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US and EU block plans to protect world’s fastest shark from overfishing

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US and EU block plans to protect world’s fastest shark from overfishing
The EU and US have blocked British and Canadian efforts to protect an endangered shark species, angering conservationists.

The shortfin mako shark is also known as “the cheetah of the ocean” because it is the fastest shark species, swimming at up to 43mph, but numbers have collapsed by 99.9 per cent since the 18th century due to overfishing, according to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

The fast-swimming shark, which can jump over 6 metres from the surface of the water, is targeted by sport fishermen as well as for meat and fins. But it is also routinely caught accidentally as boats seek other species.

EU vessels are responsible for the majority of the recorded bycatch, in particular Spain and Portugal, followed by Morocco.

Conservationists were “shocked and distressed that the European Union and the United States – despite long promoting science-based shark conservation – were the main obstacles to the adoption of urgently needed protections for mako sharks at the annual meeting”, according to the Shark League – an umbrella organisation for shark protection.

Scientists at the Shark Trust and at the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (Iccat), a fisheries management organisation, have warned that the Atlantic population of short-finned mako sharks could take 50 years to begin to recover, even if fishing ceased immediately.

The UK backed a proposed ban on trade of mako sharks, alongside Canada and Senegal, as Iccat scientists advised.

The vote was the UK’s first official Iccat vote as a country independent of the EU, and representatives said they were disappointed no agreement had been reached last year.

But the US and EU argued that the ban would not be enough to prevent bycatch, and voted against the proposal. The lack of consensus means no decision on the rules on mako sharks will be reached until next year.

Ali Hood, director of conservation for the Shark Trust, said: “North Atlantic mako depletion remains among the world’s most pressing shark conservation crises, yet the EU and US put short-term fishing interests above all else and ruined a golden opportunity for agreeing a clear and simple remedy.

“The repeated obstruction of vital, science-based protections allows top mako fishing countries – Spain, Morocco and Portugal – to continue to fish these endangered sharks, essentially without limit, and drive valuable populations toward collapse.”

Sonja Fordham, president of Shark Advocates International, said: “North Atlantic mako depletion is among the world’s most pressing shark conservation crises.

“A clear and simple remedy was within reach. Yet the EU and US put short-term fishing interests above all else and ruined a golden opportunity for real progress. It’s truly disheartening and awful.”

Zac Goldsmith, the international environment minister, told The Telegraph: “We are pushing for stricter protections for mako sharks, and I’m disappointed there isn’t a consensus on this issue. The UK has co-sponsored a proposal for a ban on landing these important endangered species at the current Iccat annual meeting.

“As a newly independent nation, now able to speak in these global forums in our own right, we will continue to make the case for greater protection of endangered species – on land and in the ocean.”

Iccat parties plan to hold a special intercessional meeting next year to continue mako talks, the Shark League said.

Catholic charities’ new initiative for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh – Vatican News

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Catholic charities’ new initiative for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh - Vatican News

By Vatican News staff writer

The Multipurpose Adolescent Centre is a new initiative by Caritas Bangladesh, Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) and the US-based Catholic Relief Service (CRS) for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.

It aims to help the psychological development of children, provide counselling and skill development to adolescents, care for expectant mothers, childcare and care for children with special needs, according to UCA News.

The project, launched after a workshop in Cox’s Bazar on November 15, will run until April 2021, covering children aged 12-18. If needs be, the initiative could be extended, officials said. 

Staff from Caritas emergency response programme (ERP), representatives from JRS and CRS and officials from the state-run Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commission participated in the evaluation of work in 2020 and formulated a strategic plan for 2021.

The work of the Multipurpose Adolescent Centre is not an easy one, given the problems of hygiene and social distancing in the extremely overcrowded conditions in the refugee camps.

Bangladesh on Monday registered 28 more deaths, taking the total to 6,419, according to the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).  2,419 new cases of the virus were confirmed on Monday, bringing the total to more than 449,000.

Who are the Rohingya

The Rohingya are a largely Muslim ethnic group that mostly lives in Western Myanmar’s Rakhine state bordering Bangladesh. Buddhist-majority Myanmar considers the Rohingya illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, even though they have lived in the country for generations.

Denied citizenship under a nationality law passed by the government’s military regime in 1982, they are virtually stateless and are denied freedom of movement and other basic rights. The Rohingya were the targets of intercommunal violence in 2012 that killed hundreds and drove about 140,000 people from their homes to displacement camps, where most remain.

More than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to neighbouring Bangladesh since a brutal crackdown by Myanmar’s military in 2017, bringing the total number of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh to some 1.3 million.  They are mostly sheltered in about 30 refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar in southeast Bangladesh.

Caritas

Caritas has been active in the Rohingya refugee camps since 2017.  With funding from Catholic agencies across the globe, Caritas has reached out to 146,819 refugees, as well as 8,641 host community members with aid including food, non-food items, water and sanitation in the past years.  

Inmanuel Chayan Biswas, head of operations of Caritas ERP, said that JRS funding for the project was mainly for protection sectors, whereas CRS provides support for disaster risk reduction, shelter and protection. In addition, CRS also provides technical and advisory support.

He said JRS and CRS are funding and support for mental health and skill development. The two donor agencies are also providing technical support and advice to Caritas Bangladesh, Biswas told UCA News.

Philippine Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, the president of Caritas Internationalis, the global confederation of 165 national Catholic relief and development agencies, visited some of the refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar in December 2018 and in July 2019.  

JRS

JRS, which celebrated its 40th founding anniversary on November 14, started working among Rohingya refugees in April 2018.

Bangladeshi Jesuit priest, Father Jerry Gomes, JRS representative in the country, told UCA News that JRS funds 11 child-friendly spaces that already reached about 4,000 beneficiaries with basic education. In the past three years, JRS provided funds worth US$ 2.5 million.

He explained that JRS has been working in Bangladesh through Caritas, maintaining government rules and regulations. He pointed out that many governments have restrictions, especially in the education sector.

“If Bangladesh allows formal education for refugee children, we will be happy to help,” Father Gomes said.  (Source: UCANews)

EU must rebuild industry, avoid protectionism after pandemic – Portugal PM

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EU must rebuild industry, avoid protectionism after pandemic - Portugal PM
FILE PHOTO: Portugal’s Prime Minister Antonio Costa speaks to the media outside European Commission building after a meeting with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, in Brussels, Belgium, October 15, 2020. Olivier Hoslet/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

LISBON (Reuters) – Rebuilding European industry and making it less reliant on China and other nations should be a priority after the coronavirus pandemic but the EU should avoid protectionist policies, Portugal’s prime minister said on Monday.

The pandemic has exposed how dependent the European Union has become on China and other countries for essential goods and this makes supply chains more vulnerable to the risk of disruption, Antonio Costa said.

Europe cannot be totally dependent on essential goods produced outside,” Costa said during an event to outline the main priorities of Portugal’s six-month EU presidency, which starts on Jan. 1. “This is something the COVID-19 crisis has clearly turned into a priority.”

But Costa also warned against a “protectionist vision of Europe or a rupture of global trade” and said it was not a question of creating a few big dominant firms but of devising a “more agile competition policy”.

Part of the strategy should be to develop networks of different firms working on a European scale, he said, adding that the EU could only benefit from decentralising innovation and production chains.

A new European Central Bank report on Monday showed that euro zone firms are increasingly vulnerable amid a pandemic-induced recession, though public support, including cheap ECB cash, have so far limited the damage.

Reporting by Sergio Goncalves; Editing by Catarina Demony and Gareth Jones

Tanzanian Archbishop: Caritas is not an NGO – Vatican News

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Tanzanian Archbishop: Caritas is not an NGO - Vatican News

 By Fr. Benedict Mayaki, SJ

“Caritas is part of the Church’s mission, the mission of love. It is not right for Caritas to be taken as an NGO.” These were the words of Archbishop Jude Thadeaus Ruwai’chi of Dar es Salaam, during the opening of the recent General Meeting of Caritas Tanzania.

Archbishop Ruwai’chi, who is also the Chairman of Caritas Tanzania, stressed that ‘Caritas’, which means ‘love’, has its meaning in the main goal of the Church, which is “to provide services to the needy especially the poor and to provide answers to questions caused by various disasters.” Bearing this in mind, every member should contribute towards helping it fulfill its mission in the dioceses as well as at the national level.

The meeting, held at the Tanzania Episcopal Conference’s Kurasini Center in Dar es Salaam, saw directors of Caritas from the dioceses and from the national level in attendance.

Caritas highlights the Church’s vision

Archbishop Ruwai’chi noted that transforming Caritas into a non-governmental organization “is to enter into an unsatisfactory world, which contradicts the vision and goals of the Church.”

He pointed out that some people look at Caritas as a disaster management tool for writing projects to raise donor money to help the poor. But, as a Church, it must “recognize the existence of opportunities and responsibilities” and build an understanding that every baptized person has a responsibility to help, including the poor.

Urging Caritas to strategize on how to respond to the questions of disaster and poverty in the community, he encouraged the meeting’s participants to “plan carefully with the scope that satisfies the presence of the Church through Caritas.” At the same time, the Archbishop called for Caritas “not to be a disaster survivor, but to find ways to cope with crisis even under the most extreme circumstances.”

“When Covid-19 emerged in our dioceses, what answers did we give? How much were we involved? How much were we responsible?” Archbishop Ruwai’chi asked the meeting’s delegates, stressing that since Caritas has a unique mission of love and compassion, it must “seek answers in time” when tragedies arise.

Caritas not part of NGO culture

Deputy Secretary-General of the Tanzanian Episcopal Conference, Fr. Daniel Dulle also underscored Caritas’ responsibility to put in place sustainable strategies to help the poor.

“Do not be part of the NGO culture which is to be happy about the poverty of other people,” he warned the delegates, adding that Caritas should “rather provide sustainable assistance that will free the poor from poverty.”

Fr. Dulle further stressed that Caritas should not do its job in a spirit of competition as NGOs do. Instead, the implementation of Caritas’ responsibilities must be in line with the “Church’s mission to “serve the person physically and spiritually” especially through peacebuilding and the provision of humanitarian assistance to victims of various disasters.

Closing the meeting, Archbishop Ruwai’chi called on Caritas Tanzania to plan and develop strategies that focus on productive performance.

The EU is built on rule of law – Manfred Weber, Bernard Grech

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The EU is built on rule of law - Manfred Weber, Bernard Grech

We all know how the pandemic has disrupted the lives and businesses of millions of EU citizens and we cannot see with absolute clarity how and when we will be out of this crisis. 
 
At the European Union level, the efforts to mitigate its devastating impact have been intensive, comprehensive and robust. A number of radical and creative decisions have been taken and as we saw just a few days ago, Malta has already received EUR 120 million as part of the EU Sure programme, intended to help subsidise the salaries of workers hit by the Covid-19 outbreak. And it will receive a similar amount shortly as well.  
 
But this is just a foretaste of what was meant to come to Malta from the EU. As part of the Covid-19 Recovery Plan and the EU long-term-budget, an extra €2 billion were allocated to Malta for the next seven years. First Vice President Roberta Metsola and Quaestor David Casa, together with their EPP Group MEP colleagues, fought tooth and nail over the past months, for this generous level of funding. This is indeed good news for small businesses, citizens, students, farmers, researchers and many others.

The bad news is that a few days ago the Polish and the Hungarian governments have blocked these EU funds from being released to the people that need it most. Those who have found themselves gasping for air precariously, under the heavy yoke of the pandemic.
 
We, as EPP Group, made sure that the EU-seven-year-budget is based on an effective, expert-driven mechanism that ensures the respect for the rule of law is made a precondition for receiving EU payouts. What this means is that countries which do not respect this EU core principle of the rule of law, particularly in relation to the independence of justice and the freedom of the media, would not receive EU payouts. This policy mechanism, is a non-political process that applies equally to all countries. Yet, Hungary and Poland object to it and we cannot understand why. 
 
This rule of law mechanism is not about one specific country or about East and West. It is neutral and it applies to all. If you respect the rule of law there is nothing to be scared about. Denying the whole European continent crisis funding, in the worst crisis since decades is incomprehensible.
 
And let us be clear. Independent judiciaries and free media are the corner stones of our democracies and our freedom. We will not compromise on that and European citizens are behind us.
 
According to the latest poll carried out for the European Parliament, a stunning 80 percent of Europeans believe that sticking to democratic principles must be a precondition for receiving EU money. We will not let these people down. We will not give in and we will not give up. 

The EU is not a cash machine
 
Every member state which wants to receive EU money must stick to the basic principles of democracy and the rule of law. The EU is not a cash machine but a union of values. That is why we made sure that the EU’s long-term budget is based on an effective mechanism that ensures the respect for the rule of law as a precondition for receiving EU funds.
 
The new mechanism defines clear timelines for decisions and will allow for a more effective defence of the values that are laid down in our treaties. As such, it will complement the current lengthy mechanism (the so called Article 7 procedure), under which European leaders have refused to take any action in the past. 
 
Under the agreed mechanism, EU funding will be stopped not only when the rule of law has already been breached, but also in cases where there is a serious risk of this still happening. For example, when the independence of national courts is undermined, there is a clear future risk that judges may take arbitrary decisions or disregard cases of corruption and fraud.
 
The EU cannot continue using double standards; demanding high democratic standards from candidates countries which seek to join the EU and at the same time letting EU governments slip back to authoritarian tendencies, without batting an eye lid. 
 
This is not acceptable for us and we won’t cave in. Our people deserve better.

Manfred Weber is leader of the European People’s Party, Bernard Grech is leader of the Nationalist Party in Malta. 

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The dark side of Italian hazelnut farming

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The dark side of Italian hazelnut farming

As the early morning mist clears to reveal the turrets of San Quirico Castle in central Italy, the greenery surrounding local farmhouses comes alive with sound: Red-bellied woodpeckers chirp and bright-green tree frogs call to each other among the cypress and beech trees.

But walk a little further towards the fields of young hazelnut plantations and there is suddenly silence: the birds and insects have been driven away by the monoculture. Seemingly never-ending lines of saplings are now the defining feature of Alfina plateau which lies a few hundred meters above sea level. Until recently, much of this area was composed of wildflower fields and a patchwork of different crops.

“Six or seven years ago this place looked completely different,” Gabriele Antoniella said. He works as a researcher and activist with Comitato Quattro Strade, a conservation organization in Alfina. Antoniella estimates there are around 300 hectares (741 acres) of new plantations in the area, mostly owned by a few large investors. 

The plateau sits in the northern section of Tuscia, a historical region in Viterbo province and the heart of Italy’s hazelnut production. Around 43% of the agricultural land in Viterbo is reserved for hazelnut orchards, the bulk of which goes to the confectionary industry for use in products such as nougat and chocolate.

Local environmentalists say once many of the saplings grow, beloved views will also be obscured

Monocultures are believed to be damaging the air, soil and water

The nuts have been grown for thousands of years in the southern part of Tuscia and have largely sustained its economy since production ramped up in the 1960s. But the intensification of monoculture practices and their expansion into new areas such as the Alfina plateau is an increasing concern for environmentalists.

Impact of monoculture on water, soil and air 

Several diverse cropshave been replaced by hazelnut plantations, and hedgerows have been cleared to minimize the presence of insects. As the nuts are harvested once they fall, the ground beneath the trees is also usually kept completely free of vegetation.

“For us the hazelnut represents a great resource, but it’s cultivated in an unsustainable way,” said Famiano Cruciarelli, president of the Biodistretto della Via Amerina e delle Forre, an environmental organization in southern Tuscia. “Hazelnut monoculture has caused problems with water, soil, and air.”

The use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides treatments, he says, is making the soil increasingly arid, which in turn has led to its erosion in some places. And during harvest season, clouds of dust are kicked up into the air by the heavy machinery. “That dust is full of chemicals, which are a big problem for people’s health,” he said.

One of the most glaring examples of environmental degradation can be seen in a nearby volcanic lake encircled by decades-old hazelnut plantations. 

“Large quantities of fertilizers have been used in the intensive hazelnut cultivation, and they have ended up in Lake Vico,” explains Giuseppe Nascetti, a professor at the Tuscia University who has been studying the lake for over 25 years. This has caused the proliferation of so-called “red-algae,” which produce carcinogenic chemicals harmful to environmental and human health.

Famiano Crucianelli says monoculture has made the soil increasingly arid

High-levels of fertilizers have been found in Vico Lake, a body of water surrounded by decades-old hazelnut plantations

Expansion of the industry  

While the transformation towards monoculture has been underway for decades, environmentalists say the growing demand for hazelnuts from big companies and investors has further fueled this shift.

Italian manufacturer Ferrero Group, which makes the chocolate and hazelnut spread Nutella, doesn’t own or run any farms in the region but is one of the biggest consumers of the nuts produced in Tuscia.

In 2018, the company launched its Progetto Nocciola Italia plan which aims — in cooperation with farming associations — to increase hazelnut plantations across Italy by 20,000 hectares by 2026. In Lazio — a region that includes Alfina plateau — the company is also working with local producers through a farming association in Lazio to develop 500 hectares for the crop over a five-year period. According to Ferrero’s figures, 17,708 hectares are currently devoted to hazelnut cultivation in Viterbo, and 80,000 across Italy.  

A Ferrero spokesperson said it was a company objective to integrate hazelnut shrubs with existing crops — and that organic production is neither an obligation nor prohibited.

They add the company is also working in collaboration with researchers including those at Tuscia University to “gain a better understanding of its environmental impact” and “enhance sustainability in hazelnut cultivation.”

A large amount of the hazelnuts grown in the region end up in chocolate bars and spread

Sustainable, organic agriculture 

Yet as local farmer Anselmo Filesi has discovered, choosing a sustainable path isn’t without its challenges.

In 2002, concerned about the environmental and health impacts of using pesticides, he converted his small 20-hectare hazelnut plantation in southern Tuscia to organic methods.

But it came at a cost. Filesi says he was no longer able to sell his products to the world’s biggest buyers: Most confectionary multinationals require hazelnuts with little damage from shield bugs — a common pest which can cause shriveled kernels and a slightly bitter taste.

“This is very difficult to achieve with organic methods,” Filesi said. “If the hazelnuts are not perfect the market will not accept them.”

Filesi shells, toasts and packages his own produce before selling it directly to local shops and supermarkets. But he says it’s harder for bigger farmers — which usually sell pre-processed nuts in bulk – to make the switch as they fear losing their biggest buyers.

The rush to invest in hazelnut plantations in the area is also increasing land prices, says Filesi, making it harder for small farmers like him to buy or rent land.

“Converting all hazelnut plantations to organic ones could be one way forward, but there is no incentive to do so,” said Professor Nascetti, citing a lack of commitment from big companies to pay good prices for organic produce. “Until sustainability is put before profit … it’s unlikely this will happen.”

“People do not imagine that behind a jar of hazelnut [spread] there is an environmental and social economic catastrophe,” Antoniella said. By staging protests against intensive agriculture, encouraging smallholder farmers to turn to organic farming and not to sell their land, activists hope to foster a new relationship between locals and the land. 

“We are not against hazelnuts, but against these agro-industrial methods that don’t respect our land,” Antoniella said. “We want to show that things can be done differently, that agriculture can be based on respect for the environment.” 

He glances at the endless lines of saplings and explains that once the trees grow, the striking view of San Quirico castle perched on a hill in the background will be obscured. “The landscape will change forever.”

Brussels, London ‘Working Hard’ to Ink Post-Brexit Trade Deal, EU’s Barnier Says

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Brussels, London 'Working Hard' to Ink Post-Brexit Trade Deal, EU's Barnier Says

“After technical discussions this weekend, negotiations continue online today… Time is short. Fundamental divergences still remain, but we are continuing to work hard for a deal”, EU negotiator Michel Barnier warned in a tweet, speculating about the continuing bilateral negotiations over the terms and conditions of Britain’s divorce from the European bloc.

British and European Union negotiators resumed Brexit talks, stalled after one of the EU team tested positive for COVID-19 last week.

On 31 December 2020, the UK is set to withdraw from the European Union’s Single Market and Customs Union, thereby drawing a line under the so-called transition period, which was ushered in in early 2020 by Britain’s formal exit from the bloc.

Such issues as fishing quotas and market terms including a level playing field have since remained major talking points in the latest rounds of discussions on the subject.


©
AP Photo / Gareth Fuller
A fishing boat at work in the English Channel, off the southern coast of England, Saturday Feb. 1, 2020

London insists that “British fishing grounds are first and foremost for British boats”, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisting that “taking back control” over the UK’s waters is a key Brexit objective and vowing that Britain will become an “independent coastal state”. Brussels, for its part, demands a “fair share” of the fisheries as a precondition for any potential trade deal.

Another sticking point in the discussions is London’s would-be regulatory autonomy. More specifically, London has remained firm about “divergence” from EU rules, to which Brussels agreed, but outlined that “some mutual understanding of how much divergence is likely to happen” must be reached.


©
AP Photo / Francisco Seco
A woman holds up the Union and the European Union flags during an event called “Brussels calling” to celebrate the friendship between Belgium and Britain at the Grand Place in Brussels, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020

Amid recent reports on the upcoming inking of the long-sought trade deal, 10 Downing Street insisted that “the government is united behind the negotiation position”, admitting that “key elements of the draft text are not agreed [upon]”.

“We are working to get a deal, but the only one that’s possible is one that is compatible with our sovereignty and takes back control of our laws, our trade, and our waters”, David Frost, the UK’s chief Brexit negotiator tweeted last week.

Czech Republic: Investment Plan for Europe – EIB supports the Czech-Moravian Guarantee and Development Bank in establishing an advisory unit

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Czech Republic: Investment Plan for Europe - EIB supports the Czech-Moravian Guarantee and Development Bank in establishing an advisory unit
©Getty

  • The European Investment Advisory Hub’s funding will enable the Czech-Moravian Guarantee and Development Bank to strengthen support for investment projects in priority sectors such as renewable energy, transport, and the circular and digital economy.
  • The advisory unit will accompany a wide range of public and private project promoters in the Czech Republic.
  • EIB support will complement that provided by DG REFORM under the Structural Reform Support Programme.

Today, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Czech-Moravian Guarantee and Development Bank (CMZRB) signed an agreement funded by the European Investment Advisory Hub as part of the EIB’s Call for Proposals “Delivery of local investment advisory services by National Promotional Banks (NPBs).”

Thanks to the funding support of the European Investment Advisory Hub, CMZRB will set up a dedicated advisory and business development unit within its structure, with the aim of increasing investment activity in priority sectors of the Czech economy, such as renewable energy, transport, circular economy, social infrastructure, digital economy, and digital and smart city infrastructure. Once in place, the unit will identify a pipeline of projects that need advisory support and will help promoters in the Czech Republic to prepare, finance and implement such projects. The support of the dedicated advisory unit will be made available to large-scale projects as well as to projects for small businesses and mid-caps.

Under this programme, CMZRB will focus on various business development and awareness-raising activities aimed at informing project promoters about the services of the new unit. The low level of awareness among project promoters about suitable support mechanisms has been identified as a particular vulnerability on the market and CMZRB will undertake targeted actions to address it. The unit will also help project promoters connect with investors, thus facilitating access to finance.

Lilyana Pavlova, EIB Vice-President responsible for Advisory Services, said: “We are very proud to be helping CMZRB develop their own advisory capacity through the establishment of a dedicated advisory unit that will support priority sectors of the Czech economy. This agreement builds on a long-standing relationship with CMZRB and represents an important milestone in the cooperation with our local partner in the Czech Republic. This additional support by the EU bank as part of the Advisory Hub’s activities will allow CMZRB to play a key role in supporting the development of sustainable investment projects to help the recovery of the country and support its transition towards a low-carbon economy, which is fully in line with our recently approved Climate Bank Roadmap.

Jiří Jirásek, Chair of the Board of Directors of CMZRB, said: “CMZRB has successfully cooperated with the EIB for many years in a wide range of areas. The creation of this new advisory platform is a unique opportunity to enlarge our current scope of services. CMZRB’s strategic goal as a national promotional institution is to serve as a knowledge centre for financial instrument implementation in the Czech Republic. We believe that creating new organisational capacity will help us to bridge the gap, mobilising the investment potential of local project promoters.”

This agreement will complement advisory and technical assistance already provided by the EIB to public and private project promoters in the Czech Republic in the areas of energy efficiency, smart cities and sustainable infrastructure. CMZRB benefited from the Advisory Hub’s support in assessing the potential for establishing an investment platform in the area of energy efficiency, mainly based on the model of Energy Performance Contracts (EPCs), as well as with regard to smart cities. CMZRB also participated in exploratory work assessing the viability of establishing a regional advisory and investment platform for regionally important infrastructure projects in the Visegrad Four region. In parallel to the support of the European Investment Advisory Hub, CMZRB is also in receipt of a grant under the ELENA facility to support the preparation of an investment programme for energy efficiency investments in private non-residential buildings and EPC-based investments in public buildings.

Background information

About the European Investment Advisory Hub (EIAH)

The European Investment Advisory Hub (EIAH) is a partnership between the European Investment Bank Group and the European Commission under the Investment Plan for Europe. The EIAH is designed to act as a single access point for various types of advisory and technical assistance services. It supports the identification, preparation and development of investment projects across the European Union. Building our local partnerships across Europe has been a priority of the Advisory Hub since its launch in 2015. Today, the Hub’s partner network includes more than 40 local institutions, with almost 30 formal agreements signed with national promotional banks and institutions (NPBIs) and other partners. Through a dedicated Call for Proposals, the Hub made funding and technical support available to NPBI partners to develop their capacity to deliver advisory services locally and boost investments on the ground. Read more about the Hub’s support for energy efficiency investments in the Czech Republic here.

About the European Investment Bank

The EIB has worked with the Czech Republic since 1992 and invested in infrastructure, small businesses, environment and innovation. Since the start of operations in the Czech Republic, the EIB has provided €22.51 billion of financing to 185 projects.

About CMZRB

CMZRB is the only promotional bank in the Czech Republic entrusted with the administration of funds disbursed within the assistance programmes launched by the government to help the development of small and medium-sized enterprises using financial resources from national or EU funds for guarantees and loans. The Bank’s activities result from its long-term strategy focused on contributing to the implementation of the economic policy of the government of the Czech Republic and its regions.

Uganda: Church launches environmental protection campaign – Vatican News

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Uganda: Church launches environmental protection campaign - Vatican News

By Fr. Benedict Mayaki, SJ

In this special jubilee year dedicated to the celebration of the fifth anniversary of Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato si’, on the care of our common home, priests in Uganda have begun a campaign to mobilize individuals, communities and institutes to curb climate destruction.

The initiative, launched under the umbrella of the Global Catholic Climate Movement (GCCM), hopes to concentrate on improving the environmental message in the Encyclical, as well as promote the integration of ecological conversion into the faith life, reduce dependence on fossil fuels, and advocate for concrete actions to encourage the use of renewable energy.

Growing ecological concerns

At the head of this ecological campaign is Fr. Benedict Ayodi, a Franciscan Capuchin priest from Kenya who is the Program Manager in Africa.

Alongside his team of self-driven environmentalists and in collaboration with the Center for Citizens Conserving (CECIC) based in south-western Uganda, they hope to help people understand the devastating effects of environmental degradation in Africa, particularly in East Africa.

The GCCM highlights several areas of concern including the increasing water level of Lake Victoria which has affected several settlements in Uganda and its surrounding countries; the locust invasions across East Africa; the unpredictable rainy seasons leading to food shortages and the impending displacement of people due to the oil pipeline project to be constructed from western Uganda to Tanzania.

GCCM is also concerned about the Ogoni struggle against oil pollution in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria, the effects of the mineral exploration in South Africa and the continuing conflicts in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Global Catholic Climate Movement

In recent months, the GCCM has implemented several climate initiatives using Catholic structures and initiatives, such as Caritas.

The climate movement also rallies societies and international partners to advocate for ethical investment and for people to think of alternative energy sources that are not destructive to nature and the environment.

Fr. Ayodi notes that, in May 2020, the group reached out to at least 28 Catholic institutions that have been sensitized to embrace solar energy.

COMMENT | Politicking under the influence Annuar Musa claims that the recent guidelines for alcohol applications and sales have nothing to do with religion. S Thayaparan 5 h ago

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COMMENT | Politicking under the influence Annuar Musa claims that the recent guidelines for alcohol applications and sales have nothing to do with religion. S Thayaparan 5 h ago

“Efforts by the government to uphold Islam can be seen in the constitution which has placed Islam as the religion of the federation.”

  • Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki

COMMENT | The quote by Asyraf that opens this piece was made when he was a panellist at a conference titled “Bicara Minda dan Sesi Dialog Perjuangan For All” in 2017. Why is this important? This is important because another panellist at that conference was then Umno info chief Annuar Musa.

Annuar Musa recently said that the recent guidelines for alcohol applications and sales had nothing to do with religion and was a strategy to look after the well-being of “the Kuala Lumpur community, especially the less fortunate and the needy in continuing with their lives amidst the Covid-19 pandemic”.

The prime minister on another related issue even “joking” about how it may be a good idea for nightclubs and pubs to remain closed because it is difficult to have “social distancing” in these venues points to the kind of religious and moral pandering that goes in this Malay uber alles government.

Take this anecdote from Martin Vengadesan’s latest report where “live music and deejays are already not allowed, but many more are not even permitted to play piped-in music or even broadcast entertainment on their TV screens”.

Keep in mind this is a country where we have a religious body which decries “excessive laughter”…