Sunday, November 29, 2020

Could a green future spell the end of international sport?

Coreen Grant takes a reflective outlook on the opportunities the pandemic has presented us with in changing the impact sport has on the environment


'Looking forward, 2021 holds an unusually high number of major international sporting events.


by Coreen Grant


Sunday November 29 2020, 

As England enters the second national lockdown of 2020, elite sport shows no signs of slowing down. International fixtures continue to be played, with teams like England Netball travelling as far as New Zealand to begin a three-match series. Looking forward, 2021 holds an unusually high number of major international sporting events. With some events postponed from 2020, the sporting calendar promises to be particularly packed. England Netball will be joined in New Zealand by rugby teams from across the globe for the Rugby World Cup (women’s), while the Rugby League World Cup (men’s, women’s and wheelchair) will take place closer to home, in venues across England. Other major events in the calendar include the Euro 2020 Championship, the Invictus Games, and, of course, the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games. With global audiences having endured tight restrictions throughout the pandemic, a stimulating series of gripping international sport seems just the ticket.

Or does it? Since the beginning of lockdown measures, voices across the political spectrum have been drawing attention to the unique opportunity the pandemic presents to change the way that society operates, for the better. A ‘green recovery’ from COVID-19 is near the top of national priorities, but how does a schedule of mega sporting events sit within a greener future? From the new infrastructure required for an Olympic Games, to the footprint of flying entire squads and fan-bases across the globe, it is clear that large-scale sporting events are at odds with efforts to decarbonise the economy and tackle climate change. CO2 emissions are not the only problem, either; mega sporting events generate tonnes of garbage and food waste and consume colossal amounts of energy in powering stadiums and their water usage.


“A ‘green recovery’ from COVID-19 is near the top of national priorities, but how does a schedule of mega sporting events sit within a greener future?”

Although the environmental sustainability of sport is not widely discussed in the mainstream nor in academic literature, the question is not a new one. Recognition of the importance of the relationship between sport and the natural environment dates back at least to the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway. Concerns around the negative environmental impacts of the Games were addressed by carefully planned construction of facilities and initiation of more than twenty sustainability projects. As a result, the 1994 Olympics became widely regarded as the first ‘Green Games’. Since 1994, the sport industry has developed critical strategies to mitigate environmental impact via two main types of initiatives: reducing the ecological footprint of sport, and using sport as a means to raise environmental awareness. The former is not a simple goal, as this Forbes article shows. It is difficult enough to assess the global environmental impact of sporting events, let alone create strategies to address them. And the sporting industry, like many others where environmental measures can be at odds with profit, has not always wanted to address these issues. Host cities, attracted to mega sporting events by the lure of funding and boost in tourism, often encounter unforeseen – or at least unaccounted for – consequences. One problem is the tendency for host cities to relax rules around urban development and restructuring. This happened in the run-up to the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games in Brazil; politicians in Rio executed ‘flash-votes’ to pass emergency bills, annulling the laws protecting historical architecture in order to develop the desired infrastructure. In such cases, physical goals such as state-of-the-art stadiums are prioritised to the neglect of their social and environmental impact. Likewise, the cost of mega sporting events is frequently borne out by public funding, even though local residents often cannot afford to attend such events, which are targeted towards the elite foreign traveller – another contributor to pollution. The legacy of the 1994 ‘Green Games’ seems to have gotten lost somewhere along the way. But is this still the case today, when the environment is increasingly at the forefront of development considerations?
Tokyo's sustainability concept TOKYO 2020

Among the world’s largest sporting events, the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games (Tokyo 2020) provides an ideal case study. The pandemic forced the Games to reschedule to summer 2021, but from their conception Tokyo 2020 has aimed to be the most sustainable Games yet. This focus is summed up by the motto, ‘Be better, together – For the planet and the people’. Tokyo’s Governor, Yuriko Koike, wrote that, “unlike many past Olympic hosts, the city is also committed to embedding long-term economic, social, and environmental needs into all planning processes”. To do so, Tokyo 2020 has shaped its approach around the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The UN specifies: “sport is also an important enabler of sustainable development”. Tokyo 2020 made an early and well-publicised statement in this regard by announcing that the iconic Olympic medals would be made from recycled metals, and the award ceremony podiums from household plastic waste – an emblematic signal of things to come. But how do the plans for Tokyo 2020 go beyond symbolic gestures?

Tokyo’s website has an entire section dedicated to their sustainability concept, goals and policies. It is clearly designed to be accessible to a wide range of readers. A page specifically aimed at people attending the Games lists possible actions to reduce their environmental impact, including: offsetting the carbon of their flights, using public transport, segregating waste at venues for recycling, reducing single-use plastic, saving energy during hotel stays, and reducing food waste. Although Tokyo’s wider sustainability approach includes themes such as biodiversity and co-operation, the reduction of emissions to tackle climate change is at the forefront of its campaign. The Carbon Offset Programme, ‘Towards Zero Carbon’, aims to encourage energy-saving measures and the use of renewable energy in both the preparation phase and during the actual games. But as any environmental activist will point out, carbon offsetting is little comfort in a time when the world needs to drastically reduce its overall emissions, not just offset extra. In this regard, the current trajectory for international sport hardly tallies with a green future. Yet, with its incredible cultural and social significance, it is difficult to imagine international sport is going anywhere soon.
'A Village Plaza Built by All'.TOKYO 2020

This brings us back to the second strategy adopted by the sporting industry to mitigate environmental impact: using sport as a means to raise environmental awareness. This strategy is clearly a cornerstone in Tokyo 2020’s concept of a sustainable Games. They state that spreading efforts to reduce and absorb emissions worldwide, including encouraging citizens to adopt both individual and collective actions, is equally as important as reducing their own emissions. A vivid visual example is the concept design for the Athlete’s Village Plaza – ‘A Village Plaza Built by All’. Involving a ‘Japanese lumber relay’, the Plaza will be constructed from lumber borrowed from local governments across Japan, to symbolise communities uniting under the Games. After the Plaza is dismantled, the lumber will be returned to the original governments to be used as a legacy in public facilities and elsewhere. It is hoped that concepts such as these will help to realise an environmentally responsible Games, while also inspiring sustainable action throughout society.

Perhaps initiatives like these, which capitalise on the global reach of mega sporting events to promote more sustainable ways of living, are at least a partial answer to how international sport can reconcile its place within a greener future. But are the benefits of awareness initiatives enough to offset the industry’s own emissions? Even with rigorous efforts to make Tokyo the greenest Games ever, this remains to be seen. 2021 is set to be a crucial year when the sports industry will need to demonstrate that large-scale, international sport is environmentally viable in the long-term – or risk that it will be relegated as a fundamentally energy-wasteful industry.


Varsity is the independent newspaper for the University of Cambridge, established in its current form in 1947. In order to maintain our editorial independence, our print newspaper and news website receives no funding from the University of Cambridge or its constituent Colleges.
Swiss firms narrowly avoid 'Responsible Business' liability as vote divides nation

By Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi

ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss firms narrowly avoided facing greater liability for human rights and environmental abuses on Sunday after a national vote rejected the proposal due to regional differences despite it winning majority popular support.



FILE PHOTO: A small banner reading: "Responsible Business Initiative - Yes on November 29" is fixed to the frame of a bicycle in Zurich, Switzerland November 23, 2020. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo

In a divisive referendum, 50.7% of Swiss voters supported proposals by the Responsible Business Initiative (RBI) to extend liability over international human rights abuses and environmental harm caused by major Swiss companies and the firms they control abroad.

But the initiative failed to win support in a majority of cantons, a necessary condition for a public initiative to be enacted in Switzerland, paving the way for a milder government counter-proposal to come into force.

It is the first time in over 60 years a Swiss vote has failed on regional grounds after winning popular support.

“The Federal Council is pleased with the result, but is also aware that many who have fought for years for the initiative are disappointed today,” Justice Minister Karin Keller-Sutter said at a press conference.

She said the enactment of new government measures meant supporters would not leave the campaign with empty hands. “The Federal Council is convinced that this is a good way to achieve the common and undisputed goal of better protecting human rights and the environment.”

The government proposal will require firms to step up and publicly report checks on their overseas operations and supply chains, hitherto voluntary measures, but stops short of extending liability to Swiss courts.

Proponents of the initiative said its broad public support - a rare, if symbolic, victory for a politically and economically progressive issue in the traditionally staid country - remained cause for sharper scrutiny of multinationals and commodities firms in one of the world’s leading commercial centres.

“Human rights is such a fundamental issue. People understand you can’t justify human rights violations by economic considerations,” Florian Wettstein, a professor for business ethics at the University of St. Gallen and co-organiser of the initiative, told Reuters.

In a polarizing campaign, the government and multinationals denounced the negative economic consequences of the proposal, while activists, religious groups and various political factions argued Switzerland risked falling behind other countries in tackling progressive social and economic issues without it.

“It was the most aggressive campaign I’ve ever experienced in my 20 years in politics,” parliamentarian Christa Markwalder told Swiss broadcaster SRF.

Meanwhile, voters more clearly rejected a proposal seeking to impose a ban on funding arms makers, the latest anti-military referendum in a nation that has not fought an external war for 200 years.

The vote, which held implications for major Swiss banks and investors including the country’s central bank and pension funds, as well as Swiss industry, received 57.5% rejection.

Organisers said the more than 40% approval gained by the initiative, spanning beyond the country’s most left-leaning political camps, nonetheless put pressure on arms financing and showed the need for further action.


Reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Jan Harvey

 SEE
Illegal Logging Threatens Ancient Old Growth Forests of Romania

By Victoria Sinla
Nov 28, 2020 

The immense and ancient old-growth forests of Romania, straddling the vast Carpathian Mountains in Eastern Europe, are being threatened by illegal logging.




They have been unchanged ever since the last ice age, but today, they are rapidly disappearing.

This deforestation has been due to the actions of the so-called "Timber Mafia," composed of criminals that many people believe collaborate with the Romanian government.

According to Orieta Hulea, the country director of WWF in Romania, the fragile forests must be preserved, as they shelter rich biodiversity. Over half of all bears are here, as well as 30% of all wolves. The forests have aesthetic, inspirational, biological, spiritual, and planetary value.


Violence against forest protectors

The people who try to stop the destruction of the forest are threatened, beaten, or killed. According to Agent Green founder Gabriel Paun, Romania's most celebrated activist for forests, fighting illegal loggers almost had him killed on several occasions. He says that if you fight this system, you will be eliminated.

In the past few years, Paun said that forest rangers were murdered, with many others dying suspiciously. Over 650 others have been attacked with guns, knives, and axes.

Over 50% of timber in Romania come from illegal logging, acquired from forests that are protected or are harvested beyond allowable quotas.

Romsilva logging

Romsilva is the biggest logger in Romania. It is owned by the state and has control over 48% of forests. Its mandate also includes the conservation of nature.

According to many past and present employees, Romsilva has been plagued by criminal infiltration. Murder, beating, and threats are part of their operation. However, the director of Romsilva said the company does not tolerate any illegality.

Paun says foreign companies are attracted to Romania because of the convenience brought by corruption.

HS Timber

HS Timber, formerly Holzindustrie Schweighofer, is the biggest logger in Romania. It consumes trees at breakneck speed but denies any illegal activities, despite covert video recordings of admission to acquiring illegal timber.

According to Ikea forest manager Mikhail Tarasov, they stopped accepting materials from the company in 2017 when its wrongdoings were made public. Nonetheless, Tarasov admits that it is impossible to have no wood in their supply chain which had an illegal origin.

Ingka Investment is Romania's largest privately owned forest owner, which is part of Ikea Brand's Group of companies. Tarasov insists Romania's Ingka Forests implements and secures requirements that are legal and even beyond.

Critical situation

The illegal logging in the country is critical, with the European Commission filing infringement procedure against it because it failed to halt illegal logging. This is the last step before forwarding the case to the EU's Court of Justice.

According to Gelu Puiu, Romania's state for forests secretary and former Romsilva senior manager, they have reduced crime and improved sustainable management, and are confident that they are on the right path now.

The future

There is still a lot of forests that still stand. However, there is little time left. If the ancient old-growth forests of Romania, the treasure of the Carpathian Mountains in Eastern Europe, are to see the decade ahead, then drastic action is warranted if they are to be saved from being lost forever due to illegal logging. 

Drastic Ice Melt Reveals Frozen Archive of Ancient Arrows in Norway

By Rein F.
Nov 29, 2020 

Researchers discovered a trove of frozen arrows as climate change melts away an ice patch in Jotunheimen Mountains in Norway. These artifacts have been preserved in ice that has melted and refrozen over the years, with the oldest dating back 6,000 years.

Treasure Trove in a Single Patch

The research team from the Universities of Cambridge, Oslo, and Bergen found 68 arrow shafts at the Langfonne ice patch in the Norwegian mountain. Some of these still have arrowheads attached, as the ice preserved the twine and tar that hold the arrow together.

Aside from the large collection of ancient arrows, the discovery also included a 3,300-year-old shoe from the Bronze Age, scaring sticks used in deer hunting from the Iron Age, and remains of reindeer antlers. They also found fabric that may have been used to package meat.

As published in the Holocene journal, the researchers have been secretly working on the Norwegian mountain slope for years to prevent others from contaminating the site. They were able to find various artifacts spanning more than 5,000 years. The most recent artifacts are from around 1,300 AD.

(Photo: Lars Pilø, Secrets of the Ice )
Researchers found 68 arrowheads in Langfonne, one of which is from around 700 AD.


READ: Melted Glacier Reveals Ancient Viking Mountain Pass


Frozen Pieces of History

The discovery confirms the interesting hunting practices of ancient people. It also describes the extent of ice at different times.

The arrowheads were made of bone, slate, quartz, iron, or mussel shell. The oldest of them dates back to 4,000 BC. These were found to be in poor condition, probably due to ice movement. Data from ground-penetrating radar (GPR) showed that ice deformation deep in the patch might have broken the brittle arrows.

Meanwhile, late Neolithic arrows, or those from 2,400-1,750 BC, were better preserved than arrows from the next 2,000 years.

In 2006, a well-preserved shoe was found by glacier archeologist Reidar Marstein. Radiocarbon dating revealed it to be 3,300 years old or from the Early Bronze Age. This launched an extensive study on the Langfonne area.


Window to Novel Archeological Discoveries

The Jotunheimen Mountains are located north of the Norwegian capital, Oslo. Over the past two decades, the ice melts in the regions have been drastically affected by global warming, with the Langfonne ice patch retreating by more than 70%.

Ice patches give way to high-level archeological findings. The Langfonne setting provides opportunities for researchers to engage in important glaciological investigations.

Researchers previously believed that items would be preserved chronologically and can be used to create a timeline. However, displacement in ice movement, meltwater, and other natural processes are believed to have affected the spatial patterning of artifacts in the site.

The spatial distribution of artifacts can measure increased hunting activities in the area during a certain period. Radiocarbon dating also revealed interesting usage patterns.

There are periods when many reindeer bones but few arrows were found, suggesting that the presence of human hunters was low and reindeer were most likely preyed on by wolverines.

Interestingly, artifacts from 600 to 1,300 AD showed an opposite pattern where there is an abundance of arrow finds but hardly any reindeer materials. This has been attributed to activities in the era when Vikings were raiding coastal communities in Northern Europe. Human hunters probably sold the reindeer fur and antlers from their harvest to other communities.

The discoveries also support recent ideas that long-distance trade in Northern Europe started earlier than previously believed.

READ: Valuable Archeologic Sites Emerge From Melting Glacier Ice

Skewed Responsibility: Australian War Crimes In Afghanistan

The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Afghanistan Inquiry was always going to make for a gruesome read – and that was only the redacted version. The findings of the four-year investigation, led by New South Wales Court of Appeal Justice and Army Reserve Major-General Paul Brereton, point to “credible evidence” that 39 Afghan non-combatants and prisoners were allegedly killed by Australian special forces personnel. Two others were also treated with cruelty. The Report recommends referring 36 cases for criminal investigation to the Australian Federal Police. These involve 23 incidents and 19 individuals who have been referred to the newly created Office of the Special Prosecutor.

The Report goes into some detail about various practices adopted by Australia’s special forces in Afghanistan. The initiation rites for junior soldiers tasked with “blooding” – the first kill initiated by means of shooting a prisoner – come in for mention. “This would happen after the target compound had been secured, and local nationals had been secured as ‘persons under control’.” “Throwdowns” – equipment such as radios or weapons – would then be placed upon the body. A “cover story” would thereby be scripted “for purposes of operational reporting to deflect scrutiny.”

A “warrior culture” also comes in for some withering treatment, which is slightly odd given the kill and capture tasks these men have been given with mind numbing regularity. “Special Force operators should pride themselves on being model professional soldiers, not on being ‘warrior heroes.’” When one is in the business of killing, be model about it.

As with any revelation of war crimes, the accused parties often express bemusement, bewilderment and even horror. The rule at play here is to always assume the enemy is terrible and capable of the worst, whereas somehow, your own soldiers are capable of something infinitely better. “I would never have conceived an Australian would be doing this in the modern era,” claimed Australian Defence Force Chief General Angus Campbell.

History has precedent for such self-delusions of innocence abroad. The atrocity is either unbelievable, or, if it does take place, aberrant and capable of isolation. The killing of some 500 unarmed women, children and elderly men in the Vietnamese hamlet of My Lai on March 16, 1968 by soldiers of the US Americal Division was not, at least initially, seen as believable. When it came to light it was conceived as a horror both exceptional and cinematic. A veteran of the Twenty-Fifth Infantry Division went so far as to regard My Lai as “bizarre, an unusual aberration. Things like that were strictly for the movies.”

The investigating subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee responded to My Lai in much the same way, suggesting a lack of sanity on the part of the perpetrators. The massacre “was so wrong and so foreign to the normal character and actions of our military forces as to immediately raise a question as to the legal sanity at the time of those men involved.”

The Brereton Report also has a good deal of hand washing in so far as it confines responsibility to the institution of the army itself. “The events discovered by this Inquiry occurred within the Australian Defence Force, by members of the Australian Defence Force, under the command of the Australian Defence Force.”

Even here, troop and squadron commanders, along with headquartered senior officers, are spared the rod of responsibility. The Report “found no evidence that there was knowledge of, or reckless indifference to, the commission of war crimes, on the part of commanders at troop/platoon, squadron/company or Task Group Headquarters level, let alone at higher levels such as Commander of Joint Task Force 633, Joint Operations Command, or Australian Defence Headquarters.”

Such a finding seems adventurously confident. If accurate, it suggests a degree of profound ignorance within the ADF command structure. For his part, Campbell acknowledged those “many, many people at all sorts of levels across the defence force involved in operations in Afghanistan or in support of those operations who do wonder what didn’t they see, what did they walk past, what did they not appreciate they could have done to prevent this.”

The Report also sports a glaring absence. The political context in terms of decisions made by Australian governments to use such forces drawn from a small pool is totally lacking. Such omissions lend a stilted quality to the findings, which, on that score, prove misleading and patently inaccurate. Armies, unless they constitute the government of a state, are merely the instruments of political wish and folly. Nonetheless, the Report insists that, “It was not a risk [the unlawful killings] to which any government, of any persuasion, was ever alerted. Ministers were briefed that the task was manageable. The responsibility lies in the Australian Defence Force, not with the government of the day.”

Prime ministerial and executive exemption of responsibility is thereby granted, much aided by the persistent fiction, reiterated by General Campbell, that Australian soldiers found themselves in Afghanistan because the Afghans had “asked for our help.”

History may not be the ADF chief’s forte, given that the government at the time was the Taliban, accused of providing sanctuary to al Qaeda’s Osama bin Laden, responsible for the 9/11 attacks on the United States. Needless to say, there was no invitation to special forces troops of any stripes to come to the country. The mission to Afghanistan became a conceit of power, with Australia’s role being justified, in the words of the Defence Department’s website, to “help contain the threat from international terrorism”.

It is also accurate to claim that Australian government officials were unaware of the enthusiastic, and sometimes incompetently murderous activities of the SAS in the country. On May 17, 2002, Australian special troops were responsible for the deaths of at least 11 Afghan civilians. They had been misidentified as al-Qaeda members. The defence minister at the time, Robert Hill, told journalist Brian Toohey via fax that the special forces had “well-defined personnel identification matrices” including “tactical behaviour”, weapons and equipment. These suggested the slain were not “local Afghan people.” This turned out to be nonsense: the dead were from Afghan tribes opposed to the Taliban.

John Howard, the prime minister responsible for deploying special operations troops to Afghanistan in 2001, is understandably keen to adopt the line of aberrance in responding to the Report’s findings. The ADF was characterised by “bravery and professionalism”, and the disease of atrocity and poor behaviour could be confined to “a small group of special forces personnel who, it is claimed, amongst other things, were responsible for the unlawful killing of 39 Afghan citizens.”

This is much wilful thinking, though it will prove persuasive to most Australian politicians. In Canberra, there are few voices arguing for a spread of responsibility. One of them is the West Australian Greens Senator Jordon Steele-John. “The politicians who sent [the special forces] to #Afghanistan & kept them there for over a decade,” tweeted the sensible senator, “must be held to account, as must the chain of command who either didn’t know when they should’ve or knew & failed to act”.

Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at SelwynCollege, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com

© Scoop Media

 

New Zealand Government To Declare A Climate Emergency

The Government will declare a climate emergency next week, Climate Change Minister James Shaw said today.

“We are in the midst of a climate crisis that will impact on nearly every aspect of our lives and the type of planet our children will inherit from us.

“Declaring a climate emergency is a clear statement of the Government’s intent to address this crisis.

“It will build on the significant progress we made last term putting in place one of the world’s most ambitious frameworks for long-term, meaningful climate action.

“However, the only way to avoid the worst impacts of the climate crisis and build a zero carbon New Zealand that meets the needs of everyone, is to take action.

“Today’s Speech from the Throne outlined that climate change will be a priority for this Government.

“Over the next three years the Government will develop policy to ensure the declaration we make next week is backed with action to bring emissions down.

“Every part of Government will have an important role to play in this. And we know there is no time to waste. According to the world’s leading scientists we have just over nine years left to cut global warming emissions in half.

“And so, while the window of opportunity is small and the task is large, this Government has shown again and again that we are equal to the challenge ahead,” James Shaw said.

© Scoop Media

 

On How America’s Middle East Allies Are Poisoning The Ground Joe Biden Will Inherit

As even the US mainstream media has been reporting, the prime motive for the murder of Iran’s top nuclear scientist Dr. Mohsen Fakhrizadeh (by Israeli or Saudi operatives, or both) has been to poison the situation that the next US president will inherit. At best, there was only an outside chance that the incoming Biden administration and the outgoing liberal regime of Iranian PM Hassan Rouhani could have revived the Iran anti-nuclear deal that Rouhani had negotiated in 2015 with Barack Obama. Deliberately though, America’s allies have now made it impossible for Biden to pursue that option.

In the time remaining to Rouhani before he leaves office at the mid 2021 elections, Rouhani cannot possibly negotiate with a United States that (a) welshed on its side of the original deal (b) tried to wreck the Iranian economy (c) assassinated General Qassem Soleimani and now (d) has given the greenlight for its allies to murder Iran’s top scientist. No civilised country can behave as the US has been doing in the Middle East and then expect other countries to deal with it in good faith.

At other times in the past, Israel has been strongly suspected of murdering the scientists in the regimes it opposes. (See below.) In passing though, the killing of Fakhrizadeh has once again underlined the folly of US President Donald Trump reneging (in 2018) on the Iran nuclear deal. Imperfect though it was, that deal created a workable trade-off. Iran would halt any progress to nuclear weapons, submit to demeaning inspections by external authorities, and receive (in return) opportunities to trade with the West. Iran complied: the US didn’t. Trump not only scrapped the deal, he imposed harsh economic sanctions on Iran and murdered Soleimani, the most widely respected political leader in Iran – all in order to bludgeon Iran’s leaders back to the bargaining table.

That strategy has failed, utterly. Why Iran would ever re-negotiate any deal with a US incapable of keeping its word was always a mystery. In any case, the US trade and financial sanctions have caused extreme hardship to ordinary people – but all this has achieved has been to undermine public support for the liberal government, and justify the hardliners’ position that it was always naively stupid to trust the Americans in the first place.

In the June 2021 election conservative hardliners will almost certainly prevail. Meanwhile, the Trump strategy has not curtailed Iran’s support for the Houthi rebels in Yemen, or for its foreign policy initiatives in Syria and Lebanon. Given that it now had no incentive to do otherwise, Iran has also recommenced very early work on re-building a nuclear energy capability.

In fact, the trade openings to the West originally promised under the 2015 nuclear deal had been seen by the mullahs as a dangerous threat to their grip on power. The mullahs themselves are corruptly insulated from the hardships caused by the US sanctions. (Soleimani was widely popular because he was seen as the exception to the corruption among the ruling elites.). In practice, all that the overt hostility to Iran (by the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia) has done is to enable the mullahs to justify the strict surveillance measures and security crackdowns on an Iranian public increasingly disenchanted with the dominant role of the mullahs in Iran’s public life.

That’s the tragedy here. The real losers have been the people of Iran - demonised abroad by the most brutal regimes in the Middle East (Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE) and ruled at home by a regime of fanatics who treat the hostility of the outside world ( and of their own dissidents) as a badge of virtue.

Footnote: If Mossad agents were responsible for the murder of Dr. Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. it would not be the first time Israel has targeted scientists: 

In 1967, Egyptian nuclear scientist Samir Naguib was killed in a car accident in the U.S. Naguib was reportedly planning to return to Egypt at the height of war with Israel to help launch Egypt’s nuclear program when he was killed. Another Egyptian nuclear scientist, Yahya al-Mashad, who headed Iraq’s nuclear programme, was killed in a Paris hotel room in 1980. In 1991, Lebanese condensed matter physicist Rammal Hassan Rammal died in mysterious circumstances in France.

In 2004, Iraqi nuclear scientist Ibrahim al-Dhaheri was shot dead as he was riding a cab in Iraq’s western city of Baquba. In 2010, Iranian quantum field theorist and elementary-particle physicist Masoud Alimohammadi was shot dead outside his home in Tehran. Iran accused the U.S. and Israel of killing the scientist, but Washington denied the accusation. Israel, however, did not deny or confirm involvement.

In the same year, Iranian nuclear engineer Majid Shahriari was killed in a car bombing in Tehran.

The individuals concerned are being targeted not simply because of the potential military applications of their work, but also for the contribution they were making to their respective countries’ wider modernising and development efforts.

Footnote Two : As the US Middle East expert Professor Juan Cole has pointed out in his response to the killing of Fakhrizadeh, it is not as if Iran was on the brink – or anywhere near it – of building a nuclear weapon. Reportedly, Iran has enriched uranium only to 3.5%, well below the 95% needed to build a nuclear weapon. As Cole says:

You’d have to enrich the uranium to about 95% U-235 to make a bomb. Iran has never enriched beyond 19.5%, which is the level that is needed to run its small medical reactor, and is the cut-off for Low Enriched Uranium. There is no reason to think that Iran knows how to enrich to 95% for a bomb or has the various additional technologies that would be necessary to construct a bomb. Sometimes you see US journalists allege that Iran has “enough” enriched uranium to make “two bombs.” That is frankly ridiculous. You don’t make bombs by the amount of uranium you possess that is enriched to 3.5% or 4.5%. Without the necessary level of enrichment, you’d just have some rocks that could be used to heat water.

This lack of a palpable nuclear weapon threat from Iran’s uranium enrichment programme reinforces the view that the timing of the murder – and its motive – has been to fence in the Biden administration, and prevent it from making any gesture of goodwill to Tehran. More than ever, American foreign policy in the Middle East is being held hostage by its supposed friends and allies, and not so much by its alleged enemies.

Footnote Three: One of the other downsides of Trump scrapping the nuclear deal has been that this has apparently encouraged the mullahs to recommence the killing of Iranian dissidents living abroad. These lethal actions in Europe were relatively common in the early 1990s, and picked up again just after the failed Green Revolution in 2010 – but they were suspended in an apparent gesture of goodwill in order to get the 2015 nuclear deal safely negotiated. With that incentive gone, the killing of Iranian dissidents living abroad appears to have resumed.

Footnote Four: And just in case Iran looked like the only place where Donald Trump is trying to poison the foreign policy situation his successor will inherit, it isn’t. Trump is doing the same thing in Afghanistan, too. Not only will the Trump-ordered scale of troop reductions limit the ability of US forces to train Afghan forces, it will undermine the diplomatic efforts to strike a deal with the Taliban. US troop withdrawals were a prime negotiating card in those talks, and the active presence of US forces in the field was an incentive for the Taliban to make any deal at all. At home and abroad, Trump will be leaving Biden to pick up the pieces.

© Scoop Media

Low-lying Pacific Island Has More Land Above Sea Level Than In 1943

Monday, 30 November 2020, 9:50 am

Press Release: University of Auckland

An inhabited island in the low-lying Pacific nation of the Marshall Islands, which are thought to be at risk of being inundated by rising sea levels, has actually increased in size since 1943, scientists say.


And the increase in area above sea level is likely not confined to Jeh Island on Ailinglaplap Atoll, one of 29 coral reef atolls that form the Republic of the Marshall Islands which lie roughly half way between Hawaii and Australia. The low-lying Islands have been called the most endangered nation on earth due to the potential effects of sea level rise.



Atoll islands like those in the Marshall Islands are low-lying deposits of reef-derived sediments deposited in the last 5000 years or less. Despite local sea level rise, scientists have observed growth in land area of most atolls since the mid-20th century, suggesting they are able to accumulate the sediment needed to expand.

But this process of aggregation of sediment is not well understood. In particular, little research has been done to establish whether sediment deposits which accumulate on coral atolls are recent deposits or sediment that has built up over many decades.

In a new study Dr Murray Ford from the University of Auckland and Professor Paul Kench from Simon Fraser University in Canada compared aerial photographs from 1943 and used satellite imagery and radiocarbon dating of sediment deposits on Jeh Island.


Photographs and satellite images show the island, sparsely populated with about 40 homes, has increased in land area by 13 per cent since 1943, from 2.02 sq km to 2.26 sq km, reaching 2.28 sq km by 2015. It also appears Jeh is a merger of at least two formerly separate islands where sediment has built high enough to form one larger continuous land area.


As well, satellite images from 2010, 2015 and 2019 reveal a spit at the western-most end is continuing to extend, adding to the total land area above sea level.

In trying to track where the island-building sediment is from and how long ago it accumulated, the ages of sediment samples were calculated using radiocarbon dating. The team tested coral fragments, mollusc shells and microscopic marine organisms called foraminifera at the Island’s western end.

In total 28 radiocarbon dates of island sediments were analysed which showed accretion of sediment deposits was from more recent material, generally post-1950.

“This study has found that the expansion of islands through sediment generation under conditions of sea level rise is possible,” Dr Ford says.

“The coral reefs which surround these islands is the engine room of island growth, producing sediment which is washed up on the island shoreline. Healthy coral reefs are essential for this process to continue into the future.

“In this work and in previous studies, we have found Islands are resilient in the face of rising seas and that sediment supply to some atolls is out-pacing sea level rise. What we don’t know is how that will play out in coming decades but studies of low-lying reef island formation do need to take these findings into account.”

© Scoop Media


UPDATES
INDIA
Farmers vow to step up protests, reject government appeal to lift blockade

By Manoj KumarAnushree Fadnavis
NOVEMBER 29, 2020












NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Thousands of protesting Indian farmers refused to comply with a government appeal to stop blockading major highways into New Delhi on Sunday and vowed to intensify their action against Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s liberalising reforms.

Farmers from states around the capital have been demonstrating for three straight days against reforms that deregulate the sector and allow farmers to sell produce to buyers beyond government-regulated wholesale markets, where growers are assured of a minimum price.

Small growers fear the changes will make them vulnerable to competition from big business, and that they could eventually lose price supports for staples such as wheat and rice.

In a statement on Sunday, an umbrella group representing different farmers’ unions slammed the government for saying it would engage in talks with the farmers if they moved their protest off the roads into a designated stadium site.

“The government, if serious about addressing the demands of farmers, should stop laying down any conditions and should come straight out with the solution it is offering,” the statement said.

Modi sought to allay farmer concerns during his monthly radio address, saying “farmers will get new rights and opportunities” through these laws.

Union and opposition leaders, however, were unmoved by Modi’s comments, and criticised the government’s use of tear gas and water cannon to disperse protesters on Friday.

“Farmers are not fools who would not understand what is in their interest,” said Yogendra Yadav, president of Swaraj India - an opposition party.




With key roads blocked, prices of fresh produce at wholesale markets in Delhi have already begun to tick up, and the protests also disrupted commuter travel into the city.

The farmers’ unions called on farmers in other states to expand the protests from Tuesday, while urging farmers in neighbouring states and others to join demonstrations in Delhi.


Angry Indian farmers reject government offer for talks

NEW DELHI — Protesting farmers on Sunday rejected the Indian government's offer to hold immediate talks if they ended their blockade of key highways they've held as they seek the scrapping of legislation they say could devastate crop prices.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The thousands of farmers will continue camping out on highways in Punjab and Haryana states until three new agriculture laws are withdrawn, Jaskaran Singh, a leader of the Kisan Union, or Farmers’ Union, told reporters.

The farmers say the laws could cause the government to stop buying grain at guaranteed prices and result in their exploitation by corporations that would buy their crops cheaply.

The government says the legislation brings about much needed reform agriculture that will allow farmers the freedom to market their produce and boost production through private investment.

“These reforms have not only served to unshackle our farmers but also given them new rights and opportunities," Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Sunday.

On Friday, Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar offered to hold talks with the farmers’ representatives on Dec. 3.

That followed a day of clashes with police, who used tear gas, water cannons and baton charges to push them back as they tried to enter New Dehli.

The latest offer for talks was made by Home Minister Amit Shah on Saturday. But he said the farmers would have to shift their protests to a government-designated venue in New Delhi and stop blocking the highways.

Singh, the farmer's representative, said he doubted the government really wanted to hold talks.

"We want the farm laws to be scrapped, that’s all,” he said.

Singh said more farmers would be joining the protest and blocking national highways in other states as well.

Farmers have long been seen as the heart and soul of India, where agriculture supports more than half of the country’s 1.3 billion people. But farmers have also seen their economic clout diminish over the last three decades. Once accounting for a third of India’s gross domestic product, they now produce only 15% of gross domestic product, which is valued at $2.9 trillion a year.

Farmers often complain of being ignored and hold frequent protests to demand better crop prices, more loan waivers and irrigation systems to guarantee water during dry spells.

Ashok Sharma, The Associated Press

Indian farmers defiant against reform as Modi tries to calm anger

By Manoj Kumar 

© Reuters/ANUSHREE FADNAVIS
 Protest against newly passed farm bills near Delhi

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Thousands of Indian farmers, angry over reform of the agriculture sector, held a third day of protests on the outskirts of the capital on Sunday, blocking roads into the city and defying a government appeal to move to a designated site
.
© Reuters/ANUSHREE FADNAVIS 
Protest against newly passed farm bills near Delhi

The government on Saturday invited farmers' union leaders for talks on new legislation to deregulate agricultural but that has not calmed farmers' anger over what many see "anti-farm laws", and their action appeared to be spreading.

"We will stay put here today," said Rakesh Tikait, spokesman of the Bharatiya Kisan Union, one of more than 30 protesting unions, as he and his members blocked a road on the eastern approaches to Delhi.

The farmers object to legislation introduced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government in September that would let farmers sell their produce anywhere, including to big corporate buyers like Walmart, not just at government-regulated wholesale markets where growers are assured of a minimum price.
© Reuters/ANUSHREE FADNAVIS
 Protest against newly passed farm bills near Delhi

Small growers worry they will be left vulnerable to big business and could eventually lose price support for staples such as wheat and rice

Modi sought to allay farmers' concerns on Sunday.


"From these reforms, farmers will get new rights and opportunities," he said in his monthly radio address.

But one farm union leader said many protesters were demanding that the government withdraw the laws.

"The farmers' leaders will meet later on Sunday to decide their response to the government," he said, referring to the government's call for talks.

The protests began with farmers from the northern states of Haryana and Punjab on the outskirts of New Delhi on Friday, when police fired tear gas and water cannon in a bid to disperse them. [L1N2ID09V]

But instead farmers from the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh joined in over the weekend, blocking roads to the east of the capital.

Media reported protests by farmers in the southern states of Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Kerala on Saturday.

Prices of fresh produce prices at wholesale markets in the city began to tick up and commuters have faced travel disruption.

(Reporting by Manoj Kumar; Editing by Euan Rocha, Robert Birsel)
Norway gas plant resumes exports to Europe


By Reuters Staff




OSLO (Reuters) - Norway’s Nyhamna gas export terminal has restarted production and is ramping up output following a shutdown triggered by a strike among workers, system operator Gassco said on Sunday.

Sunday’s output loss was expected to amount to 40 million standard cubic metres (mcm) of gas, less than the 50 mcm loss on Saturday, while it was not yet clear if the outage would have any residual impact on Monday.

“Nyhamna has started and currently increasing export. Day ahead impact uncertain,” Gassco said in a regulatory filing.

British gas prices for the coming week had spiked on Friday ahead of the strike on fears of a protracted conflict.

Gassco and Shell, which provides technical service at Nyhamna, late on Saturday said a solution had been found however that allowed the plant to safely restart despite an ongoing strike among security guards.

Norway exported around 330 mcm per day before Saturday’s outage and meets around 22% of Europe’s annual gas demand via an extensive network of pipelines to Britain, Germany, Belgium and France.