Headlines:

China foreign ministry: ‘airship’ over the U.S. a ‘force majeure accident’

China
  • The US claimed it was a clear Violation.
  • Wang reminded Blinken that both parties needed to communicate in a timely manner.
  • Wang claimed that China has always strictly abided by international law and respected sovereignty.

China: The Chinese foreign ministry stated on Saturday that the flight of a Chinese “airship” over the United States was a result of force majeure, accusing US politicians and media of exploiting the situation to malign China.

The US, claiming the device was a suspected spy balloon that had committed a “clear violation” of US sovereignty, postponed Secretary of State Antony Blicken’s visit to China, which was scheduled to begin on Friday.

“China has always strictly abided by international law and respected the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries,” the ministry said in a statement.

It said Beijing and Washington had not announced any visit by Blinken and that “the U.S. announcements are their own matter and we respect that”.

In a separate statement, the ministry said Wang Yi, director of China’s Central Commission for Foreign Affairs, met with Blinken on the phone on Friday evening and discussed how to deal with unintentional occurrences in a calm and professional manner.

According to the ministry, Wang reminded Blinken that both parties needed to communicate in a timely manner to avoid any miscalculations.

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China balloon soaring over U.S. deflates hopes for diplomatic thaw

China balloon
  • Chinese surveillance balloon threatens to derail efforts by both countries to steady an increasingly fragile relationship.
  • U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed his trip to Beijing.
  • This incident has soured the atmosphere and hardened positions.

Washington: The political controversy over a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon drifting above the United States not only derailed the senior US diplomat’s scheduled visit to Beijing, but it also threatens to derail efforts by both countries to steady an increasingly fragile relationship.

The reaction in the United States to what appears to be an ill-timed eavesdropping expedition will have long-term ramifications for efforts to normalize relations, which are already at record lows. Some politicians in the United States are urging that President Joe Biden, a Democrat, hold China accountable for what authorities describe as an egregious infringement of US sovereignty.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who postponed a trip scheduled to begin on Friday, said he would be willing to visit Beijing “when conditions allow,” but policy analysts said the administration would be hard-pressed to immediately restart the trip unless China made major gestures of goodwill.

Under then-President Barack Obama, Daniel Russel, the senior US diplomat for Asia, said China’s “laughable excuse” that the aircraft was a stray weather balloon didn’t help.

Meeting between Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping

“This incident has soured the atmosphere and hardened positions and there’s no guarantee the two sides can successfully resurrect the ‘Bali’ momentum,” Russel said, referring to the November meeting between Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Indonesia where they agreed to increase communications.

Ties between the superpowers have deteriorated in recent years, reaching their lowest point in decades last August, when then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan, leading Beijing to undertake military drills near the Chinese-claimed island.

Since then, the Biden administration has stated that it intends to provide a “floor” for the relationship and prevent competitiveness from escalating into war.

Republicans, who control the House, are already working on methods to probe potential threats from the US’s major geopolitical competitor, and they have been quick to put pressure on Biden over the balloon, questioning how it was permitted into US airspace.

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CALLS TO SHOOT DOWN BALLOON

On Friday, Republican House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul wanted to know why the administration had not shot down the balloon, accusing the president of permitting it to pose a “clear and continuous national security threat to the U.S. heartland.”

China has frequently complained about US ships and aircraft spying on its developing military, despite the fact that such operations have recently been conducted from widely recognized international waters and airspace.

China’s reaction to the balloon was likewise gloomy. The government expressed sadness that an “airship” designed for civilian meteorological and other scientific reasons had deviated from its intended path. However, some Chinese internal critics were critical of the US response.

“If Blinken cancels his trip to Beijing because of the balloon, I’d see it as him using that as an excuse to do what he had already planned to do – not visit China,” said Zhu Feng, executive dean of Nanjing University’s School of International Relations, speaking before the State Department announced the trip’s cancellation.

If Blinken had gone forward with the visit, it would have exposed the administration to more vehement criticism that its approach to China is weak, as well as terrible optics in Congress, where there is bipartisan support for a tough stance on Beijing, according to some observers.

MISSED OPPORTUNITIES

Expectations for Blinken’s trip were low, but he planned to highlight by name the cases of American people unlawfully detained in China and to press Beijing to help in slowing the flow of fentanyl, both areas where any progress would have established a momentum that could carry into future negotiations.

Former White House National Security Council deputy senior director for Asia Ivan Kanapathy predicted a string of China hearings in Congress, making it difficult for Blinken to justify a trip to Beijing unless he can secure the release of jailed Americans or return with another substantial reward.

China, too, wants a stable U.S. relationship so it can focus on its economy, battered by the now abandoned zero-COVID policy.

Blinken’s trip, which would have been the first by a secretary of state to China since 2018, was considered an effort to create strategies for dealing with future crises. With new House Speaker, Kevin McCarthy expected to visit Taiwan this year, the next crisis could be just around the corner.

“Overall, I do think the Biden administration would like to reschedule, as there are many issues on the table and a real chance for a thaw. But the balloon incident probably means the thaw is postponed indefinitely,” said RAND Corporation Indo-Pacific analyst Derek Grossman.

However, Ryan Hass, a Brookings Institution China researcher, said on Twitter that China’s balloon operation had at least provided the US and China a chance to hammer out rules of engagement in space and at high altitudes, where the two militaries will come into increasingly close contact.

“We should not squander this opportunity to materially reduce risk and also prevent future violations of U.S. airspace by PRC spy balloons,” Hass said.

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Chinese spy balloon changes course

Chinese spy balloon
  • Chinese spy balloon is now flying eastward at about 60,000 feet (18,300 meters) over the central United States.
  • China’s claim that the balloon was only a civilian airship.
  • The Pentagon anticipates the balloon to remain in US airspace for a few more days.

Washington: The US military said on Friday that a Chinese spy balloon has changed course and is now flying eastward at about 60,000 feet (18,300 meters) over the central United States, demonstrating maneuverability, in the latest twist in a spying saga that has forced US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to postpone a visit to China.

The disclosure concerning the agility of the surveillance balloon directly contradicts China’s claim that the balloon was only a civilian airship that had wandered into US territory after being blown off course.

“We know this is a Chinese (surveillance) balloon and that it has the ability to maneuver,” Air Force Brigadier General Patrick Ryder told a news briefing at the Pentagon, declining to say precisely how it was powered or who in China was controlling its flight path.

According to American officials, US President Joe Biden decided against firing down the balloon as it soared over Montana on Wednesday due to military worries about the anticipated distribution of debris.

The Pentagon anticipates the balloon to remain in US airspace for a few more days, according to Ryder, who declined to speculate on what alternatives the US military might develop during that time, as speculation circulated about whether Biden could still order the balloon to be destroyed or captured.

Ryder claimed the US military would not disclose where the balloon was over the central United States, citing a desire to avoid an “hour-by-hour” cycle of updates. People in any individual U.S. state, he continued, could stare up into the sky if they chose to.

“The public certainly has the ability to look up in the sky and see where the balloon is,” Ryder said.

Senator Roger Marshall of Kansas stated the spy balloon was over his state’s northeastern region and that his team was in contact with law enforcement personnel.

“I condemn any attempts the Chinese make to spy on Americans. President Biden must protect the sovereignty of the U.S.,” Marshall posted on Twitter.

Ryder went on to say that the balloon presented no danger to persons on the ground.

He commented as political ramifications from the Chinese balloon’s presence over the United States grew.

The cancellation of Blinken’s trip, which was coordinated in November by Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping, is a setback for those on both sides who saw it as a long-overdue opportunity to repair an increasingly strained relationship. The last time a US secretary of state visited was in 2017.

When speaking about the economy on Friday morning, Biden avoided queries about the balloon.

Chinese spy satellites have identical sensors to what US officials suspect is on the spy balloon, raising doubts about why Beijing would undertake such a bold gesture on the day of a significant diplomatic event.

Officials say the Chinese spy balloon has picked a flight path that will take it over a number of important facilities. Military bases, such as those in Montana, which house intercontinental ballistic missile silos, could be one such location.

The airport near Billings, Montana, issued a ground stop on Wednesday as the military mobilized assets, including F-22 fighter jets, in case Biden ordered the balloon to be shot down.

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Antony Blinken delays his trip to China due to balloon over US

Antony Blinken heads to Israel to revive Gaza ceasefire talks         

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s trip to China has been postponed. Visit was due to take place on Sunday, but “conditions are not right” for visit now. Spokesman says presence of Chinese spy balloon in US airspace is a “clear violation of our sovereignty”. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has postponed his trip to … Read more

China claims that balloon in US airspace is a civilian airship

China

China’s foreign ministry apologized for what it called a civilian balloon that entered American airspace. The ministry said the airship has little ability to steer and “deviated significantly from its scheduled trajectory”. Due to worries about harming people on the ground, it chose not to shoot down the balloon. China‘s foreign ministry apologized for what … Read more

China to resume all travel with Hong Kong and Macau

China
  • China announced on Friday that cross-border travel between the mainland, and Hong Kong.
  • Macau would fully resume on February 6.
  • Three border crossings in Hong Kong have not yet been reopened.

China announced on Friday that cross-border travel between the mainland, Hong Kong, and Macau would fully resume on February 6, eliminating current quotas and doing away with the requirement to take the COVID-19 test in order to travel.

The number of customs checkpoints open will increase to pre-pandemic levels, and group travel between China and its two special administrative areas of Hong Kong and Macau will resume, according to a statement on the website of China’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office.

There is still a COVID-19 testing requirement and a quota system in place for travellers between the mainland and Hong Kong even after China reopened its borders to the outside world on January 8. Three border crossings in Hong Kong have not yet been reopened.

China made its decision a day after Hong Kong began a promotion push with 500,000 free flights to entice travellers, companies, and investors back to the financial centre following more than three years of strict COVID controls.

In an effort to fend off COVID, Hong Kong was largely closed off behind closed borders for much of the past three years, with required quarantine of up to three weeks for visitors as well as stringent testing and screening.

The ex-colony of Britain adhered strictly to China’s zero-COVID policy until the middle of 2022, at which point it started to progressively relax its regulations.

The majority of Hong Kong’s COVID regulations remained in place until December, however mask use is still required when exercising and students are required to perform daily quick antigen testing.

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Pentagon suspected a Chinese spy balloon over the US

Chinese spy balloon
  • Joe Biden asked Lloyd Austin and senior military leaders to shoot the balloon down.
  • China has already flown spy balloons above the United States.
  • Lingered in US airspace for a substantially longer period of time.

Just days before a rare visit to Beijing by the top US ambassador, tensions between the two countries were rekindled when the Pentagon announced on Thursday that it was tracking a Chinese surveillance balloon flying high above the United States.

President Joe Biden asked Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and senior military leaders to shoot the balloon down, but they ultimately decided that doing so would put too many people on the ground at danger, a senior defence official told reporters on Thursday.

The officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, stated that it is obvious that the purpose of the balloon is for surveillance.

The balloon had flown over important airbases and strategic nuclear missiles in underground silos in the northwest of the country, the official continued, but the Pentagon did not consider it to be a particularly severe intelligence threat.

From the standpoint of intelligence gathering, “we evaluate that this balloon has minimal added value,” the person stated.

The aircraft’s discovery comes only days before US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is anticipated to visit China, with managing the escalating tensions between the two nations at the top of the agenda.

The top American diplomat will be travelling to Beijing for the first time since 2018, following a meeting between Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in November on the fringes of the G20 summit.

Relations between the two nations have deteriorated in especially over democratically-governed Taiwan, which China has promised to reunite with the mainland, by force if necessary, in addition to continuous disagreements over trade and intellectual property.

In order for Taiwan to defend itself, the United States has been selling it armaments, and Biden has stated that if China invaded, Washington would assist in defending Taiwan.

The balloon entered US airspace “a couple days ago,” according to a defence official, although US intelligence had been monitoring it for a long time before that.

After Biden inquired about alternatives for handling the balloon, Austin, who was in the Philippines, met with top Pentagon officials on Wednesday.

While conversations were going on, fighter jets were flown to look at it while it was over Montana.

Seriousness of the problem

However, the official stated that the Pentagon had decided “not to take kinetic measures due to the risk to safety and security of people on the ground from the possible debris field.”

Pat Ryder, a spokesperson for the Pentagon, verified that the balloon was still being monitored over US airspace.

“At this time, the balloon is flying far above commercial air traffic. No military or physical threat is posed to anyone on the ground by it “In a statement, Ryder stated.

China has already flown spy balloons above the United States.

The senior defence official stated that this one, however, lingered in US airspace for a substantially longer period of time.

The person stated, “We are nonetheless taking precautions to guard against foreign intelligence gathering of critical material.”

In a move that emphasises the US assessment of China as a threat to East Asia, Austin was in the Philippines this week to deepen US defence cooperation, including seeking more access for Pentagon soldiers at Philippine military facilities.

The defence official claimed that Beijing officials had been informed of “the seriousness of the issue” with the balloon.

We have stated unequivocally that we will take all necessary steps to safeguard our people in their own country.

When Nancy Pelosi, the then-Speaker of the US House of Representatives, decided to visit the island last year, tensions over Taiwan erupted into a furor.

Since the Republicans took over the chamber in January, there have been doubts about whether her successor will travel in a similar manner.

President Biden cannot remain mute in the face of China’s flagrant disdain for American sovereignty, the House Speaker Kevin McCarthy tweeted on Thursday night.

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Space power China plans to construct ground stations in Antarctica to support satellites

Space power China

China will construct four ground stations in Antarctica to support its ocean monitoring satellites. Sweden’s state-owned space corporation rejected to extend contracts with China. Doubts have been raised concerning purpose of a Chinese-built ground station in Patagonia. China, the third nation after the Soviet Union and the United States to launch a man into space, … Read more

US secures deal on Philippines bases to complete arc

US

The agreement partially undoes the US’s decision to leave their former colony. Philippines border two of the major flashpoints, Taiwan and the South China Sea. The US hasn’t said where the new bases are but three of them could be on Luzon. Four more military outposts in the Philippines have been granted to the US, … Read more

Death of missing teen is not suspicious, says Chinese police

Chinese police

The body of Hu Xinyu, 15, was found near his school in Jiangxi province. Hu had not been located despite massive police searches. Which had drawn criticism from several quarters. There are no suspicious circumstances behind the death of a Chinese teen whose body was discovered close to his school last week, more than 100 … Read more

Chinese police: Death of teen who went missing for 100 days is not suspicious

Chinese
  • The body of a Chinese boy was discovered near his school last week.
  • The boy went missing for 100 days.
  • His absence became one of the most talked about subjects on the Chinese internet.

Hong Kong: Authorities confirmed Thursday that there are no suspicious circumstances behind the death of a Chinese boy whose body was discovered near his school last week, more than 100 days after he went missing, bringing an end to a high-profile case that had gripped the nation.

Hu Xinyu, 15, went missing in October from a private high school in China’s southeastern Jiangxi province. His absence became one of the most talked about subjects on the Chinese internet, sparking speculation about what happened to him.

At a news conference on Thursday, Hu Mansong, Jiangxi province’s deputy police chief, released specific information on the police investigation into Hu’s death – an unusually exhaustive explanation by Chinese authorities’ norms. He also admitted to flaws in official search operations and welcomed public criticism.

Authorities were chastised for failing to locate Hu despite massive police efforts. Before his body was discovered by a member of the public, the efforts spanned roughly 40 hectares (0.4 square kilometers) of wilderness around the school grounds, utilising sniffer dogs, drones, and thermal imaging equipment and recruiting thousands of personnel.

In recent months, false reports about the boy’s abduction have spread, highlighting widespread popular skepticism in Chinese authorities, which is exacerbated by a lack of government transparency and years of deteriorating censorship.

According to the deputy police chief, one individual was arrested for sharing false information in a video and three others were given administrative penalties for spreading rumors.

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US and India to increase defense and technological collaboration

US
  • The United States and India are taking steps to improve their defense partnership.
  • The US and Indian forces will work to improve maritime security.
  • Washington and New Delhi also agreed to expand their space collaboration.

The latest indication of collaboration between the two nations US and India in the face of a more aggressive China was the announcement by officials on Tuesday that the United States and India are taking steps to improve their defense partnership.

The proposals, which include increased cooperation on military-related businesses and operational coordination in the Indo-Pacific, were developed during two days of talks between the government and industry representatives from the two countries in Washington.

According to a White House information sheet, collaboration on developing jet engines and military weapons technologies is crucial among them. In particular, it stated that the US government will try to hasten the evaluation of a request made by US company General Electric to produce jet engines in India for use in indigenous Indian aircraft.

According to the information sheet, the US and Indian forces will work to improve maritime security as well as intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities.

US Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks told Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval that “building alliances and partnerships are a top priority” for the Pentagon, in what she said was “the region’s increasingly contested strategic environment,” according to a Defense Department statement.

Hicks said building the partnerships was a major objective of the US’ 2022 National Defense Strategy, which calls China a “growing multi-domain threat.”

While the United States has witnessed China‘s military buildup in places near Taiwan and major US ally Japan, India’s forces have battled with Chinese troops along the Line of Actual Control, the ill-defined frontier between the two countries high in the Himalayas.

Technological collaboration

The United States and India, together with Japan and Australia, are members of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, also known as the Quad, an informal security forum founded in the early 2000s. It has become more active in recent years as part of efforts to oppose China’s Indo-Pacific reach and territorial claims.

US President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the US-India collaboration on Critical and Emerging Technology on the margins of a Quad conference in Tokyo last May. (iCET).

The sessions this week were the first under the initiative, and they brought together dozens of government officials, CEOs from the private sector, and leading academics from both nations.

Aside from defense technologies, Washington and New Delhi plan to “increase international collaboration in a variety of sectors — including artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, and enhanced wireless,” according to a White House information sheet.

The commitment to grow the semiconductor sector in India, which has the educated and qualified people needed to become a major participant in making those crucial components, was a major industrial component of the conference.

Furthermore, the two countries agreed to collaborate on the development of next-generation telecoms in India, including 5G and 6G sophisticated cell phone technology.

Washington and New Delhi also agreed to expand their space collaboration, including aiding India’s astronaut development, commercial space sector, and role in planetary defense.

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US reaches agreement on bases to finish arc around china

US
  • The US has gained access to four more military installations in the Philippines.
  • Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin made the announcement.
  • The new additions and expanded access will allow more rapid support.

Washington: The US has gained access to four more military installations in the Philippines, a strategic location that would give it a good vantage point for watching Chinese activity in the South China Sea and near Taiwan.

Washington has filled the gap in the US alliance arc that stretches from South Korea and Japan in the north to Australia in the south with this agreement.

The Philippines, which borders Taiwan and the South China Sea, or the West Philippine Sea as Manila insists on calling it, are the missing piece since they are two of the most significant potential flashpoints.

According to a statement from Washington, the new additions and expanded access will “allow more rapid support for humanitarian and climate-related disasters in the Philippines, and respond to other shared challenges,” probably a subliminal reference to countering China in the region. The US already had restricted access to five sites under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).

The declaration was made following a Thursday meeting between Philippine President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin in Manila.

Under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), the US already had restricted access to five sites. According to a statement from Washington, the new additions and expanded access will “allow more rapid support for humanitarian and climate-related disasters in the Philippines, and respond to other shared challenges,” probably a covert allusion to countering China in the region.

After meeting Philippine President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. in Manila on Thursday, Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin made the announcement.

The US has not disclosed the locations of the four facilities, but three of them may be on Luzon, an island off the northern tip of the Philippines, and if you exclude China, the only significant piece of territory close to Taiwan.

The agreement is a significant one since it partially undoes the US’s decision to leave their former colony more than 30 years ago.

“There is no contingency in the South China Sea that does not require access to the Philippines,” says Gregory B Poling, director of the Southeast Asia program at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

“The US is not looking for permanent bases. It’s about places, not bases.”

That is, it is seeking access to places where “light and flexible” operations involving supplies and surveillance can be run as and when needed, rather than bases where large numbers of troops will be stationed.

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China is enraged at the new Czech president’s call to Taiwan

Czech
  • Beijing is attempting to isolate Taiwan.
  • Pavel will take over for pro-Chinese incumbent Milos Zeman.
  • Zeman held a 45-minute video call with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

PRAGUE – China chastised Czech President-elect Petr Pavel on Tuesday for a phone call the day before with Taiwan’s president and foreign minister.

“Pavel… trampled on China’s red line,” said Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning.

“This severely interferes with China’s internal affairs and has hurt the feelings of the Chinese people,” she added.

Beijing is attempting to isolate Taiwan on the international scene by opposing countries having diplomatic contacts with Taipei.

It claims self-governed, democratic Taiwan as part of its territory, which it intends to seize one day, using force if necessary.

Beijing has urged Prague to “immediately take effective measures to eliminate the negative impact of this incident and avoid irreparable damage being sustained to China-Czech relations”, Mao said.

Pavel, who was elected president on Saturday, will take over for pro-Chinese incumbent Milos Zeman on March 9.

Earlier this month, Zeman held a 45-minute video call with Chinese President Xi Jinping, whom he refers to as a friend, and lauded “friendly relations” between the two countries.

Pavel then called Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, who congratulated him on his election victory.

“I thanked her… and I assured her that Taiwan and the Czech Republic share the values of freedom, democracy, and human rights,” Pavel said on Twitter.

“We agreed on strengthening our partnership,” added the former general, who served as head of NATO’s military committee in 2015-2018.

He expressed his desire to “meet President Tsai in person” in the future.

The call, which Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu also participated in, lasted over 15 minutes, according to the Taiwanese presidential office.

“The president… acknowledged that president-elect Pavel carries on the spirit of former Czech president (Vaclav) Havel, who respected democracy, freedom, and human rights, under which the republic was founded, and is like-minded with Taiwan,” Tsai’s office said.

Havel served as the Czech Republic’s first president from 1993 to 2003.

Before becoming president, Havel led the Velvet Revolution, which overthrew Communism in old Czechoslovakia in 1989.

Mao stated that Beijing was pressing Prague to “honestly abide by its political commitment to the One China concept,” which the European Union observes.

Pavel said in a radio interview on Sunday that the one-China policy should be supported by a “two-system” philosophy.

“There is nothing wrong if we have specific relations with Taiwan, which is the other system,” Pavel said.

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$1 Trillion green Investment matches fossil fuels for first time

fossil fuels
  • 31% increase over the previous year.
  • The surge was caused by the energy crisis that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
  • Hydro and nuclear power continued to contribute 32% of total electricity generation in the 27-nation bloc.

PARIS: After hitting $1 trillion last year, investment in clean energy is on the verge of surpassing spending on fossil fuels for the first time.

Despite the achievement, BloombergNEF estimates that spending on energy transition technology must instantly increase to fulfill the aim of net-zero emissions by 2050 to mitigate climate change.

Renewables, nuclear, zero-emission vehicles, and recycling initiatives received $1.1 trillion in investment last year, matching spending on fossil fuels, according to the report.

This represents a 31% increase over the previous year and the first time the investment amount has been calculated in trillions.

According to the research, the surge was caused by the energy crisis that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“Investment in clean energy technology is on the verge of overtaking fossil fuel investments and will not look back,” said Albert Cheung, BloombergNEF’s head of global analysis.

Top polluter

China, the world’s top polluter, was by far the largest investor in energy transition, with the US trailing far behind.

China accounted for about half of the total worldwide investment, mainly in the steel recycling, renewable energy, and electric vehicles (EV) sectors.

Germany has maintained its third-place ranking, owing partly to a strong EV market.

However, a reduction in offshore wind projects caused investment in the UK to plummet by about a fifth, according to the research.

Renewable energy was the most heavily invested in the sector globally, accounting for $495 billion, followed by electrified transportation projects.

With the exception of nuclear power, all other sectors received unprecedented levels of investment, according to the experts.

The advancement of energy transition technologies coincides with an increase in fossil fuel investment in many countries in an effort to ensure energy security.

The war in Ukraine disrupted worldwide power supply because Russia, a major supplier of fossil fuels, curtailed gas supplies to European Union (EU) countries and was sanctioned for the invasion.

According to a separate analysis released on Tuesday by Ember, an energy think tank, wind, and solar energy generated 22% of EU electricity, exceeding gas (20%) for the first time.

Hydro and nuclear power continued to contribute 32% of total electricity generation in the 27-nation bloc.

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Beijing has hit ‘temporary herd immunity,’ official says

Beijing
  • China’s unparalleled virus wave is fading.
  • COVID deaths nationwide have dropped by over 80%.
  • The city would survey thousands of citizens in February and March.

BEIJING – Beijing has reached “temporary herd immunity,” and its COVID outbreak is nearing a conclusion, according to a city health official, another indicator that China’s unparalleled virus wave is fading.

Since the ruling Communist Party abruptly reversed its zero-COVID policy last month, a flood of cases has swept through the world’s most populous nation.

The spike crammed hospitals and crematoriums in major cities, including Beijing, though the scope of the outbreak is difficult to confirm because official statistics are thought to represent just a small percentage of the total number of cases.

However, there are signs that the increase is slowing, with authorities reporting last week that the number of daily COVID deaths nationwide has dropped by over 80% since the beginning of January.

Beijing’s Centre for Disease Control and Prevention

Wang Quanyi, deputy head of Beijing’s Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, told local media Tuesday that the metropolis of 22 million has “established temporary herd immunity protection”.

“This wave of infections in Beijing has already peaked and is now coming to an end,” the state News quoted Wang as saying.

The capital was “currently in a state of sporadic infections” with the virus exhibiting a “relatively low risk of transmission”, Wang said.

According to official data, the number of persons seeking treatment for flu-like diseases at major Beijing hospitals dropped by more than 40% between January 23 and 29, compared to the previous week.

According to Wang, a national decrease in the number of illnesses showed that the end of the Lunar New Year break would “not have too much of an impact” when people returned to Beijing from other regions of the country.

He went on to say that the city would survey thousands of citizens in February and March to see how many have COVID antibodies in their blood plasma.

The survey will “comprehensively assess Beijing’s state of coronavirus infection” and “provide a reference for optimizing resource allocation in the future,” Wang said.

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Sichuan allows unmarried people to legally have children

Sichuan

Sichuan will remove restrictions on unmarried individuals having children. The move is part of a larger government effort to increase the nation’s declining birth rate. Only married couples are currently permitted to register the births of up to two children. Sichuan, a province in south-west China, will remove restrictions on unmarried individuals having children as … Read more

Namibia reported a record amount of rhino poaching

Namibia
  • 87 rhinos killed in Namibia last year – almost twice as many as the year before.
  • Most were poached in Etosha, Namibia’s biggest national park.
  • Rhino numbers in Africa have dropped significantly to feed demand for rhino horn in China and Vietnam.

According to officials, poaching of endangered rhinos in Namibia last year reached a record high and was almost two times higher than the year before.

87 rhinos were killed overall, compared to 45 in 2021, according to official government figures.

According to officials, the majority were taken from Etosha, Namibia’s largest national park.

Rhino populations in Africa have drastically decreased in recent decades as a result of China and Vietnam’s increased demand for rhino horn.

According to Romeo Muyunda, a spokesman for the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism, poachers killed 61 black rhinos and 26 white rhinos, mostly in Etosha, where 46 rhinos were discovered dead.

Etosha National Park, our flagship park, is a hub for poaching, Mr. Muyunda noted with grave concern.

International criminal gangs now locate and sedate the animals using high-tech technology before chopping off the horn and leaving them to bleed to death.

Wildlife teams have been slicing off the rhinos’ horns to keep them alive as a result of rhino poaching in South Africa and Botswana.

Despite having no known medical benefits, rhino horn has been utilized for many centuries in traditional Chinese medicine.

Demand for horns in Vietnam, where they are displayed as a symbol of wealth, is another factor driving poaching.

With just over 5,000 remaining in existence, the black rhino is the most vulnerable.

However, there were just four elephants poached in Namibia last year, down from a record of 101 in 2015.

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