Long-dead Oilfield In Nigeria Still Sows Conflict Between Shell And Communities That Watched It Grow

By Onome Amawhe

Nigeria’s oldest oil well stopped gushing black gold a half-century ago, but it is still producing legal actions, tribal conflict, wild conspiracy theories, accusations of environmental exploitation — and bad press. Royal Dutch Shell sits in the middle of it.

Some lawsuits facing Shell, a publicly traded Dutch company based in The Hague, spring from a well that died before many of its lawyers, accountants and PR executives were born.

Oloibiri Well No. 1 is at the crossroads of everything that can go wrong with corporate communications strategies practiced by today’s multinational corporations, say American, Dutch and Nigerian critics. Its history is a list of strategic landmines for C-Suite executives to cringe at.

Several old fights still rage at the old, dry well. Two Nigerian towns claim ownership of the land it sits on, and dispute the well’s very name. Environmental activists and some locals accuse Shell of polluting nearby land and disrupting native cultures.

Shell formed its first company in Nigeria in 1936, then known as Shell D’Arcy and since rechristened the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria. The company’s explorers, interrupted by world war and independence movements, found oil in 1956. Oloibiri Well No. 1, the country’s first commercially viable oil well, last produced oil in 1978.  Shell in Nigeria still owns it.

A Shell-owned pumping site in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. (Chris Hondros/Newsmakers)

More than 375 miles southeast of Lagos, it’s still marked with weather-worn sign reading: “Oloibiri Well No. 1, drilled June 1956, 12,008 feet.”

All sides agree on where the well is located, and on its corporate ownership history. Beyond that, stories told by the feuding parties fragment.

Shell first came to the Eastern Niger Delta with a license, granted by Nigeria’s government, to prospect for oil in all parts of the country. Oloibiri was the district headquarters in Nigeria’s Eastern Region at the time, according to residents who spoke to Zenger. Shell won’t confirm this, telling Zenger to ask government officials.

These local residents allege that as Shell searched for oil, elites in Oloibiri persuaded company executives to name the well after their community. This demand, if it was made, was granted.

Likely, the name was a non-issue at the time, said tribal leader Sere Kokumo, 76. “Oloibiri was the district headquarters of the Ogbia area when oil was discovered here in 1956,” he said. “As a result, whatever that arrived in the area was directed to the district headquarters.”

But inhabitants of a nearby rustic community called Otuabagi have long believed they are “the true owner of the Oloibiri oil fields,” said Kokumo, “The elites of Oloibiri were cunning and formed a collaboration with Shell. As a result, they were able to sway the well’s name in their favor. We have since been trying to correct this historical distortion.”

The Oloibiri and the Otuabagi continue to argue over the name of the dead well 65 years later. Shell has not offered to rename it or explain the name’s history, feeding the regional conflict. The company told Zenger to direct “boundary and related questions” to government authorities.

An oil tanker loads up at Shell-owned Bonny Oil Terminal in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. (Chris Hondros/Newsmakers)

It’s difficult to know whether Oloibiri elites actually influenced the naming of the well, according to Belema Akoriadu, an Oloibiri native and local historian. “Due to Oloibiri’s administrative power over the neighboring villages, including Otuabagi, naming the well after the district headquarters, as Shell did, was sensible,” he told Zenger.

“Besides, Otuabagi was a backwater place inside the Oloibiri domain at the time and only came to prominence years after Shell began exploration,” he said. “It was afterward that people from all walks of life flocked to the area in quest of greener pastures as a result of the flurry of activity that erupted around the place.”

A campaign to rename the well took off when oil prices rose in 2007 and Otuabagi natives anticipated Shell’s return. As it happened, the company didn’t come back. The Shell Petroleum Development Company joint venture ended its oil and gas exploration and production in Oloibiri decades ago. It sold its stake in the Oloibiri oil field in 2014.

Separate from bragging rights over the well’s name, the feud between Oloibiri and Otabagi reflects the stark contrast between poor Nigerian villages sitting on vast oil deposits and the politically connected few who collect the royalties.

Village people have gained little from decades of oil exploration on their territory. They resent how Nigeria shares its oil wealth — or doesn’t — with its people. Shell is caught in the crossfire and absorbs much of the blame., but says that “Revenue allocation is the sole prerogative of government authorities.”

Some tribal elders, nostalgic for fields thick with maize and nets full of fish, regret the arrival of oil prospectors three generations ago. “In the years since oil drilling commenced in this community, we have since retrogressed in every facet of our lives,” said Pere Akugbaju, a local chief.

The oil industry is largely gone now, but it left a dual legacy: water pollution and a taste for luxuries that oil dividends once made possible. Both serve to lure people away from traditional agriculture and fishing. “Even though the relics and pollutants related with oil exploration were still visible in the community, promises made by previous administrations to improve the area and give it a befitting status remain unfulfilled,” said Akugbaju.

Shell points to elected officials and bureaucrats to answer “questions on alleged unfulfilled promises.”

Some observers blame Shell for the tribal divisions, which are as ancient as the Niger river itself.

“The oil sector is not interested in consensus-building among communities,” said Dimieari Von Kemedi, CEO of Alluvial, an agriculture technology company.

“The benefits to local communities are very little compared to the amount of money generated by these oil wells,” Von Kemedi told Zenger. “As a result, the dream of oil as a commodity to improve people’s lives in Nigeria has turned into a nightmare. … Crude oil has become a source of poverty and strife.”

Eric Dooh is a plaintiff in an ongoing court case, brought by four Nigerian farmers and Friends of the Earth Netherlands against oil giant Shell. (Luka Tomac/Friends of the Earth International)

The Ijaws, a minority tribe in Nigeria’s multi-ethnic federation, now dominate the land of the Oloibiri, who once grew and sold the region’s most important cash crop, palm oil.

With Shell’s arrival in 1956, crude oil quickly replaced palm oil as Oloibiri’s main product. Ayere Ololo, an Oloibiri native, told Zenger that profits for the company ran parallel with losses for the community. “Indigenous people, especially farmers and fishermen, have long complained about the negative economic and health effects of the oil company’s presence in their community,” said Ololo.

Environmental activists in the region say oil production drove away once-plentiful fish stocks. Oghenetega Ojengbede, a researcher on oil exploration in Niger Delta communities, told Zenger that he has seen villagers row boats for entire days with nothing but dead fish and shrimp to show for the effort.

Nigerian photographer George Osodi set out in 2009 to find and photograph elderly people who were oil explorers’ first contacts during the 1950s. “The delta region is famed for its oil resources,” Osodi told Zenger. “However, much of it is not beneficial to the people who live there. The indigenous communities are denied a share of the huge wealth mined from their backyards by successive Nigerian governments and international oil companies.”

Decaying relics of oil exploration still litter the landscape. Abandoned oil wells, nicknamed “Christmas Trees,” are common features across the landscape. And young people blame their elders, now destitute, for believing Shell’s promises. “This is why the elderly are referred to as the ‘masquerades,’ as if they were the ‘abandoned oil wells,’”said Osodi.

In a statement to Zenger, Shell said its Nigerian arm “has disbursed more than $250 million to communities in the Niger Delta” since 2006, when it began signing “global memoranda of understanding” to manage those relationships. It has also made “statutory payments to the Niger Delta Development Commission for the development of the Niger Delta,” and made grants to entrepreneurs and university students.

Shell said its Nigerian company “exclusively inaugurated” a 24-hour hospital in 2019 whose coverage area includes Oloibiri. But it “does not explore for oil or gas any longer in Oloibiri.”

(Additional reporting provided by Kipchumba Some)

Edited by David Martosko and Bryan Wilkes



The post Long-dead Oilfield In Nigeria Still Sows Conflict Between Shell And Communities That Watched It Grow appeared first on Zenger News.

VIDEO: NASA Capsule Splashes Down After Longest US Crew Mission To International Space Station

By Lee Bullen

Four astronauts are back on earth after carrying out the longest stay on the International Space Station by a U.S.-crewed spacecraft.

The quartet — one from the European Space Agency, two from NASA and one from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency — returned to Earth on Nov. 8 aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon Endeavour spacecraft in the Gulf of Mexico near Pensacola, Florida. After splashing down, the capsule was hoisted onto the deck of the SpaceX GO Navigator recovery ship.

The mission by NASA’s SpaceX Crew-2 was the longest spaceflight by a U.S.-crewed spacecraft at 199 days in orbit aboard the space station, beating the previous record of 168 days by the SpaceX Crew-1 operation earlier in 2021. (The longest stay in space by an individual was recorded by Russian cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov, who spent 437 days on the Mir Space Station in 1994–95. For the U.S., the record holder for the longest stay in a single mission is Scott Kelly, at 340 days.)

The SpaceX Crew-2 mission was carried out by NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Shane Kimbrough, European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Akihiko Hoshide.

NASA is “happy to have Shane, Megan, Aki, and Thomas safely back on Earth after another successful, record-setting long-duration mission to the International Space Station,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “Congratulations to the teams at NASA and SpaceX who worked so hard to ensure their successful splashdown.”

NASA’s SpaceX being pulled from the water after splashing down in a landing zone in the Gulf of Mexico off the Florida coast. (NASA/Zenger)
A member of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-2 exiting the capsule that returned four astronauts from a record-setting stay aboard the International Space Station. (NASA/Zenger)

This mission by the SpaceX Crew-2 marks the third time the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft has transported a crew rotation of astronauts to the station as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, which NASA said has proven effective at providing safe transport to the space station for experts to carry out important science work and maintenance.

“Crew-2 astronauts contributed to a host of science and maintenance activities, scientific investigations, and technology demonstrations,” including four spacewalks, NASA said. “They also studied how gaseous flames behave in microgravity, grew hatch green chiles in the station’s Plant Habitat Facility, installed free-flying robotic assistants, and even donned virtual reality goggles to test new methods of exercising in space, among many other scientific activities.”

European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet, left, NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Shane Kimbrough, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Aki Hoshide, right, inside the SpaceX Crew Dragon Endeavour spacecraft onboard the SpaceX GO Navigator recovery ship shortly after having landed in the Gulf of Mexico on Nov. 8. (NASA, Aubrey Gemignani/Zenger)

The team headed to space on April 23 atop the Falcon 9 launch vehicle at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. During their time in space, the team traveled 84,653,119 statute miles during their mission, stayed 198 days on the space station, and completed 3,194 orbits around Earth.

The Crew-2 splashdown happened days ahead of the launch of the SpaceX Crew-3 mission, which scheduled for Nov. 10 and expected to last six months.

“The next NASA and SpaceX crew rotation mission is Crew-4, currently targeted for launch in April 2022. Crew-3 astronauts are scheduled to return to Earth shortly after welcoming their Crew-4 colleagues to the orbiting laboratory,” NASA said.

Edited by Matthew B. Hall and Kristen Butler



The post VIDEO: NASA Capsule Splashes Down After Longest US Crew Mission To International Space Station appeared first on Zenger News.

VIDEO: World At His Fingertips: Boy Born Without Hand Gets 3D-Printed Prosthetic

By Peter Barker

A 5-year-old boy born without a left hand is now able to play catch thanks to a 3D-printed fully functional prosthetic that enables him to firmly grip objects.

Rice e-Nable, part of the global e-Nable community of “digital humanitarians” who use 3D printers to produce low-cost prosthetic limbs for children and adults in need, partnered with Dr. William Pederson from Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston to help Adriel Rivas.

The Rice e-Nable chapter was launched  by Arinze Appio-Riley, who is studying kinesiology at Rice University, and his sister Chinwe Appio-Riley, a Rice alumna.

They asked Rice University lecturer Deirdre Hunter in 2020 for help with the project and to be their faculty mentor.

Pederson, who specializes in hand reconstruction, hand trauma, brachial plexus repair and lower limb reconstruction, then sent Hunter a mold of Adriel’s arm.

A major advantage of 3D-printed limbs is that they are quick to make and relatively cheap, Hunter said.

“As a child grows, you’ll have to change the size and dimensions of these prosthetics,” she said. “And children can be really rough on them.”

Arinze Appio-Riley said he wanted to make the prosthetic as comfortable as possible because, regardless of how well it works, if it’s uncomfortable, Adriel won’t wear it.

Rice University student Arinze Appio-Riley and Adriel Rivas have a lot to smile about as the boy’s 3D-printed hand allows him to play just as other boys his age do. (Brandon Martin, Rice University/Zenger)

Appio-Riley explained that the 3D-printed hand has a flexible wrist, and the tensioner strings, connected to Adriel’s fingers, allow him to grip objects.

“The amount of fit and tension you can get just by this simple design is pretty nice,” Appio-Riley said. “It can pick up a lot of heavier things than you’d imagine: a cup, maybe a newspaper, or a baseball, something our client is looking forward to.”

The Rice e-Nable team met repeatedly with Adriel and adjusted the design of the arm until it was comfortable and effective, enabling him to pick up such objects.

Rice University students teamed with a Texas Children’s Hospital doctor to help a 5-year-old boy take hold of his future. Adriel Rivas, who was born without a left hand, now has a 3D-printed prosthetic that allows him to grip objects. (Rice University/Zenger)

Appio-Riley said the project was born out of compassion, an important characteristic of the mission of Rice e-Nable, which has several more projects lined up.

“This is a compassionate project, and Rice students are really looking for that,” he said.

Hunter said that as children often cannot endure long waiting periods, it will operate year-round to produce prosthetic limbs that fundamentally improve their quality of life.

“There are approximately 40,000 e-Nable volunteers in over 100 countries who have delivered free hands and arms to an estimated 10,000-15,000 recipients through collaboration and open-source design to help those in underserved communities who have little to no access to medical care,” the organization says on its website.

Edited by Richard Pretorius and Kristen Butler



The post VIDEO: World At His Fingertips: Boy Born Without Hand Gets 3D-Printed Prosthetic appeared first on Zenger News.

Baby Daycare ‘Abuse’: Woman Facing Murder Charge After Toddler’s Death

0

By Lee Bullen

A daycare operator faces a charge of murder after a year-old girl in her care was allegedly abused and later died.

Police said Amanda Taylor, 41, who holds a valid childcare license, was the only adult with the baby when she was injured on Nov. 3 at the Imagination Playhouse daycare in Visalia in south-central California.

At approximately 2:40 p.m. on Nov. 3, the Visalia Police Department received a call for service regarding an unconscious 1-year-old female infant at the daycare, police said. “Personnel arrived on scene, began lifesaving measures and transported the juvenile to Kaweah Health by ambulance.

“The Visalia Police Department responded to Kaweah Health and were informed by doctors that the juvenile sustained non-accidental injuries. The infant was in critical condition and was airlifted to Valley Children’s Hospital.”

Taylor was arrested on Nov. 5 and held without bail at the Tulare County Adult Pre-Trial Facility, police said.

Police learned on Nov. 8 that “despite the efforts of Kaweah Health and Valley Children’s Hospital, the juvenile victim passed away from her injuries.”

The charges against Taylor were amended to include homicide, Visalia police said.

Police spokesperson Jared Hughes said: “The injuries the child had were something that we don’t see as being accidental. It was something that was definitely related to abuse.”

“The Violent Crimes Unit was asked to take over the investigation,” Visalia Police said. “After executing a search warrant at the Imagination Playhouse daycare and conducting numerous interviews, detectives learned that the infant sustained her injuries while at the daycare and under the care of Amanda Taylor. It was also learned that Taylor was the only adult who had contact with the victim during that time frame.

“On Nov. 5, the Violent Crimes Unit obtained a no bail arrest warrant for Amanda Taylor. Taylor was arrested without incident and booked at the Tulare County Adult Pre-Trial Facility.”

In an update, police said the Violent Crimes Unit “received additional reports of child abuse by Amanda Taylor and is conducting additional investigations.”

Police did not say how many reports they received, but said they suspect that there could be more victims. They want to speak to any parents who believe their child may have been abused at the center.

Police are calling on parents and anyone with additional information to come forward, especially if they suspect their child was injured while in the care of Imagination Playhouse.

The investigation is ongoing.

Edited by Judith Isacoff and Kristen Butler



The post Baby Daycare ‘Abuse’: Woman Facing Murder Charge After Toddler’s Death appeared first on Zenger News.

Farm-Ageddon: How New Tech Can Help Farmers Tackle Climate Change

By Brian Blum

“We help farmers speak better plant.”

It’s a clever tagline but, in the case of Israeli ag-tech startup SupPlant, it may literally be true.

SupPlant attaches sensors to crops to monitor their needs: Are they thirsty? Too hot? Too cold? How is climate change affecting their productivity?

By correlating data from the sensors with third-party weather predictions — will there be a heatwave this weekend? A freak morning frost? — SupPlant can provide highly accurate instructions for farmers striving to maximize yields.

But it’s the next generation that SupPlant is most excited about, already in the pipeline: a sensor-less approach that taps into SupPlant’s database of 31 crops in 14 countries to provide predictions at a cost of just $1 a month per farmer.

SupPlant’s sensor-less product is intended for the nearly 80 percent of farmers worldwide who grow crops on less than two hectares of land.

That comes out to 450 million “smallholder” farmers, many of them women, concentrated in the developing world — Africa, Asia and South America — who are mostly ignored by more expensive smart farming solutions.

All in the family

SupPlant’s founders have a long pedigree with the land. President and founder Zohar Ben Ner has 33 years of experience with irrigation and growing crops. His family arrived in Israel in the 1920s and his father, Avner, was a farmer. His son Ori is SupPlant’s CEO.

Zohar Ben Ner was in South Korea in 1996 while heading up Israeli drip irrigation pioneer Netafim’s Seoul office. One day, a Russian professor came in holding a box filled with sensors and cables.

“I’m coming from the USSR,” the professor told Ben Ner. “No one believes in my technology, but I think I have something amazing here.”

That technology became the basis of SupPlant’s sensors. Ben Ner was so enthusiastic that he left Netafim and SupPlant was born.

A passion for agriculture

SupPlant’s sensors can measure soil humidity, the size of a plant’s trunk and fruit, the temperature of the leaf, and more.

“We know when a plant gets into a stress condition,” SupPlant’s API Product Manager Itai Langer said.

Langer previously held executive positions at Microsoft and IBM. “I was turning 50. And I felt that something was missing. I decided, I have to chase my dreams. I wanted to make an impact.”

Langer says he has a passion for agriculture. “I love the smell of the ground, seeing the fruits, feeling the leaves. It opens up channels that are indescribable. I couldn’t do something like that sitting in my cozy office.”

When a plant gets stressed, it starts to shut down. It stops photosynthesizing, stops growing, and may drop its fruit on the ground.

Corn growing in a field irrigated with SupPlant technology. (Courtesy of SupPlant)

By installing sensors on the plants, SupPlant creates what Langer calls “autonomous farms.” The sensor data tells the irrigation systems how much water to deliver and when.

“Everyone knows the quantity of water is important,” Langer says. “But we also found that the timing of irrigation is crucial. The textbooks say, ‘Trees do not consume water at night.’ But they do! We learned that from the sensor data.”

Mitigating effects of climate change

SupPlant has a major role to play as climate change ravages farms and economies.

“The difference between an amazing growing season and a disastrous one is about four to five extreme weather events,” Langer notes.

“We have about 15,000 sensors deployed across the world. Next year it should be 50,000 and we’re aiming for a total of 150,000. All this data flows into our cloud database every half an hour. Our database can react faster than the climate itself!”

SupPlant’s extreme weather alert system is based on existing satellite data. “We can tell a farmer that there will be a heatwave in three days, and here’s our recommendation for how to deal with it,” Langer explains.

Take avocados as an example.

Avocados demand a lot of water. By using SupPlant, farmers can differentiate between when the tree needs tons of water and when all that’s required is wetting the soil. That saves the farmer money (and ultimately makes for tastier guacamole).

Irrigating palms in the UAE

SupPlant took a similar approach in the United Arab Emirates, where the company’s experts taught farmers how to irrigate their palm trees with 50 percent less water. (Zohar Ben Ner is managing the company’s work in the Emirates now.)

Sometimes, water is simply not available.

“In India, farmers will visit their plots every seven to 10 days but may not have water to irrigate. So, we say, ‘We’ll give you the critical timing in advance for when to water your crop in the next seven days to prevent damage and maximize growth,’” Langer says.

SupPlant has amassed 2.3 billion data points about various types of plants. That’s enough to make some super-smart predictions.

And that’s how we get to SupPlant’s new sensor-less push.

In places like India and Africa, smallholder farmers don’t have the resources to install sensors across their fields. But SupPlant knows enough about the crops being grown from the data it’s drawn from sensors elsewhere that all it needs to do is match that historical data with weather reports to make its recommendations.

A dollar a month may sound like a small amount, but for a subsistence farmer in Africa, it’s unaffordable and too often out of the question. Also, some farmers do not have a cell phone to track the alerts.

PlantVillage

That’s why SupPlant partnered with PlantVillage, a non-profit group affiliated with Penn State University that helps smallholder farmers worldwide.

PlantVillage has relationships with 500 women growing maize (corn) in Kenya. It supplies free phones to community leaders, who walk around notifying fellow farmers what to do prevent stress to their crops.

SupPlant aims to reach some two million smallholder farmers across Africa and India this way.

Although the total market is huge – 450 million farmers times $12 a year is nothing to scoff at –SupPlant isn’t giving up its work with big farms.

“We offer them a whole different kind of service,” Langer said. “We have dedicated agronomists who work with them, a control center that monitors their crops 24/7. They can call the switchboard and ask questions. It’s a very different SLA [service level agreement].”

SupPlant’s API Product Manager Itai Langer. (Courtesy of SupPlant)

When we spoke to Langer, he was preparing for a trip to Kenya to install sensors on a new variety of tomato that is not currently in SupPlant’s database.

“We’re installing sensors at our own cost, in order to get the data to help all the tomato growers in Kenya,” he says.

SupPlant is doing the same in India, where it’s making 30 farms “autonomous” in order to collect data on the cassava, an exotic fruit currently not in the company’s database.

Extreme weather

Langer’s job at SupPlant is all about the sensor-less approach. “By 2023, and maybe even sooner, my part of the business will be the biggest part of the company,” he says.

The timing is right: This past year saw extreme weather events worldwide: drought, fires, Antarctic temperatures usually found only in Europe during the height of summer.

“Smallholder farmers base what they do on what their parents did,” Langer explains. “But the rain spells are growing longer these days and a drop of rain is stronger now –crops aren’t used to that. One might not normally think of irrigating during the monsoon season, but you may need to, based on the data.”

It is this forward, data-driven approach that sets SupPlant apart from its competitors.

“Most of the other companies look at how much water evaporated from the ground in the past,” Langer says. “We don’t look into the past. We look into our database to see what plants like this will need in the future.”

In addition to PlantVillage, SupPlant is working with the largest telecom provider in India to build an app to deliver crop data. There’s another partner in Paraguay.

The 17-person Afula-based company has customers in South Africa, Poland and China, plus a few in Europe.

SupPlant has raised $22 million, including $10 million last June from Mivtach Shamir, Boresight Capital and Smart-Agro. The investments have paid off: During 2020, revenue for SupPlant grew by 1,200 percent.

Smart-Agro reports that, in the next 40 years, farmers will have to grow as much food as they have in the last 10,000 years combined.

As for the company’s name, it’s a mashup of “plant” (duh) and “sup” which means to gulp, consume or irrigate. Although there’s another intention.

This Israeli startup intends to supplant (that is, to replace) current ways of managing agriculture. If that can help grow more food at lower prices and keep smallholder farmers in business, Langer will have made the most of trading in his title in the C-suite for a life managing avocados, corn and newfangled Kenyan tomatoes.

For more information, click here 

Produced in association with Israel21C.



The post Farm-Ageddon: How New Tech Can Help Farmers Tackle Climate Change appeared first on Zenger News.

Dust Devastating: How High-Speed Space Dust Can Rock Spacecraft With Plasma Explosions

By Martin M Barillas

NASA scientists have provided the most accurate picture to date of tiny, super-fast dust particles that damage spacecraft and impede space missions.

A team of scientists, led by David Malaspina of the University of Colorado Boulder, used electromagnetic and optical observations from the Parker Solar Probe, which is on a mission to observe the outer corona of the sun.

Orbiting at about 400,000 miles per hour, the probe is the fastest object ever built, and it endures collisions with grains of dust shed by asteroids and comets. It will eventually come as close as 4.3 million miles from the sun’s center.

“With these measurements, we can watch the plasma created by these dust impacts be swept away by the flow of the solar wind,” Malaspina said. The process the researchers used, albeit on a smaller scale, may lead to a better understanding of how the plasma in the upper atmospheres of Mars and Venus is swept away by solar wind.

The probe hurtles through the densest area of the pancake-shaped zodiacal cloud, which is composed of dust and extends throughout the solar system. Thousands of dust particles 2 to 20 microns in size strike the probe at hyper-velocity (at least 6,700 mph). When dust strikes the probe, the particles and the spacecraft surface are heated and vaporized. The material then ionizes, which means atoms are separated into their constituent ions and electrons, producing matter called plasma.

Measurements of electric fields, magnetic fields and camera images reveal the plasma explosions and clouds of debris created when very high-velocity dust impacts the Parker Solar Probe. By watching the dispersal of these small plasma and debris clouds, scientists can learn about how larger clouds of dust and debris are blown away from stars. (NASA)

The rapid vaporization and ionization of dust yields a plasma explosion that lasts less than one-thousandth of a second, while the biggest impacts produce clouds of debris that slowly expand away from the probe.

The researchers used antennas and magnetic field sensors to measure disturbances to the electromagnetic environment surrounding the probe. They studied how the plasma explosions interacted with the solar wind, or the stream of ions and electrons that the sun constantly generates.

The flakes of metal and paint knocked off the probe by dust collisions drifted and tumbled nearby, showing up as streaks on the images recorded by the Parker Solar Probe’s cameras.

“Many image streaks look radial, originating near the heat shield,” which protects the probe from the sun’s intense heat, the study said. Some debris reflected sunlight into the spacecraft’s navigation cameras, temporarily hampering the probe’s orientation. The danger to the probe is that it relies on the precise pointing of the heat shield to survive.

The results of the study will be presented at the annual meeting this month on plasma physics of the American Physical Society in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

So far, the Parker Solar Probe has made nine complete orbits around the sun. By 2025, when its mission ends, 15 complete orbits are expected.

Edited by Richard Pretorius and Kristen Butler



The post Dust Devastating: How High-Speed Space Dust Can Rock Spacecraft With Plasma Explosions appeared first on Zenger News.

VIDEO: Drone Rescue: Spy In The Sky Finds Missing Woman Within Seconds

By Lee Bullen

A high-tech police drone took mere seconds to find a vulnerable missing woman lying unconscious at the edge of a dark field in England on Nov. 4.

“A traditional search could have taken hours, but our drone was able to find her within seconds of taking off with its thermal imaging camera,” said Nottinghamshire Police. “The technology allows us to search very large areas in very short space of time and can be deployed very quickly when needed.

“This was a great bit of work by all the officers involved and further proof of the potentially life-saving impact of drone technology.”

Police said the woman, whose name was not disclosed, was reported as missing from her home and was believed to be in the area of Belvoir Castle on the Leicestershire border.

“Concerns were raised for her welfare, and officers from Nottinghamshire Police’s drones team were called in to help with the search,” police said.

“The force’s main drone took off shortly before 11:40 p.m. and within seconds its high-tech thermal imaging camera had identified the woman at the edge of a field. Officers on the ground were immediately dispatched to help her. She was later treated by paramedics but was not seriously hurt.”

The drone footage shows the moment the woman is detected at the edge of the field on the dark, rainy night, apparently lying motionless on the ground.

Within seconds, two police officers are seen running to the woman’s location and assisting her.

Police used a drone with thermal imaging capabilities to locate a vulnerable missing woman near Leicestershire in England. (Nottinghamshire Police/Zenger)

Police Constable Vince Saunders, Nottinghamshire Police’s chief drone pilot, said: “Finding vulnerable missing people is an area in which our drone technology really excels. … Officers were faced with the challenge of finding a cold, missing and potentially very poorly woman in total darkness.

“The technology allows us to search very large areas in very short space of time and can be deployed very quickly when needed,” he said. “This was a great bit of work by all the officers involved and further proof of the potentially life-saving impact of drone technology.”

Nottinghamshire Police said the drones team, made up of 17 volunteer pilots and four drones, is a resource shared with Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Service and is on hand 24/7 to carry out pre-planned and emergency response operations.

Typical operations include finding missing people, evidence gathering and supporting the arrest of criminal suspects.

In addition to thermal imaging, the drone used in the field rescue is able to pinpoint and track targets on a map and boasts a laser range-finder that offers accurate geo-location information up to 3,937 feet away, police said.

The Nottinghamshire Police said that U.K. police forces have been using a range of methods for gaining aerial views over events or people since the 1920s, including fixed-wing airplanes and airships.

“This was a great bit of work by all the officers involved,” Saunders said, “and further proof of the potentially life-saving impact of drone technology.”

Edited by Judith Isacoff and Kristen Butler



The post VIDEO: Drone Rescue: Spy In The Sky Finds Missing Woman Within Seconds appeared first on Zenger News.

Israel Sends COVID-19 Assistance To Hard-Hit Romania

0

By Brian Blum

The fourth wave of COVID-19 has hit Romania hard. The country is confronting its worst wave of infections since the pandemic started nearly two years ago with 500 deaths a day and more than 10,000 new infections every 24 hours. Romania’s health system is starting to collapse.

Israel is coming to Romania’s rescue, offering both human and technical help via the Israeli Embassy in Bucharest.

This week, Israel sent 40 oxygen concentrators to Romania. The devices were made possible with help from AFI Europe Romania and Israel’s Elbit Systems.

“Romania is going through a difficult period,” said David Saranga, Israel’s ambassador in Romania. “COVID patients need special medical attention and these oxygen concentrators will help them in the healing process.”

In addition, a medical team from Israel was sent to Bucharest on Sunday to share best practices with physicians in Romania. The team includes three doctors, a chief nurse specializing in COVID-19, and a logistics expert: Dr. Rami Sagi, Dr. Eyal Fox, Dr. Mark Romain, Tamar Keinan, Moshe Batito.

A medical team from Israel was sent to Bucharest November 7 to share best practices with physicians in Romania. Photo courtesy of Israeli Embassy in Bucharest
A medical team from Israel went to Bucharest on Sunday to share best practices with physicians in Romania. (Courtesy of Israeli Embassy in Bucharest)

The country requested help via the EU Civil Protection mechanism. Denmark, Holland, Poland, Italy, Austria, France, Germany and Serbia all stepped up to the plate. Moldova also sent a team of doctors and nurses to work at the hospital in Letcani, in Romania’s northeastern county of Iasi, where COVID-19 patients are treated.

Although cases of infection in Romania seem to have plateaued, the number of patients dying from COVID is still high. On Nov. 2, the COVID death toll reached an all-time high: 591 cases in 24 hours. The country’s death tolls since the start of the pandemic has reached 48,664, authorities reported.

Romania has a population of 19.2 million — about double that of Israel, which also saw new cases of infection skyrocket to 10,000 a day during the height of the fourth wave, although total deaths remained much lower, at 8, 109.

Worldwide, there have been 249,743,428 confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 5,047,652 deaths, reported to the World Health Organization as of Nov. 8, and a total of 7,084,921,786 vaccine doses have been administered.

A new World Health Network — an international grassroots task force in response to the COVID-19 pandemic — aims to bring cases down to sufficiently low numbers so that no community transmission occurs for extended periods of time.

The network includes independent scientific advisory and advocacy teams and citizens’ action to achieve progressive elimination of the disease globally.

Produced in association with Israel21C.



The post Israel Sends COVID-19 Assistance To Hard-Hit Romania appeared first on Zenger News.

Google’s News Showcase Teaches Executives What Not To Do

By Joe Golder

When Google earmarked $1 billion through its News Showcase to help struggling news outfits, it was expecting thunderous applause. When that didn’t come, they thought the payments would make publishers smile. Instead, many have grumbled and complained that others received more.

Now the London-based Press Gazette, a bedrock of the British journalism trade, has unveiled a new investigation, which hurls fresh complaints at Google. The Press Gazette story is surprising because few details about Google’s News Showcase have been disclosed so far. This media silence may be due to the confidentiality agreements that Google had asked publishers to sign or an internal quiet period while negotiations proceeded.

What happened to Google’s image among journalists? The Mountain View, California-based tech giant once had a simple unofficial slogan “Don’t be evil” and was lionized for its smart tools and corporate giving. Then, the company dropped the slogan from its code of conduct in 2018 while its image has been repeatedly battered since Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 presidential election, which some journalists blamed on “Big Tech.”

Meanwhile, for many years, publishers and union leaders have faulted “the Internet” for the decline of the news business across the industrialized world. These crosswinds united into an anti-Google hurricane.

Into this storm, Google sought to calm the waters. The company announced News Showcase, an effort to give money and drive traffic to struggling news outlets. Google hailed it as its “single biggest investment in news partnerships” to date, in October 2020.

Since media outlets had long demanded larger payouts from Google for its longform news stories (which are costly to make), the company decided to give its critics what they said they wanted. A Google statement described Showcase as “a licensing program for news publishers that provides a customizable, curated space for news content in Google News and Discover. These are not payments for links, snippets, short extracts, or headlines.”

Aerial Views Of Sydney Opera House As Australia Remains In Lockdown Due To CoronavirusAccording to media industry leaders, publishers in Australia – where political and regulatory pressure is highest for Google – are receiving larger payments than their peers in Britain, Canada or elsewhere. (Brook Mitchell/Getty Images) 

Yet the media fury never abated.

Indeed, some have switched sides. During the October 2020 launch Google’s News Showcase, Press Gazette editor-in-chief Dominic Ponsford hailed it as “an admission that free media platforms like Google are now willing to pay for quality content.” Now, its reporting faults News Showcase as unfair and ungenerous.

The Press Gazette interviewed more than a dozen unnamed media industry leaders from five countries and surfaced a range of complaints, including the headline allegation that publishers in Australia – where political and regulatory pressure is highest for Google – are receiving larger payments than their peers in Britain, Canada or elsewhere.

Meanwhile, American publishers complained to the Press Gazette that Google has yet to launch News Showcase in the U.S. Two senior U.S. news industry sources, reportedly told Press Gazette that the American launch of News Showcase is suffering a delay, possibly because large publishers are holding out for higher payments. David Chavern, chief executive of the News Media Alliance, told Press Gazette: “We don’t know much about Google’s initial offers, but we did hear that they were insufficient to cause anyone to immediately jump to ‘yes’.”

Others faulted News Showcase as a product, claimed it only produces “dribbles of traffic” for some news websites. The historic decline in public trust in traditional media’s offerings, which has been reported by countless studies across the developed world, is not cited by Press Gazette as a countervailing factor.

Google’s response? “Like all new products, News Showcase’s success for publishers will ultimately be judged over a longer horizon, which is normal in product development,” a Google statement said. “The value of News Showcase is about driving high-value traffic directly to the publisher, increasing engagement with users, and helping develop a deeper relationship with readers. The feedback and uptake we have had from publishers has shown us that this is an approach that they like and that has a long-term future.”

The main revelation of Press Gazette’s investigation is how effectively political pressure on Google works – it claims that Australian publishers are being offered disproportionately generous deals. The same sources believe that Google’s payouts are driven by new Australian laws, adopted this year, that force Google and Facebook to pay for news content. Google is thought to have struck a series of eight-figure Showcase deals with Australia’s biggest and most powerful publishers – News Corp, Seven West, Nine and ABC. The Press Gazette provided no on-the-record sources or internal documents to support its claims.

Seven West and Nine are both reported to have signed annual deals with the search engine behemoth worth AUD 30 million (S22 million), while publicly-owned ABC is said to have agreed a deal valued at AUD 25 million ($18 million) per year. Two of Press Gazette’s sources also cite a rumor that News Corp, led by executive chairman Rupert Murdoch, has signed a deal worth around AUD 69 million ($50 million) a year.

London-based Press Gazette, a bedrock of the British journalism trade, has unveiled a new investigation which hurls fresh complaints at Google. (Oli Scarff/Getty Images)

Finally, Press Gazette claims that Google’s budget for Australian deals is three times greater than its equivalent budget for the British news industry – while the U.K. economy is twice as large. The Press Gazette’s sources suggested Google may be willing to pay more money to Australian publishers because of pressure from its parliament and regulators.

Asked about the claim that Australian publishers are receiving higher offers than their U.K. peers, the Google statement said: “Just as the news market differs from country to country, the size and scope of our efforts will reflect those differences. The deals are commensurate with the market, as well as the individual situation of each publisher.”

News Showcase payments, its spokesman said, are made according to a strict formula that is based on audience size, volume of content, and other variables. This formula is likely to be scrutinized by regulators across the world as publishers pressure Google for more money.

Google has hurt itself by failing to fully explain its formula or announce its payments to particular parties, Press Gazette said. Rumors and guesses fill the vacuum. The paper cites the head of a British local news publishing company who claimed that Google makes “it up as they go along.” Another news company source told the Press Gazette that the Google formula was “relatively opaque”.

In a prepared statement,  Google responded with a march of words unlikely to satisfy publishers: “News Showcase payments cover the publisher’s editorial curation of stories for News Showcase panels and, in some cases, beyond-the-paywall access to a set number of articles for Google users, as well as a license for text and other assets needed to run the News Showcase product. We take into account objective metrics including publisher traffic, the amount of content being provided, and the cost of providing limited free access to content behind paywalls for users.”

However, Press Gazette’s investigation found that News Showcase deals often come with ‘add-on’ arrangements, such as Google inking Showcase deals with publishers while also pledging funds for their use of YouTube, which is also owned by Google.

When News Corp announced its Showcase arrangement, the publisher said the deal also included “the development of a subscription platform, the sharing of ad revenue via Google’s ad technology services, the cultivation of audio journalism and meaningful investments in innovative video journalism by YouTube.”

Google Showcase has reached global deals with Reuters and News Corp, which publishes the Wall Street Journal. No deals have yet been announced with other U.S. publishing giants, such as the New York Times. (Ramin Talaie/Getty Images) 

Publishing sources told Press Gazette that Google also sometimes ties Showcase agreements to advertising commitments with publishers, while Google denies all claims of tying: “News Showcase deals are offered independently of other commercial considerations.” Tying one product to another may, in some instances, violate U.S. anti-trust laws.

The prepared statement continued to say that Google “uses a consistent formula from market to market for News Showcase but news markets are not the same globally, nor is publisher participation the same in every country. Like any commercial deal, News Showcase agreements cover the things that we and the partner publishers agree upon.”

Despite reservations from the publishing industry, Google has been able to launch Showcase in Australia, the U.K., Germany, Italy, India, Argentina, Brazil, Japan, Czechia, Colombia and Austria.

However, Google has yet to launch the product in its home market, the United States. Sources told Press Gazette that Google was aiming to go live with the product in America in the fourth quarter of this year. They now believe Google is set to delay the launch until early 2022.

The tech giant has reached global deals with Reuters and News Corp, which publishes the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post. No deals have yet been announced with other U.S. publishing giants, such as the New York Times, the Washington Post, or the Los Angeles Times.

“The biggest publishers in the U.S. are the most attractive to Google,” a senior source at a U.S. publisher told Press Gazette, “but also the biggest pain in the ass.”

Produced in association with Press Gazette. Press Gazette’s original story is here, with a transcript of the Google conversation. 

PRESS GAZETTENews Shh-owcase… The secrets behind Google’s $1bn scheme



The post Google’s News Showcase Teaches Executives What Not To Do appeared first on Zenger News.

It’s Here! Sneek Peek Of Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’

By Mina Castillo

The Walt Disney Company released the new “sneak peek” of Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” on Oct. 27, fueling the audience’s anticipation for the film.

Spectators look forward to its release for many reasons. Some wish to relive the nostalgia of the 1961 movie, directed by Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by @westsidestorythemovie

Most lead roles were not left to Latinos in the 1960s film. For some, Spielberg’s “West Side Story” provides the opportunity to pay off this debt.

For others, Spielberg’s “West Side Story” will be the “full circle” moment for the revered actress Rita Moreno, who won an Oscar for her portrayal of Anita in the 1961 version. Moreno has a pivotal role in the new movie while taking on a new position as one of the executive producers.

Rita Moreno, who won an Oscar for the role of Anita in the 1961 film, also stars in the remake, besides taking on a new role as one of the executive producers. (EPK.TV)

The film stars Rachel Zegler and Ansel Elgort. Ziegler will make her feature film debut in the role of Maria while Elgort will play Tony.

The cast of several hundred actors and dancers includes Ariana DeBose, David Alvarez, Mike Faist, Josh Andrés Rivera, Corey Stoll, and Brian d’Arcy James. Choreography is by Justin Peck.

Born to a Colombian mother, Ziegler is a singer and songwriter raised in New Jersey. She was among the 30,000 persons auditioning for the role and managed to land it. Spielberg’s “West Side Story” is quite a leap for Zegler, who first played Maria’s role in a Performing Arts School presentation at Bergen Performing Arts Center.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by West Side Story (@westsidestorymovie)

“West Side Story” is one of the most beloved musical romantic dramas. Spielberg is also co-producer, and Tony Kushner, its writer, is one of the executive producers.

The film went into development in 2014, at 20th Century Fox. Kushner began writing the screenplay by 2017. Spielberg came on board in 2018, and casting began late that year. The filming started in July 2019, with the shoot taking place in New York and New Jersey. The production stopped running during the COVID-19 lockdown, pushing back the release to Dec. 10.

It’s Here! Sneek Peek of Spielberg’s ”West Side Story” was published in collaboration with LatinHeat Entertainment.

Edited by Gabriela Alejandra Olmos and Melanie Slone



The post It’s Here! Sneek Peek Of Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ appeared first on Zenger News.