Inventus Power reçoit la certification ECE R100 pour ses batteries PROTRXion à force motrice

La certification valide la sécurité et la fiabilité des batteries lithium-ion PROTRXion 48V pour l’alimentation des véhicules électriques routiers à faible vitesse

WOODRIDGE, Ill., 13 juin 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Inventus Power, un leader mondial des systèmes de batterie avancés, a annoncé aujourd’hui avoir reçu la certification ECE R100 (Rev 3) pour son module de batterie lithium-ion (Li-ion) PROTRXion™ de 48 volts. Conformément à la réglementation ECE n° 100.03, le modèle M-48V60-TRX d’Inventus Power répond aux « exigences de sécurité relatives au système de stockage d’énergie électrique rechargeable (REESS) des véhicules routiers des catégories M et N équipés d’une chaîne de traction électrique ».

« L’obtention de la certification ECE R100 représente une étape importante pour notre entreprise. Elle témoigne non seulement de la conception avancée de nos batteries et de nos capacités de fabrication, mais nous permet également d’étendre notre présence sur le marché européen des véhicules électriques à faible vitesse homologués pour la route », a déclaré Oliver Bald, directeur principal du développement commercial EMEA chez Inventus Power.

Les batteries PROTRXion Li-ion d’Inventus Power sont conçues pour répondre à divers besoins d’électrification du marché qui ne sont pas satisfaits par des sources d’alimentation telles que les moteurs à combustion, les batteries au plomb et autres technologies conventionnelles. Avec des modèles initiaux lancés en 2020 pour cibler des marchés clés tels que la manutention, les plateformes élévatrices, le nettoyage professionnel, la robotique et les véhicules électriques à faible vitesse, la gamme de produits s’étend également pour prendre en charge des applications à forte puissance.

« À ce jour, nous avons certifié notre modèle M-48V60-TRX selon la réglementation ECE R100 Rev 3, mais notre feuille de route produit indique plusieurs autres modèles qui seront également certifiés ECE R100 dans les mois à venir », a déclaré Phu Tran, directeur de la gestion mondiale des produits. « L’obtention de la certification ECE R100 garantit à nos clients OEM et du marché secondaire européens que nos batteries peuvent être utilisées en toute sécurité dans une variété d’applications de véhicules électriques à basse vitesse. »

La batterie M-48V60-TRX constitue une solution de batterie intelligente, robuste et très performante pour les applications motrices lourdes et est évolutive jusqu’à 31 kWh. En plus de la certification ECE R100, la batterie M-48V60-TRX est certifiée ECE R10, UL2271, IEC62133, IEC62619, IEC60730 classe B, FCC classe B, CE et UN38.3.

Pour plus d’informations, visitez le site inventuspower.com/PROTRXion ou envoyez un courriel à info@inventuspower.com.

À propos d’Inventus Power :

Inventus Power est un leader mondial dans le domaine des systèmes de batterie avancés, spécialisé dans la conception et la fabrication de systèmes d’alimentation de haute qualité, fiables et innovants pour une large gamme d’applications portables, mobiles et stationnaires.

Pour plus d’informations sur nos produits, notre expérience et nos capacités, visitez le site inventuspower.com et suivez @inventuspower.

Inventus Power Receives ECE R100 Certification on its PROTRXion Motive Batteries

Certification validates the safety and reliability of PROTRXion 48V lithium-ion batteries for powering on-road low-speed electric vehicles

WOODRIDGE, Ill., June 13, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Inventus Power, a global leader in advanced battery systems, announced today that it has received ECE R100 (Rev 3) certification on its 48 volt PROTRXion™ lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery module. In accordance with the ECE Regulation No 100.03, Inventus Power’s M-48V60-TRX model meets the “safety requirements with respect to the Rechargeable Electrical Energy Storage System (REESS) of road vehicles of categories M and N equipped with an electric power train.”

“Achieving ECE R100 certification is a significant milestone for our business. It is not only a testament to our advanced battery design and manufacturing capabilities, but also enables us to expand our presence in the European market for street-legal low-speed electric vehicles,” said Oliver Bald, Sr. Business Development Manager EMEA at Inventus Power.

Inventus Power’s PROTRXion Li-ion batteries are designed to address various market electrification needs not being met through power sources such as combustion engines, lead-acid batteries, and other conventional technologies. With initial models launched in 2020 to target key markets such as material handling, aerial work platform, professional cleaning, robotics, and low-speed electric vehicles, the product line is also expanding to support higher-powered applications.

“As of today, we have certified our M-48V60-TRX model to the ECE R100 Rev 3 regulation, but our product roadmap outlines several additional models that will also be certified to ECE R100 in the coming months,” said Phu Tran, Director of Global Product Management. “Achieving ECE R100 certification provides assurance to our European OEM & aftermarket customers that our batteries are safe to use in a variety of low-speed electric vehicle applications.”

The M-48V60-TRX is an intelligent, robust, and high-performing battery solution for heavy-duty motive applications and is scalable up to 31 kWh. In addition to ECE R100 certification, the M-48V60-TRX battery is certified to ECE R10, UL2271, IEC62133, IEC62619, IEC60730 Class B, FCC Class B, CE and UN38.3.

For more information, visit inventuspower.com/PROTRXion or email info@inventuspower.com.

About Inventus Power:

Inventus Power is a global leader in advanced battery systems that specializes in designing and manufacturing high-quality, reliable, and innovative power systems for a broad range of portable, motive, and stationary applications.

For more information about our products, experience and capabilities, visit inventuspower.com and follow @inventuspower.

America’s Decline in Life Expectancy Accelerated in 2020

The United States has experienced decreasing life-expectancy ever since 2014 (when it peaked at 78.9 years), but in the latest year that the World Bank reports, 2020 (which was the first year of the covid-19 pandemic), this decline greatly accelerated, by plunging 1.51 years (1.8 years for men, and 1.2 years for women), to 77.28 years (74.5 for men, 80.2 for women).

Liechtenstein was the worst-performing nation in 2020, declining 2.35 years.

Kazakhstan was the second-worst, declining 1.81 years.

Russia was the third-worst, declining 1.75 years.

Serbia was the fourth-worst, declining 1.71 years.

America, at -1.51 years, was the fifth-worst in the entire world.

Spain and Bulgaria were almost as bad as America, and were tied as being the sixth and seventh worst, by declining 1.50 years.

Lithuania was the eighth worst, by declining 1.35 years.

Poland was the ninth-worst, declining 1.30 years.

Romania was the tenth-worst, declining 1.25 years.

Belgium was the eleventh-worst, declining 1.20 years.

Italy was the twelfth-worst, declining 1.15 years.

Slovenia was the thirteenth-worst, declining 1.00 years.

Luxembourg was the fourteenth-worst, declining 0.90 years.

Switzerland was the fifteenth-worst, declining 0.80 years.

Oman was the 16th-worst, declining 0.72 years.

Netherlands, Sweden, Portugal, and Austria were tied as being seventeenth through twentieth-worst, declining 0.70 years.

Only 39 of the 194 tabulated countries experienced a decline. All 155 other countries experienced either no change (3), or else they increased life-expectancies (152). However, amongst all countries, there was a decline of 0.02 years, because the declining countries were declining more than the increasing countries were increasing.

The very fact that life-expectancies declined, at all, is extraordinary. For example, the site ourworldindata.org says that, between the years 1800 and 2012, life-expectancies increased in all countries. And according to the U.N., which has tracked nations’ life-expectancies in five-year intervals ever since 1950, up until 2020, global life-expectancies increased from 46.96 years during the five-year period 1950-1955, to 72.28 years during the five-year period 2015-2020; and, so, life-expectancies were clearly soaring throughout that 1950-2020 period. But, it might now be over.

Here were the countries that, in the World Bank’s calculations, performed the best on boosting longevities overall:

1: Seychelles +3.19 years

2: Syria: +0.95 years

3&4 tied: Mozambique and Eswatini +0.53 years

5: Lesotho +0.50 years

6: Malawi +0.43 years

7&8 tied: Burkina Faso and Central African Republic +0.40 years

9: Mali +0.39 years

10: Djibouti +0.38 years

11&12 tied: Niger and Sierra Leone +0.37 years

12&13&14&15 tied: Ethiopia, Eritrea, Tanzania, and Guinea +0.36 years

16&17 tied: New Zealand and Madagascar +0.35 years

18&19&20 tied: Bhutan, Rwanda, and Laos +0.30

Obviously, therefore, all of the 154 countries that were neither in the best 20 nor the worst 20 were little changed, somewhere between +0.30 and -0.70. The outliers were clearly outside the global norm of -0.02 years.

What might be more surprising than that these figures indicate life-expectancies were declining (slightly) in 2020, is that Patrick Heuveline, at the California Center for Population Research, headlined in Population and Development Review, on 12 March 2022, “Global and National Declines in Life Expectancy: An End-of-2021 Assessment”, and he reported that

The global life expectancy appears to have declined by 0.92 years between 2019 and 2020 [which is considerably more decline than the World Bank calculations, of -0.02 years] and by another 0.72 years between 2020 and 2021, but the decline seems to have ended during the last quarter of 2021. Uncertainty about its exact size aside, this represents the first decline in global life expectancy since 1950, the first year for which a global estimate is available from the United Nations. Annual declines in life expectancy … appear to have exceeded two years at some point before the end of 2021 in at least 50 countries. Since 1950, annual declines of that magnitude had been observed only on rare occasions, such as Cambodia in the 1970s, Rwanda in the 1990s, and possibly some sub-Saharan African nations at the peak of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) pandemic.

Furthermore, he pointed out

the possibly vast extent to which COVID-19 deaths might have been misdiagnosed or unreported in many parts of the world. Estimates of excess deaths in Central and South America suggest drastically larger reductions in life expectancy than when based on reported COVID-19 deaths, reaching 10.91 years in Peru, 7.91 years in Ecuador, 5.54 years in Mexico, 2.42 years in Brazil, and 2.26 years in Guatemala.

So: the data on which the officially reported covid-deaths were reported were extremely untrustworthy in some countries, especially countries south of the U.S. border. Countries there might have performed far worse at restraining covid-19 than was being publicly reported at the time.

Furthermore: these covid-19 data need to be interpreted with an understanding that nations with the highest median (or “average”) age had the highest death-rates from covid, and therefore the worst 2020 performances on longevity-change. Almost all of the “best-performing” nations on longevity-change were therefore ones with the lowest median age. For example, Niger has the lowest median age, 15.4 years old, and the 11th and 12th best 2020 longevity-change performance. And the worst-performing nation on 2020 longevity-change performance was Liechtenstein, where the media age is 43.2 years, which is the world’s 17th-highest median age. (#1 on that — median age — is Monaco, at 53.1 years, and Japan is #2 there, at 47.3 years; U.S. is #58 at 38.1 years, and yet had the world’s 5th-worst longevity-change performance. Seychelles is #71 at 35.4 years, but had the world’s best longevity-change performance. Syria is the 65th-lowest median-age country at 24.3 years, and yet performed the world’s second-best longevity-change in 2020, of +0.95 years. So, everything can be properly evaluated only within its relevant context.)

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

International Blood Donation Day observed

International Blood Donation Day was observed in Barentu at the national level on 12 June under the theme “Blood Donation is Expression of Humanity”.

Speaking at the occasion, Ms. Alem Berhe, chairperson of the National Voluntary Blood Donation Association, said that on 14 June, International Blood Donation Day is a day in which those who saved lives with their blood feel proud and others pledge to respond to the call to donate blood to save lives with their renewable blood.

Ms. Alem went on to say that the objective of the association is to develop the understanding of the public on the importance of blood donation in saving lives enriching the national blood supply as well expanding activities of the association across the country.

Indicating that from 2015 to mid-2022 about 3 thousand units of blood have been collected, Mr. Gebremeskel Embaye, chairman of the voluntary blood donation association branch in the Gash Barka Region, said that the increased number of nationals joining the association attests to the growing awareness of the public.

Ambassador Mahmud Ali Hiruy, Governor of Gash Barka Region, on his part expressed the readiness of the region to stand alongside the association in all its endeavors.

The event was highlighted by cultural and artistic programs and general knowledge contest as well as handing over certificates of recognition to institutions and individuals that highly contributed to the program.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Climate Change: A Looming Threat or An Existing Reality?

“The world will warm up, the glaciers will melt and the sea level will rise” is any lay person’s answer to the question “What is climate change?” We have all learned it in school or heard it in the news media or read it in a magazine. But do we all know what it really means? Do we all know of the very “real” and “tangible” impacts it is making on our lives? I assume not.

We have all been guilty of thinking about climate change as a distant reality, especially those of us in developing countries. We think that we don’t contribute much to the greenhouse gas emissions, and, therefore, are safe, forgetting that we all live on one earth and dangers looming on one side won’t grant mercy to the other. In fact, it is the developing countries that bear the brunt of the effects of climate change despite being the least responsible for it. This is due to their inability to adapt to the ongoing change because of their structural impediments resulting from their poor economies.

Climate change is affecting particularly the developing countries by worsening their existing water scarcity, decreasing their already low agricultural productivity, changing properties of existing seasons, driving migration, creating conditions for new diseases, and allowing eradicated diseases to reemerge, increasing the burden on the already fragile health systems and weakening the resilience of the people. In Eritrea, where the overwhelming majority of the population depends on rain-fed agriculture, we can imagine how hard we are hit by the changes we are witnessing in climate.

The global community is finally realizing the urgency of the matter and the need for prompt action. There is one particular portion of the community that took the mission of raising the public’s awareness about the deadliness of climate change to heart and is advocating for things to change: THE YOUTH. Young people all over the world realize that there is no such thing as planet B and, thus, recognize the need to push the adults in positions of power to ensure that future generations inherit a habitable planet. They are rallying and pushing for the leaders of today to stand by their commitment at the Conference of the Parties (COP) on Climate Change held in Paris, where countries pledged to limit the rise in temperature of the earth to 1.5oC, the maximum threshold beyond which lands will be submerged and people will lose their homes, most of which are disproportionately located in developing countries.

The concept of climate is not merely environmental or physical in nature, but an ethical, legal and political issue as well. That is why young people are asking for climate justice to be served and for an equitable distribution of the burdens of climate change to take place along with a fair allocation of responsibilities for responding to it so that the most vulnerable are protected. The fastest route to a solution is investing in and establishing adaptation measures because of the gap between the increase in momentum of the effects of climate change and any tangible mitigating response from the global community. Thus, countries are being encouraged to embrace adaptive solutions to climate change to increase resilience and alleviate the effects. These include enabling climate-smart agricultural activities, sustainable water supply systems, climate-resilient health systems, schools, and other institutions.

Eritrea has progressed admirably in considering and establishing adaptive measures to the effects of climate change. It submitted its revised version of the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) in 2018, outlining the methodologies it will be following to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate impacts by 2030. The country recognizes that its geographical position doesn’t put it at an advantage when it comes to the availability of water and agricultural productivity, upon which 80% of the population depends for subsistence. This is also being worsened by the persisting climate change, which, in turn, is being aggravated by the already existing way of life, such as over-cultivation, overgrazing, deforestation for housing as well as cooking, and land degradation. Thus, efforts are underway to break this vicious cycle and make Eritrea a climate change-responsive country with a carbon-free economy.

Eritrea is leading efforts to arrest land degradation, nourish its soil, conserve moisture, promote alternate crops, plant trees, and use water sources as effectively as possible. Moreover, Eritrea has taken measures to shift to renewable energy sources. In fact, it is establishing solar-powered improved water systems to provide clean and adequate water to all. The country is also observing the ongoing formulation of policies and legal measures to avoid land degradation as well as marine pollution and promote the appropriate use of resources. Creative and environment-friendly solutions such as Mogogo Adhanet, which decreases the need for firewood by 50% compared to the traditional Mogogo, are also being implemented.

According to the NDC report of 2018, although Eritrea contributes less than 0.01% of the global greenhouse gas emission, it is carrying most of the burden of this dreadful reality to which it is responding commendably through the adaptation measures tailored to its unique context.

Therefore, each and every one of us should feel the responsibility to take climate change seriously and make our voices heard as change always starts with us, individuals, to eventually drive the much-needed action at the global level.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea