Marsel Khaliullin Named Business Line Manager Aftermarket Services Russia & CIS, Nikkiso Industrial Russia

TEMECULA, Calif., Feb. 07, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries’ Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (Group), a subsidiary of Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japan), is pleased to announce that Marsel Khaliullin has been named Business Line Manager Aftermarket Services Russia & Cryogenic Industries Service for Nikkiso Industrial Russia (NIR).

Based in Russia, he will manage and support Aftermarket Services, reporting to Ayman Zeitoun in NIR and Jim Estes for CIS.

Marsel has over 20 years of experience working at various positions in the maintenance and engineering business related to rotating equipment, including the previous six years in the Oil & Gas industry in Iraq and 10 years working with international companies. For the past two years, Marsel managed the Rotating Equipment workshop for SPM Oil & Gas, a Caterpillar company.

“Marsel’s experience and industry knowledge will be of great benefit to NIR and we look forward to his positive contributions,” according to Ayman Zeitoun, Vice President & Managing Director – Russia – Operations.

With this addition, Nikkiso continues their commitment to be both a global and local presence for their customers.

ABOUT CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (now a member of Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) member companies manufacture engineered cryogenic gas processing equipment and small-scale process plants for the liquefied natural gas (LNG), well services and industrial gas industries. Founded over 50 years ago, Cryogenic Industries is the parent company of ACD, Cosmodyne and Cryoquip and a commonly controlled group of approximately 20 operating entities.

For more information please visit www.nikkisoCEIG.com and www.nikkiso.com.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Hisense transforme le divertissement à domicile avec le lancement en Afrique de son téléviseur emblématique, l’U9G 4K Mini-LED

CAPE TOWN, Afrique du Sud, 8 février 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Hisense, fournisseur de téléviseurs et d’appareils électroménagers haute performance, a annoncé que son téléviseur U9G 4K Mini-LED avec technologie Quantum Dot Color et optimisation des images IA était désormais disponible en Afrique. « Nous sommes ravis de proposer notre téléviseur U9G au marché africain. Fruit de l’innovation technologique constante de Hisense et de l’expertise en matière d’écran à la pointe de l’industrie, l’U9G donnera vie au divertissement pour des millions de foyers africains avec son écran ultra-vivant et ses fonctionnalités intelligentes », a déclaré Patrick Hu, directeur marketing de Hisense South Africa.

Hisense Flagship U9G 4K Mini-LED TV

Utilisant une technologie de rétroéclairage unique et plus de 180 zones de gradation locales, le Hisense U9G produit des noirs plus profonds et un contraste époustouflant avec sa technologie de contrôle de rétroéclairage à l’échelle millimétrique. Contrairement aux LED traditionnelles, les mini-LED ont des zones gradables qui sont beaucoup plus petites et fournissent un contrôle plus granulaire sur les images pour améliorer la luminosité globale, les couleurs et le contraste.

En outre, l’U9G utilise la technologie Quantum Dot Colour de Hisense pour étendre la gamme de couleurs et afficher plus d’un milliard de nuances de couleurs avec une précision vive. Combiné avec son magnifique écran de 120 Hz de 75 pouces, 1 000 nits de luminosité maximale et la technologie de gradation locale complète de Hisense, l’U9G permet l’affichage d’images vraiment précises et dynamiques.

Avec plus de contenus africains en streaming en ligne, l’U9G porte l’expérience du home cinéma à un niveau supérieur avec IMAX Enhanced, un écosystème révolutionnaire qui permet aux familles de libérer la puissance de l’échelle, du son et de l’image signature d’IMAX à domicile. IMAX Enhanced combine le contenu numérique remasterisé 4K HDR et les technologies audio DTS pour des couleurs étonnantes, un contraste élevé, une clarté supérieure et un son incroyable – le tout sans avoir à sortir de chez soi.

L’U9G est également doté de la technologie d’optimisation des images IA, qui reconnaît intelligemment les scénarios en temps réel afin que les téléspectateurs puissent tirer le meilleur parti de leur contenu. Grâce à l’IA, le téléviseur capture instantanément chaque trame de l’image et tout signal d’entrée vidéo, puis identifie et optimise automatiquement les paramètres de qualité d’image. Qu’il s’agisse de paysages, de sports, de dessins animés ou de visages, l’U9G ajuste l’affichage pour rendre l’expérience visuelle aussi riche et captivante que possible.

Les autres caractéristiques comprennent une télécommande de commande vocale intelligente pour des opérations rapides et pratiques; et Game Mode Pro, qui permet aux joueurs de profiter de réponses instantanées avec le mode de faible latence automatique et un VRR continu pour minimiser le décalage d’entrée, la gigue et la déchirure de l’écran.

Le téléviseur U9G peut être acheté dans les magasins Takealot et New World en Afrique du Sud.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1741196/image_1.jpg

Report Calls for New US Strategy for Opioids

The U.S. needs a nimble, multipronged strategy and Cabinet-level leadership to counter its festering overdose epidemic, a bipartisan congressional commission advises.

With vastly powerful synthetic drugs like fentanyl driving record overdose deaths, the scourge of opioids awaits after the COVID-19 pandemic finally recedes, a shift that public health experts expect in the months ahead.

“This is one of our most pressing national security, law enforcement and public health challenges, and we must do more as a nation and a government to protect our most precious resource — American lives,” the Commission on Combating Synthetic Opioid Trafficking said in a 70-page report released Tuesday to Congress, President Joe Biden and the American people.

The report envisions a dynamic strategy. It would rely on law enforcement and diplomacy to shut down sources of chemicals used to make synthetic opioids. It would offer treatment and support for people who become addicted, creating pathways that can lead back to productive lives. And it would invest in research to better understand addiction’s grip on the human brain and to develop treatments for opioid use disorder.

The global coronavirus pandemic has overshadowed the American opioid epidemic for the last two years, but recent news that overdose deaths surpassed 100,000 in one year caught the public’s attention. Politically, federal legislation to address the opioid crisis won support across the partisan divide during both the Obama and Trump administrations.

Rep. David Trone, D-Md., a co-chair of the panel that produced the report, said he believes that support is still there, and that the issue appeals to Biden’s pragmatic side. “The president has been crystal clear,” Trone said. “These are two major issues in America: addiction and mental health.”

The U.S. government’s record is also clear. It has been waging a losing “war on drugs” for decades.

The stakes are much higher now with the widespread availability of fentanyl, a synthetic painkiller 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine. It can be baked into illicit pills made to look like prescription painkillers or anti-anxiety medicines. The chemical raw materials are produced mainly in China. Criminal networks in Mexico control the production and shipment to the U.S.

Federal anti-drug strategy traditionally emphasized law enforcement and long prison sentences. But that came to be seen as tainted by racial bias and counter-productive because drug use is treatable. The value of treatment has recently has gained recognition with anti-addiction medicines in wide use alongside older strategies like support groups.

The report endorsed both law enforcement and treatment, working in sync with one another.

“Through its work, the commission came to recognize the impossibility of reducing the availability of illegal synthetic opioids through efforts focused on supply alone,” the report said.

“Real progress can come only by pairing illicit synthetic opioid supply disruption with decreasing the domestic U.S. demand for these drugs,” it added.

The report recommends what it calls five “pillars” for government action:

• Elevating the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy to act as the nerve center for far-flung federal efforts, and restoring Cabinet rank to its director.

• Disrupting the supply of drugs through better coordinated law enforcement actions.

• Reducing the demand for illicit drugs through treatment and by efforts to mitigate the harm to people addicted. Treatment programs should follow science-based “best practices.”

• Using diplomacy to enlist help from other governments in cutting off the supply of chemicals that criminal networks use to manufacture fentanyl.

• Developing surveillance and data analysis tools to spot new trends in illicit drug use before they morph into major problems for society.

Trone said it’s going to take cooperation from both political parties. “We have to take this toxic atmosphere in Washington and move past it,” he said. “Because 100,000 people, that’s husbands, sisters, mothers, fathers. As a country, we are better than that.”

Source: Voice of America

Start Fund Monthly Risk Bulletin (Issued 8 February 2022)

The monthly risk briefing reports on new, emerging or deteriorating situations; therefore, ongoing events that are considered to be unchanged are not featured and risks that are beyond the scope and scale of the Start Fund are also not featured. It is collated by the Start Network Anticipation and Risk Financing team using information from academia and research institutes, government departments, ACAPS, global risk indexes, risk information provided by Start Members and their partners, and the media. Key risks are shared and collated each month with FOREWARN input.

Source: Start Network

COVID-19 Researchers See Hope in Existing Drugs

An international collaboration led by researchers in Canada and Brazil is applying innovative funding and testing methods to determine whether existing medications can provide cheaper and more effective treatments for COVID-19 and is encouraged by its initial results.

Calling it the “TOGETHER Trial,” researchers predominantly in Brazil and Canada refer to their method as “adaptive platform clinical trial,” which permits several potential treatments to be tested simultaneously, reducing costs and the number of people who need to be tested.

The researchers have also speeded up the search for effective COVID treatments by relying on financing and support from private foundations, universities and the private sector, rather than the time-consuming process of seeking government funding.

One such trial conducted in Brazil beginning in June 2020 found fluvoxamine, a common anti-depressant, helped reduce hospitalization and death of COVID-19 patients by 32%.

Ed Mills, a clinical epidemiologist who teaches at Ontario’s McMaster University, is helping to coordinate the project from offices in Vancouver, Canada. He explained the “adaptive platform” model in which more than one drug is tested at the same time.

“Typically, in a clinical trial, you expect to see a drug versus placebo,” Mills told VOA. “Well, in our circumstance, we’re doing five drugs versus placebo, six drugs versus placebo.”

While uncovering promising data on fluvoxamine, discovering what does not work has been equally important. Mills said the group’s trials showed that hydroxychloroquine, lopinavir, metformin, doxazosin and ivermectin do not help prevent hospitalization from COVID-19.

Two of those drugs, hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, gained notoriety in the United States as some COVID-19 patients have insisted on taking them despite warnings by U.S. health officials that the drugs are ineffective at best for treating a coronavirus infection.

Amid a global wave of infections driven by the omicron variant, the project is recruiting about 100 participants a day, with trials now underway in South Africa, Pakistan and Brazil. About 5,000 people have participated to date in the trials, which currently involve about 2,500 people.

Mills said the researchers are studying several other existing drugs, and combinations of those drugs, to gauge their effectiveness.

“One would be a drug called peginterferon lambda, which is a single subcutaneous injection, single-dose drug to treat COVID. I’m extremely optimistic about that. We’re also now evaluating combination strategies,” he said.

“So, we know that fluvoxamine works. We also know that budesonide works — an inhaled steroid. What would happen if you put them together? So, I think that’s going to be a really great, cheap intervention that can be applied,” he said. Both drugs are widely available and — in some countries — economical.

Mills said he expects further results within the next few weeks.

Dr. Brian Conway, the medical director of the Vancouver Infectious Diseases Centre, sees the work being conducted by the TOGETHER Trial as a model for some future medical research.

New medications require rigorous and time-consuming clinical trials before they can be approved for use, he noted. But progress can be quicker “if a medicine’s been around for a while, it’s been licensed, it’s available for sale, and you’re trying to decide if there’s a new indication for it.”

Conway, who is not involved with the TOGETHER Trial, was also impressed with the researchers’ methodology.

“I think that going forward, they’re quick. They are rigorous. They generate the kind of information that we need to help guide clinical practice,” he said. “These adaptive platforms are, to my mind, a very appropriate way of figuring out if they work against something for which they have not yet been tested or approved.”

Conway also sees the program as a good way to counter unsubstantiated rumors about unproven medications.

“And it avoids us from getting into a situation where someone says, ‘I gave this treatment to eight or 10 people and it saved their lives. So you should do this, too,’” he said.

“That’s not how we should do science. That’s not how we should practice medicine, especially in the era of COVID,” he said. “And it helps us be rigorous, responsive, and as helpful to our patients as we can be.”

Among the takeaways from the studies, according to Mills, is that the “Global South” — developing countries in the Southern Hemisphere — has a lot to teach the so-called “Global North,” or more developed nations.

“Although we are the ones that tend to come up with the rules on epidemiology, they’re the ones that apply those rules on epidemiology and have practical experience,” he said.

“If you think about a country like Rwanda, for example, where I’ve spent a long time, they deal with Ebola monitoring all the time, they deal with malaria, deal with HIV all the time. They’re very, very experienced at infectious diseases,” Mills said.

This is not the first time Vancouver has played a role in advancing epidemiology. MRNA vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna rely on lipid nanoparticles to enter human cells. That technology was first researched at the University of British Columbia in the late 1970s.

Source: Voice of America

WFP welcomes US$ 66 million from Japan for emergency food assistance

YOKOHAMA – The United Nations World Food Programme has welcomed a total of US$ 66 million in funding from the Government of Japan to provide emergency food assistance and livelihood support to vulnerable people in 26 countries across Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

US$ 10 million will be allocated for life-saving food and nutrition assistance in Afghanistan, where food insecurity has rapidly deteriorated, driven by the triple-impact of the economic crisis, conflict, and drought.

In Myanmar, Japan will provide US$ 4.6 million for emergency food and nutrition assistance to the most vulnerable populations in Rakhine, Kachin, Shan, Chin as well as peri-urban areas of Yangon, amid rising food insecurity due to the political crisis, conflict and poverty.

Japan is supporting WFP to deliver vital food assistance to crisis-affected people in Iraq, including internally displaced persons and returnees by contributing US$ 6.4 million. In Yemen, US$ 4.6 million will be used to help WFP provide life-saving assistance to severely food-insecure households.

To prevent the spread of COVID-19 and enhance response measures, Japan is contributing US$ 5.6 million to WFP to build temperature sensitive logistics capacities and capabilities in Sub-Saharan Africa.

“The contribution by the Government of Japan will enable us to save and change the lives of millions of vulnerable and hungry people teetering on the edge,” said Naoe Yakiya, Director of Japan Relations Office. “We are grateful for the critical support that comes at a time when our emergency food, nutrition and livelihood assistance are needed more than ever due to conflict, climate change and the socio-economic impact of COVID-19.”

Japan has consistently been one of WFP’s top donors. The countries and regions benefitting from this year’s US$ 66 million supplementary funding are: Afghanistan, Angola, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Iran, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Mali, Myanmar, Nigeria, Pakistan, Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Somalia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Tajikistan, Uganda, Yemen.

Source: World Food Programme