Nikkiso Cryogenic Services Anuncia o novo Representante Autorizado e Parceiro de Serviços Soletec Group (Qatar)

TEMECULA, Califórnia, Dec. 08, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — O Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (Grupo) da Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries, subsidiária da Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japão), tem o orgulho de anunciar que o Soletec Group (Soletec) é o novo Representante Autorizado e Parceiro de Serviços da Nikkiso Cryogenic Services (NCS) em Qatar.

Com o crescimento do mercado do Oriente Médio, esta associação permite que o Grupo amplie sua presença regional nas indústrias de gases industriais, hidrogênio, processamento de gás natural e petroquímica. A partir de 1º de julho de 2021, a Soletec fornece serviço e suporte pós-venda aos clientes e estaleiros locais, como serviço e suporte de bombas, expansores turbo e plantas de processo, incluindo embalagens, reparos, peças sobressalentes e serviço de campo.

Com sede em Doha, Qatar, o Soletec dará suporte ao Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group no estabelecimento de operações de longo prazo em apoio a todos os nossos clientes existentes.

“A parceria recém-formada da Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group com o Soletec viabiliza que tenhamos uma forte presença regional na Arábia Saudita e fortalece nossa capacidade de servir melhor os mercados do Oriente Médio”, disse Jim Estes, Presidente da Nikkiso Cryogenic Services. “Estamos prontos para continuar a oferecer aos clientes da Nikkiso um serviço e suporte de alta qualidade, eliminando tempos de inatividade dispendiosos para suas operações e processos.”

O Grupo Soletec presta serviços à indústria de Petróleo e Gás há mais de 50 anos. Como fornecedor líder de serviços de projeto, engenharia e produção em toda a cadeia de suprimentos upstream, midstream e downstream, o Soletec Group estabeleceu relações de longo prazo com algumas das empresas de petróleo e gás mais importantes do mundo.

SOBRE A CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
A Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (agora membro da Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) fabrica equipamentos de processamento de gás criogênico projetados e plantas de processo de pequena escala para as indústrias de gás natural liquefeito (GNL), serviços de poços e gás industrial. Fundada há mais de 50 anos, a Cryogenic Industries é a empresa controladora da ACD, Cosmodyne e Cryoquip, e de um grupo comumente controlado de aproximadamente 20 entidades operacionais.

Para mais informação, visite www.nikkisoCEIG.com e www.nikkiso.com.

CONTATO COM A MÍDIA:
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group da Nikkiso Anuncia a Conclusão de uma Instalação de Armazenamento de Hidrogênio Líquido de Unitrove

TEMECULA, Califórnia, Dec. 08, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — O Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (Grupo) da Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries, subsidiária da Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japão), tem o orgulho de anunciar sua participação no design da nova instalação de Armazenamento de Hidrogênio Líquido (LH2) juntamente com a Unitrove.

A Nikkiso CE&IG e a Unitrove estão trabalhando em conjunto para desenvolver soluções para o futuro, particularmente em relação ao LH2. Para este projeto, o Grupo forneceu equipamentos personalizados de duas de suas Unidades Funcionais: um reservatório da sua unidade de Trocadores de Calor (Cryoquip) e unidade de Bombas Criogênicas (ACD).

“Estamos empolgados e orgulhosos de fazer parte de um dos primeiros projetos de instalações de armazenamento de hidrogênio líquido (LH2) do mundo e a busca de soluções mais eficientes em termos energéticos para o mercado marítimo”, disse Ole Jensen, Vice-Presidente, Europa, Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group.

O sistema de Armazenamento está sendo apresentado na Conferência Ambiental da COP26 das Nações Unidas em Glasgow, que vai até 12 de novembro de 2021. A instalação deve ser concluída em algum momento em 2022.

Este será o primeiro de vários projetos a serem entregues em 2022.

SOBRE A CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
A Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (agora membro da Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) fabrica equipamentos de processamento de gás criogênico projetados e plantas de processo de pequena escala para as indústrias de gás natural liquefeito (GNL), serviços de poços e gás industrial. Fundada há mais de 50 anos, a Cryogenic Industries é a empresa controladora da ACD, Cosmodyne e Cryoquip, e de um grupo comumente controlado de aproximadamente 20 entidades operacionais.

Para mais informação, visite www.nikkisoCEIG.com e www.nikkiso.com.

CONTATO COM A MÍDIA:
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group annonce une installation complète de soutage d’hydrogène liquide pour Unitrove

TEMECULA, Californie, 08 déc. 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries’ Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (Groupe), une filiale de Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japon), est fière d’annoncer notre participation à la conception d’une installation complète de soutage d’hydrogène liquide (LH2) avec Unitrove.

Nikkiso CE&IG et Unitrove travaillent ensemble pour développer des solutions pour l’avenir, en particulier en ce qui concerne le LH2. Pour ce projet, le groupe a fourni des équipements sur mesure provenant de deux de ses unités fonctionnelles : un puisard de son groupe d’échangeurs de chaleur (Cryoquip) et une unité de pompes cryogéniques (ACD).

« Nous sommes ravis et fiers de faire partie de l’un des premiers projets d’installation de soutage d’hydrogène liquide (LH2) au monde et de la recherche de solutions plus économes en énergie pour le marché maritime », a déclaré Ole Jensen, vice-président, Europe, Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group.

Le système de soutage a été présenté lors de la conférence COP26 des Nations Unies qui s’est tenue à Glasgow jusqu’au 12 novembre 2021. L’installation devrait être achevée en 2022.

Ce sera le premier de plusieurs projets prévus pour 2022.

À PROPOS DE CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (aujourd’hui membre de Nikkiso Co., Ltd) et ses entreprises membres fabriquent des équipements et de petites usines de traitement du gaz cryogénique pour les secteurs du gaz naturel liquéfié (GNL), des services d’entretien de puits et du gaz industriel. Fondée il y a plus de 50 ans, Cryogenic Industries est la société-mère d’ACD, de Cosmodyne et de Cryoquip, ainsi qu’un groupe administré en commun comptant une vingtaine d’entités opérationnelles.

Pour tout complément d’information, veuillez consulter les sites www.nikkisoCEIG.com et www.nikkiso.com.

Contact auprès des médias :
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Globeleq, Africa’s leading independent power company and its partners, Electricidade de Moçambique, E.P. (EDM) and Sasol, have announced financial close of the Central Termica de Temane power project (CTT)

MAPUTO, Mozambique, Dec. 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Debt financing of the US$652.3 million project is being provided by IFC, together with its “B” loan participants FMO and Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (together US$253.5 million), US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) (approximately US$191.5 million) and the OPEC Fund for International Development (OPEC Fund) (US$50 million). The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) has provided up to $251.3 million in political risk insurance to the private sector equity investors.

Globeleq - Powering Africa's Growth (PRNewsfoto/Globeleq)

Located at Temane in Inhambane Province, CTT consists of a 450 MW gas-fired power plant which will supply power to EDM under a 25-year tolling agreement. CTT is expected to provide electricity to meet the demand of 1.5 million households and will contribute about 14% of the electricity supply capacity available to meet demand in Mozambique.

The project is aligned with the Paris Agreement and will support Mozambique’s longer-term sustainable energy transition to net-zero by 2050. CTT’s flexible technical and commercial configuration allows for a variable supply of baseload and dispatchable power and will deliver complementary power so that Mozambique can maximise renewable energy generation projects on its grid and pursue lower carbon energy development.  In addition, the Siemens SGT-800 turbines chosen for the plant can be upgraded to handle high hydrogen content, further reducing the plant’s carbon impact.

CTT also anchors a new 563 km high-voltage transmission line (the Temane Transmission Project (TTP)) and secures the first phase of the interconnection of the southern grid to the central and northern grids of Mozambique.  This will establish a corridor of electrification and ensure a more stable and secure grid and enable the connection of future renewable generation projects. The TTP is owned by EDM and will be funded using grant and concessional finance provided by the World Bank, Africa Development Bank, Islamic Development Bank, OPEC Fund and the Norwegian Government.  Together, the entire value chain (gas development, gas fired power plant and transmission infrastructure) will see an investment of more than US$2 billion.

“This pioneering project has the potential to deliver significant economic and social benefits by helping meet Mozambique’s growing demand for power, support the country’s economic recovery and the region’s energy transition. This is our third power investment in Mozambique, and we remain committed to supporting the sustainable development of the country’s electricity sector”, said Linda Munyengeterwa, IFC’s Regional Industry Director for Infrastructure, Middle East & Africa.

DFC financing for this project will support people and businesses throughout Mozambique by reducing the cost of electricity and increasing generation. These are important development gains that will spur further economic development in communities across the country.

Abdulhamid Alkhalifa, Director General of the OPEC Fund said: “The OPEC Fund supports the development of the Temane power plant, as well as the complementary transmission infrastructure through its private and public sector loan facilities. Our assistance reflects our commitment to the Sustainable Development Goal 7- Affordable and Clean Energy. Once completed, Temane will increase the supply of efficient and affordable energy to households, businesses, and industries, contributing to social and economic development in Mozambique and the region.”

The Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy, Hon. Ernesto Max Elias Tonela confirmed: “As a country that is at risk from the worst effects of climate change, our government fully supports the Paris Agreement.  We are working on our long-term decarbonization plans in line with that Agreement and CTT is fully in line with our transition which also includes developing hydro, solar and wind projects.”

The project will be built by the Spanish contractor TSK, utilising efficient and well-proven Siemen’s gas turbine technology. TSK has extensive experience in designing and constructing similarly sized combined-cycle power plants and will leverage their in-country construction experience during the 34-month construction period. CTT is expected to generate around 830 jobs during construction and 90 permanent jobs during operations. This excludes engineering and other work performed off-site. Mozambicans will be prioritized for jobs during both construction and operations. It is estimated that the project will support the creation of 14,000 indirect jobs and livelihoods when it becomes operational in 2024.

Mike Scholey, CEO of Globeleq, indicated: “Globeleq is committed to supporting the Government’s aim of achieving universal electricity access by 2030 and positively impacting the regional energy landscape. The Government of Mozambique, through EDM, is a strategic partner for Globeleq as we grow to develop other projects in renewables, such as the Cuamba solar and battery project and other wind and solar developments underway.”

EDM’s Chairman, Marcelino Gildo Alberto, believes that “a new phase is now opening in the energy sector, with EDM leading the way in the processes of generating increasingly cleaner electricity to promote the country’s industrialisation and export to the regional market.”

Priscillah Mabelane, Executive Vice President for Sasol’s Energy’s Business said: “Sasol is proud to partner with EDM and Globeleq in this exciting Temane project, which will create jobs, enable sustainable and lower carbon energy supply and long-lasting in-country benefits. She added: “Sasol is committed to a meaningful contribution towards the development Mozambique.”

CTT is expected to provide first power in 2024.

Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/612609/GLobeleq_Logo.jpg

New Zealand’s Plan to End Smoking: A Lifetime Ban for Youth

New Zealand’s government believes it has come up with a unique plan to end tobacco smoking — a lifetime ban for those 14 or younger.

Under a new law the government announced Thursday and plans to pass next year, the minimum age to buy cigarettes would keep rising year after year.

That means, in theory at least, 65 years after the law takes effect, shoppers could still buy cigarettes — but only if they could prove they were at least 80 years old.

In practice, officials hope smoking will fade away decades before then. Indeed, the plan sets a goal of having fewer than 5% of New Zealanders smoking by 2025.

Other parts of the plan include allowing only the sale of tobacco products with very low nicotine levels and slashing the number of stores that can sell them. The changes would be brought in over time to help retailers adjust.

Because the current minimum age to buy cigarettes in New Zealand is 18, the lifetime smoking ban for youth wouldn’t have an impact for a few years.

In an interview with The Associated Press, New Zealand’s Associate Health Minister Dr. Ayesha Verrall, who is spearheading the plan, said her work at a public hospital in Wellington involved telling several smokers they had developed cancer.

“You meet, every day, someone facing the misery caused by tobacco,” Verrall said. ”The most horrible ways people die. Being short of breath, caused by tobacco.”

Smoking rates have steadily fallen in New Zealand for years, with only about 11% of adults now smoking and 9% smoking every day. The daily rate among Indigenous Maori remains much higher at 22%. Under the government’s plan, a task force would be created to help reduce smoking among Maori.

Big tax increases have already been imposed on cigarettes in recent years and some question why they aren’t hiked even higher.

“We don’t think tax increases will have any further impact,” Verrall said. “It’s really hard to quit and we feel if we did that, we’d be punishing those people who are addicted to cigarettes even more.”

And she said the tax measures tend to place a higher burden on lower-income people, who are more likely to smoke.

The new law wouldn’t impact vaping. Verrall said that tobacco smoking is far more harmful and remains a leading cause of preventable deaths in New Zealand, killing up to 5,000 people each year.

“We think vaping’s a really appropriate quit tool,” she said.

The sale of vaping products is already restricted to those 18 and over in New Zealand and vaping is banned in schools. Verrall said there was some evidence of a rise in youth vaping, a trend she is following “really closely.”

New Zealand’s approach to ban the next generation from tobacco smoking hasn’t been tried elsewhere, she said.

But she said studies have shown youth sales decrease when minimum ages are raised. In the U.S., the federal minimum age to buy tobacco products was raised from 18 to 21 two years ago.

While public health experts have generally welcomed the New Zealand plan, not everybody is happy.

Sunny Kaushal said some stores could be put out of business. Kaushal chairs the Dairy and Business Owners Group, which represents nearly 5,000 corner stores — often called dairies in New Zealand — and gas stations.

“We all want a smoke-free New Zealand,” he said. “But this is going to hugely impact small businesses. It should not be done so it is destroying dairies, lives and families in the process. It’s not the way.”

Kaushal said the tax increases on tobacco had already created a black market that was being exploited by gangs, and the problem would only get worse. He said smoking was already in its twilight in New Zealand and would die away of its own accord.

“This is being driven by academics,” he said, adding that stakeholders hadn’t been consulted.

But Verrall said she didn’t believe the government was overreaching because statistics showed the vast majority of smokers wanted to quit anyway, and the new policies would only help them achieve their goal.

She said the pandemic had helped people gain a new appreciation for the benefits of public health measures and rallying communities, and that perhaps that energy could be harnessed not only to tackle smoking but also diseases like diabetes.

Source: Voice of America

Pakistan Reports First Case of Omicron

Pakistan has detected its first case of the omicron variant of the coronavirus.

Official said Thursday the infection was found in a 57-year-old unvaccinated woman in Karachi, the country’s largest city and capital of the southern Sindh province.

Local media reported the patient, who was isolating at home after being discharged from the hospital a day earlier, did not have a travel history and contact tracing was under way.

“We have not yet concluded the genomic study of the patient’s sample but the way the virus is behaving, it seems like it is omicron,” provincial Health Minister Azra Fazal Pechuno said in a video statement.

Pechuno said people need not panic and urged them to get fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.

“Omicron is highly transmissible, but deaths or serious illnesses have not been seen in reports from South Africa,” where the variant was first detected, she added.

In a statement Thursday, the federal government-run National Institute of Health in Islamabad said it was premature to draw any conclusions whether the patient in Karachi was infected with omicron.

“To clarify, the sample is not yet confirmed to be omicron via whole-genome sequencing, which is to be performed after obtaining the sample,” the statement said. “However, in the light of global situation, the public is strongly urged to get vaccinated at the earliest.”

Late last month, Pakistan placed a complete ban on travel from six African countries, including South Africa, Lesotho, Eswatini — formerly known as Swaziland, Mozambique, Botswana and Namibia, and Hong Kong after the discovery of omicron.

Authorities later extended the ban to nine more countries, including Croatia, Hungary, Netherlands, Ukraine, Ireland, Slovenia, Vietnam, Poland and Zimbabwe, and tightened monitoring of passengers arriving from several other nations.

Pakistan, a country of about 220 million people, has reported close to 1.3 million coronavirus cases, including more than 28,800 deaths.

As of Thursday, officials said more than 24% of the total population and 35% of the eligible population had been vaccinated against the pandemic.

Source: Voice of America