Saturday, November 25, 2023

Biden's clean energy agenda faces mounting headwinds

Fri, November 24, 2023 




By Nichola Groom and Jarrett Renshaw

(Reuters) - Canceled offshore wind projects, imperiled solar factories, fading demand for electric vehicles.

A year after passage of the largest climate change legislation in U.S. history, meant to touch off a boom in American clean energy development, economic realities are fraying President Joe Biden’s agenda.

Soaring financing and materials costs, unreliable supply chains, delayed rulemaking in Washington and sluggish permitting have wrought havoc ranging from offshore wind developer Orsted’s project cancellations in the U.S. Northeast, to Tesla, Ford and GM’s scaled back EV manufacturing plans.

The darkening outlook for clean energy industries is tough news for Biden, whose pledge to deliver a net-zero economy by 2050 faces headwinds that the landmark Inflation Reduction Act's billions in tax credits alone can't resolve.

After walking into last year’s United Nations climate summit in Egypt touting the IRA as evidence of unprecedented progress in the fight against climate change, Biden is expected to skip this year’s event in Dubai amid dire warnings that the world is moving too slowly to avert the worst of global warming.

Clean energy experts interviewed by Reuters say the mounting setbacks will make the United States' ambitious targets to decarbonize by mid-century even harder to reach.

"While we see healthy numbers being deployed each and every quarter and we're continuing to be on a growth path, it's certainly not at the level that is required to hit some of those targets," said John Hensley, vice president for the clean energy trade group American Clean Power Association (ACP).

The dynamics of soaring costs and broken supply chains are also slamming projects in other regions. No major nation is on track to meet the emissions reduction goals outlined in the United Nations' Paris accord, which aims to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, according to Wood Mackenzie.

A White House official said that while there have been macroeconomic setbacks and bottlenecks at the local level to renewable energy deployment, there are plenty of examples of progress, including an expanding EV market and Dominion Energy Inc making headway on the nation’s largest offshore wind farm off the coast of Virginia.

“In the face of headwinds that are macro in nature, headwinds that affect decision making across the economy, this has been a resilient trajectory," White House National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi said in an interview. He said the United States will achieve it's climate goals.

TEN MILLION HOMES

More than 56 gigawatts of clean power projects, enough to power nearly 10 million homes, have been delayed since late 2021, according to an ACP analysis. Solar energy facilities account for two thirds of those delays due in part to U.S. import restrictions. Washington has been trying to combat the use of forced labor and tariff-dodging in a panel supply chain that is dominated by Chinese goods.

Issues like permitting gridlock, local fights over where to site solar and wind projects and a grid connection process that can take an average of five years are also routinely cited by developers as among the industry's biggest challenges.

"In a number of areas investment has increased," Prakash Sharma, vice president of scenarios and technologies at Wood Mackenzie said in an interview. "But then when it comes to some of those permitting and approvals that are required to push projects forward, or infrastructure development, that's an issue which IRA cannot solve."

Tight supplies and strong demand for renewables from utilities and corporations have also driven up contract prices, which could mean higher costs for consumers. Solar contract prices rose 4% to hit $50/MWh for the first time ever in the third quarter, according to tracking firm LevelTen.

Vic Abate, Chief Executive of GE Vernova's wind business, said progress is happening more slowly than some had anticipated, but was not fundamentally off course.

"I'm not betting against the IRA," he said in an interview. "This is more of a question of when. If last year people were thinking '23 to '24, it's probably more '24 to '25."

The IRA aims to shore up the U.S. clean energy supply chain by incentivizing domestic production of equipment like solar panels and wind turbines, but recently manufacturers have warned that a wave of new Asian capacity is threatening the viability of dozens of planned American factories.

Turmoil in the nascent U.S. offshore wind industry, meanwhile, is perhaps the most high profile setback. Developers like Orsted, BP and Equinor have sought to renegotiate or cancel contracts due to soaring costs, and have taken multi-billion dollar writedowns on projects. Players also largely failed to show up for a federal sale of wind leases in the Gulf of Mexico in August. The Biden administration's target of deploying 30 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030 is now widely regarded as unattainable.

Meanwhile, some corporations are delaying investment decisions while awaiting the Treasury Department to craft rules on how the IRA's tax credits can be used.

Robert Walther, director of federal affairs at ethanol maker POET, for example, says his company is waiting on the design of tax credits for sustainable aviation fuel under the IRA, to see whether the corn-based fuel can qualify as a feedstock.

"We're not pulling the trigger on anything until we know what the value of these tax credits are," Walther said.

Still, the U.S. can be proud of how it is tackling climate change, particularly when compared with the Trump administration's relatively recent efforts to roll back policies that protect the climate, according to Dan Reicher, a scholar at Stanford University.

"These are the normal ups and downs of clean energy development and deployment," Reicher said.

"I think we can go to COP with our chin held high that we're making some real progress."

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Alistair Bell)

A tiny ancient elephant that roamed Sicily 200,000 years ago had babies the size of pet dogs

  • Scientists discovered this ancient elephant fossil on the island of Sicily.

  • They said the elephant shrunk rapidly over a million years because of the constraints of the island.

  • The tiny elephant, and its baby, are on display as models at the American Museum of Natural History.

Imagine a world where you could have an elephant the size of a Shetland pony. Turns out, if you had been alive some hundreds of thousands of years ago, that might've been possible.

Over a hundred years ago, in the late 19th century, researchers discovered the bones of an ancient elephant in Sicily, near Syracuse.

After analyzing the DNA within the bones, scientists were able to construct a picture of how this animal may have looked, which is now displayed in a new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History, in NYC.

This elephant isn't just, "really cute," Alexandra van der Geer, a paleontologist at Leiden University, in the Netherlands, and a consultant for the exhibit, told Business Insider. It's also, "really an amazing example of extreme evolution," she said.

Extreme elephant evolution


The juvenile Sicilian dwarf elephant. It had hair to help it keep warm.Maiya Focht

These ancient elephants evolved from a common elephant ancestor, the straight-tusked elephant, which was even bigger than modern elephants, weighing in at about 10 tons and standing over 12 feet tall.

In less than a million years, evolutionary pressures caused that mega-elephant to morph into the Sicilian dwarf elephant represented by the fossil here. It was about 6.5 feet tall and weighed 1.7 tons. Its baby, shown in the reconstructions from the AMNH, was even smaller, standing around the size of a mid-sized dog, like a poodle.

Researchers from across Europe, who studied dwarf elephant fossils in order to estimate the animal's body size, said that the giant straight-tusked elephant evolving into the Sicilian dwarf elephant would be like if an adult human shrank to the size of a Rhesus macaque monkey, which is about 1.65 feet tall.

Van de Geer said that this shrinking is especially shocking because it happened on a short time scale, by evolutionary standards. "It is fast. A million years may sound for humans may sound really long. A million years, you can do a lot of things in a million years. But for evolution, that's a short time," she said.

Why did this ancient elephant get so tiny?

Since it was first discovered, scientists have been analyzing different features of the fossils to try to figure out how quickly the elephant went from a gigantic ancient animal into this bite-sized version.

The giant straight-tusked elephants roamed all over what became the European continent around 40,000 to 800,000 years ago, according to the European researchers' study, which was published in the peer-reviewed journal Current Biology.

But when the land masses began to break off or separate because of sea level change, elephant species began evolving in different ways in order to best adapt to their environment. One group of giant straight-tusked elephants moved to Sicily about 200,000 years ago.

From there, a rule of evolutionary biology seems to have taken hold, Ross MacPhee, the curator of the AMNH's Secret World of Elephants, told BI. Species that once lived in mainland areas typically have to adapt to very different environments when they move to islands, and they end up evolving vastly different traits.

For example, MacPhee explained, there's probably a lot less food available on an island and fewer predators. In those conditions, it makes sense to evolve into a smaller species that can eat less to survive. Especially when you don't have to worry about being eaten by big bad predators.

Basically, MacPhee said, "To be on an island, it's bad to be big."

Understanding cases like the Sicilian dwarf elephant helps scientists better understand evolution as a whole, Van der Geer, said. It's survival of the fittest, at the end of the day. "It's a constant fight. Evolution is a fight," she said.

CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Republican Senate candidate’s family egg company caught in price-fixing plot

Victoria Bekiempis and agencies
Thu, November 23, 2023 

Photograph: Aaron Piper/AP

The family farming company of a Republican candidate for the US Senate was found liable on Tuesday in a plot to fix the price of eggs.

Related: Pussy Riot founder protests Indiana’s ban on nearly all abortions

Rose Acre Farms, which claims to be the second-largest egg producer in the country and until September was chaired by John Rust – now running as a Senate candidate for Indiana – was accused in a civil suit of cutting supply to raise prices.

Food giants including Kraft, Kellog, General Mills and Nestlé filed the suit in Illinois federal court, arguing that between 1999 and 2008 Rose Acre and other producers – Cal-Maine Foods, United Egg Producers and United States Egg Marketers – “unlawfully agreed to and did engage in a conspiracy to control supply and artificially maintain and increase the price of eggs”.

Jurors agreed, finding that the egg suppliers had exported eggs to cut supply in the US market, as well as limiting the number of hens, reducing flocks and killing chickens earlier than they usually did.

The food giants argued that, as companies which buy eggs, these moves hurt them by artificially driving up their costs.

The court will consider damages starting on 29 November.

Rust chaired the board of Rose Acre until September of this year, when his brother took over. His candidacy for Senate has met setbacks: his opponent, Congressman Jim Banks, was endorsed by the Indiana Republican party and, perhaps more important for GOP candidates, by ex-president Donald Trump.

Rust is also suing Indiana over a statute that could bar him from appearing on the ballot, as it stipulates that candidates must vote in two primaries for the party with which they are affiliated, or else have their candidacy approved by a county party chair. Rust did cast his ballot as a Republican during the 2016 primary, but voted in Democratic primaries from 2006 and 2012, according to the Indianapolis Star.

Banks seized on the jury’s decision against his opponent. “Today’s verdict proves John Rust isn’t just a conman pretending to be a Republican, he is a crook who exploits working-class Hoosiers across Indiana for his own financial gain,” the Associated Press quoted Banks as saying. “While Indiana families struggle to put food on the table, he’s making it even harder to do that.”

VW struggling with S.Africa costs as group targets savings - executive


Volkswagen CEO of the VW Passenger Cars Brand Thomas Schaefer speaks with Reuters in Johannesburg


Fri, November 24, 2023 
By Joe Bavier

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - A senior Volkswagen executive involved in a global cost-cutting strategy said on Friday he was "very worried" about the future of the company's operations in South Africa, which is fighting persistent power cuts and logistics snarls.

The company's VW passenger car brand is in the midst of defining the key measures of a global scheme to boost its flagging margin - the first of a series of savings drives aimed at improving group profitability and staying competitive in the transition to electric cars.

The German automaker has been in South Africa for nearly 80 years. Factors like competitive labour costs once placed it among the company's higher-ranking bases globally, VW brand chief Thomas Schaefer said during a visit to the country.

But the costs of mitigating power outages caused by chronic production shortfalls at state-owned utility Eskom as well as rising labour costs and logjams on railways and at ports have eroded that advantage, he said.

"Eventually you have to say, why are we building cars in a less competitive factory somewhere far away from the real market where the consumption is?" Schaefer said. "I'm very worried about it ... We're not in the business of charity."

He said the company's team in South Africa had done what it could to overcome what he called an "uphill battle" but that ultimately the South African government needed to step up to solve the problems.

Volkswagen produced some 132,200 Polo and Vivo models at its South African facility in Uitenhage last year, most of them for export.

Those export markets now risk disappearing, however, as wealthy countries move to electric vehicles (EVs).

The European Union and Britain are planning to ban sales of new internal combustion vehicles from 2035.

Schaefer said there were no current plans to introduce EV manufacturing in South Africa, since electric cars are currently priced out of the reach of most domestic consumers. Producing them for export would not be environmentally sustainable, he said.

With the proper government policies aimed at leveraging the country's proximity to critical minerals like lithium and cobalt, however, it could become a battery manufacturing hub, he said.

"There's a realistic chance that South Africa, with enough focus, with all the raw materials in the neighbourhood, they could be a champion," Schaefer said.

(Additional reporting by Victoria Waldersee in Berlin; Editing by Mark Potter)

Beijing is making its biggest move yet to patch up the property crisis threatening to blow up China's economy

Huileng Tan
Thu, November 23, 2023


China's property sector is mired in a debt crisis amid a slump in demand.Zhang Peng/Getty


China is drafting a "white list" of property developers for bank financing, per Bloomberg.


Beijing may let banks offer unsecured short-term loans to the 50 developers on the list.


China's massive property sector is in a slump, adding to the country's post-COVID economic woes.

China's finally starting to do something about the three-year property crisis that's been weighing on its COVID-scarred economy.

Beijing is urging banks to boost financing for property developers, media outlets reported this week.

Authorities may let banks offer unsecured short-term loans to the developers on a "white list" of 50 developers for the first time, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. They include embattled real-estate giant Country Garden and state-backed China Vanke.


As developers will not need to provide collateral such as land, property, or other assets to back the loans, this will free up resources for real-estate firms to repay their debt, the unnamed sources told Bloomberg.

If approved, the measures will be the biggest taken by Beijing to address the $3.2 trillion Chinese yuan, or $451 billion, funding gap needed to complete around 20 million incomplete pre-sold units across China, according to Nomura economists earlier this month.

China's real-estate sector has been mired in a crisis since the second half 2021 when a liquidity crisis at Evergrande — once China's second-largest developer — came into public view.

Other Chinese real-estate developers ran into similar issues and began defaulting on their bond payments, spurring fears the crisis could spill over to other sectors in the country and globally.

China's economy is struggling to stage a convincing post-COVID recovery, with youth unemployment hitting a record high earlier this year. China has stopped publishing this data.

While Beijing has been trying to cool speculation in the previously red-hot property market, it's now caught between the sector's slump and reviving its economy because the real-estate market, along with related industries, contributes as much as 30% to the country's GDP.

China has been trying to boost demand for real estate, but there just isn't consumer appetite for spending against the backdrop of economic uncertainty and falling property valuations, wrote Rory Green, the chief China economist at GlobalData TSLombard in a Thursday note seen by BI.

But Green thinks Beijing is finally starting to take its crisis extremely seriously.

"Officials have finally started to show signs of panic, with triggers for greater easing, growth target threat, financial stability and unemployment risks all flashing," he added in his note. "The rhetoric has changed and a number of relatively more aggressive and unusual stimulus measures have come in to play."

Still, not everyone is convinced Beijing's property "white list" will be the solution to China's property problems.

"The White List will probably still fall well short of being White Knight for the property sector that has a plethora of impediments to work through," wrote Vishnu Varathan, the head of Asia economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank in a note on Tuesday seen by Business Insider.

For a start, banks may have concerns about lending to struggling developers, he added.

China's central bank did not immediately respond to a request from BI for comment.


Xi Tolerance for Property Pain Nears Limit as Rescue Emerges

Bloomberg News
Thu, November 23, 2023 










(Bloomberg) -- China is ramping up pressure on banks to support struggling real estate developers, signaling President Xi Jinping’s tolerance for property sector pain is nearing its limit.

Developer stocks and bonds rallied in China this week on bets that authorities may introduce some of the most sweeping measures yet, creating a draft list of firms eligible for bank support while weighing a plan that would allow banks to offer them unsecured loans for the first time.

The moves are aimed at easing the real estate industry’s cash crunch, people familiar with the matter said, underscoring the anxiety among China’s top leadership over the protracted crisis. Beijing also wants to ensure developers have enough cash to finish the millions of homes under construction, even if it means added risks for its banks.

“The new round of measures to support the property sector would be powerful to break the vicious cycle of widespread defaults and avoid the spread of systemic risks,” said May Zhao, head of equity research at Zhongtai Financial International Ltd.

The fresh effort to strengthen developers adds to a slew of moves over the past year mostly aimed at stoking demand for homes, including lower down payments and easier mortgage terms. They’ve largely failed, with home sales plunging in 18 of the past 22 months. Buyers remain on the sidelines, spooked by construction delays, falling prices and company defaults.

Beijing is now setting its sights on the world’s biggest banks, urging them to extend more credit and ensure that loan growth to private developers matches the industry average. The optimistic take is that if firms like Country Garden Holdings Co. can use the cash infusion to finish homes and avoid more headline-grabbing defaults, buyers will regain confidence and sales will rebound. Banks could even avoid losses if the sector stabilizes.

“Developers can survive the downturn if the short-term liquidity issue is resolved,” said Jian Shi Cortesi, a fund manager at GAM Investment Management.

Analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. warned that allowing banks to provide unsecured loans to qualified developers “would be a risky move” for the lenders as “it would raise concerns about national service risk and credit risk in the medium term.”

Beijing’s previous failure to cajole commercial banks means implementation also remains a question mark. And even if it works, some analysts warn the measures still aren’t large enough to meet the challenge of reviving the market.

Banks have been the weak link in China’s rescue attempts so far. Despite government exhortations since late last year for them to lend more, property loans fell year-on-year in the third quarter — the first time that’s ever happened. Banks made 2.4 trillion yuan ($336 billion) in property development loans in the first three quarters, according to China’s financial regulator.

Read more: China Races to End Property Panic, Fill $446 Billion Funding Gap Loans

The slump reflects China’s unruly financial system: even though banks are mostly state-owned, they sometimes put their bottom lines above government priorities. They also struggle to implement conflicting instructions, such as helping the property market and ensuring financial stability.

Bank stocks listed in Hong Kong fell on Friday, with large lenders like Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. and China Construction Bank Corp. down more than 1% each. A gauge of property shares also dropped in the morning session, paring its rally this week to about 14%. A broader benchmark of Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong slid as much as 1.8%, leading losses in Asia and indicating that optimism spurred by the recent measures may be fading.

“Commercial banks in China, especially the largest ones, are now very cautious,” Li Daokui, a former adviser to the central bank, warned ahead of the latest measures. “When they see signs of deterioration of developers, each commercial bank would automatically shrink from formally committed lending.”

The banks’ record on implementation is also weak. Late last year, they loudly announced huge lines of credit to developers, yet few of them actually materialized, people familiar have said. Lenders also shunned low-cost funding for property loans provided by the central bank since last year.

While some banks took the initiative this week to engage with developers for financing support on certain projects, they remain concerned about whether they’ll be held accountable for any bad debt, bankers with knowledge of the matter said.

The “actual impact is highly relying on banks’ attitudes,” said Raymond Cheng, head of China and Hong Kong research at CGS-CIMB Securities.

The funding needs are massive. Just completing construction on the unfinished homes would require about 3.2 trillion yuan, Nomura economists wrote in a note this month. The latest measures seem to be short of filling that hole: The property lending targets for banks could lead to just 407 billion yuan of additional loans, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst Shuo Yang said in a note.

“Recently announced and rumoured measures will not be enough to halt the sectoral slowdown,” said Rory Green, chief China economist at TS Lombard. Lower interest rates and a more expansive funding push are needed, he said, and likely to come next year.

To help mitigate risks, officials are weighing a mechanism that would allow one lender to take the lead on supporting a specific distressed builder by coordinating with other creditors on financing plans, people familiar with the matter said.

Soured Loans

Chinese property developers used to rely on selling houses in advance of construction to fund their development, with loans and bond issuance secondary. But that pre-sales funding has dried up for many developers, increasing the need for bank support.

And though the latest moves are aimed in part at stemming defaults, much damage has already been done. About 85% of the offshore property bonds by value are in default or subject to a bond exchange, according to estimates from Goldman Sachs. Some $44 billion in offshore bonds are in default this year alone, based on a tally by Bloomberg.

Another trigger is the worsening housing slump. Sales in 21 major cities fell 44% from their 2019 levels in the early weeks of November, according to data tracked by Nomura Inc., similar to the pace of contraction in July when the government lowered home purchase restrictions. That led to a sales rally in big cities that quickly fizzled out.

Developers’ funding struggles have led to “panicked expectations,” among households, China’s Communist-party controlled parliament said in a meeting last month, urging banks to do more.

Read more: Sweeping Mortgage Boycott Changes the Face of Dissent in China

The slump may have eased the leadership’s concerns about the optics of bailing out property tycoons. Failing to take bolder action could also have political consequences: Households have protested when properties they paid for were left unfinished. The property market troubles are also dragging on economic growth, hitting consumer confidence and contributing to a weak labor market.

“It’s definitely a must to try to save developers,” said Andrew Zhu, Beijing-based fund manager at Hainan Shire Asset Management Co. “When your job is to fight a fire, you don’t have time to worry about whether one or two arsonists got away.”

--With assistance from Shikhar Balwani, Jun Luo, Emma Dong, April Ma, Charlotte Yang, Ishika Mookerjee and Amanda Wang.

(Updates with moves in bank stocks in the 12th paragraph.)

 Bloomberg Businessweek

JPMorgan Says Unsecured Loans to China Developers a ‘Risky Move’

John Cheng
Thu, November 23, 2023 



(Bloomberg) -- Any step by China to allow banks to provide unsecured loans to qualified developers “would be a risky move” for the lenders, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Such a measure “would be negative for banks as it would raise concerns about national service risk and credit risk in the medium term,” analysts including Katherine Lei and Karl Chan wrote in a note. What’s more, implementation “would be challenging, as banks could circumvent such guidance due to credit risk concerns.”

China is considering allowing lenders to issue loans backed up by no collateral to some builders, which could potentially free up capital for debt repayment, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.

The unprecedented move would be part of a package of new measures to ease China’s ongoing property crisis, which has seen numerous defaults and stoked fears of contagion in financial markets. Authorities are also reportedly finalizing a draft list of 50 developers eligible for financial aid that includes Country Garden Holdings Co. and Sino-Ocean Group.

Though the developments sparked a rally in property shares as well as the broader China market on Thursday, stocks fell again on Friday. A Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of developer stocks retreated more than 2% on Friday while a broader index of Chinese stocks traded in Hong Kong dropped as much as 1.8%.

Bank shares have remained under pressure as the latest report adds to investor concerns about their profitability and asset quality. Chinese lenders have been battling with shrinking margins and rising bad loans since they were drafted by authorities to backstop the struggling economy and prevent risk spillover from the sluggish property sector.

The brokerage suggests going long property shares and shorting banks if the report on unsecured loans eventually pans out. Continuous positive news flow may support property shares in the short-term, the analysts said, while warning it may not be sustainable. More liquidity support to private developers may come only selectively and conditionally, they added.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Vietnam's plan for spending $15.5 billion for its clean energy transition to be announced at COP28

ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL
Fri, November 24, 2023 

FILE - Workers are seen in Ninh Binh Power Plant, which is a coal fired power plant to supply electricity, in Ninh Binh Province in Vietnam, on Sept. 19, 2007. A plan for how Vietnam will spend $15.5 billion to transition to cleaner energy has been finalized and will be announced at the COP28 climate conference, which begins in Dubai next week. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki, File)


HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — A plan for how Vietnam will spend $15.5 billion to transition to cleaner energy has been finalized and will be announced at the COP28 climate conference, which begins in Dubai next week.

Mark George, the climate counselor for the British Embassy in Hanoi, said that after months of coordination with key Vietnamese ministries to iron out details of how the money will be used, the final plan was finalized on Thursday.

George gave no details of the plan.

The United Kingdom is co-chair of a group of nine, rich industrialized nations that have agreed to provide the $15.5 billion to help Vietnam end its reliance on dirty coal power and more quickly switch to renewable energy as a part of a Just Energy Transition Partnership, or JETP.

“That is a really important milestone,” said George.

George was speaking at a panel discussion hosted by the UK-Vietnam Joint Economic and Trade Committee centered around opportunities for the two nations after Britain officially joined an Asia-Pacific trade group that includes Japan and 10 other nations.

Earlier this year, Vietnam released a national energy plan that aimed to more than double the maximum power Vietnam can generate to some 150 gigawatts by 2030. It called for a drastic shift away from heavily polluting coal and pledges that no new coal-fired plants will be built after 2030. It also called for expanding use of domestic gas and imported liquefied natural gas or LNG, which will account for about 25% of total generating capacity, while hydropower, wind, solar, and other renewable sources will account for nearly 50% by 2030.

Tang The Hung, the deputy director general of Vietnam's department of Energy Efficiency and Sustainable Development, who also was at Friday's panel, said “great support” from the international community was needed to ensure Vietnam can carry out its plan.

OpenAI's offices were sent thousands of paper clips in an elaborate prank to warn about an AI apocalypse


Tom Carter
Thu, November 23, 2023 

Microsoft's much-maligned Clippy was one of the first "intelligent office assistants" – but never tried to wipe out humanity. SOPA Images/Getty Images

An employee at rival Anthropic sent OpenAI thousands of paper clips in the shape of their logo.


The prank was a subtle jibe suggesting OpenAI's approach to AI could lead to humanity's extinction.


Anthropic was formed by ex-OpenAI employees who split from the company over AI safety concerns.

One of OpenAI's biggest rivals played an elaborate prank on the AI startup by sending thousands of paper clips to its offices.

The paper clips in the shape of OpenAI's distinctive spiral logo were sent to the AI startup's San Francisco offices last year by an employee at rival Anthropic, in a subtle jibe suggesting that the company's approach to AI safety could lead to the extinction of humanity, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

They were a reference to the famous "paper clip maximizer" scenario, a thought experiment from philosopher Nick Bostrom, which hypothesized that an AI given the sole task of making as many paper clips as possible might unintentionally wipe out the human race in order to achieve its goal.

"We need to be careful about what we wish for from a superintelligence, because we might get it," Bostrom wrote.

Anthropic was founded by former OpenAI employees who left the company in 2021 over disagreements on developing AI safely.

Since then, OpenAI has rapidly accelerated its commercial offerings, launching ChatGPT last year to record-breaking success and striking a multibillion-dollar investment deal with Microsoft in January.

AI safety concerns have come back to haunt the company in recent weeks, however, with the chaotic firing and subsequent reinstatement of CEO Sam Altman.

Reports have suggested that concerns over the speed of AI development within the company, and fears that this could hasten the arrival of superintelligent AI that could threaten humanity, were reasons why OpenAI's non-profit board chose to fire Altman in the first place.

OpenAI's chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, who took part in the board coup against Altman before dramatically joining calls for him to be reinstated, has been outspoken about the existential risks artificial general intelligence could pose to humanity, and reportedly clashed with Altman on the issue.

According to The Atlantic, Sutskever commissioned and set fire to a wooden effigy representing "unaligned" AI at a recent company retreat, and he reportedly also led OpenAI's employees in a chant of "feel the AGI" at the company's holiday party, after saying: "Our goal is to make a mankind-loving AGI."

OpenAI and Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, made outside normal working hours.




HEROES OF THE MOTHERLAND
2 Russians convicted of murdering and eating victims have been released after fighting in Ukraine: reports


Thibault Spirlet
Fri, November 24, 2023

Two men convicted of murder were released after fighting in Ukraine, per Russian media.


Denis Gorin and Nikolai Ogolobyak killed their victims and ate parts of their bodies, reports said.


Russia has sent convicts to the front lines to fill in the gaps in its military, analysts say.

Russia released two prisoners convicted of murder, who then ate parts of their victims, after they fought in Ukraine, according to multiple Russian reports.


In 2003, Denis Gorin was sentenced to 9 years and 10 months in jail for premeditated murder and "subsequently desecrating the corpse of his victim," according to court records shared and translated by Meduza.

He was released on parole in 2010. But three years later was sentenced to 20 years and 10 months in prison for knifing an acquaintance to death, cutting his victim's leg, and consuming it as food to "remember the old days," per court records shared by the outlet.

Meanwhile, in 2010, Nikolai Ogolobyak was given a 20-year prison term for murder and the desecration of dead bodies after killing four teenagers with accomplices in blood rituals in 2008, per 76.ru.

Both men would spend years behind bars before being released to fight in Ukraine.

Gorin, from Russia's Sakhalin region, is wearing a military uniform in a photo published on his social media page in October, according to a Telegram post by the Sakhalin Against War account. The report fails to specify where the picture was taken.

He's now recovering from moderate injuries at a military hospital in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, his neighbor Dmitry told Russian news outlet Siberia Realities.

"He's basically free, pardoned, and half his [prison] sentence has been wiped out," Dmitry told the outlet, according to a translation by Ukrainska Pravda.

However, Dmitry added that his freedom could be short-lived.

"I don't think he'll stay free for long. His victims' relatives remember everything," he told the outlet.

Ogolobyak, from Russia's Yaroslavl region, was pardoned after serving in a Storm Z assault detachment for six months in Ukraine, per the local 76.ru news website.

Ogolobyak and his associates murdered two people by chopping their heads off and extracting their hearts and tongues before frying and eating them, the outlet reported, citing court documents.

Ogolobya stabbed two other victims to death, penetrating their bodies 666 times and counting the blows out loud, witnesses said.

His father told the outlet that he is now recovering after sustaining serious injuries and will likely not go back to fight, according to a translation by the Moscow Times.

The Wagner mercenary group had used convicts to fight in Ukraine, recruiting up to 49,000 of them, a group official identified as Marx said, per the Telegram channel Razgruzka Vagnera.

Russia's army has also deployed convicts in penal battalions to fight in Ukraine as it struggles to mount effective offensives on the battlefield, the UK's Ministry of Defence said in October.

En.wikipedia.org

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Russian_cannibals

Pages in category "Russian cannibals" ; B · Dmitry and Natalia Baksheevy · Alexander Bychkov ; K · Ilshat Kuzikov ; M · Mikhail Malyshev ; N &...

 Latimes.com

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-05-25-mn-62454-story.html

May 25, 1997 ... But none of these tragedies of Soviet history explain people like Spesivtsev taking up cannibalism, says Russian anthropologist Mikhail A.

Cipdh.gob.ar

https://www.cipdh.gob.ar/memorias-situadas/en/lugar-de-memoria/memorial-de-la-isla-nazino

It is known as Death Island or Cannibal Island because around 6000 people were deported and abandoned there in the summer of 1933 by order of the Soviet ...


News.ycombinator.com

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21445022

Nov 4, 2019 ... ... wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Leningrad#Cannibalism. and some stats : "By December 1942 the NKVD had arrested 2,105 cannibals – dividing them ...

Time.com

https://time.com/4958639/russia-cannibalist-couple-krasnador

Sep 27, 2017 ... A Russian 'Cannibal Couple' May Have Eaten up to 30 People, Investigators Say ... Police in southwestern Russia have arrested a couple accused of ...

Independent.co.uk

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/world-history/newly-discovered-diaries-reveal-cannibal-nazi-horror-a7796246.html

Nov 16, 2017 ... Approximately 1,500 Leningraders were arrested for cannibalism during this time. According to historian Guy Walters, the Russian language ...


Journals.openedition.org

https://journals.openedition.org/emscat/3441

Mangi practised cannibalism, including eating bones (ibid.). Most colonial powers actively employed these images of indigenous people as cannibals, associating ...


Russia's worker shortage is so bad the economy is leaning on the Soviet-era practice of using prison labor, think tank says

Jennifer Sor
Thu, November 23, 2023

Security worker walks by the gate of a penal colony in Vladimir, Russia.

Kirill Zarubin/AP Photo

  • Russia is leaning more on prison labor amid a dearth of available workers.

  • Income generated from forced convict labor notched 19 billion rubles last year.

  • Around a million Russians have fled the country to avoid fighting and escape Russia's economic situation.

Russia's worker shortage is so bad, the nation is increasingly leaning on prison labor to prop up its ailing industries and make up for a lack of manpower.

In 2022, Russia pulled in an estimated 19.1 billion rubles, or around $204 million from forced prison labor, The Moscow Times recently reported, citing dating from Russia's finance ministry. That exceeded estimates that Russia made the year prior, when budget makers anticipated bringing in just 15.8 billion roubles from forced prison labor.

The nation expected to rake in 15.9 billion rubles in 2023 and 16.2 billion rubles in 2024, according to 2021 budget estimates.There are around 26,000 Russian prisoners forced into labor across 1,700 organizations, according to August 2023 data from Russia's Federal Penitentiary Service. That's more than double what was reported in 2022, when 9,300 prisoners were forced to work, according to the research and analytics firm Jamestown Foundation.

Those trends have been sparked by a record workforce shortage in Russia, with around a million Russians having fled the country to avoid fighting or escape Russia's difficult economic situation.

"The Russian economy is facing harsh structural challenges, including the lack of a qualified work force," Jamestown senior fellow Sergey Sukhankin said in a note last month. "The Kremlin has sought to integrate prison labor with certain sectors of the domestic economy to solve this issue."

The use convict labor isn't new to Russia. The practice dates back to the Soviet era's "Gulag" system, where convicts were assigned to work in the riskiest and most "lucrative" sectors of the Soviet Union's economy, Sukhankin said.

Prison labor could eventually evolve into a system similar what was seen in the Soviet Era, Sukhankin added, assuming that Russia's current leadership survives conflict in Ukraine.

"The recent uptick in the use of forced prison labor in Russia is not merely the transient trend of a post-COVID, economically troubled, or war-hurt Russia. In the event that [...] Vladimir Putin survives the war in Ukraine, the use of prison labor in Russia might evolve into a system similar to the Soviet period," Sukhankin added.

Economists, meanwhile, have been sounding grim warnings for Russia's future as the nation continues to be battered by war and western sanctions. Predictions have been as dire as Russia becoming a failed state over the next 10 years, as sanctions bite and its reputation as a pariah state isolates it from world trade.