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Why Are We Mostly Ignoring the Climate Crisis? The Message Is Wrong

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Yves here. I’m posting this article as what consultants call a forcing device, in the hopes of spurring discussion. Notice that this piece focuses on an issue raised in a recent Gaius Publius post: how the need to take action to limit climate change is urgent, yet the public isn’t at all engaged, despite more and more climate-change related damage, like more severe storms and wildfires. It is also noteworthy that the 2007 IPCC report series got much more press coverage, particularly in the business media, than the new, much more dire edition has gotten.

The problem with doing what it would take to greatly reduce greenhouse gas generation isn’t just that it would take a war-level mobilization of resources. It would also require sustained sacrifices. And some industries, like tourism, would come out big losers. The elites would need to participate in and lead what would amount to a wholesale restructuring of commerce and lifestyles. No one wants to go there. So even those individuals who are willing to make considerable personal changes for the most part don’t have adequate outlets because they are part of a much larger system.

By Sunny Hundal, a journalist and commentator, and the social media editor at openDemocracy. Originally published at openDemocracy

My wife asked last week whether climate change means it’s not worth having children. She was only half joking. She had asked me what the IPCC report was about and I said something like: “Well, it turns out the worst of climate change is coming sooner than we all expected. Doom is coming!”

We are moving back to London soon and that brought another climate issue to mind. I said it was probably a bad idea to live close to the River Thames, as floods are likely to become more frequent. She’s starting to think Canada might be a better option.

If you too ignored the IPCC report this week, I won’t judge you. I skimmed The Guardian story with a mixture of resignation and despair. Thanks, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, I needed cheering up! A viral headline from the BBC, later changed, summed up a the problem: “Climate report: scientists politely urge ‘act now, idiots’”.

The problem is that climate change doom has lost its shock value. People have lost interest. They are tuning out. Climate scientists who used to be frustrated that the media wouldn’t believe them are now frustrated that no one seems to be listening. Most politicians offer perfunctory soundbites and move on. Even The Guardian’s ex-editor Alan Rusbridger urged readers last week: “You may find it too alarming to think about, too big to worry about, or too depressing to engage with. I understand. But please don’t switch off.”

The challenge for us who want strong action to avert a climate crisis isn’t denial any more: it is apathy, despair and paralysis. In our world of short attention spans, constant shocks and economic insecurity, the warnings are not doing their job. Climate scientists are pushing the button but the warning lights remain dark.

The media get a lot of blame for this. As someone who has been tracking the BBC’s failings on climate changefor a decade, I think they deserve much of it. But simply pushing the panic button harder won’t work. We need a different alarm system altogether. Why? Because we aren’t reaching people with stories that affect them.

End This Avalanche of Numbers

Any story about the climate crisis has to start with a family, not a statistic. We have to stop this obsession with 1.5 or 2 or 3 or 4°C. It means little to non-scientists and sounds like minor differences. Worse, stories of doom make people more depressed. When bad news is everywhere, the first thing we do is ignore the bad news set in the future. The IPCC report was never going to set the news agenda on fire: anyone who expected it to doesn’t understand communication.

The climate crisis is first and foremost a story about people: how it is hurting them and how it will upturn their lives. That is where we must start. People are affected by and remember stories they can relate to, not statistics. We need to stop focusing on degrees, sea levels, coral reefs or Arctic icesheets, and focus on people instead.

You could say it’s the job of journalists to turn those numbers into stories and you’d be right. But the IPCC updates and the avalanche of doomsday scenarios have created a narrative around statistics and disaster. Politicians overwhelmingly take their cue from this avalanche of numbers. The media dutifully run them on a regular basis and the world moves on. I’m not surprised most people are ignoring them.

And that’s just the first problem.

We Are Preaching to the Converted

Climate change is a left-wing issue. The language, the solutions, the advocacy is almost entirely by and for a left-liberal audience. But those are not the people we need to convince. Right-wingers don’t listen to our warnings because we don’t speak their language andthey don’t trust us.

I know what you’re going to say: that we cannot reach those people because capitalist interests already have them convinced. In that case, go home because you’ve already given up. Instead we could list to people like Katharine Hayhoe, a Christian evangelical and a climate scientist, who is trying an approach that involves radically different language and sources trusted by conservatives.

Even our solutions are limited. We cannot overcome the climate crisis just through ‘eco socialism’ – it will need billions of investment into clean energy and new technologies too. We have to champion a range of voices and solutions for everyone.

Climate scientists are not all political partisans but the people pushing their message almost entirely are. And that’s why so many resist it. We have to convince our political opposites we have their interests at heart because… there is no other choice.

What Is Our Vision for the Future?

I’m a paid-up member of this movement and yet I still don’t know if our governments are hitting necessary targets or how much the shortfall is. Most of us don’t know what goals countries should aim for, so journalists rarely ask politicians how they match up. It allows politicians to make vague promises without firm commitments.

What does a world with cheap, green energy look like? Given how cheap solar energy has become just in the last decade, where could we be in 20 years? What is our positive vision? There is no positive agenda so it’s easy for our opponents to say we just want to hike up energy prices. There is no pushback to that narrative.

Yes, the Media Is Still a Problem

None of this is to deny the media could be covering climate change much better. Or that there aren’t big corporate interests opposed to any action. We still need to call out oil companies for funding climate denialism.

We also need climate change to be featured in general news coverage, as Genevieve Guenther’s project End Climate Silence is pushing for, and call out the media when they don’t link climate change to natural disasters.

But we have to stop hoping journalists will become advocates. Instead we have to get better at setting the media agenda. If we feed it an endless diet of doomsday statistics, readers start to tune out, and journalists have a strong incentive to follow. Big oil doesn’t need to confuse the public when we are already putting them to sleep.

I know this debate is not new. Our problem isn’t a choice between good news or bad news or between hope and fear – it is that our stories are too abstract and removed from daily lives.

The climate crisis is already affecting families like mine, but I can make that link because I follow it closely. Most people don’t because the debate is too abstract. There is little point in just blaming the media for this, though. We can make those links in face-to-face conversations with our friends and families, in our local communities. That would change minds and prompt political action much quicker than we realise. But we have to start the conversation with what is close to our hearts.

This entry was posted in Doomsday scenarios, Environment, Global warming, Guest Post, Media watch, Social values on October 19, 2018 by .

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Source: https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2018/10/mostly-ignoring-climate-crisis-message-wrong.html

Teens Would Rather Text Their Friends Than Talk to Them in Person

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Source: http://fortune.com/2018/09/10/teen-social-media-survey/

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TMBA471: The Helsinki Bus Theory

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Podcast 46:19 | Download | Stitcher | iTunes | Comment

Dan and Ian really appreciate having return guests on the show.

And it’s become a tradition that every time Dan visits Chiang Mai he touches base with Kevin Graham. You may remember Kevin from a previous episode we released in early 2017.

Then, Kevin joined us to talk about the first major business he co-founded, which was a suite of Amazon Associates affiliate sites.

These days, he has been focusing on a different project; a web hosting business called Bulk Buy Hosting. In particular, he has decided to take a different turn with that business and we invited him on the show to talk about that and his new venture Zone Node.

Kevin also shares why he believes a bus station in Helsinki has a strong connection to a topic that regular listeners will be familiar with  – The 1,000 Day Principle.

Transcript

Listen to this week’s show and learn:

  • What inspired Kevin to explore an entirely new direction with his business. (2:40)
  • The five major “epochs” that make up The 1,000 Day Principle. (11:00)
  • What the “Helsinki Bus Station Theory” is. (12:01)
  • The point that Kevin took the leap into full-time entrepreneurship. (20:53)
  • Why entrepreneurs believe they can skip the 1,000 days, and why it almost never works. (39:45)

Mentioned in the episode:

This week’s sponsor:

This week’s episode is brought to you by Dynamite Jobs. Dynamite Jobs is a service that helps entrepreneurs and listeners of this show find top, experienced talent to join their teams.  These types of remote positions can be especially challenging to hire for, and we specialize in making that process easy.  For those of you who are on the hunt for a new opportunity, we know how frustrating it can be to find good remote jobs, so we only work with established, reputable companies offering great remote opportunities. If you’re looking for a new job in the new year, check out DynamiteJobs.co.

Enjoyed this podcast? Check out these:

Listening options:

Thanks for listening to our show! We’ll be back next Thursday morning 8AM EST. Cheers, Dan & Ian

Published on 12.13.18


Source: http://www.tropicalmba.com/helsinkibustheory/

Snapchat Slump Ends as App Jumps to 190 Million Users

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Snapchat has put an end to its user growth slump. 

The messaging app's parent company, Snap, on Tuesday said it had 190 million daily active users during the first quarter of the year, up from 186 million DAUs during at the end of 2018. That was 3 million more users than analysts were expecting but it's still down from the 191 million DAUs that the company had in the first quarter of last year. 

Shares in Snap jumped 10 percent in after-hours trading on the strong growth of the app's user base. 

Snap also reported a loss of 10 cents per share, better than an analyst forecast for a 12-cents-per-share loss. First-quarter revenue was up 39 percent to $320 million, which beat a Wall Street forecast of $306 million in revenue. 

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel has been looking to prove that he can build a sustainable business off his eight-year-old messaging app. On April 4, the company hosted its first-ever partner summit, during which it unleashed a number of announcements designed to deflect attention away from a rough 2018 that included an unpopular app redesign, executive turnover and a flagging stock price.

In a call with investors, Spiegel attributed the user growth to Snap's "ability to innovate and execute on our mission to empower people to express themselves, live in the moment, learn about the world, and have fun together." He also noted that Snapchat's Android app is now widely available, which resulted in a 6 percent increase in the number of people sending Snaps within the first week of upgrading on the lowest-performing devices. "While these early results are promising, improvements in performance and new user retention will take time to compound and meaningfully impact our top-line metrics," he added. 

The health of Snap's business is largely measured by its ability to grow its user base. The app is a fraction of the size of social networking behemoth Facebook, which ended 2018 with 1.5 billion daily active users, but it is larger than Twitter, which reported earlier in the day that it now has 134 million DAUs. On April 9, eMarketer downgraded its growth outlook for Snapchat, forecasting that the app will lose monthly U.S. users in 2019, ending the year with 77.5 million domestic users. A Snap representative challenged the report, calling its methodology "flawed."

To keep users engaged on the platform, Snapchat has been building out its content offerings via the Discover platform. Original shows expected to debut on Discover in the coming months include scripted relationship drama Two Sides, unscripted paranormal activity series Stranded With Sam and Colby and a daily entertainment news show from BuzzFeed. Spiegel told investors that during the first quarter, nearly half of daily Discover viewers watched Discover every day of the week. 

Snap shares closed the day up nearly 4 percent to $11.99.

This article was originally published by The Hollywood Reporter.



Source: https://www.billboard.com/articles/business/8508496/snapchat-slump-ends-as-app-jumps-to-190-million-users

The ABCs of Cultivating Practice: How to Get Where You Want to Be

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Woman running up stairs. Text Overlay: The ABCs of Cultivating Practice: How to Get Where You Want to Be

Editor’s note: This is a guest post by Yvonne Ator, MD, MPH.

“One, two, three…! I’ve got this! Four, five, six… Easy day! Hooyah!”

Gasping, I bear-crawled through the sand, step by tiny step, my legs and abs clenching with cramps, tears dripping down my salt-stained face.

I collapsed mid-crawl…face in the sand.

I tried to get up but collapsed again.

I was in trouble.

It was the fifth hour of a six-hour physical crucible event called 20X, a SEALFIT program designed to help participants discover their 20X potential, 20 times what they thought was possible. I had been up since 3am in preparation for the beatdown, with no end in sight. I had been in constant motion, getting yelled at by Navy SEALS as we did countless burpees, squats, pushups and jumping jacks; ran from the beach to the surf and back again; rolled in the sand; and hiked for miles carrying heavy sandbags.

Other times, my fellow participants and I lay in the Pacific, with waves washing water and sand into our eyes, nostrils, ears, and tightly clenched teeth. We locked arms, several of us members of the pioneer class of the Unbeatable Mind Coach Training Program where we had trained in Mental Toughness and Emotional Resilience with a Retired Navy SEAL, Commander Mark Divine for the past year. This six-hour crucible would test everything we had learned.

I looked up from the sand and at my team. I had several feet to bear-crawl, but my arms were shot after hours of drills and dragging my swim buddy back and forth from the ocean. Even worse, I felt cramps forming in my lower back, abdomen, shins, and calves.

I couldn’t move.

I thought back to a brief respite earlier. Our coach, a tall, burly, bearded man with dark shades who looked every bit the intimidating part of a drill instructor, asked us about our why. I told him about my passion for sheepdogs, my dedication to serving those who have sacrificed to make a positive impact in the world, and my belief that the world needs idealists to thrive. Little did I know he’d be barking my words at me while my muscles spasmed on the beach, unable to move.

“Ator! Get up! Get up!  You said you wanted to serve sheepdogs! You said you cared about those who wanted to make a difference. You said you wanted to serve those who have sacrificed? What are you doing down there?!? Is this what you want them to see? Get up! Get up!!!”

Something about hearing him yell my own mission with such conviction stirred and shifted something deep within me. I couldn’t afford to give up, he believed in me even more than I did! I lifted my head from the dirt.

I crawled. Sand in my hair, eyes, teeth… Cramps…

“F$#&!”

I fell back onto the sand.

“Come on, Yvonne! You’ve got this!” My peers cheered me from several feet away. But they might as well have been on the far side of the beach.

I looked at the space between where I was and where I wanted to be. Then I saw it. I saw my why in my mind’s eye — my daughters and those I had committed to serve.

I pushed up from the sand again and began to crawl.

“1,2,3,4,5… I’ve got this!” I breathe, my shoulders burn. “…6, 7 8, 9,10… Easy day!”

The Gap

As creative giants, vision is one of our greatest superpowers. Not only can we see for miles into the future, but we can also see infinite possibilities and their corresponding consequences almost immediately. This is a beautiful and powerful gift. It enables us to make the positive impact we want to make in the world in breathtakingly creative and beautiful ways.

But left unchecked and undeveloped, our gift can become an Achilles heel. We see, so clearly, where we want to be, what we want to accomplish in the world, all the possibilities and their corresponding outcomes…and, it all becomes so grand and overwhelming that we do nothing. We spin our wheels. Analysis paralysis, perfectionism, mind-numbing fear, a collapse in the sand.

How do we bridge that gap?

How do we bridge the divide between where we are and where we want to be?

By cultivating practice.

The Practice

We have to cultivate a practice around what we want to achieve. We repeat, over and over again, until we gain proficiency. Then we deepen from proficiency into mastery by going deeper and deeper into the practice.

But the thing you have to realize is, there is no destination. When we start a practice, many of us put our lives on hold, hoping we’ll know when we “arrive.” That, or we hope that, when we get “there,” we will be happy, successful, etc. But there is no “there.”

The daily practice is the there. It is the bridge, the journey, and the destination all rolled up in one. When we embrace that practice, it becomes our whole lives, constantly helping us to go from where we are to where we want to be. But there is no there. We never really get there. We just go further into the territory of where we want to be. You go deeper and deeper into the practice. It is all a journey.

Think about that idea for a second. Breathe into it. There is no there. There is just one unfolding journey. That takes the pressure off. (Tweet this.)

The ABCs of Practice

A framework that has helped me achieve my goals is something I call the ABCs of Practice. These ABCs cultivate a regular practice, both now and in the past. They can help you, too.

Nearly three years ago, I went through almost every horrific experience possible. Homelessness, divorce, eviction, financial destitution, food instability, job layoffs, deaths of loved ones. Yet in the middle of that, I was able to build a coaching and facilitation practice; write a book; go through a grueling integrated warrior training program; publish articles in an international magazine; speak to thousands; embark on deeply immersive ongoing daily quests such as writing and sharing over 700 daily haikus; meditate for 1,080 consecutive days; perform 12,200 burpees and counting to support Courage Foundation’s #BurpeesForVets challenge to help veterans with PTS; and raise two strong warrior princesses as a single working mom with ADD. How did I realize such consistency in the midst of devastating and chaotic life circumstances? By applying the ABCs of Practice.

Maybe you’re going through a rough time in your life and want to find a way to endure without abandoning your dreams. Or maybe you wish to make a journey from where you are to where you want to be. Think of your goal, your “destination,” and run it through the ABCs of Practice framework.

Align It

Align with your inner compass. As with any destination, you have to identify where you are and where you want to go. Nowadays we use a GPS to reach our desired destination. So, what is your internal GPS? What guides you? What are your values, principles and ethos? Are you living them? Are you embodying the values you profess? The space between your professed values and practiced values is where burnout lives. If you are feeling burned out, it could mean you have gotten out of alignment with your GPS. That is unsustainable. You must get clear about what your values are.

Empower your journey. Aligning with your inner compass also requires knowing what your strengths are. Strengths are not merely things  you are good at. They also are activities and traits that give you energy, strength, and light you up. That is, your strengths are gas in the tank. You can know where you are going, but, without gas in the tank, you will go nowhere. You will have no energy and will burn out quickly.

If you aren’t sure what your strengths are, use the Gallup CliftonStrengths assessment and the VIA strengths test. Getting clear about your strengths and passions is also important because you can use your strengths to hack your weaknesses. Plus, we, as creative giants, often get into trouble for strengths we later discover are undeveloped or imbalanced. By discovering and harnessing your strengths now, you can power your values and get closer to where you want to be with more ease, flow, effectiveness, and joy. Learn more about my values-strengths framework from My Thriving Idealist Framework here.

Envision where you are headed. Two other actions help with alignment, envisionment and embodiment. Envisioning helps you see where you are headed. So envision your goal and see yourself as worthy of what you envision. Visualize what you want your practice to be and how you want to accomplish it. You can’t be what you can’t see. And when you’re going somewhere, you don’t just set the GPS and drive. You check the GPS, making sure you’re still headed where you thought you were headed. When you aren’t… “Recalculating… recalculating!” So remind yourself of your goal. See it. Speak it. Declare it. Make it a mantra.

Embody your goal. Become it. You can’t just profess your values and strengths with words and intentions. You have to commit to them and live them out in the day to day. Authenticity is the highest form of integrity. Who are you and who are you becoming? If you profess inauthentic values, you will find it difficult to live with integrity. So if you’ve set the GPS and are looking at it but aren’t getting anywhere, check yourself. Are you embodying your goals? Moving toward them on a daily basis? You won’t get anywhere if you don’t move. So move. Drive the car. Walk. Bike. Or, as in my case, crawl toward your destination. Do what it takes to get to where you want to go. That is embodiment.

Break It

Nanogoal the heck out of it. If you want to reach a particular objective, nanogoal it. Break it ALL the way down. Nowadays, you can’t get on the internet without someone telling you to crush it, hustle, and grind. I know many people, including myself, have taken these directives to heart, comparing others’ heavily edited highlight reels with our own raw, first drafts. We forget about context, seasons, the unique nuances of our lives, and all the work that went into those highlights—and a lot of work did, even if we never see it.

But we don’t think about that. We focus on their success and our seemingly weak attempts. And when we do, many of us run smack into burnout, depression, anxiety, divorce, sickness, bankruptcy, and thoughts of suicide. Fortunately, our society is slowly starting to talk about these issues.  And at the Productive Flourishing podcast, we hear about them frequently, intentionally, and mindfully.

I’m deeply grateful for that because they give a solid foundation for nanogoals. We don’t have to do everything RIGHT NOW. We just need to take the next aligned tiny action and the next.  I actually coined the term “nanogoals” when coaching my physician moms. I realized even micro-goals seemed overwhelming for working professionals who were also parents. They needed something even smaller, so I gave it to them in the form of nanogoals. The term simply means taking the tiniest, most consistent action you can take. In other words, if you can’t run, you can walk. If you can’t walk, you can crawl, sometimes even on your belly until you get there. I started telling my clients, “Just nanogoal the heck out of it.” The advice gives them permission to focus on just taking action instead of getting stuck on the size of the problem or goal.

Simplify it. Another way to break it all the way down is to think in not only size but also simplicity. Remove the clutter and emotional drama around your goal and practice. Keep things simple. For example, I could have written a poem or an article every day. But I decided to keep it simple by writing a haiku (a three-line poem) daily. Keeping things simple frees up energy for the actual practice.

Fail it. A final way to break it all down is to accept doing the practice imperfectly. To quote The Matrix, the greatest movie of all time, “Nobody makes the first jump.” We can’t go from where we are to where we want to be in one jump. We will fail. So we need to train. And we get our butt kicked. So we train again and learn to be okay with breaking stuff. Perfectionism and analysis paralysis will keep us from taking any action at all. I know. I had to bear-crawl with several cramps. It wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t perfect. But I kept moving. Scott Dinsmore, the founder of Live Your Legend, always said he looked for something to fail at. What would life look like if we regarded failure as a part of the process, part of the journey? If we did that, we could use our gift of seeing possibilities, test our hypotheses, find ways to break our ideas, learn lessons from our failures, and make the possibilities better. That is how we grow.

Commit It

Dedicate it. You know where you are going and what you will do to get there, but do you know why? What pulls you forward? What is your purpose? Why is this practice important to you?

Keep your eyes fixed on the why. Dedicate to your why. Really commit to it. Connecting with it means you are connected to something bigger than yourself. When you find that connection, you will show up with your hair on fire. Show up with dedication day in, day out.

Many think they need more willpower. But what they need is dedication and discipline. Discipline is not mere will power. Discipline means being a disciple or student of something bigger than yourself. Connecting your practice to a bigger why will be a larger and more powerful pull than sheer willpower alone. Your strengths can drive you forward. But sometimes, the gas in the tank runs out. You’re human and will hit a wall some time. When that happens, you need a tow truck, a bigger why. It propels you forward even more powerfully. It will continue to pull you forward when your strengths fail.

So what is your bigger why? Your faith? Your kids? The positive impact you want to make it the world? What is your purpose? If you can answer those questions, you can break your answers down into nanogoals. And when you do that, you’ll show up more consistently because you have a sense of purpose and an action plan. For me, my purpose was and is to inspire and to serve those who sacrificed to make a positive impact in the world. To do that, I developed nanogoals to help me master myself because self-mastery would help me fully tap into my potential to serve my kids and my thriving idealist community.

Communicate it.  Speak your practice not only to yourself alone, but to your community. Communicating with your community creates accountability. When you share your practice, communicate authentically and courageously.  Ask for what you want. Tell your story. Own your story and the parts where you fall short or need help. If you don’t know where you struggle, identify your tendency. If you know it — obliger, questioner, rebel, or upholder — you will better understand how you meet internal and external expectations and what you need to be held accountable. And if you need help, ask your community for support. Set boundaries, too, so that you have what you need to be successful.

Grace it. Finally, give yourself grace. Be kind and gentle with yourself. Breathe. With all the actions you are taking, you will face mistakes, failures, heartbreaks, faceplants, and grief. Give yourself time to heal. Grieve. Respect the seasons of your life. If you are a middle-aged working parent of young kids, you can’t be on the same timeline as a single young student. Practice self-compassion at all times. According to Dr. Kristin Neff, self-compassion has three parts.

  1. Mindfulness. Be aware of what you are feeling, saying, thinking, and doing to yourself.
  2. Self-kindness. Be kind and gentle with yourself in what you do, say, and think.
  3. Common humanity. Remember you are not alone.

So practice self-compassion. Be aware of how you feel and own your emotions. There is no need to escape or numb your feelings. Remember other creative giants are going and will go through the same thing. Rest. Eat. Take care of yourself. Connect with a friend or loved one. Breathe. And get back in the game.

Speaking of the game…

“Hooyah, Yvonne! You’ve got this!”

I rose from the sand and began to breathe, nanogoaling the heck out of my bear-crawl. I fixed my eyes on my teammates, envisioning my why — my kids and thriving idealist community —  and repeating my mantra over and over until I reached my team.

“1, 2, 3, 4, 5… Easy Day!” Breathe. “ 6, 7, 8, 9, 10… I’ve got this! Hooyah!”




Source: https://www.productiveflourishing.com/cultivating-practice-get-where-you-want-to-be/

Adani group to operate five airports for 50 years

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The Adanis were the highest bidder for the Ahmedabad, Thiruvananthapuram, Lucknow, Mangaluru and Jaipur airports.

The Adani group has won the bid to operate for 50 years five out of six airports that were put for privatisation by the central government, a senior Airports Authority of India (AAI) official said on Monday.

The Adanis were the highest bidder for the Ahmedabad, Thiruvananthapuram, Lucknow, Mangaluru and Jaipur airports, the official said, adding the bid for the Guwahati airport will be opened on Tuesday.

The AAI chose the winner on the basis of "per-passenger fee" offered by the bidders.

The five airports would be handed over to the Adani group after completion of formalities, the AAI official said.

The official said the bids put by the Adani group were "very aggressive" as compared to others.

The AAI said in a press statement that, as per passenger fee, the Adani group put in a bid of Rs 177, Rs 174, Rs 171, Rs 168 and Rs 115 for airports at Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Lucknow, Thiruvananthapuram and Mangaluru, respectively.

The per passenger fee would be paid by the Adani group to the AAI.

The GMR Airports Limited -- which operates the Delhi and the Hyderabad airports -- put in a bid of Rs 85, Rs 69, Rs 63, Rs 63 and Rs 18 for the five airports, as per AAI statement.

For the Ahmedabad and the Jaipur airports, the second highest bid was put jointly by the 'National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF) and Zurich Airport International Ag" at Rs 146 and Rs 155, respectively, according to the AAI statement.

For the Lucknow airport, "AMP Capital (GIF II Lux Holdco) 5 LP" was the second highest bidder at Rs 139. For the Thiruvananthapuram airport, the Kerala State Industrial Development Corporation (KSIDC) was the second highest bidder as it quoted Rs 135.

For Mangaluru airport, the Cochin International Airport Limited was the second highest bidder at Rs 45, according to the AAI statement.

The other companies that had put in the bid for the six airports were Autostrade Indian Infrastructure Pvt Ltd, PNC Infratech Ltd and I-investment Ltd.

A total of 32 technical bids were received from 10 companies to operate six airports that are currently under AAI's management.

In November last year, the government had cleared a proposal for managing six AAI-run airports on public-private partnership (PPP) basis.

The Ahmedabad and the Jaipur airports received seven bids each while the Lucknow and the Guwahati received six bids each. Mangaluru and Thiruvananthapuram received three bids each.

The move to manage the six airports on the PPP basis, according to the AAI, is part of an initiative to provide world-class infrastructure and services to stakeholders.

Photograph: Reuters

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Source: https://www.rediff.com/business/report/adani-group-to-operate-five-airports-for-50-years/20190225.htm

7 Free Apps To Get Your Life Together

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Modern day life can be pretty stressful. There are bills to be paid, work obligations you have to handle, maybe even children you have to care for and your own home to look after. And no matter the lifestyle you lead, all of us have responsibilities that we have to deal with every day. But when things start piling up and you start feeling overwhelmed, don’t just turn into a recluse and forget about the rest of the world and all that you have to do. Utilize the resources that are available to you that can make managing your life much easier.

And these days, there’s a mobile app for everything. Whatever idea you can dream up, it’s probably already been done — and is readily available in your app store. Wondering which ones you should buy (or download for free)? Lucky for you, in this week’s episode of The Lifestyle Fix, Tasha is sharing seven apps she personally swears by that help her stay organized and sane. Of course, just because they work for her doesn’t necessarily mean they will for you, too (we all have different lives, after all). But you never know — one of them may turn into your go-to life admin app! To find out which apps Tasha loves and finds extremely useful, head over to the TFD Youtube channel now.

Image via Unsplash

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Source: https://thefinancialdiet.com/7-free-apps-to-get-your-life-together/

The Worst and Best in Sustainability: Amazon vs. Dassault Systèmes

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Every year Corporate Knights puts out a report ranking the world’s most sustainable companies. This year Dassault Systèmes won the award. Dassault Systèmes, is a software company headquartered in France, that produces product lifecycle management (PLM) software. What is PLM software? Dassault’s software provides companies with 3D software applications to transform the way products are designed, produced, and maintained.

Sustainability

Corporate Knights uses publicly-disclosed data – financial filings, sustainability reports, and related data – to produce their ratings. Key factors in Corporate Knight’s analysis include energy use, carbon, waste and clean air production.

Also considered were leadership compensation, suppliers the companies work with, pension fund health, safety ratings, employee turnover, innovation expenditures, taxes paid, the diversity of leadership, and the link between sustainability targets and senior executive pay. This year Corporate Knights added a new category, a focus on the proportion of a company’s revenue that comes from services or products that are environmentally beneficial. Without this change in scoring, Dassault Systèmes would not have won.

All forms of supply chain software support sustainability, with transportation management systems and supply chain design solutions being even greener than product lifecycle management. But the companies Corporate Knight looks at have a minimum revenue of $1 billion. Most supply chain software companies don’t hit that threshold.

Who is the worst company for sustainability in the world? There are no lists of the worst actors. One reason is that figuring out just how bad a company has performed will usually require that the company prepare a report on their sustainability performance, and the worst companies don’t do that.

But my completely subjective vote for the least sustainable company in the world goes to Amazon.

Transportation produces large amounts of greenhouse gases. E-commerce is inherently less green than traditional bricks and mortar retail supply chains; it contributes to larger transportation emissions than traditional retailing. That is because instead of having pallets of goods delivered in truckload size shipments to stores, small parcels are sent directly to consumers. And often one leg of the journey is by Air. Full truckload shipments are greener than van deliveries, and Air is the least sustainable of all transportation modes. Amazon has done more to grow e-commerce than any company in the world.

But one can argue that Amazon can’t be blamed for this. It is we the consumers that demand instant gratification and are driving the massive growth in e-fulfillment.

Further, consider companies in the coal, oil and gas, and chemical industries. Don’t these industries produce even greater adverse impacts on the environment than transportation?

But intentions matter. Let’s take the chemical industry for example. Like the ecommerce industry, that industry is producing goods demanded by global businesses and consumers. However, it is still possible to produce those goods with a supply chain that is designed to minimize adverse impacts to the world. For example, BASF, the world’s largest chemical company, has a cleverly constructed supply chain where the byproducts of one operation get converted into starting materials of another operation. They call this Verbund (see One of the World’s Most Innovative Supply Chains for more on this topic).

One leading analyst firm produces an annual list of the companies with the best supply chains. Amazon use to be listed Number 1. They don’t even make the list anymore. That is because this firm added a sustainability category. Amazon does not even produce a sustainability report.

Amazon has also gotten bad press surrounding how their warehouse workers are treated and the disparity in earnings between CEO Jeff Bezos, one of the richest men in the world, and the armies of workers toiling in their e-fulfillment centers.

Amazon finally did appoint a head of sustainability in 2014. And they have made sustainability advances in the areas of reducing waste from excess packaging and investments in Wind Farms. But it is in transportation where Amazon is creating the biggest adverse impacts on the environment. They have done next to nothing in this area. Amazon recently purchased 20,000 delivery vans for last mile deliveries. All were powered by internal combustion engines; not one electric vehicle in the bunch.

Sustainability is defined in many ways. As a supply chain professional, I look at it through a supply chain lens. I’m proud that a supply chain software company, Dassault, has been listed as the best in the world in sustainability. But I find it inexcusable that Amazon, a company with the most innovative supply chain in the world, puts so little emphasis on working to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions across their supply chain.



Source: https://logisticsviewpoints.com/2018/10/01/the-worst-and-best-in-sustainability-amazon-vs-dassault-systemes/

Snoop Dogg & Rising Pop Singer Layke Shoot Hoops in Their 'Happier' Cover Video: Exclusive

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Fortnite recently gave Marshmello and Bastille's smash collab "Happier" another life, but Layke and Snoop Dogg are all about a different game in the video for their cover of the hit song: basketball.

The indie-pop newcomer and rap mogul teamed up for a piano-tinged duet of the dance track, premiering the music video for their "Happier" cover on Billboard below. The video starts out with Layke in the studio, flashing between shots of her in a car and on a basketball court before Snoop joins in. In between shooting hoops, the pair laugh and dance, providing an upbeat visual to the song's rather somber lyrics.

Adding to Layke and Snoop's more hopeful take on "Happier," proceeds from the duo's cover will go to Snoop Special Stars -- the rapper's flag football and cheer league for special-needs children -- as well as child abuse prevention nonprofit organization Childhelp.

Layke and Snoop's "Happier" video arrives just after the original "Happier" reached its highest peak on the Billboard Hot 100, landing at No. 2 on the Feb. 16-dated chart. Its jump from No. 8 to No. 2 is thanks to Marshmello's Fortnite concert on Feb. 2, which marked the first of its kind as the 10-minute show virtually took place in the game's Pleasant Park location.

Watch Snoop and Layke's "Happier" video below.



Source: https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/pop/8498537/snoop-dogg-layke-happier-cover-video-premiere


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