JA Solar va fournir des modules PV à la première centrale photovoltaïque et de transformation des déchets en énergie en République du Congo

PÉKIN, 20 novembre 2022 /PRNewswire/ — JA Solar a récemment annoncé qu’elle fournira des modules pour IGNIE 2021-2046, la première centrale hybride renouvelable et la première centrale photovoltaïque (PV) et de transformation des déchets en énergie, dans la zone économique spéciale d’IGNIE en République du Congo. Ce projet comprend une centrale de stockage d’énergie photovoltaïque de plus de 55 MWp et une usine de transformation des déchets en énergie d’une capacité quotidienne de traitement des déchets de 500 tonnes dans un premier temps. La centrale PV sera installée avec des modules JA Solar DeepBlue 3.0. Une fois achevé, le projet, conçu par TINDA CASH CONGO S.A Producteur IPP, jouera un rôle important dans le renforcement des capacités de production d’énergie de la société nationale d’électricité E2C, et contribuera à la durabilité économique, sociale et environnementale de la ZES d’IGNIE.

Antoine Nicéphore Fylla Saint-Eudes, Ministre du Développement Industriel et de la Promotion du Secteur Privé du Congo, a assisté à la cérémonie de signature.  Il a adressé ses félicitations et ses encouragements aux deux parties signataires de l’accord, espérant que le projet sera achevé dès que possible et qu’il jouera un rôle positif dans la promotion du développement vert à faible émission de carbone dans la région.

DeepBlue 3.0, les modules photovoltaïques avancés fabriqués par JA Solar, ont été mis sur le marché par la société en mai 2020. Les expéditions cumulées des produits dans le monde entier entre 2020 et juin 2022 ont totalisé 24 GW. Afin de répondre à l’évolution des demandes du marché, JA Solar s’efforce continuellement d’améliorer les performances de production d’énergie des modules PV en renforçant ses propres recherches et innovations techniques. En mai 2022, JA Solar a introduit son premier produit sur le marché des modules photovoltaïques de type n, DeepBlue 4.0 X. En plus des avantages de DeepBlue 3.0, DeepBlue 4.0 X présente un meilleur rendement, une plus grande puissance, une plus grande capacité de production d’énergie et une excellente fiabilité. Le DeepBlue 3.0 et le DeepBlue 4.0 X illustrent parfaitement la philosophie de JA Solar en matière de conception de produits, qui consiste à être « conçu pour améliorer la valeur du client ».

Malawi to exhibit at UK’s biggest tourism show

LILONGWE, (CAJ News) – MALAWI, the Warm Heart of Africa, is preparing to showcase its tourism offerings at the Destinations: The Holiday and Travel Show in England early 2023.

The event is scheduled for Olympia, in the capital London, from February 2-to-5.

It is one of the United Kingdom’s top travel exhibitions, dedicated to giving visitors the chance to discover brilliant new parts of the world.

“It is also the perfect place to discover more about Malawi and talk to our professionals who can help plan your next adventure,” Malawi Tourism stated.

Recognised as a Lonely Planet Top 10 Best in Travel Country for 2022, Malawi is fast emerging as one of Africa’s ‘hottest’ and most complete destinations.

“We can tell you all about its natural wonders – stunning landscape, crystal clear lake, huge variety of wildlife (including the big five) – as well as giving you chance to find out why they call it ‘The Warm Heart of Africa’,” the country’s tourism agency stated.

Destinations: The Holiday and Travel Show brings together more than 200 of the leading and specialist independent travel brands, including tour operators and over 30 tourist boards from around the world.

Source: CAJ News Agency

Court Workers in Malawi Return to Work After Strike

Support staff for Malawi’s judiciary system has ended a week-long labor strike after the government promised to consider its demands next year. The government has told the workers that it will honor their grievances in April 2023.

The striking judicial support staff resumed work Dec. 19, 2022, after several meetings between representatives of the workers and Malawian government authorities.

Andy Haliwa, spokesperson for the Judiciary Members of Staff Union in Malawi, said Finance Minister Sosten Gwengwe told attendees at a meeting over the weekend that their demands are not part of the current budget.

“We met the minister of finance in Lilongwe, where we had discussions as regards to the same and we reached a compromise whereby the government made a commitment that come next year, April, they might give us what we wanted,” Haliwa said.

The strikers’ demands include improved working conditions and allowances for working overtime or outside their normal places of employment, among other things.

Some critics of the government say the budget excuse is a way for officials to sidestep the striking workers’ demands.

But Haliwa does not think so.

“No, no, no, no. Much as we are a union, we trust our government,” he said. “The only problem we had was lack of communication. So, when we requested the minister to meet him, he accepted. We met, we discussed, and he promised that he will honor his promise.”

The strike, which began December 12, led to the indefinite suspension of many cases, as the strikers barricaded court buildings, denying access to judges, lawyers and other regular court users.

The strike also left prison and police cells overflowing with crime suspects.

Peter Kalaya, spokesperson for the Malawi Police Service, said the resumption of court operations will help ease crowding in police station holding cells.

“It was really bad because in all the days when these officers were on strike, we were still making arrests,” Kalaya said. “And we have our cells that are actually meant as temporary custody, so there was congestion in most of our police cells.”

A strike lasted two months in 2015, when workers demanded a 30% salary increase.

Michael Kayiyatsa, executive director for the Centre for Human Rights and Rehabilitation, said the government should work out a way to ensure that future court strikes do not happen.

“It’s not right that every time there are concerns, the government has to pay the blind eye,” he said. “To avoid a similar situation, the government should be proactive in addressing the concerns raised by judiciary workers, and also, other civil service providers.”

Haliwa said the workers have signed a memorandum of understanding with the government to ensure that their demands are honored. However, he added that court workers might resume their strike if the government flouts the agreement and fails to take their demands seriously.

Source: Voice of America

Malawi | Tropical Storm Ana 6 – month operation update – Emergency appeal No: MDRMW015

SITUATION ANALYSIS

Description of the crisis

In January 2022, the Tropical Storm Ana weather system brought destruction and damage to most parts of the country especially within the southern region. The impact of tropical storm Ana brought subsequent flooding and resulted in an estimated 945,728 people needing humanitarian assistance and protection. Initially, and as of 8 February 2022, the Government of Malawi estimated that 46 people were reported dead, 18 missing, 206 injured and 221,127 households (more than 945,728 people) were affected. Swollen rivers drowned livestock and submerged fields destroying the livelihoods of rural families. At least 115,388 hectares of crops were destroyed. Over 228 schools had their blocks destroyed rendering over 114,218 learners without learning materials and facilities. Furthermore, access to some of the affected areas remained a big challenge as many of the roads were damaged and to date, some remain in bad condition. The displaced populations over 67,800 households were relocated to 217 camps in Chikwawa, Zomba, Phalombe, Mulanje, Nneno, Mangochi, and Nsanje districts. Government embarked on a process of decommissioning camps after a joint monitoring visit to the camps during the month of April 2022. The monitoring visit indicated that most of the camps were decommissioned in some affected districts except in Nsanje and Chikwawa where about 1200 households are still in camps waiting to relocate to other new places.

Due to the magnitude of the impact, most vulnerable people are still struggling to recover from this shock although a smaller number of the affected households have managed to relocate to higher and safe areas. The intensity of the impact has been aggravated by outbreak of Polio, Cholera, and continued risk of COVID 19 across the country.

Meanwhile the Department of Climate Change and Meteorological Services (DCCMS) has forecasted that during the 2022/23 rain season, the country will receive normal to above normal rainfall. Normal to above normal rainfall is associated with heavy flooding across many areas in the country acerbating the vulnerability of the people who were affected and are still recovering. The MRCS team is in the process of putting in place contingency plans at national and district level to make sure that any eventuality is handled in a proactive manner to avoid being caught unawares.

Summary of response

Overview of the host National Society and ongoing response

MRCS was established by ACT 51 of 1966 Parliament as an auxiliary to Government of Malawi. The National Society is a volunteer- based organization, which has 33 Divisions (Administrative Structures) and a network of more than 76,000 volunteers and 372 staff present in all the 28 districts of Malawi. Following the disaster, the Government of Malawi declared a State of National Disaster and called for support from various organizations. It was against this background that Malawi Red Cross Society (MRCS) through the International Federation of the Red Cross Societies (IFRC) launched an Appeal which helped to mobilize funds through various partners including the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent (IFRC) itself, Danish Red Cross consortium and the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) through the International Office of Migration (IOM), Kuwait Red Crescent and other individual well-wishers to support the people affected.

The Appeal therefore seeks to continue supporting the immediate humanitarian needs of the affected population targeting 160,000 people (32,000 households) that were directly affected by the storm in the four districts of Salima,

Phalombe, Nsanje and Chikwawa in Malawi for a period of 18 months (01/03/2022 to 30/06/2023). The response which focused on the immediate needs of families displaced and hosted in camps has now started to support early recovery interventions by assisting the affected to return to their homes and start to rebuild their houses and livelihoods.

Key achievements include:

• Provision of unconditional cash transfer to 6,141 households with each receiving an average of CHF 72 (Mk80, 000) supported 500 households with cash for shelter to enable them to reconstruct their damaged houses

• Provided NFIs to 7,465 households

• rehabilitated 63 boreholes

• De-sludge over 235 latrines in schools which were used as safe havens.

The operation continues to undertake additional Cash Transfers, construction of Transitional Shelter, rehabilitation and drilling of more boreholes, provision of small-scale livestock such as goats as part of their early recovery interventions with much focus on households embarked in voluntary relocation.

Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies

NASA Mars Lander Insight Falls Silent After 4 Years

It could be the end of the red dusty line for NASA’s InSight lander, which has fallen silent after four years on Mars.

The lander’s power levels have been dwindling for months because of all the dust coating its solar panels. Ground controllers at California’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory knew the end was near, but NASA reported that InSight unexpectedly didn’t respond to communications from Earth on Sunday.

“It’s assumed InSight may have reached the end of its operations,” NASA said late Monday, adding that its last communication was Thursday. “It’s unknown what prompted the change in its energy.”

The team will keep trying to contact InSight, just in case.

InSight landed on Mars in 2018 and was the first spacecraft to document a marsquake. It detected more than 1,300 quakes with its French-built seismometer, including several caused by meteoroid strikes. The most recent marsquake sensed by InSight, earlier this year, left the ground shaking for at least six hours, according to NASA.

The seismometer readings shed light on Mars’ interior.

Just last week, scientists revealed that InSight scored another first, capturing a Martian dust devil not just in pictures, but in sound as well. In a stroke of luck, the whirling column of dust blew directly over the lander in 2021 when its microphone was on.

The lander’s other main instrument, however, encountered nothing but trouble.

A German digging device — meant to measure the temperature of Mars’ interior — never made it deeper than half a meter (a couple of feet), well short of the intended 5 meters (16 feet). NASA declared it dead nearly two years ago.

InSight recently sent back one last selfie, shared by NASA via Twitter on Monday.

“My power’s really low, so this may be the last image I can send,” the team wrote on InSight’s behalf. “Don’t worry about me though: my time here has been both productive and serene. If I can keep talking to my mission team, I will — but I’ll be signing off here soon. Thanks for staying with me.”

NASA still has two active rovers on Mars: Curiosity, roaming the surface since 2012, and Perseverance, which arrived early last year.

Perseverance is in the midst of creating a sample depot; the plan is to leave 10 tubes of rock cores on the Martian surface as a backup to samples on the rover itself. NASA plans to bring some of these samples back to Earth in a decade, in its longtime search for signs of ancient microscopic life on Mars.

Perseverance also has a companion: a mini helicopter named Ingenuity. It just completed its 37th flight and has now logged more than an hour of Martian flight time.

Source: Voice of America

Harvey Weinstein Found Guilty of Rape in Los Angeles Trial

Harvey Weinstein was found guilty Monday of rape at a Los Angeles trial in another #MeToo moment of reckoning, five years after he became a magnet for the movement.

After deliberating for nine days spanning more than two weeks, the jury of eight men and four women reached the verdict at the second criminal trial of the 70-year-old onetime powerful movie mogul, who is two years into a 23-year sentence for a rape and sexual assault conviction in New York.

Weinstein was found guilty of rape, forced oral copulation and another sexual misconduct count involving a woman known as Jane Doe 1. The jury was unable to reach a decision on several counts, notably charges involving Jennifer Siebel Newsom, the wife of California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The jury reported it was unable to reach verdicts in her allegations and the allegations of another woman. A mistrial was declared on those counts.

Jurors were 10-2 in favor of conviction of the sexual battery of a massage therapist. They were 8-4 in favor of conviction on the rape and sexual assault counts involving Siebel Newsom.

Weinstein was also acquitted of a sexual battery allegation made by another woman.

He faces up to 24 years in prison when he is sentenced. Prosecutors and defense attorneys had no immediate comment on the verdict.

“Harvey Weinstein will never be able to rape another woman. He will spend the rest of his life behind bars where he belongs,’” Siebel Newsom said in a statement. “Throughout the trial, Weinstein’s lawyers used sexism, misogyny, and bullying tactics to intimidate, demean, and ridicule us survivors. The trial was a stark reminder that we as a society have work to do.”

“It is time for the defendant’s reign of terror to end,” Deputy District Attorney Marlene Martinez said in the prosecution’s closing argument. “It is time for the kingmaker to be brought to justice.”

Lacking any forensic evidence or eyewitness accounts of assaults Weinstein’s accusers said happened from 2005 to 2013, the case hinged heavily on the stories and credibility of the four women at the center of the charges.

The accusers included Newsom, a documentary filmmaker whose husband is California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Her intense and emotional testimony of being raped by Weinstein in a hotel room in 2005 brought the trial its most dramatic moments.

Another was an Italian model and actor who said Weinstein appeared uninvited at her hotel room door during a 2013 film festival and raped her.

Lauren Young, the only accuser who testified at both Weinstein trials, said she was a model aspiring to be an actor and screenwriter who was meeting with Weinstein about a script in 2013 when he trapped her in a hotel bathroom, groped her and masturbated in front of her.

The jury was unable to reach a verdict on the charges involving Young.

A massage therapist testified that Weinstein did the same to her after getting a massage in 2010.

Martinez said in her closing that the women entered Weinstein’s hotel suites or let him into their rooms, with no idea of what awaited them.

“Who would suspect that such an entertainment industry titan would be a degenerate rapist?” she said.

The women’s stories echoed the allegations of dozens of others who have emerged since Weinstein became a #MeToo lightning rod starting with stories in the New York Times in 2017. A movie about that reporting, “She Said,” was released during the trial, and jurors were repeatedly warned not to see it.

It was the defense that made #MeToo an issue during the trial, however, emphasizing that none of the four women went to the authorities until after the movement made Weinstein a target.

Defense lawyers said two of the women were entirely lying about their encounters with Weinstein, and that the other two had “100% consensual” sexual interactions that they later reframed.

“Regret is not the same thing as rape,” Weinstein attorney Alan Jackson said in his closing argument.

He urged jurors to look past the the women’s emotional testimony and focus on the factual evidence.

“Believe us because we’re mad, believe us because we cried,” Jackson said jurors were being asked to do. “Well, fury does not make fact. And tears do not make truth.”

All the women involved in the charges went by Jane Doe in court. The Associated Press does not typically name people who say they have been sexually abused unless they come forward publicly or agree to be named through their attorneys, as the women named here did.

Prosecutors called 40 other witnesses in an attempt to give context and corroboration to those stories. Four were other women who were not part of the charges but testified that Weinstein raped or sexually assaulted them. They were brought to the stand to establish a pattern of sexual predation.

Weinstein beat four other felony charges before the trial even ended when prosecutors said a woman he was charged with raping twice and sexually assaulting twice would not appear to testify. They declined to give a reason. Judge Lisa Lench dismissed those charges.

Weinstein’s latest conviction hands a victory to victims of sexual misconduct of famous men in the wake of some legal setbacks, including the dismissal of Bill Cosby’s conviction last year. The rape trial of “That ’70s Show” actor Danny Masterson, held simultaneously and just down the hall from Weinstein’s, ended in a mistrial. And actor Kevin Spacey was victorious at a sexual battery civil trial in New York last month.

Weinstein’s New York conviction survived an initial appeal, but the case is set to be heard by the state’s highest court next year. The California conviction, also likely to be appealed, means he will not walk free even if the East Coast conviction is thrown out.

Source: Voice of America