OPEC+ oil output cut aims to promote market stability: Saudi minister

The Saudi Arabian energy minister said the decision of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, a group known as OPEC+, to reduce oil production is aimed to promote market stability, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported Wednesday.

According to Xinhua reported on 7 Sept that the decision showed that the organization was attentive, pre-emptive and proactive in supporting the market’s stability to the benefit of the industry, Abdulaziz bin Salman was quoted by SPA as saying.

This was a reversion to the production level of August and the addition of the 100,000 barrels in September was always intended as a measure for that month only, he explained.

“We are seeing mixed signals in relation to economic growth from different parts of the world, and there has been a tendency toward exaggeration in some of the negative analyses of the global economic situation,” the Saudi minister said.

Data indicates recessions with limited oil demand contractions, or even demand growth in recession years, as in 1991, he added.

On Sept. 5, the OPEC+ decided to cut crude production by 100,000 barrels per day in October from its September level, according to an OPEC statement released after the 32nd OPEC and non-OPEC Ministerial Meeting.

Source: Lao News Agency

Vocational training for Nang Noi Girls’ Groups conclude with great success

Today, Sengchanh, Seo, Mone, Loy and Phouvieng: the five young women from Sepone District, Savannakhet Province who received three months of intensive hospitality training at Crowne Plaza hotel concluded with great success.

They attended classes at Pakpasak Technical College to acquire vocational skills in food products preparation and learn how to run small entrepreneurship projects. BFL Bank provided for them financial literacy and basic accounting training, while the Vientiane Youth Center briefed them on sexual reproductive health services that include hotline counselling to adolescent and young people. They leave, ready to establish their own small business back in Sepon district, Savannakhet Province.

This initiative took place thanks to partnership between the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and Crowne Plaza as part of the UNFPA work with the Ministry of Education and Sports (MoES) within the comprehensive “Noi ecosystem”. The Noi framework engages different stakeholders and partners including the private sector for sustainable economic development in the Lao PDR, focusing on empowerment of adolescent girls and young women.

“Innovative public private partnerships between the MOES, UNFPA and Crowne Plaza to support Nang Noi Girls in their path towards empowerment shows us the great returns of coordinated, complementary interventions. This is essential for realising sustainable development,” said Ms Mariam Khan, UNFPA Representative to the Lao PDR.

The Lao PDR within ASEAN, has the highest proportion of early marriage and highest adolescent birth rate. Nearly 1 in 5 girls aged 15-19 are married and more than 1 in 10 have begun childbearing. This combined with high rates of school drop outs exacerbated by COVID-19, leaves girls with reduced future opportunities.

“Through partnership with UNFPA, the MoES is running projects targeting the empowerment of adolescent girls in poor villages. We support them to acquire life skills as well as vocational skills in order to ensure a better life and a better future to them and their families,” said Mr. Sisana Boupha, Director General of Non-Formal Education, MOES.

Crowne Plaza hotel’s responsible business plan “Journey to tomorrow” emphasises the role of the private sector in supporting the local efforts to build a resilient future for the population, increase development opportunities and secure the wellbeing of vulnerable women and girls. The leadership of Crowne Plaza is a model that can inspire other companies in the Lao PDR.

“In a young country such as Lao PDR, all sectors must stand by youth to help them learn, develop their skills, receive new opportunities for learning and growing and entering the workforce with confidence, great ideas and strong support. We were very glad to welcome Nang Noi Mentors to Crowne Plaza. This is just the beginning,” said Ms Patria Puyat, General Manager of Crowne Plaza Vientiane expressed her full support.

Soon, the second batch of participants in vocational skills training will arrive at Crowne Plaza. Crowne Plaza will facilitate product placements and market access for all the young women.

“My friends and I learnt how to make different types of food that people like to order in a restaurant. With my experience, I am now confident to open a restaurant of my own, using the skills and equipment that Crowne Plaza offered to us and the financial skills that I learnt from BFL. I am sure I will do well. Crowne Plaza team helped us to design our business plan and our logos to start our cooking projects,” said Ms. Seo, one of the Nang Noi Mentors.

Source: Lao News Agency

Scaling up a Tropical Agriculture Platform discussed

Department of Planning and Cooperation (DOPC) and Department of Agricultural Extension and Cooperatives (DAEC) co-hosted the policy dialogue on “Maximizing benefits of agriculture exports from Lao PDR”, which was organized under the framework of EU funded project entitled “Developing Capacities in Agriculture Innovation Systems: Scaling up a Tropical Agriculture Platform Framework” (TAP AIS) at the National Agriculture and Forestry Research Institute (NAFRI), Vientiane on Sept 6.

The dialogue was chaired by the Director General of the DAEC, Mr. Somxay Sisanonh, and co-chaired by Deputy Director General, Dr. Phommy Inthichack, FAO Representative to the Lao PDR, Mr. Nasar Hayat, and Programme Manager of the EU Delegation to the Lao PDR, Mr. Inpone Senekhamty.

The TAP-AIS is global project funded by and a part of the larger European Union Initiative “Development Smart Innovation through Research in Agriculture (DeSIRA): Towards climate-relevant agricultural and knowledge innovation system”. The project has been implementing at global, regional and country levels, in nine countries. Three in Asia (Cambodia, the Lao PDR and Pakistan), five in Africa (Burkina Faso, Eritrea, Malawi, Rwanda and Senegal); and one in Latin America (Colombia) from August 2019 to July 2023.

In the Lao PDR, the project works with multi stakeholders aiming to contribute to promoting climate-relevant, productive and sustainable transformation of agriculture and food systems through developing capacities to innovate at national level.

The objective of this important event is to bring policy and decision makers together to provide insights and direction on how to maximize benefits from export of agriculture products by Lao stallholder farmers.

As an input to this national policy dialogue, with technical assistance from FAO TAP-AIS, DAEC hosted multi-stakeholder dialogue on 22 June 2022, followed by technical discussions with technical departments, private sectors and farmers. The results from those are the policy recommendations and policy brief, which were shared and discussed in this dialogue to guide a way forward for increased collaboration to facilitate and enable rural producers to benefit from export markets.

The policy dialogue was attended by a dynamic group of stakeholders with representatives from key departments of Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, relevant Ministries, farmer organization, development partners, private sectors, academia, and relevant actors in agriculture value chain in Lao PDR. The dialogue was also made available virtually for those who could not attend but were eager to contribute for a fruitful discussion.

Key messages from the policy dialogues are:

Most Lao agriculture exports are unprocessed products for which smallholder farmers receive less economic value than traders and processors, who produce brand name items.

Lao products are not competitive, current farming systems cannot ensure consistency of quality products and regular supplies for export markets; production certification and Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) are critical for agriculture export.

Sustainable agriculture practices will help produce more with less with an aim to reduce post-harvest loses, labor saving technologies, low input cost, etc.

Attracting more investment in the manufacturing of agriculture inputs including fertilizer and animal feed, there is a greater need to improve the agribusiness environment and the efficient application of regulations.

Strengthening relevant capacities of smallholder farmers and their organizations would enable them to benefit from the agri-food system transformation, commercialization and access to markets.

Coordination and collaboration among government departments, public and private institutions, investors and farmers are key to addressing export issues e.g. high production cost, export procedures, and enabling all stakeholders, including farmers, to mutually benefit from partnership.

Lack of evident based research and studies to provide analysis and policy options to address issues involving different actors. It is beyond the mandate of the agriculture sector to address these issues alone especially high production costs and coordination among key actors.

Developing capacities of key organizations and improving the policy environment can strengthen Lao agriculture innovation systems and drive the transformation of agri-food systems. Building on experience and achievement on agriculture export, Lao could realize its unexploited export potential in agriculture products by more effectively implementing policies to improve the agribusiness environment and the application of quality and safety standards.

The policy dialogue was successfully completed with fruitful discussions and contents and with policy recommendations by DOPC and closing remark by the chair, Mr. Somxay Sisanonh, the DG of DAEC.

Source: Lao News Agency

COVID Threatening Resurgence of Deadly Meningitis in Africa

The World Health Organization is warning of a resurgence of deadly meningitis in Africa because COVID-19 has disrupted lifesaving vaccination campaigns.

The near elimination of the deadly form of meningitis type A in Africa is one of the continent’s biggest health success stories. Over the last 12 years, about 350 million Africans have received a single dose of MenAfriVac, a vaccine designed specifically for the African meningitis belt.

The WHO regional director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, said not a single case of meningitis Group A has been reported on the continent in the past five years.

“Now, however, the COVID-19 pandemic has delayed vaccination campaigns targeting more than 50 million African children, raising the risk that these gains will be reversed,” she said. “In addition, major outbreaks caused by meningitis Group C have been recorded in seven of the African Sub-Saharan meningitis belt countries in the past nine years.”

Moeti noted a four-month outbreak last year in the Democratic Republic of Congo claimed more than 200 lives.

Francois Marc Laforce, director of technical services for the Serum Institute of India, played a pivotal role in the development of the MenAfriVac vaccine at the Serum Institute nearly two decades ago. He said that besides meningitis Group C, Africa currently is contending with residual outbreaks of other forms of meningitis.

“A new vaccine again specifically designed for the African meningitis belt will, hopefully, be prequalified later this year or early next year,” he said. But this vaccine holds the promise of finishing what MenAfriVac began, such that Africa may be the first continent to be free of meningitis epidemics.”

Meningitis is caused by inflammation of the membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord. Acute bacterial meningitis can cause death within 24 hours. Young children are most at risk. About half the cases and deaths occur in children under age five.

The WHO launched a new strategy Thursday to defeat bacterial meningitis in the African region by 2030. The plan calls for shoring up diagnosis, surveillance, care, and vaccination. The WHO estimates $1.5 billion will be needed to implement the plan between now and 2030.

Source: Voice of America

Four Major Climate Tipping Points Close to Triggering, Study Says

Even if the world somehow limits future warming to the strictest international temperature goal, four Earth-changing climate tipping points are still likely to be triggered, with a lot more looming as the planet heats more after that, a new study said.

An international team of scientists looked at 16 climate tipping points — when a warming side effect is irreversible, self-perpetuating and major — and calculated rough temperature thresholds at which they are triggered. None of them are considered likely at current temperatures, though a few are possible. But with only a few more tenths of a degree of warming from now, at 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) warming since pre-industrial times, four move into the likely range, according to a study in Thursday’s journal Science.

The study said slow but irreversible collapse of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets, more immediate loss of tropical coral reefs around the globe and thawing of high northern permafrost that releases massive amounts of greenhouse gases trapped in now frozen land are four significant tipping points that could be triggered at 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming, which is three-tenths of a degree (half a degree Fahrenheit) warmer than now. Current policies and actions put Earth on a trajectory for about 2.7 degrees Celsius (4.9 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming since pre-industrial times, according to some projections.

“Let’s hope we’re not right,” said study co-author Tim Lenton, an Earth systems scientist at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom. “There’s a distinct chance some of these tipping points are going to be unavoidable. And therefore, it’s really important we do some more thinking about how we’re going to adapt to the consequences.”

Impacts delayed

Timing is a key issue for tipping points in two ways: when they become triggered and when they cause harm. And in many cases, such as ice sheet collapses, they could be triggered soon but their impacts, even though inevitable, take centuries to play out, scientists said. A few, such as the loss of coral reefs, cause more harm in only a decade or two.

“It’s a future-generation issue,” said study lead author David Armstrong McKay, a University of Exeter Earth systems scientist. “That ice sheets collapsing is kind of that thousand-year time scale, but it’s still bequeathing an entirely different planet to our descendants.”

The concept of tipping points has been around for more than a decade, but this study goes further into looking at temperature thresholds for when they may be triggered and what impacts they would have on people and Earth, and in the past 15 years or so “the risk levels just keep going up,” Lenton said.

Lenton likes to think of tipping points as someone leaning back on a folding chair.

“When you start tipping over backwards, you have in that case a very simple kind of feedback on the forces of gravity operating on propelling you backwards until SPLAT,” Lenton said.

Study co-author Johan Rockstrom, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, likened it to someone lighting a fuse on a bomb “and then the fuse will burn up until the big bang and the big bang may be further down the line.”

While the ice sheets with several meters or yards of potential sea rise can reshape coastlines over centuries, Rockstrom said he saw the loss of coral reefs as his biggest concern because of the “immediate impacts on human livelihoods.” Hundreds of millions of people, especially poorer tropical-area residents, depend on fisheries linked to the coral reefs, McKay said.

Other tipping points

With just a few more tenths of a degree, new tipping points become more possible and even likely. That includes a slowdown of northern polar ocean circulation that can ripple into dramatic weather changes, especially in Europe, loss of certain areas of arctic sea ice, glaciers collapsing worldwide and utter failure of the Amazon rain forest.

Some of these tipping points, like the permafrost thaw, add to and accelerate existing warming, but don’t think “it’s game over” if temperatures hit 1.5 degrees of warming, which is quite likely, McKay said.

“Even if we do hit some of those tipping points, it will still lock in really substantial impacts we want to avoid, but it doesn’t trigger some sort of runaway climate change process,” McKay said. “That’s not the case at 1.5 degrees. And that means that how much further warming occurs beyond 1.5 is still mostly within our power to effect.”

That’s a crucial point — that these are tipping points for individual regional disasters, not the planet as a whole — so it’s bad, but not world-ending, said climate scientist Zeke Hausfather of the tech company Stripe and Berkeley Earth. He wasn’t part of the study but said it was important, nuanced research that quantified tipping points better than before.

“Have we really contemplated what happens when you mess with our global and ecological systems to that degree?” said University of Miami climate risk scientist Katharine Mach, who also wasn’t part of the study. She said it shows ripples and cascades that are troublesome. “This is a profound reason for concern in a changing climate.”

Source: Voice of America

UNICEF Representative pays courtesy visit to Minister of Industry and Commerce

Dr. Pia Rebello Britto, UNICEF Representative to the Lao PDR on Sept 6 paid a courtesy visit to Mr Malaythong Kommasith, Minister of Industry and Commerce of the Lao PDR.

Mr Malaythong Kommasith commended UNICEF for its 50 years-strong collaboration with the Government of Lao PDR on improving the wellbeing of children and their families in the country.

During the visit, Dr. Rebello Britto congratulated Minister Malaythong Kommasith on his new appointment. She then highlighted the role of the private sector can play in protecting women and children in the Lao PDR.

Dr. Rebello Britto also briefed Mr Malaythong Kommasith on a number of actions on which UNICEF is collaborating with the Government of the Lao PDR, namely: providing quality education for all children; providing decent work opportunities for children above the minimum legal age for work, including vocational and specialized training; and developing family-friendly policies and practices at the workplace to promote gender equality and protect the wellbeing of workers’ children.

Mr Malaythong Kommasith highlighted that the Government of Lao PDR looks forward to building upon this partnership under the new UNICEF Country Programme 2022-2026. He also commented on the workloads of women in the work space and family and suggests if UNICEF could contribute to improve women working conditions.

Dr. Rebello Britto concluded the meeting by thanking Mr Malaythong Kommasith for the cordial reception today, and reaffirmed UNICEF’s commitment to continue working closely with the Government across various initiatives in the new Country Programme.

Source: Lao News Agency