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BGRIM’s VN solar venture financing gets green certification, A further recognition of clean energy pathway

The US$160.5 million financing of B.Grimm Power PCL (BGRIM)’s Dau Tieng solar farm project in Vietnam has been certified as a “green” borrowing by an independent international environmental agency.

Being awarded the Green Loan Certificate under the Climate Bonds Initiative (CBI) on 1 October 2021 connotes the eco-friendly nature of the 240-megawatt solar energy scheme.

The certificate was given to Dau Tieng Tay Ninh Energy Joint Stock Company, a BGRIM subsidiary, after a syndicated loan for the amount was finalised on 31 August 2021.

The financing comprises a $32.5 million loan directly funded by ADB and the Leading Asia’s Private Infrastructure Fund (LEAP), a $128 million syndicated loan (B loan) funded by commercial banks, including Bangkok Bank, Kasikorn Bank, Kiatnakin Phatra Bank, ICBC (Thai) and Standard Chartered Bank (Thai).

Dau Tieng is BGRIM’s second green loan of large-scale solar farm in Vietnam, after the 257-MW Phu Yen TTP facility in Phu Yen province, that gained the green loan recognition.

The Phu Yen TTP solar farm, which is operated by Phu Yen TTP Joint Stock Company that is owned 80% by BGRIM, is funded by a $183 million loan that received the CBI credential at the end of 2020, becoming the first green lending extended to Vietnam.

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These certificates underpin BGRIM’s potential in developing projects that contribute to environmental and climate protection, said Dr Harald Link, Chairman and President of BGRIM.

“BGRIM is committed to expanding its business with sustainability under the principles of good governance and responsible value chain management. We pursue our business by taking into account the impacts in various dimensions including economy, society and environment through the clean energy development,” said Dr. Link.

“BGRIM’s investment in renewable energy ventures in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Lao PDR and many other countries are testimonial to its contribution in reducing global warming and taking care of the environment in a sustainable way according to the company’s long-standing philosophy of ‘Doing business with compassion for the development of civilization in harmony with Nature” that spans over 143 years in B.Grimm’s history,” Dr Link concluded.    

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EARN, EAT & ENJOY WITH MARRIOTT BONVOY ALL ACROSS THAILAND!

Marriott Bonvoy unveils a food-focused domestic vacation this winter, free breakfast, generous credit and bonus points at hotels and resorts in many of the Kingdom’s most desirable destinations

15 October 2021, Bangkok, ThailandWhich part of your vacation do you look forward to the most? In Thailand, many of life’s most magical and memorable moments revolve around food, friends and family.

To celebrate the twin pleasures of travel and gastronomy in Thailand this winter, Marriott Bonvoy has unveiled “Earn, Eat, Enjoy”, a rewarding new promotion that gives local residents the chance to experience exceptional hotel stays including daily breakfast and up to THB 2,000 of hotel credit, in a wide range of desirable destinations all across the Kingdom.

Marriott Bonvoy members will also be treated to complimentary Wi-Fi and bonus points on every stay! Not a member yet? CLICK HERE to sign-up for free! 

This winter is a wonderful time of year to travel in Thailand.  Whether you’re seeking a blissful beachfront break, a relaxing upcountry retreat, a fun-filled family holiday or a stylish staycation in the city, every guest can “Earn, Eat, Enjoy” with Marriott Bonvoy.image3 4

“In Thailand, two of the most cherished parts of life are family and food. The chance to come together with loved ones and share a meal is truly precious. With Earn, Eat & Enjoy we want to reward our Thai customers by giving them the opportunity to reconnect with their friends and relatives.  Every vacation will be enriched with bonus points and dining experiences in their destination-of-choice, creating memories that will be treasured forever,” said Jakob Helgen, Area Vice President – Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia & Myanmar, Marriott International.  

Having kick-started each morning with a bountiful breakfast at the hotel’s restaurant, guests can spend care-free days exploring the local area or indulging in the comfort of first-class facilities, such as shimmering swimming pools and soothing spas. The hotel credit can be redeemed for refreshing drinks around the pool, daytime bites, sunset cocktails, evening dinners and weekend brunches, or alternatively for wellness treatments, room upgrades and more! 

Every guest can rest assured that their stay will be completely safe and secure. The Marriott Cleanliness Council is redefining hygiene in hotels and resorts worldwide, with a wide range of advanced health and safety protocols, including intensive cleaning procedures. All Marriott International hotels have been certified by the Amazing Thailand Safety & Health Administration (SHA).

“Earn, Eat, Enjoy” is valid for bookings made from 15 October to 31 December 2021, for stays taken before 31 March 2022. To learn more and book your gastronomic getaway in Thailand with Marriott Bonvoy, please visit https://hotel-deals.marriott.com/thailand/ .image2 5

The following hotels and resorts are taking part in the “Eat, Earn, Enjoy” promotion:

  1. Aloft Bangkok Sukhumvit 11
  2. Marriott Executive Apartments Bangkok, Sukhumvit Thonglor
  3. Renaissance Bangkok Ratchaprasong Hotel
  4. Courtyard by Marriott Bangkok
  5. Le Méridien Bangkok
  6. JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok
  7. Marriott Executive Apartments Sathorn Vista
  8. Marriott Executive Apartments Mayfair
  9. The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  10. Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  11. Bangkok Marriott Sukhumvit
  12. Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park
  13. Rayong Marriott Resort & Spa
  14. Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel & Towers
  15. Sukhumvit Park, Bangkok – Marriott Executive Apartments
  16. W Bangkok
  17. Westin Grande Sukhumvit Bangkok
  18. Bangkok Marriott Hotel The Surawongse
  19. The St. Regis Bangkok
  20. Le Méridien Chiang Rai Resort
  21. Le Méridien Chiang Mai
  22. Hua Hin Marriott Resort & Spa
  23. Sheraton Hua Hin Pranburi Villas
  24. Sheraton Hua Hin Resort & Spa
  25. Renaissance Phuket Resort & Spa
  26. Four Points by Sheraton Phuket Patong Beach
  27. JW Marriott Phuket Resort & Spa
  28. JW Marriott Khao Lak Resort & Spa
  29. Phuket Marriott Resort & Spa, Merlin Beach
  30. Le Méridien Phuket Beach Resort
  31. Le Méridien Khao Lak Resort & Spa
  32. Phuket Marriott Resort and Spa, Nai Yang Beach
  33. Westin Siray Bay Resort & Spa Phuket
  34. Phulay Bay, A Ritz-Carlton Reserve, Krabi
  35. Renaissance Pattaya Resort & Spa
  36. The Naka Island, a Luxury Collection Resort & Spa, Phuket
  37. Renaissance Koh Samui Resort & Spa
  38. The Ritz Carlton, Koh Samui
  39. Sheraton Samui Resort
  40. Vana Belle, a Luxury Collection Resort, Koh Samui
  41. W Koh Samui
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Envoy Aborts Visit to Myanmar, Straining ASEAN Relations

In this May 5, 2021, file photo, Brunei Second Minister of Foreign affairs Erywan Yusof poses for photographers ahead of a meeting on the sidelines of a G7 foreign ministers' meeting, in London. Photo: Adrian Dennis / Pool Photo via AP

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar’s military-installed government said Thursday that a special envoy appointed by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations abruptly canceled his visit this week after it told him he would not be able to meet with ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi and others he had proposed.

The visit’s cancellation is likely to have fueled sentiment among some members of the 10-nation regional body, known as ASEAN, to punish Myanmar for hindering the envoy’s work. Malaysia had already proposed that Myanmar’s leader, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, not be allowed to attend an ASEAN summit later this month.

A hastily scheduled virtual meeting of ASEAN foreign ministers will consider the issue on Friday night, said two Southeast Asian diplomats, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to release such information.

Myanmar had agreed to allow this week’s visit by the special envoy, Brunei Second Foreign Minister Erywan Yusof, but he canceled after being informed by his hosts that he would not be able to meet all those he wanted to, said a statement issued by Myanmar’s foreign ministry.

The statement did not mention whom Erywan sought to meet, but he said last month that it included Aung San Suu Kyi. Her elected government was ousted by the military in February, precipitating widespread and volatile popular opposition.

Myanmar military spokesman Maj.-Gen. Zaw Min Tun had previously explained that Erywan could not meet with Suu Kyi because of the criminal charges against her.

“As Myanmar has been prioritizing peace and tranquility in the country, some requests which go beyond the permission of existing laws will be difficult to be accommodated,” the foreign ministry statement said.

It said it “has already accommodated its best to the proposals of special envoy to enable his visit to Myanmar.”

ASEAN foreign ministers in August appointed Erywan as their envoy to help mediate an end to Myanmar’s crisis. Even before his scheduled trip, some ASEAN members had become frustrated at the perceived lack of cooperation from Myanmar’s government.

Suu Kyi has been in detention since the army takeover, and is currently being tried on several charges that her supporters and independent analysts say are contrived and an attempt to legitimize the military’s seizure of power.

ASEAN is hamstrung by its bedrock policy of noninterference in the domestic affairs of member nations and by its consensus decision making, meaning just one member state can shoot down any proposal. But some members feel action is justified because major unrest in Myanmar could trigger regional instability.

ASEAN leaders at a special meeting in April issued a statement expressing a “five-point consensus” on Myanmar’s crisis. It called for the immediate cessation of violence, a dialogue among all concerned parties, mediation by an ASEAN special envoy, provision of humanitarian aid through ASEAN channels, and a visit to Myanmar by the special envoy to meet all concerned parties.

Myanmar, an ASEAN member, is widely seen as doing very little to honor its commitments, though it claims to have helped facilitate humanitarian assistance.

Story: Grant Peck

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Myanmar Bars Suu Kyi’s Lawyer From Talking About Her Cases

In this May 24, 2021, file photo, Khin Maung Zaw, a lawyer assigned by the National League for Democracy party to represent deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi, speaks to journalists in Naypyitaw, Myanmar. Photo: AP

BANGKOK (AP) — The main lawyer for Myanmar’s ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who is being tried on multiple criminal charges, said late Thursday he has been issued a gag order barring him from talking about her cases.

Lawyer Khin Maung Zaw wrote on his Facebook page that the action against him was taken under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, a broadly worded statute from British colonial times intended to deal with emergency situations that threaten public safety.

“My mouth is under 144,“ is how he explained his situation. The law is normally used to to restrict public gatherings and impose curfews, and has been employed that way by the military after it ousted Suu Kyi’s elected government in February.

Kyi Win, another lawyer on Suu Kyi’s legal team, told The Associated Press that the township office in the capital Naypyitaw, where Suu Kyi is being tried, summoned Khin Maung Zaw to have him sign an undertaking not to reveal information to the media.

News of the gag order circulated late Thursday night, when government officials could not be contacted for comment.

The practical effect of the order will be to choke off almost any firsthand accounts of the ongoing trials in which Suu Kyi and her co-defendants are involved.

The only accounts of the proceedings have come from the lawyers defending her and her co-defendants. The court sessions are closed to reporters and the public, the prosecutors do not comment on them, and the state-controlled media so far have not reported directly on them.

“The military council now is blocking one lawyer after another,” Kyi Win said, referring to the ruling junta. “We do not know what will happen next.”

In August, San Mar La Nyunt, another of Suu Kyi’s lawyers, was also forced to agree to a gag order banning her from speaking to the media.

Suu Kyi’s supporters and independent analysts say the charges against her are concocted to discredit her and legitimize the military’s seizure of power. The most serious charges are corruption, for which each count is punishable by up to 15 years in prison, and violating the Official Secrets Act, which carries a maximum term of 14 years.

Suu Kyi’s co-defendants in the secrets case are three of her former Cabinet ministers and Sean Turnell, an Australian economist who served as her adviser.

Turnell’s lawyer, Ye Lin Aung, said the court in Naypyitaw handling the case agreed in principle on Thursday to allow an interpreter at the upcoming trial, reversing its own ruling of a week earlier, when it had denied one for what it said were security reasons.

The exact details of Turnell’s alleged offense and those of the others have not been made public, though Myanmar state television, citing government statements, has said the Australian academic had access to “secret state financial information” and had tried to flee the country.

Story: Grant Peck

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Moderna Vaccines Will Arrive in November, Firm Says

In this file photo dated Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2020, a bottle of Moderna COVID-19 vaccine on a table before being utilised in Topeka, USA. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, FILE)

BANGKOK — The longest pre-order of your life may soon be over: Moderna’s mRNA vaccine will start arriving in Thailand by November following months of delay, a distributor representative said.

Zuellig Pharma, the company responsible for distribution of the Moderna vaccine, said the doses will arrive in weekly shipments, starting in November. The firm did not give any precise date. Despite previous pledges, the Moderna vaccines failed to be delivered to Thailand this month, a cause of frustration for many Thais who already pre-ordered the vaccines from private hospitals and clinics.

Speaking to the press, ZP Therapeutics Zuellig Pharma Thailand’s general manager apologized for the long wait and said they did everything in their power to get the vaccines into the country as fast as possible.

The general manager cited a rush of overwhelming demand, production delays and legal complication for the delay in vaccine deliveries. Zuellig Pharma was working with Moderna to find more production sources to speed up manufacturing and had looked for sources in Europe and the United States, the manager said.

Now they expect between 100,000 and 300,000 Moderna vaccines to be delivered to Thailand every week starting next month. The weekly shipments will continue until Zuellig Pharma delivers 1.9 million Moderna vaccines by the end of the fourth quarter of 2021, according to the company.

The finalised dates for each shipment are expected to be confirmed only 1 to 2 weeks before the delivery is received, the manager said, adding that the procedure is the same in every country that receives vaccine shipments from Moderna.

Moderna was approved by health authorities in July as an “alternative” vaccine that private hospitals and clinics can sell to customers. The sales typically come with a no-refund clause.

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US Nursing Schools See Applications Rise, Despite COVID Burnout

First year nursing student, Emma Champlin, poses for a photo in her clinical laboratory class at Fresno State on Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2021, in Fresno, Calif. (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)

STORRS, Conn. (AP) — Nurses around the U.S. are getting burned out by the COVID-19 crisis and quitting, yet applications to nursing schools are rising, driven by what educators say are young people who see the global emergency as an opportunity and a challenge.

Among them is University of Connecticut sophomore Brianna Monte, a 19-year-old from Mahopac, New York, who had been considering majoring in education but decided on nursing after watching nurses care for her 84-year-grandmother, who was diagnosed last year with COVID-19 and also had cancer.

“They were switching out their protective gear in between every patient, running like crazy trying to make sure all of their patients were attended to,” she said. “I had that moment of clarity that made me want to jump right in to health care and join the workers on the front line.”

Nationally, enrollment in bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral nursing programs increased 5.6% in 2020 from the year before to just over 250,000 students, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.

Figures for the current 2021-22 school year won’t be available until January, but administrators say they have continued to see a spike in interest.

The University of Michigan nursing school reported getting about 1,800 applications for 150 freshman slots this fall, compared with about 1,200 in 2019.

Marie Nolan, executive vice dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing in Baltimore, said it has seen its biggest number of applicants ever, many of them applying even before a vaccine was available, despite her worries that COVID-19 would scare off students.

Students at those and other schools have been able to gain valuable hands-on experience during the pandemic, doing COVID-19 testing and contact tracing and working at community vaccination clinics.

“We’ve said to the students, ‘This is a career opportunity that you’ll never see again,’” Nolan said.

Emma Champlin, a first-year nursing student at Fresno State, said that like many of her classmates, she saw the pandemic as a chance to learn critical-care skills and then apply them. And she is young and her immune system is fine, she said, “so the idea of getting the virus didn’t scare me.”

“It’s just time for us to step in and give it our all and figure out how we can help, because there has to be a new generation and that’s got to be us,” the 21-year-old said.

The higher enrollment could help ease a nursing shortage that existed even before COVID-19. But it has brought its own problems: The increase, combined with the departure of too many experienced nurses whose job is to help train students, has left many nursing programs without the ability to expand.

The rise is happening even as hospital leaders around the U.S. report that thousands of nurses have quit or retired during the outbreak, many of them exhausted and demoralized because of the pressure of caring for the dying, hostility from patients and families, and the frustration in knowing that many deaths were preventable by way of masks and vaccinations.

Eric Kumor saw many of his nursing colleagues from a COVID-19 unit in Lansing, Michigan, transfer or take other jobs this past spring when the pandemic’s third wave began to hit. He followed them out the door in July.

“It was like this mass exodus. Everybody chose their own health and wellness over dealing with another wave,” he said.

He said he plans on returning to health care someday, but for now is working at a barbecue joint, where the worst thing that can happen is “burning a brisket.”

“I’m not done with nursing yet,” he said.

Betty Jo Rocchio, chief nursing officer for Mercy Health, which runs hospitals and clinics in Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas and Oklahoma, said her system has about 8,500 nurses but is losing about 160 each month.

The departures are also taking their toll on nursing education, which relies on clinical instructors and preceptors, the experienced, hands-on nurses who mentor students on the job.

Nursing faculty is expected to shrink by 25% by 2025 across the country as nurses retire or leave because of burnout or other reasons, said Patricia Hurn, the nursing school dean at Michigan.

Mindy Schiebler, a cardiac nurse from Vancouver, Washington, taught nursing students for three years before quitting in 2016. She said she would love to still be teaching but that it’s not workable financially. She said she knows nursing professors who work multiple jobs or dip into their retirement savings.

“How long can you subsidize your own job?” she asked. “Nurses will make double what you make in just a few years out of the gate.”

Administrators said they would like to see more financial incentives such as tax breaks for instructors and preceptors. Rocchio said it would also help to have national licensing instead of state-by-state requirements, giving health systems more flexibility in training and hiring.

Champlin, the Fresno State student now doing clinical studies in a COVID-19 ward, said the stress, even on students, is sometimes overwhelming. It’s physically and mentally tiring to don cumbersome protective equipment every time you enter someone’s room and then watch as a tube is inserted down the frightened patient’s throat and the person is hooked up to a ventilator.

“I don’t even know when it will stop,” she said. “Is this the new normal? I think the scariness of it has worn off at this point, and now we’re just all exhausted.” She confessed: “That has had me reconsider, at times, my career choice.”

Hurn said the pandemic has led to a new focus at her school on the mental health of students, leading to the creation of programs such as “Yoga on the Lawn.”

“For nursing, you have to develop the skills to be resilient, to adapt to high-strain conditions,” she said.

Monte, whose grandmother survived, said she believes the pandemic is waning and hopes to have a long career no matter the challenges.

“They do have this nursing shortage right now, which selfishly is good for me, because I won’t have trouble finding a job, wherever I decide to go,” she said. “I feel like I won’t get burned out, even if we have another national emergency. I feel I’ll still be committed to nursing.”

___

Associated Press writer John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, contributed to this story.

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CP Foods named in THSI 2021, moving forwards “CPF 2030 Sustainability in Action”  

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods) is one among 146 companies has been named in Thailand Sustainability Investment 2021 (THSI), reflecting its successful business management in line with social responsibility and sustainable development in all aspects including Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) to create food security, safety and sufficiency to Thai society especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.     

Mr. Wutthichai Sithipreedanant, Senior Vice President – Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable Development of CP Foods, said CP Foods manages the operation through ESG with transparency and accountability to ensure sustainable growth of its revenue. Moreover, the company also has taken care all of stakeholders throughout the supply chain including employee, farmer, business partner and investor. The company’s operation also commits on sustainability in all dimensions in line with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals : SDGs) all 17 targets. This practice has created trust both the country and international level. Particularly, CP Foods puts important place in implementing the highest-level preventive measures against the virus to ensure food safety and sufficiency to support Thailand and the government.        

“CP Foods has been listed in THIS for seventh consecutive year in Agriculture and Agro-Industrial category, reflecting its dynamic performance in business development with faster speed to serve with all situations, particularly during the COVID-19. This helps reduce business risks from any external factor in terms of economy, social and environment,” Mr.Wuthichai said.

Mr. Wuthichai added that the company’s successful business towards sustainability in the past years is an important driven engine for the business growth to proceed its new strategy “CPF 2030 Sustainability in Action” throughout the next 10 years (2021-2030). The company is still moved forwards under three pillars strategy comprising food security, self-sufficiency society and balance of nature with nine commitments, including sustainable diet, responsible marketing, animal welfare, and conserve environment by promoting the use of the renewable energy and compostable packaging to achieve “Low Carbon Organization” while encourage ability and experience of employee to upgrade quality of life and strengthen competitiveness through sustainable production and responsible consumption practice. 

In 2021, qualified companies named in THSI showed their well performances and planning to curb the COVID-19 crises by considering new normal factors such as Digital Transformation and changing consumption behaviors as emerging risks to adapt the operation and cope with challenging in the future. In addition, the company has also focused on employee’s health and safety to ensure smooth operation and maintained operational efficiency together with supporting society, stakeholder and business partner. They all had outstanding performance on environment and set up quantitative goal and data disclosure on greenhouse gas reduction to reduce climate change impacts as well as help drive the country towards low carbon society goal.

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CP Foods declares commitment to support GCNT’s climate initiatives

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods) declared its commitment to prevent and mitigate climate change impacts at the Global Compact Network Thailand Annual Forum (GCNT Forum) 2021.

The annual forum was organized by the Global Compact Network Thailand and the United Nations under the theme of “Thailand’s Climate Leadership Summit: A New Era of Accelerated Actions”. image4 1

Mr. Peerapong Krinchai, Executive Vice President for Engineering as chairman of CP Foods working committee on climate change, water and waste management, represented CP Foods in the declaration and participated in a panel discussion on “Solutions to Address Climate Change by Relevant Business Sectors”.  

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Mr. Peerapong said that CP Foods has adhered to the sufficiency economy principles. Under “CPF 2030 Sustainability in Action” Strategy, CPF aims to be a carbon neutral organization in line with Charoen Pokphand Group’s zero emission target in 2030. Under the strategy, CP Foods vows to drive the operations with 9 commitments shaped around its pillars towards sustainability – Food Security, Self-Sufficient Society and Balance of Nature. The 9 commitments encompass the holistic sustainability in economic, social and environmental dimensions. In focus are the reduction of food waste (Waste to Value); optimization of resources; reduction of carbon emissions (Decarbonization); and prevention and mitigation of climate change impacts through operational efficiency, an increase in renewable energy, sourcing without harms to forests (Deforestation Free), and afforestation and reforestation. 

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 CP Foods has adopted advanced innovation and technology including the automation system, artificial intelligence and Internet of Things for its Smart Farm System and Smart Factory System, to cut down water consumption and waste in the production process. By resorting to renewable energy, CP Foods has played a part in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The Company’s switch from coal to biomass in 2022 will reduce carbon emissions by 70,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent while biogas which has powered several businesses like pig farms, layer hen farms and food processing plants has annually cut down more than 490,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. Meanwhile, solar panels installed at office buildings, manufacturing buildings, livestock farms and aquaculture farms with 47 megawatts in annual capacity have slashed the emissions by 30,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent per annum, equivalent to the plantation of 25,000 trees. image5

In addition, CPF has a mission to expand forest areas and green areas to absorb carbon dioxide. The CPF Rak Ni-Ves, Pasak Watershed, Khao Phraya Doen Thong Project has been running and covered 6,971-rai where trees will be grown in the Pasak River’s watershed in Pattananikom Sub-district, Lop Buri province. Another project is Grow-Share-Protect Mangrove Forestation that covers 2,388 rai in 5 provinces (Rayong, Samut Sakhon, Chumphon, Songkhla and Phang-Nga). CPF also implements the Rak-Nives Project to grow trees on CP Foods premises nationwide, covering 1,720 rai. image1 6

Under the projects, the reforestation areas will be doubled from 10,000 rai in 2020 to 20,000 rai in 2030, being another key point in driving CP Foods towards its goals under the “CPF 2030 Sustainability in Action” Strategy in the next 9 years.

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Gov’t Confident on Nov. 1 Reopening for Vaccinated Tourists

Few beachgoers are at a beach on Phuket island on June 9, 2020.

BANGKOK — Key government officials said the lifting of quarantine for fully vaccinated travelers from “low-risk countries” will definitely go ahead on Nov. 1, as announced by PM Prayut Chan-o-cha earlier this week.

Minister of Tourism and Sports Pipat Ratchakitprakan told the media he believes visitors will be arriving in droves as soon as the new measure becomes effective on Nov. 1. He also urged businesses and the authorities to prepare for the large number of travelers who will be visiting Thailand.

Pipat said that Thailand has always been a popular winter destination with tourists from colder Western and Northern countries, who like to escape to the sunny beaches of Thailand and enjoy a warm winter.

Thailand’s “cool season,” which is considered to be the high season of tourism, typically lasts from November to January.

With parts of the world slowly reopening and international travel and tourism making a gradual return, Pipat said he’s confident that tourists are ready to come back to Thailand.

To streamline the entry process, Tourism Authority of Thailand Governor Yuthasak Supasorn suggested dropping the complex and frustrating certificate of entry requirement, or COE, as well as reducing the costs of the required RT-PCR. He said the cost of the coronavirus tests should be kept under 1,000 baht each to help attract international travellers.

According to the announcement by PM Prayut, vaccinated travelers from 10 countries will be able to enter Thailand without having to be quarantined, given that they have a negative RT-PCR test before and upon their arrival.

Public health minister Anutin Charnvirakul also went as far as suggesting that Thailand should reopen to more than just 10 countries.

Anutin told reporters that vaccinated visitors from other countries should also be admitted, provided they test negative for the virus and remain 1 night in the province in which they arrived.

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Japan PM Dissolves Lower House for Oct. 31 National Election

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, center, and other lawmakers give three cheers after dissolving the lower house, the more powerful of the two parliamentary chambers, during an extraordinary Diet session at the lower house of parliament Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021, in Tokyo. Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / AP

TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s new Prime Minister Fumio Kishida dissolved the lower house of parliament Thursday, paving the way for Oct. 31 national elections.

Kishida said he is seeking the public’s mandate for his policies after being elected prime minister by parliament only 10 days ago to replace Yoshihide Suga.

Tadamori Oshima, the speaker of the more powerful lower chamber, announced the dissolution at a plenary session.

At the announcement, all 465 lower house lawmakers stood up, shouted “banzai” three times and left. They’ve now lost their seats and official campaigning for a new lower house begins Tuesday.

The last lower house election was held in 2017 under former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

His successor, Suga, lasted just a year as prime minister and his government’s support was battered by his perceived high-handed approach in dealing with the coronavirus and insistence on holding the Tokyo Olympics despite rising cases that angered the public.

Kishida, tasked with rallying support for the ruling party, has promised to pursue politics of “trust and empathy.”

He said in his first policy speech last Friday promised to strengthen the country’s response to the coronavirus pandemic in case of another resurgence and revive its battered economy while bolstering defenses against threats from China and North Korea.

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