Thursday, October 26, 2023

‘No limit’ to hell people can inflict on children, says artist Helnwein

AFP
October 25, 2023

Austrian-Irish artist Gottfried Helnwein, who is famous for his hyperrealistic paintings - Copyright AFP ISAAC LAWRENCE

Kiyoko METZLER

Art is “probably the only help one has to cope” in a world being traumatised by the wars in Gaza and Ukraine, one of Austria’s most famous artists told AFP.

“What is taking place is depressing,” said Gottfried Helnwein as a retrospective of his work opened Wednesday at Vienna’s Albertina gallery.

The provocative artist — who has worked with Marilyn Manson and the Rolling Stones — is known for his haunting photo-realistic paintings which depict violence, power and abuse inflicted on defenceless children.

“There is no limit to what people are capable of doing against someone who cannot defend themselves,” said the 75-year-old, whose work has often evoked his homeland’s dark Nazi past.

“When I see a child, in the current wars, wounded, crying or dying, it affects me.”

“The question (of) whether it is an Israeli or a Palestinian, a Ukrainian or a Russian child becomes superfluous” since it is “a human being who certainly does not deserve this”, he said.

The defenceless child is a “central figure” in Helnwein’s works.

For the artist, the child is also a metaphor for both human vulnerability and strength that is “completely at the mercy of the fairness of adults”.

His oeuvre also includes performances, photography and collaborations with controversial US shock rocker Manson — who married Dita Von Teese in his Irish castle — and German metal band Rammstein.

– Painting Hitler in blood –


Born in Vienna in 1948, Helnwein grew up in the shadow of two lost world wars, the Holocaust and the Nazi era weighing heavily on people’s minds.

“Vienna was a shit city after the war. Everything was grey and black, people were unfriendly,” he said of the smothering atmosphere he struggled to comprehend as a child.

“It was an appalling climate, because history is simply not without consequences.”

As a response, “very aggressive, rebellious art” emerged in Vienna in particular as a post-war generation of artists revolted against their parents’ legacy.

Through researching the horrors of the Nazi past and the Holocaust, Helnwein zeroed in on the topic of violence against the defenceless — especially children and women.

“I knew that the only way out for me to approach this subject was art,” he said.

Only when people are “emotionally touched” by his works does he consider them finished, the artist said.

Helnwein’s early pieces in the 1960s provoked public outcry when he used his own blood to paint Adolf Hitler.

His subsequent paintings would also frequently be confiscated and damaged.

“Over the past decades the attacks have decreased more and more. But there are always people who attack you,” Helnwein said, as he has learned to live with criticism.

Asked about his alleged links to the controversial Church of Scientology, Helnwein — who divides his time between Ireland and the US since leaving Austria in the 1980s — declined to comment.

The Vienna retrospective features more than 40 of Helnwein’s works from the past three decades and runs until 11 February 2024.
Heineken warns of slowdown in consumer demand

AFP
October 25, 2023


Dutch brewing giant Heineken said Wednesday that it sold less beer in the third quarter, noting that higher prices and the poor economic outlook was affecting consumer demand.

The company, whose stable of brands includes Amstel, Sol and Tiger, sold 63.2 million hectolitres of beer in the three months to end of September, a drop of 5.4 percent.

Like many firms, Heineken raised prices as inflation hit the cost of its inputs, so overall revenues still rose, edging 2.0 percent higher compared to the same quarter last year to 9.6 billion euros ($10.1 billion) during the quarter.

Commenting on the drop in sales volumes, Heineken’s chief executive Dolf van den Brink said that although “inflation-led pricing is tapering, we observe a slowdown of consumer demand in various markets facing challenging macro-economic conditions.”

But profits have been squeezed. The brewing giant does not provide a third quarter net profit figure, but based on its published data the firm earned 768 million euros during the quarter, a drop of 18 percent.

Over the first nine months of the year, profits were down 12.5 percent to 1.924 billion euros, with Heineken saying the figure included the effects of exceptional items like its exit from Russia.

Heineken completed its exit from Russia in August, announcing it sold its operations to the locally-based Arnest Group at an exceptional loss of around 300 million euros.

But CEO van den Brink noted that sales volumes trends were improving in half of the company’s markets and that the company would continue to pursue its strategy of containing costs and rebalancing towards growing markets.

Heineken left in place its outlook for a stable to mid-single-digit increase in operating profit in 2023 as a whole.

Heineken’s shares rose in morning trading but gave up their gains to stand flat in midday trading, while Amsterdam’s all-share AEX index was down 0.1 percent.

‘Severely punished’: Vietnam environmental activists face crackdown

AFP
October 25, 2023

Hoang Thi Minh Hong, pictured here in 2022, is the fifth Vietnamese environmentalist jailed for tax evasion 
- Copyright Hoang Vinh Nam/AFP Handout

Alice PHILIPSON

Hoang Thi Minh Hong had worried for months she could become the next environmental activist swept up in Vietnam’s crackdown, so she closed her NGO and began keeping a low profile.

But it wasn’t enough, and last month she became the fifth environmentalist jailed for tax evasion, in what activists see as a campaign to silence them.

Her conviction came less than a year after a group of donors including the United States and European Union pledged to mobilise $15.5 billion in funding as part of a Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) to help Vietnam switch to clean energy faster.

The deal was hailed by US President Joe Biden as part of Vietnam’s “ambitious clean energy future”.

“Hong doesn’t deserve a single day in jail, because she’s innocent,” her husband Hoang Vinh Nam, 54, told AFP.

“She worked for the environment, for wildlife, for a better place. And now she’s been severely punished for doing that.”

Just a week before Hong’s conviction, Ngo Thi To Nhien, director of an independent energy policy think tank working on the JETP implementation, and a leading Vietnamese energy expert, was also arrested. She was accused of appropriating documents from a state-owned power firm.

The country’s communist government tolerates no opposition to its one-party rule and regularly jails critics, but its recent focus on environmental activists appears to carry a particular message, said Jonathan London, an expert on contemporary Vietnam.

“What I think we’re seeing is a concerted effort… to declare that all matters of public concern are to be addressed by the party and its state alone,” he told AFP.

Environmental activism could pose a singular threat because it targets powerful economic interests, which in Vietnam “are always closely affiliated with state power”, he added.

– ‘Shut his mouth’ –

The arrests began in 2021 with the detention of Dang Dinh Bach, a legal adviser and NGO worker who worked on coal issues. He was sentenced to five years in prison on evidence his wife Tran Phuong Thao said was fabricated.

“He pursued justice and he was on the side of the weak,” the 29-year-old told AFP. “But his work touched upon the interests of companies and authorities, and they wanted to shut his mouth.”

In January 2022, authorities detained Nguy Thi Khanh, founder of Green ID, one of Vietnam’s most prominent environmental organisations.

She was an early and rare voice challenging Hanoi’s plans to increase coal power to fuel economic development. She was jailed later that year.

The 88 Project, which advocates for freedom of expression in Vietnam, found “serious irregularities” in the way criminal procedures and sentences were applied to Bach and Khanh — as well as two other jailed environmental activists: Mai Phan Loi, and Bach Hung Duong.

Bach received one of the heaviest sentences for someone convicted of tax evasion, despite the amount involved being much lower than in other cases with similar sentences, the group said.

Pham Thu Hang, a spokesperson for Vietnam’s foreign ministry, strongly rejected claims of a “politically motivated” crackdown on environmentalists, saying each individual had violated national law.

Khanh and Loi were both released from jail this year.

But Bach is still in prison, has been intimidated and beaten, and is refusing to pay back the $55,000 he is alleged to owe, said his wife Thao.

Authorities have threatened to confiscate the apartment where she lives with their two-year-old son, she said.

– JETP ‘not punitive’ –

Washington said it was “deeply concerned” by Hong’s conviction, and has urged Vietnam “to ensure its actions are consistent with… its international commitments, including to consult with non-government stakeholders as part of the Just Energy Transition Partnership”.

“We have had numerous conversations at every step along the way about respect for human rights and our concerns about the environmental activists,” a US government official told AFP.

Still, there has been little sign the International Partners Group (IPG) — the coalition of donors signed up to the JETP — see the arrests as jeopardising the agreement.

The arrests are “a major hindrance to Vietnam’s ability to not only achieve the JETP goals… but more broadly Vietnam’s own goals to achieve net zero”, a government official from an IPG country told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

But, the JETP “is not set up in a way that is punitive”.

That is little comfort to Vietnam’s community of environmental activists who remain “very worried”, Hong’s husband Nam said.

One NGO worker, who declined to be named, said several accountants in the industry had quit their jobs, fearful of putting a foot wrong with regard to Vietnam’s complex tax laws.

Nam said Hong wrote to the tax department more than a year before her arrest and was told that CHANGE, her NGO, did not owe anything.

But now she has to pay back $300,000 — “more than the total income she received in the last ten years”, he said.

“It’s an injustice.”
US auto workers union reaches preliminary deal with Ford


AFP
October 25, 2023

UAW President Shawn Fain, shown at a Chicago rally earlier this month, hailed a tentative agreement with Ford as an historic win - 
Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File Jim Vondruska

John BIERS

The US auto workers union reached a tentative agreement with Ford late Wednesday, a breakthrough in a 41-day stoppage on Detroit’s “Big Three” car manufacturers.

The deal, which rank-and-file workers must still approve in a vote, includes a 25 percent wage increase for hourly employees, the United Auto Workers (UAW) union said.

Other key elements include guaranteed cost-of-living adjustments; an elimination of different pay levels or “tiers” that disadvantage junior employees; and a right to strike over plant closures.

“For months we’ve said that record profits mean record contracts,” said UAW President Shawn Fain in a statement. “And UAW family, our Stand Up Strike has delivered.”

Ford confirmed the agreement, saying “we are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement on a new labor contract with the UAW covering our US operations.”

Also cheering was US President Joe Biden, who hailed an “historic accord,” saying “I applaud the UAW and Ford for coming together after a hard fought, good faith negotiation and reaching a historic tentative agreement tonight.”

Biden made history in September as the first US president to stand on a picket line as he endorsed the UAW’s call for “record” contracts in light of record auto industry profits.

The wage increase in the tentative agreement is somewhat lower than the 40 percent sought by Fain when the UAW launched the strike on September 15 in the first ever simultaneous stoppage of Detroit’s Big Three (Ford, General Motors and Stellantis).

However, it is much above the nine percent increase Ford initially proposed in August.

“This agreement sets us on a new path to make things right at Ford, at the Big Three, and across the auto industry,” Fain said, while stressing that the final decision rests with members.

“We’re going to let that democratic process take its course,” said Fain, calling the rank-and-file “the highest authority.”

Fain said the ratification process will include detailed online presentations and regional meetings.

After rejecting a tentative agreement struck by UAW negotiators, workers at Mack Trucks voted to go on strike earlier this month.

– Expanding strike –

While the initial UAW strike targeted three plants with just 12,700 workers walking out, the union has gradually expanded the action in the ensuing weeks as it has sought a better deal.

More than 45,000 workers were on strike prior to the Ford deal. The UAW has about 146,000 auto workers in the United States.

In just the last two days, the UAW escalated the strike at both Stellantis and GM, taking down key factories in Michigan and Texas that make some of the companies’ most profitable vehicles.

Both GM and Stellantis are currently offering 23 percent wage hikes. Fain has argued the companies need to sweeten the deal further in light of union concessions after bankruptcy reorganizations more than a decade ago.

Following a tentative agreement, labor unions sometimes do not end a strike until the accord is ratified by members.

But in a twist, the UAW said Ford workers would return to their shifts to apply pressure to GM and Stellantis.

“This is a strategic move to get the best deal possible,” said UAW Vice President Chuck Browning, adding that “the last thing” GM and Stellantis want is for Ford to get back to full capacity while they mess around and lag behind.”
Stellantis to buy stake in Chinese EV start-up Leapmotor

AFP
October 25, 2023

Stellantis will pay China's Leapmotor $1.6 billion for a 20 percent stake
 - Copyright AFP Tobias SCHWARZ

Global carmaker Stellantis said Thursday it will buy a 20 percent stake in Chinese electric car maker Leapmotor, making it the latest European brand seeking a foothold in the country’s highly competitive market via partnerships with local manufacturers.

Hangzhou-based Leapmotor only produces electric vehicles and is relatively unknown in Europe, despite selling 10,000 cars a month in China, while Stellantis is one of the world’s largest carmakers, owning popular brands including Alfa Romeo and Jeep.

Under the deal, the Netherlands-based firm will spend 1.5 billion euros ($1.6 billion) on the stake in Leapmotor.

The two firms will also establish a Stellantis-led joint venture, Leapmotor International, which will hold “exclusive rights for the export and sale, as well as manufacturing, of Leapmotor products outside Greater China”, Stellantis said.

“As consolidation unfolds among the capable electric vehicles start-ups in China, it becomes increasingly apparent that a handful of efficient and agile new generation EV players, like Leapmotor, will come to dominate the mainstream segments in China,” Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a statement.

“It’s the perfect time to take a leading role in supporting the global expansion plans of Leapmotor, one of the most impressive new EV players who has a similar tech-first, entrepreneurial mindset to ours,” he said.

With 200 vehicles on French roads since last spring, Leapmotor is seeking to clear regulatory hurdles from the European Union in order to deploy more widely in France — its first target market in Europe.

The start-up offers a compact model, the T03, priced at 26,000 euros — aimed at meeting market demand for entry-level electric cars.

Leapmotor told AFP in September that it was ready to ally with a European group, though it did not confirm rumours about a potential alliance with Stellantis.

The company’s CEO, Zhu Jiangming, hailed the partnership with Stellantis as a “great milestone” in the firm’s history.

Stellantis already has a presence in China, via a tie-up with the Chinese group Dongfeng Motor to sell its Peugeot and Citroen cars in the world’s second-largest economy.

But it has struggled to gain a foothold, announcing last week that it would sell the three factories owned by that joint venture to Dongfeng Motor in line with a “strategy of reducing our assets in China”.

And a joint venture with Guangzhou Automobile Group filed for bankruptcy last year.

Other European manufacturers have also stepped up partnerships with Chinese companies to win over local customers.

In July, German car giant Volkswagen announced it would invest more than 600 million euros in Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer XPeng.
Erdogan challenges Ataturk’s legacy on Turkey’s centenary

AFP
October 26, 2023

Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Mustafa Kemal Ataturk are the two seminal figures of post-Ottoman Turkey - 
Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File KEVIN WINTER

Fulya OZERKAN and Burcin GERCEK in Ankara

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will mark Turkey’s centenary Sunday by honouring the post-Ottoman republic’s revered founder, while chipping away at the foundation of his secular state.

Erdogan and World War I-era military commander Mustafa Kemal Ataturk have become the seminal figures of modern Turkey, their contrasting styles and visions defining the shape of society and the country’s place in the world.

Dubbed “reis” (“chief”) by supporters, Erdogan is now Turkey’s longest-serving leader, overseeing a massive modernisation drive that has sustained his popularity in poorer and more religiously conservative provinces since 2003.

Meaning the “father of all Turks”, the surname Ataturk was bestowed on Mustafa Kemal by Turkey’s parliament after the field marshal drove out foreign armies and built a new, staunchly secular republic from the Ottoman Empire’s ruins.

Now, Erdogan is walking a fine line between paying respects to the man who created the country, and building his own legacy — one that critics fear is pulling Turkey back into its Ottoman past.

He peppers his speeches with proclamations about a new “Century of Turkey”, which could include a revised constitution that protects women’s right to stay veiled in public and defines marriage as a union between a man and woman.

State television is also rolling back coverage of the celebrations, citing Israel’s war with Gaza militants.

A lack of foreign guests at Turkey’s big birthday bash is adding to a sense of this being one party that Erdogan would prefer to skip.

Erdogan “didn’t really want to celebrate the republic,” said Soli Ozel, a professor of Istanbul’s Kadir Has University.

“People are unhappy. Nothing has been done to create a festive atmosphere.”

– ‘Climate of fear’ –

Ataturk’s lasting importance in Turkey is difficult to overstate, making any attempts by Erdogan to eclipse him particularly sensitive.

Historian, researcher and writer Ekrem Isin said Ataturk is still viewed by vast strata of society as a liberator who both defended Turks from World War I invaders and ended the religious conservatism of sultans’ rule.

“Think of a people who had spent 600 years under dynastic rule,” Isin said.

“Anyone who raised his head a little was hit with a stick. There was a climate of fear.”

The new, secular and Europe-oriented republic formed by Ataturk allowed people “to stand on their own feet, granting them rights that they did not even ask for”.

Some of the most sensitive reforms involved the stripping of religion from most facets of public life in the overwhelming Muslim state.

This may be exemplified best by the fate of Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, an ancient cathedral that the Ottomans converted into a mosque.

– Political Islam –

Ataturk turned the UNESCO-protected building — once the seat of Eastern Christianity — into a museum, bestowing it a religious neutrality that underscored his vision of modern “Turkishness”.

Erdogan converted the Hagia Sophia back into a mosque in 2020, drawing international indignation and criticism from his secular rivals.

“Erdogan is very much interested in putting his mark in every important policy matter,” said Berk Esen, an associate professor at Istanbul’s Sabanci University.

“I think Erdogan has anti-secularism in his veins,” added political analyst and columnist Barcin Yinanc.

“Political Islam has a problem with secularism and the republic,” she said.

“We are entering the second century of the republic with a government that is not at peace with the republic. Perhaps it does this consciously, because it feeds on polarisation.”

Erdogan’s underlying message Sunday, when he is due to deliver prepared remarks, will be that “he has done more in 20 years than was done in 100 years,” Yinanc said.

– ‘No excitement’ –


Sunday’s celebration will still include a drone show over the Bosphorus and fireworks in Turkey’s main cities.

The drones’ inclusion is a tacit nod to the technological innovations being spearheaded by the Baykar company, founded by the president’s popular son-in-law Selcuk Bayraktar.

The festivities could also be partially overshadowed by a million-strong rally in defence of Palestinian rights that Erdogan’s AKP party has scheduled for Saturday in Istanbul.

“He could have organised this meeting for next week. This anniversary only comes once in a century,” Kadir Has University’s Ozel said.

“Our government is an (AKP) party government that has always opposed the republican project.”

Turkey’s TRT state broadcaster is also cancelling concerts and other entertainment broadcasts for the event, citing “the alarming human tragedy in Gaza”.

The historian Isin said festive marching band parades would always commemorate October 29 in his youth.

This time, it will be “an unpleasant celebration with no atmosphere of excitement,” Isin said



Vlad the Impaler steps out of Dracula’s shadow


AFP
October 26, 2023

Fangs for coming: visitors admire one of the few portraits of Vlad III, aka Dracula, in Austria's Forchtenstein Castle
 
- Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File KEVIN WINTER


Blaise GAUQUELIN with Ionut IORDACHESCU in Romania

Cloaked in a black cape like the infamous count himself, 10-year-old Niklas Schuetz runs through the dark corridors of a hill-top castle in search of the truth about Dracula.

“He was a Romanian prince, not a vampire,” said the schoolboy, as he tripped by torchlight through the nocturnal gloom of Forchtenstein Castle.

The group being guided through the Austrian fortress are eager to sink their teeth into the gripping life of Vlad Tepes, the notorious “Vlad the Impaler”, whose descendants once held the schloss.

The castle is home to one of the few paintings of the cruel 15th-century prince, and this Halloween its curators are trying to bring the real historical figure out from the chilling shadow of the monster invented by the Irish writer Bram Stoker.

Rather than being a ghoulish fiend, the real Vlad Tepes had for a “long time gone down in history as a positive figure” who courageously fought the Ottoman Turks, said the director of its collections, Florian Bayer.

“More and more people are able to distinguish between the bloodsucking vampire and the historical figure,” he said.

Voivode Vlad III — also known by his patronymic name Dracula derived from the Slavonic word for dragon — once ruled over Wallachia, a Romanian-speaking vassal state of the Kingdom of Hungary.

– ‘Forest’ of the impaled –

Held as a child hostage of the sultan at the Ottoman court, he later turned against his former captors.

In several hard-fought campaigns against the Turks, he struck fear into his enemies by impaling thousands of Turkish prisoners.

This gruesomely slow death was also used against his internal rivals, like “the German merchants from neighbouring Transylvanian towns,” historian Dan Ioan Muresan told AFP.

Tepes was often depicted amidst a “forest” of impaled bodies.

Yet despite his gory reputation, Vlad was a handsome devil and something of a ladykiller, according to Muresan.

He was a “very handsome man with an imposing build”, with long hair flowing over his Turkish-style kaftans adorned with diamonds.

By marrying a cousin of the Hungarian king, he “gave rise to a branch from which the British royal family descends,” the historian added.

Indeed Britain’s King Charles III has repeatedly boasted of their shared blood ties, saying that Transylvania runs through his veins.

– Communist marketing –


The gothic novel by Stoker published in 1897 helped kickstart the modern vampire genre.

Dozens of films later, the fictional Dracula had transformed into a pop culture icon.

“Until the 1960s, Romanians didn’t associate the character imagined by Stoker with Vlad Tepes,” said Bogdan Popovici, head of the national archives in the Transylvanian city of Brasov, home to some of the prince’s manuscripts.

“It was the Communists who started to commercialise it for the Western market to attract tourists,” he said.

While cashing in on selling the vampire myth to visitors, the regime of Romanian Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu sought to resurrect Vlad as a national hero.

Paradoxically, the Communist regime was careful in differentiating the real Dracula from its fictitious counterpart as it pursued its mission to wipe out pagan traditions.

– Tears of blood –


“Romanians have never recognised themselves in the character, which was born out of a foreign imagination and planted into an exotic reality,” said Muresan.

“It is being exploited as a kind of tourist trap,” he said.

The real Vlad never set foot in Romania’s Bran Castle — widely taken as the inspiration for the lair of Dracula — but it hasn’t stopped it drawing visitors in their droves.

Murdered by his own people in 1476 in the wake of a conspiracy, experts dispute the whereabouts of his remains to this day, with some claiming that his head was sent to the sultan in Constantinople to confirm his death.

A recent Italian scientific study based on the analysis of the prince’s handwritten letters found that Vlad probably suffered from haemolacria, indicating that he could shed tears of blood.

The creepy detail is undoubtedly enough to keep the Dracula myth alive for some time yet.


Arctic archipelago turns the page on its mining past


AFP
October 26, 2023

Rusty bits of rail track and other rubble are virtually all that remain on the site of the former Svea coal mine which operated from 1917 until 2020
 - Copyright AFP JUNG YEON-JE


Viken KANTARCI with Pierre-Henry Deshayes in Oslo

At the old Svea mine in the Arctic, broken railway tracks overgrown with weeds lead nowhere. Of the hundred buildings that once made up the town, there’s almost nothing left.

Coal brought fortune to Norway’s Svalbard archipelago, but that bonanza became a curse for the remote group of islands, now the most harmful fossil energy for the climate.

Svalbard, today home to 3,000 people and located in the fastest-warming region on the planet, is bit by bit erasing all traces of its mining past.

A 40-minute helicopter flight from the main town of Longyearbyen, the Svea mine and its surrounding settlement have been returned to Mother Nature after a massive, recently-completed restoration project.

“At its peak there were barracks for 300 people, with a canteen, an airfield with 35,000 passengers yearly, a power plant, a workshop, and storage,” said Morten Hagen Johansen, in charge of the project at the mine where he was once employed.

The Svea site is the biggest natural restoration ever undertaken in Norway.

Only a handful of man-made objects remain, preserved because they are considered historic.

They include a few dilapidated brick buildings, a rusted track vehicle, and railway tracks that once transported wagons loaded with coal.

The area “was home to many miners who were working here for decades,” Hanna Geiran, head of the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage, told AFP.

“Preserving these artefacts helps to better understand what this place was,” she added.

– Avalanches –

The mine was opened by a Swedish company in 1917 and officially closed 100 years later after producing 34 million tonnes of coal.

The site has since been returned to its natural state at a cost of around 1.6 billion kroner (about $140 million) to the Norwegian state.

“The concept is to try to let nature take it back,” said Hagen Johansen.

“That means to let creeks run freely. To make sure that avalanches do happen, because that will transport more sediment down and it will make new creeks.”

The part of the Barents Sea where the Svalbard archipelago is located is warming up to seven times faster than the rest of the planet, according to a study published in last year.

At Svea, a spectacular landslide recently created a deep crevasse down a hilly slope.

“It is the result of a very heavy rainfall last summer where they got maybe 50-60 millimetres (2-2.3 inches) of rain in just 24 hours,” geologist Fredrik Juell Theisen said.

“That was very unusual before climate change started changing the climate up here,” he added.

– Russian presence –


The climate backlash is for the archipelago now trying to rid itself of fossil fuels.

Seven other mines located in the hills of Longyearbyen have almost all been closed, with the last one due to shut in 2025.

The town also disconnected its coal plant for good this month in exchange for a less-polluting diesel plant, ahead of a transition to renewable energies at a later stage.

Going forward, Svalbard’s economy will rely on tourism and scientific research.

The only coal still being mined on the archipelago will be a vein in Barentsburg, a Russian mining community with just under 500 Russians and Ukrainians, most of them from the Donbas region.

Under the 1920 international treaty that recognises Norway’s sovereignty over Svalbard, all signatories are entitled to exploit the region’s natural resources equally.

As a result, Russia has for decades maintained a mining community om Svalbard, via the state-run company Trust Arktikugol, in a strategic region belonging to a NATO member.

According to some observers and Russia itself, strict environmental regulations that Norway has introduced in the region — about two-thirds of Svalbard land is protected in one way or another — are at least partly aimed at limiting .

It’s impossible to know whether such considerations played into Oslo’s decision to restore the Svea mine at great cost, said Mats Kirkebirkeland of Norwegian think tank Civita.

“But there’s no denying that some of the Norwegian environmental policies and the geostrategic policies on Svalbard are aligned.”

Iraq dig unearths 2,700-year-old winged sculpture largely intact

AFP
October 25, 2023

This 2,700 year old relief uncovered by archaeologists in northern Iraq depicts a lamassu, an Assyrian deity portrayed with a human head, the body of a bull and the wings of a bird - Copyright AFP WANG Zhao

A dig in northern Iraq has unearthed a 2,700-year-old alabaster sculpture of the winged Assyrian deity Lamassu, which was found largely intact despite its large dimensions.

Only the head was missing and that was already in the collection of the Iraq Museum in Baghdad after being confiscated by customs officers from smugglers in the 1990s, the dig’s French leader Pascal Butterlin said.

“I never unearthed anything this big in my life before,” Butterlin said of the 18-tonne sculpture measuring 3.8 by 3.9 metres (about 12.5 by 12.8 feet). “Normally, it’s only in Egypt or Cambodia that you find pieces this big.

“The attention to detail is unbelievable,” said the professor of Middle East archaeology at the University of Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne.

Erected at the entrance to the ancient city of Khorsabad, some 15 kilometres (10 miles) north of the modern city of Mosul, the sculpture shows the Lamassu, an Assyrian deity with a human head, the body of a bull and the wings of a bird.

It was commissioned during the reign of King Sargon II who ruled from 722 to 705 BC and erected at the city’s gates to provide protection, Butterlin said.

First mentioned in the 19th century by French archaeologist Victor Place, the relief dropped from public records until the 1990s when Iraqi authorities earmarked it for “urgent intervention”.

It was during this period that looters pillaged the head and chopped it into pieces to smuggle abroad.

The rest of the relief was spared the destruction wreaked by the Islamic State jihadist group, which overran the area in 2014, because residents of the modern village of Khorsabad hid it before fleeing to government-held territory, Butterlin said.


Canadian scientists find a way to make batteries charge faster

By Dr. Tim Sandle
October 25, 2023

Teslas are a common sight on roads around Los Angeles and San Francisco, and data shows electric vehicle sales in the state are rising - 
Copyright AFP Sajjad HUSSAIN

Researchers from McGill University and Université du Québec à Montreal (UQAM) have found a new approach to making inexpensive batteries that can not only hold large amounts of charge but also recharge quickly.

The research focuses on improving lithium ion batteries, rechargeable cells that are used in electric vehicles, power tools, smartphones and other devices. These types of batteries are used extensively in the electrification of transport (such as electric cars) sector due to their high energy density, low self-discharge and long cycle life.

Conventional lithium-ion batteries consist of single or multiple lithium-ion cells, along with a protective circuit board. Yet despite the commonality of these batteries, progress with technology is partly hampered by a relatively slow charging time. New research has signalled a new way forward.

It is hoped from the research that energy sector manufacturers will be able to make batteries that can be charged faster. This is not only with vehicles for lithium-ion batteries have come to dominate more than 90 per cent of the global solar grid market.

To understand how a battery performs, researchers needed to see what was going on inside different batteries while they were being used. The was achieved through the use of the Canadian Light Source (CLS) synchrotron at the University of Saskatchewan (USask).

CLS is a national research facility of the University of Saskatchewan and one of the largest science projects in Canada’s history. This technology offers the bright, intense x-ray light required to peer into a working battery.

Lithium ion batteries can be made of a combination of different materials, which researchers tweak to get the performance they want.

This allowed the researchers to combine two materials and use the benefits of both of them. This was part of the hunt for one material that is capable of fast charging and another one that is capable of having a huge capacity.

The outcome was that the researchers produced a battery by mixing a known fast-charging material with a high-capacity one and experimented with different ways to combine them. This was made possible through the CLS, with the technology enabling the scientists to image the lithium ions–so that they could monitor the battery chemistry while it was being charged.

This demonstrated that a found that a layered, sandwich-like approach worked best since the lithium ion is able to move more efficiently through the cell. The findings appear in the journal ChemElectroChem. The paper is titled “Exploring the Synergistic Effects of Dual-Layer Electrodes for High Power Li-Ion Batteries.”