Ether Bunny NFT Vows to Plant One Million Trees Globally by 2024

Ether Bunny Turns Minting NFTs Into Minting Trees for Future Generations

Ether Bunny NFT – One Million Trees

Ether Bunny NFT – One Million Trees

AUSTIN, Texas, April 06, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today, Austin-based technology company MetaBloxx Inc., and its flagship brand Ether Bunny NFT, announced an alliance with One Tree Planted, a 501(c)3 dedicated to reforestation. Ether Bunny is an NFT project launching this month with a mint date set for April 28, 2022, with a project mission of saving wildlife and restoring natural habitats. One Tree Planted has tree-growing operations in North America, Latin America, Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Pacific. With this alliance, One Tree Planted will receive direct donations from the Ether Bunny NFT project to plant trees all over the world.

Ether Bunny will start by planting 10 trees for every Ether Bunny NFT minted, including all secondary sales on marketplaces such as Open Sea. To achieve its ultimate goal of one million trees by 2024, Ether Bunny will incorporate “tree planting” into all its upcoming gaming platforms and merchandise sales.

Planting trees is an idea that is starting to gain traction in the NFT community as a way of addressing the carbon footprint of NFT production and minting. Many companies and individuals have tried to compute the carbon (CO2) footprint of various cryptocurrencies that rely on “Proof-of-Work” consensus protocols, due to the high electricity consumption. NFTs have been seen as a contributor to that footprint, though on a fractional level.

“We’re super excited about our Million-Tree initiative,” said MetaBloxx VP Hilda Lunderstedt. “We are totally dedicated to our mission of protecting wildlife and natural habitats, so this makes complete sense to us. It fits perfectly into our mission statement for Ether Bunny NFT and the charitable work we’ll be doing with organizations like the WWF and Wild and Free Foundation. Now, we’ll be planting trees along the way, offsetting carbon and adding significant value to the world’s natural resources.”

Ether Bunny NFTs are a collection of 10,000 computer-generated rabbits on the Ethereum Blockchain with various traits and rarities that will be revealed during the Play2Earn game “Bunny Wars” and in the 3D game “VR Bunny Wars.” Two bunny tribes will be battling it out with the objective of raising money for wildlife charities around the world. A portion of all proceeds from Ether Bunny NFT sales, merchandise, and “in-game” revenues are donated to charities that are vetted and chosen to be part of the Ether Bunny wildlife conservation platform.

MetaBloxx Inc. is a blockchain development company located in Austin, Texas, focusing on Metaverse, cryptocurrency, non-fungible tokens, and token economics.

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GA-ASI Selected for Japan Coast Guard RPAS Project

Japan EEZ Surveillance Using SeaGuardian® RPA Scheduled to Begin in October

GA-ASI SeaGuardian Remotely Piloted Aircraft

GA-ASI SeaGuardian Remotely Piloted Aircraft

SAN DIEGO, April 06, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI), the global leader in Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS), is pleased to be selected to support the Japan Coast Guard’s (JCG) RPAS Project. Operations will feature GA-ASI’s MQ-9B SeaGuardian® and begin in October 2022.

SeaGuardian will be used to conduct wide-area maritime surveillance to support JCG’s missions, which include search and rescue, disaster response, and maritime law enforcement. This project follows a series of successful JCG flight trials in 2020 that used SeaGuardian to validate the same JCG missions in accordance with Japan’s “Policy on Strengthening the Maritime Security Systems,” using unmanned aerial vehicles to perform maritime wide-area surveillance.

“We’re proud to support the JCG’s maritime surveillance mission with our SeaGuardian UAS,” said Linden Blue, CEO of GA-ASI. “The system’s ability to provide affordable, extremely long-endurance airborne surveillance with long-range sensors in the maritime domain is unprecedented.”

SeaGuardian features a multi-mode maritime surface-search radar with an Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR) imaging mode, an Automatic Identification System (AIS) receiver, and High-Definition – Full-Motion Video sensor equipped with optical and infrared cameras. This sensor suite enables real-time detection and identification of surface vessels over thousands of square nautical miles and provides automatic tracking of maritime targets and correlation of AIS transmitters with radar tracks.

SkyGuardian® and SeaGuardian® are revolutionizing the long-endurance RPAS market by providing all-weather capability and full compliance with STANAG-4671 (NATO UAS airworthiness standard). This feature, along with our operationally proven, collision-avoidance radar, enables flexible operations in civil airspace.

About GA-ASI

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI), an affiliate of General Atomics, is a leading designer and manufacturer of proven, reliable, Remotely Piloted Aircraft (RPA) systems, radars, and electro-optic and related mission systems, including the Predator® RPA series and the Lynx® Multi-mode Radar. With more than seven million flight hours, GA-ASI provides long-endurance, mission-capable aircraft with integrated sensor and data link systems required to deliver persistent flight that enables situational awareness and rapid strike. The company also produces a variety of ground control stations and sensor control/image analysis software, offers pilot training and support services, and develops meta-material antennas. For more information, visit www.ga-asi.com.

Avenger, Lynx, Predator, SeaGuardian and SkyGuardian are registered trademarks of General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc.

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Illness from Omicron Variant Shorter Than from Delta, UK Finds

Disease caused by the omicron variant is on average around two days shorter than the delta variant, a large study of vaccinated Britons who kept a smartphone log of their COVID-19 symptoms after breakthrough infections found.

“The shorter presentation of symptoms suggests — pending confirmation from viral load studies — that the period of infectiousness might be shorter, which would in turn impact workplace health policies and public health guidance,” the study authors wrote.

Based on the Zoe COVID app, which collects data on self-reported symptoms, the study also found that a symptomatic omicron infection was 25% less likely to result in hospital admission than in a case of delta.

While omicron’s lesser severity has been known, the study is unique in its detailed analysis and in that it corrected for any distortions caused by differences in vaccination status by looking at vaccinated volunteers only.

The researchers at King’s College London analyzed two sets of data from June 1 to Nov. 27, 2021, when the delta variant accounted for more than 70% of cases, and from Dec. 20, 2021, to Jan. 17, 2022, when omicron was more than 70% prevalent.

The patients, close to 5,000 in each group, were matched and compared 1:1 with a person of the same age, sex, and vaccination dose in the other group.

Omicron’s shorter symptom duration relative to delta was more pronounced in those with three vaccine doses. Symptoms lasted 7.7 days on average during the delta-dominated period, and only 4.4 days, or 3.3 days less, during the omicron period.

Among those with only two vaccine doses, symptoms from delta lasted for 9.6 days and 8.3 days from omicron, a difference of just 1.3 days.

The Zoe COVID Study application, previously known as the COVID Symptoms Study App, collects data on self-reported symptoms.

The company ZOE Ltd was initially founded to offer customized nutritional advice based on test kits. Its app is a not-for-profit initiative in collaboration with King’s College London and funded by the Department of Health and Social Care.

The study was published in the medical journal The Lancet on Thursday and will be presented at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases later this month.

Source: Voice of America

On World Health Day, US Lacks Funding for Global COVID Response

Without a single dollar of the $5 billion it requested for its global COVID-19 response approved, the Biden administration’s key program to help vaccinate the world is in danger of grinding to a halt.

Even as the administration marked World Health Day on Thursday with a commitment to build a safer, healthier and more equitable future around the globe, without additional funding from Congress, by September the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) will no longer be able to finance Global Vax. The U.S. launched the international initiative in December to deliver shots in arms in 11 countries: Angola, Ivory Coast, Eswatini, Ghana, Lesotho, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.

“Without additional funding to support getting shots into arms, USAID will have to curtail our growing efforts to turn vaccines into vaccinations — just as countries are finally gaining access to the vaccine supplies needed to protect their citizens,” a USAID spokesperson told VOA. USAID had initially requested $19 billion for its global vaccination initiatives.

USAID had planned to expand Global Vax to 20 additional countries, but those plans are now on hold.

Without additional funding, the U.S. will also be unable to provide oxygen and other lifesaving supplies around the world, White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients told reporters earlier this week.

“And our global genomic sequencing capabilities will fall off and undermine our ability to detect any emerging variants around the world,” Zients added.

On Monday, the U.S. Senate agreed to provide $10 billion in supplemental funding for COVID-19 response domestically but did not approve the $5 billion requested by the White House for its global pandemic efforts.

With Senate Republicans insisting that any new COVID-19 spending be paid for with unspent funds from the nearly $6 trillion in COVID-19 legislation that had already been passed, Senate Democrats dropped the international funding request to get the domestic package approved first.

“While we were unable to reach an agreement on international aid in this new agreement, many Democrats and Republicans are committed to pursuing a second supplemental later this spring,” Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.

Republican Senator Mitt Romney, who had been leading negotiations with Schumer on the $10 billion COVID-19 domestic response package, said he is willing to explore a fiscally responsible solution to support global pandemic efforts in the weeks ahead.

Airports to arms

Globally, the issue now is not the lack of vaccine doses but the ability of getting them “from airports to arms,” said Krishna Udayakumar, who leads a Duke University team that tracks global vaccine production, distribution and donation.

“How do we make sure that the trained vaccinators are there, the data system, the cold chain, that’s where a lot more money is needed,” Udayakumar told VOA.

The administration has already purchased all of the 1.2 billion doses of vaccines it has pledged to donate around the world. However, without the additional funding, some of them are in danger of expiring in warehouses in the U.S., said global health advocate Tom Hart.

Hart, president of the ONE Campaign, an advocacy organization that fights preventable diseases, said that in his decadeslong career in global health, he has never seen the U.S. reneging on its commitment.

“In the 20 years I’ve been doing this, every time we have pledged to deliver something, the United States has been able to keep that pledge, and it has created enormous goodwill around the world,” Hart told VOA.

But now, U.S. credibility is on the line. “We’ve said with great fanfare that we have these incredibly effective doses. And they are sitting here in America, ready to go to those who need them, and we can’t get them to them,” he said.

The White House said it will continue to work with lawmakers to push for additional international funding.

“We’re not quite there yet,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said when asked by VOA about the fate of those undelivered doses. “And our hope is that we will be able to turn … vaccines into vaccinations.”

Other multilateral programs may have to step in to pick up the U.S. slack, including the COVID Vaccine Delivery Partnership mechanism established earlier this year as the next phase of COVAX, the international vaccine-sharing facility supported by the World Health Organization and health organizations Gavi and CEPI.

“The aim of the partnership is to focus on providing bespoke support for those countries furthest behind in coverage: coordinating efforts around delivery funding, technical assistance, demand planning and political engagement, led by countries themselves,” a Gavi spokesperson told VOA.

The administration would not say whether it is pushing for a separate global pandemic funding package, or one that is attached to potential additional funding for Ukraine and the global food crisis, which could come in weeks or months.

It is also not providing details on when President Joe Biden will host the second global COVID-19 summit, originally scheduled for March. Biden hosted the first summit in September 2021 when he sought to galvanize a robust response from wealthy nations to help vaccinate the world.

Source: Voice of America

Over 5.6 million people receive at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine

More than 5.6 million people across the country have been administered with at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine with other 4.5 million given all recommended doses, accounting for 62.41% of population in the country.

“The best way to prevent COVID-19 is to get vaccinated to reduce the risk of infection, and to get the first and second booster shots,” Dr. Buaphan Khamphaphongphan, Deputy Director General, National Centre for Laboratory and Epidemiology, Ministry of Health, told a press briefing on Mar 6.

He claimed that many people didn’t know when they could have a booster dose.

“Those who have been fully vaccinated with Sinovac or Sinopharm vaccines for two months or longer can be vaccinated with AstraZeneca or Pfizer as a booster shot. If the 3rd injection has been given for more than 3 months, then the 4th shot can be administered,” Dr. Buaphan Khamphaphongphan.

“People with Covid-19 have to wait at least two months after recovery to get their first booster shot,” said Dr. Buaphan Khamphaphong.

Source: Lao News Agency

Laos reports over 2,000 new cases of Covid-19, three new deaths

Laos has logged 2,033 new Covid-19 cases and three new fatalities attributed to Covid-19 over the past 24 hours with the total caseload rising to 191,018 including 4,857 active cases and 687 deaths, Covid-19 Taskforce Committee told a press conference this morning.

Vientiane continued to record the higher number of domestic infections with 1,069 cases documented in the capital city, followed by Xayaboury 244, Luang Prabang 104, Vientiane (province) 86, Savannakhet 80 and Khammuan 66.

The new infections were detected among 4,827 samples tested for Covid-19 yesterday. Some 321 Covid-19 patients were discharged from hospitals nationwide on Wednesday.

As of Apr 6, over 5.5 million people, representing 77.06% of population in the country, have been vaccinated with at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, according to the Centre of Information and Education for Health, Ministry of Health.

Meanwhile, the number of those fully vaccinated against the coronavirus currently stands at 4.4 million, accounting for 62.04% of the population, and those given a booster shot represent 17% of the population.

Source: Lao News Agency