Drugmaker Actavis agrees debt refinancing deal

July 22 (Reuters) – Icelandic generic drugmaker Actavis has agreed a debt refinancing deal with its lenders to slash its multi-billion-euro debt load, the company said.

The group did not give details in a brief statement but said the agreement positioned it with the flexibility to continue to grow, especially in southern Europe, Japan, the Middle East and northern Africa, and increase market share in current markets.

Sources familiar with the matter had told Reuters earlier this month that key lender Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) was close to a deal with Bjorgolfur Thor Bjorgolfsson, the Icelandic tycoon who owns Actavis, to refinance the company. [ID:nLDE6661A3]

Deutsche financed Bjorgolfsson’s 4.7 billion euro ($6 billion) leveraged buyout (LBO) of Actavis, one of the world’s biggest makers of copycat drugs, in 2007. ($1=.7836 Euro) (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Hans Peters)

Where Desertification Meets the Bottom Line Climate

Throughout history, every continent has harbored dry landscapes that depend on limited rainfall and are vulnerable to desertification, the process through which vegetation and soil moisture is lost and dry lands become more like deserts.

Now, global climate change is making the situation worse.

The examples range across geographies: Spain already loses an estimated US$200 million per year due to desertification, and is expected to get even hotter and drier over the next 50 years. Across the sea in northern Africa, fragile dry environments are losing their productivity along with the capacity to support subsistence farmers and herders. Even the Amazon is at risk, with deforestation, drought, and rising temperatures creating conditions that could quickly turn the world’s largest rainforest into savanna or desert.

Most of the desertification hotspots are in relatively poor rural places, but the impacts are relevant to global companies because of the communities or sites where they operate and the reach of supply networks. Today, on the World Day to Combat Desertification, most of the emphasis will likely be on government intervention and NGO assistance, but there are clear opportunities for the private sector to play a role as well.

Businesses can invest in local social and environmental projects to halt or reserve desertification, engage with suppliers to reduce degradation, and create products that improve agricultural sustainability and enable restoration of damaged land.

Investing in Local Projects

In northern China, desertification is the root cause of the heavy spring sandstorms that plague Beijing and also spread to Korea, Japan, and even North America. In early 2010, Hong Kong blamed its worst-ever air pollution on northern sandstorms. The Chinese government has made fighting desertification a top priority, with plans to construct a “Green Great Wall” to hold back the desert. The private sector is chipping in as well: Hyundai is planting a 50-square-kilometer grassland reserve in Inner Mongolia as its first global environmental corporate social responsibility (CSR) project, and Toyota will plant 1,500 hectares of trees in Hebei Province, which supplies much of Beijing’s water.

ABB, a Swiss company that provides power and automation technology, has also taken steps to address desertification in northern China, which has a direct physical impact on ABB’s projects because high-voltage power lines in Inner Mongolia are affected by dune movement and encroaching desert. ABB is working with Inner Mongolia Power and the local power supply bureau to reforest hundreds of hectares and create a barrier to anchor nearby dunes. The company has turned this effort into an employee-engagement initiative.

Working with Suppliers

Supply chains, particularly for textile and apparel companies, may contribute to degradation if they include livestock products from arid or semi-arid regions, which are vulnerable to negative impacts from overgrazing. The production of low-cost cashmere in China has soared, along with the goat population, testing the carrying capacity of the grassland and increasing desertification. Retailers such as Marks and Spencer are including the environmental management of their cashmere suppliers as a factor in supplier evaluation.

Intensive cotton production with high levels of chemical input is another substantial cause of desertification, particularly in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Sustainable cotton sourcing has become a priority due to the use of child labor, but improving traceability also could enable companies to reduce their environmental impacts through strategic sourcing from areas that have lower risk of desertification.

Wood and timber products are also potentially linked to deforestation, another key cause of desertification, but efforts by the Forest Stewardship Council and others to certify sustainable forestry practices and chains of custody have created mechanisms for making sure that environmental impacts are minimized.

Creating Sustainable Products and Solutions

Other businesses see the challenges of vulnerable arid and semi-arid landscapes as a market opportunity. Monsanto, DuPont, BASF, Bayer, Syngenta, and Dow have invested heavily in research into drought-resistant seeds and technologies, such as water-retention gels for use in planting crops and trees, which could be helpful for re-vegetation of degraded areas.

Environmental degradation also can be addressed through careful decisions about the ways in which land is used. This is especially relevant as changing climatic conditions add another element of uncertainty into resource management. Ecosystems and resources should be viewed more holistically if companies want to really understand their environmental impacts and the steps required to use resources sustainably. This means understanding not only the component parts, but also the relationships between them and the emergent properties of an ecosystem — the ways in which it is greater than the sum of its parts.

Groups, such as BSR’s Environmental Services, Tools & Markets working group, are taking steps in the right direction by trying to assess resources and landscapes in terms of the value of the services they provide. While environmental economists and ecologists are still wrestling with translating these services into quantitative terms, approaching environmental issues through this lens can be instructive for companies wanting to take a more comprehensive approach.

Taking ecosystem services into consideration for strategic planning and assessment of operations impacts should help businesses understand their risks and dependencies on ecosystem services. Ultimately, this will help them reduce environmental degradation by providing information about risk management, due diligence processes, and possibly stakeholder engagement.

Indeed, when viewed through an ecosystem services lens, the costs of desertification become even more significant. That’s because in the process of desertification, land loses not only its immediate economic value to humans when agriculture or grazing is no longer possible, but also the value created by soil stabilization, biodiversity, rain infiltration, nutrient retention, carbon sequestration, and climate regulation.

Initiatives to fight desertification can have clear and immediate environmental benefits, but the expected impacts of climate change demand a more far-sighted and systemic approach to local and global land-use allocations. Shifting climate patterns will alter the ability of an ecosystem to provide certain services, and so must also change the calculus of land-use decisions.

For businesses with global reach, adaptation should include not only long-term projections of how a warming planet will change the availability of certain resources, but also a nuanced understanding of how the complex services provided by functioning ecosystems are influenced by and enable their own operations. Policymakers are beginning to think this way; businesses will have to as well.

Gazprom upbeat on demand despite rival shale gas

MOSCOW, April 14 (Reuters) – Russian energy giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM) on Wednesday projected a further gas output increase in three years, despite increasing competition from alternatives such as shale gas.

Energy

Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said the company expected to produce 565.5 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas in 2013 compared to a projected 529 bcm this year and 461 bcm in crisis-hit 2009.

“Obviously, the planned output is defined by the positive dynamics of gas consumption both on the domestic and international gas markets, for example, in Europe,” Miller told Russian TV.

He added that the forecast 2013 production is expected to reach a record high in 13 years and exceed volumes extracted in pre-crisis 2008 when the company produced 551 bcm.

Gazprom faces severe competition from shale gas production, which has transformed the U.S. gas market and was one of the driving forces behind the company’s decision to postpone several key projects including the huge Shtokman gas deposit development.

Shale gas in northern Africa also jeopardises Gazprom’s position as the dominant supplier in Europe.

The company is also suffering because spot gas prices in Europe are below its own long-term contract prices, which link natural gas and oil product prices. (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, editing by Will Waterman)

Negative public opinion about foreign countries an early warning signal for terrorism

Washington, September 18 (ANI): People’s negative views toward the leadership and policies of other countries may be an indication that a terrorist act may be carried out, say researchers.

Alan Krueger, a Princeton University economist, and Jitka Maleckova, of Charles University in the Czech Republic, came to this conclusion after analysing public opinion polls and terrorist activity in 143 pairs of countries.

Writing about their findings in the journal Science, the researchers say that there is a strong relationship between attitudes expressed toward a foreign country — indicated in surveys on foreign leaders’ performance-and the occurrence of terrorism against that country.

“Public opinion appears to be a useful predictor of terrorist activity,” said Krueger, the Bendheim Professor in Economics and Public Policy.

“This is the first study to relate public opinion across countries to concrete actions such as terrorism,” he added.

He pointed out that the notion that public attitudes can contribute to terrorism has been inadequately explored to date.

According to him, the study’s findings attain significance as they suggest that public opinion may provide a valuable early warning signal of terrorism, and help researchers better understand the causes of terrorism.

The researchers carried out their study by mining public opinion polls of residents in 19 countries in the Middle East and northern Africa conducted by Gallup.

They asked the respondents whether they approved of the job performance of the leaders of nine large countries.

According to the researchers, the countries selected for the study are world powers in terms of size, population or military strength, are the United States, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Russia and the United Kingdom.

The opinions, both positive and negative, were linked to the number of terrorist attacks conducted against the nine world powers by people from the 19 countries between 2004 and 2008. The terror attacks were compiled by the National Counterterrorism Center.

Based on the findings, Krueger says that there is not a direct connection between poverty and terrorism, contrary to a popular view.

He adds that economic status has more to do with target countries than it does with the states where the attacks originate.

He says that countries with advanced economies as well as a high degree of civil liberties are most likely to be the targets of terrorism.

The researchers admits that the study does not explain whether terrorists act in response to public opinion or whether they are simply reacting just like the larger public to external events.

However, he insists that, in either case, public opinion surveys can provide a powerful indication of the likelihood of terrorist activity.

Krueger believes that greater disapproval of another country’s leaders or policies may result in more terrorist acts because it increases the number of people who provide material support and encouragement for terrorism, and increases the number of people interested in joining cells and carrying out terrorist acts themselves. (ANI)

Al-Qaeda threatens to target Chinese workers in Africa following Uighur deaths

London, July 14 (ANI): In a bid to avenge the deaths of Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang, Al-Qaeda’s North African wing has threatened to target Chinese workers in Africa.

The threat from Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) comes in the wake of race riots in far West China which claimed the lives of at least 136 Han Chinese and 46 Uighurs, The Telegraph reports.

The London based risk-analysis company ‘Stirling Assynt’ quoted the AQIM, as saying that it would target the 50,000 Chinese who are working in Algeria and launch attacks against other Chinese projects in Northern Africa.

“This threat should be taken seriously. Future attacks of this kind are likely to target security forces and Chinese engineers alike,” the AQIM said, referring to its attack when the terror group had killed 24 Algerian security personnel who were protecting Chinese engineers.

China has repeatedly linked Uighur separatist groups to Al-Qaeda, but this is the first time that the terrorist network has made a direct threat against China or its overseas projects.

Stirling Assynt said that it had monitored an increase in internet “chatter” among possible jihadists about the need to “avenge the perceived injustices in Xinjiang.”

“Some of these individuals have been actively seeking information on China’s interests in the Muslim world which they could use for targeting purposes,” Stirling Assynt said, adding that locations included North Africa, Sudan, Pakistan and Yemen.

Two extremist web sites affiliated with Al-Qaeda noted that large numbers of Chinese work in Saudi Arabia and the Middle East.

“Chop off their heads at their workplaces or in their homes to tell them that the time of enslaving Muslims has gone,” read one posting.

China’s policy of total control and its inability to stop Uighur Muslims’ killings has upset Islamic states.Protesting Muslims in Indonesia called for a jihad against China on Monday, while Iran and Turkey, both key Chinese allies, have lashed out at Beijing.

Over 5,000 people protested in support of the Uighurs in Istanbul on Sunday. In the Gaza Strip, Hamas has also said the unrest would harm China’s ties to the Muslim world. (ANI)

Ryanair plans on standing room to accommodate more people on board plane

New York, Jul 7 (ANI): Irish discount airline Ryanair is said to be making plans for standing rooms on their planes so that they can accommodate more people onboard.

The company’s CEO wants Boeing to build a special standing room only jet so that fliers can perch on stools rather than sit in chairs, a method Ryanair thinks could get 30 percent more customers on their planes.

“Passengers wouldn’t be fully standing, they would have something like a stool to lean on or to sit on,” the New York Daily News quoted Stephen McNamara, a Ryanair spokesman as saying.

He said that the plan would “completely adhere to safety procedures”, as the stools would have lap belts to keep you attached, with the standing room tickets costing less than seats.

The idea came from the Chinese airline Spring, which is developing a similar plan.

Ryanair flies to destinations throughout Europe and a few in Northern Africa. (ANI)

Scientists develop fast and cheap forecasting system for Mediterranean cyclones

Washington, May 27 (ANI): In a new study, a team of Scientists has developed a fast and cheap forecasting system for Mediterranean cyclones.

The study shows that analyses of atmospheric sensitivity are useful for designing “efficient” observation networks based in Europe, and strategies that can be adapted to “especially dangerous” events.

“Sensitivity studies are a low-cost and efficient way of establishing the best kinds of observation strategies,” said Lorena Garcies, lead author of the study and a researcher in the Meteorology Group at the University of the Balearic Islands (UIB).

“Areas with low levels of in situ measurements, such as northern Africa, the Mediterranean Sea and the north east Atlantic, are important areas in the prediction of intense, short-range Mediterranean cyclones,” said Víctor Homar, another of the study’s authors and a researcher at the UIB.

Garcies and Homar have developed a methodology that builds up a climatology based on atmospheric sensitivities “without any dependence on numerical prediction models”.

The researchers applied statistical calculations of this sensitivity to the climatology of intense Mediterranean cyclones and obtained more precise estimates of the sensitivity of the real atmosphere.

With this method, the scientists are able to improve the prediction of cyclones’ development and impact between 48 and 24 hours before they fully form.

Temperature and wind speed are also important factors in predicting this high-impact phenomenon.

“The results for intense Mediterranean cyclones show dynamic, spatial and temporal coherence between the sensitivity fields, and are consistent with similar results obtained by using much more expensive sensitivity techniques”, according to Garcies and Homar.

The researchers are inviting the network of European Meteorological Institutes (EUMETNET) to use this new system to help improve observation systems over the regions of western Europe, northern Africa and the Atlantic Ocean, and “to bring about a systematic improvement in the forecasting of high-impact events in the Mediterranean”.

Forecasting is improved by increasing the observations within data assimilation systems, but Garcies believes that “building up in situ observations to the same levels over all areas is an unachievable goal, because it is incompatible with growing public demand for improved forecasts with maximum efficiency but at the lowest cost.” (ANI)

Al Qaeda’s senior leadership rooted in Pakistan’s western region: US

Washington, May 11 (ANI): A top US general has said that al Qaeda’s senior leadership has moved to the western region of Pakistan, and warned that the next few weeks would be pivotal for the country’s future.

General David Petraeus, the head of the US Central Command, noted that Pakistanis have also realised this and had galvanised themselves to protect their country from militants.

He said affiliated groups have “enclaves and sanctuaries” in Afghanistan and that “tentacles of al Qaeda” have touched countries throughout the Middle East and northern Africa.

But according to General Petraeus the terrorist group has suffered “very significant losses” in recent months, and agreed with Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s recent assessment that there is no al Qaeda based in his country.

Still, he said he believes Osama bin Laden and his No.2 Ayman al-Zawahiri remain in charge of the terrorist network, FOX News reports.

“They surface periodically. We see communications that they send out.

Nobody can provide an accurate location for either terrorist, but al Qaeda’s senior leadership clearly is now rooted in the border region of western Pakistan,” General Petraeus added.

“The actions of the Pakistani Taliban seem to have galvanised all of Pakistan.

There is a degree of unanimity that there must be swift and effective action taken against the Taliban,” he said.

The Obama Administration has strongly backed the offensive launched last week when President Asif Ali Zardari was in Washington seeking support for fighting the militancy, which General Petraeus said was a threat to the entire international community.

“Certainly the next few weeks will be very important in this effort to roll back, if you will, this existential threat – a true threat to Pakistan’s very existence that has been posed by the Pakistani Taliban,” he added.

The general dismissed the suggestion that if the fight against the Taliban intensifies, it could also endanger Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal.

“With respect to the nuclear weapons and sites that are controlled by Pakistan, as President Obama mentioned the other day, we have confidence in their security procedures and elements and believe that the security of those sites is adequate,” he said. (ANI)

Immigrant mums ‘at higher risk of having babies with birth defects’

Washington, April 17 (ANI): Immigrant mothers are less likely to take folic acid supplements before pregnancy to prevent birth defects, a new study has found.

The study, led by a St. Michael’s Hospital physician in collaboration with Statistics Canada, Health Canada and the University of Toronto, is important because such women may be at higher risk of having babies with birth defects.

This study is the first to provide national estimates of pre-pregnancy folic acid use in Canada.

“Our study’s findings report that while about six in 10 Canadian-born mothers take folic-acid supplements in the three-month period before conception, mothers from non-western countries – China, Northern African, Middle Eastern, Caribbean, Latin American or South Pacific countries – are less likely to use the supplements,” St. Michael’s Hospital’s Dr. Joel Ray said.

“This information is important for policy makers and health practitioners as we aim to better educate new mothers and prevent neural tube defects in their babies,” Ray added.

Neural tube defects are birth defects of the spinal cord and brain, otherwise known as spina bifida and anencephaly.

Research has shown that the risk of neural tube defects can be reduced by nearly 50 per cent with folic acid supplements taken just before and soon after conception, or through consumption of food fortified with folic acid.

The study, an analysis of 6,349 new mothers aged 18 to 45 years, examined the relationship between folic acid supplement use in the three months before conception and the mother’s maternal country of birth and years of residence in Canada.

Sixty one per cent of Canadian-born women in the study reported using folic acid supplements in the three-month period before conception.

However, these rates were much lower among women born in the Caribbean or Latin America (41 percent), Sub-Sahara Africa (44 percent), Northern Africa or the Middle East (31 percent), or South Asia (46 percent).

What’s more, only 39 percent of foreign-born women living in Canada less than four years reported using supplements compared to 64 percent of foreign-born women living in Canada at least 17 years.

“The disparity in pre-conceptual folic acid supplement use may be due to unplanned/unintended pregnancies or lack of awareness of the benefits of folic acid supplements,” Ray said.

“Immigrant women, especially those from non-Western countries, are least likely to have this information, which can otherwise be easily provided to these women through various communication mediums,” Ray added.

The researchers suggest that immigrant women should be provided with a language-specific pamphlet on the benefits of folic acid, or even with free supplements. (ANI)

Columbus proven not guilty of bringing anthrax to America

London, March 14 (ANI): A new research has shown that Christopher Columbus, along with other medieval European explorers, did not introduce anthrax in the Americas, as the deadly bacteria arrived in the continent thousands of years earlier, when Stone Age humans crossed the Bering land bridge.

Anthrax bacteria can live in soil for decades as tough spores, until a grazing animal inhales them. Then, they multiply explosively, kill the animal, and bleed into the soil to await the next victim.

It is only since the intense genetic analysis of anthrax that followed the 2001 attacks, though, that enough has been known about the bug to trace its family tree in the Americas.

Anthrax initially evolved in southern Africa, earlier work has demonstrated.

According to a report in New Scientist, Paul Keim of the Northern Arizona University, who led the genetic investigation of the attacks, said that normally anthrax spores do not move far from their dead victims, so it was probably humans carrying scavenged, spore-infested hair and hides who moved one anthrax “family” into northern Africa, then across Eurasia.

“That transfer then continued,” Keim said.

His new work confirms previous studies suggesting that many strains of American anthrax came on European wool and cattle in recent centuries.

The Ames strain used in the anthrax attacks, for example, naturally occurs only in Texas, but differs from Eurasian anthrax by only about eight mutations, showing it is a recent immigrant.

But, the analysis also shows that most of the anthrax lurking in the grasslands from northern Canada to Mexico differs by up to 106 mutations, showing it branched off from the Eurasian form long ago – roughly when humans and animals entered the Americas from Siberia then moved south as grasslands opened up in central Canada around 13,000 years ago.

“The line of descent shows a clear gradient from north to south,” Keim said.

The fact it moved from north to south shows it was carried by the invading humans, not animals moving back north as the glaciers retreated. (ANI)

G4S celebrates Happy Day with underprivileged children

New Delhi, Mar 3 (ANI/Business Wire India): G4S, a world leader in security solutions, celebrated Happy Day on Tuesday, at the British High Commission, as an initiative to spread happiness to underprivileged, differently-abled and orphaned children in the region.

The guest of honor gracing the occasion was Salma Ansari, wife of Vice President Hamid Ansari.

This year G4S has invited more than 5,500 children to celebrate Happy Day across India. These children are invited from several established NGOs and charity organisations like HOPE Foundation, SOS, JAMGHAT and India Vision Foundation.

Happy Day will be celebrated at more than 60 locations across Northern Africa, Middle East and Southern Asia Region out of which 34 locations are in India.

At the occasion, G4S also announced its support to 10 underprivileged children from the India Vision Foundation under its ‘Children of Vulnerable Families Project’.

This support would be towards each child’s education and well being where G4S would be sponsoring the child’s tution fee, stationery and medical expenses among others.

India Vision Foundation was born with the receipt of the Ramon Magsaysay Award by Dr Kiran Bedi in the year 1994.

“We are celebrating the second Happy Day in the NAMESA region. This is the day that G4S has dedicated to helping those children who are less privileged than we are. Through this event, we hope to bring a little fun into their lives and smile on their face and seeing them enjoying themselves, we feel generously rewarded,” said Hudson, Regional President G4S North Africa, Middle East and South Asia (NAMESA).

“Last year, we celebrated Happy Day with more than 5000 children and this year we expect there will be many, many more. This is our way to come together and touch the lives of our little guests with a view to make them realize that the world is a truly wonderful place. It is also an exciting opportunity for G4S to invest time to help future generations and we wish to continue doing so,” added Hudson.

G4S India celebrated the day with the theme of Aladdin and Jasmine. The event had toy trains, columbus and caterpillar rides, bouncy castles, musical chairs, hoopla games and activity game stalls including “Hit the Magrebi” and “Feed the Genie” for the little guests.

The Arabian set-up, joyrides and streamers created a perfect ambience for children. G4S family members dressed as Aladdin and Jasmine took care of children to extend a personal touch. A tattoo artist painted children’s favourite Aladdin characters on their faces and hands.

Going in accordance with the children’s fondness, G4S Chimes sang melodious songs like Jungle Book, Lakdi ki kathi, and Bum bum bole. In spite of the hectic schedule, G4S employees put in their heart and soul to the practice sessions for these songs.

An elaborate menu of lunch and breakfast was organised specially catered for the children.

A chocolate fountain was also created with accompaniments like éclairs, wafers and cookies. Adding to the fantasies of children a fountain sprinkling milk shakes, juices and other drinks for the little ones was made too.

In addition, the event includes transportation of children to the venue, doctor-on-demand at the event and cute mementos for all participants. This event is for children above the age of five years. (ANI)

Algerian Al-Qaeda activists infected themselves with Black Death, says expert

London, Jan.20 (ANI): The al-Qaeda cell that was wiped out in Algeria by the Black Death may have infected itself while developing biological weapons.
According to The Sun, the 40-odd terrorists, who succumbed to the plague, planned to wreak havoc on Western targets but fell victims to their own weapon

According to Dr Igor Khrupinov, a leading expert on chemical warfare at Georgia University, the “Al-Qaeda is known to experiment with biological weapons. And, this group has direct communication with other cells around the world. Contagious diseases, like ebola and anthrax, occur in northern Africa. It makes sense that people are trying to use them against Western governments.”

Dr. Khrupinov, once arms adviser to Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev, added: “Instead of using bombs, people with infectious diseases could be walking through cities.” (ANI)