ChartWater™ and Calgon Carbon Announce Referral Agreement

ChartWater’s AdEdge Center of Excellence and Calgon Carbon signed an agreement to partner in offering drinking water treatment systems to under-resourced, rural communities.

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, June 09, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ChartWater™ a division of Chart Industries, Inc. (“Chart”) (NYSE: GTLS), and Calgon Carbon Corporation (“Calgon Carbon”), a wholly owned subsidiary of Kuraray Co., Ltd. (TYO: 3405) (“Kuraray”), today formally announced an agreement signed in 2021 to jointly offer drinking water systems, using granular activated carbon, to under-resourced rural areas.

The terms of the Agreement allow Calgon Carbon to refer all communities in the United States requiring treatment of up to approximately 175 gallons per minute to ChartWater’s AdEdge Water Technologies (AdEdge ), who will source all related GAC from Calgon Carbon. While both companies will continue to provide water treatment solutions for all flow rates, the Agreement enables the Companies to combine their capabilities for solutions that will cost-effectively provide safe drinking water to communities.

According to the U.S. EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Act, there are over 140,000 small drinking water systems in the United States. Many of these systems face challenges in meeting ever-changing and stringent regulations around drinking water contamination, making it difficult to provide consistently safe drinking water to customers. The new Agreement offers these small systems access to AdEdge’s variety of equipment offerings as well as Calgon Carbon’s premium product line, FILTRASORB® GAC.

“We are excited to partner with Calgon Carbon to combine their decades of GAC experience with our experience providing complete, packaged treatment systems to municipalities around the United States,” said Chris Milligan, President of ChartWater™. “ChartWater’s AdEdge Center of Excellence provides solutions for municipal and industrial customers of all sizes. This relationship with Calgon Carbon will specifically strengthen our ability to serve smaller utilities with a world-class GAC solution for the removal of PFAS, TOC, disinfection byproducts, and any other contaminants that can be addressed with GAC.”

Since creating the first activated carbon products from bituminous coal in the 1940s, Calgon Carbon has been a pioneer in developing high performing granular activated carbon products for water purification.

“Calgon Carbon has provided GAC to hundreds of water suppliers for over 40 years, and we are enthusiastic about this Agreement,” said Nora Stockhausen, VP of the Drinking Water Solutions and Innovative Carbon Technologies business unit. “This collaboration allows our FILTRASORB® GAC to be more accessible to smaller utilities through AdEdge’s reach in this market and we’re proud to work together to provide clean, safe drinking water to more Americans.”

About Chart Industries, Inc.

Chart Industries, Inc. is a leading independent global manufacturer of highly engineered equipment servicing multiple applications in the Energy and Industrial Gas markets.  Our unique product portfolio is used in every phase of the liquid gas supply chain, including upfront engineering, service and repair.  Being at the forefront of the clean energy transition, Chart is a leading provider of technology, equipment and services related to liquefied natural gas, hydrogen, biogas and CO2 Capture amongst other applications. We are committed to excellence in environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) issues both for our company as well as our customers.  With over 25 global locations from the United States to Asia, Australia, India, Europe and South America, we maintain accountability and transparency to our team members, suppliers, customers and communities.  To learn more, visit www.chartindustries.com.

About ChartWaterTM

ChartWater™, a division of Chart Industries, is a global manufacturer and service provider of engineered solutions for municipal water treatment and industrial process applications. Its portfolio of proven products, processes, and engineering expertise provides customers with single-point responsibility for complete solutions that enable water professionals to achieve their objectives with the lowest combination of risk and costs while driving enhanced outcomes for people, communities, and the planet. For more information, visit www.chartindustries.com/products/water-treatment

About AdEdge Water Technologies

Founded in 2002 and headquartered just north of Atlanta, Georgia, USA, AdEdge Water Technologies, LLC is a leading provider of advanced water treatment technologies and systems serving municipal, residential and industrial applications nationally and overseas for flow rates up to 15 MGD. AdEdge manufacturers fully integrated and custom water treatment systems to remove over twenty different contaminants from water, including arsenic, iron, manganese, fluoride, PFAS, TOC, and radionuclides. AdEdge also offers an ultra-high recovery reverse osmosis membrane solution for removal of TDS and multiple contaminants, using ROTEC’s Flow Reversal Reverse Osmosis. AdEdge was acquired by Chart Industries in August of 2021 as a ChartWater Center of Excellence. For more information, visit www.adedgetech.com.

About Calgon Carbon 

Calgon Carbon, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Kuraray Co., Ltd. (TYO: 3405) (Kuraray), is a global leader in the manufacture and/or distribution of innovative coal-, wood- and coconut-based activated carbon products – in granular, powdered, pelletized and cloth form – to meet the most challenging purification demands of customers throughout the world. Calgon Carbon provides purification solutions for more than 700 distinct applications, including drinking water, wastewater, pollution abatement, and a variety of industrial and commercial manufacturing processes. Headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Calgon Carbon employs approximately 1640 people and operates 20 manufacturing, reactivation, innovation and equipment fabrication facilities in the U.S., Asia, and in Europe, where Calgon Carbon is known as Chemviron. Calgon Carbon was acquired by Kuraray in March of 2018.  With complementary products and services, the combined organization will continue to focus on providing the highest quality and most innovative activated carbon and filtration media products, equipment, and services to meet 

Amanda Lofty
Calgon Carbon Corporation
724-541-2658
amanda.lofty@kuraray.com

La série de réunions du groupe de travail sur la santé du G20 en Indonésie exhorte les dirigeants du monde à se préparer à de futures pandémies

LOMBOK, Indonésie, 9 juin 2022/PRNewswire/ — La deuxième réunion du groupe de travail sur la santé (HWG) du G20 a réuni des dirigeants du monde pour lancer un nouveau fonds mondial d’urgence pour les futures pandémies et a mis l’accent sur la nécessité de mieux partager les données de séquençage génomique, ainsi que sur le fonctionnement du Fonds intermédiaire de financement (FIF) sous l’égide de la Banque mondiale pour se préparer aux futures pandémies.

Ministry of Health Republic of Indonesia discussed the Global Health System Resilience in the second Health Working Group (2nd HWG)

Le ministre de la Santé indonésien, Budi Gunadi Sadikin, a encouragé les États membres du G20 à ne pas laisser la pandémie progresser sans en tirer de précieuses leçons.

« Ce n’est que par de grands tremblements de terre que s’élèvent de hautes montagnes. Je crois que c’est vrai, non seulement pour les volcans, mais aussi pour notre humanité. Chaque crise crée de grandes occasions », a-t-il déclaré à Lombok, aux Petites îles de la Sonde occidentales, en Indonésie.

Les principales questions abordées lors de la réunion qui s’est déroulée du 6 au 8 juin 2022 avaient trait à la mobilisation de ressources financières pour les futures interventions en cas de pandémie.

Les États membres du G20 ont discuté des leçons à tirer des succès des initiatives de contre-mesures médicales, telles que COVAX et les accélérateurs ACT qui ont fonctionné efficacement pendant la pandémie pour introduire les vaccins, les traitements et les diagnostics.

Le G20 et ses partenaires, tels que le GISAID, cherchent désormais à optimiser la surveillance génomique et le partage de données fiables pour permettre au monde d’identifier rapidement de nouveaux pathogènes qui pourraient représenter de nouvelles menaces pour la sécurité sanitaire mondiale.

« Nous avons besoin d’une plateforme de coordination plus permanente qui puisse traiter les cinq points essentiels que sont l’accès aux contre-mesures, la coordination d’urgence, le renseignement collaboratif, la protection communautaire et les soins cliniques aux patients dans le besoin », a déclaré le ministre de la Santé.

L’Indonésie s’est engagée à verser 50 millions de dollars américains au FIF. Dans le cadre de son mandat à la présidence du G20, l’Indonésie exercera également des pressions sur les organisations et les donateurs pour s’assurer que le fonds profite aux pays cibles identifiés afin de prévenir les conflits d’intérêts avec les donateurs et les organisations.

Le docteur Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Secrétaire général de l’OMS, a été félicité par la présidence indonésienne pour avoir donné la priorité à l’établissement d’une architecture d’un système de santé mondial et l’avoir mis à l’ordre du jour du G20.

« Nous devons tirer les leçons de cette pandémie, car ce ne sera pas la dernière », a déclaré le docteur Tedros.

Pour visionner la cérémonie d’ouverture de la plénière du groupe de travail sur la santé et la conférence de presse, consultez  https://www.youtube.com/c/KementerianKesehatanRI.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1835386/52125930441_50fc2d3444_6k.jpg

Internal Tensions Resolved in Pacific’s Main Political Forum

Pacific Island leaders have agreed a deal that should prevent the region’s main body from falling apart because of tensions between members. Australia – a key regional power – has said the Pacific Islands Forum is the “architecture” allowing the region to manage “both internal and external issues.”

The Pacific Islands Forum includes 18 members. It spans the three cultural and geographic groups of Micronesia, Melanesia and Polynesia, as well as Australia and New Zealand. Some states have diplomatic ties with Taiwan while others recognize China.

Founded in 1971, the forum was at risk of splintering over a leadership row that began last year, as both China and Australia intensify their diplomatic presence in the Pacific. Micronesia was angry that its candidate for the organization’s secretary-generalship, Marshall Islands Ambassador to Washington and former Foreign Minister Gerald Zackios, was overlooked in favor of former Cook Islands Prime Minister Henry Puna.

Those antagonisms appear to have been resolved following a meeting this week of officials from Fiji, Samoa, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Palau and Marshall Islands. They agreed to reforms that need to be ratified by all members of the forum at its next meeting.

On a recent trip to the region, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi failed to reach a sweeping trade and security pact with 10 Island nations because of concerns the process had been rushed. Some leaders called for the proposed accord to be debated by the Pacific Islands Forum.

Speaking to Radio New Zealand, Anna Powles, a senior lecturer in security studies at Massey University, said the diplomatic expertise of Pacific leaders should not be underestimated.

“Minister Wang’s visit really demonstrated both the depth of relationships that China has bilaterally, but also the overreach and over-confidence with respect to its efforts to engage at the multilateral level,” said Powles. “This demonstrated the astuteness of Pacific statecraft, the way in which Pacific states are leveraging geopolitical interests in the region.”

Wang did sign individual accords with several island nations in the region during his recent trip, including Kiribati and Samoa.

Earlier this year, Beijing signed a security agreement with Solomon Islands, northeast of Australia, to boost the response to natural disasters and to enhance internal law enforcement in a Melanesian archipelago with a history of violent unrest.

Australia and its allies are worried the accord will eventually allow China to establish a strategic military foothold in the region.

In response, the recently elected center-left government in Canberra immediately intensified its diplomatic efforts in the region after the May 21 vote, promising more action on climate change, security and aid.

Analysts believe that the feeling within the Pacific Islands Forum’s 18 members is that the soothing of internal tensions will make the grouping stronger and more unified to carefully consider China’s ambitions and Australia’s promises of more action on climate change.

Source: Voice of America

DRC-Rwanda crisis: DRC accuses Rwanda of sending disguised soldiers across border

KINSHASA— The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have accused Rwanda of sending special forces in disguise into the country’s territory, marking the latest flashpoint in an escalating dispute between the two neighbors over resurgent violence in its east.

DRC’s military alleged that 500 Rwandan soldiers had been deployed in the Tshanzu area in North Kivu province, which borders Rwanda, in a statement issued on Thursday.

It said the soldiers were wearing a green-black uniform different from the regular Rwandan apparel. The statement also called on the local population to exercise caution as well as denounce anyone seen in such clothing.

It added that M23 rebels, allegedly backed by Kigali, had attacked a group of United Nations peacekeeping forces in the Rutshuru area, also in North Kivu, injuring three Tanzanian peacekeepers.

A spokesman for Rwanda’s army said the claims were false while a government spokeswoman said that Kigali would not respond to baseless accusations.

Kinshasa has accused Kigali of actively supporting the M23 rebel group, which in recent weeks has been waging its most sustained offensive in eastern DRC since capturing vast swaths of territory there in 2012-13.

“Today, it’s clear, there is no doubt, Rwanda has supported the M23 to come and attack the DRC”, President Felix Tshisekedi said on Sunday on state television.

The M23 is the latest in a series of ethnic Tutsi-led rebel groups to rise up against DRC forces, claiming to defend Tutsi interests against ethnic Hutu armed groups.

Rwanda has denied this and in turn accused DRC’s army of firing into its own territory and of fighting alongside the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), an armed group run by ethnic Hutus who fled Rwanda and are alleged to have been involved in the country’s 1994 genocide.

The simmering dispute has caused relations between the two states to sour. At the end of May, hundreds of Congolese attended an anti-Rwanda protest in Kinshasa.

Meanwhile, the latest fighting in eastern DRC has forced tens of thousands to flee their homes in a region that has had little respite from war since Rwanda and Uganda invaded in 1996, citing threats from local rebel groups.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

In Shanghai, Bleak Mood Lingers Beyond Lockdown’s End

“I used to have normal emotions and feelings, but (the government) locked me at home for two months and took away my happiness.”

So said Coco, a Shanghai resident who asked that VOA Mandarin not use her name to let her discuss freely an issue of concern to many of the 26 million people in China’s most populous city: their mental health, a subject often dismissed in China.

A building and construction materials seller, Coco said she remains constrained by pessimism and painful memories of more than 70 days in a draconian lockdown that local authorities imposed to comply with China’s zero-COVID containment policy.

Days after most of Shanghai reopened on June 1, Coco told VOA Mandarin that even though most residents can leave their homes, she doesn’t want to. Rather than adapting to life after reopening, Coco said she’s more concerned about dealing with her feelings of despair, resentment and even suicide that plagued her during lockdown.

Ever since the first 76-day-long lockdown began in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the coronavirus was first detected in humans in late 2019, psychologists have studied the mental health impact of prolonged periods of mandated isolation.

Now, the sophisticated financial hub of Shanghai faces serious post-lockdown mental health concerns even as authorities announced they would be locking down several of the city’s 16 districts on Saturday to conduct mass testing this weekend because new cases have emerged, Zhao Dandan, deputy head of the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, said at a news conference Thursday, according to CNN.

Psychological worries

The city began accepting professional psychological counseling as an element of health care in the 1990s and was the first metropolis in China to provide psychological assistance via telephone hotlines, according to Sanlian Life Weekly.

Then, as Shanghai authorities began locking down the city on March 28, and quickly sealed off all of it, “The number of calls to our psychological hotline in April almost tripled from the 3,000 calls in a single month in the past, and 80% of them were related to the epidemic,” said Qiu Jianlin, director of the psychological counseling and treatment outpatient department at the Shanghai Mental Health Center, speaking to the state-affiliated China News.

The first callers expressed worries about obtaining food and adapting to the sudden lockdown. But as April progressed, callers described more acute mental challenges. Consultants who staffed some 30 hotlines described the work as “battlefield hemostasis.”

“The situation is critical, the conditions are simple, and the situation is severe,” according to Sanlian Life Weekly.

In a survey of 1,021 Shanghai residents conducted April 12 and 13 by Data Humanism, a Chinese blog, more than 40% of respondents experienced depression during the lockdown.

“Nobody was unaffected,” said George Hu, president of the Shanghai International Mental Health Association, told NBC News.

Hu, who is also chair of mental health at United Family Pudong Hospital, added that “a lockdown of this scale is virtually unprecedented in the world.”

‘No one knows what will happen next’

For many middle-class Shanghai residents, Hu said the lockdown tore “the rug out from under you, because a person learns to navigate the world from a secure base, believing the reality they know is trustworthy and reliable. The lockdown has caused some to question that now.”

Residents struggled with feelings of hopelessness, anger and frustration while isolated, and for many, those feelings continue post-lockdown, in part because local authorities continue to require repeated nucleic acid tests. To enter public areas or board public transit, residents must hold a certificate of a negative test within the last 72 hours.

Victor, a financial professional in his 40s who lives in Shanghai’s Pudong District, told VOA Mandarin the testing regime reminds residents they are still not fully free from lockdown restrictions. He asked that his full name not be used so he could speak on a sensitive topic without fear of official reprisal.

“We have to do nucleic acid testing every 72 hours. … Basically, it takes the government half a day to get the nucleic acid report, so, we have to do nucleic acid testing every two-and-a-half days,” Victor said.

Coupled with inconveniences such as shops that remain closed, Victor said he’s constantly reminded that life has yet to return to normal. Because of these disruptions, he said, he’s far from alone in being in a bad mood.

Most people Victor knows in Shanghai are feeling anxious about their future because the lockdown slammed the economy of Shanghai, where Volkswagen’s joint venture with SAIC Motor and U.S. automaker Tesla have manufacturing sites. He said that his friends are leaving Mo Du, or the Magic City, as Shanghai is known.

“Most of the people who choose to leave are young people around 30 years old and those just graduated. … Once these young people leave, Shanghai’s economy will collapse, and everyone will be worried,” Victor said.

Ying Miao, a lecturer in the politics department of Aston University in Birmingham, England, said some middle-class Shanghai residents were preparing to “flee.”

She told VOA Mandarin, “Shanghai is one of the most cutting-edge and open cities in China. At the beginning of this outbreak, many people thought ‘this cannot happen in Shanghai,’ but the reality has proved them too optimistic. Now, the new hot word on social media is ‘run.’ The middle class in Shanghai chooses to vote with their feet.”

Yet Miao also detailed another middle-class response in Shanghai, as “some people seek more resources and more stable backers. For example, we recently saw there are more young people taking the civil service exams and trying to enter the civil service system than in previous years.”

According to recent statistics, for the competitive Chinese national civil service exam, the number of applicants for the exam this year has exceeded 2.12 million, a record high. Only 1.4% of them obtain jobs.

“The biggest impact of Shanghai’s lockdown is that the public realized that the government’s confidence in its system with dealing with the pandemic in the past two years can’t be trusted. … No one knows what’s going to happen next. People just have to live in a different situation — the normalized abnormality,” Miao said.

In addition to worrying about the economic prospects, some Shanghai residents are also uncomfortable with returning to normal life.

“I may (need) to relax for half a month, and I need a ladder to step back from the thoughts of worry, anxiety, anger and suicide and go to a calm, normal state. I still feel that I don’t really want to talk,” said Coco, the construction and building materials seller.

Miao said that as most people gradually adapt to their new lives, many may remain worried about the future, adding the lockdown was “a huge collective mental trauma that will challenge the sense of security and wealth of the middle class in the city.”

Source: Voice of America

Japan’s Kishida Vows Expanded Security Role in Asia

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida unveiled a plan to enhance the country’s military capability and assist Southeast Asian countries with maritime security during his Friday keynote address in Singapore before the Shangri-La Dialogue, Asia’s premier security summit.

“Ukraine may be East Asia tomorrow,” he said, suggesting the Taiwan issue could pose an imminent threat to peace across East Asia. Kishida then made it clear that typically dovish Tokyo is planning to acquire counterstrike weapons to defend against potential attacks.

“The Kishida Vision for Peace will strengthen Japan’s diplomacy and security,” he said, reiterating a commitment Tokyo made earlier this week to drastically increase defense spending over the next five years, including aid packages earmarked for supplying Southeast Asian countries with patrol boats. Several of those countries have rival claims against China over parts of the South China Sea.

China’s state-run Global Times news outlet criticized the Japanese initiative in an opinion piece published just hours before Kishida’s speech. “Japan uses the pretext of ‘preventing a crisis like the Russia-Ukraine crisis from happening in Asia’ to legitimize its move to collude with NATO and convince regional countries to serve its goal of targeting China,” it said.

The Japanese leader also expressed concern over North Korea, which has carried out at least 18 rounds of weapons tests this year to showcase its evolving nuclear and missile arsenals. He also expressed disappointment that the U.N. Security Council had failed to act against Pyongyang because of the ability of members to veto resolutions.

There is a strong debate in Japan about allocating 2% of the national budget for military expenditure. Analysts see the move as an attempt by Tokyo to come out of the shadow of the U.S. after having kept away from military spending since the end of World War II.

Source: Voice of America