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(AUSTRALIA) #Coronavirus Report: More Australians are in lockdown today following one #COVID19 case travelling from Sydney into the Northern Territory as Queensland prepares to strengthen its border as case continue to climb in NSW, Victoria and the ACT ….

#AceHealthReport – Aug.18: Six of the people who died were aged over 70 and one was in their 40s. It is the highest number of daily fatalities NSW has recorded since the #pandemic began….

#CoronavirusNewsDesk says New #COVID19 rules in Melbourne, Darwin goes into lockdown, ACT cluster grows: Here’s the latest COVID-19 news across the country in last 24-hours ……….NSW has recorded 478 cases and seven deaths, with Premier Gladys Berejiklian saying the numbers are “disturbingly high”………

A 15-year-old boy who contracted pneumococcal meningitis and COVID-19 also died but Sydney’s Children Hospital confirmed the virus was not the cause of Osama Subuh’s death.

NSW Police at midnight launched “Operation Stay at Home”, a 21,000 personnel operation — including 18,000 police officers and 800 members of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) — to enforce public health orders.

Play Video. Duration: 3 minutes 15 seconds
NSW records 478 new local cases of COVID-19, seven deaths

New COVID restrictions and lockdown extended in Victoria

Victoria announced a two week-extension of its current lockdown and tougher restrictions as the state recorded 22 new locally acquired COVID-19 cases. 

The new restrictions include a curfew that will be in force from 9:00pm to 5:00am each day.

Playgrounds, basketball courts, skate parks and outdoor exercise equipment will also close.

Premier Daniel Andrews said the new restrictions would come into effect at 11:59pm on Monday and be in place until September 2. He said they came amid concerns about compliance with current restrictions.

Play Video. Duration: 2 minutes 44 seconds
Daniel Andrews hits out at the engagement party that was attended by 69 people amid Victoria’s lockdown.

South Australia blocks travellers from parts of NT

South Australia closed its border to travellers from several local government areas in the Northern Territory as of 6:00pm Monday night.

The new direction blocks travellers who had been in local government areas (LGAs) north of the Central Desert and Barkly LGAs — excluding the East Arnhem LGA — on or after Thursday, August 12.

A photo of cars on the road
People entering SA from parts of the NT will have to quarantine on arrival.(ABC News: Mitchell Abram)

Only returning South Australian residents, people who are relocating, people escaping domestic violence and essential travellers will be allowed to enter SA from the affected LGAs, which cover both Darwin and Katherine.

However, those travellers will still be subjected to level 4 requirements upon their arrival in SA, meaning they must self-quarantine for 14 days and undertake COVID-19 tests on days 1, 5 and 13.

Greater Darwin enters snap three-day lockdown after one COVID case

Greater Darwin and Katherine entered a three-day lockdown at noon on Monday.

NT Chief Minister Michael Gunner said one positive case of COVID-19 was recorded overnight, a man in his 30s who travelled to the Northern Territory for “legitimate work purposes”.

The man was a recent international arrival and had spent 14 days in quarantine in Sydney.

He left hotel quarantine on August 12 after returning a negative COVID-19 test on August 10.

On Thursday, August 12, the man transited from Sydney to Darwin through Canberra airport, while Canberra was a declared COVID-19 hotspot.

However, under the NT’s hotspot rules, the man was allowed to transit through without going into quarantine.

Mr Gunner said the man visited “various locations” in the Darwin CBD over a few days.

Play Video. Duration: 5 minutes 46 seconds
Greater Darwin and Katherine enters into three-day lockdown from 12pm

COVID cluster in ACT grows to 28

The ACT recorded 19 new locally acquired cases of COVID-19, taking the total number of active cases in Canberra to 28.

The ACT government also extended its lockdown — initially set to end this Thursday — for another two weeks, until at least September 2.

One of today’s new cases was a student at Lyneham High School, who attended classes over four days while infectious.

Another of the cases is a worker at an aged care facility in Tuggeranong, who had received one dose of a vaccine and unwittingly worked three shifts while infectious. 

Queensland tightens borders restrictions

Queensland recorded no new local cases but it declared Greater Darwin and the Katherine region to be hotspots and also announced it would strengthen border controls from Friday.

From 1:00am on Wednesday, anyone who had arrived in Queensland from those areas of the NT since August 12 will need to go into hotel quarantine.

Anyone who has already arrived, or arrives in Queensland from the Greater Darwin and Katherine regions before 1:00am on August 18, should monitor their symptoms and get tested immediately if they experience symptoms.

The move follows a man in his 30s testing positive for COVID-19 and spending time in the NT community while infectious.

And from Friday, essential workers with an exemption to cross into Queensland — including emergency and health workers — will need to have had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Chief Health Officer Jeannette Young said people from NSW should only be coming to Queensland “if it is absolutely essential and services would fall over if those people didn’t cross the border”.

Deputy Police Commissioner Steve Gollschewski said delays should be expected at the border and only those people with exemptions would be allowed in.

He said 6,442 vehicles were intercepted at the border in the past 24 hours, with 606 turned around.

Play Video. Duration: 1 minute 40 seconds
Chief Health Officer Jeannette Young says essential workers crossing the border must be vaccinated.

Clive Palmer plans to sue WA over vaccination rule

Queensland businessman Clive Palmer says he will launch a High Court challenge against Western Australia’s plan to make people from high-risk states show they have had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccination before entering the state.

In a statement, Mr Palmer said the requirement was in breach of section 117 of the constitution.

“By restricting free movement of Australian citizens within Australia and creating an island-within-an-island, the WA COVID-19 eradication strategy is unconstitutional,” Mr Palmer said in an emailed statement from his United Australia Party.

As of tomorrow, Western Australia will designate New South Wales a high-risk state.

It will require anyone granted an exemption to enter WA from there to show proof of at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccination and a negative COVID test in the 72 hours before departure.

Play Video. Duration: 9 minutes 14 seconds
If you’re vaccinated, how protected are you from catching COVID-19?(ABC News)

ACT Policing increases compliance activities during lockdown….

ACT Policing has significantly increased its compliance activity following the announcement of the ACT wide lockdown on Thursday (12 August 2021).

Overall community compliance has been high – with the vast majority of people making themselves aware of the rules. However, since the lockdown was announced police have fined people for a range of reasons.

These included workers painting an unfinished new home and a driver that allegedly claimed to be a rideshare driver but could not provide any proof of this.

Three men, arrested for criminal matters, were also charged with breaching health directions.

In one case overnight a 43-year-old Queanbeyan man was charged with contravening health directions and other offences after officers in Weston spoke with the man and asked him to wear a face mask. The man refused to do so and was arrested after disclosing he was not in the ACT for essential work or health care. A search of his possessions revealed a number of stolen items.

In total, eight infringement notices have been issued since Thursday, along with seven cautions and 48 people were directed to leave the ACT.

In Road Policing activities (some jointly conducted with NSW Police), more than 2700 drivers have been spoken to by police at random compliance operations since Thursday.

Police will continue to stop vehicles both within the ACT and border crossings to ensure people from interstate or entering the ACT are entitled to be in the Territory.

Face-to-face compliance activity was also ramped up following the lockdown announcement, with police conducting 3813 in-person checks at homes, hotels and businesses.

ACT Policing COVID-19 Taskforce Inspector Naomi Binstead said there was very clear advice about what restrictions are in place during the lockdown.

“While we have seen a good overall level of compliance across the ACT, there are still those few people that have decided they either know better, or that these important rules do not apply to them,” said Inspector Binstead.

“As the Chief Police Officer has repeatedly said – stay at home unless you meet the reasons identified by ACT Health and check the ACT Health website for the most up-to-date information.”

“Also, please do not call police for general COVID-19 lockdown information. A significant number of calls have been received by our operations centre and the vast majority of these are already clearly answered on the ACT Health website.”

Before you call a helpline – please visit the ACT COVID-19 site for the most up to date information.

To make reports of non-compliance you can complete a form via Access Canberra or contact the COVID-19 Helpline on 6207 7244 (8am-8pm, 7 days a week).

For police assistance call 131 444 and only contact Triple Zero (000) for emergencies.

#AceHealthDesk report ………Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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(SIBERIA) Wildfire Report: In recent years, summer temperatures in Russia have seen numbers in the triple digits despite being one of the coldest places on Earth #AceNewsDesk report

#AceNewsReport – Aug.18: As of early spring, wildfires have been surging through the taiga forest in Siberia. The region hardest hit was the Republic of Sakha in northeastern Russia. Also known as Yakutia, the area had 250 fires burning across 2,210 miles of land on July 5. By mid-July, residents of Yakutsk, the capitol of Sakha, were breathing in smoke from over 300 separate wildfires, as reported by the Siberian Times.

#AceDailyNews says that nearly 10-Million Acres of Land Are Burning in Siberia: Russia has seen an increasing severity of wildfires in recent years due to rising summer temperatures and a historic drought

A photo of a small town in Russia. Its skies glowing an eerie amber color as wildfires continue to rage in Yakutia.
(Nikolay Petrov/Associated Press)smithsonianmag.com
August 16, 2021 7:30AM:

Currently, almost 10 million acres are currently burning, with one fire alone scorching an area as wide as 2.5 million acres, reports Ann M. Simmons for the Wall Street Journal. The fires are burning so intensely that vast swaths of smoke blocked sunlight. For the first time in recorded history, smoke from the fires in Siberia have drifted thousands of miles away to reach the North Pole, reports Oliver Carroll for the Independent.

The Siberian wildfires are more substantial than this season’s blazes in Greece, Turkey, the United States, and Canada combined. Local residents from Yakutia have been under a state of emergency for weeks as smoke continued to smother cities, even those that are thousands of miles away, reports the Moscow Times.

Climate Change and Increasing Temperatures 

In recent years, summer temperatures in Russia have seen record highs in the triple digits—despite being one of the coldest places on Earth. Many experts suspect it’s a result of human-driven climate change. The increasing hot weather melted permafrost and, as a result, fueled the numerous fires, report Daria Litvinova and Vladimir Isachenkov for the Associated Press. Per the Moscow Times, a warming climate combined with a 150-year drought and high winds created the best conditions to turn the taiga forest into fire fuel.

Temperatures over the year range between -44 to 77 degrees Fahrenheit in Yakutsk. This past summer, after arid and extremely hot weather patterns, the Sakha-Yakutia region reached 102 degrees Fahrenheit, setting records for several consecutive days, per the Associated Press.

The inferno’s intensity has closed airports, roads and prompted evacuations. The smoke’s cover is so vast that NASA estimated it measured 2,000 miles from east to west and 2,500 miles from north to south. The smokes’ haze was also spotted 1,200 miles away in Mongolia’s capitol as well as 1,864 miles to the North Pole, reports NPR’sSharon Pruitt-Young. Satellite images taken by NASA’s Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite show the smokes’ reach in color detail.A thick blanket of smoke from forest fires ascends over Russia on August 6, 2021. The image was taken with NASA’s MODIS imager aboard the Aqua satellite.

A satellite image of smoke covering Russia and streching towards the North Pole.
To get this image, the satellite made four passes over the region. (MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC )

Uncontrolled Forest Fires

In Russia, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Ecology only keeps track of forest fires that threaten populated areas and omits any fires on grassland plains or farmland, per the Post. Authorities are not required to extinguish fires in regions far away from settlements, also called control zones, per the Moscow Times. Fires located far away from populations are allowed to burn if the damage is not considered worth the costs of containing the fire.

Locals and environmentalists have argued that the inaction allows authorities to downplay the urgency of the fires.

“For years, officials and opinion leaders have been saying that fires are normal, that the taiga is always burning, and there is no need to make an issue out of this. People are used to it,” says Alexei Yaroshenko, a forestry expert at Greenpeace Russia, an environmental nonprofit organization, to Robyn Dixon for the Washington Post.

News and media stations also rarely report on the events, so many fires go unreported, and locals often do not know the extent of some fires.

Yaroshenko told the Post that fires are left to burn if they are too dangerous to fight or because of lack of funding to support firefighters, so the majority of the forests to the far north are left unprotected.

Firefighters are battling the blazes with very little equipment, and planes are used only rarely. Reinforcements have been sent from other areas, but it is still not enough, so many locals have volunteered to help, reports Patrick Reevell for ABC News.

“I have lived 40 years, and I don’t remember such fires,” Afanasy Yefremov, a teacher from Yakutsk, tells ABC News. “Everywhere is burning, and there aren’t enough people.”

There are various other reasons as to why the fires exploded to this magnitude. Some fires are sparked naturally by lightning strikes, but officials estimate that over 70% are caused by human activates like smoking and campfires, the Associated Press reports. Forest authorities do control fire burns to clear areas for new plant growth and to reduce fire fuel, but they are often poorly managed and sometimes burn out of control.

Other reasons for the increased fires range from both illegal and legal logging and monitoring difficulties. Forests in Siberia are so extensive that spotting fires can be difficult, per the Associated Press.

What Happens Next?

Siberian wildfires naturally occur as part of an annual cycle, but climate officials see this year’s blazes as a sign of more enormous fire risks in the future. Especially with the amount of carbon released during these wildfires on an already warming planet, writes the Post. Last year when wildfires rolled through Siberia, an estimated 450 million tons of carbon dioxide was released into the atmosphere. This year, the combined wildfires released more than 505 million tons of CO2, and the fire season is still not over, Live Science’s Tom Metcalfe reports.

According to the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Russia can expect to face extreme weather events—like intense heatwaves, wildfires, and floods—as global warming intensifies, reports the Moscow Times. Russia, in general, is warming 2.5 times faster than the rest of the planet. This statistic is alarming because 65 percent of Russia is covered in permafrost, which holds large amounts of carbon and methane. As permafrost melts, stored greenhouse gases are released, which in turn warms the planet, leading to more permafrost melt, per the Moscow Times. Even if global carbon emissions fall drastically, a third of Siberian permafrost will melt by the end of the century, the Post reports.

#AceNewsDesk report ………Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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(ACCRA, Ghana.) True Cost Of Fashion Report: It’s the dirty secret behind the world’s fashion addiction. Many of the clothes we donate to charity end up dumped in landfills, creating an environmental catastrophe on the other side of the world #AceNewsDesk report

#AceNewsReport – Aug.18: On the banks of the Korle Lagoon, in the Ghanaian capital of Accra, an escarpment towers at the water’s edge, cattle grazing on its summit…….This ragged cliff, some 20 metres high, is formed not of earth or stone, but of landfill. Most of it — an estimated 60 per cent — is unwanted clothing……

#AceDailyNews says how fast fashion is turning parts of Ghana into toxic landfill and creating a ‘climate catastrophe’ on the other side of the world these were garments shipped to Ghana ostensibly for resale and reuse, many sourced from clothing bins and charity collections but a huge proportion were never worn again…..

A waste pile.
ABC REPORT: As waste overflows from Accra’s designated landfills, it’s being dumped in unofficial tips like this one on the banks of the Korle Lagoon.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

Some 15 million used garments pour into Accra every week from the UK, Europe, North America and Australia, flooding the city’s sprawling clothing market.

An estimated 40 per cent are of such poor quality they are deemed worthless on arrival and end up dumped in landfill.

As global clothing consumption skyrockets, fed by ruthless “fast fashion” brands, it’s creating an environmental catastrophe.

The clothes arrive long before dawn, when the city has yet to stir. Headlights ablaze, semitrailers squeeze into ever-narrower alleys, disgorging hundreds of bales wrapped in bright orange plastic. Men and women, some bearing clipboards, inspect the goods and dispatch them.

Some of the clothes will cross Ghana, others will go as far as Burkina Faso or Côte d’Ivoire. But most will be dispersed within West Africa’s biggest second-hand clothing exchange — Accra’s Kantamanto markets, a bustling labyrinth of 5,000 retailers and their timber stalls, many of them overflowing with the West’s unwanted fashion.

Competition for customers is fierce. Clothes are spruiked by song and are quickly discounted by day’s end. Entrepreneurs seize high-end pieces with minor defects that can be mended and dyed and put back on sale for a premium.

Men reach for clothing.
Many of the clothes donated to op shops end up in Kantamanto market, in the Ghanaian capital Accra.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

But transporting the 55kg bales around the teeming bazaar, with its narrow passageways and thousands of customers, is impossible by mechanical means. So the job falls to Accra’s ranks of head porters, or kayayei, “the women who carry the burden”. 

Since she was 12 years old, Aisha Iddrisu has been one such woman. With no work in her remote northern village, Iddrisu has travelled back and forth to Accra for work, now with her 18-month-old son Sheriff. She tries to earn enough money to send some back to the rest of her family, including her nine-year-old daughter. 

“I didn’t have much choice,” she told Foreign Correspondent, “because I didn’t know how else I can take care of my children if I don’t come. I am not happy with this situation, but I need the money.”

A woman holds her son in a clothing market.
Aisha Iddrisu and her son Sharif in Kantamanto markets.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)
A clothing market from above.
Kantamanton market, a labyrinth of stalls and shops.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

The market employs thousands of people, including Aisha Iddrisu, who comes here every day from her home in central Accra’s sprawling slum, Old Fadama.

Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves

The work is far from lucrative — Iddrisu earns about $4.50 a day. It’s also notoriously hazardous; everyone seems to know a woman who has suffered a grave injury. 

“Some of them get severely injured and they are sent back to the north because they can’t do the job again,” Iddrisu said. “When they get there, they’re unable to do any work because of the injuries.”

Still, Iddrisu credits the second-hand clothing industry with helping her find employment. And there are many who would agree. The local used-clothing dealers’ association claims the industry has created 2.5 million jobs — a figure as plausible as it is impossible to verify.

A tag reads 'this shop ends homelessness'.
A discarded shirt in the market.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)
A green superman jacket.
A green superman jacket for sale in the Kantamanto market.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)
Kids clothing.
Second-hand children’s clothes.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)
A blue t-shirt being held up.
A Dr Seuss illustration on a t-shirt.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

For the past few decades, the resale of Western cast-offs has boomed here. They are so cheap, local textile makers can’t compete.

Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves

Wander around Accra and every spare inch of pavement seems occupied by a hawker, a new batch of old clothing folded and hung among their wares. They call them “obroni wawu” — dead white man’s clothes.

The trade in second-hand clothing has steadily grown in Accra, just as it has around the world. Every year as many as 4 million tonnes of used textiles are shipped across the planet in a trade estimated to be worth $4.6 billion. 

In Accra, where some 60 containers of used clothes arrive every week, the industry can be highly profitable. But it carries an unusual business risk. Importers can spend as much as $95,000 on a container of clothes and have no idea what they’re buying.

It’s only once a bale has been opened that the quality of the clothing is discovered. If it’s in good condition, profits can tally quickly to as much as $14,000. But if the clothes are torn or stained, or long out of fashion, their importer may as well have put a torch to their money. 

Play Video. Duration: 29 seconds
A clothing bale is opened in Kantamanto market Ghana(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

In the swarming Kantamanto Market, young traders, even friends, can briefly become fierce competitors when a prize new bale arrives.

There’s a lot at stake — if they don’t grab the best clothes they don’t make money.

Emmanuel Ajaab has fought his way to the top of the industry; he’s now one of the market’s more prominent importers. He stands atop a pyramid of resellers and traders who each find a margin to carve off for themselves. 

“I have about 100 to 150 customers who buy from me here,” Ajaab said. “And remember, those that buy from me, they are going to sell it and to many other people too.”

Ajaab is a firm believer in the power of his industry to create opportunity. It’s certainly been true of himself. His business has not only provided jobs for his immediate family but also the capital to invest elsewhere. He now owns a construction business which competes for his time.

A woman with bras slung over her arm.
When importers find good-quality clothes, profits are there for the taking.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

In Ghana, they call them “obroni wawu” — dead white man’s clothes.

But the clothes business is not what it once was. 

“Seventeen years back [when I started] it was good,” said Ajaab, “but now what they are bringing to Africa, to Ghana … they are continuing to reduce the quality that was given to us. Now it’s very bad.”

As I watched, Ajaab opened a bale from Australia and quickly separated out those clothes which might be resold at a decent price, from those which were worth far less. Familiar labels flashed by: Suzanne Grae, Target, Zara, Billabong, Just Jeans.

Play Video. Duration: 2 minutes 19 seconds
Emmanuel Ajaab sorts a bale of clothing from Australia into what can be resold and what will be dumped.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

Very few landed on his high-quality pile. Of the 180 light summer jackets inside, 85 pieces were unsaleable: collars ringed with sweat, buttons missing, bloodstains on the sleeve. He threw his hands in the air. 

“It’s an insult,” he said. “Assume you use your money to buy this bale. How are you going to survive?”

The bale had cost him $90. In the end, he sold $20 worth of clothes. The rest were put out with the rubbish. And it’s happening more frequently. “We don’t know what is going on,” he said. “And if we complain to them … to our suppliers, they say that what they get is what they are giving.”

A man watches people sort through clothes.
Retailers eagerly snatch up the best offerings from a new bale.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

Ajaab’s suppliers, like all of Kantamanto’s importers, are middlemen: recyclers and rag traders, who source castoffs from high street charity shops and the private operators of clothing bins. There’s little incentive for them to filter out unwearable items. Individuals who include spoiled garments in their charity shop donation are behaving woefully, he said.

“In Europe, the UK and Australia, America, they think [that in] Africa here, sorry to say, we are not like human beings. Even if somebody knocked [on] your door [to beg], you cannot just … pick something from your dustbin. In this case … they’re doing this to us.”

The growing number of poor-quality clothes arriving at Kantamanto Market is a major driver of Ghana’s waste crisis. Another is the sheer volume of clothing being manufactured around the world.

Fast fashion collage.
The sheer volume of global clothing production and consumption is driving the problems in Ghana.(Foreign Correspondent: Emma Machan)

Since 2000, global production of clothing has doubled. 

We’re buying 60 per cent more clothes now than we did 15 years ago. 

But we’re only keeping them for half as long. 

A major survey in the UK six years ago found one in three young women considered garments “old” if they had been worn just twice. 

An estimated 85 per cent of all textiles go to the dump every year, according to the World Economic Forum, enough to fill Sydney Harbour annually. 

Globally, that’s the equivalent of one garbage truck of textiles being burned or going into landfill every second.

These problems have only accelerated with the advent of so-called “fast fashion” — cheap, low-quality clothes produced quickly to respond to changing trends. Where brands once had two fashion seasons a year, many now produce 52 micro-seasons, flooding the market with new styles.

H&M, Zara and Boohoo are among those brands rolling out new fashion lines within days. Boohoo, for example, has more than 36,000 products available at any one time. Three years ago, the company was castigated in the British Parliament for selling five-pound items of such low quality that charity shops were unwilling to resell them. 

With factories incentivised to maintain around-the-clock operations, the world’s major fashion houses factor into their budgets huge waste margins. In 2018, Burberry attracted a storm of criticism when it revealed it had destroyed $50 million of stock. The same year, H&M reported an unsold global inventory worth more than $5 billion.

A woman stands in front of a polluted river.
Liz Ricketts has spent the past decade documenting the impact of clothing waste on Ghana. (Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

Liz Ricketts, an American fashion waste campaigner, has documented Ghana’s textile waste disaster for a decade. Her organisation, the OR Foundation, blames major fashion houses for the waste crisis.

Where do our donated clothes go?

A man wears an AFL singlet.
A Ghanaian man wears an AFL shirt, which has made its way to the country via the used clothing trade.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

Australians donate 310,000 tonnes of clothing to charities every year. Many of these clothes are sold to raise $527 million for the funding of social welfare programs. But one-third of these clothes can’t be sold in local op shops. Instead, they are shipped overseas. Charities sell them to Australian exporters for around 50 cents a kilogram. They’re then exported to Malaysia, Pakistan and the UAE for sorting into bales based on their market segment, for example “men’s shirts” or “women’s jackets”. Those bales are then sold to importers in Eastern Europe, the Pacific and Africa. Once these garments arrive in those markets, many end up in landfill.

“Waste is a part of the business model of fashion,” she said. “A lot of brands overproduce by up to 40 per cent.”

Equally, she believes consumers are “somewhat complicit”. “We have decided that convenience is a human right and we think that when we go shopping we should always be able to find exactly what we want,” she said. “We should find it in our size and the colour that we want. That also contributes to this overproduction.” 

Australia, with clothing retail sales in 2020 of about $22 billion, may not have the economic scale of the US or the UK, where combined the industry turned over $468 billion in the same period. But on a per capita basis, Australia is the highest consumer of textiles anywhere in the world outside of the US.

When these clothes fall out of favour with their owners, the vast majority of them end up in landfill. Only 7 per cent of clothes sold in Australia are classified as recycled. But it’s a dubious classification — watching the Kantamanto Market clean-up at days’ end gives its lie.

A pile of clothes.
As night falls in the Kantamanto Market, the clean-up begins. Piles of unwanted clothes are swept up and bagged, awaiting collection for the landfill.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

As night falls in Kantamanto Market, alleys full of unsaleable clothing are swept up into giant hessian sacks, ready for collection. Every dawn, garbagemen haul them into a derelict truck that groans under the weight, threatening to spill its awful load. About 6 million garments leave Kantamanto Market every week as waste.

“Close to 40 per cent of whatever shipments that are coming on a daily basis ends up to be complete chaff of no value,” said Accra’s waste manager, Solomon Noi. “We have become the dumping ground for textile waste that is produced from Europe, from the Americas and [elsewhere].”

A man with Aussie boxers.
A man wears Australian flag boxer shorts amid the refuse in Accra’s sprawling slum, Old Fadama.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

 “Waste is a part of the business model of fashion. A lot of brands overproduce by up to 40 per cent.”

Ghana’s capital has the capacity to process 2,000 metric tonnes of waste per day. But in part because of the blooming textile problem, the city produces almost double that volume every 24 hours.

The overflow is almost everywhere you look. Much of it is burned, sometimes in small pyres on street corners, sometimes in huge bonfires of cotton and plastic, and whatever else besides, which blacken the skies for days at a time. 

One such fire burned for 11 months, though it was not deliberately lit. The Kpone landfill was a $9.5 million World Bank-funded project, which was carefully designed to solve Accra’s mounting waste crisis. It opened in 2013, with the capacity to operate for 15 years.

It filled within five, then caught alight.

Play Video. Duration: 34 seconds
A landfill in Accra on fire(Supplied: OR Foundation)

“We were all afraid. The fire started in the night … things are exploding,” said Jerry Johnson Doe, a waste picker who once worked retrieving recyclables from the Kpone landfill. 

“Everybody around is running because we understand how the place is designed, we are afraid it can explode.”

As the textiles could not be properly compacted, unbeknownst to all, they had trapped a rising bubble of methane. 

“Less than two, three hours’ time, you see the fire has escalated to all corners of the landfill.”

The site is now closed and capped. But there has been no let-up in demand.

Informal dumps now dot the city, including the towering Korle Lagoon tip. It rises on the edge of the city’s Old Fadama slums, where some 100,000 people live and work and raise their children. 

Most are migrants from Ghana’s north, displaced by conflict and unemployment. They’ve had little choice but to bow to the dump site at their door, even as it steadily grows.

Synthetic textiles can take hundreds of years to decompose. This mountain of waste may cast its fetid shadow over their neighbourhood for generations.

But only a portion of the 160 tonnes of daily textile waste ends up in landfill. During the monsoon season, tropical storms wash an untold volume of clothing into the city’s medieval network of open sewers. The fabrics choke the city’s drainage system and promote flooding. Mosquitos breed, diseases prosper. 

Liz Ricketts sorts through clothing waste on the beach in Accra.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)
Tangled clothing in the sand.
‘Tentacles’ of clothing buried in the sand.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

The textiles that wash back onto the beach become so tangled in the sand they are almost impossible to dig out.

Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves

“We have become the dumping ground for textile waste that is produced from Europe, from the Americas and elsewhere.”

The textiles which do make it all the way out to sea wreak yet more damage. Lighter materials float, become entangled with floes of plastic waste and wash back onshore. But heavier materials sink to the ocean floor, only to rise again and roil about in ocean currents, forming long arms of writhing fabric.

“We call them tentacles,” Ricketts said. “When you see them wash up from the sea they’re very long, you know they can be eight feet to 30 feet (2.4m to 9.1m), and sometimes three feet wide,” she said. “When we’ve done clean-ups here, we’ve been digging 15 feet and still find tangles of clothing.”

Liz Ricketts on the beach in Accra.
Liz Ricketts has found clothing “tentacles” up to 10 metres long. They have their origin in the Kantamanto Market.(Foreign Correspondent: Andrew Greaves)

Behind Accra’s waste crisis lies a startling piece of arithmetic. Thirty million people live in Ghana and yet 30 million garments arrive every fortnight. The man who is trying to do what he can to rescue Accra from its waste catastrophe, Solomon Noi, has a simple message to the second-hand clothes industry — and to individual donors. 

“I’m not sure they’ve ever been conscious to ask, where is the final destination of that thing they are discarding,” he said. “But if they come here, like you’ve come, and you see the practicality for yourself, then they will know that, no, we better take care of these things within our country and not ship that problem … to other people.

Watch Foreign Correspondent’s ‘Dead White Man’s Clothes’ on iview or YouTube.

Credits

  • Story: Linton Besser
  • Photography and cinematography: Andrew Greaves
  • Graphic design: Emma Machan
  • Digital production: Matt Henry

Drone footage of the burning Kpone landfill site courtesy of the OR Foundation.

#AceNewsDesk report ………Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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‘Ace Daily News With Kindness & Wisdom’

This is our daily list of posts on that are shared across Twitter & Facebook and Shared here on mydaz.blog/ 

‘Todays selection of posts from across our publishing panel, Twitter & Telegram with Kindness & Love❤️’

Aug.18, 2021: @acenewsservices

Ace Daily News Posts Published Today 18/08/2021: With Kindness & Love 

Posts being added daily to see the latest please click this link here:

#AceNewsDesk report ……..Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says #AceNewsDesk reports by https://t.me/acenewsdaily and all our posts, also links can be found at here for Twitter and Live Feeds https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/ and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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(NEW YORK) JUST IN: Bob Dylan is being sued by a woman who says the US singer-songwriter sexually abused her in 1965 when she was 12. #AceNewsDesk report

#AceNewsReport – Aug.18: It says the abuse took place at Dylan’s apartment in New York’s Chelsea Hotel: Dylan’s spokesman told the BBC “the 56-year-old claim is untrue and will be vigorously defended”.

#AceDailyNews says Bob Dylan denies sexually abusing girl in 1965: Her legal case alleges the rock star “exploited his status as a musician to provide [her] with alcohol and drugs and sexually abuse her multiple times”, and used threats of physical violence under ‘Child Victims Act’ implemented by Gov.Cuomo in 2019 ….

What is the Child Victims Act?

New York State’s Child Victims Act was signed into law by Governor Andrew Cuomo in 2019.It allowed survivors of childhood sexual abuse to file a case which had already been time-barred or expired, and gave them a year to do so.That one-year window was then extended because of disruption to court services during the pandemic and ends this week, on 14 August.Mr Cuomo called it a “pathway to justice” for people who allege they were abused when under-age and was intended to help “right wrongs that went unacknowledged and unpunished”.

Bob Dylan. File photo
Dylan’s songs include Like a Rolling Stone, Blowin’ In The Wind and The Times They Are a-Changin’

The Nobel Prize-winning singer, now 80, is accused of assault, battery, false imprisonment and infliction of emotional distress.

The accuser, who is now 68 and lives in the state of Connecticut, is only identified by the initials JC.

She said the singer had caused her “severe psychological damage and emotional trauma”, and is seeking unspecified damages and a jury trial.

Dylan had become a major star by 1965

According to his accuser, the star carried out “predatory, sexual and unlawful acts”, which were allegedly “done intentionally by him to her without her consent”.

She claimed to have suffered “severe mental distress, anguish, humiliation and embarrassment, as well as economic losses”.

Her legal documents were filed on Friday at the New York Supreme Court under the state’s Child Victims Act. The claim was submitted a day before the closure of a temporary legal “look back window” in New York, which allowed historical abuse allegations to be filed.

Dylan – who was born Robert Allen Zimmerman – has sold more than 125 million albums around the world during a career spanning six decades. His best-known songs include Blowin’ In The Wind and The Times They Are a-Changin’.

In 2016, the Grammy and Oscar-winner was given the Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the first songwriter to win the prestigious award. He was also awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2012 by then-President Barack Obama.

#AceNewsDesk report ………Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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‘Ace News Room U.K. Daily News Desk’

This is our daily list of posts on that are shared across Twitter & Facebook and Shared here on mydaz.blog/ 

‘Todays selection of posts from across our publishing panel, Twitter & Telegram with Kindness & Love❤️’

#AceDailyNews says here’s todays Newspaper Headlines: Several front pages feature images of Monday’s extraordinary attempts by dozens of Afghans to board a US Air Force plane rolling down the runway in Kabul

Metro front page
The Taliban seizing control of the Afghan capital, Kabul, continues to dominate the front pages, with many featuring photos of a US plane being surrounded by a crowd at the city’s airport. The Metro says the sudden fall of the city “sparked a chaotic race” to escape the Taliban. It claims some teenage Afghans were so desperate that they clung to a US military plane as it took off.

Aug.18, 2021: @acenewsservices

The Guardian reports on “chaotic scenes” as civilians converged on Kabul airport – which it describes as the only route out of the city for people who were in fear of their lives. It says the airport was close to being overrun, with flights being grounded and several people dying.

BBC News: Staff:

The Financial Times claims at least five people were reported to have been killed in “desperation to escape”. It quotes a foreign official as saying there was “absolute chaos” at Kabul airport. They said that only US military planes were taking off and landing, adding: “Afghans are clinging on to the tyres of the aircraft that are taking off.”

“Desperate” exclaims the Daily Mirror’s headline, alongside a photo which it says shows around 640 Afghans “crammed” onto a US plane leaving Kabul.

The i newspaper features an image of a group of people, including children, climbing over a wall at Kabul airport. “No way out” is the headline in the paper, which says all flights were grounded at the airport because of crowds on the runway “pleading for help”.

Britain is racing to evacuate thousands of UK and Afghan citizens, according to the Times, which reports that British and US soldiers were trying to regain control of the airport. It adds that Britain is due to restart evacuation flights on Tuesday.

The Daily Express leads on an extra 200 British troops being flown into Kabul to “save thousands of Britons fleeing Taliban forces”.

“Joke Biden” is the headline in the Sun, which suggests US President Joe Biden faced a “global backlash” over his handling of the Afghan crisis, which it called the US’s “biggest foreign humiliation in almost 50 years”. The paper says Mr Biden “finally” dashed back to Washington DC after being accused of hiding at Camp David as the crisis unfolded.

The Daily Telegraph focuses on the speech of the US president, who said he stood “squarely by his decision to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan as he “partly blamed Donald Trump and the Afghan security services for the debacle”. The paper describes it as a “defiant message” from Mr Biden, who admitted the Taliban’s sweep to power happened more quickly than he had anticipated.

The same angle is the lead for the Daily Mail, which calls Mr Biden’s defence “extraordinary” as he “blamed Afghan leaders and the country’s military leaders for refusing to fight”. The paper says the US president’s speech came as “brave translators” hid in fear for their lives amid “scenes of carnage” at the airport.

And away from Afghanistan, the Daily Star claims Russia has accused a US astronaut of drilling a hole in the space station so she could get back to Earth quickly.

The Financial Times describes scenes of “absolute chaos” as the airport was “overrun” – with some people falling to their deaths after clinging to aircraft as they took off. “The flight from hell”, says the Metro. “Race to escape Kabul carnage” is the headline for the Times. 

According to the FT, “the mayhem reflects the panic among many Afghans as they brace themselves for life under Taliban rule”. The Daily Mirror has a single word headline – “desperate” – with a photograph of hundreds of Afghans standing packed like sardines inside a US cargo plane.

The Guardian thinks video footage of the crowd running alongside the American plane “is likely to haunt” President Joe Biden. 

The Sun calls him “Joke Biden” – “humiliated and alone” facing a “global backlash” over his handling of the crisis. The Daily Mail highlights what it calls the president’s “blunt” and “extraordinary” response – “it’s the Afghans’ own fault” – in his address to the nation last night, while the Daily Telegraph argues the backlash in Washington “was matched with finger-pointing at Mr Biden in Westminster”. 

It claims Ministry of Defence figures “repeatedly warned” their US counterparts that the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan was “too fast”.

AFP: There were chaotic scenes at Kabul airport on Monday as people tried to flee from the Taliban

Mr Biden’s address is heavily criticised by the Wall Street Journal, which accuses him of effectively telling Afghanistan to “drop dead”. 

He “refused to accept responsibility while blaming others”, made false claims and “played to the sentiment of Americans tired of foreign military missions”, its editorial says.

The Washington Post resorts to “searching the sorriest episodes of US foreign policy” for an analogy to the president’s “blunders” – suggesting the Bay of Pigs and the fall of Saigon. “Worse”, it says, “this was avoidable”. 

But the New York Times suggests Mr Biden’s speech “stemmed some of the howls of criticism”, with Democrats praising him for laying out the costs of America’s involvement in Afghanistan.

Both the Times and the Telegraph warn that household energy bills are expected to rise as a result of the government’s push for more hydrogen energy. Eenergy minister, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, has told the Times it’s “too early” to say how much the transition will cost households, but it’s likely to be “very small”.

The Telegraph thinks the government’s plans show hydrogen will play a “niche” role in cutting carbon emissions, and it says experts have warned that bill payers could be locked into paying for the development of “pointless” technology.

Experts say there is an urgent need to reduce emissions from home heatingClaims by a Chinese woman who says she was held for more than a week at a secret jail in Dubai, run by the Chinese embassy, are highlighted by the Times.

It argues the revelations “throw striking new light” on the extent of Beijing’s targeting of dissidents abroad – and the help it’s receiving from other authoritarian regimes, including Western allies: The paper says the UAE has viewed London and Washington as “unreliable” for more than a decade now and, in searching for friends who do not deliver lectures on human rights, “giving Beijing space to interrogate dissidents is a small price to pay for an extra vote on the UN Security Council”.

#AceNewsDesk report ………Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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(ALASKA) #ClimateChange Salmon Run Report: Historically low chinook and chum salmon runs on the Yukon River are alarming people in the nearly 50 nearby villages who rely on the fish to fill their freezers for the winter #AceNewsDesk reports

#AceNewsReport – Aug.18: This summer, fishers in the world’s largest wild salmon habitat pulled from a record-breaking run of 65 million sockeye in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, beating the 2018 record by more than three million fish….

#AceDailyNews says that record salmon in one place and very few in another causes alarm as historically low runs on the Yukon River have devastating impacts for Alaskans relying on the fish for sustenance and tradition, but Bristol Bay is seeing more sockeye than ever before according to report by Ash Adams for The New York Times

Published Aug. 12, 2021Updated Aug. 16, 2021

Historically low chinook and chum salmon runs on the Yukon River are alarming people in the nearly 50 nearby villages who rely on the fish to fill their freezers for the winter.
Historically low chinook and chum salmon runs on the Yukon River are alarming people in the nearly 50 nearby villages who rely on the fish to fill their freezers for the winter.Ash Adams for The New York Times

But on the Yukon River, about 500 miles to the north, salmon were alarmingly absent. This summer’s chum run was the lowest on record, with only 153,000 fish counted in the river at the Pilot Station sonar — a stark contrast to the 1.7 million chum running in year’s past. The king salmon runs were also critically low this summer — the third lowest on record. The Yukon’s fall run is also shaping up to be sparse.

The disparity between the fisheries is concerning — a possible bellwether for the chaotic consequences of climate change; competition between wild and hatchery fish; and commercial fishing bycatch.

“This is something we’ve never seen before,” said Sabrina Garcia, a research biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. “I think that we’re starting to see changes due to climate change, and I think that we’re going to continue to see more changes, but we need more years of data.”

The low runs have had ripple effects for communities along the Yukon River and its tributaries — the Andreafski, Innoko, Anvik, Porcupine, Tanana and Koyukuk Rivers — resulting in a devastating blow to the people relying on salmon as a food staple, as feed for sled dogs and as an integral and enriching cultural tradition spanning millenniums.

Serena Fitka, the executive director of the Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association, was raised on the Lower Yukon River, in St. Mary’s, Alaska, and worked the fish rack of her family’s summer fish camp.
Serena Fitka, the executive director of the Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association, was raised on the Lower Yukon River, in St. Mary’s, Alaska, and worked the fish rack of her family’s summer fish camp.Ash Adams for The New York Times

“We have over 2,000 miles of river, and our numbers are so low,” said Serena Fitka, the executive director of the Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association. “Where are all our fish? That’s the question hanging over everyone’s head.”

Because the critically low runs of chinook and chum didn’t meet escapement goals, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game prohibited subsistence, commercial and sports fishing on all of the Yukon, leaving nearly 50 communities with basically no salmon.

“When we have a disaster of this magnitude, where people are worried about their food security, they’re worried about their spiritual security, they’re worried about the future generations’ ability to continue our way of life and culture — our leadership is very anxious,” said Natasha Singh, who is general counsel for the Tanana Chiefs Conference, a tribal organization representing 42 villages in an interior Alaska region nearly the size of Texas. “Our people are very anxious. They want to remain Athabascan-Dene. They want to remain Native, and that’s at risk.”

It’s not the first time salmon runs on the Yukon River and its tributaries have plummeted, but this summer’s record low numbers feel particularly distressing. A large stretch of the Yukon River carries only two of the five species of salmon found in Alaska: chinook and chum.

“When one species crashes, we’re kind of shocked, but we’re OK because we know we can eat from the other stock,” said Ben Stevens, the tribal resource commission manager for Tanana Chiefs Conference. “But, this year is unprecedented in that we don’t have either stock there. They’re both in the tank.”Stevens Village sits along the 1,980 mile-long Yukon River, which flows from British Columbia to the Bering Sea, and is one of seven villages in the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge, an area federally dedicated to fish and wildlife conservation.Ash Adams for The New York Times

Yukon River chinook salmon have been in decline for decades, shrinking in size and in quantity as the years pass. The region is also seeing mass die-offs of salmon. In 2019, thousands of chum carcasses washed up on the banks of the Yukon River and its tributaries, which scientists blamed on heat stress from water temperatures of nearing 70 degrees, about 10 to 15 degrees higher than typical for the area.

While warming waters can create an inhospitable habitat for salmon, some research indicates that the heat benefited the sockeye in Bristol Bay, boosting the food supply for young salmon.

Some fish processors are donating excess fish from Bristol Bay to communities along the Yukon. SeaShare and other Alaska fish processors are coordinating donations, and more salmon is expected to be shipped in the next few weeks.

“It’s so heartwarming to have our fellow Alaskans reach out and provide donations,” Mr. Stevens said. “I’m just kind of sad that we’ve allowed the situation to get this bad.”At his family’s fish camp an hour boat ride away from his home of Stevens Village, Darrell Kriska checks on the salmon that’s drying on the racks. This year, he said, it takes much longer to get far less fish than the family is used to.Ash Adams for The New York Times

Mr. Stevens is a Koyukon Athabascan from Stevens Village, a small community northwest of Fairbanks, Alaska, where the Trans-Alaska Pipeline crosses over the Yukon River. He toured the region last month to hear how communities are coping with the low runs. He said people are scared about a winter with no food, and for the consequences that come with being disconnected from the land and animals. With the loss of fish also comes “the incredible loss of culture,” Mr. Stevens said.

Meat harvested from the land is a core food for people living off Alaska’s road system, whose communities are accessible only by boat or plane. Steep shipping costs and long travel times make fresh food at village stores prohibitively expensive and limited; the custom of harvesting food together with friends and family goes back thousands of years.

No salmon also means no fish camp — an annual summer practice where families gather along the rivers to catch, cut and preserve salmon for the winter, and where important life lessons and values are passed down to the next generation.

“We go out and we pass on our tradition over thousands of years from the young to the old,” said PJ Simon, a chief and chairman of the Tanana Chiefs Conference. “That’s our soul. That’s our identity. And that’s where we get our courage, our craftsmanship, for everything that has led up to where we are today.”PJ Simon, a chief and chairman of the Tanana Chiefs Conference, in Stevens Village, where the Tanana Chiefs Conference held its subregional meeting this summer, bringing leaders together for meetings and celebration.Ash Adams for The New York Times

The 19-year-old model and activist Quannah Chasinghorse travels to her family’s fish camp every summer. Ms. Chasinghorse is Han Gwich’in and Oglala Lakota, and is from the Eagle, Alaska.

“Every time I go out to fish camp there’s something new I notice that’s different — due to climate change, due to so many different things — and it breaks my heart because I want to be able to bring my children, and I want them to experience how beautiful these lands are,” Ms. Chasinghorse said. “I want to see younger generations fishing and laughing and having fun and knowing what it’s like to work hard out on the land.”

The future of Yukon salmon runs remains uncertain. But there’s still time for fishers in the region to adapt to the effects of climate change and to different management approaches, said Ms. Singh, the attorney. If salmon are allowed to rebound, then “our children will be fishing people,” she said.

“We shouldn’t conclude that climate change is going to change our fisheries to the point where we have to give up our identity,” Ms. Singh said.

Mr. Stevens said the state and federal natural resource managers “need more Indigenous science” and more “traditional resource management principles in play right now.”

“I think we need folks to know that the last great salmon run on this globe, the last wild one, is about ready to end,” Mr. Stevens said. “But, we can stop it.”

#AceNewsDesk report ………Published: Aug.18: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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KINDNESS WISDOM

Thought of the Day ~

If you’re offered a seat on a rocket ship, don’t ask what seat! Just get on

Yeah ♥♦♥