Thursday, February 15, 2024

Parents of gun violence victims use AI to recreate their voices in calls to Congress

BY JULIA SHAPERO - 02/14/24 - THE HILL



Parents of half a dozen victims of gun violence used artificial intelligence (AI) to recreate their children’s voices in calls to Congress, urging lawmakers to change the country’s gun laws as part of a new campaign launched on the sixth anniversary of the Parkland, Fla., shooting.

The Shotline, created by gun control advocacy groups Change the Ref and March For Our Lives, allows people to send the AI-generated voices of six gun violence victims to members of Congress.


The voice of Joaquin Oliver — who was killed in the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. — is one of the six on the Shotline’s website. Oliver’s parents founded Change the Ref in his memory.

“Six years ago, I was a senior at Parkland,” Oliver’s AI-generated voice says. “Many students and teachers were murdered on Valentine’s Day that year by a person using an AR-15. But you don’t care. You never did. It’s been six years, and you’ve done nothing, not a thing to stop all the shootings that have continued to happen since.”

“The thing is, I died that day in Parkland,” he continues. “My body was destroyed by a weapon of war. I’m back today because my parents used AI to recreate my voice to call you. Other victims like me will be calling too, again and again, to demand action. How many calls will it take for you to care? How many dead voices will you hear before you finally listen?”

The website also features the AI-generated voice of 10-year-old Uziyah “Uzi” Garcia, a victim of the 2022 mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. Garcia’s father, Brett Cross, shared his son’s message Wednesday in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“For 631 days we’ve been Uziyahs voice,” Cross wrote in the post. “Today his voice has a message to all, especially our politicians.”

According to The Shotline website, more than 5,000 calls have been submitted to members of Congress so far.
















 As It Happens

Their son was shot dead. Now his AI voice is calling lawmakers about gun reform

6 years after Parkland shooting, victims' families recreate loved ones' voices to robocall politicians

Manuel and Patricia Oliver, the parents of Parkland, Fla., shooting victim Joaquin Oliver, are launching a campaign where re-created voices of gun violence victims will call federal lawmakers. (Cody Jackson/The Associated Press)

If the idea of getting a phone call from a teenager who was killed in a mass shooting makes you uncomfortable, Patricia Oliver says that's the point.

Six years after her son Joaquin Oliver, 17, was gunned down at his Parkland, Fla., high school, a new gun reform campaign is using a recreation of his voice, generated by artificial intelligence, to robocall U.S. politicians.

"The point is to make people in Congress … feel uncomfortable," Oliver told As It Happens host Nil Köksal. "Maybe that makes them move forward."

The campaign — called the Shotline — launched on Valentine's Day to mark the anniversary of the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland.  

'I died that day in Parkland'

People can go to the project's website and choose from seven AI recordings of people who were killed by gun violence, and send them to elected U.S. representatives of their choice. 

It's a joint project by March For Life, a student-led gun control advocacy group, and Change the Ref, an organization Joaquin's parents created to defeat politicians who support gun lobbyists and manufacturers.

Joaquin Oliver — known by his nickname 'Guac' — was a proponent of gun reform long before he became a victim of gun violence, his mother says, (Tyra Hemans via AP)

In Joaquin's message, an AI voice says: "Six years ago, I was a senior at Parkland. Many students and teachers were murdered on Valentine's Day that year by a person using an AR 15. But you don't care. You never did. It's been six years, and you've done nothing. Not a thing to stop all the shootings that have continued to happen since. 

"The thing is, I died that day in Parkland. My body was destroyed by a weapon of war. I'm back today because my parents used AI to recreate my voice to call you. Other victims like me will be calling too, again and again to demand action. 

"How many calls will it take for you to care? How many dead voices will you hear before you finally listen? Every day your inaction creates more voices. If you fail to act now, we'll find someone who will."

There's also a robocall using the AI-generated voice of Uziyah Garcia, a 10-year-old who was killed in the 2022 elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

Brett Cross, Uziyah's uncle and caretaker, says the family decided to participate "so that no other child will have to go through what Uzi did. No other parent should have to go through what we have."

Brett Cross, uncle of Uvalde shooting victim Uziyah Garcia, says he's participating in the AI campaign to stop other children from being killed in shootings. (Mikala Compton/Austin American-Statesman/The Associated Press)

There's one of Ethan Song, a 15-year-old who shot himself by accident in 2018 at his best friend's house in Connecticut, while the two played with a handgun that hadn't been locked away. His message pushes for a federal law making it a crime to not properly store guns in homes where children live.

"You would think the stacking up of our dead children's coffins would be enough to create a cultural shift in this country, but sadly our message is really falling on deaf ears," Kristin Song, Ethan's mother, said.

Kristin Song, mother of accidental shooting victim Ethan Song, says the sheer number of minors killed by guns should be enough to make lawmakers enact change. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

To create the recordings, PR company MullenLowe and AI firm Edisen fed real audio recordings of the victims to the ElevenLabs generative voice AI platform. 

"There's a lot of discussion going on with AI right now, but this is a beautiful example of what it actually can achieve, a very human output," Mirko Lempert, Edisen's AI creative designer, told the Guardian newspaper.

"The project was very emotional and showed how much our worlds are different, because in my country we're not exposed to those kinds of [gun violence] situations that much. It was a wake-up call."

'We do our activism in a different way'

A wake-up call is exactly what Oliver and her husband Manuel are going for. The couple are among the most outspoken of the Parkland parents. 

They have driven through the country on a schoolbus loaded with the loved ones of school shooting victims. They've published a picture book, riddled with bullet holes, called Joaquin's First School Shooting.

Manuel's activism has seen him arrested twice, once in 2022 after he climbed a construction crane near the White House to unfurl a banner demanding U.S. President Joe Biden enact stricter gun laws and again 2023, for disrupting aU.S. House of Representatives hearing on guns.

"We're going to get criticism for anything we do, because we do our activism in a different way," Oliver said. "I don't want to see people ... grabbing their cell phones because they're bored. I want them to be ...  paying attention to what we're saying."

Manuel Oliver was pinned to the ground and arrested for disturbing a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington in 2023. (Manuel Balce Ceneta/The Associated Press)

This also isn't the couple's first time using an AI recreation of their son's likeness. In 2020, they released an AI video of Joaquin urging young voters to choose candidates who support stricter gun laws. At the time, critics accused them of politicizing his death.

"They put words in a dead kid's mouth. If my father did this to me, I would haunt him for the rest of his life," one wrote on YouTube.

But Oliver says that if her son was alive today, he'd be the one out there fighting for stricter gun laws — an issue he was outspoken about on social media and at school. 

"For anyone who doubts about what was Joaquin's position and perspective about gun violence, they can go themselves and check it themselves," his mother said. "I don't need to prove anything."

Joaquin would be 23 today if he had survived the Parkland shooting. She says she remembers when his father asked him how he envisioned his future. 

"He said, 'I want to be big…. I want to be like someone that is well-known for what I'm doing.' I'm telling you that he's doing that,'" she said.

"From Japan to Venezuela, where we are from, he is very powerful. His energy is very active. A lot of people that never knew Joaquin are able to feel it."

With files from The Associated Press. Interview with Patricia Oliver produced by Katie Geleff


Happy workers
DAWN
Published February 13, 2024 






RESEARCH shows a causal link between happy workers and an increase — 13 per cent — in productivity, while unhappiness at work costs the world $8.8 trillion. According to a survey conducted by Gallup, there is a “strong relationship between worker happiness and workplace engagement. Happy and engaged employees are much more likely to have a positive relationship with their boss, are better equipped to handle new challenges and changes, feel they are more valued by their employers, handle stress more effectively, and are much more satisfied with their lives”.

There are three types of employees within organisations: a) ‘engaged employees’ who work with passion and feel a deep connection with their organisation. “They drive innovation and move the organisation forward”; b) workers who are ‘not engaged’ and sleepwalk through their workday, putting “time, but not energy or passion, into their work”; and c) employees who are ‘actively disengaged’, not only unhappy at work, but also busy acting out their unhappiness. They undermine what their engaged coworkers accomplish.

An employee contributes to productivity, if his supervisor focuses on his strengths or positive traits. At the same time, having a positive interaction with coworkers is also important. Employees who are not happy at the workplace don’t maintain a positive relationship with their peers. Engaged employees feel less frustrated at work in comparison to those not engaged or actively disengaged.

Supervisors play a crucial role in workers’ well-being and engagement. If the employee feels uncomfortable while interacting with his supervisor, it will adversely affect his morale and performance. Such employees often take home their tension and frustration, which impacts their relations with family and friends.

In her article ‘Creating a happier workplace is possible — and worth it’, Jennifer Moss describes three steps organisations can take to turn around a negative environment. An expert on workplace well-being, employee happiness and workplace culture, Moss delves into the following three factors for generating happiness at work: flexibility, a sense of belonging among employees, and finding purpose in their work.

Flexibility at work: A 2023 ILO report found that greater flexibility — from staggered start times to shift-sharing, to remote working options — leads to greater productivity and improved work-life balance. A global survey of 28,000 full-time employees by Cisco shows that over 80pc of employees find that their ability to work from anywhere has made them happier.

The Covid pandemic forced organisations to allow some of their employees to work from home. However, post-pandemic, the concept of working from home has not taken root in Pakistan. Few companies here allow flexible work timings. Besides, 60pc of the workforce can’t work from home, such as those engaged in the manufacturing process, in running shops, or managing hospitals, etc.

Build a sense of belonging: Happiness is negatively impacted at the workplace without social interaction. People should have a sense of belonging to their organisation, which is generated by making friends, who may also be of help in their hour of need. A pleasant work environment is created when employees contribute meaningfully to shared goals. Having social get-togethers, shared activities, etc, outside the workplace boosts people’s attachment to their organisations.

Purpose in work: Businesses should responsibly and ethically serve all stakeholders, including employees, communities, and the environment — not just their management teams and shareholders. The hospitality industry suffered the most during Covid. But Hilton Hotels continued to retain recruiters that pla­ced their employees in outside sectors that needed talent. Similarly, they announced a million empty rooms for patients who had to quarantine away from their own homes.

In 1972, I had joined a factory at Kot Lakhpat, Lahore, which was nationalised by the government. Most employees had no sense of belonging to the enterprise nor had any purpose at work to keep them motivated. Their output started to decline after the government takeover and the only purpose left for them to come to work, was their monthly salary. The number of not-engaged and actively disengaged employees started escalating.

Thereafter, I worked in an American and a British multinational company for around 27 years. There, besides a system that ensured lucrative salaries, the companies’ leadership would take good care of employees’ health, general well-being, fulfilling their personal needs and maintaining a work-life balance by providing recreational activities. The employees in both the above companies remained happy and motivated and delivered greater output in terms of productivity.

The writer is a consultant in human resources at the Aga Khan University Hospital.

Published in Dawn, February 13th, 2024
Overexploitation, Habitat Loss Threaten Migratory Species: CMS Flagship

Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS)

14 February 2024


According to the report, the extinction risk is growing for CMS and non-CMS migratory species alike.

It identifies overexploitation and loss of habitat due to human activity as the two greatest threats to all migratory species, with climate change, pollution, and invasive species posing additional threats.

The report also shows that population and species-wide recoveries are possible and showcases examples of successful policy action.


The Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) has launched the first-ever comprehensive assessment of the state of the world’s migratory species. The report warns that almost half of the world’s migratory species are in decline and more than a fifth are threatened with extinction, including nearly all of CMS-listed fish. It provides a set of recommendations for priority action to save migratory animals.

Titled, ‘State of the World’s Migratory Species,’ the report provides an overview of the conservation status and population trends of migratory animals, both CMS-listed species and those not listed in CMS. It presents the latest information on their main threats and successful actions to protect them. The report mainly focuses on the 1,189 animal species that are listed under CMS, but also features analysis of some 3,000 additional migratory species. CMS-listed species are “those at risk of extinction across all or much of their range, or in need of coordinated international action to boost their conservation status,” a press release notes. Globally, 399 migratory species that are threatened or near threatened with extinction – including many albatrosses and perching birds, ground sharks, and stingrays – are not listed under CMS.

According to the report, the extinction risk is growing for CMS and non-CMS migratory species alike, with half of key biodiversity areas of importance for CMS-listed migratory animals lacking protected status and nearly 60% of the monitored sites of importance for CMS-listed species facing “unsustainable levels of human-caused pressure.” In the last 30 years, 70 CMS-listed migratory species have become more endangered. These include the steppe eagle, Egyptian vulture, and the wild camel. Only 14 listed species, including blue and humpback whales, the white-tailed sea eagle, and the black-faced spoonbill, have improved their conservation status.

The report identifies overexploitation and loss of habitat due to human activity as the two greatest threats to all migratory species, both those that are listed in CMS and those that are not. Other threats include climate change, pollution, and invasive species.

At the same time, the report shows that population and species-wide recoveries are possible. It offers examples of successful policy change and positive action, including coordinated local efforts that reduced illegal bird netting in Cyprus by 91% and “integrated conservation and restoration work in Kazakhstan, which has brought the Saiga Antelope back from the brink of extinction.”

“When species cross national borders, their survival depends on the efforts of all countries in which they are found,” said CMS Executive Secretary Amy Fraenkel. “This landmark report will help underpin much-needed policy actions to ensure that migratory species continue to thrive around the world.”

The report recommends that governments prioritize:Strengthening and expanding efforts to tackle illegal and unsustainable taking of migratory species, as well as incidental capture of non-target species;
Increasing actions to identify, protect, connect, and effectively manage important sites for migratory species;

Urgently addressing those species in most danger of extinction, including nearly all CMS-listed fish species;

Scaling up efforts to tackle climate change, as well as light, noise, chemical, and plastic pollution; and
Considering expanding CMS listings to include more at-risk migratory species in need of national and international attention.

Prepared for CMS by conservation scientists at the UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC), the report features expert contributions from BirdLife International, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), among other institutions. It was launched on 12 February 2024, during the 14th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS COP14). 

Studying the otherworldly sounds in Antarctic waters


By AFP
February 14, 2024

Scientists have warned that rising ocean temperatures are impacting whales' body clock and migration cycles, as well as killing off krill, the tiny crustacians they need to fatten up for a journey of thousands of kilometers - 
Copyright AFP Yasuyoshi CHIBA


Juan RESTREPO, Juan BARRETO

In freezing Antarctic waters, amid bobbing chunks of floating ice, the hums, pitches and echoes of life in the deep are helping scientists understand the behavior and movements of marine mammals.

“There are species which make impressive sounds, literally like Star Wars, they sound like spaceships,” said Colombian scientist Andrea Bonilla, who is carrying out research with underwater microphones off Antarctica’s coast.

The biologist from Cornell University in New York submerges a hydrophone covered in titanium and attached to a buoy, into the frigid water. The device is like a camera trap in the wild, except it picks up aquatic sounds.

Her team, part of a Colombian scientific expedition to the Southern Ocean, also picks up devices they left a year prior for analysis.

The research also gives scientists data on how human activity and environmental pollution affect sea life in one of the best conserved parts of the planet.

Nearby, a colony of penguins waddle along a giant block of floating ice.

A humpback whale comes to the surface for some air during a stint in the region for the austral summer — a time for feeding and building up energy before their massive trek to warmer climes around the equator in the breeding season.



– ‘Sound is essential’ –




Bonilla describes the first time she heard whale song underwater as having “changed her life.”

Scientists have warned that rising ocean temperatures are impacting whales’ body clock and migration cycles, as well as killing off krill, the tiny crustaceans they need to fatten up for annual journeys of thousands of kilometers.

Whale communication has also been found to be impacted by noise at sea from shipping and other activity, which can disorient them.

“In a marine environment sound is essential,” said Bonilla, adding that any interruption can affect some species ability to hunt.

Weddell seals and leopard seals also emit high-pitched songs in different tones and often harmonious compositions.

During their expedition the scientists install three underwater microphones, two in the Bransfield Strait and one in the Drake Passage.

The team also follows a set of coordinates to find the buoy left by Bonilla a year ago. When they are within 300 meters (1,000 feet) of it, she can send remote signals to find its exact location.

Her delighted teammates pat her on the back as she successfully retrieves the hydrophone from 500 meters deep.

“I am so excited because it was the first time we did this manuever in these waters. It all went super well,” said Bonilla.

The scientist will use spectrograms — a visual representation of sound — to extract information not only about the movement of marine mammals, but also geophysics.

The hydrophones also capture low frequencies that can pick up the sounds of earthquakes or melting ice.

The research has another goal, supporting a proposal pushed by Chile and Argentina since 2012 to convert the Antarctic Peninsula into a protected marine area.

New Gas Supplies For the Western Balkans Facilitates a Geopolitical Game Rather Than the Green Energy Transition

Gasification plans are a trap for the region's green transition and risk benefiting powerful political players – especially Russia and the US – more than local citizens


14 February 2024
Petr Čermák


The Western Balkans plan to rely on hydrocarbon as a quick and affordable replacement for coal. The region is now looking to secure new gas supplies from sources other than Russia with the support of the West. However, this diversification would come with new geopolitical and economic risks, while the new dependence on gas would further compromise the decarbonisation of a region heavily polluted by coal burning.

On the second Sunday in December, the Serbian city of Niš hosted a geopolitically noteworthy meeting of statesmen. Serbian President Vučić, known for his teetering between Russia and the West, together with the pro-Russian president of Bulgaria and the authoritarian ruler of Azerbaijan, launched a new gas pipeline linking Bulgaria and Serbia.

Along with the trio, the EU’s top official in Serbia also pressed the green button but was overshadowed by Vučić at the key moment for the cameras. Ironically, it was the EU who covered most of the costs of the project, with the intention to reduce the region’s dependence on Russian gas. This peculiar moment illustrates well how the interests of local politicians and global powers meet and clash in the geopolitical game for new gas supplies to the Western Balkans.

Western Balkan road from coal to gas

In 2022, when the energy crisis in Europe escalated shortly after the Russian aggression against Ukraine, it seemed that the golden era of energy from natural gas was over.

Governments of countries dependent on Russian gas, under pressure from growing prices and supply insecurity, urgently searched for ways out of the gas trap. However, within a few months, the volatile market calmed down, and the price stabilised thanks to the increased supplies of liquefied gas to Europe. European countries previously dependent on Russian gas were able to secure new sources in record time, and gas has largely rehabilitated its position as a reliable energy source.

Despite recent experience with the risks associated with gas dependence, many European countries have decided to rely on gas as a transitional fuel in the gradual process of transition to green energy. Gas should play the role of a fast and available substitute for coal, which is expected to cease burning in most of the EU by 2030. The Western Balkans, a region that, unlike most of the EU states, has never been dependent on gas, is now looking to gas with the same intention.

While – at the EU level – gas accounts for a full quarter of total energy production, in the Western Balkans, its share is less than 8%.

Gas plays a more significant role only in the energy sector of Serbia and Northern Macedonia, where it is used as supplementary fuel for electricity and heat generation. Bosnia and Herzegovina and Albania have only marginal gas consumption, while Kosovo and Montenegro do not use gas in their energy sector at all.

The main reason for the significantly smaller use of gas compared to neighbouring EU regions is the weak infrastructure stemming from historically low gasification. Apart from Scandinavia, the Western Balkans are the only part of Europe without a developed gas distribution network.

Instead of gas, the Western Balkans have long depended on coal for energy production, which is still mined in large volumes in the region. Coal, burned mainly in outdated power stations built in the Yugoslav industrial era, is the main source of electricity and heat generation for all Western Balkan countries except Albania, leading to some of the most polluted air in Europe.

In addition to the environmental burden, dependence on coal comes along with increasing economic and political costs resulting from international pressure to decarbonise the energy sector. While in the EU, coal accounts for around one-tenth of the energy mix and is expected to be insignificant by 2030, it accounts for almost half of the total energy generation in the Western Balkans, and its replacement in the form of green energy is not yet in sight.

Gas might therefore seem to be a quick and affordable solution for the regional coal dependency.

However, geopolitics also comes into play in the discussion about the future replacement of coal and the role of gas. Gas supplies to the Western Balkans are subject to competition for influence in an unstable region, and the political interests of local and foreign actors often outweigh rational arguments in this debate.

The geopolitics of energy (in)dependence on Russia

Apart from small domestic reserves in Serbia and Albania, the gas sector in the Western Balkans has so far been entirely dependent on imports from Russia.

Gas has been delivered to the region since 2020 via a new branch of the TurkStream pipeline running through the Black Sea, Turkey and Bulgaria. Its Western Balkan part, which runs through Serbia to Hungary, was constructed as a joint project by Serbia and Russia to avoid transporting gas via Ukraine and became operational shortly before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

So far, all existing gas infrastructure in Serbia, North Macedonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina has been connected solely to the Russian pipeline. Although gas supplies to these countries are negligible compared to the volumes Russia has until recently delivered to other parts of Europe, Moscow has exploited this dependence to strengthen its influence in the region.

The energy links to Russia are most pronounced in Serbia, which has long been oscillating between Russia, the West and China in its foreign policy.

Serbian President Vučić has deftly used the gas card in his domestic rhetoric, advocating the benefits of maintaining open relations with Moscow. In May 2022, shortly after the Russian aggression against Ukraine, Vučić boasted to his voters that he had renegotiated stable supplies and a lower price for Russian gas for Serbia directly with Putin.

Ironically, at the recent launch of a new gas pipeline from Bulgaria, he used quite a different rhetoric when he highlighted the benefits of diversifying gas sources for Serbia’s energy security.

Geopolitics is also central to the debate about gasification in internally divided Bosnia and Herzegovina (BaH). The political leadership of Republika Srpska, which has openly affiliated with Russia even during its aggression against Ukraine, is relying on Russia’s Gazprom in its ambitious gasification plans.

The Bosniak-Croat Federation of BaH is trying to break free from its dependence on Russian gas by connecting to infrastructure in neighbouring Croatia. However, the construction of a pipeline that would give the Federation access to the global LNG market via the Croatian Krk terminal is being blocked by a political dispute between Bosnians and Croats over who should have economic control over the strategic project.

Nihad Harbaš, a Bosnian energy and climate expert, points out that the issue of new gas supplies to the region is so pronounced mainly because of inevitable energy transition and strong political and economic pressures from the highest levels of domestic and international politics, including Russia and the US.

New sources in Azerbaijan and LNG market

Most governments in the region are aware of the political vulnerability arising from energy dependence on Russia, and the planned pipelines are therefore heading in other directions.

The main alternative would be to connect the region to the already operational TANAP and TAP pipelines, which have delivered gas from Azerbaijan to southern Europe via Turkey since 2020.

Although the TAP pipeline runs through the Western Balkans in Albania, no country in the region is yet connected to it. All Western Balkan states could, in the future, gain access to gas from Azerbaijan through planned interconnectors though.

Ironically, Serbia, the regional actor most loyal to Russia, was first among them. It decided to take advantage of European assistance in diversifying regional energy resources and, with significant financial support from the EU, built a new gas pipeline to Bulgaria, which connected its system to the new sources.

The interconnector gave Serbia access to Azerbaijani gas, the purchase of which Vučić had already negotiated during his frequent meetings with President Aliev. The interconnector will also provide Serbia with access to LNG terminals in Greece, through which it can buy liquefied gas on the global market in the future.

Liquefied natural gas should become another key source for the gasification of the entire Western Balkans. Already today, LNG is flowing to Southeast Europe via terminals in Greece and Croatia, whose capacities should increase significantly in upcoming years.

In addition, Albania and Montenegro are considering building their own smaller terminals to supply the new pipelines and power plants. The main political and economic force behind these ambitious projects to connect the region to the LNG market is the United States.

New geopolitical and economic risks

If all the ambitious plans to bring in gas from new sources are materialised, the region’s gas supply capacity would more than double thanks to thousands of kilometres of new pipelines and new LNG terminals.

Gas transported from Azerbaijan and by sea from other continents would supply up to ten new gas-fired power plants. However, even such diversification of gas sources would come with significant political and economic risks.

Azerbaijan, the main alternative supplier of non-liquefied gas, has profiled itself as a reliable energy partner for Europe, unlike Russia. Yet it is also an authoritarian state which, in its recent military takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh, has shown that it does not restrain from asserting its vital interests by force.

Recent years have also seen a rapprochement between President Aliev’s regime and Russia, from where Azerbaijan has begun to import gas to cover its domestic consumption and growing exports. Moreover, the only pipeline carrying gas from Azerbaijan’s Caspian fields to Europe passes through the volatile Caucasus and Turkey, which is a close ally of Azerbaijan and has its own hard-headed policy vis-à-vis Europe.

In contrast, the global LNG market, the second main planned source of gas for the Western Balkans, would provide a real diversification of sources.

LNG can be freely purchased from suppliers across different continents who compete for consumers. However, a free global market that is not bound by fixed pipelines also carries its risks, especially economic ones.

As the turbulent months of the energy crisis and Russian aggression against Ukraine have shown, the supply and price of LNG on the world market are difficult to predict. Also, the costs of building new terminals and associated gas infrastructure are enormous.

The long-term economic uncertainty of LNG supplies should lead Western Balkan governments to caution, according to Bankwatch’s analysis. From a geopolitical perspective, it is also important to consider that much of the liquefied gas entering the global market originates from Russia and other authoritarian states, as well as politically unstable regions in the Middle East, the Maghreb or the Gulf of Guinea. Moreover, the entire LNG market is vitally dependent on the security of shipping routes that pass through vulnerable bottlenecks.

Experts in the region also point to the risks associated with the strong US lobby behind plans to increase gas supplies through LNG imports.

They fear that it will bring profit primarily to the US gas exporters, while the weak Western Balkan economies and especially citizens as end-users of the energy will be exposed to uncertainty in the future due to volatile prices.

American interests and the European dilemma

Plans to bring gas from new sources to the Western Balkans would not have come about without strong political and economic support from the EU and the US, two key Western players in the region. They are both concerned by the Russian influence in this unstable region and see diversification of gas sources as one of the tools to weaken it. However, the interests of the EU and the US diverge to some extent in this field.

From the American perspective, boosting the role of gas in the region is clearly a profitable calculus from which the US can benefit politically and economically.

In addition to reducing Russian influence in the region, which is still at the centre of the US foreign policy, connecting the region to the LNG market would present an interesting business opportunity for the export-oriented US gas sector.

American LNG currently accounts for about half of the gas imports processed at terminals in Croatia and Greece. Unsurprisingly, the planned new terminals and pipelines connected to them in the region thus have strong support not only from the US gas industry but also from American diplomats in the region lobbying for them by local governments.

The EU’s position on the future role of gas in the Western Balkans is much more multifaceted. As the main guarantor of fragile stability in the region, Europe is also sensitive to Russian influence and has a strong geopolitical interest in its elimination. A significant part of the EU’s new financial aid package to the region is therefore directed toward the diversification of energy sources, including the construction of new gas interconnectors.

At the same time, the EU is pushing the Western Balkan countries to move faster towards green energy as part of their EU accession process. However, the intended decarbonisation of regional energy may be significantly delayed by increased reliance on gas.

A new analysis by international environmental organisation Bankwatch warns that EU-backed construction of new pipelines could lock the Western Balkan states into a new gas dependency for decades to come. European officials in the region, off the record, admit that the era of European support for new gasification projects is therefore coming to an end.

Gas trap for the green transition

The planned increase in gas supplies to the Western Balkans poses a major risk to the region’s path towards green energy.

The energy transition is inevitable in a region dependent on burning coal in obsolete power plants, not only because of political pressure from the EU and economic pressure from the energy market but, above all, because of the extreme levels of pollution. Regional capitals regularly top the list of cities with the worst air pollution, which is estimated to be responsible for tens of thousands of premature deaths a year.

Gas may appear to be an affordable replacement for coal, but it does not provide an environmentally sustainable solution. Although gas is tolerated in the EU for the time being as a ‘transitional technology’ on the path to green energy, it is still a fossil fuel with high emissions. While its combustion directly produces around two-thirds fewer emissions than coal, when methane emissions from extraction and transport are taken into account together with the energy intensity of the processing chain, the carbon footprint of the two fuels is almost equal.

The Western Balkans, with their ambitious gasification plans and costly investment into new gas supplies, risk merely replacing their current coal dependence with a new dependence on another fossil fuel that will soon suffer a similar fate. The region would thus willingly and with the direct assistance of the West lock itself into a trap of new geopolitical and economic risks.

The whole big strategic game over gas supplies to the Western Balkans could, in a broader context, look like an unnecessary big fuss that will soon fizzle out. However, the recent launch of the new gas interconnector from Bulgaria or the construction of the Balkan branch of the Russian pipeline in 2020 shows that, with sufficient political and economic backing from abroad, ambitious plans can be realised.

The smiling faces of controversial political leaders at the recent opening ceremony should be a warning signal to the region and the EU that the projects may ultimately benefit powerful political players and their own interests rather than local citizens.

This article was produced with the support of the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network. More data about gas supplies in the region can be found in this factsheet on the AMO website.

Petr Čermák

Petr Čermák is a Research Fellow at the Association for International Affairs (AMO), an independent think tank based in Prague. His primary research areas encompass politics and security in the Western Balkans. He earned his Ph.D. in international relations from Masaryk University in Brno and has undertaken research and academic pursuits at universities in Sarajevo, Zagreb, Ljubljana, Graz, and Tirana. His recent endeavors involve research projects centered around the energy transition and foreign influences in the Western Balkans, as well as the formulation of Czech foreign policy towards the region.

 


Intuitive Machines’ private Moon mission has successfully launched from Earth


A US private Moon lander has successfully launched 24 hours after its flight was delayed due to fuel issues.

The Nova-C Odysseus lander, built by Texas-based space flight company Intuitive Machines (IM), could become the first private mission – called IM-1 – to land intact on the lunar surface.

The Moon lander lifted off at 6.05am Irish time on Thursday on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida, SpaceX posted on X, formerly Twitter.

Intuitive Machines’ co-founder and chief executive Steve Altemus said “there have been a lot of sleepless nights getting ready for this” in the minutes before lift-off.

The company’s vice president of lunar access Trent Martin was responsible for the countdown as the launch went off on time.

He said: “Godspeed, Odysseus. Now let’s go make history.”

Applause could be heard from the control room as the spacecraft achieved second-stage engine cutoff.

The successful launch comes one month after another US spacecraft, Peregrine, failed to touch down following a fuel leak.

The failure of Peregrine, operated by US company Astrobotic, marked the third time a private company had been unable to achieve a soft landing on the lunar surface.

The Beresheet lander, built by Israel’s SpaceIL, crashed during descent in 2019, while the Hakuto-R M1 lander, from Japanese company ispace, was destroyed while attempting to land in April last year.

Odysseus would be the first US Moon landing since the final mission of the Apollo programme – Apollo 17 – more than 50 years ago.

Odysseus is a hexagonal cylinder about 13ft (4m) tall and 5ft (1.57m) wide and weighs 1,488lb (675kg).

It is part of Nasa’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative, which aims to involve commercial companies in the exploration of the Moon as the space agency focuses on getting astronauts back there through its Artemis programme.

If all goes to plan, Odysseus could attempt a lunar landing on February 22.

The landing site will be at Malapert A, a crater near the Moon’s south pole.

Once it is on the surface, Odysseus will operate for roughly two weeks, or one lunar day.

(PA Graphics)

Onboard the lander are 12 payloads, which includes a Nasa instrument known as Scalpss (Stereo Cameras for Lunar Plume-Surface Studies) – a four-camera system which aims to capture Odysseus’s descent to the lunar surface.

The lander will also be carrying a sculpture – called Moon Phases – by American artist Jeff Koons.