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Philippine team Sibol puts up semblance of fight, advances to quarterfinals

HANGZHOU — The Sibol team of Robert de Guzman picked up a win and a loss in the Dream Three Kingdoms 2 event as the Philippines put up a semblance of a fight in the 19th Asian Games esports competitions at the Hangzhou Esports center on Wednesday.

Mr. De Guzman and his teammates first turned back the Sardor Azimov-led Uzbekistan, 1-0, before bowing, 0-1, to the Meirlan Yanmakhanov-powered Kazakhstan, to place second in Group B.

The top two squads in each group will reach the quarterfinals, which now has Kazakhstan, China and Thailand as the first qualifiers.

As the second-placed team in the group, the Philippines, which is backed by the Philippine Sports Commission and the Philippine Olympic Committee, arranged a quarterfinal showdown with Hong Kong on Thursday at 2 p.m. in the esports competition making its debut in the games.

In Group A, Laos took the lead after getting past Hong Kong and Tajikistan in the morning matches.

Group C saw Vietnam stopping Kyrgyzstan, 1-0, but the latter bounced back with a triumph over Nepal, 1-0.

Vietnam stayed unbeaten after whipping Nepal, 1-0, for their second straight victory.

Meanwhile, Sibol tries its luck in DOTA 2 when it meets India on Friday. — POC-PSC media pool

Meralco suffer second setback to Egypt’s Al Zamalek

FAILING to weather Al Zamalek’s third-quarter storm, Meralco conceded a 62-70 setback to the Egyptian club and fell to 0-2 in the Doha International Championship early yesterday (Manila time) at the Al Gharafa Sports Club in Qatar.

The Bolts kept it close in the first half of the Group B showdown and even held a 44-40 lead in the initial minutes of restart. But the it lost control as Al Zamalek went on a game-changing 16-3 barrage in the penultimate period to set the tone for its second straight victory and boost its semis bid.

Meralco, which surrendered an 82-90 defeat to Kuwait’s Al Arabi SC Monday night, seeks its tournament breakthrough against Libya’s Al Ahly (1-1) in the last day of the group stages. Al Ahly bounced back from its opening 65-72 loss to Al Zamalek with an 86-63 rout of Al Arabi (1-1) Tuesday night.

At the forefront of Al Zamalek’s attack against Meralco were Ahmed Azab, who delivered 22 points, four rebounds and three assists, and Ahmed Ismail, who posted a 19-10 double-double.

Messrs. Azab and Ismail conspired for Al Zamalek’s third-quarter breakaway then hit the big shots in the fourth that widened the gap to 12 and kept the Filipino squad no closer than six the rest of the way.

Feron Hunt took the cudgels for Meralco with 18 markers and nine boards but was marred by eight turnovers. Allein Maliksi added 17 spiked by a three-of-four shooting from deep as 7-foot Serbian import Uros Lukovic produced 11 markers, 13 boards and six blocks. — Olmin Leyba

The Scores:

Al Zamalek 70- Azab 22, Ismail 19, Omar 9, A.Yasser 7, Elida 5, Hisham 3, Jawad 3, Y. Yasser 2, Z. Ayman 0, Hegazy 0, M. Ayman 0.

Meralco 62 – Hunt 18, Maliksi 17, Lukovic 11, Pasaol 6, Quinto 5, Banchero 3, Hodge 2, Black 0, Dario 0, Rios 0, Torres 0, Pascual 0.

Quarterscores: 20-19, 37-36, 56-47, 70-62.

SMB signs lowest pick Kyt Jimenez, Mallillin for two years

SAN Miguel Beer has given Internet sensation Kyt Jimenez a chance to prove himself as a PBA player.

The Beermen signed Mr. Jimenez for two years yesterday, making him the lowest pick at 76th overall to secure a PBA contract.

“We had a chance to really take a look at Kyt (Jimenez) and the kid can play,” SMB team manager Gee Abanilla told The STAR yesterday.

Mr. Jimenez first made a name for himself online then brought his act to the MPBL with the GenSan team before applying for the PBA’s Season 48 Rookie Draft.

“He is skilled, he works hard and is very coachable. I expect him to improve some more when he gets his groove and confidence. But of course, he has to consistently prove himself in practice and when he gets the chance to play,” said Mr. Abanilla.

“Long way to go but he has a very good potential and he is very easy to get along with,” he added.

SMB also gave 35th selection Troy Mallillin a similar deal as it infused youth to its star-studded lineup led by June Mar Fajardo, CJ Perez, Vic Manuel, Terrence Romeo and Jericho Cruz.

Similarly adding fresh legs was NorthPort, which inked 11th selection Cade Flores, No. 29 Brent Paraiso and No. 40 Fran Yu for two years.

Meanwhile, veteran James Yap is poised to extend his illustrious PBA career.

The 41-year-old Mr. Yap agreed to a one-conference pact with Rain or Shine, marking his 19th season in Asia’s first play-for-pay league.

The former MVP and current San Juan councilor took a break from playing during the 2022 elections and made his comeback in the last Governors’ Cup. — Olmin Leyba

Short-handed PHL golfers swing to action against elite rivals

HANGZHOU — Rianne Malixi will bank on an intensive buildup for the Asian Games as she and Lois Kaye Go launch their drive in women’s golf in the 19th Asian Games at the West Lake International Golf Country Club in Xihu District Thursday.

The country’s bid to defend the individual and team gold medal suffered a snag after the Hangzhou Asian Games Organizing Committee (HAGOC) denied an appeal to include Chanelle Avaricio in place of Princess Superal.

The Philippines found itself with no other recourse but to vie in the three-to-play, two-to-count format with only Mmess. Malixi and Go.

But Mmess. Malixi and Go remain upbeat of their chances in the individual competitions bannered by Chinese Yin Ruoning, who held the world’s top ranking for two consecutive weeks (Sept. 11 to 24) before yielding it to American Lilia Vu this week.

Still, Ms. Yin, who edged Yuka Saso by one to score a major breakthrough in the Women’s Professional Golfers Association Championship last June, remains the marked player for the gold, along with India’s Avani Prashanth, Saki Baba and Mizuki Hashimoto of Japan and Thais Eila Galitsky, Patcharajutar Kongkraphan and Arpichaya Yubol.

But focus will be on a crack Korean squad seeking to regain the team gold it last won in 2010 in Guangzhou, its fourth in the last eight Asian Games.

The Koreans also swept the individual gold medals for three straight Asiad staging from 2006 in Doha, to Guangzhou to 2014 in Incheon.

Ms. Saso broke that streak with a gripping come-from-behind victory in Jakarta in 2018 then, with Bianca Pagdanganan, who took the individual bronze, and Go steered the PH to the team gold.

But Ms. Saso has since opted for the Japanese citizenship month’s after winning the US Women’s Open in 2021 while Ms. Pagdanganan is focusing on regaining her Ladies PGA card.

Ms. Superal would have been a key addition to the team but the first Philippine-born player to win a US Golf Association-sanctioned event, the US Girls’ Junior in 2014, begged off due to conflict in schedule with her Japan Step Up Tour campaign.

But with the International Container Terminal Services Inc.-backed Ms. Malixi, now back on No. 75 in the women’s amateur world ranking, in top form and Go, from Cebu, continuing to improve her all-around game, things are looking up for Team PHL despite the drawback in team composition.

Though she missed matching Ms. Superal’s US Girls’ Junior feat with a runner-up finish in Colorado last July, the setback only made Ms. Malixi hungrier and she expects to start out strong in an attempt to build the needed confidence and momentum for her medal drive in the four-day tournament.

Meanwhile, the men’s team of Clyde Mondilla and Ira Alido, along with amateurs Aidric Chan and Carl Corpus, also faces a formidable set of rivals whose teams are bannered by some of the world’s leading pros, led by South Korea’s Sungjae The world No. 27 Im, a former PGA Tour Rookie of the Year and a two-time PGA Tour winner.

I’m also tied for second in the 2020 US Masters.

Others in the told are world No. 40 Si Woo Kim, also from Korea, India’s Anirban Lahiri, SSP Chawrasia and Shubankar Sharma, Chinese We Shun and Wenyi Ding, and Thais Asian Tour campaigners Poom Saksansin, Danthai Boonma and Phachara Kongwhatmai. — POC-PSC

Games-China storm to first ever Asian Games esports gold

HANGZHOU, China — China won the first gold esports medal in Asian Games history in the Eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou on Tuesday by beating Malaysia in the smartphone multiplayer battle game “Arena of Valor”, to delight fans in the world’s biggest esports market.

Esports, which refers to video games played competitively and whose players can make millions in prize-money, is making its debut as a medal event in this edition of the Asian Games, as the gaming sector pushes its case for Olympic inclusion.

Teams and individuals are battling for a total of seven gold medals across a range of titles in the city hosting the Games, including online soccer and multi-player battle arena games.

Inside the recently built Esports venue, organizers used lights, ear-splitting loud music and live commentary to create something akin to a gameshow scene in a movie set in a dystopian future world.

Then the arena’s several thousand fans, many of whom waved multi-colored light sticks, screamed their support when the stadium announcer introduced the Chinese team.

“China must win!” the Chinese players shouted in a huddle on the stage just before the match began, triggering another loud cheer from spectators, before taking their seats for the “Arena of Valor” final.

In the Asian Games version of “Arena of Valor”, a smartphone game developed by a subsidiary of Chinese tech giant Tencent, teams of five players first pick characters, called “heroes”, to operate in the virtual world of the game before working with team mates to destroy their opponent’s base.

A destroyed base equates to a set won and two sets means a victory in the best-of-three contest.

Tapping furiously on their phones, and watched by millions of fans at home, the players communicated via headsets as their “heroes” exchanged fierce and noisy blows on large screens above the stage – an image that may seem bizarre to sports purists.

After a fairly tight opening, China dominated the match before clinching a 2-0 win and sending fans into a frenzy.

Thailand earlier claimed the Games’ first esports medal by beating Vietnam for the bronze.

“I feel excited and happy,” said Chines player Jiang Tao after the medal ceremony. “I feel we all performed really well.”

“I feel so happy and excited,” added a beaming and bespectacled Xu Bicheng.

MIXED MESSAGES
Whilst some social media users complained about esports being included in the Games and getting air time on TV, many were delighted.

“I am so touched and very proud, especially when I see the e-sports project being recognised on such a stage,” said final spectator Yvonne Yu who has played the game for about seven years.

“I stopped working and to watch CCTV’s e-sport broadcast, almost bursting into tears,” one user wrote on Weibo, referring to coverage of the match by the state broadcaster which, though not live, was history-making given authorities’ recent nervousness about gaming.

China’s cyberspace regulator said last month that children under 18 should be limited to a maximum of two hours a day on their smartphones, sending shares in tech companies tumbling.

But, at the same time, other departments have offered support to esports.

For example, the state run China Media Group established a National E-sports Development Research Institute earlier this year, highlighting esports’ potential to contribute to the country’s “digital economy”, a project championed by President Xi Jinping.

Elsewhere, authorities in Hangzhou ploughed in 4.586 billion yuan ($627.50 million) to build the esports venue according to official data.

“The position of the Chinese government on gaming is ambiguous,” said Serkan Toto, founder of consultancy Kantan Games.

“The government seems to be torn between regulating and restricting mobile and PC gaming on the one side and supporting events like esports tournaments on the other side.

“It looks like the focus is on limiting play time and spend on actual gaming while being more lenient on esports, a more passive way of enjoying games.”

China has the world’s largest esports market by revenue and fans. The market generated $445 million in 2022 or 64.8% of the Asian esports market and China boasts 400 million esports fans, also the highest number globally, according to data from leading Asian video game market analysts Niko Partners.

OLYMPIC DREAM
The next step for esports will be a much tougher ask — to get Olympic recognition. Several players and managers on Tuesday made the case.

“Even skateboarding, breakdancing, rock climbing is in the Olympics, so why not esports?” said Wong Kang Woon, Team Manager of Malaysia’s esports team.

“Esports players are not just sitting on the chair. They even sweat. You can check on their heartbeat. There is sports science involved.

“We cannot be putting esports into a negative mindset. We need to move into a positive way. Every sport, even football, starts from gaming, start from fun and then onto high performance sport. Esports in future will be towards that.” — Reuters

Brazil court fines Cargill in case involving child labor on cocoa farms

SAO PAULO — Commodities trader Cargill has been ordered by a Brazilian court to pay 600,000 reais ($120,185) as indemnity for buying cocoa from farms where child labor or forced work has been identified.

US-based Cargill said on Tuesday it disagreed with the complaints and fine and would appeal the ruling to a higher court.

According to a decision dated Sept. 18, seen by Reuters, from the 39th Labor Court in the northeastern state of Bahia, Cargill was also ordered to add to its contracts with Brazilian cocoa suppliers clauses to end the commercial relationship if child labor or other unlawful working conditions occur.

The lawsuit was brought against the commodities company by local labor prosecutors.

The court also requires Cargill to start a “due diligence” process to verify whether there is child labor in its supply chain and launch a campaign to combat the practice, according to the ruling.

In a statement, Cargill said it could not comment on details of the case because it is subject to legal confidentiality.

However, it said it “does not tolerate” human trafficking, forced or child labor in its operations or supply chain and suspends suppliers if any violation is found.

In the lawsuit, the company said that it buys cocoa from hundreds of producers, co-ops and merchants in the country and has no way of knowing whether child labor was used in any stage of that chain.

The court’s decision was first reported by local news outlet Reporter Brasil.

Similar lawsuits have appeared in other countries aiming to make food companies liable for cases of child labor.

A federal judge in Washington, D.C., last year dismissed a lawsuit by eight citizens of Mali who sought to hold Hershey Co., Nestle, Cargill and others liable for child slavery on Ivory Coast cocoa farms. — Reuters

California enacts first state tax on guns, ammunition in US

JAY REMBERT-UNSPLASH

LOS ANGELES — California Governor Gavin Newsom on Tuesday signed into law a first-in-the-nation state excise tax on sales of firearms and ammunition, aimed at raising a projected $160 million annually to prevent gun violence in schools and elsewhere.

The California excise tax, due to go into effect in July 2024, will essentially add an 11% levy on top of the existing federal excise gun and ammo tax, a rate of 10 or 11%, depending on the type of weapon.

The measure, part of a package of gun safety bills signed by Mr. Newsom, was enacted four days after a federal judge struck down a California ban on high-capacity ammunition magazines, ruling that it unconstitutionally infringed on Second Amendment rights of gun owners.

Mr. Newsom’s office said his action on gun safety also came in “the wake of shootings across the country that have left at least 104 people dead over the past 74 hours.”

“While radical judges continue to strip away our ability to keep people safe, California will keep fighting — because gun safety laws work,” Mr. Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Mr. Newsom said data showed the rate of gun-related deaths in California, home to some of the most stringent firearms laws in the US is more than 40% lower than the national average.

The California excise tax would be collected on the gross receipts of manufacturers, retailers and dealers derived from gun and bullet sales in the state.

The tax measure was one of nearly two dozen gun safety bills passed during the latest session of the Democratic-controlled California legislature and signed by Mr. Newsom days after his administration vowed to appeal last week’s federal court ruling on high-capacity magazines.

One prominent bill from Tuesday’s package is aimed at toughening California’s concealed gun permit law, raising from 18 to 21 the minimum age at which a gun owner can apply for such a permit, increasing advance training requirements and banning alcohol consumption while carrying a concealed weapon.

Sponsors said the measure, which also would bar concealed weapons altogether in airports, around schools and other sensitive zones, was crafted in such a way as to protect the measure from conservative legal challenges.

Still, the California Rifle & Pistol Association, a gun rights advocacy group, posted a statement on the social media platform X saying it had already filed a “preemptive lawsuit” against the measure.

Supporters of the new tax pointed to a 2021 report by gun control advocates that found gun deaths and injuries cost California $22.6 billion annually, of which $1.2 billion is paid directly by taxpayers every year. — Reuters

China’s Trina Solar plans $400-M Vietnam plant following US sanctions

TRINA SOLAR

HANOI — Chinese solar panel maker Trina Solar is planning to build its third factory in Vietnam, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters, a move that would boost exports to the United States following punitive duties to be imposed on products it makes in Thailand.

Trina, one of the world’s biggest solar panel makers by sales, would invest $400 million in the plant that would span 25 hectares of industrial land. Production is set to begin in 2025, one of the sources with direct knowledge of the plan said.

Another person who was involved in discussions with the company said Trina had flagged $600 million in possible investment in Vietnam.

The sources declined to be named because the project details remained confidential. Trina did not reply to requests for comment.

Trina’s Vietnam investment follows an investigation by the US Department of Commerce which concluded last month that Trina was among five Chinese solar firms who used their plants in Thailand and other Southeast Asian countries to dodge punitive tariffs on Chinese-made panels, which the US says benefit from unfair state subsidies.

The tariffs, which are due to come into effect from the middle of next year, only impact Trina’s Thailand operation so far, but the widespread practice of Chinese firms setting up facilities in Southeast Asia for export to the US remains under close scrutiny.

The top producing countries in the region account for about 80% of US panel supplies, with Vietnam providing about one third of all US imports of solar panels in the first quarter of this year, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Trina is already one of the biggest solar panel makers in Vietnam, and its planned investment underscores the growing interest of Chinese businesses in setting up factories there as they seek to avoid escalating geopolitical and trade tensions between Beijing and Washington.

China is the second biggest foreign investor in Vietnam this year, pouring into its neighbor from January to mid-August $2.7 billion, or more than five times the value of investments by US companies during the same period, according to Vietnamese government data.

FENG SHUI MASTER
Trina has two plants in Vietnam: one began making silicon wafers last month with an expected annual output of 6.5 gigawatts (GW), and another one that produces solar cells and panels.

It was not immediately clear what product the new plant would manufacture. One source said it would focus on making solar cells, while another person said silicon wafers.

Sources said the company was looking at various industrial parks. One person said Trina had asked a feng shui expert to be involved in the final decision.

Feng shui is a traditional Chinese geomancy practice that is used to determine which location would be most auspicious.

Another source said Trina Vietnam’s power supply problems were being considered as the company weighed options for its possible expansion.

A heatwave in June hit the output of hydropower, Vietnam’s second biggest source of electricity, forcing factories to temporarily suspend production due to power cuts. — Reuters

Amazon faces landmark monopoly lawsuit by FTC

DANIEL HOLLAND-UNSPLASH

WASHINGTON — The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed a long-awaited antitrust lawsuit against Amazon.com on Tuesday and asked the court to consider forcing the online retailer to sell assets as the government accuses Big Tech of monopolizing the most lucrative parts of the internet.

The FTC accused Amazon, a company started in a garage in 1994 and today worth $1.3 trillion, of fighting efforts by sellers on its online marketplace to offer products more cheaply on other platforms. Amazon forces sellers to use its warehouses and delivery services, inflating costs for consumers and sellers, the FTC said.

Amazon is a monopoly and misuses its powers, according to the FTC, which quotes a seller as saying: “We have nowhere else to go and Amazon knows it.”

The lawsuit had been expected after years of complaints that Amazon.com and other tech giants abused their dominance of search, social media and online retailing to become gatekeepers on the most profitable aspects of the internet.

The need to take action against Big Tech has been one of the few ideas that Democrats and Republicans have agreed on, and the FTC chief has been particularly concerned about Amazon’s power.

The lawsuit, which was joined by 17 state attorneys general, follows a four-year investigation and federal lawsuits filed against Alphabet’s Google and Meta Platforms’ Facebook.

The FTC said that it was asking the court to issue a permanent injunction ordering Amazon to stop its unlawful conduct. The lawsuit was filed in federal court in Seattle, where Amazon is based.

“Left unchecked, Amazon will continue its illegal course of conduct to maintain its monopoly power,” the FTC said in its complaint which asked the court “to put an end to Amazon’s illegal course of conduct, pry loose Amazon’s monopolistic control, deny Amazon the fruits of its unlawful practices, and restore the lost promise of competition.”

The FTC complaint asked for the court to consider “any preliminary or permanent equitable relief, including but not limited to structural relief, necessary to restore fair competition.”

Structural relief in antitrust jargon generally means a company sells an asset, such as a part of its business.

In a press briefing, FTC Chair Lina Khan was asked about the idea of breaking up Amazon but declined to discuss it. “At this stage, the focus is really on liability,” she said.

In other antitrust trials, the court first establishes that the company broke the law and then, if needed, discusses how to remedy that.

Amazon said that the FTC lawsuit was wrongheaded and would hurt consumers by leading to higher prices and slower deliveries.

“The practices the FTC is challenging have helped to spur competition and innovation across the retail industry, and have produced greater selection, lower prices, and faster delivery speeds for Amazon customers and greater opportunity for the many businesses that sell in Amazon’s store,” said David Zapolsky, Amazon’s general counsel. In a blog post, the company noted that it had 500,000 independent sellers on the platform.

Amazon shares, which were down 3.2% before the lawsuit was announced, traded down 4% in late afternoon trade. Some investors saw upside from the lawsuit.

“Either way, the shareholders win. If FTC loses its status quo, if company breaks up, the sum of the parts is greater than the whole as the AWS (cloud) business will command a very high multiple. Analysts will figure this out soon, but for now it’s ‘shoot first, ask questions later,’” said Thomas Hayes, chair at Great Hill Capital.

The FTC said that Amazon punished sellers that sought to offer prices that were lower than Amazon’s by making it difficult for consumers to find the seller on Amazon’s platform.

Other allegations include that Amazon gave preference to its own products on its platforms over competitors.

The case, which was filed in the US District Court for the District of Columbia, was assigned to John Coughenour, who was nominated to the bench in 1981 by Republican President Ronald Reagan.

‘MONOPOLY POWER’
Ms. Khan said that Amazon had used illegal tactics to fend off companies that would have risen to challenge its monopoly.

“Amazon is now exploiting that monopoly power to harm its customers, both the tens of millions of families that shop on Amazon’s platform and the hundreds of thousands of sellers that use Amazon to reach them,” she said.

Ms. Khan, while a law student, wrote about Amazon’s dominance in online retailing for “The Yale Law Journal” and was on the staff of the House committee that wrote a report issued in 2020 that advocated reining in four tech giants: Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook.

Amazon’s critics welcomed the lawsuit.

“No corporation has ever centralized this much power across so many crucial sectors. Left unchecked, Amazon’s power to dictate and control threatens the rule of law and our ability to maintain open, democratically governed markets,” said Stacy Mitchell of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, which has pushed for the government to act against Amazon.

During the Trump administration, which ended in 2021, the Justice Department and FTC opened probes into Google, Facebook, Apple and Amazon.

The Justice Department has sued Google twice — once under Republican Donald Trump regarding its search business and a second time on advertising technology since Democratic President Joseph R. Biden took office. The FTC sued Facebook during the Trump administration and Mr. Biden’s FTC has pressed forward with the lawsuit. — Reuters

Youth vs. Europe: ‘Unprecedented’ climate trial to kick off at rights court

REUTERS

Six young people from areas in Portugal ravaged by wildfires and heatwaves will on Wednesday take 32 European governments to court over what they see as climate inaction, arguing countries’ failure to cut emissions fast enough is a violation of their human rights.

The case – filed in September 2020 against the 27 EU member states as well Britain, Switzerland, Norway, Russia and Turkey – is the largest-ever climate case to be heard by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg.

With the support of the British-based Global Legal Action Network (GLAN), the Portuguese applicants, aged between 11 and 24, are seeking a legally-binding decision that would force states to act.

A ruling in the case is expected in the first half of 2024. If the complaint is upheld, it could result in orders from national courts for governments to cut carbon dioxide emissions blamed for climate change faster than currently planned.

Gerry Liston, one of GLAN’s lawyers, said that if the case was successful, it would be up to national courts to enforce the rulings and that they would be provided with a roadmap to ensure enforcement was effective.

Applicants will argue climate change threatens their rights including to life, physical and mental wellbeing.

One of the six, 15-year-old Andre Oliveira, previously told Reuters their goal was to force governments to “do what they promised they would do”, referring to the 2015 Paris Agreement to cut emissions to limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius and ideally 1.5C. Current policies would fail to meet either goal, according to the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

“Without urgent action to cut emissions, (the place) where I live will soon become an unbearable furnace,” another applicant, 20-year-old Martim Agostinho, said in a statement.

Mr. Agostinho and three other applicants are from the central Portuguese region of Leiria, where two wildfires killed more than 100 people in 2017.

DOZENS OF LAWYERS
More than 80 lawyers are expected in court to represent the accused countries, while the applicants will be represented by six lawyers, resulting in what GLAN described in a statement as a hearing “unprecedented in scale”.

Mr. Liston acknowledged “taking on the legal teams of over 30 very well-resourced countries” would not be easy.

Portugal’s legal team has submitted to the court that it was committed to fight climate change and the applicants had failed to provide evidence of its direct impact on them.

Britain argued the case should be rejected because it was “inadmissible” for various reasons, including jurisdiction.

Climate litigation occurring in Europe and beyond is growing.

Last month, a judge in Montana, in the United States, handed a historic win to young plaintiffs in a climate change case. In addition to Wednesday’s youth case, there are two other climate cases pending before the ECHR’s Grand Chamber. — Reuters

Reforms could boost World Bank lending to developing countries by nearly $190 bln -study

REUTERS

 – Reforming the World Bank‘s approach to risk could unlock nearly $190 billion in additional urgently needed lending for developing countries without jeopardizing its AAA credit rating, a study commissioned by the Rockefeller Foundation found.

The study, carried out by international finance analytics firm Risk Control, found the bank‘s two main lending arms, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and the International Development Association (IDA), have “significant headroom” to boost lending.

Rockefeller hired Risk Control to review and quantify key recommendations made in 2022 by an independent Group of 20 panel, which said easing the bank‘s strict capital adequacy framework could free up hundreds of billions in additional lending to combat climate change and advance development.

The report, to be published early Wednesday, comes as the United States, China and other World Bank shareholders prepare to meet in Marrakech, Morocco next month to review and advance initial reforms already underway at the bank.

The study said the IBRD could boost lending by $162 billion over a decade or less before triggering a downgrade by global credit rating agencies, while IDA, which lends to the poorest countries, could boost lending by $21 billion to $27 billion.

In fiscal 2023, which ended June 30, IBRD made net new lending commitments of $38.6 billion, while IDA committed $34.2 billion.

It said IBRD and IDA could boost lending to nearly $900 billion if the rating agencies changed their processes and modified the allowance they make for “callable capital,” commitments by shareholders to supply additional resources in the event of severe financial problems.

Use of innovative approaches, including hybrid capital, could provide further funds, the study concluded, while securitizing 10% of IBRD and IDA’s portfolios could generate additional lending headroom of $29 billion to $41 billion.

The bank has already increased its leverage ratio to squeeze out an additional $50 billion in lending over a decade, but World Bank President Ajay Banga on Tuesday said the bank could potentially double that amount with international contributions.

Eric Pelofsky, vice president at the Rockefeller Foundation, said Risk Control conducted a math-based and transparent analysis that confirmed additional lending capacity was possible, even beyond the levels mapped out to date.

“This is the math, absolutely as detailed and transparent as you could possibly get, that says there’s more room,” he said. “It very clearly says that there are actions that can be done now while we consider other more long-term reforms to the bank.”

Hans Peter Lankes, a professor at the London School of Economics and member of the G20 panel, said the study provided “timely benchmarks” for shareholders and World Bank management as they scoped out ways to boost lending.

Some experts argue that developing and emerging economies need $2.4 trillion per year to meet global climate challenges.

“We need this because the developing world is pitching off a cliff in terms of debt, available climate finance, development needs,” Pelofsky said. “And from a geopolitical standpoint, the Bank, the Fund, the regional development banks are infinitely more transparent than some of the obvious alternatives.”

The Biden administration is pushing the World Bank as a “credible alternative” to China’s overseas lending, which U.S. officials say is often not transparent and often uses collateralized loans that pose risks to countries later. – Reuters

Russia mulls joining China in banning Japanese seafood imports

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Jason Goh from Pixabay

Russia may join China in banning Japanese seafood imports after Japan released treated radioactive water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea, and Moscow is seeking talks with Japan, a Russian regulator said on Tuesday.

Japan started releasing the water from the plant into the ocean last month, drawing strong criticism from China. In retaliation, China imposed a blanket ban on all aquatic imports from Japan.

Russian food safety watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor on Tuesday said it had discussed Japanese food exports with its Chinese counterparts. Russia is one of the biggest marine product suppliers to China and is seeking to increase its market share.

“Taking into account the possible risks of radiation contamination of products, Rosselkhoznadzor is considering the possibility of joining with Chinese restrictions on supplies of fish products from Japan,” Rosselkhoznadzor said in a statement. “The final decision will be made after negotiations with the Japanese side.”

So far this year, Russia has imported 118 tonnes of Japanese seafood, the regulator said.

Rosselkhoznadzor said it had sent a letter to Japan on the need to hold talks and requesting information on Japan’s radiological testing of exported fish products by Oct. 16, including tritium.

Japan will scrutinize Tuesday’s announcement by Russia, the top Japanese government spokesperson Hirokazu Matsuno said on Wednesday.

Japan says the water is safe after being treated to remove most radioactive elements except tritium, a radionuclide difficult to separate from water. It is then diluted to internationally accepted levels before being released.

Japan has said criticism from Russia and China was unsupported by scientific evidence.

“We strongly ask Russia to act based on scientific evidence,” Matsuno told a Wednesday press conference, adding that Russia was a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)’s Fukushima expert team, which in July greenlighted the water release plan.

On Monday, in its latest report on water testing, Japan’s Ministry of Environment said analysis results of seawater, sampled on Sept. 19, showed the tritium concentrations were below the lower limit of detection at all 11 sampling points and would have no adverse impact on human health and the environment.

Russia has also detected no irregularities in marine samples used for tests in Russian regions that are relatively close to where the treated water was released, Rosselkhoznadzor’s far eastern branch said on Tuesday, Interfax reported.

Russia exported 2.3 million metric tons of marine products last year worth about $6.1 billion, around half its overall catch, with China, South Korea and Japan being the biggest importers, according to Russia‘s fisheries agency. – Reuters