
Insurance Group Loses More Members After GOP Attacks on ESG
The list of firms walking out of the Net Zero Insurance Alliance continued to grow this week, adding
2023-05-30 18:58

IFRC-DREF calls on global donors to help the world ‘Stand Tall’ in the face of accelerating humanitarian need - supporting smarter and faster disaster relief
GENEVA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec 2, 2023--
2023-12-03 08:46

Henry Schein Congratulates Dr. Louis W. Sullivan for Receiving a 2023 National Humanism in Medicine Medal, Awarded by The Arnold P. Gold Foundation
MELVILLE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 10, 2023--
2023-07-10 18:46

Australia Just Had the Driest October in More Than Two Decades
Australia, a top exporter of wheat, barley and canola, experienced the driest October in more than 20 years
2023-11-08 13:53

How shipping more US natural gas to Europe helped fuel CO2 pollution
By Tim McLaughlin (Reuters) -Carbon dioxide emissions from U.S. liquefied natural gas facilities have jumped to 18 million tons per
2023-11-09 00:54

When will 'Deep Fake Love' Season 1 air? Release date, time, and how to watch spicy Netflix reality show
Five couples' love is tested by 'deepfake' technology in this Spanish reality TV show
2023-06-30 17:55

How McCarthy's fall and Trump's rise will shape the 2024 GOP strategy
When House Republicans elect a new speaker this week, the only question is not whether, but how far, they will move the party to the right.
2023-10-10 12:23

Wagner group formally banned as terror organisation in the UK
The move comes just weeks after the death of the group's founder Yevgeny Prigozhin.
2023-09-16 01:51

Sushi standoff spreads as Russia joins China in banning Japanese seafood
Russia has joined its ally China in suspending seafood trade with Japan after Tokyo began releasing treated radioactive water from its Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean. Russia’s agricultural watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor said it is "joining China’s provisional restrictive measures on the import of fish and seafood products from Japan as of 16 October 2023”. It said the decision has been taken as a "precautionary measure” and restrictions will remain in place until more information was received to confirm the safety of Japanese seafood, which it said was still pending. Japan said the ban was “unjust” and regrettable. Japan began releasing the first batch of treated radioactive water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean on 24 August and the second on 5 October amid opposition from fishing groups and neighbouring countries, including major trade partners like South Korea, China and Taiwan. The release of tons of water has generated international concerns with countries expressing doubts about the potential health and environmental risks posed by the release, leading to diplomatic and trade tensions with neighbours. This is despite Japan’s assurances that the released water is safe and will be diluted to well below internationally approved levels of tritium (an isotope of hydrogen hard to separate from water) before being released into the Pacific. Analysts have said that the restrictions on the import of fish from Japan appear unreasonable and could be motivated by political and financial interests rather than safety fears. Mark Foreman, an associate professor of nuclear chemistry in Sweden, told The Independent that the levels of radioactivity in the water discharged from the Fukushima site will not pose any danger to the general public and that these bans could not be defended from a scientific viewpoint. “I do not think it will even endanger a fish glutton who eats nothing but fish,” he said. “There is the problem that many politicians and countries wish to be seen to be more strict or protective of the public than another.” Reacting to Russia’s restrictions, Japan‘s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said on Monday that Moscow’s ban had "no scientific basis, is unjust and regrettable”, calling for it to be revoked, the Kyodo news agency reported. Japan‘s foreign ministry said that it had provided Russia with additional information before 15 October following an online dialogue between the relevant state bodies last week, it said in a statement released on Monday before Russia announced its ban. "Japan will continue to provide explanations based on scientific evidence to Russia in a highly transparent manner and in good faith, while undergoing the review by the IAEA," it added. Russia’s move comes after China – Japan’s biggest buyer of seafood – implemented its own ban on all seafood imports from Japan. Tokyo called on China and its territories Hong Kong and Macau to remove the ban and prime minister Fumio Kishida criticised Beijing for spreading "scientifically unfounded claims". Mr Foreman and other analysts suggested the bans could be explained partly by Tokyo’s closer alignment to the US and South Korea in recent years and the Fumio Kishida government’s policy of speaking out against the Ukraine war. “I see the bans as being made for political advantage and also in an attempt to obtain an economic advantage for the fishing fleets of the countries which are imposing the bans. I believe that no good scientific arguments can be made for these bans,” Mr Foreman said. International trade law expert Henry Gao told BBC News: “The main reason is not really the safety concerns. It is mainly due to Japan’s moves against China.” Vladimir Putin is due to visit Beijing this week for the Belt and Road Initiative Forum, only his second foreign visit since an International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant was issued against him. Russia and China have forged closer ties and hailed their “no limits” partnership as Western countries have tried to isolate Mr Putin following his invasion of Ukraine. Moscow had criticised Tokyo for its stance on the war and for joining the Group of Seven (G7) nations in imposing sanctions after the invasion in February last year. Russia is also a direct competitor with Japan when it comes to catching fish and seafood in the waters off its far eastern regions, and is already one of the largest suppliers of marine products to China. Not a big market for Japanese seafood itself, Russia imported 118 metric tonnes of fish and seafood from January to September this year, according to Rosselkhoznadzor. Beyond China and Russia, the South Korean government is under pressure to put a blanket ban on imports from Tokyo. Seoul has maintained an import ban on fisheries products from Fukushima and some surrounding prefectures since 2013 but has so far refused to extend this to the rest of Japan. Read More Japan starts discharge of second treated batch of Fukushima water US ambassador to Japan calls Chinese ban on Japanese seafood 'economic coercion' Japan hits out at China’s ‘unacceptable’ seafood ban as it rolls out emergency fund The Body in the Woods | An Independent TV Original Documentary The harrowing discovery at centre of The Independent’s new documentary
2023-10-16 19:58

'Sounds messed up': Viewers call out 'DWTS' Season 32 for audio errors during guest judge Billy Porter's performance
'DWTS' Season 32 celebrated 'Whitney Houston Night' in the latest episode
2023-11-15 10:24

Kai Cenat's hilarious reaction to IShowSpeed hitting 20M subscribers on YouTube goes viral: 'He did it'
IShowSpeed celebrated the remarkable milestone with some signature dance moves, which quickly went viral
2023-08-28 15:59

Jessie 'Boss Lee': MLM seller dies after forgoing chemotherapy and trying 'natural' colon cancer treatment
After receiving her routine bloodwork results, Jessie Ward was told she had stage-four colon cancer back in March
2023-09-20 20:23
You Might Like...

Updated NFL Draft order after Bears beat Panthers on Thursday Night Football

Part of the sun is broken and scientists are baffled

Christian Pulisic could be on his way to AC Milan

Jury deliberations will continue Wednesday in the trial of the 2 officers charged in Elijah McClain's death

With 'shuttle diplomacy,' step by step, Kissinger chased the possible in the Mideast

Reece James committed to Chelsea despite Real Madrid interest

MLB Rumors: Sure sounds like Aaron Nola's days with Phillies are numbered

As Jacksonville shooting victims are eulogized, advocates call attention to anti-Black hate crimes