Latest News
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Peru Congress extends license plan for informal miners
Peru's Congress passed late on Friday passed an extension to a plan enabling temporary permits to be provided to smallscale casual miners, questionable due to accusations by opponents that it has been misused to expand prohibited mining. Legislators moved on a bill proposed previously in the day by the Energy and Mining Legislative Committee to extend for six months a registry called REINFO, which enables small miners to continue working while seeking formalization. The resolution specifies a one-time extension for the short-lived licenses. REINFO, which has already been extended numerous times, expires on Dec. 31. The government has actually promoted the scheme to end, declaring that its misuse over more than a years has caused illegal mining to increase. On Tuesday, Energy and Mines Minister Romulo Mucho was eliminated from his post by Congress amidst demonstrations by small miners who are demanding REINFO be extended by 2 years. Peruvian small miners, mainly gold miners, have turned down the expense as inadequate and have been obstructing a key southern transportation path for over a week. In Lima, numerous artisanal miners have encamped in front of the legislature.
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Canada PM Trudeau visits Florida to consult with Trump amidst tariff threat
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited Donald Trump's Florida resort on Friday to consult with the U.S. Presidentelect, days after Trump threatened to slap tariffs on Canadian imports over borderrelated issues. Trudeau, whose public itinerary did not note a scheduled see to Florida, was seen leaving a hotel in West Palm Beach, Florida, to go to Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort, according to a. Reuters witness. Trudeau's workplace and Trump's agents did not. immediately responded to ask for remark. Trump threatened on Monday to impose a 25% tariff on imports. from Canada and Mexico up until the nations clamped down on. drugs, especially fentanyl, and migrants crossing their. borders with the U.S. Authorities from Mexico, Canada and China, together with significant. industry groups, have actually warned that the large tariffs threatened. by Trump would hurt the economies of all nations included,. trigger inflation to increase and harm job markets. Any hit to the Canadian economy would contribute to Trudeau's concerns. at a time when his popularity has actually sunk in part due to a slowing down. economy and a rise in the expense of living over the previous few. years. Polls reveal Trudeau's Liberals would lose to the. opposition Conservative party in an election that should be held. by late October 2025. Trudeau today pledged to stay unified versus Trump's. tariff danger and called a conference with the premiers of all 10. Canadian provinces to go over U.S. relations. Canadian Public Security Minister Dominic LeBlanc is taking a trip. with Trudeau, CBC News reported. Canada is the world's fourth-largest oil producer and. sixth-largest gas manufacturer. The vast bulk of its 4. million barrels each day of unrefined exports go to the U.S. Trump's strategy does not exempt crude oil from the trade. charges, 2 sources familiar with the strategy told Reuters on. Tuesday.
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Senior Russian diplomat says possibility of new nuclear tests remains open question
A possible resumption of nuclear weapons tests by Moscow remains an open question in view of hostile U.S. policies, a senior Russian diplomat was quoted as saying early on Saturday. This is a concern at hand, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told TASS news agency when asked whether Moscow was thinking about a resumption of tests. And without expecting anything, let me simply state that the situation is quite challenging. It is constantly being thought about in all its elements and in all its aspects. In September, Ryabkov described President Vladimir Putin as having stated that Russia would not carry out a test as long as the United States refrained from carrying one out. Moscow has not conducted a nuclear weapons test considering that 1990, the year before the collapse of the Soviet Union. But Putin this month decreased the limit governing the nation's nuclear teaching in response to what Moscow sees as escalation by Western nations backing Ukraine in the 33-month-old war pitting it versus Russia. Under the brand-new terms, Russia might think about a nuclear strike in reaction to a standard attack on Russia or its ally Belarus that produced a critical threat to their sovereignty and ( or) their territorial stability. The changes were triggered by U.S. authorization to enable Ukraine to utilize Western missiles versus targets inside Russia. Russia's testing site lies on the remote Novaya Zemlya archipelago in the Arctic Ocean, where the Soviet Union conducted more than 200 nuclear tests. Putin signed a law in 2015 withdrawing Russia's. ratification of the international treaty prohibiting nuclear weapons tests. He said the move sought to bring Russia into line with the. United States, which signed but never ratified the treaty.
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Surge damages canal feeding Kosovo's primary power plants
A surge on Friday night harmed a canal in northern Kosovo providing water to 2 coalfired power plants that create nearly all of the country's electrical energy, authorities said, blaming what they called a terrorist act. There were no instant reports of injuries and the cause of the blast was unclear. Kosovo Interior Minister Xhelal Svecla told local media from the scene that the explosion, which took place before 7 p.m. ( 1800 GMT), was a terrorist act and that part of the canal was damaged. Previously on Friday, Kosovo cops announced increased security measures after two current attacks where hand grenades where hurled at a police station and municipality building in northern Kosovo where ethnic Serbians live. It was not clear if the occurrences were linked. In a sign of ethnic stress, Kosovo President Vjosa Osmani blamed Serbian criminal gangs for the attack, without providing evidence. Local media showed images of part of the canal ruined and leaking water and a heavy authorities presence at the website. Reuters could not immediately validate the images. Faruk Mujka, the head of water company Ibar-Lepenci, informed regional news website Kallxo that an explosive device was tossed into the canal and damaged the wall of a bridge. He said the supply of water, which likewise feeds drinking water to the capital Pristina, should be stopped to fix the issue as quickly as possible because it was the primary channel for supplying Kosovo Energy Corporation (KEK), the country's primary power service provider. Self-reliance for ethnic Albanian-majority Kosovo was available in 2008, almost a years after a guerrilla uprising versus Serbian rule. However tensions persist, primarily in the north where the Serb minority declines to identify Kosovo's statehood and still sees Belgrade as their capital.
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Peru takes step to extend permit scheme for casual miners
A Peruvian congressional committee on Friday took an initial action to extend a scheme that enables temporary authorizations to be given to smallscale informal miners, questionable due to allegations by opponents that it has actually been misused to expand unlawful mining. The Energy and Mining Legislative Committee approved an expense that would extend for 6 months a computer system registry called REINFO, which permits small-scale miners to continue working while looking for formalization. The proposition, which would be a one-time extension, will now be sent to the rest of Congress for a full vote. REINFO, which has actually currently been extended several times, ends on Dec. 31. The government has actually pushed for the scheme to end, claiming that its abuse over more than a years has triggered unlawful mining to increase. On Tuesday, Energy and Mines Minister Romulo Mucho was gotten rid of from his post by Congress in the middle of demonstrations by small miners who are requiring REINFO be extended by two years. Peruvian small-scale miners, mainly gold miners, have turned down the expense as insufficient and have been obstructing a secret southern transport path for over a week. In Lima, hundreds of artisanal miners have camped out in front of the legislature.
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Russia's Rosneft might postpone refinery modernisation due to high rate of interest, taxes
Rosneft, Russia's. biggest oil producer, stated on Friday it might delay updating. its refineries due to high rate of interest and taxes, as its. ninemonth profit fell 13.9% year on year to 926 billion roubles. ($ 8.7 billion). Industry sources told Reuters this month that a minimum of three. Russian refineries, consisting of Rosneft-owned Tuapse plant, had to. stop processing or cut runs due to monetary losses amid export. curbs, increasing unrefined costs and high borrowing costs. Rosneft's head Igor Sechin, a longstanding ally of President. Vladimir Putin, has actually long criticised the central bank for its. tight financial policy. In order to safeguard the shareholders' interests and avoid. losses, Rosneft has been thinking about the need to suspend. refinery modernization jobs. At the same time, fulfilling the. domestic demand for quality petroleum products remains a. concern, the business said. The bank hiked its crucial interest rate by 200 basis points. last month to 21%, the highest level considering that the early years of. Putin's guideline in the 2000s, when Russia was recovering from the. turmoil that followed the Soviet Union's collapse. Rosneft likewise stated that a revenue tax increase to 25% beginning. in 2025 had an unfavorable effect on company results. The company stated its oil and gas condensate production from. January to September reached 138.3 million metric heaps in overall,. or 3.753 million barrels daily on average. Rosneft did not supply production data from a year back. for comparison, but stated output was pushed by an OPEC+. arrangement to curb production. Rosneft stated it had actually restored its share buyback program in the middle of. high stock-market volatility.
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Policemans arrested in Brazil for taking allurements from gold miners
2 senior police officers were arrested in Brazil on suspicion that they took kickbacks and offered security for illegal gold mining activity in the Amazon, according to a court file seen on Friday. Brazilian authorities suspect they were receiving money to ignore and even offer personal security for trading of gold unlawfully drawn out from Native lands and conservation areas, the court choice and a federal authorities statement revealed. Another 36 police officers were gotten rid of from their jobs for thought participation in the protection plan, and high-end vehicles, fashion jewelry, cellphones and an undefined quantity of gold and cash were seized, according to the files. Brazil is attempting to crack down on unlawful gold mining that has actually surged over the last few years, fueled by record high world rates and the absence of enforcement during the nation's previous hard-right federal government. Over half the gold exported from Brazil is believed to be illegally produced. The authorities stated it has actually found strong proof that the gold traded by the criminal organization comes from locations near or within the Munduruku Native land, a reservation in the Amazon rainforest the size of Switzerland. The two officers with northern Para state's military cops, as well as 2 businessmen from the gold company Gana Gold, were preventively apprehended on Thursday, the court file said. Para state military authorities did not immediately respond to requests for remark. Reuters could not instantly discover representatives from Gana Gold. The cops statement stated the firm targeted by the operation had a projected earnings of 1.1 billion reais ($ 182.9 million). between 2020 and 2021, adding that it has already been at the. center of other official examinations into illegal mining. Brazilian authorities earlier this month started an operation. to remove unlawful gold miners from the Munduruku booking,. where agents found clandestine airstrips utilized by wildcat miners.
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United States sets tariffs for photovoltaic panels from Southeast Asian countries
U.S. trade officials on Friday announced a brand-new round of tariffs on solar panel imports from 4 Southeast Asian nations after American manufacturers grumbled that business there are flooding the marketplace with unjustly low-cost products. It is the second of 2 initial decisions that President Joe Biden's Commerce Department is making this year in a trade case brought by Korea's Hanwha Qcells, Arizonabased First Solar Inc and several smaller producers seeking to protect billions of dollars in financial investments in U.S. solar manufacturing. This is the latest chapter in a more than decadelong trade war with Chinese companies over their solar dominance. Chinese manufacturers have actually responded to U.S. solar tariffs by moving their enormous operations to countries where they will not face tasks consisting of Southeast Asia. The group, the American Alliance for Solar Manufacturing Trade Committee, accused big Chinese photovoltaic panel makers with factories in Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam and Thailand of triggering international prices to collapse by disposing items into the market. The Hanwha-led group has actually looked for antidumping duty rates of between 70.35% and 271.45%, depending upon the country, to balance out the unreasonable rates. It likewise has sought tariffs to fight unjust aids in those nations, and the Commerce Department imposed initial antisubsidy tasks last month. On Friday, the department provided a variety of preliminary rates for panels from the four nations. Its last decisions are set for April 18, 2025, with the ITC set to settle its decisions the list below June 2 and last orders anticipated June 9. Most photovoltaic panels installed in the United States are made overseas, and some 80% of imports originated from the 4 nations targeted in the Commerce Department probe. Tariffs would increase rates for companies that import panels to install on rooftops or construct solar energy plants, but the United States over more than a decade has shown a. determination to impose duties on the sector in a quote to reinforce. the small U.S. clean energy manufacturing market. The Biden administration this year raised the alarm over China's. huge investment in factory capability for tidy energy items. Biden's landmark environment change law, the Inflation Reduction. Act, includes incentives for business that produce tidy energy. devices in the United States - an aid that has prompted a. flurry of plans for brand-new solar factories. President-elect Donald Trump has actually called the Inflation Reduction. Act too costly, however likewise has stated he prepares to slap substantial. tariffs on a range of sectors to protect American workers. Discarding occurs when a company sells an item in the United. States at a cost listed below its expense of production or lower than. what it charges in its home nation.
A-O-S Welcomes Its Third CTV for Offshore Wind Market
American Offshore Services (A-O-S) has taken delivery of a hybrid-ready ready Crew Transfer Vessel (CTV), the third G-Class vessel for the company in 2024, which will support the development of offshore wind industry on the United States’ East Coast.
The vessel, named M/V Guarder, has been designed and developed in partnership with Northern Offshore Services (N-O-S) to transfer technicians and equipment to the rapidly expanding offshore wind industry, a service crucial for constructing and maintaining wind energy infrastructure.
As a ‘future-proof’ platform, M/V Guarder is fully prepared to convert to hybrid. With the capacity to accommodate 24 passengers and a strong focus on comfort, Guarder stands out as one of the largest and most capable CTVs in the United States.
The 30-meter, Jones Act-compliant catamaran is purpose-built to meet the demands of the offshore wind industry.
"We have taken delivery of three vessels in three quarters. The industry is growing and the demand for CTVs is steady. As I said earlier this year, we are just getting started. We are dedicated to serving the offshore wind industry and we strive to be the best at what we do,” said Michael Burbelo, Managing Director at A-O-S.
A-O-S is owned in partnership between Northern Offshore Group (N-O-G) and Orion Infrastructure Capital, one of the leading U.S. investment firms focused on energy and infrastructure