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The world is choking on plastic pollution

Waste pickers collect plastic waste for recycling at Jamestown beach in Accra, Ghana, on July 5, 2022. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK (BLOOMBERG) – In March 2022, the world decided it was time to address the growing scourge of plastic pollution. About 430 million tonnes of plastic are produced annually, according to the United Nations, two-thirds of that just for short-term use. And at the rate we are going, the amount is set to triple by 2060.

There were meetings and conferences. Then two months ago, the UN’s lead negotiators released a “zero draft” of a global plastics treaty.

The zero draft is, as its name suggests, a starting point. It contains a lot of suggested actions for reducing plastic waste and options for how to implement those steps. One option is that every country “shall” create a list of dangerous chemicals that occur in plastics and follow a plan to phase them out. But under a different option, nations “may” create such a list.

Steering between that “shall” and “may” – the first considered binding, the second voluntary – will be key to the third round of negotiations for the treaty, which start Monday in Nairobi, Kenya.

Anti-plastic advocates fervently hope that nations will come together and deliver binding commitments to stop or slow the global production of plastic. They are looking for regulations that would control plastic products from birth (their chemical components) to grave (design to allow reuse or recycling).

The precedent they aspire to follow is the global agreement to phase out ozone-depleting chemicals in 1987. That treaty, the Montreal Protocol, had hard and fast timelines and is seen as more successful than the 2015 Paris Agreement, which is based on voluntary national targets to reduce greenhouse gases. Most of those targets are so far being missed.

The argument for firm global regulation has grown in strength. A new report by the Organisation for Economic Development and Cooperation finds the current infrastructure for plastic capture and recycling is entirely insufficient, and that more than USD1 trillion in investment is needed in non-OECD countries alone to prevent plastic from leaking into the environment.

Meanwhile, corporations’ voluntary pledges to reduce plastic use are failing. Starting in 2018, the Ellen MacArthur Foundation enlisted 150 companies to report on and reduce their plastics use by 2025. Five years in, 20 companies, including Marks and Spencer Group Plc, Burberry Group Plc and Metro AG, have dropped out, having been unwilling or unable to meet the criteria to take part, such as setting quantitative targets and reporting publicly how they get on.

Waste pickers collect plastic waste for recycling at Jamestown beach in Accra, Ghana, on July 5, 2022. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Instead of doing the hard work of getting rid of virgin plastic, in recent years Nestle SA, PepsiCo Inc and other big companies have found another way to reassure critics, and it’s far murkier. They’re making claims to being “plastics neutral” – some of which are underpinned by paying third parties to collect trash and pass it on to cement producers for use as fuel in factories.

The mechanism, in other words, is plastic offsets: units akin to carbon offsets that represent a ton of plastic collected and processed or recycled, which are bought by companies seeking to compensate for their waste. It’s now gaining traction as an approach to tackling plastic pollution, and some industry bodies are lobbying for it to feature in the treaty.

But activists are firmly against that. “The negative impacts far outweigh any benefits,” says Marian Frances Ledesma, zero-waste campaigner at Greenpeace Southeast Asia.

Blocking flawed solutions like plastic offsets, regulating plastic along its entire lifecycle, finding billions of dollars to invest in infrastructure – all in a binding way – would be an enormous challenge, even during a time of peace. Now delegates will meet with wars unfolding in Ukraine and Gaza. Erin Simon, vice president for plastic waste and business at the World Wildlife Foundation, says there’s also concern that Saudi Arabia, a major producer of the fossil fuels that are the building blocks of plastic, is willing to use procedural tactics to slow the approval process down.

Nevertheless, advocates remain surprisingly optimistic.

“Although we are not moving fast enough for the planet, we are moving faster on this than any other global issue,” says Simon, pointing out that getting to a zero draft took just 18 months, versus decades for climate accords.

Even countries that can agree on little else agree plastic waste is a nightmare, says Winnie Lau, who directs the preventing ocean plastics project at the Pew Charitable Trusts. “There is a lot of momentum,” she said, “even from countries that don’t like global treaties.” Plastic pollution is just that bad.

Workers sort plastic waste at a recycling centre in South Korea. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Using old wood for carbon capture

Logs sit stacked outside the yard of Wagner Forest Management Ltd., a company hired to manage Yale's land, in Errol, New Hampshire, US, on August 10, 2017. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK (BLOOMBERG) – A startup backed and incubated by Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy Ventures has engineered a hybrid technology that combines engineering with natural photosynthesis processes to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it underground.

“It’s important to understand that carbon removal is not an excuse to keep emitting, or to slow down our transition to a clean energy economy – we need to keep innovating as fast as we can,” Gates wrote in his firm’s “State of the Transition 2023” report, released today. “But it’s become clear that carbon removal will be a necessary tool to have in our toolkit.”

Plants naturally pull CO2 from the atmosphere and store it in their tissue, but that CO2 is released back into the atmosphere when the plant decomposes. Launching today, startup Graphyte takes waste biomass like discarded wood residue or rice hulls, dries and sterilises it to prevent decomposition. It then condenses it into dense carbon blocks, wraps it in a proprietary polymer barrier and stores it underground in an engineered storage site. The carbon within will be locked away and prevented from being re-released.

The idea for the carbon removal process, which Graphyte calls “carbon casting,” was first conceived by BEV partner Chris Rivest, who brought in Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Barclay Rogers to commercialise the technology and helm the startup.

“He and I started going back and forth on such an approach of trying to make the most of the carbon within the biomass and then determine ways to ensure that it’s not re-released,” said Rogers. “And through those collaborative discussions, Graphyte was born.”

Logs sit stacked outside the yard of Wagner Forest Management Ltd., a company hired to manage Yale’s land, in Errol, New Hampshire, US, on August 10, 2017. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

What appealed to Rivest about this approach was its potential for durable, affordable and immediately-scaleable carbon removal. “There’s a concern around the energy and capital intensity of some of the existing approaches, particularly the engineered approaches,” he said.

Graphyte plans on buying waste biomass from local sources and selling its carbon removal services to corporate buyers. Today those buyers are mostly technology companies like Microsoft and Shopify, which have pledged hundreds of millions of dollars to help scale the nascent carbon removal industry, and view it as critical to meeting their sustainability commitments.

Existing carbon removal technology like direct air capture currently costs hundreds to thousands of dollars per ton of CO2 removed and would require large amounts of renewable energy at scale. Cheaper, nature-based options like planting trees also have drawbacks when it comes to durability and measurement challenges.

By comparison, Graphyte says its levelised cost of production is currently under USD100 per tonne, a moonshot target for carbon removal that direct air capture is still far from achieving. It also requires a tenth of the energy of direct air capture, and the carbon blocks are projected to be durable for over a thousand years, due in part to the proprietary polymer barrier protecting them, according to Rogers. The process is also land-efficient, with the potential of removing 10,000 tons of CO2 equivalent per acre, he said.

Graphyte is in the process of building its first plant in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, near local timber and rice mills that could serve as biomass sources, according to Rogers. It’s also in the process of signing customer offtake agreements, or a contractual commitment to buy carbon removal services at a predetermined price upon delivery. The first carbon blocks are expected to be produced by January 2024. The startup projects the project will have the capacity to remove 5,000 tonnes of CO2 per year by the end of 2023 and 50,000 by July of 2024.

The path to rapid scale-up is by no means guaranteed. Commercialisation challenges are manifold, from courting enough buyers willing to pay for these removal services to getting regulatory and community buy-in.

Ensuring that the blocks remain buried and that the CO2 trapped within them doesn’t get released, either through degradation or decomposition, is critical. Leakage in these scenarios is possible if the biomass gets wet or experiences significant microbial activity, according to Dan Sanchez, an assistant professor at the University of California at Berkeley, who is a science advisor to Graphyte.

The polymer barrier, in addition to drying and condensing the blocks, acts as “a helpful insurance policy” to prevent degradation of the blocks, Sanchez said.

That insurance policy is going to be key to ensuring that the CO2 stays buried and the blocks don’t produce and release methane, according to Brian Snyder, associate professor at Louisiana State University’s Department of Environmental Sciences. A key risk of biomass-based approaches to carbon removal is that, like landfills, these biomass sinks could release methane, a harmful greenhouse gas, if exposed to bacteria that anaerobically digests the material. Graphyte’s approach of drying, condensing and wrapping the biomass will help prevent that process from happening, he said.

To monitor and measure the CO2 within the blocks, Graphyte will install sensors and proprietary tracer systems in the storage sites. The company has also elected Puro.earth as its carbon registry, a first step towards independent verification of its removals.

One other key concern for carbon removal pathways that involve waste biomass is availability of the material. In Sanchez’s view, there is enough residual biomass in the US for Graphyte’s purposes and “more than enough for any one company to work with.”

Essentially carbon landfills, Graphyte’s carbon blocks will be buried underground, following similar permitting requirements as construction waste landfills. Although the land above the buried blocks could be usable for, say, solar farms, getting regulatory buy-in to do carbon removal projects at scale “is often a challenge,” Rogers said.

“If they have any concerns, we are addressing those concerns,” he said of the company’s engagement with the local Pine Bluff community.

Gaza death toll crosses 11,000

A Palestinian boy rides a bicycle amidst debris in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on November 13, 2023, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. More than 11,000 people have been killed in relentless Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip, according to the Hamas-run health ministry, since the war erupted after Palestinian militants raided southern Israel on October 7 killing at least 1200 people, according to official Israeli figures. (Photo by MOHAMMED ABED / AFP)

GAZA (Bernama-WAFA/AA) — At least 11,540 Palestinians have been killed as Israeli bombardment on the besieged Gaza Strip and West Bank continued into the 38th day on Monday. 

Palestinian Health Ministry said over 28,200 Palestinians were reportedly wounded, while at least 3,250 citizens are still missing or under the rubble including 1,700 children.

Palestinian news agency (WAFA) reported the ministry said in its daily report on Monday that 202 health personnel and 36 members of the Civil Defense have also been killed in the attacks, while more than 130 were wounded, as 60 ambulances were damaged, including 53 that were completely out of service.

A Palestinian boy rides a bicycle amidst debris in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on November 13, 2023, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. PHOTO: AFP

Hospitals Come Under Attacks 

It reported the ministry said that the bombing operations around Al-Shifa Hospital, the main hospital in Gaza City intensified since Nov 11, as vital infrastructure was targeted, crippled its operations including the oxygen station, water tanks and well, cardiovascular department facilities, and the maternity ward, adding that three nurses were also killed.

Six premature babies and at least 15 patients had died because fuel ran out and hospital departments were out of service as a result of it being directly targeted and besieged.

According to WAFA, the number of hospitals out of service has now reached 25 out of 35 hospitals in the Gaza Strip, and 53 out of 72 primary health clinics had also ceased operation due to lack of fuel or bombing.

Red Crescent Denies Claims Of Gunmen Present Inside Al-Quds Hospital

Meanwhile, Anadolu Agency reported the Palestine Red Crescent Society in a statement on Monday denied Israeli claims of the presence of Palestinian gunmen inside Al-Quds Hospital in Gaza.

The Red Crescent condemned “the (Israeli) occupation army’s false allegations of gunmen firing from inside Al-Quds Hospital.”

It also considered the claims being “incitement to target the hospital” in a clear violation of international humanitarian law.

The Red Crescent Society said Sunday that Al-Quds Hospital went out of service due to a lack of fuel and electricity, but many Gazans took shelter in the hospital hoping it will be spared by the Israelis due to its status as a civilian facility.

“No Fuel Has Entered Gaza” Since Oct 7

The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) on Monday warned that it would have to suspend operations in Gaza within 48 hours due to the lack of fuel in the enclave blockaded by Israel.

The statement was made by UNRWA’s director in Gaza Thomas White, who confirmed that “no fuel has entered Gaza” since Oct 7.

“The humanitarian operation in Gaza will grind to a halt in the next 48 hours as no fuel is allowed to enter Gaza,” Anadolu Agency reported the UNRWA senior official as saying.

UNRWA is the main UN agency operating in the Gaza Strip, where its schools currently host some 700,000 displaced Palestinians seeking refuge from Israeli attacks.

Thousands of buildings including hospitals, mosques and churches have also been damaged or destroyed in Israel’s relentless air and ground attacks on the besieged enclave since last month.

 

Don’t toss those giblets

If you're roasting a turkey or chicken for the first time, if your first instinct is to throw the giblets in the trash - don't. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON (THE WASHINGTON POST) – With Thanksgiving just around the corner, many will be cooking up a whole bird. And if you’re roasting a turkey or chicken for the first time or if it is something you do only a few times a year, you may be confused about what to do with the giblets, or organs, often found inside the bird. If your first instinct is to throw them in the trash – don’t. That’s a lot of flavour that you’d be wasting. Here’s what you need to know to put turkey and chicken giblets to good use.

What are giblets and what do they taste like? 

Technically, giblets are defined as the gizzard (the mechanical stomach of a bird), heart and liver of poultry. But the neck is often included alongside them, so it gets lumped into the term colloquially. 

Unless you buy your bird directly from a farm or independent butcher, the giblets aren’t necessarily from that animal. Sometimes, you might be missing a component or may even get something extra. And on rare occasions, your chicken or turkey may not contain any giblets at all. 

In terms of flavour, the neck, gizzard and heart mostly just taste like poultry dark meat. The gizzard in particular has a chewy texture, so it’s best cooked low and slow to tenderise it as much as possible. (Smothered gizzards is a classic dish if you ever find yourself with a bunch of them.) The liver has a mineral-y flavour that is characteristic of the organ and that some find polarising.

If you’re roasting a turkey or chicken for the first time, if your first instinct is to throw the giblets in the trash – don’t. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST

How to use chicken and turkey giblets 

You’ll typically find the giblets in the cavity of the fowl, although at times I’ve encountered them tucked under the flap of skin at the front of the bird near the breasts. Most people will remove them before proceeding with preparing the chicken or turkey. But if you accidentally cook the giblets in the bird, there may be no need to fret as they often are packaged in an oven-safe paper bag.

– Make stock. My go-to method for dealing with giblets is to first cook the gizzard, heart and neck by making my own giblet broth or stock. Another option is to simmer them with store-bought broth to infuse it with more poultry flavor. (You don’t want to include the liver as it becomes bitter when boiled.) If you don’t want to bother with the giblets the day you’re cooking a whole bird, you can save them to combine with the leftover carcass to make stock another day. 

– Add them to dressing, stuffing and gravy. Once cooked, you can pull the meat from the neck and chop up the remaining giblets (you can simply saute the liver) to add to your favorite dressing, stuffing or gravy recipe. It adds even more chicken or turkey flavor to these dishes to make them that much more delicious. 

– Make dirty rice. For a non-holiday dish, use the liver and gizzard to make Dirty Rice, a classic Louisiana side dish. 

The one thing to keep in mind with the gizzard is that it has a tough silver skin connecting the two muscles that you’ll want to remove at some point before consuming. Other than that, enjoy them however you please.

And, finally, if you’re too busy during the holidays to use the giblets, or if you’re unsure how you’d like to cook them, simply place them in an airtight container and freeze them for up to 3 months. You’ll have a quick and easy way to add big poultry flavor to stocks, gravies and recipes of all sorts in the new year. – AARON HUTCHERSON

Giblets. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST

Hybe enters Latin America market

(ANN/KOREA HERALD) — The company behind K-pop phenomenon boy band BTS, Hybe, has announced its foray into the Latin American music market. The company has established the local subsidiary, Hybe Latin America, in Mexico, the firm said Monday.

“We aim to extend our reach into Latin America, one of the fastest-expanding music markets in the world,” Hybe said in a statement Monday, adding the regional division will serve as its local office for the artists of Hybe Labels, the management arm of the multilabel company.

Hybe Latin America is also to be a base for new artist recruitment and content development, it added. The subsidiary will allow it to join forces with top-tier producers for the training, development, and systems optimal to the artists in the region.

Ultimately, the K-pop powerhouse is looking to implement its business methodology from Korea — achieved through the success of global stars the likes of BTS, Tomorrow X Together and NewJeans — in the Latin genre, the firm noted.

Isaac Lee, founder of Exile Contents, has been named to head the board of Hybe’s Latin American unit. Lee previously served as the chief content officer for the world’s leading Spanish-language media conglomerate, TelevisaUnivision, and has also produced global content distributed via Netflix, Amazon and Disney.

Hybe said it anticipates a full-fledged partnership with Exile Content with Lee’s engagement. Ahead of the launch, Hybe Latin America brought in Exile’s music arm, Exile Music, setting the grounds before officially entering the regional market. The deal marked the Seoul-based company’s first acquisition of a Latin American firm.

Meanwhile, the market for the Latin music genre recorded around USD1.1 billion in the US, the world’s No. 1 music market, in 2022, up by 24 per cent year-on-year, according to the Recording Industry Association of America — a considerable pace considering the 9 per cent annual growth of the global music market.

1962 Ferrari auctioned for USD51.7M

Sotheby's auctioneer Oliver Barker takes bids during Sotheby's auction of Emily Fisher Landau collection, including Picasso's "Femme à la montre" in New York City on November 8, 2023. Pablo Picasso's 'Femme a la montre' from 1932 is expected to fetch at least 120 million USD. Other works up for sale include pieces by Jasper Johns, Willem de Kooning, Mark Rothko and Andy Warhol. The sale consists of around 120 pieces from Landau's prestigious collection which is overall expected to realise well over 400 million USD. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) A 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO sports car sold for USD51.7 million in New York on Monday, making it the second most expensive car ever sold at auction, Sotheby’s said.

The bright red roadster had been the property of an American collector for the past 38 years, and its auction price was surpassed only by that of a Mercedes 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe that went for EUR135 million in 2022, the auction house said. That would be USD144 million at today’s exchange rate.

The 250 GTO went on sale Monday evening after a few minutes of bidding in the auction room, but at a price lower than the more than USD60 million expected by RM Sotheby’s, the luxury car subsidiary of the auction house.

Sotheby’s did not identify the winning bidder.

Dating from 1962, the legendary Scuderia sports car — chassis 3765, four-liter engine developing 390 horsepower — had finished second in a race of 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) on the German Nurburgring circuit, as well as in the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans, where the team had to withdraw due to engine failure, according to RM Sotheby’s.

After several years of competition on the Italian mainland and in Sicily, the car was sold and exported to the US in the late 1960s.

Restored and modified, the 250 GTO changed American owners several times before ending up in the hands of an Ohio “dedicated collector” in 1985, who sold it on Monday.

“This stunning GTO offers its next caretaker further touring and vintage racing enjoyment, or display at major concours d’elegance and marque gatherings worldwide,” Sotheby’s said.

The Mercedes 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupe that fetched 135 million euros in 2022 was one of only two examples of the sport car. It sold at a confidential auction at the German manufacturer’s museum in Stuttgart and was the most expensive car ever sold worldwide, whether at auction or privately, a RM Sotheby’s spokesman told AFP.

This week, New York auction houses Sotheby’s and Christie’s conclude their autumn season of art sales, which have not been affected by hard times and have raked in hundreds of millions of dollars since November 7.

Christie’s, which on Thursday sold Claude Monet’s “Le bassin aux nymphéas” (“Water Lily Pond”) for USD74 million and three paintings by Paul Cezanne for USD53 million, reported a total of USD864 million by late Monday.

Competitor Sotheby’s, which closes its New York sales on Thursday, sold Pablo Picasso’s “Femme à la montre” (“Woman with a Watch”) on Wednesday for USD139 million, the second-highest amount ever achieved for the Spanish master, who died 50 years ago.

Sotheby’s auctioneer Oliver Barker takes bids during Sotheby’s auction of Emily Fisher Landau collection, including Picasso’s “Femme à la montre” in New York City on November 8, 2023. PHOTO: AFP

Sotheby’s followed that sale on Monday with a Cezanne — “Peupliers au bord de l’Epte, temps couvert” (“Poplars on the banks of the Epte, overcast”) — to an Asian collector for USD30.7 million.

An 1892 Monet, “Le Moulin de Limetz” (“The Mill at Limetz), in the same American family for 130 years, sold for USD25.6 million.

And finally, American painter Mark Rothko broke his record for works on paper: “Untitled” was bought by an anonymous bidder in the room for USD23.8 million.

The market is driven by China and Asia and shows no signs of slowing down, according to Sotheby’s, despite a tense international context.

“Whatever happens in the financial markets, a car of this caliber is a collector’s item, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Michael Caimano of RM Sotheby’s told AFP before the car sale, comparing the Ferrari to a work of art that “can be touched, felt and heard.”

Alcaraz loses to Zverev in his ATP Finals debut

Spain's Carlos Alcaraz returns the ball to Germany's Alexander Zverev during their singles tennis match of the ATP World Tour Finals at the Pala Alpitour in Turin, Italy on Monday. PHOTO: AP

TURIN, Italy (AP) — Considering all that he’s accomplished over the last two years — two Grand Slam titles and finishing last season as No 1 — Carlos Alcaraz no doubt belongs among the world’s elite.

Still, this wouldn’t have been the ATP Finals debut the 20-year-old Spaniard was hoping for at the season-ending event for the year’s top eight players.

After missing the finals last year because of an abdominal injury, Alcaraz was beaten in his opening match on Monday by two-time champion Alexander Zverev 6-7 (3), 6-3, 6-4.

In the other red group match, Daniil Medvedev quickly dispatched his good friend Andrey Rublev 6-4, 6-2.

Zverev also missed last year’s edition after tearing ligaments in his right ankle in the French Open semifinals. But the big-serving German clearly likes the fast conditions inside the Pala Alpitour, where he claimed the title two years ago.

Zverev served 16 aces to Alcaraz’s 11, saved five of six break points, and never really let Alcaraz feel in control.

“I had a few break points that I couldn’t take, and I think that was the key of the match,” Alcaraz said.

Added Zverev, “I served very well. That helped.”

Zverev overcame a scare late in the third set when he was chasing down a forehand from Alcaraz, lost his grip, slipped and fell to the court clutching his left ankle. But Zverev quickly shook it off and held in that game for a 4-2 lead.

“I didn’t twist my ankle. I just kind of slipped. And kind of maybe pinched my Achilles, my capsule a little bit,” Zverev said. “Hopefully it’s nothing too major and I can continue playing.”

Zverev faced a break point while serving for the match and responded with an ace down the middle. Two points later, the match was over.

Zverev has also had off-court issues recently after a German court issued a penalty order against him after allegations he caused bodily harm to a woman. Zverev has disputed the allegations and is contesting the penalty order.

Alcaraz had trouble adjusting to the court’s speed.

“This surface is the fastest on the year, that’s for sure,” Alcaraz said. “I don’t know why they put this kind of surface at the end of the year because all the tournaments that we have played on hard court is so, so slow. Then we come here to the Masters and they put this court so fast.”

Zverev suggested a slight bit of altitude is a factor, with Turin at an elevation of 239 metres,

“But generally speaking, the conditions here are very fast,” Zverev said.

Still, Alcaraz enjoyed the experience of the fancy lighting and and the tunnel leading out to the court.

“The best walk-out that I’ve ever done,” the Spaniard said. “It was unbelievable experience for me to play my first match…even if I lost.”

Alcaraz can still hope to advance from the round-robin, with the top two finishers in each four-man group reaching the semifinals.

Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz returns the ball to Germany’s Alexander Zverev during their singles tennis match of the ATP World Tour Finals at the Pala Alpitour in Turin, Italy on Monday. PHOTO: AP

King Charles III celebrates 75th birthday

Britain's King Charles III reacts as he cuts a birthday cake as he attends his 75th birthday party, hosted by the Prince's Foundation, at Highgrove House in Tetbury, western England on November 13, 2023. Guests included local residents who have been nominated by friends and family and individuals and organisations also turning 75 in 2023. (Photo by Chris Jackson / POOL / AFP)

LONDON (AFP)Charles III turns 75 on Tuesday, showing no sign of a let-up in activity just over a year since he became king after the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth II.

Halfway through his eighth decade, the British head of state is due to spend the day carrying out public engagements followed by a private dinner at his London residence.

The lifelong environmentalist will use the day to highlight causes close to his heart, including a visit to a surplus food distribution centre with his wife Queen Camilla.

The visit will see him officially launch the Coronation Food Project, an initiative aimed at tackling food poverty by redistributing food that would otherwise end up in landfill.

Charles will also host a reception at Buckingham Palace for 400 nurses and midwives as part of this year’s 75th anniversary celebrations for the state-run National Health Service (NHS).

The NHS choir will treat him to a surprise birthday song, and gun salutes will also sound in London and across the UK, Buckingham Palace announced.

Britain’s King Charles III reacts as he cuts a birthday cake as he attends his 75th birthday party, hosted by the Prince’s Foundation, at Highgrove House in Tetbury, western England on November 13, 2023. PHOTO: AFP
Cake and a sing-song
 
Camilla, 76, once revealed that the famously workaholic king is particularly hard to buy gifts for.
 
“I will tell you that he is the most difficult person in the world to buy a present for… So he likes to make a list of things that he wants so you get it exactly right,” she said.
 
He likes “a cake and a bit of a sing-song”, she said, adding however that it was often difficult to get him to take a break.
 
The evening celebration will be attended by close family and friends, although his estranged younger son Harry will be missing.
 
A spokesperson for Harry and his American wife Meghan rebutted reports they had turned down an invitation saying there had been “no contact regarding an invitation to His Majesty’s upcoming birthday”.
 
Harry, 39, and Meghan, 42, quit royal duties in 2020 and relocated to California.
 
They have since unleashed a barrage of criticisms of the royal family leading to strained relations with his father and a damaging rift between Harry and his older brother, heir to the throne Prince William.
 
‘Lead diplomat’ 
 
Prince Charles Philip Arthur George was born on November 14, 1948 at Buckingham Palace, the first child of future Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh.

When he turned 70 in 2018, Charles joked that it was “alarming” and that he had acquired “all the scars that go with” his age.

Charles is marking his 75th birthday landmark in the same year that he was crowned and just a week after opening the UK parliament for the first time as sovereign.

Like his mother, who died at the age of 96 in September 2022, Charles has maintained a busy diary of royal duties despite his advancing years.

But Ed Owens, a royal historian and author, told AFP that Charles had taken on a more active role on the international stage than the late sovereign.

Charles had adopted the role of a “kind of international lead diplomat of Great Britain” and the Commonwealth, said Owens, author of “After Elizabeth: Can the Monarchy Save Itself?”

He had also shown that he was happy to speak out about difficult issues linked to colonialism and the British empire.

On a visit to Kenya earlier this month, Charles acknowledged there was “no excuse” for colonial-era abuses committed in the East African country.

“He’s confronting some of those more problematic histories in a way that Elizabeth II never would have done,” Owens added.

US postpones Asia trade deal rollout after criticism

Police stand on a bridge at the Moscone convention center hosting the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders' week in San Francisco, California, on November 13, 2023. President Joe Biden this week welcomes Pacific Rim allies to San Francisco, where he will also hold a high-stakes summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, part of the US leader's effort to confront Beijing's growing clout. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP)

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP)President Joe Biden’s administration signaled Monday it would postpone a draft of an Asia trade pact that had been set to be unveiled at a summit in San Francisco, after facing domestic criticism.

Biden, welcoming 20 other members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum to San Francisco where he will meet on the sidelines with Chinese President Xi Jinping, had been expected to announce substantial progress on a nascent trade deal.

But Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said there was still work to be done on the most contentious part of the so-called Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF), the trade component.

Police stand on a bridge at the Moscone convention center hosting the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders’ week in San Francisco, California, on November 13, 2023. PHOTO: AFP

“There’s been significant progress, but it looks not to be complete, like something that is likely to require further work,” she told reporters after leading talks of APEC foreign ministers.

“Nevertheless, in a number of areas that I think are critically important to the United States, like supply chains, environment, sustainable finance, we’ve made a huge amount of progress and we’ve made progress on trade too, but it appears not to be complete,” she said.

IPEF falls well short of a traditional trade deal as it does not offer trade access.

Nonetheless, it would aim to set standards for business across some 40 percent of the global economy including three of the world’s top five economies — the United States, Japan and India.

IPEF also includes Australia, South Korea and much of Southeast Asia, but notably not China, as the United States tries again to assert a leadership role in Asia.

Senator Sherrod Brown, a member of Biden’s Democratic Party close to labor unions, who faces reelection next year in battleground Ohio, on the eve of the summit called for the entire removal of trade from the IPEF.

“Any trade deal that does not include enforceable labor standards is unacceptable,” Brown said.

The Democrats enjoy only a slender majority in the Senate and some in the party fear IPEF could be a replay of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a more ambitious trade deal that former president Barack Obama pitched to Asian allies.

Donald Trump denounced that deal as ignoring US workers’ interests and pulled out immediately after entering the White House in 2017.

Naomi Biden’s agents open fire in carjacking attempt

A secret service agent, July 20, 2022, in New York. PHOTO: AP

WASHINGTON (AP) — Secret Service agents protecting President Joe Biden’s granddaughter opened fire after three people tried to break into an unmarked Secret Service vehicle in the nation’s capital, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press.

The agents, assigned to protect Naomi Biden, were out with her in the Georgetown neighborhood late Sunday night when they saw the three people breaking a window of the parked and unoccupied SUV, the official said. The official could not discuss details of the investigation publicly and spoke to the AP on Monday on the condition of anonymity.

One of the agents opened fire, but no one was struck by the gunfire, the Secret Service said in a statement. The three people were seen fleeing in a red car, and the Secret Service said it put out a regional bulletin to Metropolitan Police to be on the lookout for it.

The Metropolitan Police Department said Monday it was investigating the shooting, as it does with all police shootings in Washington. The agency said the “facts and evidence in the case will be independently reviewed by the United States Attorney’s Office.”

Washington has seen a significant rise in the number of carjackings and car thefts this year. Police have reported more than 750 carjackings this year and more than 6,000 reports of stolen vehicles in the district. US Representative Henry Cuellar of Texas was carjacked near the Capitol last month by three armed assailants, who stole his car but didn’t physically harm him.

Violent crime in Washington has also been on the rise this year, up more than 40 per cent compared with last year. In February, US Reppresentative Angie Craig of Minnesota was assaulted in her apartment building, suffering bruises while escaping serious injury.

A secret service agent, July 20, 2022, in New York. PHOTO: AP