Humanitarian Bulletin Latin America and Caribbean Volume 30 | November December 2016 – ReliefWeb

HIGHLIGHTS

2016 closed with 10.7 million people affected, 10 per cent more than in 2015.

Floods are the most frequent type of disaster in the region, although drought affected more people.

The Atlantic hurricane season was more active than 2012 and more deadly than 2005.

The United Nations requested funding for US$339 million for emergencies in the region.

2016 marked the 25th anniversary of UN Resolution 46/182.

More than 10 million people affected by disaster in 2016

Drought, hurricanes, floods and earthquakes were the main disasters that affected people in 2016. Dengue, chikungunya and Zika affected another 3.7 million people.

Preliminary data shows that disasters affected 10.7 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2016. Drought affected the largest number of people, followed by Hurricanes Matthew and Otto, floods and complex emergencies such as a lack of potable water in large cities in Bolivia, due to structural failures in the distribution systems.

Floods, earthquakes and the effects of violence and migration are some of the 75 events that also affected the region in 2016. There was an increase of more than 10 per cent in number of people affected compared with 2015 (1.4 million more people affected).

Zika, one of the major emergencies in 2016

Epidemics transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito affected 3.7 million people some 2.5 million people fell ill with dengue, 700,000 from Zika and 495,000 from chikungunya. In November, the World Health Organization announced that Zika was no longer a sanitary emergency; however, it would continue to challenge public health systems. The virus reached a level of epidemic in 49 countries and territories in the region and was declared a global sanitary emergency due to the cases of babies born with microcephaly from infected mothers and cases of Guillain-Barr syndrome.

Hurricane Season 2016 The Atlantic Hurricane season was more active than 2012 and more deadly than 2005. La Nia contributed to the increased intensity, which caused an above-normal warming of the oceans surface, favouring hurricane formation. The season officially ended on 30 November and affected 2.7 million people in 13 countries. The hurricane season formally begins on 1 June, however, five months before in the middle of January Hurricane Alex formed in the North Atlantic, an event that has not occurred since 1955. The strongest and most deadly hurricane was Matthew, followed by Otto. In the Pacific, the season was very active but did not because major damage as the majority of the systems did not make landfall. Otto put preparedness measures to the test in Central America Otto was the seventh hurricane of the 2016 Atlantic Hurricane season. Northern Costa Rica received the worst impact. In Nicaragua, the hurricane made landfall as a category 2 with winds of up to 175 km/h, affecting the southern Caribbean area. Otto also caused damages in Panama.

The hurricane directly affected more than 10,000 people in Costa Rica, killed nine and caused US$56 million in economic losses in agriculture. In Nicaragua, authorities evacuated 11,600 people to safe areas and official shelters, while in Panama more than 2,500 people were affected by the storm. OCHA deployed a Humanitarian Affairs Officer to Costa Rica to bolster United Nations support to the Government response. OCHA also allocated US$30,000 in emergency funds for immediate relief items.

In total, Hurricane Otto affected 24,940 people in three countries, causing 18 deaths, 16,000 people to seek shelter, 120 houses destroyed and 2,300 damaged. Although Costa Rica was hardest hit, authorities responded immediately. Humanitarian needs were relatively small due to Governments leadership in the response, bolstered by joint efforts. For more information visit: http://www.redhum.org/emergencia

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Humanitarian Bulletin Latin America and Caribbean Volume 30 | November December 2016 - ReliefWeb

Caribbean reports record of 29M visits – Beloit Daily News

February 09, 2017 at 2:22 pm | By DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) The Caribbean received a record number of visitors last year as arrivals topped 29 million, tourism officials announced Thursday, and they said growth should continue this year, though at a slightly slower pace due to uncertainty over U.S. President Donald Trump and the impact of Britain's move to leave the European Union.

Last year's 4.2 percent jump marked the seventh consecutive year of growth for the Caribbean, which officials said was a result of relatively low oil prices and U.S. economic growth.

The majority of tourists came from the U.S., but there was also a more than 11 percent growth in visitors from Europe and the United Kingdom, according to Hugh Riley, secretary general for the Caribbean Tourism Organization.

Officials said cruise ship arrivals, which are counted separately, also set a record with 26.3 million arrivals.

Overall, tourists including cruise ship passengers spent $35.5 billion last year, a 3.5 percent increase from the previous year. But Riley said that despite more visitors entering the region, hotels reported a drop in occupancy rates.

Arrivals to the Caribbean in 2017 are projected to grow somewhat more slowly, between 2.5 and 3.5 percent, said Ryan Skeete, research director for the Barbados-based Caribbean Tourism Organization.

"It's a little bit unpredictable," he said of Trump's administration. "We're still monitoring it very closely ... That's all we can do."

He said the fallout of Britain exiting the European Union also could affect the number of visitors to the Caribbean this year.

Seven destinations reported double-digit growth rates last year, including the Turks & Caicos Islands, Cuba, Bermuda and the South American country of Guyana. Six other destinations reported a drop in visitors, including the Dutch Caribbean islands.

Visitors from South America dropped 11 percent last year, and those from Canada dropped nearly 3.5 percent.

"We haven't reached anywhere close to our full potential," Riley said.

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Caribbean reports record of 29M visits - Beloit Daily News

AP PHOTOS: Editor Selections From Latin America, Caribbean … – ABC News

This photo gallery highlights some of the top imagery and news moments made by Associated Press photographers in Latin America and Caribbean that were published in the last week.

Celebrations for the Feast of Candelaria ended with big hangovers in Peru, while in Mexico people made sure to take their ornately dressed baby Jesus dolls to church to get them blessed. In Uruguay, thousands of worshippers went to the beach during African sea goddess Yemanja's feast day, bearing gifts to show their gratitude for her blessings.

In Argentina, bare-chested women and bikini-clad men went to the streets to protest after police threatened weeks ago to detain several women sunbathing topless on a beach.

The Brazilian state of Espiritu Santo erupted in deadly violence with dozens dead. The killings prompted help from the army after police stopped patrolling the streets to demand higher pay.

Chile's president has said the worst fires in the nation's history are mostly under control but not before claiming the lives of at least 10 people, destroying forests, livestock and entire towns.

Panama's recently expanded canal continue facing operational problems as ships are still scraping the walls and prematurely weakening the defenses designed to protect the ships and the locks themselves.

In Venezuela, protests continue over the dire shortage of medicine and medical supplies.

Lastly, in Mexico's northwestern city of Cuilacan, heavily armed men attacked marines on patrol, leaving several suspects and one marine dead. At about the same time and just a few miles away, at the Tomateros stadium, Puerto Rico's Criollos de Caguas beat Mexico's Aguilas de Mexicali and won the 2017 Caribbean Series baseball tournament.

This photo gallery was curated by photo editor Dario Lopez in Mexico City. Follow Lopez on Twitter : @DarioLopezMills

Follow AP photographers and photo editors on Twitter: http://apne.ws/15Oo6jo

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AP PHOTOS: Editor Selections From Latin America, Caribbean ... - ABC News

Pros and Cons of Royal Caribbean’s unlimited drink packages – Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)


Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)
Pros and Cons of Royal Caribbean's unlimited drink packages
Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)
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Pros and Cons of Royal Caribbean's unlimited drink packages - Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)

Caribbean Series artifacts to be displayed in Hall – MLB.com

National Baseball Hall of Fame President Jeff Idelson discusses attending the Caribbean Series in hopes of bringing artifacts to Cooperstown

CULIACAN, Mexico -- The Caribbean Series has secured a spot in Cooperstown.

National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum president Jeff Idelson and Jean Fruth, the Hall of Fame's photographer, were in Mexico this week gathering items and documenting the annual tournament between the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Puerto Rico and Venezuela. Cuba, an original member of the Caribbean Confederation, participated in the tournament as a special guest for the fourth consecutive year.

Complete Caribbean Series coverage

"The Caribbean Series, the Serie del Caribe, is an important part of the world baseball calendar," Idelson said. "From the Hall of Fame's standpoint, we are here to collect artifacts, to meet new people from the different federations and teams and to really make sure that this event is documented properly in the Hall of Fame."

In 2015, Idelson attended the Caribbean Series in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and returned to Cooperstown with several items, including the championship jersey of Pinar del Rio outfielder Roel Santos from Cuba. He returned with many artifacts from last year's Caribbean Series in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, including the jersey of Jorge Vazquez of Mexico's championship team.

This year, Idelson will take back a list of artifacts that includes the ball from the first pitch thrown by Mexico's Hector Velazquez to start the championship game between Mexico and Puerto and jerseys belonging to Puerto Rico's Jonathan Morales and Puerto Rico's Randy Ruiz. Morales drove home what proved to be the winning run in the top of the 10th in Puerto Rico's 1-0 victory in the Caribbean Series title game.

Puerto Rico defeats Mexico to win Caribbean Series

Manager Luis Matos and pitcher Dereck Rodriguez discuss Puerto Rico's 1-0 victory over Mexico to win the 2017 Caribbean Series

"The artifacts we collect can end up anywhere in the museum," Idelson said. "Viva Baseball!, which is our first bilingual exhibit, talks about the great baseball playing countries like Puerto Rico and Mexico. What we collect could very well end up in Viva Baseball!"

The Viva Baseball! exhibit was opened in 2009 to recognize the impact of Latin America on baseball through an exhibit that celebrates Caribbean countries and its players. All of Fruth's work will reside in the permanent archives, and some will be used in the Viva Baseball! exhibit.

Jesse Sanchez, who has been writing for MLB.com since 2001, is a national reporter based in Phoenix. Follow him on Twitter @JesseSanchezMLB and Facebook. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

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Caribbean Series artifacts to be displayed in Hall - MLB.com

LGBTQI coalition gears up in eastern Caribbean – Erasing 76 Crimes

A new coalition of LGBTQI organizations in the eastern Caribbean is setting its sights on improving the lives of the regions sexual minorities. The Eastern Caribbean Alliance for Diversity and Equality Inc. (ECADE), which was launched late last year, issued this update:

Board selected to guide new eastern Caribbean Alliance

(St. Johns, February 6, 2017) Another step has been taken toward a more united Caribbean with the election of a new board to head the Eastern Caribbean Alliance for Diversity and Equality Inc. (ECADE).

The eleven-member board was drawn from representatives of eighteen regional organisations at the Alliances Feb. 6 general meeting.

Board Chair Ren Holder-McClean-Ramirez notes, The new board fully recognises the wide scope of work ahead of us. We are committed to fostering a space that will complement the development and strengthen the communities, territories and by extension the region of which we are all a part.

ECADE executive board includes (from left to right) Joan Didier, treasurer; Richie Maitland, vice-chair; Ren Holder-McClean-Ramirez, chair; and Arlene Gregoire, secretary. (ECADE photo)

The new board comprises members from St Croix, Sint Maarten/Saint Martin, Antigua, Barbados, St Kitts and Nevis, Grenada, Saint Lucia, Dominica, Saint Lucia and St Vincent and the Grenadines. In addition to Holder-McClean-Ramirez, the Board executive comprises Richie Maitland Vice-Chair, Arlene Gregoire Secretary and Joan Didier Treasurer.

Now is the time

In welcoming the board, Executive Director Kenita Placide also expressed hope for the work ahead.

Kenita Placide, executive director of ECADE (Photo courtesy of YouTube)

The movement of the sub-region as a unified people is important at this point as we all feel now is the time. The democratic process invoked of nominating and voting in a new board is vital in the ownership of stakeholders. The work ahead is not light or easy but everyone is at the table. We are hopeful and being strategic.

The general meeting held discussions on the status and development of ECADE as the new regional hub for advocacy in eastern Caribbean countries and resulted in agreements on its governance structure. In addition the meeting explored the needs of member organisations, including institutional strengthening of the national organisations and a clear delineation of roles between the regional hub and the local organisations. These will be among the core undertakings for the board going forward.

ECADE is an independent umbrella organisation, inclusive of all small island territories in the eastern Caribbean. Geographically, from the Virgin Islands to Grenada. ECADE will work with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex groups and other rights organisations within these countries to strengthen their institutional capacity and provide a platform to strategize and work towards equality within the eastern Caribbean.

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Ancient Tropical Tortoise Found in a Deep Blue Sinkhole in the Bahamas – Seeker

The Sawmill Sink hole, on Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas, had something special waiting at the bottom for divers from the University of Florida: the 1,000-year-old skeleton of an extinct tortoise species, one so well preserved it yielded its ancient DNA intact.

The find, described by University of Florida researchers in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, is being called the first DNA sample extracted from an extinct tropical species.

"This is the first time anyone has been able to put a tropical species into an evolutionary context with molecular data," said study co-author David Steadman, in a statement.

"And being able to fit together the tortoise's evolutionary history together will help us better understand today's tropical species, many of which are endangered," he added.

The tortoise, Chelonoidis alburyorum, with a shell described as about the size of a football, seems to have lived a harsdscrabble life. Evidence of bite marks from predators such a crocodiles adorned the shell's surface.

Credit: University of Florida

The fact that anything from the ancient animal, much less DNA, was intact was a happy accident of chemistry. For DNA to remain intact for a long time, it needs to exist in cold, dry conditions - quite the opposite of life in the West Indies. But Sawmill Sink is a deep blue hole deep enough that, at its bottom, 80 feet down, say researchers, water devoid of oxygen is created by the decay of plants and animals. That lack of oxygen kept the tortoise preserved, allowing researchers 1,000 years later to find it and sample its DNA.

RELATED: World's Deepest Blue Hole Is in South China Sea

Bone collagen preserved in the skeleton helped the researchers date the find, while other, more poorly preserved tortoises allowed them to determine that Chelonoidis alburyorum went extinct about 780 years ago. Not coincidentally, the scientists say, soon after humans settled in the area.

"There's a correlation that the arrival of humans spelled the demise of the tortoises," said Steadman. "It's probably a blend of direct hunting and habitat loss as the humans started burning the forests in the dry season."

Will the tropics yield more such well-preserved treasures of nature? Only time will tell.

"We now know so much about the tortoise's anatomy, how it lived and its evolutionary context," Steadman said. "To be able to do that with other species is a goal."

Top Photo: The fossil skull of the Bahamian tortoise, which yielded the first ancient tropical DNA.

WATCH VIDEO: 5 Islands That Are Going To Disappear

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Cruise Liner pulls out of Bahamas for Cuba – Jamaica Observer

NASSAU, Bahamas (CMC) The Bahamas says it is regrettable that Norwegian Cruise Lines (NCL) has decided to drop Grand Bahama from its schedule four-day voyage to the country.

NCL said that the Norwegian Sky will begin calls to Havana, Cuba in 2017.

The timing for the Sky to drop Freeport, Grand Bahama, an island that is still recovering from the effects of Hurricane Matthew, which struck the island in October 2016, is regrettable. We look forward to Norwegian returning to that island in 2018, Bahamas Tourism said in a statement.

It said that NCL received approval for a one day per week sailing into Cuba, and that date coincides with their Freeport stop, which resulted in them dropping Freeport, Grand Bahama from its four-day schedule.

Norwegian Cruise Lines have been sailing in The Bahamas for 50 years and all of its vessels are registered under the Bahamian flag. This not only proves confidence in our destination, but it is also a testament to our stability in the region, Bahamas Tourism added.

It said that figures from 2016 show that cruise visits were up by 5.8 per cent in 2016 over 2015.

A total of 4,219,218 visitors cruised to The Bahamas through to November last year, compared to 4,066,530 for the same period in 2015. As a result, thousands of jobs and millions of dollars have been injected into The Bahamian economy as a result of the cruise industry.

Moreover, many cruise lines who committed to move their itinerary to Asia have moved back to the region, where The Bahamas owns the market share. This is further evident in the investments by all major cruise lines including Norwegian, Royal Caribbean, Disney, MSC and Carnival Cruise Line.

But the main opposition Free National Movement (FNM) said that the decision by CNL to withdraw from Grand Bahama underscores the downward spiral of the local economy.

There are constant reminders every week of more hotels and resorts closing, more workers being laid off, and now we have cruise lines leaving our beautiful waters for other countries, said FNM Deputy Leader, K Peter Turnquest.

This change in destinations will mean that The Bahamas will lose out on 25 cruises, which make stops in both Nassau and Freeport, in the second half of 2017. This will have major negative impact on our tourism industry.

We will experience a loss of customers, a loss in revenues, and profits and an increase in our national debt. With the US-Cuba relations on the mend, The Bahamas needs to work double time to ensure that other Cruise Lines do not end their calls on Bahamian ports.

When companies start to leave the Bahamas and a trend is allowed to begin, it is hard to stop. This Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) Government has not been working to save these cruise lines from leaving rather they have focused solely on massive foreign-owned resorts. We need to catch ourselves from this death spiral quickly or we will be over the cliff before we know it, he added.

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Cruise Liner pulls out of Bahamas for Cuba - Jamaica Observer

These Offshore Drilling Stocks Are Up Big as Earnings Season Starts – Fox Business

What happened

Shares of a number of offshore drilling stocks are up big on Friday following the announcement of Q4 earnings fromNoble Corporation Ordinary Shares (NYSE: NE). Noble's shares are leading the way today, up over 12% as of 2:50 p.m. EST, butSeadrill Ltd(NYSE: SDRL) stock is also up more than 10%, whileENSCO PLC(NYSE: ESV) andDiamond Offshore Drilling Inc(NYSE: DO) are both up around 5%:

NE Price data by YCharts.

Today's jump for these stocks is largely tied to Noble's earnings release. The company reported an adjusted loss of $0.15 per share. And while a loss isn't exactly great, Wall Street analysts were expecting a much bigger $0.22-per-share loss from the company this quarter. On a GAAP basis, Noble's loss was much bigger, as the company took a $1.3 billion impairment against five of its drilling rigs.

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From an operations perspective, Noble has made a lot of progress. The company generated positive operating cash flows in 2016, and the impairments above are a reminder that the global drilling vessel fleet still has a lot of rationalization to go through before reaching parity with existing demand for work.

There's still less offshore activity, and that's not changing overnight. Image source: Getty Images.

From a capital perspective, Noble remains on sound footing. The company issued $1 billion in new debt in the fourth quarter, due in 2024, and used $762 million of the proceeds to pay off debt due in 2020, 2021, and 2022. At the quarter's end, Noble reported a cash balance of $726 million, $2.45 billion in undrawn credit capacity, and no major debt maturities within the next couple of years.

Noble's report comes on the back of a surprisingly good report from Diamond Offshore on Feb. 6. The company delivered a strong $0.53-per-share earnings profit. And while a one-time gain of $0.26 per share tied to a settlement over a contract dispute won't boost future quarters, Diamond still delivered a stronger result than many were expecting.

ENSCO is scheduled to hold its earnings call on Feb. 28, while Seadrill will likely report sometime in March. But investors probably shouldn't put too much stock in Noble's or Diamond Offshore's results when it comes to optimism for ENSCO or Seadrill.

If you're following offshore drillers, it's probably best to focus more on their balance sheets and less on GAAP profits and revenue at this stage. Look for the companies that are best-positioned to ride out the downturn, which could continue through 2017, and have the financial stability to make it to the recovery.

Noble, Diamond Offshore, and ENSCO are all in much better positions than Seadrill in that regard.Seadrill has nearly $5 billion in obligations due within 12 months, while the other three have less than $1.6 billion combined. The others also have a combination of cash and available credit liquidity to address their short-term obligations, while Seadrill has far more debt maturing in the next several months than it has the liquidity to deal with.

There is real opportunity in offshore drillers, but also very real risk of permanent losses. Make sure you balance the two, and understand the risks before investing in any of these companies. It's also important to acknowledge that it could take another year -- or more -- before the offshore market really starts recovering.

10 stocks we like better than Noble When investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.*

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Jason Hall owns shares of Diamond Offshore Drilling, Ensco, Noble, and Seadrill. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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These Offshore Drilling Stocks Are Up Big as Earnings Season Starts - Fox Business

Cost Impact of Immigration and Visa Reform to US Customers Using Offshore Services – Forbes


Forbes
Cost Impact of Immigration and Visa Reform to US Customers Using Offshore Services
Forbes
2000x-18 Most US organizations have substantially used offshore service providers in IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) to drive cost reduction. But there is currently a great deal of discussion in Congress and the Trump Administration as well ...

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Israel Puts Off License Award In First Offshore Oil, Gas Bid Round – OilPrice.com

Israel has extended the original deadlines for each step of its first offshore oil and gas bid round launched last November, Energy Minister Yuval Steiniz said on Thursday.

Under the original plan for re-opening Israels offshore to new oil and gas exploration, the country announced its first bid round for development of resources in its territorial waters. At the time, minister Steiniz quoted independent research as having estimated that there are additional resources in a range of 6.6 billion barrels of oil and 2,137 BCM of natural gas yet to be found offshore Israel. The ministry is auctioning off 24 exploration blocks of up to 400 square kilometers (154.4 square miles) each, and will award 3-year licenses, extendable by another 3 years under certain conditions. In order to keep a healthy competition, companies with significant holdings in active offshore leases in the area are not allowed to bid. That means that Israels Delek and U.S.-based Noble Energy which are developing the giant Leviathan natural gas field are not bidding.

The original timetable had stipulated that the deadline for submission of proposals would be April 21, 2017, with winners of the new blocks expected to be announced in July 2017.

However, under the revised timetable, the closing date for bid submission is July 10, 2017, and bid bonds are valid until March 1, 2018, which may mean that the awarding of the licenses may take place next year.

Related: U.S. Oil Rig Count Up On Rising Oil Prices

Dozens of companies have expressed interest in the bidding process, thus the extension to allow for more time to prepare for bids, Natural Gas World quoted Steiniz as saying at a roadshow in Tel Aviv.

In the eastern Mediterranean, other countries are also advancing bid rounds and licensing awards. Cyprus has recently awarded three offshore blocks one to Italys Eni, one to an Eni/Total partnership, and the other to ExxonMobil and Qatar Petroleum while Lebanon opened last month five offshore blocks up for bidding, re-launching the first licensing round after three years of political impasse.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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Israel Puts Off License Award In First Offshore Oil, Gas Bid Round - OilPrice.com

Statoil looks to Newfoundland offshore after selling off all oilsands assets – Globalnews.ca

By Dan Healing The Canadian Press

The head office of Statoil in Stavanger, Norway, in this file photo dated Jan. 18, 2013.

A week after Statoil sold off all its assets in Albertas oilsands, it looked eastward, to Newfoundlands offshore.

There, the Norwegian energy giant saw opportunity in the North Atlantic, announcing this week plans to drill two offshore exploratory wells this summer in the Flemish Pass Basin, roughly 500 kilometres east of St. Johns, N.L.

It is a gamble pulling out of one area with vast pools of proven oil reserves, while simultaneously launching a drilling program in the open ocean, where discovering commercially viable reservoirs is not certain.

But analysts say there is logic behind Statoils decision. While companies shifting their investments to offshore exploration are taking on more risk, there is an upside.

READ MORE:Calgary-based Athabasca Oil buys oilsands assets from Norwegian firm in deal worth up to $832M

The crude found beneath the ocean floor is generally lighter and more valuable than oilsands bitumen. Offshore oil can also be shipped anywhere in the world by tanker, whereas Albertas landlocked oil requires pipelines to access markets abroad pipelines that still need to be built.

You fill up a tanker from your platform and you send it to whoever is willing to pay the best price for it, said Kevin Birn, senior director for IHS Markit.

Whereas in Western Canada, the history has been you put it in a pipeline and it goes south. Those prices are subject to transportation costs down to the Gulf Coast and you have a lower price as a result.

READ MORE:Gas facility in Algerian Sahara attacked, Norwegian energy group says

Statoil Canada president Paul Fulton said the decision to invest in the offshore is in line with the parent companys strategy of funding safe, high-volume projects (with) low-carbon emissions.

He said Statoils exit from the oilsands was a commercial decision that had nothing to do with criticism from environmentalists in Norway, as has been suggested by some.

The upstream emissions from potential projects out there (on the East Coast) are very good, so we see that as a good fit and it fits into the competitive portfolio of Statoil globally, Fulton said in an interview.

Analysts, however, say criticism in Norway had to have been a factor in the sale of oilsands assets.

Statoil in particular was facing some political pushback from Norway as a state-owned company operating in the oilsands, said Nathan Nemeth, an upstream research associate at Wood Mackenzie.

Nemeth said oilsands and offshore projects both face long planning phases, high upfront costs and complicated construction issues, but the payback of capital for offshore comes much more quickly because of flush production from freshly drilled wells. Oilsands production, on the other hand, is steady and predictable for decades.

Statoils offshore investment comes as Calgary-based Husky Energy (TSX:HSE) confirmed earlier this week it had shipped its first oil to an unnamed customer in China from the White Rose project, about 350 km east of Newfoundland.

The pieces of the puzzle fell together for the sale, company spokesman Mel Duvall said in an email.

Favourable freight rates made it economically attractive.

Statoil is a major player in Newfoundlands offshore oil sector with a nine per cent stake in the Hebron project, a five per cent share in Hibernia and a 15 per cent stake in Terra Nova.

In 2015, the company bought six exploration licences in the Flemish Pass Basin and its first two licences for offshore Nova Scotia.

2017The Canadian Press

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Statoil looks to Newfoundland offshore after selling off all oilsands assets - Globalnews.ca

Coalition urged to charge 10% royalty on offshore oil and gas projects – The Guardian

The north-west shelf project in Western Australia which the Tax Justice Network says pays high royalties. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian

The Turnbull government must introduce a 10% royalty on all offshore oil and gas projects in Australia to ensure taxpayers start getting a fair return on their natural resources, the Tax Justice Network says.

The group has called for the petroleum resource rent tax (PRRT) to be overhauled, saying there were too many opportunities under its regime for offshore oil and gas companies to exploit transfer pricing, with direct impacts on PRRT credits and profits.

In a submission to the PRRT review, the Tax Justice Network said a 10% royalty ought to be applied to offshore oil and gas projects in commonwealth waters that were only subject to the PRRT.

It said a 10% royalty needed to be charged because the PRRT which was designed in the 1980s for crude oil projects, but which had failed to keep up with developments in the industry was failing to collect adequate revenue.

The treasurer, Scott Morrison, admitted last year that revenues from the PRRT had halved since 2012-13, and crude oil excise collections had fallen by more than half.

He announced a formal review of the PRRT regime in November after a rapid decline in revenues from the tax.

Jason Ward, from the network, said a 10% royalty would raise between $4bn and $6bn over the next four years.

He said the royalty system should be similar to existing state and Commonwealth royalties that already apply to all other oil and gas projects in Australia.

It should be deductible from PRRT, and the PRRT should remain as a backstop to collect additional revenue if and when prices increased substantially and when existing PRRT credits were exhausted.

With Australia poised to be the worlds largest exporter of LNG but projected to generate little direct government revenue for decades, there is a major problem that needs to be addressed, he said.

At the moment projects in commonwealth waters are getting millions of tonnes of LNG effectively for free.

No other industry, including coal, iron ore and onshore gas, get given the total cost of their investment (plus uplift) in free resources before they begin paying for that resource.

This policy will level the playing field across the oil and gas industry. At the moment projects in commonwealth waters are getting a competitive advantage over onshore projects and the north-west shelf who pay much higher royalties.

All of the major companies, Shell, Chevron, BHP, Woodside and BP, already pay under our proposed model through their ownership of the north-west shelf project. They have been happy to pay under this model for years without complaint. The north-west shelf shows they still make huge profits under this type of royalty regime.

Ward said mature oil projects, such as BHP in the Bass Strait who already pay PRRT, would not be affected given the royalty would be fully deductible from the PRRT.

This proposal we believe ensures a fair return to the Australian people while still encouraging investment by maintaining our royalty regime as one of the most generous in the world, he said.

We call on the industry to support this proposal to the commonwealth government.

The problems raised by the Tax Justice Network are similar to those raised by tax expert Dr Diane Kraal, from Monash University.

Her submission warned flaws in the PRRT regime meant Chevrons giant Gorgon gas project off WA would not pay the tax until at least 2030, despite decades of operation.

Kraal said her modelling showed $5bn in revenue would be raised from Gorgon alone by 2030 if royalties were reintroduced.

She said her research indicated other natural gas projects in commonwealth waters should also be subject to commonwealth royalties, including Chevrons Wheatstone, Woodsides Pluto LNG project, and Inpexs Ichthys project.

Woodside Petroleum used its submission to argue against any changes to the PRRT.

It said the PRRT had been operating as intended, despite declining revenues from the tax recently.

It said the regime had delivered $200bn worth of projects over the past decade, and Woodside had paid $2bn in PRRT since 2001.

As a profits-based tax, it is not unusual to have declining PRRT at a time of declining oil and gas prices and prior to these projects recouping their costs, its submission said.

Woodside pays billions of dollars of taxes in Australia. The PRRT is just one part of our tax contribution but increasing it could put other tax revenues at risk by making future projects unviable.

Woodside has an ownership stake in three of Australias major undeveloped gas resources. As the leading Australian gas producer, we want to develop these resources and deliver significant benefits to the Australian people.

We urge the PRRT review team to consider carefully the substantial impact of any changes to the current fiscal settings that could jeopardise existing and future investments.

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Coalition urged to charge 10% royalty on offshore oil and gas projects - The Guardian

Eni starts production of East Hub Development Project, offshore Angola – Offshore Technology

Eni has started production of the East Hub Development Project in Block 15/06 of the Angolan deep offshore region, five months ahead of schedule.

The oilcompany is using the Armada Olombendo Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel for production which can generate up to 80,000bpd of oiland compress up to 3.4 million cubic metres of gasa day.

FPSO Olombendo will put Cabaa South East field into production with nine wells and four manifolds at adepth of 450m.

The Cabaa South East field is located about 350km from Luanda and 130km west of Soyo.

East Hub Project production will add to the output from the existing West Hub Project in the Sangos, Cinguvu and Mpungi fields, where another vessel, FPSO NGoma, is operating.

Overall, Block 15/06is expected to reacha peak of 150,000bpd this year.

Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi said: We are proud of what we have achieved in Block 15/06. Leveraging our extensive experience in exploration, we have been able to discover a total ofthree billion barrels of oil in place throughten commercial discoveries.

"We have been able to discover a total of three billion barrels of oil in place through ten commercial discoveries."

Moreover, thanks to strong field development and project management, we are beginning production of the East Hub with a time-to-market of onlythree years, andfive months ahead of schedule.

Cabaa South East brings our number of fields in production to five, withtwo more expected to start before the end of 2018.

This is yet another example of Enis Angolan and worldwide capability to deliver state-of-the-art projects, and was made possible by Enis new operational model, where we play an increasingly active role in the integrated development of our projects.

Eni operates Block 15/06 with 36.84% stake. Sonangol Pesquisa e Produo and SSI Fifteen Limited hold the remaining ownership with interests of36.84% and 26.32%respectively.

Eni has been operating in Angola since 1980 through its subsidiary.

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Eni starts production of East Hub Development Project, offshore Angola - Offshore Technology

‘Fifty Shades Darker’ Unmasks $22M In Offshore Foreplay International Box Office – Deadline

Christian Grey has seen $22.4 million worth of business at the international box office through Thursday. Fifty Shades Darker, Universals sequel to the 2015 S&M phenomenon that was Fifty Shades Of Grey,is releasing day-and-date this weekend with the U.S. Overseas, 37 offshore markets undressed Wednesday and Thursday.

The film is dominating with No. 1 openings in 36 territories and 50% market share across the current releases. There are still 20 hubs to tie in today, including the UK and Spain. By the end of the weekend, the total will climax at 57.

Already, Australia pulled a No. 1 opening day with $2.1M and 55% market share (including Wednesday night previews). Thats the second-biggest opening for an R-rated film and the second-biggest Universal opening day of all time, behind Furious 7.

Argentina also set a record for biggest R-rated opening. Brazil had an impressive $2M day one at No. 1 with 72% of the market the top opening day of the year andsecond-biggest 16+ rated film opening day of all time.

France also submitted to the sequel with a No. 1 start of $1.9M. Thats the biggest opening day of the year for the Hexagon. In Germany, where it looks like the lovers could hit near to 1M tickets sold this weekend, the No. 1 start was $1.4M for 53% of the market. Italy, likewise has Darker dominating at $1.6M/70%. There, the movie boasts thesecond-biggest opening of a R-rated film, behind Fifty Shades Of Grey.

Other No. 1 starts include the Netherlands ($319K/biggest R-rated opening of all time and best opening day of 2017); Philippines ($370K/biggest opening day of all-time for a February foreign release); and Russia ($1.5M M).

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'Fifty Shades Darker' Unmasks $22M In Offshore Foreplay International Box Office - Deadline

Cuba Eager to Develop Offshore Oil Reserves | OilPrice.com – OilPrice.com

Cuba is seeking foreign investments in its oil industry, with a particular focus on offshore drilling, a senior government official said this week. At the moment, about 50 percent of the islands demand is being satisfied by local production, but plans are to raise this substantially in the near term, the deputy general director of state-owned company Cuba Petrol Union (CUPET), Roberto Suarez, said.

Currently, CUPET pumps around 4 million barrels of oil equivalent a year, with the oil used for power generation. Almost all of Cubas natural gas output, 97 percent, is utilized as heating fuel and power generation.

After the U.S. lifted its trade embargo on the island, Cubas government has wasted no time in trying to attract foreign investments that are vital for the development of its energy industry, among all others.

What the island has to offer is total undiscovered technically recoverable reserves of 4.6 billion barrels of crude oil, 9.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 900 million barrels of natural gas liquids, based on 2004 estimates by the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The country has, almost like clockwork, produced about 50,000 barrels of liquids per day, most from the coastal reserve areas east of Havana.

Related:Will Lebanese Oil And Gas Ignite The Country?

One of the few oil companies exploring for oil in Cuba, Australian Melbana Energy, earlier this month said it has revised up its estimates for onshore oil reserves on the island, and substantially. Now Melbana believes there are 612 million barrels of oil in its Block 9, almost double the earlier estimates.

Other foreign companies, including Russias Zarubezhneft and Spanish Repsol, have drilled in Cubas portion of the Gulf of Mexico but so far, no commercially viable finds have been made.

Recent discoveries in Cubas shelf were made, according to Suarez, in the North Belt: a 200-km-long offshore area east of Havana, which is divided into 45 blocks. CUPET is looking for bidders for these blocks as well as partners that will bring in new technologies to its oil industry.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

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Cuba Eager to Develop Offshore Oil Reserves | OilPrice.com - OilPrice.com

Frommer: Dumbing down the cruise experience – News Chief

By Arthur Frommer

The recent tendency of the cruise lines to eliminate port stops in actual cities inhabited by local residents replacing those ports with stops in phony, artificial "private islands" or "private beaches" has now escalated. By creating a phony island for their passengers on Caribbean cruises, Norwegian Cruise Line has given us the phony island to end all such fakes.

It's called "Harvest Caye," and it's a separate small island developed by the cruise line, reachable by a 15-minute boat ride from the mainland of southern Belize. Passengers are disembarked on Harvest Caye, from which they walk under a canopy shielding them from the sun to the various facilities on this private island. If travelers want to experience the real Belize, they could take the boat ride to the mainland, but I would assume that this further trip primarily is for people signing up for an escorted sightseeing tour of the mainland. I am guessing that few passengers would board that boat and, after arriving, walk close to 3 miles to the Placencia Village on the mainland.

Rather, the facilities on the private island are designed to keep passengers rooted there, spending money at the various enticing comforts and attractions of Harvest Caye.

The island has hundreds and hundreds of chaise lounges, several villas for daylong rent, several restaurants charging for their meals, an entire shopping village, a giant swimming pool, a zoo (of all things) and every other artificial attraction meant to keep passengers from ever experiencing the nature and community life of Belize.

And what about Belize itself? Is it worth visiting? The answer to that would cause long-time visitors to Belize to sputter with indignation. Belize is one of the great ecological adventure areas of the world. It sports caves for tubing, waterfalls for swimming under, exotic birds and every sort of sealife manatees, particularly, and lobsters as well. Several organizations seeking to protect the unique and enthralling environment of Belize are apoplectic with anger over what developments like Harvest Caye will do to their cherished area.

The Norwegian Cruise Line passengers spending their day at Harvest Caye see and experience nothing of Belize they might as well have stayed at home and visited a heated day spa or steam bath. They have not experienced any kind of foreign travel, an experience that, to me, is one of the chief rewards of booking aboard a traditional cruise. I, for one, will avoid those cruises that substitute so-called private islands for actual real-life islands and communities.

Arthur Frommer is the pioneering founder of the Frommer's Travel Guide book series. He co-hosts the radio program, The Travel Show, with his travel correspondent daughter Pauline Frommer. Find more destinations online and read Arthur Frommer's blog at frommers.com.

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Frommer: Dumbing down the cruise experience - News Chief

A Business Plan for Healthy Communities – Hospitals & Health Networks

A Business Plan for Healthy Communities
Hospitals & Health Networks
Over the life of the program, Dignity has invested more than $180 million in loans and equity an intentional strategy to complement its community-benefit grants and other commitments. In 2015, ProMedica, based in Toledo, Ohio, began a pilot project ...

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A Business Plan for Healthy Communities - Hospitals & Health Networks

Chris Wood: Now more than ever localize! – vtdigger.org

Editors note: This commentary is by Chris Wood , who is the director of BALE (Building A Local Economy), a community resource center for local initiatives in the White River Valley.

Intentional localization of production and all life-sustaining activity is key to our future thriving. This important work is joyous when done in community. There are many pathways toward greater local self-reliance and resilience. Pamela Boyce Simms, trainer for Transition US

I know that we care about these things and I am aware that we mostly feel powerless to change the way things are. I hear those voices that say making the kind of fundamental change really needed is far beyond the capacity of us here in our communities. The forces that drive the global economy to which we seem inextricably tied are both powerful and seemingly invisible. The system seems rigged against us, or at least against achieving decent lives for most of us.

Consider, however, that the global economic model that now drives much of the commerce, politics and culture of this world is really only several decades old. Even more importantly, it is human made. This means that if it was created by us, we can undo it.

True it wont be easy. The forces that promote globalization control most of the avenues of information to which people have access, and their propaganda saturates the media and internet. But the fact is that, not just where I live in the White River Valley of Vermont, but all over the world, there is a prevailing movement away from the structures of globalization. In Vermont, our local food systems transformation is helping to lead the way. And there is so much more that can be turned toward local capacity.

For me, 2017 is the year to powerfully advance the concept of localizing and reimagining the appropriate scale under which systems should work.

For me, 2017 is the year to powerfully advance the concept of localizing and reimagining the appropriate scale under which systems should work. I have worked with many others to help shape one organization that has consciously worked to advance a new narrative that runs in contrast to the old story. That new narrative is called localization. Our intention has been to create as many powerful locally driven and inspired initiatives as possible and to clearly speak our truth about what is at the heart of what we need to change if we are to survive. To that end, we offer this systemic solution a solution that, if strong and powerful enough, can build resilience against the forces of those familiar injustices weve internalized and tolerated for too long. Surely, its not the only answer because we need many, but its what will help build what I believe is a desperately needed new story of living on this planet.

The essential first step in this process is to scale down and localize economic activity with the goal of meeting our needs our basic needs in particular closer to home. This does not mean an end to trade, not even international trade. And it does not mean reverting to isolation or nationalism or tribalism, the counter-productive framework that appears to drive a Donald Trump.

As Helena Norberg-Hodge, executive director of Local Futures, observes: Localization is the real solution multiplier, with immediate economic, social and ecological benefits. By reducing the scale and reach of the economy, the environmental impacts of economic activity shrink as well. And the argument for localizing goes well beyond the environment. Among other things, localization allows us to live more ethically as citizens and consumers. In human scale economies, people are more connected to each other something that, as we are increasingly realizing, is crucial to our health and well-being.

It will take determined effort in localities everywhere to create or restore local knowledge and local democracy. It can be done. There are alternative energy co-ops to emerge, there is an ever-more powerful local food system that could provide good food to everyone (not just the well-off), there are localized transportation models to develop, there are cooperatives and socially aligned businesses to emerge in every sector, there can be credit unions with true community social missions, there are time banks and strong barter systems that operate outside the dollar economy, there are creative artists and craftspeople providing clothing and wares made from local resources. And, surely, there are hundreds of other initiatives that will emerge and inspire us.

To some, these ideas may seem relatively small and inconsequential, but just imagine that they are happening a hundred thousand times over in other communities around the world. Localizing done right that is, in an inclusive way offers the best path toward maintaining and building regional cohesion. And stronger communities, local economies, and greater self-reliance are all things that many people who voted for Donald Trump would support.

Localizing is a slow, patient path that requires trust, persistence and hard work. Such mundane work may sound boring in a time of political crisis and turmoil. But we do need to build a future that will sustain us and the rest of nature in which we can thrive even as the old story unravels.

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Chris Wood: Now more than ever localize! - vtdigger.org

Twins study offers valuable data on space travel – Herald-Whig – – Herald-Whig

Posted: Feb. 10, 2017 2:35 pm

WHEN astronaut Scott Kelly returned to Earth after nearly a year on the International Space Station, he was 2 inches taller than his twin brother, astronaut Mark Kelly. When Scott left for the mission, he and his earthbound brother were the same height.

What happened? Scientists at NASA are poring over the data compiled from the Twins Study, information that benchmarks Scott and Mark Kelly's genomic and physical markers before and after Scott's yearlong mission on the space station.

So far we've learned that being in space for prolonged periods does have an effect on chromosomes, bone structure and even the content of the culture in an astronaut's gut. Scott's DNA and RNA underwent hundreds of mutations in space that gradually returned to normal once he was back on Earth.

Scott Kelly exhibited declining bone density, but a healing hormone kicked in during his exercise regimen on the space station. Still, his cognitive abilities and muscle dexterity showed signs of slowing a bit once he returned to Earth.

That will be a factor to consider when astronauts land on Mars after six months traveling through space. Setting up their living environment on the planet will present both physical and mental challenges.

NASA's plans for manned missions to Mars in the 2030s are still in the early stages. The rival civilian space programs that have popped up are shooting for a Mars mission in the early-to-mid-2020s. Whoever gets to Mars first will be better prepared for the challenges of space travel thanks to the Twins Study.

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Twins study offers valuable data on space travel - Herald-Whig - - Herald-Whig