics, as well as a curation of staff favorites for the year.

New this year is our Viewers Choice award, which is given to the best visualization, as chosen by our loyal VC+ readership.

Below are the top posts of 2019. But first, a few quick notes:

Wishing you the best in the new year! The Visual Capitalist Team

If you like what you see on the following list, dont forget to subscribe to our mailing list or connect via Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn to get our free content daily.

Let the countdown begin

When it comes to making money, not all personality types play on an even playing field.

This recent post breaks down Myers-Briggs personality types by average earning potential, including the specific facets that tend to correlate positively with money over the long term.

Digital media moves at a breakneck pace and with almost no barriers to entry, its no surprise to see the pecking order turn over every other year.

Even so, its easy to forget that names like GeoCities, Lycos, and Ask Jeeves once dominated the internet landscape as we knew it. Our infographic from earlier this year balances the technological pace of change with nostalgia, to show how the web has changed over recent decades.

In 2018, the global banking industry raked in $1.3 trillion in after-tax profit.

In this infographic, we looked at where the money is in banking as well as the upcoming geographic regions and segments that will fuel the future of banking.

The American Revolution was born out of colonial dissent towards unfair taxation policies.

For this reason, its no surprise that the evolution of U.S. taxation itself has been inextricably linked to contentious debate and even moments of rebellion. Our infographic on the history of U.S. taxation helps paint a picture of this story.

Esports is already filling stadiums and soon it could be lining investors pockets as well.

Our recent infographic breaks down the history of this soon-to-be multi-billion dollar industry, while also showing you the five factors that will determine the pace of future growth in esports.

Imagine a world where over a billion citizens are scored on how good they are, based on a set of criteria put forward by the government.

What could possibly go wrong?

Which countries are the most corrupt?

This colorful map breaks down the Corruptions Perception Index an attempted measure of the perceived level of public sector corruption in over 180 countries.

For decades, the space economy has been driven solely by government spending.

Of course, the government still plays an important role in the sector today, but the final frontier is also seemingly open for private business and sustained investment. In the near future, space tourism, resource extraction, and other segments could make space a trillion dollar industry.

Historically, oil and gas discoveries have been an unparalleled source of wealth for many countries around the world.

This recent post maps out the biggest oil discoveries ever made, while also highlighting the flipside to the story: in a global economy where dependency on fossil fuels is expected to diminish, is any new discovery a blessing or a curse?

Which company or organization is the largest employer in every state?

This animated map focuses in on employment statistics but really, it gives perspective of the dominance of Walmart, the nations largest brick-and-mortar retailer and private employer.

This series of maps highlights several metrics that are used to evaluate housing markets, including the price-to-rent ratio, price-to-income ratio, real house prices, and credit to households as a percentage of GDP.

See which countries have ratios out of whack, and what it could mean for housing markets.

Only 15 countries account for over 72.2% of global carbon emissions.

See it all visualized and also see the percentage of fossil fuel emissions that have occurred in your lifetime.

This series of maps provides a look at each individual continent, to identify the happiest (and unhappiest) country in each region.

Its been 70 years since the founding of the Peoples Republic of China.

This nifty graphic timeline contains an impressive amount of history and facts about the countrys prolific rise and economic growth.

Its not always easy to tell which new technologies will pan out, and which will fail to live up to societys expectations.

But hindsight is 20/20 so in this graphic, we look back at almost 20 years of Gartners hype cycle of emerging technologies, to see what amounted from many of the technological breakthroughs that have gained traction over the years.

In this spectacular data visualization, we resize the worlds top 100 websites according to the amount of traffic they receive.

The end result provides a fascinating snapshot of global web traffic, and the impressive scale of the internet.

What is the origin story behind Tesla, and how did it end up becoming the innovative car company it is today?

We condense the history of Tesla into about five minutes, while also providing an outline of the future vision of Elon Musk.

Did you know that government debt now adds up to $69 trillion globally?

The latest version of our famous world debt graphic breaks down the debt owed by each country as a proportion of world debt, as well as debt to GDP ratios.

Tech giants are finding ways to play bigger roles in our digital lives, whether its through computers, smartphones, smart devices, or apps.

As names like Facebook, Amazon, and Google have become even more ubiquitous, theyve also leveraged network effects, scale, and winner-take-most marketplaces to build up powerful businesses as well.

Our #1 pick of 2019 showcases the Big Five Tech Giants and their various revenue streams which, when combined together, add up to over $802 billion per year.

Finally, its time for our Viewers Choice award.

We polled our VC+ members last week to get a tally for which visualization this year was their favorite, with this video on the largest projected economies in 2030 taking the cake.

Until next time, have a fantastic holiday season and a happy new year!

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Our Top Infographics of 2019 - Visual Capitalist

Open and shut cases: North – Resource Clips

How do the territories mine openings compare with closures for 2019 and 2020?

by Greg Klein

See part 2 of this series, covering the western provinces.

One indication of the state of mining involves the vital statistics of births and deathsthe new mines that arrived and the old mines that left. To that end we survey each Canadian region for some of the major gains and losses that occurred over the past year or are expected for the next. The first of this multi-part series looks at the countrys three northern territories, with each distinct jurisdiction contributing to a study in contrasts.

Yukon

Yukon without mining? That might surprise people better acquainted with the territorys past than its present. But such was the case for nearly a year, following the suspension of Minto, Yukons sole remaining hardrock mine up to 2018. Nevertheless operations returned to this fabled mining region in September as Victoria Gold TSXV:VITcelebrated Eagles debut. By late November the company reported 10,400 ounces of gold and 1,600 ounces of silver from the heap leach operation.

Victoria Gold finished construction a month early on Yukons largest-ever gold mine. (Photo: Victoria Gold)

Less than two weeks later the company unveiled an updated feasibility study raising the annual production target for the territorys largest-ever gold mine from 200,000 to 220,000 gold ounces, based on a 20% increase in proven and probable reserves for the Eagle and Olive deposits. Victoria expects to reach commercial production in Q2 2020.

By mid-October Minto came back to life under LSE-listed Pembridge Resources. Capstone Mining TSX:CShad placed the underground mine on care and maintenance in 2018, after about 11 years of continuous operation, as acquisition negotiations with Pembridge stalled. But the companies sealed the deal last June. Within weeks of restart Pembridge reported 1,734 dry metric tonnes of copper-gold-silver concentrate. Proven and probable reserves totalling 40,000 tonnes copper, 420,000 ounces silver and 45,000 ounces gold give Minto an estimated four more years of production.

Among the most advanced Yukon projects is BMC Minerals Kudz Ze Kayah, a zinc deposit with copper, lead, gold and silver. The privately owned UK-based company reached feasibility in June and hopes to begin at least nine years of mining in 2021.

Environmental/socio-economic reviews continue into Newmont Goldcorps (TSX:NGT)Coffee gold project and Western Copper and Golds (TSX:WRN)Casino polymetallic project. Should Casino make it into operation, the copper-gold-silver-molybdenum operation would be by far the territorys largest mine.

Read more about Yukon mining.

Northwest Territories

Confidence in the territorial economy fell last October when Moodys downgraded a $550-million bond issued by Dominion Diamond.Theres no plan in place to extend the mine life at a time when the debt is coming closer and closer to coming due, the credit ratings agencys Jamie Koutsoukis told CBC. We continue to see a contraction in the time they have to develop this mine plan.

Part of the Washington Group, Dominion holds a majority stake in Ekati and 40% of Diavik, where Rio Tinto NYSE:RIO holds the remaining 60%. Along with De Beers/Mountain Province Diamonds (TSX:MPVD)Gahcho Ku, the three diamond operations comprise the territorys largest private sector employer.

Agnico Eagle once again laid claim to Arctic riches with the Amaruq satellite deposit, over 300 kilometres west of Hudson Bay. (Photo: Agnico Eagle)

In an October presentation before the territorys newly elected legislative assembly, the NWT and Nunavut Chamber of Mines urged the government to safeguard the economy by improving investor confidence in the mining industry.

An election year in the NWT and Canada-wide, 2019 brought optimistic talk and initial funding for the NWTs Slave Geological Province Corridor and Nunavuts Grays Bay Road and Port, two transportation proposals that would offer enormous potential for mineral-rich regions in both territories.

Nunavut

Whispers could be heard throughout the room as intervenors turned to their colleagues. Members of the audience turned their heads, looking for Baffinlands reaction to what was unfolding. Baffinland officials sat stone-faced, sometimes crossing their arms and looking down at the table as [Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. president Aluki] Kotierk spelled out the motion.

That was the scene described by the Nunatsiaq News as the Nunavut Impact Review Board abruptly suspended hearings into Baffinland Iron Mines $900-million Phase II expansion plans for Mary River. The proposals, already accepted by Ottawa, include building a railway to replace a 100-kilometre road north to the companys Milne Inlet port and doubling annual production to 12 million tonnes iron ore. The new railway proposal comes in addition to a previously approved but un-built 150-kilometre southern rail link to a harbour that had been planned for Steensby Inlet.

The company maintains that expanded production and a northern rail line will be crucial to the existing operations viability. Responses at public hearings ranged from support to skepticism and outright opposition. Within weeks of the hearings suspension and a month ahead of a scheduled layoff, Baffinland let go 586 contractors who had been working on expansion preparations.

About 290 kilometres southeast of Meadowbank, Agnico Eagle celebrated Meliadines first gold pour in February.(Photo: Agnico Eagle)

Despite all that, operations continue at Mary River and Nunavut remains a bright spot in Canadian mining.

Thats largely due to Agnico Eagle TSX:AEM, which brought two new operations to the territory. Meliadine began commercial production months ahead of schedule in mid-May, followed by Amaruq in late September.

As a satellite deposit, Amaruq brings new life to the Meadowbank mine and mill complex 50 kilometres southeast. With the latter mine wrapping up its ninth and last year of operation, Amaruqs open pit offers an estimated 2.5 million ounces up to 2025. Should hoped-for permitting come through in late 2020, a Phase II expansion could broaden the lifespan. Meanwhile drilling seeks to upgrade the projects underground resource.

Meliadine began with underground production but has an open pit scheduled to come online by 2023. Combined open pit and underground reserves of 3.75 million gold ounces give the operation a 14-year life.

TMAC Resources (TSX:TMR) expansion plans moved forward in October as construction began on an underground portal to Madrid North, a fully permitted deposit that could enter production by late 2020. The new operations probable reserves of 2.17 million gold ounces far overshadow the companys other three Hope Bay deposits, which total 3.59 million ounces proven and probable.

By comparison, the current Doris operation hosts 479,000 ounces proven and probable. Hope Bay has updated resource/reserve and prefeas studies scheduled for Q1 2020.

See part 2 of this series, covering the western provinces.

This article was posted by Greg Klein - Resource Clips on Wednesday, December 18th, 2019 at 1:12 pm.

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Open and shut cases: North - Resource Clips

Tackling the difficult political history of the sub-continent – Dhaka Tribune

Professor Nurul Islams exploration of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh should be required reading for all committed to learning this history

Professor Nurul Islam is a distinguished economist of global repute. He is teacher of my teachers. I have reviewed most of his books written on the Bangladesh economy, including his fascinating autobiography.

All these books have been written for professional economists and young researchers. However, the book which I am going to present today to the readers is simply unique.

This is a book which has been written in his simplistic style with a passion to educate the younger generations who often receive confusing messages regarding their political history from the traditional historians.

So, from that perspective, this is an exceptional book and the author should be congratulated for this socially responsible attempt to clarify the mess which has been baffling the youths.

The book India-Pakistan-Bangladesh published by Prothoma Prokashan (2019) is a historical writing about the break-up of British India into two and then eventually three nations written by economist Dr Nurul Islam.

The book first explains the circumstances that led to British India being divided into two nations -- India and Pakistan -- and then the eventual struggle by East Pakistan for freedom and the formation of Bangladesh as an independent nation.

In this sense, the title of the book explains its content, since the geographical area known as India before 1947 got transformed into India and Pakistan after they gained independence from the British, and later in 1971 East Pakistan gained independence and became Bangladesh.

In Dr Nurul Islams own words the book seeks to answer an often-asked question whether the partition of British India could be avoided as well as a follow up question whether the breakup of Pakistan was inevitable.

The book is based on the hypothesis that when political parties are based on a fixed characteristic like religion or race, voters in an electoral democracy vote for the party that have the same characteristic as the voter, and as a result there is the creation of a permanent majority and a permanent minority.

In such a case, it is almost impossible for the minority party to win and the minority group may then have to face inadequate opportunities in political, economic, and social spheres.

A major reason that led to the partition of India was that MA Jinnah was aware that the Muslims in India were a minority and, in the case of an electoral democracy, the Muslim League would become the permanent minority with very slim chances of being part of the central governing body.

Again in 1971, West Pakistan and East Pakistan were separate geographical regions, and most of the population of Pakistan belonged to the Eastern counterpart. However, the civil society, military, and central government were all more dominant in West Pakistan.

An electoral democracy would then result in West Pakistan becoming the permanent minority, and those with power in West Pakistan would see a decline in their powers, which they did not want.

Historical context

The first part of the book explores the historical context that led to the Partition of India. India had a fair share of population coming in from both religions of Hinduism and Islam, but the majority were Hindus.

When the British ruled the region, they did not settle in India and only used the place for the purpose of resource extraction. Most of the local governing was done through Indian natives. However, the Muslims wanted to retain their Islamic roots and identity in the early days of British rule, whereas the Hindus were willing to learn from the British.

As a result, Hindus got an advantage and were able to occupy most of the administrative positions of pre-Partition India. A failed mutiny took place in 1857, mainly led by the Muslim members of the British Indian Army. The failure led the Muslims to practise more orthodox Islam.

This ultimately meant that the population of India at that time contained a more progressive Hindu majority and a rather backward Muslim minority.

Road to Partition

The second part of the book explains the events that led to the Partition of India. By the late 19th century, Muslims were becoming more progressive and modern as they realized their earlier follies. The Indian National Congress was formed in December 1885, and had little participation from the Muslim community.

The Congress had started a movement for self-government, and later, in the early 20th century, the British government introduced a separate electorate system for the Muslims. This was so that Muslims could be more integrated into politics, and have more representation.

The Muslim League was formed in 1906 in Dhaka. In 1916, the Congress and Muslim League joined forces in order to attain the institution of self-government in India. The Muslim League came up with the fourteen-point demand, but it was denied by the Congress, claiming that they too represented the mass of the Muslims of the country and special considerations were not, therefore, required.

British India saw two political parties by the 1930s -- the Indian National Congress, which consisted of mainly Hindu members, and the Muslim League with Muslim members. In order to establish self-governance, the British introduced provincial assemblies of elected representatives.

The Congress and the Muslim League took part in the elections and Congress won most of seats. The results of this election showed that the Congress became the permanent majority since they represented Hindus, and on the other hand, the Muslim League were the permanent minority.

Jinnah then propagated the two-nation theory which said that the Hindus and Muslims were two different nations. The idea of nations based solely on religion was rather unique since the general definition of nationhood included common historical experiences and shared values, ideals, and future aspirations.

But here, only religion was considered to be the basis of nationality. In 1947, the British proposed the Cabinet Mission Plan, which separated British India into three territories: Group A, B, and C.

Group B and C were proposed to have consisted of the Muslim Majority areas and would have considerable autonomy. The Congress, which was proposed to have Group C with Hindu majority, did not agree to the Cabinet Mission Plan and this ultimately led to the Partition of India into two nations.

A huge number of people migrated from one region to another -- the Muslims went to Pakistan and the Hindus went to India. A lot of violence took place against the minorities of the regions and many lives were lost. The trauma of this violent partition still persists in the psyche of both Muslims and Hindus who had to face this tragedy.

Pakistan is born

Part three of the book describes the creation of Pakistan. In August 1947, Pakistan became a nation with two regions separated geographically by India. The regions were smaller than what was originally proposed in the Cabinet Mission Plan, and the country had to face many disadvantages because of this.

East Pakistan lost out because of the Partition since most of the industries and commercial areas of Bengal remained in Kolkata and West Pakistan inherited infrastructurally developed areas. Even though the founders wanted a parliamentary democracy for the constitution of Pakistan, the five provinces could not come to an agreement.

The army that Pakistan inherited from British India was nearly one-third of the former Indian army and hence relatively more powerful compared to its Indian counterpart, given the smaller size of Pakistans land and population.

It also wanted a strong government so that they could have access to the resources. All institutions of the central government were located in West Pakistan and the military also consisted of people mainly from the West.

As a result, West Pakistan managed to get an overwhelmingly large share of the budget, even though East Pakistan housed majority of the population. The foreign trade policy and allocation of credit was centralized under the constitution of British India, promulgated in 1935. Representation by East Pakistan was 5% in the military, 30% percent in the bureaucracy and 15% percent in business.

The government also transferred resources from East Pakistan, which was already poor compared to the wealthier West Pakistan. The increased entrepreneurship and investment in West Pakistan did not create employment in the East and the government in the West had no incentive to allocate resources to East Pakistan.

In 1948, the decision was taken to make Urdu the state language of Pakistan. This resulted in the Language Movement of 1952 by the student community and was resolved by violence on part of the government. By 1956, East Pakistan created their own opposition political party.

A lot of back and forth took place in order to prevent East Pakistan from assuming power, since it was obvious that an electoral democracy would make East Pakistan the permanent majority. The disagreements of 1956 led to the implementation of martial law under Ayub Khan.

In the early 1960s, the government decided to ban the works of Rabindranath Tagore, claiming that he promoted Hindu culture. However, East Pakistanis considered this to be an attack on their identity.

East Pakistan was also left completely defenseless during the Indo-Pakistan war of 1965. In the late 1960s, Ayub Khan became unpopular to all of Pakistan due to the Tashkent Declaration, which was thought to have capitulated to the diplomatic pressure of India and given in too much to them.

A conference was held in Lahore in 1966, where Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman presented the Six-Point Program as a future blueprint for the constitution. The program was rejected right away by the West Pakistani delegates.

Around this time, the Awami League was the biggest party in East Pakistan and Pakistan Peoples Party was the largest in the West. West Pakistan did not desire an electoral democracy since the parties were based on unalterable characteristics and the majority belonged to the East.

The end of Pakistan

Part four is titled End of Pakistan and is essentially talking about the end of East Pakistan. The rejection of the Six-Point Program led to movements in East Pakistan. Awami League faced suppression by the Ayub government and many leaders along with Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman were imprisoned under the false accusations of Agartala Conspiracy case.

Ayub resigned after becoming ill in the face of broad-based protests from the agitating students, workers, and masses, mainly from the eastern part of the country, and was succeeded by General Yahya who arranged for a direct election to take place.

The AL fought in the election on the platform of the Six-Points Program and won all the seats in the national parliament from East Pakistan and became the single majority party in the National Assembly. The ALs win meant the program would have to be implemented and East Pakistan would gain significant autonomy over their resources.

The West Pakistani elites tried hard to make Bangabandhu abandon the program. However, they failed. In the end, the army used force against East Pakistanis. East Pakistanis fought back with arms and the struggle for independence began.

About 10 million refugees went to India. These refugees created pressure on the Indian economy and the displaced Bengali youths were trained in guerilla warfare to fight back for their just cause since there were no agreements among Bangabandhu and General Yahya.

Eventually, India directly interfered in the war and backed the Bengali freedom fighters. The West Pakistani forces surrendered on December 16, 1971.

Bangladesh is born

The fifth part of the book is about the emergence of Bangladesh. Bangabandhu came to Dhaka on January 10, 1972, after being released by the Pakistani army, and formed the government of Bangladesh.

The country was war-torn and faced many disadvantages. There was a lack of adequate administrative institutions and the economy was also backward. The constitution of Bangladesh was based on democracy, nationalism, secularism, and socialism.

The principles of democracy and nationalism were attained from the struggle for independence. Since 1947, the people of East Pakistan have struggled for democracy. Bangladesh was a nation that was not solely based on religion. Bangladeshi nationalism was meant to embrace all the cultural and religious diversity present in the country.

Socialism mainly indicated towards welfare liberalism of the West. The state was responsible for improving the standard of living of the people through economic growth, generating employment, and providing social security.

Secularism implied the separation of state and religion. Although, in later years, the constitution was amended quite a few times with changing governments, and has moved away from what it initially aspired.

The value of the primer

Since the intended audience for the book is young adults, I think the book does exceptionally well in briefly explaining the history behind the formation of the country. The concise size of the book will not discourage young readers and, despite being concise, it has a lot of information that the younger generation is likely to be unaware of.

It provides a lot of insight on the economic aspects and thinking that went into Bangladesh becoming an independent nation. This is also something which I believe many young adults do not have enough knowledge about.

The appendix about the Six-Points Program and two economies thesis are also brimming with information and describes, very briefly, two important topics that have contributed to the formation of Bangladesh.

The presentation of this primer is not only simple and lucid, but also captivating with flawless, well-reasoned arguments.

Professor Nurul Islam will be well-remembered by the young readers for this gift of a primer on the political history of the sub-continent, which has been experiencing many common problems despite some spectacular progress in areas of economic development.

Certainly, Professor Islam is absolutely on target when he writes his concluding sentence of the book which says: They are yet to develop a spirit of cooperation that allows them to live in harmony.

This primer deserves to be a textbook in almost all undergraduate courses of history, political science, and economics in all the universities of the sub-continent.

Atiur Rahman is a Bangabandhu Chair Professor, University of Dhaka, and a former Governor of Bangladesh Bank. He can be reached at [emailprotected]

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Tackling the difficult political history of the sub-continent - Dhaka Tribune

NSF Awards Grant to Research Team to Develop Next-Generation Cloud Computing Testbed – HPCwire

RALEIGH, N.C., Dec. 19, 2019 Red Hat, Inc., the worlds leading provider of open source solutions, today announced that the National Science Foundation (NSF) Division of Computer and Network Systems hasawarded a grantto a research team from Boston University, Northeastern University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) to help fund the development of a national cloud testbed for research and development of new cloud computing platforms.

By providing capabilities that currently are only available to researchers within a few large commercial cloud providers, the new testbed will allow diverse communities to exploit these technologies, thus democratizing cloud-computing research and allowing increased collaboration between the research and open-source communities, said Michael Zink, Associate Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The testbed, known as the Open Cloud Testbed, will integrate capabilities previously developed for the CloudLab testbed into the Massachusetts Open Cloud (MOC), a production cloud developed collaboratively by academia, government, and industry through a partnership anchored at Boston Universitys Hariri Institute for Computing. As a founding industry partner andlong-time collaboratoron the MOC project, Red Hat will work with Northeastern University and UMass, as well as other government and industry collaborators, to build the national testbed on Red Hats open hybrid cloud technologies.

Testbeds such as the one being constructed by the research team, are critical for enabling new cloud technologies and making the services they provide more efficient and accessible to a wider range of scientists focusing on research in computer systems and other sciences.

By combining open source technologies and a production cloud enhanced with programmable hardware through field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), the project aims to close a gap in computing capabilities currently available to researchers. As a result, the testbed is expected to help accelerate innovation by enabling greater scale and increased collaboration between research teams and open source communities. Red Hat researchers plan to contribute to active research in the testbed, including a wide range of projects on FPGA hardware tools, middleware, operating systems and security.

Beyond this, the project also aims to identify, attract, educate and retain the next generation of researchers in this field and accelerate technology transfer from academic research to practical use via collaboration with industry partners such as Red Hat.

Since its launch in 2014, Red Hat has served as a core partner of the MOC, which brings together talent and technologies from various academic, government, non-profit, and industry organizations to collaboratively create an open, production-grade public cloud suitable for cutting-edge research and development. The MOCs open cloud stack is based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat OpenStack Platform and Red Hat OpenShift.

Beyond creating the national testbed, the grant will alsoextend Red Hats collaboration with Boston University researchersto develop self-service capabilities for the MOCs cloud resources. For example, via contributions to the OpenStack bare metal provisioning program (Ironic), the collaboration aims to produce production quality Elastic Secure Infrastructure (ESI) software, a key piece to enabling more flexible and secure resource sharing between different datacenter clusters. And by sharing new developments that enable moving resources between bare metal machines and Red Hat OpenStack or Kubernetes clusters in open source communities such as Ironic or Ansible, Red Hat and the MOCs researchers are helping to advance technology well beyond the Open Cloud Testbed.

This testbed will help accelerate innovation in cloud technologies, technologies affecting almost all of computing today, said Michael Zink, associate professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE), University of Massachusetts Amherst. By providing capabilities that currently are only available to researchers within a few large commercial cloud providers, the new testbed will allow diverse communities to exploit these technologies, thus democratizing cloud-computing research and allowing increased collaboration between the research and open-source communities. We look forward to continuing the collaboration in MOC to see what we can accomplish with the testbed.

About Red Hat

Red Hatis the worlds leading provider of enterprise open source software solutions, using a community-powered approach to deliver reliable and high-performing Linux, hybrid cloud, container, and Kubernetes technologies. Red Hat helps customers integrate new and existing IT applications, develop cloud-native applications, standardize on our industry-leading operating system, and automate, secure, and manage complex environments.Award-winningsupport, training, and consulting services make Red Hat atrusted adviser to the Fortune 500. As a strategic partner to cloud providers, system integrators, application vendors, customers, and open source communities, Red Hat can help organizations prepare for the digital future.

Source: Red Hat

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NSF Awards Grant to Research Team to Develop Next-Generation Cloud Computing Testbed - HPCwire

The rise of cloud computing is having an impact on data center efficiency and it’s not great – CIO Dive

Dive Brief:

Uptime Institute's 2019 survey found data centers averaged a PUE of 1.67, versus a PUE of 1.8 in 2011, meaning more of the energy that data centers consume is used for computing processes. That's a significant improvement, but the industry may be losing ground.

The rise of cloud computing is putting downward pressure on data center PUEas fewer computers are now doing the actual work, according to the Uptime Institute, an advisory group focused on business infrastructure. This follows years of improvement.

"Improvements in data center facility energy efficiency have flattened out and even deteriorated slightly in the past two years," according to the firm's annual survey, conducted online in March and April with 1,600 respondents.

Larger and more efficient data centers that power the cloud are doing more of the work now, with efficiency improvements slowing at smaller centers as the computing migrates.

"It's not overall efficiency that is stalled out it's infrastructure efficiency," Matt Stansberry, the institute's VP of North American operations, told Utility Dive. "For a long time, data centers were highly inefficient so, for every unit of energy used to run IT equipment doing productive work, there was a giant amount of overhead."

The PUE ratio "went down over the last 10 years as people started paying attention and making improvements," Stansberry said. Primarily, those improvements were to cooling systems. But with the rise of cloud computing, companies are using fewer computers and instead are relying on cloud-based systems.

"But [data center]buildings don't shift in real-time" to adjust the infrastructure supporting those computers, Stansberry said.

As more computing is done via the cloud, fewer computers mean these data centers may be over-built and less efficient. For utilities, they likely wont see significant load changes in the near term, though older data centers could close and growth in new additions could slow.

Further improvements to data center efficiency "will require significant investment and effort, with increasingly diminishing returns," Uptime Institute said. "While managers and operators should remain vigilant and seek to maintain high facility efficiency levels, higher gains may be found by focusing on IT efficiency."

That doesn't mean there isn't room for more traditional efficiency, according to Jim Kozlowski, VP of global capacity planning and data center operations at Ensono, an IT services provider.

"Utilities help drive data center efficiency," Kozlowski told Utility Dive in an email. "By driving incentives or better economics, data center users will install more energy efficient infrastructure in the long term."

Many companies are in the process of modernizing their data centers, Kozlowski said. "So as they upgrade equipment and building management systems to meet certain standards, energy efficiency is improving."

The federal government has been keeping an eye on the sector as well. In 2016, the U.S. Department of Energy's Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy offered $25 million for projects and technologies focused on increasing the energy efficiency of data centers.

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The rise of cloud computing is having an impact on data center efficiency and it's not great - CIO Dive

Cloud computing in 2020: Predictions about security, AI, Kubernetes, more – TechRepublic

Find out what Jack Wallen predicts for the cloud and cloud-adjacent technology in 2020 and why he encourages you to dream big.

Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto

The cloud is a technology that shattered the ceiling long ago and keeps rising. Ten years ago, we never dreamed that consumers and businesses would claim such a deep dependence on the cloud. Yet, here we are, so let's dream big for cloud in 2020.

SEE: Cheat sheet: The most important cloud advances of the decade (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

This coming year will see more businesses of all sizes turning to hybrid cloud. Many will find using a private cloud that can fail over to a public cloud--as demand dictates--will be the ideal way to leverage the cloud.

One type of hybrid cloud I believe will make serious gain is the on-premises cloud solution (such as Nextcloud) that will fail over to third-party solutions (such as AWS and Google Cloud Platform). When companies realize the cost savings with this model, it will become the most widely-used option.

Nextcloud has been slowly growing in popularity over the years and is already the most widely deployed on-premises cloud solution. I predict 2020 will be a very good year for this open source solution. A number of enterprise companies in the US will adopt this solution as part of their hybrid approach; this will serve as a domino for other large companies following suit. These companies will help drive innovation with the Nextcloud solution, leading the cloud software to finally have features such as a built-in backup and an integrated office suite solution instead of just the ability to connect to a third-party option.

SEE:Tech Predictions For 2020: More must-read coverage (TechRepublic on Flipboard)

Google is one of the biggest innovators in artificial intelligence (AI), and much of this innovation is geared toward the Android platform. I believe 2020 will see Google focusing more of that AI-centric development toward tools such as Google Drive. How will this play out? My guess is Google will develop an AI system that will make file and directory organization superior to anything that mortal minds can achieve.

We could also see an improvement with the Google Docs spelling and grammar check and predictive formatting within documents. I wouldn't be surprised if Google tested a possible AI option that would make comments and use track changes as you write. Google could also throw in an AI-powered chatbot to serve as a collaborative system within the G Suite--think of the Explore feature, only this would be useful.

As I said, dream big.

SEE: Google Cloud Platform: An insider's guide (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

I made this prediction about Kubernetesin my data center predictions for 2020 article, but it bears repeating.

I'm fairly confident someone will develop a tool that makes the deployment and management of Kubernetes clusters so simple that anyone can handle the task. I'm not talking the likes of AWS or Google Cloud Platform but a third-party client that makes it easy for businesses to deploy such things within their own data center.

Yes, AWS and Google Cloud Platform already have incredible tools that make it possible to deploy Kubernetes clusters, but beyond that, you're mostly back to writing YAML files for the reliable deployment of your containers. That changes in 2020 with an open source tool that will make point-and-click container deployment easier and will be a game changer. Mark my words.

SEE: What is Kubernetes? (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

Speaking of Kubernetes, I believe we are finally going to see a tool--such as Harbor--that will not only scan container images for vulnerabilities but will fix them when possible. Think about it: You have a Harbor/Clair instance that can scan your images for vulnerabilities, report any that are found, and Harbor could then automatically update the images to patch the vulnerabilities.

With software such as Ansible, this could be possible. Yes, it will take development effort, but imagine the extra security with such a tool. It could--and should--happen.

I don't want to make this prediction, but the writing is on the wall. In 2020, there will be a cloud breach to make all other breaches look elementary in execution and miniscule in outcome. This breach will see billions of users' data at risk and will force companies with stock in the cloud to take an inventory of their security offerings. We'll see a shift in focus with these companies, which will result in how they approach security.

Companies like Google may begin using strict password policies to force users into creating stronger passwords. There could be either an improvement in two-factor authentication or a rise in popularity of three-factor-authentication (also known as multi-factor authentication), which requires software and hardware keys.

SEE: Secure your data with two-factor authentication (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

This is an easy win for predictions. Open source will continue to dominate the cloud; however, I'm going one step further to say that, by the end of 2020, the cloud will be run completely by open source software. Although there may be fragments of closed source software within cloud technology at the beginning of the year, by year's end that will not be the case. In order for any software solution to make headway within the cloud, it must be open. Period.

There you have it: A few "gimmee" predictions and some that I dare to dream big. With technology like the cloud, it's hard to make predictions without falling on your face every now and then. I could be off the mark on some--or will I?

Dream big, my friends. Dream as big as you can in 2020.

Your go-to knowledge base for the latest about AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, Docker, SaaS, IaaS, cloud security, containers, the public cloud, the hybrid cloud, the industry cloud, and much more. Delivered Mondays

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Cloud computing in 2020: Predictions about security, AI, Kubernetes, more - TechRepublic

Data security is the biggest worry in cloud computing – ITProPortal

Despite understanding the advantages that cloud computing brings to the business world, many are still fearful of the technology, a new report by Savoystewart.co.uk argues.

The company polled 6,000 professionals from the UK, US, Germany, France, Italy and Spain to better understand the sentiment towards cloud solutions and concluded that the respondents mostly fear data leaks or unauthorised access to customers stored data.

It also claims that those working in non-tech sectors are most fearful: financial, insurance and healthcare sectors.

Overall, the financial sector is fairly pessimistic when it comes to cloud computing implementation, with the Italians and the Americans being most distrustful.

Those who work in hospitality are mostly in favour of cloud computing, which the reports authors see as good news for an industry which could stand to cut energy, hardware and operational costs through the cloud.

Receiving direct bookings from clients through cloud technology would mean cutting booking agency commission, and increasing profit margins for hotel owners, it argues.

Looking at the UK specifically, it was unveiled that the countrys tech and hospitality sectors are mostly concerned about the availability of cloud computing services. As no company can offer 100 per cent uptime, this represents a problem for businesses which could lose clients during maintenance.

Organisations are fearful of data breaches as they could result in significant losses, loss of business and customer trust, remediation costs and necessary upgrades, as well as penalties and fines by communications watchdogs and other government agencies.

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Data security is the biggest worry in cloud computing - ITProPortal

Google reportedly set a goal of being a top-two cloud player by 2023 – CNBC

Google CEO Sundar Pichai

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In early 2018, top executives at Alphabet debated whether the company should leave the public cloud business, but eventually set a goal of becoming a top-two player by 2023, according to a report from The Information on Tuesday.

If the company fails to achieve this goal, some staffers reportedly believe that Alphabet could withdraw from the market completely.

After the report was published, a Google spokesperson told CNBC the article was "not accurate," and disputed that the company debated leaving the cloud market in 2018.

While Alphabet subsidiary Google is dominant in web search and advertising, the company is still a small player in cloud computing, which involves renting out computing and storage resources to other companies, schools and governments. In 2018 the company lagged Amazon, Microsoft and Alibaba in that market, according to industry research firm Gartner.

Alphabet doesn't break out revenue for the Google cloud business but said in July that it had reached $8 billion in annualized revenue. Amazon Web Services, the market leader, generated $9 billion in revenue during the third quarter alone. Microsoft doesn't specify revenue from its Azure cloud, but Griffin Securities analyst Jay Vleeschhouwer estimated that Azure delivered $4.3 billion in revenue in the third quarter.

Google co-founder Larry Page, who was Alphabet's CEO at the time, reportedly thought being a distant third-place in cloud was not acceptable. But eventually he, CFO Ruth Porat, and then-Google CEO Sundar Pichai decided that Alphabet should remain in the cloud business, according to the report. The company set a five-year budget for capital expenditures of $20 billion, in part to reach that cloud goal.

The company replaced VMware co-founder Diane Greene, who had been leading the cloud business, with Oracle executive Thomas Kurian at the start of 2019. Pichai replaced Page as Alphabet's CEO earlier this month.

Read the full Information article here.

Update: This article has been updated to reflect that on Tuesday afternoon, a Google spokesperson told CNBC the report was "not accurate" and denied the company debated leaving the cloud market in 2018.

WATCH: Google Cloud VP of Retail Carrie Tharp: Cyber Monday is 'make or break'

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Google reportedly set a goal of being a top-two cloud player by 2023 - CNBC