Tag: Base

  • CRPF asks Manipur-origin personnel on leave in state to report to nearest base

    CRPF asks Manipur-origin personnel on leave in state to report to nearest base

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    New Delhi: The CRPF has directed its personnel hailing from Manipur and on leave in their home state to “immediately” report to their nearest security base with family members in the wake of a CoBRA commando being killed in the ongoing violence in the state.

    The commando of the Central Reserve Police Force’s CoBRA, who was on leave, was shot dead by armed assailants in his village in Manipur’s Churachandpur district on Friday noon, officials said.

    The headquarters of the 3.25-lakh personnel strong force in Delhi asked all its field commanders to “promptly” contact their off-duty personnel hailing from Manipur and convey the message.

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    The directive, accessed by PTI, asks all personnel hailing from Manipur and on leave in their home state to “report immediately” to their nearest security force base along with their family if they feel “unsafe or insecure”.

    It has asked its Manipur and Nagaland Sector Office, headquartered in Imphal, to extend “all possible assistance to such personnel promptly”.

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    #CRPF #asks #Manipurorigin #personnel #leave #state #report #nearest #base

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • FCIK Demands For Consolidation Of Existing Industrial Base

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    SRINAGAR: The Federation of Chambers of Industries Kashmir (FCIK) has urged the central government to consolidate the existing industrial base in Jammu and Kashmir and its ambitious expansion plans for industrial development under the “New Central Sector Scheme” (NCSS) launched in 2021 with an outlay of 28400 Crores over a period of time.

    This was conveyed by FCIK representatives to the Director of the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Dr Kajal, and her team of officers in a meeting held at Sanat Ghar Srinagar. The FCIK was led by members of the Advisory Committee, Shakeel Qalander and Mohammad Ashraf Mir, with the participation of presidents of various industrial estates, including Lassipora, Khunmoh, Rangreth, Zainakote, Shalteng, Sanat Nagar, Baghi Ali Mardan Khan, Zakura, Ganderbal, Silk Park Zakura, and other constituents.

    FCIK representatives conveyed that the desired transformation in industrial development could only take place by following the principles of natural growth, which envisages the consolidation of the existing industrial base before spreading out for expansion. While hailing the NCSS for enhanced industrial development, they said that the plan also required a change in the working atmosphere and system to facilitate existing and prospective entrepreneurs with flawless services.

    Recalling the central industrial scheme of 2002 launched by the then Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the FCIK representatives regretted that the scheme could not bring any substantial change owing to inherent deficiencies. They said that the whole scheme, spread over more than a decade, could only attract investment of about 3000 crores, mostly in two districts of 22 districts of the erstwhile state of J&K. They said that NCSS-2021 may, God forbid, meet the same fate if the problems of existing enterprises were not addressed to boost existing and prospective investor’s confidence. They informed the visiting team that a whole lot of existing units were presently in complete distress and working on meager capacities much below their break-even, apart from a large number of units that had already turned sick.

    FCIK suggested DPIIT to earmark a sum of 10000 Crores out of 28400 Crores under NCSS, which could be utilized for incentivizing existing industrial units on revival and rehabilitation of sick units, diversification, modernization, and expansion programs. This initiative could not only save thousands of crores of investment made in existing infrastructure but could also establish a strong foundation for desired expansion plans, said FCIK members, adding that re-enforcing of existing units had the potential of generating one million jobs in a short run.

    FCIK members expressed their dismay over the non-seriousness of the local administration towards the plight of existing industry and said that the role and functionaries of the industries department required complete reformation and revamp.

    FCIK also complained to DPIIT of withholding a corpus fund of 100 Crores along with some other grants approved in 1999 by the then Prime Minister on the recommendations of Task Force on MSMEs. The FCIK representatives said that J&K badly needed such a corpus with appropriate enhancement.

    The Presidents and other members also registered their complaints regarding the difficulties faced by enterprises in availing incentives under NCSS-2021 and suggested changes in rules and regulations.

    Dr Kajal in her response assured FCIK team to revisit provisions of guidelines for the incentive scheme in order to benefit unit holders. She said that the team was dumbfounded to know about the ground realities about existing industry. She assured to take up the matter with her high ups in the department and in turn with relevant quarters for finding a resolution to the problems brought in her notice. She asked FCIK to furnish a detailed note on all these issues with suggestions thereof. She also assured of having regular and frequent interaction with the stakeholders in future.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Kumaraswamy up against tough opponent in home base Channapatna

    Kumaraswamy up against tough opponent in home base Channapatna

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    Bengaluru: Former Karnataka Chief Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy, who is leading the JD(S) from the front and is countering the campaign blitzkrieg of the Congress and the BJP, is facing stiff competition in Channapatna constituency.

    The constituency is set to witness a close fight between Kumaraswamy and BJP leader C.P. Yogeshwara. Channapatna was represented by Yogeshwara in 1999. Later, he won the seat as a Congress candidate in the 2004 and 2008 assembly elections.

    After joining the BJP during ‘Operation Lotus’, he lost the by-election in 2009 against JD (S) candidate Ashwath M.C. He managed to win back the seat in the 2011 bypoll as a BJP candidate. In 2013, he contested from the Samajwadi Party (SP) and won against Kumaraswamy’s wife Anita Kumaraswamy. He got 80,099 votes while Anita polled 73,635 votes.

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    In the 2018 assembly elections Yogeshwara contesting as a BJP candidate, was defeated by Kumaraswamy. Yogeshwara managed to get 66,465 votes and Kumarswamy polled 87,995 votes. Sources said that Kumaraswamy chooses to contest from Channapatna to end the political career of Yogeshwara.

    Kumaraswamy’s son Nikhil Kumaraswamy is contesting from the neighbouring Ramnagar constituency.

    Channapatna constituency comprises 31 wards of the city. The constituency has 2,17,606 voters. Muslims comprise 42.96 per cent of the voters and Hindus make up 55.66 per cent.

    The fight has become a close contest with the BJP high command’s decision to focus on the old Mysuru region. Channapatna, which elected Congress candidates, has become a bastion of the JD (S). Former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda’s family has taken it as a matter of prestige to win from here.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah have made repeated visits to south Karnataka and appealed to the voters to root out the JD (S), branding it as a party which practices dynastic politics. The party is planning to organize mega rallies and campaigns in the constituency in the coming days.

    The results will tell how deep the saffron party has managed to put down roots in south Karnataka. With polarization of votes on the basis of religion following the hijab crisis and the call to boycott Muslim traders, Muslims are standing firmly with the JD (S). Kumaraswamy will attract a major chunk of Vokkaliga votes.

    The task of Yogeshwara is to polarize all Hindu votes towards the BJP and keep the Vokkaliga votes intact. Knowing well the uphill task, Yogeshwara had started intense campaigning in the constituency a long time back.

    Kumaraswamy is focusing on a state tour and declared that national parties will have to come to his door after the elections. Yogeshwara has proclaimed that he will win against Kumaraswamy.

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    #Kumaraswamy #tough #opponent #home #base #Channapatna

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Electronic Spices RGB 5 mm LED Light Emitting Diode (Red, Blue and Green Flashing, Pack of 50, Prong Base)

    Electronic Spices RGB 5 mm LED Light Emitting Diode (Red, Blue and Green Flashing, Pack of 50, Prong Base)

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    Electronic Spices RGB 5 mm Light Emitting Diode (Red, Blue and Green Flashing) Pack of 50

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  • While Trump’s base rallies, the GOP fractures

    While Trump’s base rallies, the GOP fractures

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    While polling, fundraising and public displays of enthusiasm indicate the indictment is emboldening Trump’s MAGA supporters, there is no evidence yet it has helped him expand his political base. In fact, many Republicans have expressed fears it may ultimately damage his prospects with swing voters the GOP will need to win the White House in 2024.

    In New York on Tuesday, those absent from the rally said as much as those who attended.

    “It is sad that we have a pretty large New York congressional delegation that has failed to show up. We’ve seen the party leadership fail to show up. We’ve seen local elected officials from the state Assembly to the state Senate fail to show up,” Gavin Wax, president of the New York Young Republican Club, said after the rally. “So I think it shows a complete disconnect between party leadership, party electeds and the establishment and the base of their actual party — their actual voters.”

    Wax noted two New York congressional Trump loyalists — Reps. Elise Stefanik and Claudia Tenney — hosted a public demonstration of support elsewhere in New York. And newly-elected Rep. George Santos — infamous for lying about some aspects of his identity during his campaign last year — defended the ex-president and lamented that the indictment “cheapens the judicial system” as he walked by the courthouse.

    But for others — specifically New York State Republican Chairman Ed Cox — Wax called it “a complete miscalculation on their part to not come out, to not be more strong on this issue.”

    Cox declined to respond, or discuss the reasons for his absence. The state party has supported Trump in the past, but has yet to make an endorsement this early in the 2024 primary cycle.

    One of the only elected officials to show up to the rally, local legislator Ben Geller, questioned why New York’s Republican congressional delegation didn’t show up.

    “A lot of them put out statements saying that they are disgusted at the politicization of this justice system, but where are they?” he asked. “None of them put the word Trump in any of their press statements.”

    Rep. Lee Zeldin, who came within striking distance of winning the New York governor’s race last year, praised Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis during an event on Long Island Saturday night, but was a no-show Tuesday. DeSantis is expected to challenge Trump for the Republican nomination, and was in town as part of a politically-focused book tour.

    His communications director Daniel Gall said Zeldin is out of the country, and noted his tweets condemning the prosecution.

    And Republican Joe Borelli, a City Council member who was once among Trump’s most visible defenders, disputed a connection between rally attendance and support for the former president.

    “For the past 24 hours, the media told New York all to be afraid of a rally and then today is wondering why few elected officials were at the same rally. I don’t get it,” Borelli said.

    Trump would appear to benefit in the short term from his legal troubles. A Yahoo News/YouGov poll conducted shortly after the indictment was announced showed Trump running far ahead of DeSantis, his main GOP rival, among Republicans and Republican-leaning independents.

    That finding reflected pre-indictment surveys that suggested the scandal would likely rally Republicans around Trump.

    But the rush of the far-right to Trump’s side may come at a cost should he win the nomination. In the midterms in 2018 – and again in the presidential election two years later – many moderate Republicans and independents broke away from Trump, exhausted by the non-stop theater. The GOP failed to deliver the “red wave” Democrats feared last year as well.

    “This is a prosecution that is being brought by a partisan,” said Rob Stutzman, a Republican strategist, and “Republicans may, at least in the short term, rally to [Trump’s] side.”

    However, he said, “It’s still an indictment, and it’s a crime that’s being alleged that appears likely to be supported by evidence and testimony. … So, in a general election sense, this is a guy who lost the general election in 2020, and it’s difficult to imagine how this adds to his general election vote count.”

    The question surrounding Trump in the primary – after this indictment and with other legal problems looming – is “ultimately, do Republican voters start to see him as having too much baggage.”



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    #Trumps #base #rallies #GOP #fractures
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Akhilesh to unveil Kanshi Ram statue; set to strike at BSP’s Dalit base in UP

    Akhilesh to unveil Kanshi Ram statue; set to strike at BSP’s Dalit base in UP

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    Lucknow: Having given up all hopes of an alliance with the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, the Samajwadi Party (SP) is now going all out to woo the Dalits.

    The party will use the upcoming Ambedkar Jayanti to kick off its campaign.

    SP president Akhilesh Yadav will unveil a statue of Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) founder Kanshi Ram at a function in Rae Bareli on April 3.

    MS Education Academy

    According to party sources, in his address, Akhilesh will recall BSP founder Kanshi Ram’s alliance with SP founder Mulayam Singh Yadav in 1993 and underline the need for another ‘coming together’ of the forces in the present political scenario.

    SP national general secretary Swami Prasad Maurya said, “The BSP today has strayed away from the path shown by its founder Kanshi Ram and Babasaheb Ambedkar. There is an urgent need for the followers of Kanshi Ram and Mulayam Singh Yadav to join hands once again for nation building. It is time to carry forward their idea of social justice that the two leaders had first shared in 1993.”

    According to sources, the SP leadership feels that an OBC-Dalit combination, in at least a dozen Lok Sabha constituencies, has the ability to be a game changer on the strength of its numbers.

    In the political circles, the move is being seen as SP’s latest strategy to win over non-Jatav Dalits who had sided with the BJP in the 2022 Assembly polls and also make a dent in the BSP’s Jatav vote base.

    The party’s broad frame of this strategy was also noticeable in the recently constituted national executive committee of the party. Where 62 members in the committee — around 35 per cent — were from non-Yadav OBC communities particularly from electorally influential communities like Pasi, Kurmi, Rajbhar and Nishad.

    A total of six members in the national executive committee list were Dalits.

    Besides, of late, Akhilesh has been seen making a conscious effort to promote Ayodhya MLA Avadhesh Prasad as the Dalit face of the party.

    The nine-term MLA, who currently represents the Milkipur Assembly constituency of Ayodhya, not only shares a seat next to party president Akhilesh Yadav in the state Assembly but was also seen sharing the dais with Yadav during the two-day party’s national executive meet in Kolkata recently.

    Akhilesh even tweeted a selfie with Awadhesh Prasad and Shivpal Yadav on board a flight to Kolkata, to underline the growing stature of the Milkipur MLA in the party.

    His rising stature in SP is being seen as Akhilesh’s attempt to send across the message that the party is willing to give a special status to Dalits — who were till now seen as a dedicated and exclusive voter base of the Bahujan Samaj Party.

    The SP, which had floated Babasaheb Vahini on Ambedkar Jayanti in 2021, now plans to strengthen the organisation within the party.

    The Vahini has been asked to celebrate Ambedkar Jayanti in a grand manner in all districts.

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    #Akhilesh #unveil #Kanshi #Ram #statue #set #strike #BSPs #Dalit #base

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Erica Fernandes opens up on life and work after moving base to Dubai

    Erica Fernandes opens up on life and work after moving base to Dubai

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    Mumbai: Erica Fernandes needs no introduction. She has been making headlines for her roles in TV shows such as ‘Kuch Rang Pyar Ke Aise Bhi’, ‘Kasautii Zindagii Kay’ and last year, she made news for her move to Dubai and grabbing projects in the new country.

    She shared her experience of staying in Dubai and missing the life of her own country. However, she asserted that she is enjoying meeting new people and exploring more opportunities.

    Erica Fernandes talked about the difference of work outside India and shared: “Working outside India has its own set of ups and downs. Every coin has two sides and so does this. I love meeting new people and getting fresher opportunities for work all the while missing India and home.

    “Life is always a learning process so I take it in stride. I feel It’s good to come out of your shell and explore the world.”

    Recently, Erica Fernandes’ fans got excited looking at her picture in Dubai with her ‘Kuch Rang Pyar Ke Aise Bhi’ co-actor Shaheer Sheikh.

    He posted a picture with her on social media. They both were seen together in a music video.

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    #Erica #Fernandes #opens #life #work #moving #base #Dubai

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Airtel Base Prepaid Plan for all 22 Circles in India – Check Benefits Here – Kashmir News

    Airtel Base Prepaid Plan for all 22 Circles in India – Check Benefits Here – Kashmir News

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    Bharti Airtel recently hiked the base prepaid tariffs in all 22 telecom circles in India. The hike happened in a phased manner, wherein Airtel started the move with just two circles. Upon getting a positive response, the telco decided to move ahead with the same for the remaining circles.

    In a matter of just two months, the base prepaid plan, which used to be the Rs 99 plan for Airtel consumers across India, became the Rs 155 plan. The Rs 155 plan is not a new plan, and thus, users are already aware of it and its benefits. For the few that aren’t aware and the ones who have forgotten its benefits, keep reading ahead.

    Bharti Airtel Base Prepaid or Entry-Level Prepaid Plan in 2023

    The new entry-level prepaid plan from Airtel for 2023 is the Rs 155 plan. With this plan, consumers get a total of 1GB of data. Along with that, users get truly unlimited voice calling and 300 SMS. The total validity of this plan is 24 days, meaning users are spending Rs 6.46 every day to use the services of this plan.

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    The only downside to this plan is that it doesn’t have a lot of data, but then it is also very affordable. You can always recharge with a 4G data voucher that Airtel provides to customers with this plan. Note that if you want to use unlimited 5G from Airtel, then you can if you are recharging with the Rs 239 plan or more.

    To enable unlimited 5G, you will have to go to the Airtel Thanks app and claim the offer. It is available for both the prepaid as well as postpaid customers of the telco. Coming back to the base prepaid plan of Airtel, users don’t get much in terms of benefits, but they have no other option but to recharge with the Rs 155 plan if they don’t want to spend more than the bare minimum to keep the SIM card active.

    There are more plans from Airtel under Rs 200 that users can recharge with. There’s a Rs 179 as well as Rs 199 plan available for the customers, and these plans are also meant to offer users validity at a lower cost. The Rs 179 plan offers 2GB of total data, while the Rs 199 plan offers 3GB. The Rs 179 plan ships with a service validity of 28 days, while the Rs 199 plan ships with a service validity of 30 days. (TelecomTalk)


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Biden expected to OK Alaska oil project — a blow to his green base

    Biden expected to OK Alaska oil project — a blow to his green base

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    Biden pledged to halt new oil and gas development on federal land during his 2020 campaign, and he and Democrats in Congress passed landmark climate legislation last summer aimed at weaning huge swaths of the economy off of fossil fuels. But the surge in oil prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced the administration into an awkward embrace of the oil industry, as Biden countered Republican accusations that his policies were to blame for the skyrocketing price at the gas pump that was stoking inflation.

    Approving Willow would be just the latest shift by Biden toward the political center as he moves toward a potential reelection bid. He similarly dismayed liberals last week by saying he would not veto a GOP-led repeal of changes to D.C.’s criminal code.

    The White House defended Biden’s environmental record Saturday in comments to POLITICO, saying Biden’s policies have made the U.S. “a magnet for clean energy manufacturing and jobs” with policies that help the U.S. come closer to meeting climate goals. A White House official said that using oil and gas is still consistent with Biden’s near- and long-term emissions targets, which the official said the U.S. is on track to meet.

    “This approach has not changed — nor will it. Our climate goals are cutting emissions in half by 2030 and reaching net-zero by 2050 — not 2023,” the official said. “That has always meant that oil will continue to be a part of the energy mix in the short-term while we shore up domestic clean energy production for the long-term.”

    Environmental groups acknowledged Saturday that they were largely in the dark about the White House’s plans, but said they believed that the current discussions inside the administration were largely over whether to limit the number of drilling sites at the Willow project to two rather than three. Conoco had proposed building five well pads.

    “It sounds like different groups in the White House are still discussing” the potential size of the project, said one environmental advocate who had been in contact with the administration late Friday.

    “They told us they had nothing to offer” on the state of project deliberations, added the person, who was granted anonymity to describe internal White House deliberations.

    But if the reports of the approval are true, Biden’s shift to the center on oil would threaten to demoralize the climate activists he needs to support him in 2024, said Jamal Raad, co-founder and senior adviser of the group Evergreen Action.

    “It will be harder for us and climate activists to rally around this president come next year,” Raad said, explaining the action would detract from his many accomplishments, such as the $370 billion in climate and clean energy incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act, while putting the onus on Biden to issue tougher environmental rules on cars and power plants.

    Conoco declined to comment until it hears a decision directly from the administration.

    Conoco Chief Executive Ryan Lance last week urged the administration to approve Willow, saying the project was in line with the Biden administration’s recent exhortations to the industry to increase oil production to help batten down prices.

    “This is exactly what this administration has been asking our industry to do over the last couple of years,” Lance told an energy conference in Houston.

    Regardless of the size, any plan would call for drilling oil and building miles of pipelines and roads, a gravel pit, an air strip and other infrastructure in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, a 36,875-square-mile patch of federal land in the relatively undeveloped Arctic wilderness. It would produce as much as 600,000 barrels of oil over its three-decade lifetime.

    The project would also add nearly 280 million tons of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere over that period, according to the Interior Department’s environmental analysis. That would be the equivalent of adding two new coal-fired power plants to the U.S. electricity system every year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency’s emissions calculator.

    The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, originally set aside by the Harding administration for potential oil drilling in 1923, is outside the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, another swath of northern Alaska that Biden has declared off-limits for oil development.

    Environmentalists said they were still holding onto hope based on the administration’s denial that it made a final decision to OK the project, despite multiple news reports saying that an announcement of the approval would be made in the coming days. (Bloomberg News first reported Friday night that the administration had decided to greenlight it.)

    “Great! Then there is still time to turn this all around!!!” Natural Resources Defense Council spokesperson Anne Hawke posted on Twitter after White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre denied on Friday that a final decision had been made.

    Hawke also reached out to Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg for help persuading Biden, tweeting at the young advocate: “In just days, the US will approve a massive oil project in Alaska. Can you help us tell US @POTUS to #StopWillowProject?”

    Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), a longtime climate advocate, expressed dismay at the news.

    “We cannot allow the Willow Project to move forward,” he tweeted late Friday. “We must build a clean energy future — not return to a dark, fossil-fueled past.”

    An approval, if it comes, would infuriate environmental groups and continue a year-long strengthening of the administration’s relationship with the oil industry. But it would also come as market analysts are forecasting that oil prices will remain volatile for the next several years, which would make killing the project politically tricky.

    Biden himself has softened his rhetoric on transitioning the country away from fossil fuels, and he has repeatedly pressed the oil and gas industry to increase production in the short term to keep prices lower.

    “We are still going to need oil and gas for a while.” he said during his State of the Union speech last month.

    The Willow development is the rare large-scale oil project to be announced in recent years in the United States, where the industry has instead shifted its focus to drilling smaller, cheaper and faster projects using fracking to tap into shale fields in the Southwest. If approved, construction could start soon, and additional construction in Alaska’s North Slope for Willow will occur throughout the summer and fall, the company has said.

    Alaskan native tribes have expressed split opinions on the project, with some warning it would degrade their environment and others welcoming its potential economic gains.

    “The Willow Project is a new opportunity to ensure a viable future for our communities, creating generational economic stability for our people and advancing our self-determination,” said Nagruk Harcharek, president of the nonprofit Voice of Arctic Iñupiat, in a statement Saturday. “North Slope Iñupiat communities have waited nearly a generation for Willow to advance.”

    Yet that urgency to develop the project, and the signals from the White House, were disheartening to environmental groups.

    “To us, it all sucks because it flies in the face of meeting our climate goals. So we’re going to keep fighting until there is a final record of decision,” said Tiernan Sittenfeld, senior vice president of government affairs with the League of Conservation Voters.

    Some of Biden’s green allies suggested the move could have repercussions for Democrats in 2024. Along with the long-debated Keystone XL pipeline from Canada, which Biden effectively killed in one of his first acts as president, Willow has joined the ranks of fossil fuel projects that in earlier decades would have flown under radar but have now taken on outsized political significance.

    The Biden administration is caught in the middle, hyping the Inflation Reduction Act it signed into law as the biggest climate-related legislation ever but also asking companies to keep pumping barrels to keep fuel prices low in the here-and-now. That law has also won praise from the oil and gas sector for its incentives for carbon capture and storage and clean hydrogen – technologies the fossil fuel producers are pursuing.

    Raad, from Evergreen Action, said the Willow project “was something that really took the internet and social media by storm the last few weeks – because it is a physical thing and a physical place that feels real.” And that has implications for Biden’s hopes for reelection, he added.

    “There’s just no escaping the fact that we’re going to need to rally young folks and folks interested in climate next year to win,” Raad said. “And this does not help in any shape or form.”

    As of March 2, environmental advocates were citing 9,000 videos protesting Willow on the social media platform TikTok. Former Vice President Al Gore earlier this week weighed in to say it would be “recklessly irresponsible” to approve Willow.

    Deirdre Shelly, campaigns director with the youth environmental group Sunrise Movement, said her organization is already strategizing for the next election and that approving Willow would make organizers’ jobs more difficult.

    “This is just a huge disappointment. … It does feel like an about-face,” she said. “It makes it even harder for us to convince young people that they need to vote, that the Democratic Party leaders will act on climate.”

    But the administration also felt heavy pressure from the oil industry and the state’s politically powerful Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski. Murkowski has long championed Willow as a needed boost to the Alaskan economy, which has been troubled for years as the overall oil industry has picked up stakes to move to the cheaper opportunities in the Lower 48.

    Oil and gas companies and energy-state lawmakers would have been ready to blame the rejection of Willow for any subsequent rise in energy costs, even though the Biden Interior Department has approved new permits to drill on public land at a faster rate than his predecessors.

    Murkowski, speaking Friday in Houston before the announcement, said she had met with the White House last week to warn that the administration was legally bound to approve the project, given that Conoco held oil leases on federal land.

    “The fact of the matter is these are valid existing leases that Conoco holds,” Murkowski told reporters. “If the administration [had] basically not allowed them to be able to access those leases, what follows then? … Alaska litigation is always something that we have to reckon with.”

    Catherine Morehouse contributed to this report.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Energy |  Has the electricity price base been seen?  The cheapest fixed-term contract costs a good 11 cents

    Energy | Has the electricity price base been seen? The cheapest fixed-term contract costs a good 11 cents

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    The contract, valid for the time being, now costs just over 12 cents per kilowatt hour at its lowest.

    Long the continued decrease in the price of fixed-term electricity contracts seems to have stopped. According to the Energy Agency’s price comparison of contracts, the cheapest fixed-price fixed-term contract sells electricity for 11.19 cents per kilowatt hour.

    The cheapest contract offer was also the same a week ago. The contract is sold by Vihreë älläenergia. It is biennial.

    Fixed-term electricity contracts have become cheaper for practically two months straight. For example, as recently as December 12, the cheapest contract traded electricity for 29 cents. Since then, the price per kilowatt hour has dropped by almost 18 cents.

    Based on the electricity derivatives market, it seems that electricity contracts will not necessarily get cheaper in the near future.

    Finland’s electricity futures are rather on a fine rise. Now electricity costs 10.4 cents per kilowatt-hour in the April-June futures trade in the Finnish region. The price includes 24 percent value added tax. A week ago, the price was 10.1 cents.

    The electricity future for July–September now costs 9.4 cents, while a week ago the price was 8.9 cents.

    For now The cheapest offer of the current contracts is currently 12.23 cents per kilowatt hour. The price in question is valid until the end of March.

    The contract is sold by Vihreë älläenergia. After this, the price of the contract is determined based on the Finnish price of the electricity exchange. A margin of 3.56 cents is added to the monthly average price. The consumer can terminate the contract with a notice period of two weeks.

    On the website of the Energy Agency, you can also find another offer valid until further notice, where the energy fee is less than 13 cents per kilowatt hour. The seller of the contract is Pohjois Karjalan Sähkö.

    In the contract, the seller can change the price after one month after notifying the customer. The consumer can terminate the contract with a notice period of two weeks.

    Exchange electricity the price has remained quite flat in recent weeks. During the last week, electricity has cost an average of 14.4 cents a day at its highest and just under 5 cents at its lowest.

    In February, stock exchange electricity cost an average of 8.8 cents per kilowatt hour. Exchange electricity has been cheaper at the beginning of the year than last year’s January-February average.

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    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )