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Estonia National Transmission System Operator Secures EU Funding

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In Estonia, national transmission system operator Elering has secured funding from the European Commission to speed up the integration of renewable energy onto the grid.

The €30 million ($34.7 million) in funding approved by the European Commission will enable Elering to modernise existing and build new energy transmission infrastructure.

Elering plans to strengthen its 110KV power line in Western Estonia to ensure the transmission network is able to transport an increasing amount of renewable energy capacity.

Kalle Kilk, Member of the Management Board and Head of Asset Management of Elering, said: “110 kilovolt power lines approaching the 330 kilovolt network from the islands and Lääne County are currently a major impediment when it comes to improving dispersed renewable energy and are in need of significant reinforcement.”

Kilk added that the project will also help Estonia to secure its energy supply and achieve its climate goals by reducing the emissions of greenhouse gases.

The most significant benefit for the security of supply is the construction of lines feeding the islands on separate masts.

Presently, there is a potential hazard of the interruption of the entire supply of electricity to the islands should the double-circuit line be switched off.

The investments to be made will improve the resistance of the 110KV network to weather conditions with regard to impact arising from icy conditions and high temperatures.

The funding will be issued through the Commission’s Recovery and Resilience Facility which aims to accelerate the digital and green transition for member states.

Projects to be deployed are also expected to help the integration of the Estonian grid with that of western European countries, a move that will help reduce the reliance of Estonia on the Russian grid.

Elering says it has developed a new methodology that will reduce the Russian energy supply into Latvia.

The method includes reducing the amount of electricity the country purchases from Russia.

The news follows Fatih Birol, the executive director of the International Energy Agency announcing that by leveraging renewables including solar and wind, Europe has the potential to address the soaring energy prices being witnessed across the bloc’s energy market.

German Renewable Energy Company Acquires Scottish Wind Project

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BayWa r.e. has completed the acquisition of the project rights for Broken Cross Wind Farm in South Lanarkshire, Scotland.

The Broken Cross project, purchased from developer Brockwell Energy, is a 48MW, ten turbine wind farm site sitting 3.5km to the northwest of Rigside in South Lanarkshire.

Gordon MacDougall, Managing Director, BayWa r.e. UK and Ireland, said: “Broken Cross is another high-quality project developed by Brockwell Energy and we’re thrilled to add this new project to our growing UK portfolio of renewable energy generation sites.

“We look forward to starting on site and expanding Scotland’s capacity for wind energy generation while creating opportunities for the local community through a significant community benefit package.”

The project is located on a restored coal mine that underwent a transformation after development company Hargreaves purchased the land from the liquidators of Scottish Coal in 2013.

Working with South Lanarkshire Council over the last eight years, Hargreaves has developed and delivered a site-wide restoration scheme paving the way for the wind scheme and other industrial and agricultural uses.

Alex Lambie, Chief Executive of Brockwell Energy: “We are delighted to complete a second transaction with BayWa r.e. that highlights the quality and value of the project we have developed at Broken Cross.

“The transaction proceeds will be reinvested to further expand our development activities at other sites and projects as we strive to deliver more projects to help achieve climate change goals.”

Bangladesh To Build Another Nuclear Power Plant After Rooppur Project

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The work to complete Bangladesh’s first-ever nuclear power plant took another significant step forward this past week when the reactor pressure vessel was installed at Rooppur NPP Unit 1.

Russian-based contractor and supplier ROSATOM announced the completion of the installation. The vessel was manufactured by Russia’s AEM-Technologies.

The Rooppur project is planned by the Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission and will eventually include two units generating 1.2GW capacity each.

The first unit work began in 2013 and is expected to be completed and operational by 2024, with Unit 2 planned for a 2024 start.

Installation of the 334-ton unit began more than three weeks earlier, with a polar crane moving it into design position with a tolerance of one-tenth of a millimeter.

“The high qualification of the specialists and the thorough preparation ensured the performance of the works with a pinpoint precision,” Alexey Likhachev, director-general of ROSATOM, said in a statement.

“The unique combination of active and passive systems of the power units will ensure safe operation of the power plant and guarantee the declared level of electricity generation. The development of nuclear power industry will not only resolve the problem of energy supply in Bangladesh but will also contribute to the development of the region and enhance the living standards of the people.”

The Rooppur plant will include two VVER-1200 pressurized water-cooled reactors. The VVER model includes horizontal steam generators, hexagonal fuel assemblies and high-capacity pressurizers.

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has said the nation will build another nuclear power plant once Rooppur is completed. The nation’s growth is pushing leaders to ensure electricity access to all of its population.

Egypt’s 500MW Wind Farm In Gulf Of Suez To Provide 1,100 Direct Jobs

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The Prime Minister of Egypt, Moustafa Madbouli, has attended the signing of two agreements on establishing a 500MW wind farm in the Gulf of Suez area.

The deal was signed by the Electricity Ministry and a consortium comprising Orascom, France’s Engie and Japan’s Toyota Tsusho Corporation in the presence of Electricity Minister Mohamed Shaker, Japanese Ambassador to Egypt Masaki Noke and France’s deputy ambassador to Egypt.

Shaker referred to efforts exerted by the ministry in cooperation with the private sector to carry out power projects based on renewable energy sources.

The efforts come as part of the ministry’s strategy to produce 42% of electricity from renewable sources by 2035, he said.

In October, the Egyptian Electricity Transmission Company (EETC) agreed with the Red Sea Wind Energy Company to set up a wind farm in the Gulf of Suez area under a BOOT (Build, Own, Operate, Transfer) system, a form of Public-Private Partnership (PPP), to produce 500 megawatts of electricity from wind energy.

The EETC will buy the electricity produced from the project, Shaker said.

The total investment cost of the project is estimated at $600 million and it is expected to become operational in 2024.

He added that the project is anticipated to provide 1,100 direct jobs in addition to many other indirect jobs related to supplies and services.

Russia Suspends Its Mission To NATO, Foreign Minister Says

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Russia’s foreign minister said Monday that the country is suspending its mission to NATO.

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that the move is in response to last week’s expulsion by NATO of eight members of Russia’s mission to the military alliance.

NATO said that they were secretly working as intelligence officers and halved the size of Moscow’s team able to work at its headquarters. Lavrov also announced that NATO’s military liaison and information offices in Moscow would be closed.

In a separate statement, he Foreign Ministry said that NATO’s joint actions “confirm that they are not interested in an equal dialogue and work to deescalate military-political tensions.

The alliance’s line towards our country is becoming more and more aggressive. The ‘Russian threat’ is inflated in order to strengthen the internal unity of the alliance, to create the appearance of its ‘relevance’ in modern geopolitical conditions.”

Lavrov said that contact between the Western alliance and Moscow could be done through the Russian embassy in Belgium.

The Russian mission isn’t based at NATO’s headquarters, but in a leafy neighborhood in the south of the Belgian capital, Brussels.

NATO suspended practical cooperation with Russia in 2014 after it annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, but has kept channels open for high-level meetings and for military-to-military cooperation. But the NATO-Russia Council, their preferred forum, has only met sporadically since then.

Russia and NATO also have been at odds over Moscow’s nuclear missile development, aerial intrusions into NATO airspace and the buzzing of allied ships by fighter planes.

Strike Dodged With Deal Between Film And TV Crews, Studios

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An 11th-hour deal was reached over the weekend, averting a strike of film and television crews that would have seen some 60,000 behind-the-scenes workers walk off their jobs and would have frozen productions in Hollywood and across the U.S.

After days of marathon negotiations, representatives from the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and from the studios and entertainment companies who employ them reached the three-year contract agreement before a Monday strike deadline, avoiding a serious setback for an industry that had just gotten back to work after long shutdowns.

“This is a Hollywood ending,” union president Matthew Loeb said. “Our members stood firm.”

The workers still must vote to approve it, but the strike has been called off with the tentative deal. Many in Hollywood celebrated the news.

The union represents cinematographers, camera operators, set designers, carpenters, hair and makeup artists and many others.

US, Haiti Seek Release Of 17 Missionaries Snatched By Gang

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U.S. officials are working with Haitian authorities to try to secure the release of 12 adults and five children with a U.S.-based missionary group who were abducted over the weekend by a gang notorious for killings, kidnappings and extortion.

The group was snatched by the 400 Mawozo gang, which controls the Croix-des-Bouquets area east of the capital of Port-au-Prince, police inspector Frantz Champagne told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The abduction happened Saturday in the community of Ganthier, which lies in the gang’s area. It was blamed for the kidnapping of five priests and two nuns earlier this year.

As authorities sought the release of the 16 Americans and one Canadian with the Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries, local unions and other organizations expected to launch a strike Monday to protest Haiti’s worsening lack of security.

The Western Hemisphere’s nation is again struggling with a spike in gang-related kidnappings that had diminished in recent months, after President Jovenel Moïse was fatally shot at his private residence on July 7 and a magnitude 7.2 earthquake killed more than 2,200 people in August.

The kidnapping of the missionaries came just days after high-level U.S. officials visited Haiti and promised more resources for Haiti’s National Police.

This is including another $15 million to help reduce gang violence, which this year has displaced thousands of Haitians who now live in temporary shelters in increasingly unhygienic conditions.

The U.S. State Department says it was in regular contact with senior Haitian authorities and would continue to work with them and interagency partners.

Alleged P&ID scam: EFCC re-arraigns British national, James Nolan

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The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), on Monday re-arraigned a British national, James Nolan, before Justice Donatus Okorowo of a Federal High Court (FHC), Abuja.

The EFCC re-arraigned Nolan, alongside two others, on amended 32-count charge bordering on money laundering. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that while the two companies; Goidel Resources Limited, a Designated Non-Financial Institution (DNFI), and ICIL Limited are 1st and 2nd defendants, Nolan is the 3rd defendant in the case.

He was re-arraigned for his involvement in the controversial contract awarded to Process and Industrial Development Limited (P&ID).

The re-arraignment followed the transfer of the former trial judge, Justice Okon Abang, to the Warri division of the court early in the year.

Thousands Migrant Workers In Kashmir Moved To Secure Locations

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Indian authorities have moved thousands of migrant workers in Kashmir to safer locations overnight, while hundreds have fled the Himalayan valley after a wave of targeted killings.

Suspected militants have killed eleven civilians, including five migrant workers, in Kashmir since early October despite a widespread security crackdown in the heavily militarised region.

While the trigger for the latest wave of attacks was not immediately clear, Kashmir has been the site of armed insurgency against New Delhi for decades. Kashmir is claimed in full by India and Pakistan but ruled in parts by both.

In other areas, security forces had intensified patrolling to prevent any militant activity, the official added.

The decision to move workers came after an attack on migrant labourers from Bihar on Sunday. Police said that militants barged into a rented room in Kashmir’s Kulgam district and fired at them, leaving two dead and one wounded.

Kashmir has gone through various bouts of violence over the years, but the latest wave of attacks appears to be targeted towards non-Kashmiris, including migrant workers, and members of the minority Hindu and Sikh communities in the Muslim-majority valley.

Indian migrant workers wait inside a railway station to board trains to their home states, on outskirts of Srinagar© Reuters/DANISH ISMAIL Indian migrant workers wait inside a railway station to board trains to their home states, on outskirts of Srinagar

The hundreds of thousands of migrant workers currently in Kashmir form the backbone of the region’s workforce in agriculture and construction.

South Korea Aims To Cut Carbon Emissions By 40% In 2030

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South Korea set a new goal on Monday for fighting climate change over the next decade, saying it will aim to cut its greenhouse gas emissions to 40% below 2018 levels by 2030.

The country had faced criticism that its initial plan for a 26.3% reduction was too modest.

In promising stronger contributions to curb global warming ahead of a U.N. climate summit in Scotland next month, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said the new target represents the “most enthusiastic” objective the country could possibly set under current circumstances.

South Korea aims to be carbon neutral by 2050.

The committee’s plan, which is to be formalized in a Cabinet meeting next week and presented at the U.N. COP26 summit in Glasgow, includes an aim to cut emissions from electricity generation and heating by 44.4% below 2018 levels in 2030

This they hope to achieve by reducing the country’s reliance on coal-fired plants and expanding renewable energy sources.

The country is also seeking to reduce the industrial use of fossil fuel and accelerate a transition toward electric and hydrogen-powered vehicles.

Moon had promised to provide a more ambitious target for reducing carbon emissions while he participated in a virtual climate summit called by U.S. President Joe Biden in April.

Moon then also said the country will no longer finance the construction of coal power plants in other nations, although his pledge didn’t effect South Korea’s participation in ongoing projects to build two new coal plants in Indonesia and another in Vietnam.