Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Can the New High Seas Treaty Protect the "Wild West" of Int'l Waters?

Coral reef
NOAA file image

PUBLISHED MAR 27, 2023 8:04 PM BY THE CONVERSATION

 

[By Dr. Sarah Lothian]

Delegates gave a jubilant cheer at United Nations Headquarters in New York on March 5 as nations reached an agreement on ways to protect marine life in the high seas and the international seabed area.

It has been a long time coming, debated for almost two decades. It took nine years of discussions by an Informal Working Group, four sessions of a Preparatory Committee, five meetings of an Intergovernmental Conference and a 36-hour marathon final push to reach agreement.

So why was it so hard to achieve? And what does it do?

In short, the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction agreement paves the way for the establishment of more high seas marine protected areas. Only 1% of the high seas are currently fully protected, so the new agreement is a vital step towards achieving the recently adopted Kunming-Montreal biodiversity pact, which pledges to protect 30% of terrestrial and marine habitats by 2030.

In turn, the designation of more high seas marine protected areas could assist in curbing fishing activities in these waters. At present, distant water fleets can scoop up almost everything that swims or scuttles thousands of kilometres from their home country. As the high seas are also teeming with marine life, the new agreement also ensures this genetic wealth is shared fairly and equitably among the international community.

It’s not too much to say this agreement marks a significant turning point in the protection of our deep oceans.

Where are we talking about?

Nations have rights to marine genetic resources out to 200 nautical miles (370 kilometres) from their coastline. After that? It’s almost completely unregulated, much like the Wild West. It’s a huge area, representing over 60% of our oceans.

But this agreement doesn’t just cover what lives in the high seas water column. It also covers the seabed, ocean floor and subsoil beyond a coastal country’s continental shelf.

Major discoveries on the ocean floor have dispelled the long perceived myth that the deep seabed is a barren desert and featureless plain. One important breakthrough has been the discovery of hydrothermal vents and their rich biological community. These seabed habitats, have been labelled one of the richest nurseries of life on Earth and harbour unique organisms of particular interest to science and industry alike. These organisms may offer a limitless catalogue of medical, pharmaceutical and industrial applications. They may even hold the cure for cancer.

Isolation is no longer protection

Due to their remote nature, the high seas were long considered protected from human impact. But only 13% of the ocean  is now classified as marine wilderness, completely free from human disturbance, with most being located in the high seas.

International law, as it stands, is not up to the task of protecting this region. Regulations and rules are haphazard, with some regions and resources (like marine genetic resources) not protected at all. Enforcement is weak, and cooperation lacking, as I have found in my research.

Without adequate regulation, the high seas are being heavily exploited with 34% of all fished species now overfished. Illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing is also a serious problem on the high seas.

There is also growing interest in deep-sea mineral resources. The International Seabed Authority has entered into contracts with companies to mine deep-seabed areas, but the long term impacts of this mining activity are difficult to predict and its effects could have irreversible consequences for marine ecosystems. Marine pollution is also a growing problem with approximately 6.4 million tonnes of litter entering our oceans every year.

What solutions does this agreement offer?

Under this agreement, the door is open to establish marine parks and sanctuaries covering key areas of the high seas. Fishing could be banned or heavily restricted in these areas along with other activities that could have a detrimental impact on marine life.

You might have expected fishing to be a key reason for the long delay in getting this agreement across the line. However, one of the main stumbling blocks was how to share the genetic wealth of the high seas. Under the agreement, all countries will have to share benefits – financial and otherwise – from efforts to harness the benefits to be derived from these resources. Think of the possible new cancer treatments coming from compounds in sponges and starfish.

Why was this a challenge? It was difficult to find common ground on how to share benefits from this genetic wealth, with a clear divide between developed and developing nations. But it was achieved and now data, samples and research advances will need to be shared with the world.

What’s next?

Reaching agreement has been achieved. To make it legally binding, it must be adopted and ratified by countries. Will the world’s nations sign up? We’ll need as close to universal participation as possible to make this work. The first part is done. But getting States to sign on, ratify and follow the agreement is likely to be a harder task.

Dr Sarah Lothian is a Lecturer and Academic Barrister, Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources and Security, University of Wollongong.

This article appears courtesy of The Conversation and may be found in its original form here.

BHP to trial carbon capture with Chinese steel firm HBIS
Reuters | March 27, 2023 | 5:

The production of steel is one of the largest sources of carbon emissions, responsible for between 7% and 9% of the world’s total. (Image courtesy of Acero AHMSA | YouTube.)

Global miner BHP Group Ltd and Chinese steel company HBIS Group Co Ltd have agreed to trial carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) technologies at the Chinese firm’s steel mills, the companies said on Monday.


The project will develop and test technologies that can be integrated into steel production processes to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, BHP said in a statement.

HBIS will also pilot test options to use captured CO2 to produce saleable products and to store CO2 in waste slag, BHP added.

The trials will be funded by an investment of up to $15 million over three years, as proposed in a memorandum of understanding signed by the firms in 2021.

“This collaboration between BHP and HBIS, a leader in the global steel industry and an important customer for our iron ore, will provide a strong example for the industry to follow towards the wider deployment of CCUS and towards achieving major reductions in the CO2 emission intensity of steel production,” said Mike Henry, BHP’s chief executive officer.

China is the world’s top steel producer, and its steel industry accounts for around 15% of total carbon emission across the country.

China emitted more than 2 billion tonnes of the greenhouse gas in the steel sector in 2021, accounting for around 61% of the world’s total of over 3.3 billion tonnes in the industry, consultancy Wood Mackenzie said in one of its studies.

BHP and HBIS both aim to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, according to their websites.

(By Amy Lv and Dominique Patton; Editing by Jamie Freed)

 North

Yellowknife's strike is over. What happens now?

All 3 of the city's collective agreements up in the fall

A woman talks to someone off-camera.
Yellowknife Mayor Rebecca Alty says city reopening will happen in stages. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

City workers in Yellowknife were off the picket line and back on the job Monday morning, with city services and facilities expected to come back online piece by piece over the coming days.

In an email Monday afternoon, the city gave a timeline of how the phased reopening will work. 

As of March 21, City Hall, the Yellowknife public library, Ruth Inch Memorial Pool, the Multiplex, Fieldhouse and Visitor Information Centre will be open to the public. 

Lessons and special programming, however, will not resume right away, and the pool will operate on reduced hours from 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 

The Yellowknife community arena will also open to the public on Tuesday afternoon at 4 p.m.

The solid waste facility continues to be closed though the City said it would release more information on its reopening next week. Garbage pickup will continue this week and next, and compost and organics picks will begin the week of April 3. 

After that the regular bi-weekly rotation schedule will continue with garbage pickup the week of April 10, organics the week of April 17 and so on. 

The City said that recycling will resume when operational capacity allows.

"It's about five and a half weeks of garbage to manage, so that one will take a bit longer," Alty said.

What the new deal means for staff

The new collective agreement gives workers a wage increase of three per cent, retroactive to 2022, and 2.75 per cent for 2023.

It also brings one-time signing bonuses of up to $1,800, depending on whether staff are full-time, part-time or seasonal.

This year, at least, the city isn't looking at an additional tax increase to cover the extra cost. Alty said the city will need to examine its budget and figure out how to whittle down operational costs to help cover the increased pay for staff.

"Whether that's through vacancies that occurred, or, you know, we've got positions that we're hoping to hire this year [that] we'll have to delay the start, but we'll have to adjust some of our work this year," she said.

What happens next

Workers had been without a collective agreement since the last one expired at the end of 2021.

Though the new agreement covers 2022 and 2023, it will be up for renegotiation again this fall — along with both of the other collective agreements covering various city staff.

Alty said she'd like to see the negotiating strategy change for those negotiations.

There are two types of negotiations, she said: the type that just happened, with offers and counter-offers; and a type where they set out values and principles, and work collectively to come to an agreement.

"If all of our unions are open to considering that way, I think it's more collaborative, it's less confrontational and could have hopefully reduced some of the tensions in [the process]," she said.

Alty said it's hard to predict what will happen this fall, since each negotiation is different, though she assumes there will be another wage increase on the table.

"When we get back together at the table in the fall, we'll have a different mandate going into the next collective agreement and approach those discussions differently," she said.

With files from Marc Winkler

SAME OLD, SAME OLD

Ailing Lucy the elephant will remain in Edmonton, zoo decides

47-year-old not fit to travel, city zoo concludes with

advocacy group Free the Wild

A man walks beside an old elephant on a lawn of brown grass.
Lucy, accompanied by a member of her care team, on her daily walk Tuesday. (Travis McEwan/CBC)

Lucy, the Edmonton Valley Zoo's ailing 47-year-old Asian elephant, is now breathing solely through her mouth and is not fit to travel, a recent medical assessment has concluded.

"Lucy's breathing issue is more serious than the visiting experts anticipated," the City of Edmonton said in a news release Tuesday.

Despite calls over the years for Lucy to be moved to an elephant sanctuary, she will live out her remaining years at the zoo.

Canada's Accredited Zoos and Aquariums requires an independent assessment of Lucy yearly to keep her in Edmonton as a lone elephant. The most recent assessment provided "great insights into Lucy's health and wellness, including medical information previously unknown," the city said.

The assessment was performed by four elephant veterinary and husbandry experts: Dr. Frank Goeritz, Dr. Thomas Hildebrandt, Dr. Patricia London and Ingo Schmidinger.

Their findings — in three reports — have been published by Free the Wild.

"Aside from her ineligibility to travel, she is a geriatric patient and would not be able to cope with her new environment (unfamiliar habitat, new caretaker staff, and other elephants)," Goeritz and Hildebrandt wrote in their report.

Not unanimous

Not all of the visiting experts agreed that Lucy is not fit for travel. 

"Lucy is being kept more like a pet and not being allowed to be the wild elephant she is," London wrote in her report.

"It is also highly possible that the cold dry environment may be adding to her respiratory problems."

Lucy's mouth breathing was first reported in 2009, when endoscopic exploration of her trunk discovered a narrowing of the nasal passage.

Her breathing problems have since worsened, and now include "very severe" hypoxemia and hypercapnia — low oxygen and high carbon dioxide levels in her blood and tissues, Goeritz and Hildebrandt  found.

The root cause of the condition remains undiagnosed. 

The experts also discovered a large uterine tumour, (leiomyoma) which they say is common in female elephants who have never given birth. The tumour is being treated with a vaccine recommended by the visiting veterinarians. 

Recommended changes to Lucy's diet and medical treatments have resulted in a 326-kilogram weight loss since the assessment was conducted four months ago, the release said.

Goeritz and Hildebrandt concluded Lucy potentially has another four to eight years to live, and "would not survive independently from humans.

"[The] ultimate goal is to keep Lucy stimulated and engaged and to provide her with good care for the rest of her life," they wrote.

London, however, said Lucy could live another 15 years or longer, and recommended she be transported to an elephant sanctuary in the United States.

"Both the temperature and the decreased amount of sunlight in Edmonton creates an inhospitable and cruel environment for an Asian elephant," London wrote.

"The forced walks on the snow and ice in –15 C weather borders on absurd." 

Lucy was born in the wild and brought to Edmonton from Sri Lanka as a two-year-old orphan in 1977. 

The zoo began her gradual retirement from public activities in 2020.

An elephant walks on grass with one person walking behind her and another walking ahead.
Lucy, seen here in May 2022, was born in the wild and brought to Edmonton as a two-year-old orphan in 1977. (Kory Siegers/CBC)

Zoo director Gary Dewar said Lucy's caretakers are dedicated to her well-being.

"Over the past 45 years, staff at the Edmonton Valley Zoo have worked tirelessly to give Lucy the best care and best home she deserves," Dewar said in the city's news release.

"We will strive to ensure she continues to receive excellent care." 

The zoo will continue to monitor Lucy's weight and overall health, as well as look at possible changes to her housing, enrichments and routines, Dewar said.

He said some of the experts will return later this year to do follow-up examinations.

Dinosaur Bone Study Reveals That Not All Giants Grew Alike

A survey of prehistoric bones reveals that T. rex and some of its cousins had more than one way to reach enormous sizes. Evolution may have preserved that variation in modern animals too.


Some of the two-legged dinosaurs called theropods grew to enormous size. 
But new research shows that they did not all attain their final size the same way.
Kristina Armitage/Quanta Magazine


By Anna Gibbs
Contributing Writer

March 20, 2023
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Introduction

When the paleontologist Michael D’Emic cut into the bones of Majungasaurus, a relative of Tyrannosaurus rex that roamed Madagascar 70 million years ago, he suspected that surprises might be hiding in them. But what he found defied all expectations.

Majungasaurus adults measured up to 7 meters from snout to tail and could weigh 1,000 kilograms. Paleontologists had thought that big dinosaurs like these massive carnivores achieved their stature through rapid growth spurts. But the fossil bones revealed a different story. “Unlike carnivorous dinosaurs that had been studied up until then,” D’Emic said, the Majungasaurus grew “really, really slowly.”

Puzzled, he sliced up a close relative of the dinosaur — a Ceratosaurus from North America, which was roughly the same length and weight — to see if it grew slowly too. This time, “we got the opposite result,” he said. “It grew just about faster than any carnivorous dinosaur I’ve ever seen.”




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What followed for D’Emic was a decade-long whirlwind of peering at bones for clues to how dinosaurs grew. His analysis of 42 different dinosaur species, recently published in Science, demonstrates that the “get big fast” mode of growth was less predominant than researchers have assumed.

It’s an insight that researchers think may be relevant to modern animals of all sizes, and not just to prehistoric behemoths. “It’s just as easy for an animal to evolve larger body size by growing slower for longer than it is growing faster,” said D’Emic, an associate professor of biology at Adelphi University in New York.

Whether an animal grows quicker and faster or slower and longer might seem like a nitpicky distinction. But an animal’s growth trajectory provides insights into its life and the world it inhabited. Fast-growing animals can overpower potential predators and outcompete other species, but they need plenty of food and other resources. Growing slowly is riskier, but it allows an animal to survive on less during hard times. The bones of Majungasaurus, for example, confirm that, as the top predator in its ancient ecosystem, it had the luxury of developing at a leisurely pace.

Understanding growth strategies also helps explain why some dinosaurs got enormous while others stayed small. Body size can affect everything from how long an animal lives to how many offspring it has, explained Santiago Herrera Álvarez, an evolutionary biologist and doctoral student at the University of Chicago. Yet, “surprisingly, we don’t have a lot of information [about] the key developmental or genetic mechanisms underlying body size variation across animals,” he said. Studies like D’Emic’s start to open that black box.

Breaking Bones

Bones contain secrets about an animal’s life history. Holes left behind by long-gone blood vessels can reveal a creature’s metabolic rate. Miniature dimples in bone that form during healing hint at trauma from ancient battles. Thin lines within a bone — much like growth rings in a tree — can indicate the age of an animal by marking where the growth of the cortical bone slowed or stopped for annual dry seasons or winters.






The microscopically fine ring structure in this enlarged cross section through a shin bone of Majungasaurus crenatissimus reveals how quickly the dinosaur grew at various stages of its life.
Courtesy of Michael D’Emic

With bones, “we can watch our dinosaurs grow,” said P. Martin Sander, a paleontologist at the University of Bonn in Germany who was not part of the research. “The only decent way of inferring or even observing how that dinosaur grew is with its own microstructure.”

To get the answers he wanted, D’Emic therefore turned to paleohistology — the study of fossil tissues under the microscope. Its techniques haven’t changed much in nearly two centuries: Cutting through ancient bones requires intensive labor, usually with a diamond blade like that of a jeweler. Museums can be reluctant to hand over their fossils for such destructive analysis but that’s started to change in recent decades. In exchange for “what is in many ways the most boring part of the bone … you’re gaining this amazing window into how the animal lived,” D’Emic said.

Over several years, D’Emic and his colleagues analyzed more than 80 bones from 42 species of theropods, the two-legged, mostly carnivorous dinosaurs that lived between 66 million and 230 million years ago and gave rise to birds. In life, those dinosaurs ranged in size from house cat to T. rex. The wafers of bone that the researchers extracted, some about as wide as a hockey puck, had to be sanded down to a thickness of one-tenth of a millimeter — thin enough to see through, but not thin enough to break. Even then, the growth rings were too narrow to be examined effectively by eye. “You’re trying to see things that are a tenth of the thickness of a hair,” D’Emic said. Only by overlaying hundreds of images at different magnifications could the researchers get the measurements they needed.

In each bone slice, the researchers looked for the biggest gap between rings to find the year when the animal grew the most. That maximum annual growth rate was compared with the dinosaur’s body mass, which they inferred from the size of the femur and shin bones. Then the team looked closely at the evolutionary trends in size versus growth rates within different lineages.




Merrill Sherman/Quanta Magazine

About 60% of the sampled theropod species were bigger than their ancestors. But among them, D’Emic’s bone analysis revealed a nearly even split between species that grew faster than their ancestors and species that grew for longer. The preferred strategy didn’t limit how much bigger the theropods became. Some tyrannosaurs, for example, increased their body mass by more than 200% in a single year, while others eventually achieved a similar mass by growing over more years.

The same was true among the 40% of species that shrank: About half were smaller than their ancestors because they grew more slowly and half because they grew for less time.

There was no overall trend of theropod lineages getting bigger or smaller throughout their evolution — with one exception. In the lineage that led to birds, the new analysis found a consistent decrease in the maximum annual growth rate. That tendency presumably contributed to their shrinking — a change that eventually helped some theropods get small enough to fly.

“A Tyrannosaurus is somehow ancestral to a bird,” Sander said. “You have to make it smaller.”
Paths of Least Resistance

Past studies have often suggested that a fast peak growth rate is the key to size in dinosaurs, birds and mammals. But the new analysis found that theropods were instead just as likely to control the duration of their growth — an alternative strategy previously identified in only a few groups, including crocodiles and some lizards.

What D’Emic and his colleagues found in theropods might eventually turn out to be more the rule than the exception. In their paper, they noted that previous studies of growth strategies have often been limited comparisons of a few species rather than comprehensive studies of lineages.

“My hunch would be that once other groups of animals are studied, we’re going to find the same thing,” he said. “We’re going to find that evolution just takes the path of least resistance” and uses whatever strategy is easiest.

Kevin Padian, a paleontologist at the University of California, Berkeley, agreed that variability in growth strategies is to be expected since the needs and environmental constraints on every animal are different. “Each species does its own thing, and its growth strategy reflects that,” he said in an email. It will be good, he added, to duplicate D’Emic’s theropod project in other vertebrate groups.

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D’Emic thinks of his work as a jumping-off point for many new directions. He’s now studying pantodonts, an extinct group of hippo-like mammals that rapidly evolved to be gigantic right after the dinosaurs went extinct and right before a period of intense global warming. Figuring out how climate change affects growth rate and size could potentially have implications for modern conservation, he said.

Sander is interested in how these growth strategies relate to metabolic rate. “For me, this is also the justification for studying dinosaurs, not just because they’re cool and extinct, but because this kind of work extends the range of what we see in living animals,” he said.
STATEHOOD OR INDEPENDENCE
Top court ruling unleashes permit upheaval in Puerto Rico


By DÁNICA COTO


A Puerto Rican flag flies on the shore at Ocean Park, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Thursday, May 21, 2020. A ruling by Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court on Wednesday, March 15, 2023, upholds the decision of an appeals court that voids a document from 2020 that regulates land use and the granting of permits on the island, throwing into limbo hundreds of thousands of business and construction permits.
 (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti, File)

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A ruling by Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court has thrown into limbo hundreds of thousands of business and construction permits issued by a U.S. territory already struggling to attract investors amid an economic crisis.

Government officials on Thursday sought to quell anxieties over fallout from the ruling, which upholds the decision of an appeals court that voids a document from 2020 that regulates land use and the granting of permits on the island.

The ruling released Wednesday prompted the government to take the unprecedented step of temporarily suspending access to the website where people apply for permits. While access was restored Thursday, confusion still reigned as people began to question whether they’re allowed to operate a new business they opened, keep a new deck they built or start from scratch and obtain new permits if they were in mid-construction of a hospital or other buildings.

“This puts our weak economy at risk,” said Luis Vega Ramos, general secretary of the main opposition Popular Democratic Party.

On Thursday, Manuel Cidre, secretary of the Department of Economic Development and Commerce, issued a statement saying people can continue to apply for permits as usual, noting that the document voided by the island’s Supreme Court would remain in effect “until all legal remedies are exhausted.”

Environmental attorney Verónica González confirmed that the current land-use plan would remain in effect until the Supreme Court’s decision is final, adding that the government has two opportunities to appeal. However, she noted that anyone can now go to court and claim that a permit issued for a certain business or construction project is illegal given the ruling.

“Uncertainty is always going to create problems,” she said.

Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi said Thursday that he would request the island’s Supreme Court reconsider its decision.

The situation led officials to announce the resignation of María Cintrón, auxiliary secretary of the Permit Management Office, which falls under Cidre’s department.

On Wednesday, Cintrón had announced that she suspended the website for permit applications out of caution and to protect the transparency and certainty of the process, saying, “we recognize this is a complex issue that cannot be taken lightly.”

Gabriel Rodríguez, a previous president of Puerto Rico’s Planning Society, blamed the current situation on recent administrations he said are pursuing a public policy that promotes economic development and a simplified permit process above a former land-use plan that aims to protect certain areas for historic, environmental or agronomic reasons.

Pierluisi said his administration has been working on a new regulation based on public input: “My administration will always ensure that we have a current regulatory framework that allows and facilitates the socio-economic development that we all want.”

It is the third time Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court invalidates the current document that governs land use and permits on the island.

“This has turned into mission impossible,” González, the attorney, said of the government’s insistence to use the land-use plan. “This is the third strike.”

March 16, 2023
CANADA
Deportation notices to 700 students: Licence of Jalandhar-based consultant cancelled

ByHT Correspondent, Jalandhar
Mar 21, 2023 

The licence of the immigration consultant, who has been accused of allegedly providing fake documents to nearly 700 students facing deportation notices in Canada, was cancelled on Tuesday.

The licence of the immigration consultant, who has been accused of allegedly providing fake documents to nearly 700 students facing deportation notices in Canada, was cancelled on Tuesday

.
The Canadian Border Security Agency issued deportation notices to at least 700 Indian students for allegedly providing fake offer letters. (REUTERS File Photo)

Informing this, deputy commissioner Jaspreet Singh said that action against Education and Migration Services has been taken under Sections 4 and 6 of the Punjab Travel Professional’s Regulation Act 2014, which invokes cancellation of the licence if a firm is found involved in any criminal activity.

An FIR has already been lodged against the firm’s owner Brijesh Mishra and his partner.

“Anyone not having a clean police record can never be permitted to do this business as it sends a wrong message to the public. Thereby, the licence issued to the above-mentioned consultancy is cancelled with immediate effect,” the DC said.

The Canadian Border Security Agency (CBSA) issued deportation notices to at least 700 Indian students for allegedly providing fake offer letters.

As per available information, the matter came to light when the students, most of them had moved to Canada in 2018, applied for their permanent residency.

After finding a few cases of misrepresentation, the CBSA cross-checked all the cases filed by this particular consultant and identified 700 students against whom deportation notices have been issued.

Meanwhile, the deputy commissioner issued directions to conduct thorough checking of immigration firms in the district.

“Special teams have been formed under the monitoring of SDMs to regularly check the activities of immigration consultants,” he said.

Canada deportation: Travel agent’s fake offer letter led to blacklisting of students in Punjab too

The police said the preliminary investigation revealed that Mishra, along with his accomplices Gurnam Singh and Bhargava, had cheated the man and his daughter by giving fake offer letters and other documents.

Written by Anju Agnihotri Chaba
Jalandhar | Updated: March 20, 2023 
The police said the preliminary investigation revealed that Mishra, along with his accomplices Gurnam Singh and Bhargava, had cheated the man and his daughter by giving fake offer letters and other documents. ((Express photo by Gajendra Yadav/Representative Image)
Listen to this article


At a time when 100s of Indian students are facing deportation in Canada because of fake offer letters provided to them by travel agent Brijesh Mishra and his partners, a few other students have been blacklisted for five years in Punjab by the Canadian government for the same reason – submitting fake offer letter in the Canadian Embassy provided by the same agent.

After one such case came to light, Jalandhar police registered a case against Brijesh Mishra, a resident of Thalwada, Darbhanga, Bihar, his accomplice Gurnam Singh, resident of Cheema Nagar Extension and Rahul Bhargava, a resident of Kabir Avenue (Laddewali).

Mishra was sending students to Canada on study visa using his registered and licenced consultancy namely ‘Education Migration Services’ in Jalandhar. He, however, came into limelight after students, who he had sent to Canada from 2018 onwards received deportation letters in Canada.

The police said more such victims could emerge as the investigation progresses.

A case has been registered in police division-6 under sections 465, 467, 468, 471 and 120B of the IPC against Mishra and his accomplices and the investigation has been handed over to the Anti-Human Trafficking Unit.

According to complainant Jagraj Singh of Ferozpur district, after completing BSc, his daughter wished to go to Canada for further studies and they contacted the consultancy in 2018 and met Mishra.

After checking the girl’s documents, Mishra promised to send her to Canada and a deal was finalised for Rs 17 lakh. Mishra got the offer letter, but the student did not like the college. Mishra then assured them that an offer letter will be procured from another college, said the complainant, adding that they got the new offer letter after paying Rs 65,000.

“…on March 18, 2019, [the girl] got a mail from Mishra’s office that her visa had arrived and asked them to get the payment of Rs 15.25 lakh ready,” the father said in the FIR. However, after scrutiny, the offer letter was found to be fake and the embassy not only cancelled her visa but also blacklisted the girl for five years. It was found that the fee amount was also not deposited with the college, said the complainant.

As per the FIR, following this, Mishra stopped taking their calls and even started threatening him with dire consequences if he talked about it to anyone else.

The police said the preliminary investigation revealed that Mishra, along with his accomplices Gurnam Singh and Bhargava, had cheated the man and his daughter by giving fake offer letters and other documents.
Deputy Commissioner (Jalandhar) Jaspreet Singh issued a show-cause notice to Education Migration Services, which was registered in Jalandhar. He also suspended the consultancy’s licence and asked Bhargava to appear in person at his office on March 20.

Similar instances of fake offer letters have jeopardised the future of several Indian students in Canada who now face deportation from Canada or have been blacklisted from entering that country for five years.

Charandeep Sandhu, former sarpanch of Baggewala village in Ferozepur district, told Pendu Punjabi Channel in Canada that two sons of his relatives were also banned for five years after an Amritsar-based travel agent issued them fake offer letters in 2019.

He added that though an FIR was registered against the agent which led to him being jailed for seven months, the students continue to pay the price for his actions.

© The Indian Express (P) Ltd
First published on: 20-03-2023


Deportation of 700 Indian students from Canada: MEA has taken up issue with High Commission, says MP

Updated At: Mar 20, 2023 

MP Vikramjit Singh Sahney (left) with EAM S Jaishankar


Tribune News Service
New Delhi, March 19

Punjab Rajya Sabha MP Vikramjit Singh Sahney met Union External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Saturday and gave him a memorandum, requesting his intervention in the deportation case of 700Indian students from Canada. Sahney claimed that Jaishankar had assured him of full cooperation.


MEA officials informed Sahney that about 100 students had contacted the Indian consulate in Toronto, Canada. Sahney said, “The MEA has taken up the issue with the Canadian High Commission in Delhi and also with its counterparts in Ottawa. The MEA has requested them to investigate the issue, but not to deport the students because they have already spent lakhs of rupees to go to Canada, completed their studies and got work experience.”

Sahney, said the World Punjabi Organisation, in addition to taking up the matter with both governments, would extend free legal help to the students.

Sahney apprised the minister and officers of the North America division in the MEA that the students had gone Canada on the forged admission letters from various colleges. On their arrival, the students found that their admission had been cancelled, consequently they had taken admissions in other colleges and completed their studies.

“It is intriguing how the students reached Canada, given their forged admission letters provided by the notorious agents,” said Sahney

He further explained that most of the students had completed their study and did jobs in Canada for one year under postgraduation work permits. It was when they applied for permanent residency, the Department of Canada Border Security Agency flagged this issue.

THANK TRUDEAU & FRIEDLAND

Federal and provincial governments commit $485M to Saskatchewan agriculture programs

READ MORE: Agriculture ministers reach deal on new Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership

“Through the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, we are investing in the economic, environmental and social sustainability of the agriculture sector, while ensuring the resilience of supply chains,” said Gudie Hutchings, federal minister of rural economic development.

“These programs and initiatives will create new ways for producers in Saskatchewan and processors to continue to improve their competitiveness while protecting our environment.”

The province said under this agreement, there is a focus on agricultural research, support for water development, an increased funding cap in the Farm and Ranch Water Infrastructure Program and a larger per-acre payment under the Irrigation Development Program.

“The Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership will help build on the great work already happening in the agriculture industry in Saskatchewan,” said Saskatchewan agriculture minister David Marit.

“This investment will see enhancements to existing programs and the introduction of new programs to position us to continue on our sustainability journey, while ensuring the sector continues to grow, prosper and remain competitive.”

READ MORE: APAS shows support for Sask. producers ‘right to repair’ bill

The province said the programs will focus on five areas:

  • $176.6 million for building sector capacity, growth and competitiveness
  • $53.4 million for climate change and environmental sustainability
  • $40.2 million for resiliency and public trust
  • $2 million to assist the industry with market development and trade
  • $175 million for science, research and innovation

Applications for federal programs started being accepted on March 6, with programs going into effect at the beginning of April.

The new agreement also goes into effect on April 1, and will be in place until March 31, 2028.

Ian Boxall, president of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan, said this money shows that both the feds and the province see the value of the agriculture sector.

“You’re always going to see now with funding from the federal government, there’s always going to be an environmental spin on all of it. I’m hoping that is rolled out in a way that benefits producers,” Boxall said.

He said he’s hoping it’s done in a way that’s useable, and that the research going into this shows where those environmental benefits can be made.

Boxall noted that Saskatchewan farmers don’t get recognition for the moves towards sustainability they make, adding he’d like to see some of the research focus on how environmentally sound some of their practices are.

Back in July when the updated partnership was announced, concerns were brought up regarding high input costs, labour shortages and supply chain shortages within agriculture.

Boxall said concerns towards high input costs remain.

“We’re still seeing some pretty high prices for inputs that we use every day on the farm.”

Sustainable agriculture partnership will see

$485M invested in Sask.: Province


 Canada is the world's sixth-largest producer and one of the largest exporters of wheat, annually producing an average of over 25 million tonnes and exporting around 15 million tonnes. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh)

Allison Bamford
Video journalist at CTV News Regina

David Prisciak
CTV News Regina Digital Content Producer

Updated March 20, 2023 

A new federal/provincial deal will see a total of $485 million invested over the next five years to assist with sustainable agricultural projects in Saskatchewan.

The new Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership (Sustainable CAP) is a five-year, $3.5 billion investment by federal, provincial and territorial governments to improve competitiveness, innovation and resilience to the nation’s agricultural sector, a news release explained.

“It’s a way forward as we look at food security and how we support it,” said Gudie Hutchings, federal minister of rural economic development, during a press conference in Regina on Monday.

Federal programs account for $1 billion of the funding, while the remaining $2.5 billion is through cost-shared programs and activities by all three levels of government.

RELATED STORIESSask. land value rose higher than national average in 2022: Farm Credit Canada

In Saskatchewan, $89.4 million will go toward strategic programming for farmers, ranchers and agri-business annually.

“What it really means is we have the opportunity to grow the Ag sector even further in the province of Saskatchewan,” Saskatchewan's Minister of Agriculture, David Marit, told CTV News.

“We want to grow more product here, that’s our growth strategy. We also want to increase value-added processing here, but the big thing we want to do is make sure we’re doing it in a sustainable manner, too.”

Federal funding accounts for 60 per cent of the partnership while the province provides the remaining 40 per cent.

The province revealed that the funding would surround five key areas over the next five years.

These include: Building Sector Capacity, Growth and Competitiveness: $176.6 million investment to build the agriculture sector capacity, ensuring growth and competitive advantages.
Climate Change and Environment: $53.4 million to support the long-term resiliency and sustainability of the sector.
Resiliency and Public Trust: $40.2 million to support the sustainability of the sector by anticipating, mitigating and responding to risks while building public trust.
Market Development and Trade: $2 million to assist industry in expanding domestic and international trade opportunities.
Science, Research and Innovation: $175 million invested in research and development activities, enhancing the diversification and profitability of agriculture.

Additionally, $37.8 million will be allocated to support national activities such as AgriMarketing and AgriAssurance over the course of the partnership.

Marit said in the last year the province consulted stakeholders, including the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association (SCA), to help fine tune the programs.

SCA CEO Grant McLellan said the group brought forward ways to improve the current farm and ranch water infrastructure program. The renewed Sustainable CAP expands that program and increses the cap from $50,000 to $75,000.

“[The expansion] is really huge for our producers,” McLellan said.

“In particular the last few years where we’ve been experiencing drought in large swaths of the province, access to clean, reliable water is a huge boon for our members and our producers because ultimately we have to get that good quality material into our animals to get that good quality protein back to the people here.”

The partnership also enhances programs aimed to improve soil health and water quality, according to the province.

An estimated $3 billion in support is expected over the lifespan of Sustainable Cap.

Applications are currently being accepted for programs under the partnership, which is expected to last until March 31, 2028.

Foran closes C$100m private placement for Saskatchewan exploration

Staff Writer | March 27, 2023 | 

Proceeds from Foran’s private placement will go toward further exportation at McIlvenna Bay project. Foran Mining photo

Foran Mining (TSXV: FOM) has completed its C$100 million private placement. The offering consisted of over 20 million common shares of the company at an issue price of C$3.70 for gross proceeds of C$75 million, and over 4.4 million flow-through shares at C$5.66 per share for gross proceeds of C$25 million.


The net proceeds will be used for exploration and development of the company’s projects in Saskatchewan, and for working capital and general corporate purposes.

Foran owns the McIlvenna Bay project in Saskatchewan, located entirely within the documented traditional territory of the Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation. The company also owns the Bigstone project, a resource development stage deposit located 25 km southwest of its McIlvenna Bay project.

McIlvenna Bay is a copper-zinc-gold-silver rich volcanogenic hosted massive-sulphide (VHS) deposit intended to be the centre of a new mining camp in a prolific district that has already been producing for 100 years. McIlvenna Bay is the largest undeveloped VMS deposit in the region.

A feasibility study on Feb. 2022, outlined that current mineral reserves would potentially support an 18-year mine life producing an average of 65 million pounds of copper equivalent annually.