Seaweed a model solution for fighting climate change

Seaweed a model solution for fighting climate change

Researchers from KAUST and Aarhus university believe they have identified a model solution to climate change, biodiversity loss, joblessness, hunger and environmental damage. In a paper published in Nature Sustainability, the co-authors outline how the cultivation and use of seaweed as a carbon capture technology, a job and tax revenue generator, and a food source, can protect and restore the planet. Credit photos from Aarhus to Michael Bo Rasmussen, Aarhus University.

THUWAL, Saudi Arabia, Oct. 07, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Seaweed, as its unfortunate name suggests, can be a nuisance. It makes a mess of beautiful beaches. It bobs up and down in the waves in an unsightly blob. And it sticks to unsuspecting swimmers as they try to enjoy a dip. But despite its reputation with some ocean goers, seaweed just might be one of the most powerful tools we have to save the planet from manmade climate change while providing a path to realizing many of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Researchers from KAUST and Aarhus University believe seaweed is a model solution to climate change, biodiversity loss, joblessness, hunger and environmental damage. In a paper published in Nature Sustainability the co-authors outline how the cultivation and use of seaweed as a carbon capture technology, a job and tax revenue generator, and a food source, can help protect and restore our planet.

“Our research consolidates seaweed farming as an underpinning of a sustainable future,” Professor Carlos Duarte, study lead author said. “It is scalable, with a 2,000-fold increase potential, it generates valuable products while also contributing to carbon sequestration below the farm, it produces sustainable fuels, and it displaces carbon-intensive products, thereby providing a range of contributions to climate action. While growing at sea, seaweed forms an ecosystem that delivers multiple benefits to the marine environment.”

The cultivation and use of seaweed, the authors believe, will directly support six of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and indirectly support several others. Achieving zero hunger, supporting good health, making clean energy affordable, as well as supporting industrial innovation, climate action, and ocean conservation, are all outcomes of cultivating seaweed. Not only is the plant climate positive, profitable, and edible, but it promises to feed and employ millions while preserving the planet and fostering poverty reduction and gender equality.

“Seaweed provides wonderful materials for a range of applications, grounded in their amazing diversity, as seaweed are as far apart from a genomic perspective as mushrooms and elephants. This genomic diversity provides a phenomenal source of new materials across a range of industries, from food, to fuels and plastics,” Duarte said.

The pitch, as much as there is one, is that seaweed cultivation must be ramped up significantly. This, of course, might encounter roadblocks in legislatures around the world as western regulations, where seaweed farming is just starting, are quite unwelcoming to seaweed aquaculture. The paper outlines in broad terms the objections that could be raised and addresses them in turn.

“Because seaweed farming is a new industry in western nations, existing regulatory frameworks do not facilitate its development. In some nations it is easier to get a concession for marine oil and gas extraction than for a seaweed farm. Creating a friendlier regulatory environment that encourages, rather than deter, seaweed farming will be critical to delivering on its potential.”

“Currently, seaweed farming occupies about 2,000 Km2 of land, compared to about 60 million Km2 land food producing systems occupy. We consider that about 4 million Km2 of ocean can support seaweed aquaculture while delivering positive impacts on the marine environment. In the rump-up to COP26, we consider that scaling seaweed farming can be a wedge of a regenerative approach to our oceans, delivering climate action while alleviating hunger and poverty,” Duarte said.

Professor Dorte Krause-Jensen from Aarhus University adds that sustainability standards and consideration of the carrying capacity for seaweed farming need be in place to avoid potential unattended negative consequences the farming.

“The utilisation of seaweed in a cascading biorefinery extracting biomolecules sequentially, offers a path to maximise the value of the biomass and render seaweed farming profitable, even in Western countries where costs are higher” said senior researcher Annette Bruhn of Aarhus University. “Promoting sustainable seaweed cultivation as an emission capture and utilisation technology supporting the circular bioeconomy, calls for a cross-sectorial approach to solving societal challenges. We need a disruption of the traditional way of thinking climate, environment and resource provision in each their sector and we need partnerships between science, industry and authorities”.

About KAUST

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) advances science and technology through distinctive and collaborative research integrated with graduate education. Located on the Red Sea coast in Saudi Arabia, KAUST conducts curiosity-driven and goal-oriented research to address global challenges related to food, water, energy, and the environment.

Established in 2009, KAUST is a catalyst for innovation, economic development and social prosperity in Saudi Arabia and the world. The University currently educates and trains master’s and doctoral students, supported by an academic community of faculty members, postdoctoral fellows and research scientists. With over 100 nationalities working and living at KAUST, the University brings together people and ideas from all over the world.

To learn more visit kaust.edu.sa.

About Aarhus

Aarhus University has been achieving excellence in research and education since 1928. Being a top 100 university with more than 50 Masters and Bachelors educations in English, Aarhus University is a leading globally oriented university with a strong engagement in the solving the societal challenges on local and global scale.

Department of Bioscience provide teaching, research and consultancy in all aspects of life; from bacteria to whales, from genes to ecosystems and from fundamental research to applied biology in nature management and biotechnology.

To learn more visit https://international.au.dk/

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5141687d-2aea-43e1-bddc-623aab93621f

For more information, please contact global.pr@kaust.edu.sa

Les algues : une solution modèle pour lutter contre le changement climatique

Les algues : une solution modèle pour lutter contre le changement climatique

Les chercheurs de la KAUST et de l’université d’Aarhus pensent avoir identifié une solution modèle au changement climatique, à la perte de biodiversité, au chômage, à la famine et aux dommages environnementaux. Dans un article publié dans Nature Sustainability, les co-auteurs soulignent comment la culture et l’utilisation des algues en tant que technologie de captage du carbone, générateur d’emplois et de recettes fiscales, et source alimentaire, peuvent protéger et restaurer la planète. Le crédit des photos d’Aarhus revient à Michael Bo Rasmussen, de l’université d’Aarhus.

THUWAL, Arabie saoudite, 07 oct. 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Les algues, ou mauvaises herbes marines, peuvent être une nuisance, comme leur nom le suggère. Elles souillent les belles plages. Elles flottent de haut en bas dans les vagues, formant des amas inesthétiques. Et elles se collent aux nageurs peu méfiants souhaitant profiter de leur baignade. Mais malgré leur réputation auprès de certains baigneurs, les algues pourraient être l’un des outils les plus puissants dont nous disposons pour sauver la planète des changements climatiques causés par l’homme tout en fournissant une voie vers la réalisation de bon nombre des Objectifs de développement durable de l’ONU.

Les chercheurs de la KAUST et de l’université d’Aarhus pensent que les algues sont une solution modèle au changement climatique, à la perte de biodiversité, au chômage, à la famine et aux dommages environnementaux. Dans un article publié dans Nature Sustainability, les co-auteurs soulignent comment la culture et l’utilisation des algues en tant que technologie de captage du carbone, générateur d’emplois et de recettes fiscales et source alimentaire, peuvent aider à protéger et restaurer notre planète.

« Notre recherche consolide l’élevage des algues en tant que fondement d’un avenir durable », a déclaré le professeur Carlos Duarte, auteur principal de l’étude. « Elles sont évolutives, avec un potentiel de multiplication par 2 000, elles génèrent des produits précieux tout en contribuant à la séquestration du carbone en aval de l’exploitation, elles produisent des combustibles durables et elles remplacent les produits à forte intensité de carbone, fournissant ainsi une variété de contributions à l’action climatique. En se développant en mer, les algues forment un écosystème qui offre de multiples avantages au milieu marin. »

Les auteurs pensent que la culture et l’utilisation d’algues appuieront directement six des Objectifs de développement durable (ODD) des Nations unies et indirectement plusieurs autres. Parvenir à l’éradication de la famine, soutenir une bonne santé, rendre l’énergie propre abordable, ainsi que soutenir l’innovation industrielle, l’action climatique et la conservation des océans, sont autant de résultats de la culture d’algues. Non seulement le climat de la plante est positif, rentable et comestible, mais il promet de nourrir et d’employer des millions de personnes tout en préservant la planète et en favorisant la réduction de la pauvreté et l’égalité des sexes.

« Les algues fournissent des matériaux merveilleux pour une variété d’applications, sur la base de leur incroyable diversité, car certaines sont aussi éloignées sur le plan génomique que les champignons et les éléphants. Cette diversité génomique fournit une source phénoménale de nouveaux matériaux dans une variété d’industries, de la nourriture aux carburants et plastiques », a déclaré M. Duarte.

Pour faire court, selon lui, la culture des algues doit être considérablement augmentée. Ce discours pourrait bien sûr rencontrer des obstacles dans les législatures du monde entier, car les réglementations occidentales, où l’élevage des algues ne fait que commencer, ne sont pas favorables à l’aquaculture des algues. Le document décrit en termes généraux les objections qui pourraient être soulevées et les traite tour à tour.

« Comme l’élevage d’algues est une nouvelle industrie dans les nations occidentales, les cadres réglementaires existants ne facilitent pas son développement. Dans certaines nations, il est plus facile d’obtenir une concession pour l’extraction de pétrole et de gaz marins que pour une ferme d’algues. Créer un environnement réglementaire plus convivial qui encourage, plutôt que décourage, l’élevage d’algues sera essentiel pour réaliser son potentiel. »

« Actuellement, l’élevage des algues occupe environ 2 000 kilomètres carrés de terres, par rapport à environ 60 millions de kilomètres carrés de systèmes de production alimentaire. Nous estimons qu’environ 4 millions de kilomètres carrés d’océan peuvent soutenir l’aquaculture des algues tout en produisant des impacts positifs sur le milieu marin. Au cours de la montée en puissance jusqu’à la COP26, nous considérons que la mise à l’échelle de l’élevage des algues peut jouer un rôle important dans l’approche régénérative de nos océans, offrant une action climatique tout en réduisant la faim et la pauvreté », a déclaré M. Duarte.

« L’utilisation d’algues dans une bioraffinerie opérant en chaîne en extrayant les biomolécules de manière séquentielle offre une voie pour maximiser la valeur de la biomasse et rendre l’élevage des algues rentable, même dans les pays occidentaux où les coûts sont plus élevés », a déclaré Annette Bruhn, chercheuse principale de l’université d’Aarhus. « La promotion d’une culture durable des algues en tant que technologie de captage et d’utilisation des émissions soutenant la bioéconomie circulaire appelle à une approche multisectorielle pour résoudre les défis sociétaux. Nous avons besoin d’une révolution de la façon traditionnelle de penser le climat, l’environnement et la fourniture de ressources dans chaque secteur et nous avons besoin de partenariats entre la science, l’industrie et les autorités. »

À propos de la KAUST

La King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) fait progresser la science et la technologie grâce à une recherche distinctive et collaborative intégrée à l’enseignement supérieur. Située sur la côte de la mer Rouge en Arabie saoudite, la KAUST mène des recherches pilotées par la curiosité et axées sur des objectifs pour relever les défis mondiaux liés à l’alimentation, à l’eau, à l’énergie et à l’environnement.

Créée en 2009, la KAUST est un catalyseur pour l’innovation, le développement économique et la prospérité sociale en Arabie saoudite et dans le monde. L’université éduque et forme actuellement des étudiants en master et en doctorat, soutenus par une communauté universitaire de professeurs, de boursiers postdoctoraux et de scientifiques dans la recherche. Avec des individus de plus de 100 nationalités travaillant et vivant à la KAUST, l’université réunit des personnes et des idées du monde entier.

Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur kaust.edu.sa.

À propos d’Aarhus

L’université d’Aarhus parvient à l’excellence en matière de recherche et d’éducation depuis 1928. Comptant parmi les 100 meilleures universités avec plus de 50 cursus de masters et licences en anglais, l’université d’Aarhus est une université de premier plan à l’échelle planétaire avec un fort engagement dans la résolution des défis sociétaux au niveau local et mondial.

Le département de Bioscience assure l’enseignement, la recherche et le conseil dans tous les aspects de la vie, des bactéries aux baleines, des gènes aux écosystèmes et de la recherche fondamentale à la biologie appliquée dans la gestion de la nature et la biotechnologie.

Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur https://international.au.dk/

Une photo accompagnant ce communiqué de presse est disponible à l’adresse https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5141687d-2aea-43e1-bddc-623aab93621f/fr

Pour plus d'information, contactez global.pr@kaust.edu.sa

Customertimes Announces CT Vision on Salesforce AppExchange, the World’s Leading Enterprise Cloud Marketplace

Customertimes’ customers can now benefit from a powerful Retail Execution mobile app.

NEW YORK, Oct. 7, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Customertimes announces that it has launched CT Vision on Salesforce AppExchange, empowering customers to streamline and enhance the Retail Execution process. A Salesforce-native solution and part of the award-winning CT Mobile suite of products, CT Vision delivers better performance with both on- and offline availability.

Built on the Salesforce Platform, CT Vision from Customertimes is currently available on AppExchange at https://appexchange.salesforce.com/appxListingDetail?listingId=a0N3u00000PGQktEAH.

CT Vision

With innovative image recognition technology for retail store check, CT Vision enhances visit execution by ensuring share-of-shelf calculation and planogram compliance with photo audit functionality. Ensure image quality, track KPIs by shelf and scene type, and get actionable data insights within seconds, all from your mobile device.

Results are immediately available in your Salesforce instance for reporting, analysis, and stakeholder review.

Comments on the News

  • “We are thrilled to share CT Vision on AppExchange,” says Anna Markova, Product Manager at CT Software. “This AI-powered retail execution tool can save time for sales reps, and, like all CT Mobile products, can result in business and efficiency gains for our customers.”
  • “CT Vision from Customertimes is a welcome addition to AppExchange, as they power digital transformation for customers by powering efficient retail execution,” said Woodson Martin, GM of Salesforce AppExchange. “AppExchange is constantly evolving to enable our partners to build cutting-edge solutions to drive customer success.”

About Salesforce AppExchange

Salesforce AppExchange, the world’s leading enterprise cloud marketplace, empowers companies to sell, service, market and engage in entirely new ways. With more than 6,000 solutions, 9 million customer installs and 117,000 peer reviews, it is the most comprehensive source of cloud, mobile, social, IoT, analytics and artificial intelligence technologies for businesses.

Additional Resources

Salesforce, AppExchange and others are among the trademarks of salesforce.com, inc.

About Customertimes

Customertimes Corp. is a global consulting and software firm dedicated to making the top IT technologies accessible to customers. With more than 4000 projects completed and 1300+ highly skilled experts, their solutions are engineered to help clients realize true business transformation and achieve maximum value from their technology investments. An early entrant into the Salesforce consulting and implementation space in Eastern Europe and an award-winning product development organization, Customertimes Corp. currently has headquarters in New York City, with regional offices in London, Paris, Toronto, Kyiv, Minsk, Riga, and Moscow. For more information, visit www.customertimes.com.

Media Contact:
Meriel Sikora
Customertimes
212-520-0059
meriel.sikora@customertimes.com

Finacity, a White Oak Company, Facilitates Consumer Loan Funding Program for Express Credit Group’s African Lending Operations

STAMFORD, Conn., Oct. 06, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Finacity Corporation, a White Oak Company, (“Finacity”) announced that it has successfully completed the facilitation of a new consumer loan funding program for Express Credit Group’s Botswana specialty finance operations (”Express Credit”). The new facility will purchase loans from Express Credit through a newly created special purpose corporation. The first tranche consisted of the purchase of USD 9.0 million pool of payroll deduction loans. Additional tranches are expected to follow. Finacity developed the program in coordination with Africa based financial advisor Africa Growth Capital.

About Express Credit Group

Express Credit Group operates specialty finance businesses in several African nations, including Botswana and Namibia. Express Credit offers payroll deduction loans, unsecured loans and real estate secured loans to consumers. Charlotte Mathula, CEO of Express Credit Botswana said that “the new loan funding program enhances our liquidity and our ability to serve our customers. Express Credit Botswana anticipates additional loan demand which could be supported by this new facility.”

About Finacity, a White Oak Company

Finacity, a White Oak Company, specializes in the structuring and provision of efficient capital markets receivables funding programs, supplier and payables finance, back-up servicing, and bond administration. Finacity currently facilitates the financing and administration of an annual receivables volume of approximately US $100 billion. With resources in the USA, Europe Latin America and Asia, Finacity conducts business throughout the world with obligors in 175 countries. Finacity is affiliated with White Oak Global Advisors, LLC, a leading alternative debt manager specializing in originating and providing financing solutions to facilitate the growth, refinancing and recapitalization of small and medium enterprises. For further information, please visit www.finacity.com.

About White Oak Global Advisors

White Oak Global Advisors, LLC (“WOGA”), together with its financing affiliates, provides over twenty lending products to the market, including term, asset-based, and equipment loans, to all sectors of the economy. Since its inception in 2007, WOGA and its affiliates have deployed over $9 billion across its product lines, utilizing a disciplined investment process that focuses on delivering risk-adjusted investment returns to investors while establishing long term partnerships with our borrowers. More information can be found at www.whiteoaksf.com.

For more information on this transaction, please contact:

FINACITY CORPORATION, a White Oak Company

Paul Jenison
Tel: +1 203 428 3511
Mobile +1 917-833-1827
pjenison@finacity.com

Kenya Researchers Confident Population Will Embrace Malaria Vaccine

More than 260,000 African children under the age of five die from malaria each year, including more than 10,000 in Kenya, according to the World Health Organization. The WHO’s backing of a malaria vaccine, Mosquirix, for children in sub-Saharan Africa has raised hopes of preventing those deaths. The vaccine proved effective in a pilot program in Ghana, Kenya, and Malawi.

On Wednesday, the World Health Organization gave the green light for the use of the vaccine for children between five and 24 months of age in Africa and other regions prone to a high level of malaria transmission.

This follows trials of the vaccine in Ghana, Kenya and Malawi. The four-dose shot was administered to 800,000 African children.

Thirty-year-old Salome Awuor allowed her son, now three years old, to take part in the malaria vaccine trials in Kisumu County, western Kenya.

The mother of four said previously she would visit her nearest clinic four times a month to get malaria treatment for him. At the time, he was 12 months old.

“My son was given three jabs, and malaria went down. I never went back to the clinic seeking malaria treatment. I feel so good my children no longer get sick most of the time. That’s why whenever I hear about vaccines, I run to get them because it helps a lot,” she said.

WHO chief Tedros Ghebreyesus described the malaria vaccine breakthrough as historic and one that could save the lives of tens of thousands of young people each year.

According to the WHO, malaria affects more than 229 million people each year and kills more than 400,000.

In Africa, more than a quarter of a million children die from the mosquito-borne disease.

Earlier trials in 2015 showed the vaccine could prevent 40 percent of malaria cases and about 30 percent of severe cases.

Bernhards Ogutu is a chief researcher at Kenya Medical Research Institute. He said Kenya’s participation in the study proves the vaccine will work on the country’s population.

“If it’s safe you know it was done in your population and you know it’s good for you. You are not relying on data from another population but from your own population. So that you can confidently advise the government this is safe for us, it works and its approved and it was done by us and we contributed to this development,” he said.

The first three vaccine doses are given a month apart when children are babies, and a final booster is given when the child is one-and-a-half years old.

Ogutu has voiced confidence that Kenyan parents will vaccinate their children from malaria.

“People have been asking where it is now that we have been given the go ahead, we can now go for the rollout. I think it’s time to get to our people and tell them now it’s available and now it’s a matter of procuring the vaccine and ensuring it’s available and start getting it to those who need it,” said Ogutu.

So far, there is no word on when the vaccine will become available to the general public.

Source: Voice of America

Nobel Prize in Literature Awarded to Tanzanian Novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah

This year’s Nobel Prize in Literature has been awarded to Tanzanian novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah for his body of work detailing the refugee experience and how colonialism shaped African culture.

At a news conference at the Swedish Academy’s headquarters in Stockholm, Permanent Secretary Mats Helm said Gurnah received the award for “for his uncompromising and compassionate penetration of the effects of colonialism and the fate of the refugee in the gulf between cultures and continents.”

Gurnah, born in 1948 and raised on the island of Zanzibar in the Indian Ocean, arrived in England as a refugee himself in the late 1960’s. He has published ten novels and a number of short stories.

In its statement, the academy said, “In Gurnah’s literary universe, everything is shifting – memories, names, identities. An unending exploration driven by intellectual passion is present in all his books.” The statement said that quality is as evident in his latest novel, 2020’s “Afterlives,” which he began writing as a 21-year-old refugee.

The academy went on to say Gurnah’s writing is “striking” for its dedication to truth and “his aversion to simplification. His novels recoil from stereotypical descriptions and open our gaze to a culturally diversified East Africa unfamiliar to many in other parts of the world.”

Gurnah will receive a $1.1 million cash prize, but for writers, the prize also adds prestige and publicity by exposing their work to much wider audience.

The Nobel Prizes for medicine, physics and chemistry were awarded earlier this week, with the Peace Prize to be awarded Friday, and economics on Monday.

The awards will all be formally presented in December. Because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the academy announced this year’s ceremony will be a mixture of digital and physical events. Laureates will receive their Nobel Prize medals and diplomas in their home countries.

Source: Voice of America

UN: ‘Transitional Justice’ Key to Unblocking Vicious Cycle of Violence in DR Congo

A report by U.N. human rights chief Michele Bachelet finds some progress has been made in the human rights situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, the report finds extensive violations and abuses continue unabated in North Kivu and Ituri provinces. Bachelet is calling for a system of what the U.N. calls “transitional justice” to address the situation.

The report says the total number of human rights violations and abuses in eastern Congo dropped slightly during the period between June 1, 2020, and May 31, 2021, compared to the year before.

Despite this decrease, it says the number of people killed in summary and extrajudicial executions rose to more than 600. That includes nearly 400 people killed by a rebel group in Ituri province, and 236 people killed by members of the Congolese security and defense forces in the provinces of Ituri and North Kivu.

U.N. Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights Nada Al-Nashif, who presented the report to the U.N. Human Rights Council this week, said violations by Congolese armed forces continue to pose serious concerns.

“These violations undermine efforts deployed to secure the east of the country,” she said. “I urge the government to take the necessary measures to ensure that military operations of the armed forces against armed groups are conducted in strict compliance with human rights and international humanitarian law, and that violations by any members of the security forces are investigated and prosecuted promptly in accordance with the right to fair trial standards.”

During the reporting period, Al-Nashif said, Congolese courts have convicted nearly 300 members of the DRC armed forces, Congolese national police as well as members of armed groups on various charges. Some were found guilty of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

She says it is critical that the DRC implement a system of transitional justice so perpetrators of violations and abuses continue to be prosecuted.

“As the High Commissioner has stated during previous sessions of the Human Rights Council, transitional justice is key to unblocking the vicious circle of violence that persists in the DRC,” Al-Nashif said. “The establishment of transitional justice mechanisms needs to effectively address impunity, guarantee access to justice and redress for victims, and ensure the implementation of guarantees of non-repetition.”

Transitional justice is a strategy, a way for countries emerging from conflict and repression to deal with human rights violations that are too large for a normal system of justice to tackle. It can include setting up special courts to prosecute gross human rights violations, reforming the existing justice system, or establishing a truth and reconciliation commission.

U.N. Human Rights spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told VOA that the U.N. cannot prescribe what form transitional justice should take in the DRC. This, she says, “depends on what the victims and civil society in the country demand.”

DRC Minister for Human Rights, Albert Fabrice Puela, says his government is determined to set up a National Commission for Transitional Justice and create a national reparation fund for victims of serious crimes.

Source: Voice of America