Thursday, March 10, 2022

BUYBACKS, DIVIDENDS, NO CAPEX
OPEC Bonds With U.S. Shale Over ‘Dangerously’ Low Oil Spending




Kevin Crowley, Sergio Chapa and Paul Takahashi
Mon, March 7, 2022,

(Bloomberg) -- Outgoing head of OPEC Mohammad Barkindo met with U.S. shale producers Monday night in Houston and said both groups are aligned in how they see the challenges posed to the oil industry by underinvestment.

The theme of spending that’s insufficient to keep pace with strong global demand was a recurring one during the first day of CERAWeek by S&P Global, a major industry conference taking place in person for the first time in three years.

The event is happening against a backdrop of surging oil prices as buyers and traders worry Russian supplies may be subject to government sanctions because of the war in Ukraine. Brent crude hit a 13-year high Monday.

“Theres no doubt we need to engage the investment community, the financial community, to address the encumbrances that are turning out to be obstacles on our way to access capital,” Barkindo said in an interview following the dinner meeting.

“The world is gradually but dangerously running out of spare capacity which is the insurance buffer which is absolutely necessary for industry and for the world,” he said. “This is a function of the massive underinvestment in the industry in the last 10, 15 years.”

He said the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is “on the same page” as U.S. shale. In previous years, both groups have eyed each other warily or engaged in outright competition for market share.

But Barkindo struck a wistful tone after the dinner, which was attended by U.S. industry figures including EQT Corp. Chief Executive Officer Toby Rice, Hess Corp. CEO John Hess, Chesapeake Energy Corp. CEO Nick Dell’Osso, and Credit Suisse Group banker Tim Perry. The shale executives could be seen through the restaurant’s windows applauding Barkindo as he was presented with a bottle of Barnett shale. For Barkindo, a Nigerian, it was his last OPEC-shale dinner as secretary general. Kuwaiti oil executive Haitham al-Ghais succeeds him in the role in July.

“We went down memory lane,” Barkindo said. When he first came to CERAWeek several years ago, “I was not optimistic that I would be welcomed, listened to.” But, he added, “we realized that we had more that binds us together.”

U.S. shale shortages to limit efforts to replace banned Russian oil


A pump jack operates in the Permian Basin oil production area near Wink

Tue, March 8, 2022
By Arathy Somasekhar

HOUSTON (Reuters) - U.S. shale producers are unlikely to replace banned Russian oil imports due to a shortage of oilfield materials, equipment and labor and a dwindling backlog of wells waiting to be completed, energy executives and analysts said on Tuesday.

U.S. President Joe Biden imposed an immediate ban on Tuesday on Russian oil imports in retaliation for its invasion of Ukraine, putting a spotlight on shale producers' ability to boost output to make up for the loss of about 200,000 barrels per day of Russia crude typically imported by domestic refiners.

Shale has a short-cycle - able to add or reduce production relatively quickly - and in the past, producers have delivered explosive growth when prices allow.


In the Permian Basin, the top U.S. shale field, output jumped by 100,000 bpd nearly every month in 2018, according to U.S. government data.

But unlike 2018, there is a lack of oilfield materials, equipment and labor, and the fastest way to increase shale production - completing already drilled but not yet completed wells - has declined.

Shale wells waiting to be completed and turned on have fallen sharply to 4,466, the lowest since January 2014 and nearly half of the highs touched mid 2020, data showed.

"Drilled-but-uncompleted (DUC) wells represent latent potential, and that latent potential has shrunk," said Stacey Morris, research director at Alerian, an energy index provider.

Analysts warned the time needed to drill and complete a new well can take six to eight months.

Even though the U.S. rig count has climbed for a record 19 months in a row, its growth has been slow and oil production is still far from pre-pandemic record levels as many companies focus more on returning money to investors rather than boosting output.

Today's lack of materials, equipment and labor is "not adequately recognized as a significant impediment for growth," Occidental Petroleum Chief Executive Vicki Hollub said.

Oil producers which have not planned for volume growth this year cannot change and abandon commitments to allocate profits to debt reduction and shareholder returns, she said.

"Capital discipline today for oil companies is basically no (production) growth," Hollub said.

Shale companies have set their production budgets for the year and, like Occidental, cannot revise them without investor approval, said Pablo Prudencio, a senior analyst at energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie.

(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar and Liz Hampton in Houston)

OPEC chief says there's 'no capacity in the world' that could replace Russia's 7 million barrels a day in oil supply


Adam Morgan McCarthy
Tue, March 8, 2022

Mohammed Barkindo speaks to reporters in 2019AP


OPEC's secretary general said there isn't enough oil capacity to compensate for the loss of Russian supply.


The oil producer group has no control over the events that are driving prices, Mohammed Barkindo said Monday.


The US is reportedly prepared to go it alone with a ban on Russian oil imports over the Ukraine war.

Russian oil exports are crucial to global supply, and there are no sources that can compensate for the millions of barrels the country contributes, OPEC's secretary general has said.

The US is considering whether to ban imports of oil from Russia over its war on Ukraine, and there are fears Russia could redirect its volumes in response to Western sanctions. That has prompted debate as to whether there are alternatives to Russian oil on deck.


"There is no capacity in the world that could replace 7 millions barrels per day," OPEC chief Mohammed Barkindo told reporters at the Ceraweek conference, according to Reuters.

Barkindo, who has been OPEC's secretary general since 2016, was speaking at an industry conference in Houston on Monday as oil prices roared toward 14-year highs.

Brent crude was last up to 1.7% at $125.15 a barrel on Tuesday, rising for the third straight day after hitting $139.13 a barrel the previous session. WTI moved up 2.8% Tuessday.

But Barkindo downplayed the impact OPEC could make in the market as the conflict in Ukraine continues, and as Russia and the West trade moves and threats.

"We have no control over current events, geopolitics, and this is dictating the pace of the market," he said.

So far, OPEC and its allies — known as OPEC+ — have shown no interest in ramping up production, leading some analysts to say that this is contributing to the squeeze on supply.

Meanwhile, oil buyers and refiners have been "self-sanctioning" — staying clear of Russian supplies and looking for alternatives, market analysts have said.

The US is willing to act alone on a ban on Russian oil imports, if its European allies step back, Reuters reported.

But Germany's leader, Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said Russian energy was "of essential importance" to the daily life of its citizens, as he cautioned against the move.

"Supplying Europe with energy for heat generation, mobility, electricity supply and industry cannot be secured in any other way at the moment," Scholz said in a statement.

The threat of an import ban prompted Russia's deputy prime minister to issue a warning and predict oil prices could surge to $300 a barrel.

"It is absolutely clear that a rejection of Russian oil would lead to catastrophic consequences for the global market," Alexander Novak said on state television Monday.


Russia's Most Important Oil Export PartnersStatista

The US is willing to act alone on a ban on Russian oil imports, if its European allies step back, Reuters reported.

But Germany's leader, Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said Russian energy was "of essential importance" to the daily life of its citizens, as he cautioned against the move.

"Supplying Europe with energy for heat generation, mobility, electricity supply and industry cannot be secured in any other way at the moment," Scholz said in a statement.

The threat of an import ban prompted Russia's deputy prime minister to issue a warning and predict oil prices could surge to $300 a barrel.

"It is absolutely clear that a rejection of Russian oil would lead to catastrophic consequences for the global market," Alexander Novak said on state television Monday.

Read more: Bank of America predicts that a ban on Russian oil exports could push prices as high as $200 a barrel - and breaks down why this could trigger a global recession or stock market crash


GOING BACK TO ITS ROOTS

Russia proposes nationalising 

foreign-owned factories that shut 

operations

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -A senior member of Russia's ruling party has proposed nationalising foreign-owned factories that shut down operations in the country over what the Kremlin calls a special military operation in Ukraine.

Several foreign companies including Ford and Nike have announced temporary shutdowns of stores and factories in Russia in order to put pressure on the Kremlin to stop its invasion of neighbouring Ukraine and as their supply chains are disrupted.

In a statement published on Monday evening on the United Russia website, the secretary of the ruling party's general council Andrei Turchak said shutting operations was a "war" against the citizens of Russia.

The statement mentioned Finnish privately owned food companies Fazer, Valio and Paulig as the latest to announce closures in Russia.

"United Russia proposes nationalising production plants of the companies that announce their exit and the closure of production in Russia during the special operation in Ukraine," Turchak said.

"This is an extreme measure, but we will not tolerate being stabbed in the back, and we will protect our people. This is a real war, not against Russia as a whole, but against our citizens," he said.

"We will take tough retaliatory measures, acting in accordance with the laws of war," Turchak said.

Paulig Chief Executive told Reuters in an email this would not change its plans to withdraw from Russia. Fazer and Valio did not wish to comment when contacted by Reuters.

Fazer, which makes chocolate, bread and pastries, has three bakeries in St Petersburg and one in Moscow, employing around 2,300 people.

Valio has a cheese factory and employs 400 people in Russia, and Paulig has a coffee roastery and employs 200 people in the country.

Last week, non-NATO member Finland, which shares a border with Russia, agreed to strengthen security ties with the United States as it nervously watches Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

(Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen; additional reporting by Essi Lehto, editing by Ed Osmond, Kirsten Donovan and Lincoln Feast.)

Tobacco group BAT suspends Russia capital investments, scales back marketing

Signage is seen at the London offices of British American Tobacco, in London, Britain

Wed, March 9, 2022
By Richa Naidu

LONDON (Reuters) - Camel and Lucky Strike cigarette maker British American Tobacco Plc said on Wednesday its business in Russia continued to operate, but that it had suspended all planned capital investment in the country following the Ukraine invasion.

BAT, which has 2,500 workers in Russia and major local manufacturing operations, also said it was "scaling our business activities appropriate to the current situation, including rationalising our marketing activities."

The Ukraine crisis has put pressure on multinational companies to take action, with a growing list of consumer products manufacturers distancing themselves from Russia this week.

BAT's announcement comes hours after Philip Morris International Inc suspended its planned investments in Russia and said it would scale down manufacturing in the country. Smaller London-listed rival Imperial Brands also said on Wednesday that it had paused operations in Russia.

Nestle, tobacco groups, gamemaker Sony join move away from Russia

Nestle logo is pictured on the door of the supermarket of Nestle headquarters in Vevey

Wed, March 9, 2022


(Reuters) - Nestle, Philip Morris and video gamemaker Sony joined the list of multinationals stepping back from Russia on Wednesday as pressure mounts from consumers in the West to take a stand against the invasion of Ukraine.

Nestle, the world's biggest packaged foods group, and Mondeleze International, followed actions by rivals Procter & Gamble and Unilever in halting investment in Russia.

But the four companies will continue providing essentials, with Mondelez aiming to help to maintain "continuity" of the Russian food supply.

Similarly, while cigarette maker Imperial Brands suspended operations in Russia, rival Philip Morris only said it would scale down manufacturing, and Camel maker British American Tobacco Plc said its business in Russia continued to operate, even though it had suspended capital investment.

Sony, whose movie studio has already stopped releases in Russia, took additional action on Wednesday, saying its PlayStation gaming unit would stop shipments and operations in Russia. "Sony Interactive Entertainment joins the global community in calling for peace in Ukraine," it said.

Many businesses face difficulty working in Russia due to sanctions and a lack of shipping, in addition to pressure from consumers and investors, and describe ending work in Russia in more practical terms, without blaming the Russian government for attacking Ukraine.

Heavy equipment maker Deere & Co, saying it was "deeply saddened by the significant escalation of events in Ukraine," announced it had ended shipments to Russia two weeks ago, and subsequently to Belarus, and said it would follow U.S. and international sanctions. Caterpillar Inc said it was suspending business as supply chain disruptions and sanctions made business difficult and 3M followed suit after reassessing its business in Russia.

Still, pressure in the West is building.

A Rio Tinto executive early in the day said the miner was working to maintain supplies of Russian fuel to its Mongolian copper mine, but the company later announced it was terminating all commercial relationships with Russian businesses.

Hotel companies Hilton Worldwide Holdings and Hyatt Hotels Corp said they would suspend development in Russia.

Coca-Cola Co and McDonald's Corp halted sales in Russia on Tuesday in symbolically potent gestures. A senior member of the Russian ruling party has warned that foreign firms that close down could end up having their operations nationalised.

McDonald's said the temporary closure of its 847 stores in the country would cost it $50 million a month.

Sportswear firm Adidas also quantified the cost of scaling back its operations, saying it would take a hit to sales of up to 250 million euros ($277 million).

Yum Brands Inc, parent of fried chicken giant KFC, said it was pausing investments in Russia, a market that helped it achieve record development last year.

Carlsberg said it was suspending Russian brewing of its namesake brand of beer while keeping its Russian Baltika brand operating.

"We feel a moral obligation to our Russian colleagues who are an integral part of Carlsberg, and who are not responsible for the actions of the Government," Carlsberg said, adding it was withdrawing financial guidance for the year.

E-commerce company Shopify Inc joined the crowd, saying it would suspend Russian operations and collect no fees from Ukrainian merchants, citing millions of Ukrainian refugees needing support.

'LAWS OF WAR'

In response to the exodus, Andrei Turchak, secretary of the ruling United Russia party's general council, warned Moscow might nationalise idled foreign assets.

"United Russia proposes nationalising production plants of the companies that announce their exit and the closure of production in Russia during the special operation in Ukraine," Turchak wrote in a statement published on the party's website on Monday.

The statement named Finnish privately owned food companies Fazer, Valio and Paulig as the latest to announce closures.

"We will take tough retaliatory measures, acting in accordance with the laws of war," Turchak said.

SANCTIONS

Moscow, which calls its invasion of Ukraine a "special military operation," has been hit by sweeping Western sanctions that have choked trade, led to the collapse of the rouble and further isolated the country.

Banks and billionaires have also been targeted, with the European Commission preparing new sanctions targeting additional Russian oligarchs and politicians, and three Belarusian banks, Reuters reported.

While the war in Ukraine and the sanctions have bolstered prices for commodities that Russia exports such as oil, natural gas and titanium, those sanctions have largely barred Moscow from taking advantage of the high prices.

On Tuesday the United States banned Russian oil imports.

U.S. oilfield services company Schlumberger, which derives about 5% of its revenue from Russia, said the ongoing conflict would likely hurt results this quarter.

Global commodities trader Trafigura Group raised a $1.2 billion revolving credit facility from banks to help address soaring energy and commodity prices.

Norway's Yara, a top fertiliser maker, said on Wednesday it would curtail ammonia and urea output in Italy and France due to surging gas prices.

($1 = 0.9037 euro)

(Reporting by Reuters bureaux, Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen, Rithika Krishna, Aishwarya Nair and Mrinalika Roy in Bengaluru, Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles, Bianca Flowers in Chicago, Denny Thomas in Toronto and Ernest Scheyder in Houston; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh, Paul Sandle and Peter Henderson; Editing by Jason Neely, Jane Merriman, Matthew Lewis and Lincoln Feast.)

Ukraine crisis: Which major Western fast food chains are still open in Russia?

Andy Wells
·Freelance Writer
Wed, March 9, 2022


The Ukraine crisis has seen many major brands suspend operation in Russia – including several fast food chains.

Following widespread criticism, Coca-Cola, Starbucks, and McDonald’s have joined others by halting business in Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine.

The three major brands all announced the move within hours of each other on Tuesday.

In a statement posted to its website, Starbucks announced it is “suspending all business activity in Russia”.

Dunkin' Donuts have stores still open in Russia. (Getty)

Papa John's stories remain open in Russia. (Getty)

Starbucks chief executive Kevin Johnson said in a statement posted on the website that the company condemns “the horrific attacks on Ukraine by Russia and our hearts go out to all those affected”.

It came just hours after McDonald’s announced the temporary closure of all restaurants in Russia in 850 different communities.

However, some fast food chains with stores in Russia appear to still be operating, with no immediate mention of halting business on company websites.

They are:


Burger King – 550 stores


Domino’s Pizza – 121 stores as of 2017


Papa John’s – 197 stores as of 2019


Subway – Around 600 stores


Dunkin’ Donuts – Around 20 stores

McDonald's has announced the closure of all its restaurants in Russia. (Getty)

KFC and Pizza Hut also have stores open in Russia but parent company Yum Brands Inc said they were finalising an agreement to suspend all Pizza Hut restaurant operations in Russia.

Seventy company-owned KFC stores are also set to close, while investment in Russia is set to be paused.

However, with at least 1,000 KFC stores in Russia, many will remain open but the majority are owned and operated independently through franchise agreements, meaning the company has significantly less control on closing those stores.

Yum Brands said in a statement: "Like so many across the world, we are shocked and saddened by the tragic events unfolding in Ukraine.

"Yum Brands has suspended all investment and restaurant development in Russia while we continue to assess additional options."

A man walks past a Domino's Pizza restaurant in Moscow, Russia. (Reuters)

Many KFC stores in Russia are independently owned and remain open. (Kirill Kukhmar\TASS via Getty)

Burger King stores in Russia remain open due to franchise issues. (Getty)

Similarly, Restaurant Brands International Inc, the parent company of Burger King, said that their more than 800 restaurants remain open in Russia as they are owned and operated by local franchisees.

A spokesperson for the company told Yahoo News UK that Burger King has committed $3m to immediately support Ukrainian refugees.

They added: “We are watching the attack on Ukraine and its people with horror and are focusing our efforts in the region on contributing to the safety of Ukrainians seeking shelter and security for their families.”

An apartment building damaged after shelling the day before in Ukraine's second-biggest city of Kharkiv. (Getty)

Domino’s Pizza, Papa John’s, Subway and Dunkin’ Donuts have all been contacted for comment.

In an article shared to the McDonald’s website on Tuesday – which was originally sent to employees and franchisees by email – CEO Chris Kempczinski said: “The conflict in Ukraine and the humanitarian crisis in Europe has caused unspeakable suffering to innocent people.”

Kempczinski said it would continue to pay the 62,000 employees in Russia although the company “cannot ignore the needless human suffering unfolding in Ukraine”.

FIVE EYES
Russia, China in 'strategic convergence' -Australian intelligence


 A Chinese flag is seen near a construction site in Beijing's central business area


Tue, March 8, 2022


SYDNEY (Reuters) - A "troubling new strategic convergence" between Beijing and Moscow has developed and the risk of "major power conflict" had grown since Russia invaded Ukraine, Australia's intelligence chief said on Wednesday.

Andrew Shearer, director general of the Office of National Intelligence, said China's President Xi Jinping appears to be planning to dominate the Indo-Pacific region and use it as a base to overtake the United States as the world's leading power.

The comments reinforce warnings that the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has met near-universal condemnation by the West, may spread into a regional or global conflict. This week Australian Prime Minister called on liberal democracies to stop an "arc of autocracy" reshaping the world.

"We're going to have to work much harder to maintain the liberal quality of the rules-based order in Europe and here in the Indo-Pacific region," Shearer said at a conference hosted by the Australian Financial Review.


"We see a leader who's really battening down and hardening his country for this struggle to overtake the United States as the world's leading power," he added, referring to Xi.

"The base camp ... is to establish primacy in the Indo-Pacific region."

Shearer said the geopolitical threat would centre around technology, including use of cyber attacks, so Australia must bolster its cyber defences without closing itself to trade and information-sharing.

"We need a growing, open economy so we can fund the increases in defence spending that the government's committed to, but this can't be a zero sum trade-off between economics and security," he said.

Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which it has called a "special operation", Australian intelligence professionals considered that "a major power conflict unfortunately is becoming a less remote prospect than it was previously", Shearer said.

He echoed many Western commentators by saying he was surprised by the effectiveness of Ukraine's resistance to Russian forces. But he foreshadowed a "brutal, bloody couple of weeks" since Russian leader Vladimir Putin had "everything at stake now (and) it's hard to see an elegant, or inelegant, dismount".

The Kremlin describes its actions as a "special operation" to disarm Ukraine and unseat leaders it calls neo-Nazis. Ukraine and Western allies call this a baseless pretext for a war of choice that has raised fears of wider conflict in Europe.

A Chinese foreign ministry official told reporters on Wednesday that he was not aware of Shearer's remarks.

But Shearer should pay more attention to the "ignorance of Australia's commitment to non-proliferation" as a result of the trilateral AUKUS agreement that will provide Australia with nuclear-powered submarines, said Zhao Lijian, a spokesman at the Chinese ministry.

Under a trilateral security partnership announced last year, Australia is to build at least eight nuclear-powered submarines with U.S. and British technology.

"This is what is truly troubling for the region," said Zhao.

(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Additional reporting by Eduardo Baptista in Beijing; Editing by Michael Perry)
'Energy transition? Leave us out,' say African energy leaders


A vertical gas flaring furnace is seen in Ughelli

Tue, March 8, 2022, 
By Sabrina Valle and Arathy Somasekhar

HOUSTON (Reuters) - Developing countries should not have to target renewable energy sources and turn away from fossil fuels, Nigerian and Equatorial Guinea energy officials said on Wednesday, joining other emerging oil-producing nations reluctant to embrace the global energy transition trend.

Emerging economies must contend with higher fuel costs at a time when millions lack access to reliable energy sources while also dealing with extreme climate events.

Some 900 million people in the world, most of them in Africa, still have no access to energy for basic needs, Nigeria's oil Minister Timipre Marlin Sylva said during the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston.


"We are still in transition from firewood to gas," Sylva said. "Please allow us to continue with our own transition."

Equatorial Guinea Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons Gabriel Obiang Lima echoed those concerns, saying pressure over renewables is "very unjust", with a discussion on how to transition only possible after the energy security crisis is over.

The 38 members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), some of the richest countries worldwide, along with Russia, China and India, account for more than two-thirds of the world's oil demand. The rest, which includes Africa, most of Asia and Latin America, accounts for just 31%, according to OPEC data.

"Every emerging economy has to have the right to access reliable, safe energy," said Tengku Muhammad Taufik, president and CEO of Malaysia's state-owned Petronas.

Other countries with oil discoveries still in development, including Ghana, Guyana and Suriname, also have said they cannot be expected to give up the chance to benefit from oil and gas that helped build more developed economies.

"They want all of us, including those of us without food, to carry the burden of transition," Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) general manager Bala Wunti said.

Nigeria now faces a double blow from high prices of gas for cooking that it imports and lack of investment in its oil industry, Sylva said, as banks and funds have been pushing to restrict investment in oil globally to cut greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.

Nigeria has had to cut oil production from 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to less than 1.5 million bpd due to lack of financing to maintain its facilities, Sylva said.

That lost production could have helped contribute to global supply as the world now seeks alternatives to Russian oil after buyers halted purchases over its invasion of Ukraine, he said. Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a "special operation".

Investors backing renewable fuels have cut financing for oil projects, reducing production of oil, gas and coal faster than renewable sources of energy could replace them, pushing prices up, he said.

"It was expected we were going to arrive at this point where we have an energy crisis," Sylva said. "There is a gap."

(Reporting by Sabrina Valle; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and David Gregorio)
Finland detects GPS disturbance near Russia's Kaliningrad

HELSINKI, March 9 (Reuters) - Finnair said on Wednesday it had noticed interference with its planes' GPS signals near Russia's Kaliningrad enclave, while other aircraft reported similar problems near Finland's eastern border with Russia since Sunday, Finnish authorities said.

The interference began soon after Finland's President Sauli Niinisto met U.S. counterpart Joe Biden in Washington on Saturday to discuss deepening defence ties between Finland and NATO due to Russia's attack on Ukraine.

Prime Minister Sanna Marin told Reuters on Wednesday she had no information about the source of the disturbances, nor about whether they originated in Russia, while the Foreign ministry said it was looking into the events.

"If they would be caused by outside influence, it would surely be said publicly," Marin said.

The Kremlin did not immediately reply to a request for comment about the reported interference.

Some of Finnair's Asian flights and most of its European ones go past Kaliningrad, which is sandwiched between NATO members Lithuania and Poland on the Baltic Sea's eastern coast, the company told Reuters.

"Our pilots have noticed interference in GPS near the Kaliningrad area in the past few days," a spokesperson for Finland's national carrier said in an email.

Some 10 aircraft have also reported unusual disturbances in GPS signals near Finland's eastern border with Russia since last Sunday, Finnish Transport and Communications Agency Traficom said on Tuesday.

Traficom said it had asked aviation authorities to alert aircraft pilots to the situation by issuing an official Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) notification. The disturbances were continuing, it said.

"Flying is still safe. Airlines have operational procedures for such situations if the GPS signal is lost," Traficom's director Jari Pontinen said in a statement.

Lithuanian airline Transaviabaltika told Reuters it had been forced to cancel 18 flights between Helsinki and Savonlinna in eastern Finland after the lack of GPS made it impossible to land because Savonlinna airport does not have alternative navigation equipment.

"We have made three attempts to fly to Savonlinna. So far, we have not succeeded," Manager Rene Must from Transaviabaltika told Reuters.

Electromagnetic radiation from the sun and signal jamming are the only two reasons that could explain such long-lasting disturbances that affect several planes, Director Jukka Savolainen from HybridCoE, a pan-European organisation that seeks to counter hybrid threats, told Reuters.

"States can have systems to see where the jamming comes from if they happen to be turned on and in that direction," he said.

 (Reporting by Essi Lehto and Anne Kauranen in Helsinki, Editing by William Maclean)

Russia admits it sent young conscripts

 into its Ukraine war after Putin denied

those troops were involved


  • Russia's army said on Wednesday that young draftees were sent to fight in its war against Ukraine.

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin previously denied that conscripts were involved in the attack.

  • Some of the conscripts have been captured, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said.

Russia's military admitted on Wednesday that young draftees were sent to fight in its war against Ukraine after Russian President Vladimir Putin denied that conscripts were involved in the attack.

"Unfortunately, some facts have come to light about the presence of conscript servicemen among the Russian armed forces conducting the special military operation on Ukrainian territory," said Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov.

"Practically all of the conscripts have been returned to the territory of the Russian Federation," Konashenkov added.

Konashenkov said, however, that some of the conscripts have been captured.

"In addition, one of the divisions operating toll security has been attacked by a diversionist group of the national battalion," he said, adding, "A number of military personnel, some of which conscripts, were captured in this attack."

Konashenkov continued, "Effective immediately, exhaustive measures have been taken to prevent conscripts from entering any and all combat zones, and to free captured personnel."

Earlier this week, Putin said that only "professional" Russian soldiers were sent in to invade Ukraine and that he would not send conscripts to fight, according to The Moscow Times.

The Kremlin said on Wednesday Putin ordered conscripts to be excluded from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, according to Russian state media.

Before Russia launched its February 24 attack on Ukraine, Putin had instructed all military commanders "to categorically exclude the involvement of conscripts for any tasks on the territory of Ukraine," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, the state-owned TASS news agency reported.

"In connection with the facts of the presence of a number of conscripts in the units of the armed forces who are participating in a special military operation on the territory of Ukraine, at the direction of the President of Russia, materials have been sent to the Chief Military Prosecutor's Office to verify and legally assess the actions and punish officials responsible for failure to comply with this order," Peskov said, according to TASS.

Translations by Nikita Angarski.

Russia acknowledges conscripts were part of Ukraine operation, some are POWs

Russian Army military vehicle drives along a street in Armyansk

(Reuters) - Russia's defence ministry acknowledged on Wednesday that some conscripts were taking part in the conflict with Ukraine after President Vladimir Putin denied this on various occasions, saying only professional soldiers and officers had been sent in.

The ministry said that some of them, serving in supply units, had been taken prisoner by the Ukrainian army since the fighting began on Feb. 24.

Citing Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov, the RIA news agency said Putin had ordered military prosecutors to investigate and punish the officials responsible for disobeying his instructions to exclude conscripts from the operation.

Some associations of soldiers' mothers in Russia had raised concerns about a number of conscripts going incommunicado at the start of what Kremlin calls a "special military operation" in Ukraine, suggesting they could have been sent to fight despite a lack of adequate training.

The Kremlin and military authorities had denied it until now. Last week, Russia's parliament passed a law imposing a prison term of up to 15 years for spreading intentionally "fake" news about the military.

"Unfortunately, we have discovered several facts of the presence of conscripts in units taking part in the special military operation in Ukraine. Practically all such soldiers have been pulled out to Russia," the defence ministry said, promising to prevent such situations in the future.

One mother of a conscript, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said her 19-year-old son's military unit was sent south to the Russian city of Kursk soon after he started his military service and was then moved to Belgorod, a town closer to the Ukrainian border, for training.

She says that judging by the few phone calls she had received, he had not yet been deployed into Ukraine and had not signed a contract to do so. "I am not sure what will happen tomorrow," she told Reuters by telephone.

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Alison Williams, Alex Richardson, William Maclean)

Who's Tucker Carlson to demand anyone ‘Show Her Papers’?

Charles M. Blow
Wed, March 9, 2022, 

Charles M. Blow

Fox News host Tucker Carlson briefly went to a Swiss boarding school before reportedly being kicked out. He went on to graduate from Trinity College. In a 1991 yearbook entry, he described himself as being part of the “Dan White Society,” an apparent allusion to the homophobe who killed San Francisco’s mayor, George Moscone, and Supervisor Harvey Milk, California’s first openly gay elected official, in 1978.

After graduation, The Columbia Journalism Review reported, “Carlson applied to the CIA, but his application was denied, so he turned to journalism. ‘You should consider journalism,’ his father told him. ‘They’ll take anybody.’ ”

That same Tucker Carlson last week demanded that Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, a Black woman who is President Joe Biden’s nominee for the Supreme Court, prove that she is qualified. He demanded that she show her papers. “It might be time for Joe Biden to let us know what Ketanji Brown Jackson’s LSAT score was," he said on Fox News. "How did she do? … It would seem like Americans in a democracy have a right to know.”


It is outrageous, to be sure. What was Jackson doing in 1991 when Carlson was identifying with the homicidal homophobe? She was studying government at Harvard University while being a student organizer for civil rights causes, and she would graduate magna cum laude the next year. One thing to which successful Black people can attest is that you are sometimes, even often, asked to prove your credentials, to demonstrate that you have earned your way, often by far less credentialed questioners.

Donald Trump — whose time at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania is shrouded in mystery — made a name for himself in politics by questioning the legitimacy, qualifications and pedigree of Barack Obama. Speaking at CPAC in February 2011, Trump said of Obama: “Our current president came out of nowhere, came out of nowhere. In fact, I’ll go a step further: The people that went to school with them, they don’t even know — they never saw him. They don’t know who he is. Crazy.”

Trump also claimed that Obama didn’t write his first book. He insisted that Bill Ayers, who happens to be white, had to be the author of the first book. And it didn’t stop there. In 2012, Trump offered to donate $5 million to the charity of Obama’s choosing if Obama would release his college and passport records.

These episodes struck such a nerve because it isn’t only presidents or Supreme Court picks who have to present proof of their credentials. Too many people, Black and of other races, have had to do the same at some point in their lives. It is humiliating and degrading. It has happened to me several times, and I will share one.

Before I was a columnist, I was an information graphics journalist, a profession that deals with data, sometimes reams of it, to produce maps, charts, diagrams and the like. The New York Times was then, and remains, a leader in the field. And as its graphics director, I was in charge of its efforts. But that field was an overwhelmingly white world. So, for some, my presence was incongruous.

One year I was in Pamplona, Spain, judging the international information graphics awards. The student helpers invited some of the judges out to a bar after dinner. The bar was a cavernous space with an overwhelming amount of flashing and spinning lights.

The students introduced me to some of the locals with my title and the kind of work that I did. No one believed them. I could speak almost no Spanish, but the locals’ "noes" were as clear as their shaking heads. The students confirmed that the locals didn’t believe I could possibly be who they said I was. Before the exchange was finished, I found myself pulling out my Times ID, to the astonishment of the locals.

This is not an isolated incident. People the world over carry so much anti-Blackness that Black excellence to them is an assault on their worldview. They think, “This person, this Black person, can’t possibly be as good as he says, good enough to have earned her station.” They must find a way to attribute it to something else: an unfair advantage, a giving of preference, a bending of the curve.

In the end, all these demands boil down to one thing, ancient and metastatic: racism.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Ukraine Ambassador Gives Russian Diplomats Some Scathing 'Mental Help' Advice

Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Nations gave Russian diplomats some unsolicited mental health advice in response to their latest wild claim.

The Russian embassy in London on Monday tweeted that Russia, which attacked Ukraine, is actually attempting to stop a war in Ukraine.

Sergiy Kyslytsya, Ukraine’s U.N. ambassador, held up the tweet, read the message and fired back.

“Let me remind the Russian diplomats that in London, in case of need for mental help, you can dial NHS line 111,” he wrote, referring to the emergency number for the National Health Service in the U.K. “Thank you.”

Russia attacked Ukraine and is currently under investigation for alleged war crimes after multiple reported attacks on civilian targets as well as for creating a massive humanitarian crisis in which 1.5 million people have fled the nation so far.

Kyslytsya made headlines soon after the invasion began by delivering a blunt warning to Russian leaders during an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting.

“There is no purgatory for war criminals,” he told Russian Ambassador Vasily Nebenzya. “They go straight to hell, ambassador.”

On social media, others took issue with the same post from the Russian embassy in London that provoked the response from Kyslytsya:

This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.

Ukrainian women fleeing war find welcome, and work, in Eastern Europe

By Krisztina Than

Wed, March 9, 2022, 

* Hundreds of thousands, mostly women and children, have fled war

* Fast-growing economies in Eastern Europe welcoming worker influx

* Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Romania all keen to fill jobs

* Employers, agencies, providing accommodation for new arrivals

* Some worry energy prices, parts shortages will lead to slowdown

VESZPREM, Hungary, March 9 (Reuters) - Two days after arriving from the bombarded outskirts of Kyiv following a gruelling journey, 24-year-old Ukrainian Olga Yasnopolska signed a contract to work for a large German automotive parts supplier in western Hungary.

She is one of hundreds of thousands of refugees, mostly women and children, who have poured into Eastern Europe seeking safety since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24.

The region's fast-growing economies, which have been struggling with a chronic shortage of workers that pre-dates even the COVID-19 pandemic, are welcoming the refugees with open arms.

Olga fled Hostomel, northwest of Kyiv, three days after the war broke out with her mother, Valentina, her 8-month-old and 11-year-old cousins and their mother, sharing a car with seven other people, with some of the children in the boot.

They arrived in the quaint town of Veszprem on Sunday, where a friend had given them contacts for a temporary work agency that employs 1,200 to 1,300 Ukrainians in western Hungary.

Yasnopolska, who worked for the railways in Ukraine, said the job contract gave her some sense of security.

"It's a relief that we have somewhere to stay and now I have a job, and we are in safety," she said, with a tired, faint smile. "I'm not sure I will be able to go back there."

The three women now live in a flat rented by the temp agency in nearby Varpalota with the two children.

Olga Batozhinska, the mother of the 8-month-old whose husband stayed behind to fight, is still haunted by the memories of spending nights in the shelter in Hostomel, in freezing cold.

"I woke up to feed my baby and heard continuous shelling, the entire house shook," she said, showing photos on her phone of the shelter and how they had to sleep on the ground at a railway station en route in Ukraine.

She also hopes to find a job soon that will allow her to take care of her baby.

'UKRAINIAN-FRIENDLY JOBS'

In the wake of the European Union's 2015 migration crisis some eastern members, led by Poland and Hungary, refused to take in people fleeing war and poverty, saying an influx from Africa and the Middle East would threaten their Christian traditions.

But hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians had been working in Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic even before the current exodus.

Since last year, companies across the manufacturing, information technology and construction sectors in the region have been jostling to attract employees as their economies rebounded fast from the COVID-19 induced slump.

Czech job vacancies climbed to a record high of nearly 364,000 in February. Romanian vacancies reached 45,600 in the fourth quarter of 2021, up by 10,000 in annual terms.

In Poland, which has been a top destination for Ukrainian workers for years and has received more than 1.3 million refugees since the war began, employers reported 116,500 job vacancies in February.

Work agencies and companies are now hoping to tap into the large pool of refugees, trying to arrange accommodation for Ukrainian workers' family members and their children.

"This 1 million women with children is in reality about half a million people who can actually enter the workforce and the Polish economy will be able to absorb them easily within a few, three or four months," said Krzysztof Inglot of the Employers of Poland Association.

BestJobs, a Romanian recruitment platform with 32,000 open positions, has introduced a "Ukrainian friendly jobs" tag.

Jitka Souckova, marketing director of Grafton Recruitment in Prague, said there were many jobs in manufacturing or logistics, where Ukrainians could work even without speaking Czech.

"Since the beginning of the conflict, we have employed almost 200 women and accommodated their children," she said.

Gabor Berta, head of the Man at Work temp agency office in Veszprem, through which Yasnopolska found her job, said the biggest problem was finding accommodation for all the Ukrainian workers they have placed and their families.

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit and the economy tanked, many Ukrainian workers lost their jobs and had gone home, he said. Now some firms are cautious, fearing components shortages and soaring energy prices will cause another slowdown.

"This situation is different," he said. "Here you cannot say to the Ukrainian employee that 'I am sorry I have too many workers now', or 'sorry we need to halt production, please can you go home'. Now, they cannot go home."

DESPERATION

The Hungarian plant of Mannheim-based Pepperl+Fuchs, which makes industrial sensors for factory automation, employs 146 Ukrainian workers, along with 420 Hungarians, mostly women.

"It was terrible to see the desperation of our women (employees) ... they set off rightaway, to bring out their families, as many of them have young children left behind in Ukraine," said human resources director Barbara Vamosi.

Vamosi said the morning after war broke out, the HR chiefs of companies employing Ukrainians in Veszprem got together trying to find ways to help their Ukrainian employees.

"We are expecting (to hire) a further 20-25 workers primarily from among refugees, but there are also our colleagues who try to bring out their families ... we will employ them."

In the canteen, Ukrainian and Hungarian workers together prepared sandwiches and aid packages on Tuesday, which Vamosi and her colleagues would take to Budapest to the railway station where packed trains arrive daily from the border. (Writing by Krisztina Than; Additional reporting by Jason Hovet in Prague, Luiza Ilie in Bucharest and Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk in Warsaw; Editing by Alex Richardson)