AFP

Environmental protesters force suspension of Shell AGM

Oil giant Shell was on Tuesday forced to temporarily suspend its annual general meeting because of disruption from climate change activists.

Proceedings at the venue in central London were halted about half an hour after they started at 10:00 a.m. (0900 GMT).

“Stop kidding yourself that you are doing no harm,” activists shouted at shareholders, according to a live feed of the meeting. 

“Think of your children and your family. They will not escape the effects of the climate emergency.”

Protesters sang “We will, we will stop you!” to the tune of Queen’s 1977 rock anthem “We Will Rock You” before police arrived and they were ejected.

Outside, another group of demonstrators sang and shouted slogans such as “shame on Shell”.

AGM chairman Andrew Mackenzie apologised to delegates after trying in vain to persuade the protesters to wait for discussion of a resolution about a climate transition plan.

The company said later in a statement: “We respect the right of everyone to express their point of view and welcome any engagement on our strategy and the energy transition which is constructive.

“However, this kind of disruption at our AGM is the opposite of constructive engagement.”

It added: “We agree that society needs to take urgent action on climate change.”

Money Rebellion said that more than 70 people took part in the protest, which was part of a wider call for action against Shell for its climate action plan.

It has previously disrupted AGMs of the banks HSBC, Barclays and Standard Chartered.

On Monday, a Shell consultant resigned and accused the oil giant in an email of “failing on a massive planetary scale” to limit climate risks.

Caroline Dennett, a UK-based safety consultant, said the company’s continued extraction of oil and gas was causing “extreme harm” to the planet.

In response, the company said it had short, medium and long-term objectives to reach net zero by 2050 and was committed to reducing its carbon footprint.

Billions of dollars have already been invested in low-carbon energy, although the transition from oil and gas would take decades, a spokeswoman told AFP.

HSBC has meanwhile suspended a top executive for playing down the impact of climate change in a recent presentation.

Environmental protesters force suspension of Shell AGM

Oil giant Shell was on Tuesday forced to temporarily suspend its annual general meeting because of disruption from climate change activists.

Proceedings at the venue in central London were halted about half an hour after they started at 10:00 a.m. (0900 GMT).

“Stop kidding yourself that you are doing no harm,” activists shouted at shareholders, according to a live feed of the meeting. 

“Think of your children and your family. They will not escape the effects of the climate emergency.”

Protesters sang “We will, we will stop you!” to the tune of Queen’s 1977 rock anthem “We Will Rock You” before police arrived and they were ejected.

Outside, another group of demonstrators sang and shouted slogans such as “shame on Shell”.

AGM chairman Andrew Mackenzie apologised to delegates after trying in vain to persuade the protesters to wait for discussion of a resolution about a climate transition plan.

The company said later in a statement: “We respect the right of everyone to express their point of view and welcome any engagement on our strategy and the energy transition which is constructive.

“However, this kind of disruption at our AGM is the opposite of constructive engagement.”

It added: “We agree that society needs to take urgent action on climate change.”

Money Rebellion said that more than 70 people took part in the protest, which was part of a wider call for action against Shell for its climate action plan.

It has previously disrupted AGMs of the banks HSBC, Barclays and Standard Chartered.

On Monday, a Shell consultant resigned and accused the oil giant in an email of “failing on a massive planetary scale” to limit climate risks.

Caroline Dennett, a UK-based safety consultant, said the company’s continued extraction of oil and gas was causing “extreme harm” to the planet.

In response, the company said it had short, medium and long-term objectives to reach net zero by 2050 and was committed to reducing its carbon footprint.

Billions of dollars have already been invested in low-carbon energy, although the transition from oil and gas would take decades, a spokeswoman told AFP.

HSBC has meanwhile suspended a top executive for playing down the impact of climate change in a recent presentation.

'Hulk' star Ruffalo joins call for global wealth tax

US actor Mark Ruffalo on Tuesday joined a call by over 150 wealthy people for governments to tax them more, as global elites and policymakers met at the World Economic Forum in Swiss resort Davos.

The face of Hulk in a decade of Marvel movies was one of dozens of new millionaires to put their names to an open letter titled “In Tax We Trust”, which was first delivered to attendees at a virtual WEF conference in January.

“While the world has gone through an immense amount of suffering in the last two years, we have actually seen our wealth rise during the pandemic — yet few if any of us can honestly say that we pay our fair share in taxes,” the letter read.

The Patriotic Millionaires group said it had boosted the number of signatories to over 150 by May, from 100 in January.

Its chairman Morris Pearl, a former managing director at mammoth asset manager BlackRock, vowed in a statement to “continue to pressure global leaders to heed our call: tax the rich before it’s too late”.

But Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) secretary-general Mathias Cormann said that wealth taxes could be less effective than other revenue-raising options.

“They don’t necessarily raise that much revenue,” he told a panel discussion at Davos. 

“In terms of the politics of it, it’s attractive, but in terms of the substance of what it achieves it’s not that attractive.”

Cormann did suggest that “property taxes are probably the most efficient, least distorting” form of wealth tax.

“There’s huge scope in wealth taxation… it’s been tried and in some countries it works,” Oxfam executive director Gabriela Bucher responded.

“These amounts that are being accumulated. You could not spend them in several lifetimes”.

Cormann and the OECD are betting on a deal struck by over 130 countries last year to tax multinational companies at a minimum of 15 percent to boost revenue for hard-up governments.

Asked if Washington might walk back its commitment should Republicans win control of Congress at November mid-term elections, Cormann said that “it’s in the rational self-interest of the United States to be part of this deal”.

For companies, it’s “much better for them to be operating in a globally consistent framework” rather than navigate conflicting tax regimes, he added.

“I can’t imagine that any country or any side of politics in any country would make a judgement that would put themselves at that sort of disadvantage.”

'Hulk' star Ruffalo joins call for global wealth tax

US actor Mark Ruffalo on Tuesday joined a call by over 150 wealthy people for governments to tax them more, as global elites and policymakers met at the World Economic Forum in Swiss resort Davos.

The face of Hulk in a decade of Marvel movies was one of dozens of new millionaires to put their names to an open letter titled “In Tax We Trust”, which was first delivered to attendees at a virtual WEF conference in January.

“While the world has gone through an immense amount of suffering in the last two years, we have actually seen our wealth rise during the pandemic — yet few if any of us can honestly say that we pay our fair share in taxes,” the letter read.

The Patriotic Millionaires group said it had boosted the number of signatories to over 150 by May, from 100 in January.

Its chairman Morris Pearl, a former managing director at mammoth asset manager BlackRock, vowed in a statement to “continue to pressure global leaders to heed our call: tax the rich before it’s too late”.

But Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) secretary-general Mathias Cormann said that wealth taxes could be less effective than other revenue-raising options.

“They don’t necessarily raise that much revenue,” he told a panel discussion at Davos. 

“In terms of the politics of it, it’s attractive, but in terms of the substance of what it achieves it’s not that attractive.”

Cormann did suggest that “property taxes are probably the most efficient, least distorting” form of wealth tax.

“There’s huge scope in wealth taxation… it’s been tried and in some countries it works,” Oxfam executive director Gabriela Bucher responded.

“These amounts that are being accumulated. You could not spend them in several lifetimes”.

Cormann and the OECD are betting on a deal struck by over 130 countries last year to tax multinational companies at a minimum of 15 percent to boost revenue for hard-up governments.

Asked if Washington might walk back its commitment should Republicans win control of Congress at November mid-term elections, Cormann said that “it’s in the rational self-interest of the United States to be part of this deal”.

For companies, it’s “much better for them to be operating in a globally consistent framework” rather than navigate conflicting tax regimes, he added.

“I can’t imagine that any country or any side of politics in any country would make a judgement that would put themselves at that sort of disadvantage.”

UAE firm inks airport deal as Afghanistan eyes international flights

A United Arab Emirates company signed a contract with the Taliban authorities Tuesday to provide ground handling services at Afghanistan’s three airports, officials said, as the country seeks to resume international transit.

Capital Kabul’s only airport was trashed in August when tens of thousands of people rushed to evacuate as the US-led forces withdrew.

While some domestic and international flights are still operating out of the facility, it needs significant upgrades for major foreign airlines to restart full service.

The full operation of Kabul airport is crucial for reviving Afghanistan’s shattered economy.

But no country has yet formally recognised the Taliban government, with nations watching to see how the Islamists -– notorious for human rights abuses during their 1996-2001 stint in power -– will rule.

UAE firm GAAC, which was previously operating in Afghanistan, signed a new 18-month contract covering three airports: Kabul, Kandahar and Herat.

“The current contract is only for offering ground handling services,” Hameedullah Akhundzada, Minister of Transport and Civil Aviation said at a press conference.

GAAC has provided these services at Kabul airport since November 2020, and played a key role in rehabilitating the facility in August.

“We are not a new face here,” Ibrahim Morafi, regional director of GAAC, told AFP.

“But GAAC signing the new contract will give confidence to international airlines to resume flights to Afghanistan,” he said, without specifying when such flights — including from the UAE — were expected to resume.

A Qatar-Turkey consortium has been in talks with the aviation ministry for months over operating airports at Kabul, Kandahar, Herat, Mazar-i-Sharif and Khost.

But the talks snagged as the Taliban insisted its fighters will guard the facilities.

Qatar and Turkey want a say in managing security, at least at Kabul airport, experts tracking the negotiations say.

On Tuesday, Afghan officials refused to comment on whether the consortium was still open to operating the five airports.

GAAC officials also declined to comment on whether its new ground handling contract would be expanded into other services.

Currently, two Afghan airlines — Kam Air and Ariana Afghan — fly to Dubai, Doha, Islamabad, and Tehran from Kabul airport.

Iran’s Mahan Air also operates flights to Kabul. 

Barcelona recruits sheep, goats to fight wildfires

It’s a rustic scene — sheep and goats graze placidly while a shepherd keeps watch. But this is Barcelona’s biggest public park, not the countryside.

Since April, Barcelona city hall has employed 290 sheep and goats to munch undergrowth at the Collserola National Park on the outskirts of Spain’s second-largest city.

The aim of the pilot scheme is to reduce the risk of wildfires by clearing vegetation in an environmentally friendly way. It also helps educate the Mediterranean port city’s 1.6 million residents about the countryside.

“The biggest challenge is re-educating people about rural life,” said Daniel Sanchez, one of the shepherds, as he took the animals out to graze.

The 36-year-old moved to Barcelona from Sant Llorenc Savall, a town some 50 kilometres (30 miles) further inland, to look after the herd. He sleeps in a shed in the park near the sheep and goats.

The 8,200-hectare (20,262-acre) park is 22 times bigger than New York’s Central Park and eight times larger than the Bois de Boulogne in Paris.

Its viewing points offer sweeping vistas of Barcelona, and hiking trails make it popular with joggers, cyclists and people out for a walk.

“Every year it catches fire,” said Sergi Dominguez, a 52-year-old maintenance worker who was in the park walking his dog.

– ‘High risk of wildfires’ –

The sheep and goats “eat the scrub and that is the best thing that can happen”, added Dominguez, pointing to the dry vegetation. He said he hoped the flock would return next year.

The project ends in June. If it is deemed a success, the authorities may expand it to other green areas.

Ferran Paune, the biologist and livestock farming expert in charge of the project, said the area posed a “very high risk of wildfires”.

“We are in a Mediterranean zone. On top of that, it’s overcrowded, with many urban areas and people living in woodland,” he added.

“This natural park could burn completely in just eight hours, which could cause a very serious problem — people needing to be evacuated or being injured.”

The goats and sheep appear to have adapted “perfectly” to the urban park, Paune said.

But Sanchez, who gave up a career as a lighting technician a decade ago to become a shepherd, said he was “getting tired” of the city noise and the night-time light pollution.

“I think I hear a sheep screaming and then I realise it’s actually an ambulance siren,” he said.

“Or I want to listen to the herd and there’s a hospital helicopter coming in to land.”

Biden, Albanese swap jokes in first meeting

US President Joe Biden and Anthony Albanese swapped banter, reminiscences, and even sleeping advice in their first meeting since the Australian’s election win.

The light-hearted exchanges came as the two men met in Tokyo where they were attending the Quad summit —  a grouping that includes Australia, India, Japan and the United States.

Biden, who has deepened US ties with Australia as part of a strategy to contain China, called the US-Australian alliance “an anchor of stability and prosperity” in the Asia-Pacific.

According to a readout from the White House, their behind-doors discussions covered topics such as the AUKUS security pact between Australia, Britain and the United States, and efforts to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

In public exchanges, however, Biden opened by joking that his counterpart, elected just last weekend, has “been on the job a long time”.

He expressed admiration that Albanese decided to fly to Tokyo for the Quad meeting so soon after his election win, saying it showed Australia is “all-in” on the relationship.

Then, instead of the more typical good-luck wish to the newbie leader, Biden suggested good night.

“You were sworn in and got on a plane,” Biden said, admiringly.

So “if you fall asleep while you’re here, it’s OK, because I don’t know how you’re doing it. It’s really quite extraordinary — just getting off the campaign trail as well.”

Albanese showed no fatigue as he launched into his own banter.

Lauding how the two countries are “great friends”, he recalled visiting the United States many years ago as a “young fellow” on a State Department invitational programme to experience the country.

While on the trip, he conducted research into the diversity of US society, studying groups ranging from the National Rifle Association gun lobby to Planned Parenthood, which promotes abortion access.

It was, Albanese said to laughter, “the full kit and caboodle across the spectrum”.

“You’re a brave man,” exclaimed Biden, who has tried with varying success to battle against deepening right-left divisions in US society.

Albanese noted that he would host the next Quad summit in Australia in 2023, but said he hoped to be “visiting the US before then”.

Biden suggested they “work out a time sooner than later”.

Returning to his concerns over Albanese’s travel schedule, the US president quipped: “But you’re probably going to have to be home at some point.”

Albanese brings a centre-left government to Australia, his Labor party ending the era of polarising conservative leader Scott Morrison.

Under Morrison, Australia entered the AUKUS deal crafted by Biden, with a plan for Australia to acquire nuclear-powered submarines. However, Albanese’s strong focus on fighting climate change is likely to see his administration dovetail with the Biden White House on another key issue.

Stock markets retreat on weak global growth worries

Stock markets retreated Tuesday on renewed concerns over weak global growth, with a profit warning from the owner of Snapchat spooking investors and further shocking the tech sector.

It comes amid concerns over the impact of China’s Covid-19 restrictions on the world’s second-largest economy after the United States.

Monday’s strong Wall Street rally, where the Dow closed up two percent, did not carry over into Asian and European trading.

Snap, the parent of social media app Snapchat, saw its share price slump more than a quarter in futures trading ahead of Tuesday’s reopening of Wall Street.

“Snap provided a shock,” noted Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com.

The company “spooked the market with a macroeconomic warning that dented tech the most and pointed to earnings revisions that could drag the market lower for longer”, he added. 

The biggest faller in London Tuesday was however energy group SSE, whose share price dived around 10 percent on reports that the UK government may impose a windfall tax on excess profits enjoyed by electricity producers.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has so far indicated he does not want to impose such a tax on oil and gas producers despite them also earning vast sums as prices soar.

Johnson argues an exceptional levy on the likes of BP and Shell would harm their efforts to invest in greener fuels like solar and wind power.

In China, Beijing’s announcement Monday of a fresh raft of measures to stimulate the economy did little to calm investors’ nerves.

China’s economy has taken a hit from Beijing’s zero-Covid approach to the pandemic, which has resulted in lengthy lockdowns of major cities and mass testing of millions of people.

Prolonged virus lockdowns have constricted supply chains, dampened demand and stalled manufacturing.

Investment banks UBS Group and JPMorgan Chase have responded by cutting their China economic growth forecasts.

“The lingering restrictions and lack of clarity on an exit strategy from the current Covid policy will likely dampen corporate and consumer confidence and hinder the release of pent-up demand,” UBS economists including Tao Wang wrote in a research note.

Concerns over the Chinese economy and its impact on oil demand weighed on crude prices Tuesday.

– Key figures at around 1000 GMT –

London – FTSE 100: DOWN 0.3 percent at 7,488.05 points

Frankfurt – DAX: DOWN 0.8 percent at 14,056.39

Paris – CAC 40: DOWN 1.2 percent at 6,283.96

EURO STOXX 50: DOWN 1.1 percent at 3,669.62

Tokyo – Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.9 percent at 26,748.14 (close)

Hong Kong – Hang Seng Index: DOWN 1.8 percent at 20,112.10 (close)

Shanghai – Composite: DOWN 2.4 percent at 3,070.93 (close)

New York – Dow: UP 2.0 percent at 31,880.24 (close)

Euro/dollar: UP at $1.0711 from $1.0692 at 2030 GMT Monday

Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.2489 from $1.2587

Euro/pound: UP at 85.77 pence from 84.92 pence

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 127.32 yen from 127.90 yen 

Brent North Sea crude: DOWN 0.4 percent at $112.96 per barrel

West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 0.3 at $109.98 per barrel

Samsung commits $356 bn in investments with 80,000 new jobs

South Korean conglomerate Samsung Group on Tuesday unveiled a massive 450 trillion won ($356 billion) investment blueprint for the next five years aimed at making it a frontrunner in a wide range of sectors from semiconductors to biologics.

The new figure is an increase of more than a third over its investments spent over the past five years.

The tech giant is South Korea’s largest chaebol — the family-run conglomerates that dominate the economy — and its overall turnover is equivalent to a fifth of the national gross domestic product.

Samsung Electronics, its flagship subsidiary, is the world’s biggest smartphone maker. 

The investment plan would bring “long-term growth in strategic businesses and help strengthen the global industrial ecosystem of crucial technology”, Samsung said in a statement.

The 80,000 new jobs would be created “primarily in core businesses including semiconductors and biopharmaceuticals” through 2026.

It also noted the investment would “bring forward the mass production of chips based on the 3-nanometer process”, the latest technology to further shrink the size of semiconductors and boost computing power.

It will also invest heavily in biopharmaceuticals with its affiliates Samsung Biologics and Samsung Bioepis.

The new plan represents a 36 percent increase in investment over its total investments over the past five years. 

Of the 450 trillion won Samsung plans to spend over the next five years, it will commit 360 trillion won to South Korea.

– Biden visit –

The announcement comes after US President Joe Biden toured Samsung Electronics’ massive Pyeongtaek semiconductor factory on Friday, underscoring the South Korean giant’s role in securing global supply chains of microchips.

South Korea and the United States need to work to “keep our supply chains resilient, reliable and secure,” Biden said, calling semiconductors manufactured there as “a wonder of innovation” and crucial to the global economy.

Lee Jae-yong, the firm’s vice-chairman and the de facto leader of the wider Samsung conglomerate, escorted Biden and newly sworn-in South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol inside the assembly line, and introduced the two to an audience in English.

It was Lee’s highest-profile public appearance since his release on parole in August.

He had served more than half of a two-and-a-half-year sentence for bribery, embezzlement and other offences in connection with a corruption scandal that brought down ex-South Korean president Park Geun-hye.

Samsung employs about 20,000 people in the United States and work is under way to build a new semiconductor plant in Texas, scheduled to open in 2024.

The vast majority of the world’s most advanced microchips are made by just two companies — Samsung and Taiwan’s TSMC — both of which are running at full capacity to alleviate a global shortage.

Many major industrial powers such as the United States, Europe, China and Japan are scrambling to build semiconductor plants on their own soil to diversify supplies.

Samsung’s massive infrastructure promise comes two weeks after Yoon, a fiscal conservative and a vocal supporter of the chaebols, was sworn in as South Korea’s new president. 

“It’s a classic way of Korean companies to appeal to a new president,” Park Ju-gun, head of Leaders Index, a Seoul-based research institute, told Bloomberg News in reference to Samsung’s investment announcement. 

“Investors need to check whether the promised amount of investments are actually executed or not.” 

Google marks 15 years of Street View

Google celebrated on Tuesday 15 years since it kicked off its mammoth and hugely controversial effort to photograph streets in minute detail across the globe.

The panoramic images of Google Street View have slipped into daily life for millions — but during its early years it attracted countless court cases and howls of anguish from privacy campaigners.

The US tech giant is marking the anniversary by releasing a slew of new features, including an improved version of the “time travel” tool that allows users to see previous photos taken by Google’s cameras.

The firm also published lists of the most popular destinations for users — with Burj Khalifa in Dubai taking the top spot for buildings, followed by the Eiffel Tower and the Taj Mahal.

Google said Indonesia was the most popular country for Street View, ahead of the United States, Japan, Mexico and Brazil.

The Indonesian capital Jakarta was the most searched city, beating Tokyo, Mexico City, Sao Paolo and Buenos Aires.

The firm boasted in a blog post that it had collected 220 billion images and travelled more than 10 million miles since the first images were released of cities including San Francisco, New York and Miami.

It has since provided armchair travellers with panoramic views everywhere from the peak of Everest to the depths of the Great Barrier Reef.

But as Google expanded its reach, it drew widespread criticism and years of scrutiny from regulators in several European countries — large parts of Germany are still absent from the tool.

It has also faced several embarrassing moments when inadvertently capturing images of a private nature.

In 2013, the firm photographed a couple having sex next to their car on an otherwise deserted road in Australia, and the picture briefly made it onto the platform. 

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