Oceania | Definition, Population, & Facts | Britannica

Oceania, collective name for the islands scattered throughout most of the Pacific Ocean. The term, in its widest sense, embraces the entire insular region between Asia and the Americas. A more common definition excludes the Ryukyu, Kuril, and Aleutian islands and the Japan archipelago. The most popular usage delimits Oceania further by eliminating Indonesia, Taiwan, and the Philippines, because the peoples and cultures of those islands are more closely related historically to the Asian mainland. Oceania then, in its most restricted meaning, includes more than 10,000 islands, with a total land area (excluding Australia, but including Papua New Guinea and New Zealand) of approximately 317,700 square miles (822,800 square km).

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Oceania has traditionally been divided into four parts: Australasia (Australia and New Zealand), Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia. As recently as 33,000 years ago no human beings lived in the region, except in Australasia. Although disagreeing on details, scientists generally support a theory that calls for a Southeast Asian origin of island peoples. By 2000 about 12 million islanders lived in Oceania (excluding Australia), and many indigenous cultures were revolutionized by intensive contact with non-Oceanic groups who had intruded from various parts of the Western world. (The arts of the region are discussed in several articles; see art and architecture, Oceanic; music and dance, Oceanic; and Oceanic literature.) Pop. (2001 est.) including Australia, 31,377,000.

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Oceania | Definition, Population, & Facts | Britannica

Oceania – Wikitravel

Oceania

Oceania is a vast, arbitrarily defined expanse of the world where the Pacific Ocean rather than land borders connects the nations. It is home to glistening white beaches, coconut palms swaying in the breeze, beautiful coral reefs, and rugged volcanic islands rising out of the blue ocean. Its diverse nations have both some of the world's most cosmopolitan and internationalised cities such as Melbourne, and some of its most remote and culturally isolated villages.

Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea are by far the largest countries on these lands that comprise southern Oceania, with the first two the most visited. Within Oceania are the vast island nation groupings of Polynesia to the far east, Melanesia to the west and Micronesia to the north.

Australia and New Zealand are both former British colonies. At one time it was envisaged that the two colonies would become a single country. In the past, Papua New Guinea was a United Nations trusteeship, administered by Australia. Various islands have been annexed by Britain, Spain, Portugal, Germany, France, Australia and the United States.

The presence of all of these cultures has created an influence on aspects of culture norms and development. In many areas at least one, often more indigenous languages, and the languages of one or more of the colonial powers, are spoken by the majority as people have coexisted or joined with the influx of other cultures. This mix has influenced cuisine, architecture and other facets of culture.

Ecologically, Oceania also includes the eastern parts of Indonesia as far as Lombok and Sulawesi.

See the country articles for detailed information on how to Get in.

The major countries of Australia and New Zealand do of course offer connections from all continents, although there are few direct flights from South America. There are some other gateways offering other opportunities to get in to Oceania, and for interesting itineraries. Air France connects New Caledonia direct with Tokyo and Paris and also flies to Tahiti. Onward connections to Sydney and Auckland are possible. Fiji Airways connects Fiji with Los Angeles with connections through to Sydney, Auckland and Tahiti. Tahiti is connected to Los Angeles, and you can fly to the Cook Islands direct from there. Air New Zealand provides a service to Tonga and Samoa from Los Angeles and Auckland. The Los Angeles service is subsidized by the New Zealand government as a form of aid to the two countries. Manila, Guam and Honolulu offer a gateway to the many countries of Micronesia, mainly on Continental Airlines.

The smallest islands with less tourism present travel challenges. Many are entirely deserted, and some have restrictions on access. Others require specialized services you may hire.

A South Pacific cruise.

Without a yacht, or a lot of time, the only way for travellers to get around between the main destinations of Oceania is by plane. Sydney, Brisbane, Auckland, and Los Angeles have good connectivity to the region. It is usually possible to fly from the west coast of the United States through to Sydney or Auckland via Hawaii, Tahiti, Fiji or even the Cook Islands.

However, air routes tend to come and go depending on whether the airlines find them profitable or not. Much of Micronesia, having been under US Administration, is serviced by Continental Airlines. Much of English-speaking Polynesia receives regular flights from Air New Zealand. Melanesia is mainly serviced by national and Australian airlines. Don't expect daily flights. Patience is required.

Flying between Micronesia and the other two areas is problematic and may involve flying all the way to Honolulu or a complicated route through Manila, Sydney and Auckland. Continental Airlines has a weekly flight from Guam to Nadi in Fiji. United Airlines offers flights also.Aircalin has flights from Japan direct to New Caledonia

Some flight options within Oceania, amongst others, are:

There are some options for boats, cruise ships, private yachts, adventure cruises, and even cargo ships.

Consult the guide for the destination you are visiting.

All island groups are fascinating and with time and money you can spend months just travelling around. There are some stunningly beautiful islands (Samoa, Cook Islands, French Polynesia), some fascinating cultures and festivals, some wonderful diving and totally deserted beaches. Check the individual country sections for details.

Skiing and snow sports. New Zealand has reliable winter snowfalls, mostly on the South Island in winter. The Snowy Mountains in New South Wales have the largest ski resorts in the southern hemisphere.

Although staple foods from outside the region, such as rice and flour, now have a firm foothold, the traditional staples of roots and tubers remain very important. The cheapest is usually cassava, which can be left in the ground for a long time. Sweet potato is a very important crop and is found in most parts of Oceania with the major producing area being the Highlands of Papua New Guinea. Taro and yam are also widespread. The latter is the most valuable of the roots and tubers and there are many customs associated with its cultivation. In the Sepik area of Papua New Guinea, for example, relations between married couples are traditionally forbidden while the yams are growing. On the other hand, in the Trobriand Islands the yam harvest traditionally is a period of active relations within couples, and of sexual freedom in general.

Kava is a drink produced from the roots of a plant related to the pepper plant and found mainly in Polynesia as well as Fiji and Vanuatu. It has a mildly narcotic effect. Other names include 'awa (Hawai'i), 'ava (Samoa), yaqona (Fiji), and sakau (Pohnpei). Traditionally it is prepared by chewing, grinding or pounding the roots of the kava plant. In Tonga, chewing traditionally had to be done by female virgins. Pounding is done in a large stone with a small log. The product is then added to cold water and consumed as quickly as possible, invariably as part of a group of people sitting around and sharing the cup. Check before taking any out of the country, however, as importing or exporting kava can be illegal for travelers.

Usual travel precautions re: any socializing or involvement with local people apply, always, and take special care in remote areas and on remote islands. Prepare thoroughly for trips into remote areas. Do your research, be prepared, understand that wilderness areas are true wilderness.

Fiji, New Caledonia, the Cook Islands, Samoa and all other islands except those listed next are usually malaria free.

Vanuatu has no reported cases of malaria currently although it has existed. Islanders are recuperating from flood losses (2014), and attendant human and infrastructure damage in the Solomon Islands, with some people who have contracted malaria. The malaria risk has lessened in Papua New Guinea this decade. All mentioned have a regimen of larval control practices.

Check with the WHO for the latest statistics.

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Oceania - Wikitravel

S/pacific Islands: Some Reflections on Identity and Art in Contemporary Oceania – E-Flux

The S/pacifics of Salt Water

Humanity emerged from the oceans, as did all life on this planet. Our bodies are 60 percent brinewe carry this marine heritage with us however far we travel from the sea, detached and diasporic as we may become. Perhaps we could even think of ourselves as self-contained mini-oceans teeming with fluid universes that have tragically lost their consciousness of shared oceanhood. While these poetic imaginations appeal to a collective human yearning for the sublime, the universal, and the utopian, such a metanarrative skips over the real lives, bodies, and territories of those people most intimate with the sea on islands and coastlines across the planet.

Specificity matters. Having grown up between the Marshall Islands, the United States, and Japan, I am concerned with a specific oceanthe Pacificand in it, the specific islands and communities of people, as well as the art in this part of the world. As my late friend and mentor Teresia Teaiwa, a scholar of Banaban and I-Kiribati heritage and one of Oceanias greatest minds, punned in her own writing, it is essential to emphasize the urgency of specific notionsor rather S/pacific n/oceansof Oceanian history and art: the specificities of genealogies, crossings, colonialisms, wars, struggles, and resilience of the people who live throughout the Great Ocean.1 It is in this spirit that I write this essay, which is not meant to be a curatorial text narrating a tidy story of which artists to watch from Oceania. Instead, I am interested in nudging this conversation beyond the ambiguities of the ocean to the specificities of Oceania, in order to foster more receptivity toward art and artists from this region.

I use Oceania in conversation with the influential and oft-quoted Tongan thinker Epeli Hauofa, who used that word to gesture toward an expanded and decolonized view of the Pacific Islands as the largest region on earth, and who described it as a sea of islands interconnected by ocean, rather than disparate and remote landmasses. But I find utility in both Oceania and Pacific, considering how the latter is a colonial term, a reminder of the embedded and entangled imperial forces that named and mapped this ocean, and that still need to be confronted. Increasingly, historians and curators from outside the region over-quote Hauofas landmark manifesto Our Sea of Islands with utopian and pan-Oceanian glee, thus making it seem as if decolonization is complete, while wallpapering over the immense differences between island topographies, Islander cultures, and contrasting colonial histories.2 After all, just as there are diverse islands, there are multiple Pacifics: competing imaginaries seen from different colonial vantage points. Western mappings of the Great Ocean created the legacy of the nesiasPolynesia, Melanesia, Micronesiabased purely on racialized perversions and fantasies of European explorers and colonists. Mapmakers romanticized Polynesians as noble savages, termed Melanesians solely for the darkness of their skin and a perception of them as being murderous barbarians (simply because they successfully fought white invaders away for so long), and coined Micronesia as a belittling term to cover all the miscellaneous scraps and leftover islands of the equatorial and northern Pacific that didnt fit into the prior two categories. And from these Western biases emerged hierarchieswith Polynesia at the top, leading to a sense even today of a privileging of Polynesia as metonym for the entire region at the exclusion of all other places, cultures, and histories, sometimes referred to as Polycentrism.

Japan, too, had its own imaginary of Oceania, which it called Nanya vague and broad frontier originating in Micronesia and eventually including all of the island Pacific and Southeast Asia. (Nany simply means The Southfrom a Japanese perspective.) In the twentieth century, Japan would attempt, and mostly succeed, to subsume this entire southern frontier, until it was wrested away by the United States and its allies and mostly reborn in the form of the postwar American Empire.

This essay says nothing new, at least in terms of what scholars and artists in and around Oceania often talk about. Rather, I want to propose an understanding of Oceania as a verb and not a noun, as dynamic rather than static, an open-ended conversation, sentence, question, and to recenter Oceania, to demand its centrality in the Middle of Now and Here as opposed to the middle of nowhere.3 As Teresia Teaiwa poignantly wrote, We sweat and cry salt water, so we know that the ocean is really in our blood.4 She meant this not as a universalist call to all humanity, but rather as an affirmation of a shared Pacific Islander identity and heritage in the context of decolonizing history, with an investment in the larger project of trans-indigenous solidarity. I would reverse that paradigm as well, to suggest that the ocean itself is made up of the blood and sweat and tears of countless generations of Islanders who have struggled and persevered there, against incredible colonial and environmental adversity. We must remember, too, that humans cannot survive in water; we live on land, and landespecially in the Pacific Islandsis part of the fabric of ones very being. It is flesh. In many Austronesian languages, for example, the word for land (whenua in Mori, fenua in Tahitian, fanua in Samoan) is the same word used for placenta, which is typically buried in the land. As many Pacific writers have emphasized, landthe island itselfis thus also a mother.5

My own connection to Oceania is not as an Islander, but as a person who grew up riding the currents of colonialism. I am a fourth-generation European American, descended from the combined Atlantic crossings and subsequent struggles and romances of Jewish, Romanian, Italian, Czech, Dutch, and other immigrants to the United States. I am also a first-generation immigrant and a twenty-year permanent resident of Japan, where I live most of my life speaking Japanese and working as a university professor in Tokyo. But most importantly, though I am not indigenous to it, I consider Oceania my first home. In the early 1970s at the height of the Cold War, my fatheran earnest, peace-loving systems engineer who worked for a major American defense companybrought my mother and one-year-old me with him to the Marshall Islands, where for nearly eight years he would help to test intercontinental ballistic missiles (minus their nuclear warheads) at Kwajalein, the largest coral atoll in the world.

Kwajalein Atoll is a vast and beautiful ring of land and lagoon that has been inhabited by brave and resilient Marshall Islanders for thousands of years. Along with much of the surrounding islands of Micronesia, after hundreds of years loosely under Spanish domination, it was colonized by Germany (18851919) and Japan (19191947).6 The United States colonized the Marshalls even longer, beginning with its so-called liberation of these islands from the Japanese government in the 1940s, followed by sixty-seven devastating nuclear tests conducted at Bikini and Enewetak Atolls between 1946 and 1958, and then by its ongoing missile-testing and space defense projects at Kwajalein Atoll, which began in 1964 and continue through to the present day, even after the formation of the sovereign Republic of the Marshall Islands in the mid-1980s. This is a proud S/pacific nation that symbolizes the perseverance and optimism of Islanders over the horrors of colonial and military violence and climate change; yet it rarely is mentioned in Western descriptions of the Pacific, which tend to favor fantasies of tropical pleasure and escape rather than the bitter truths of conquest and domination.

As a teacher, artist, and curator working with Islander colleagues between Japan and Pacific places, I situate my own story here to invite others like me with non-Pacific heritage to realize and acknowledge their own indebtedness to Oceania and the violent histories of colonial exploitation. As a child, in my privileged position derived from legacies of stealing Marshallese land for the sake of American security and wealth, I lived and breathed the military settler colonialism hidden in plain sight all around me. Had it not been for Islander teachers and friends who patiently shared their stories with me, I might have completely ignored the deeper truths that Kwajalein wanted me to learn. Through them I would begin to unpack the horrors of imperial trespass and feel humbled by the incredible resilience, strength, wisdom, and agency of Pacific Islanders.

Outside of the Pacific Islands, most of us are indeed beholden to these histories, and yet our imaginary of this Great Ocean is oddly vague and romantic. I often ask new students to draw the Pacific. 99.9 percent of their illustrations are mapstypically rendered as if looking down at earth from space or the heavens, the ubiquitous Gods eye view that most Google Maps users take for granted today as reality. They draw a political/economic map that emphasizes the contours of important countries that border the Great Ocean, and in the middle of the map is always little more than a vast and undefined stretch of bluea void, sometimes peppered with little dots that are supposed to represent islands, sometimes not. Sometimes the islands are labeledat most, the Hawaiian Islands, Aotearoa-New Zealand, perhaps Fiji or Papua New Guinea. This is an imperial worldview, an overview that audaciously and even violently attempts to encompass the wholeness of the largest region on earth and reduce it to remote specks in blue vagueness. Zoom in on Google Earth on any of these ill-defined dots, however, and you will soon discover that even the smallest islands can take a human being days to traverse by foot in the hot sun.

A more S/pacific view invites us to look at how an ocean wayfinder, a navigator, would visualize Oceania, if they even privileged the visual in the first place. True navigators in the distant islands of Micronesia, like Mau Piailugthe influential Satawalese teacher of wayfindingcould feel with their bodies the rhythm and the texture of the ocean, the subtle echoes of waves and surges and currents crashing against and flowing around islands. Chants passed down through generations and perpetuated in hula and other Islander oral traditions gesture toward specific markers on the surface and depths of ocean, even the smells of seaweed, of places and islandsas Chamorro-Pohnpeian scholar Vince Diaz writes, the olfactory map of the Pacific is also rich and nuanced.7 And so, a S/pacific perspective demands that we remember the contexts, the relativity of size to one human body, and the importance of place and environment. If it is even worth drawing the Pacific to begin with, at the very least it is essential to realize that at sea level, from an island-based visual perspective, one might not sketch out a map but rather a single unbroken line dividing the expanses of sky and water, what Westerners commonly refer to as the horizon.

Nearing the edge of the reef, Ishigaki Island, Okinawa, August 2020. Photo: Greg Dvorak. Courtesy of the author.

Triangulating across and between horizons helps Islanders navigate Oceania and the current crises of our world. Even in my own triangulations between Japan, America, and the Marshall Islands, I find a deeper sense of located-ness amidst the complexity of coral and concrete. These two substances are rich metaphors that can help to narrate S/pacific histories in helpful ways that facilitate more humility and interaction between islands, oceans, and people in relation to each other while being mindful of power and inequality.8 Oceanias culture and geography is all about connections between islands, maintained through the passing of knowledge from one generation to the next through stories and the genealogical bonds of family (not necessarily blood relations as much as kinship through shared affinity and commitment). Coral is like thisorganic, migratory, relational, ancestral, rhizomatic. But we must also call out the abuse of power and violenceto identify the aggressors who literally and figuratively crushed those coral reefs and mixed them into concrete to pour for their imperial endeavors. Amidst the turbulence of globalization, climate change, militarism, and even the Covid pandemic, Oceania is the site of an ongoing competition between coralthe little histories of real human livespitted against concretethe big histories of empires and wars.9 In the grander scheme of things, despite the imperial or military pretense of concrete permanence, it is always the coralline collective struggles and creative ingenuity of individuals formed into communities which overcome and survive across generations.

Coral is a microorganism that spawns annually, coral polyps projecting their eggs and sperm onto the ocean currents, which become baby polyps that navigate the seas on epic journeys to find hospitable new sites where they can attach and build new reefs. Coral thus builds a genealogical structure out of diverse and disparate journeys, making sense of chaos, growing in deep time over thousands of years, literally transforming from the microscopic to the macroscopic. I liken the crossings of people to coral. It is estimated that Austronesian people left their homelands in or around present-day Taiwan about five to six thousand years ago, voyaging and wayfinding across tremendous distances in waves of outmigration as they developed better and better maritime technology and knowledge, settling different corners of island Oceania from west to east. These progressive crossings and layerings gave birth to diverse but interconnected island cultures and transoceanic trade routes, languages, heritages. But I include in my metaphor of coral the other crossings of ordinary peopleof castaways and people who drifted off course, of missionaries, of people captured and forced away from their families, of the later flows of settlers like laborers and prisoners, of the migrations of soldiers and colonists.

The coral image doesnt condone the horrifically violent encounters that happened along the way as a result of these migrations; rather, it as an allegory for an inventory of all of these contradictory influences, an inclusive metaphor for the sloppy but strangely elegant sedimenting of diverse truths into complicated reefs. In English, it is said that coral colonizes, but in fact coral actually decolonizes: reclaiming, resistant, dynamic, strong. And reefs embody how colonial encounters always entail resistance, nuance, and peril; for coral can be soft, colorful, and beautiful, but also messy, harsh, fragile, sharp, and jagged. The reef can sink a ship; coral can infect a wound and kill. Coral is built upon the bones of those who came before, simultaneously life and death, sometimes strong as rock and sometimes frail as flower petals. Coral is thus the embodiment of resistance to all that would attempt to flatten, essentialize, or appropriate it into a singular narrative of domination.

In contrast to the complexity and resistance of coral, concrete is the stuff of oversimplification: imperial contrivance, the farce of permanence, the lie that the people who came before were somehow complicit and submissive in their own colonization. Before and after the Pacific War, Japanese and Americans both literally dredged up the Marshallese coral reef ancestral fishing grounds that surrounded the main island in Kwajalein Atoll, pulverized it, and mixed it with cement to make airstrips and fortifications in the service of empire and war. Bunkers, blockhouses, and bureaucracies: concrete is collective violence and oppressionit is orientalism, nationalism, and fascism. Concrete is war. It is ecocide. It is the wall that separates us and the sickening hubris of petty world leaders who boast of building walls. It is the output of general contractors who dump tons and tons of it onto islands and oceans. It is the giant blocks poured by the United States military at Henoko in Okinawa to coat the reef there and make yet another new and unnecessary Marine base. It is the gargantuan tetrapod objects heaped along the coasts of Japan in a triumphant (but futile) warning to the ocean that no tsunami shall wipe away the seaside infrastructure of capitalism, is if the waves would listen. Concrete is the rotting carcasses of Japanese war-era administrative buildings and bomb shelters buried deep in the jungles of Chuuk, Peleliu, Jaluit, Saipan, or Palawan, the aircraft carriers asleep on the bottoms of lagoons. It is also the golf courses and tourist infrastructure spread out across the Pacific today. They say that concrete has a lifespan of only a hundred years, which is really about the same as a human life, and yet empires praise it as if it were eternal.

Even if coral is bleaching because of our warming seas, its reefs will always stand as ruins and monuments to these incredible histories that far outlast concrete, and it is plausible that long after humanity has perished and oceans have cooled, coral will regenerate and continue its (de)colonizations. Over millions of years, coral reefs have built islands out of their migrations and interconnections. In the clockwise-flowing Kuroshio/Pacific Current along which I live alone, in this part of Northern Oceania, oceanographers know that the reefs of the Marshall Islands give birth to the reefs of Kosrae and Pohnpei, which in turn beget the islands and atolls to their west, all the way across to the Philippines and up across Okinawa and Amami, up to Kyushu and Honshu. This eternal cycle is overlaid with the millions of crossings of canoes and ships and airplanes, the landings and flights, the unions of individuals that result in children and their childrens children. We are deeply, deeply entangled with each other, but the concrete our nations pour can make some of us the inheritors of great privilege and others the inheritors of dispossession. In fact the coronavirus pandemic starkly reveals this: the biggest factors enabling mass infections among the poorest and most marginalized might well be our concrete cities and concrete barriers of capitalistic inequality. But it is also the coming together of disparate people for common causes that build new reefs of resistance, to fight for the health of Pacific Islanders and also to insist that black and brown lives matternot only in predominantly white places but everywhere, including in Oceania itself, such as in Indonesian-occupied West Papua, where Islanders are oppressed and killed simply for asserting their own identity.

The arrival of canoes from across Micronesia at the Festival of Pacific Arts in Guam, 2016. Photo: Greg Dvorak. Courtesy of the author.

It is the Western obsession with concrete that explains why Spain has already begun making a big fuss about the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan, notwithstanding that 2021 also marks the five-hundredth anniversary of the beginning of the European-led genocidal violence he initiated in Oceania. It was really only Magellans bad luck, ignorance, and the sheer enormity of the Great Ocean that enabled him to cross southeast to northwest without making landfall once until his crew, starving, exhausted, and bored, reached Guhan (Guam) in March 1521, having declared this ocean so uneventful and unimpressive that it earned the moniker pacificothe name Pacific stuck. Sailing into the bay of Humtak, Magellan proceeded to order the burning of the entire village and the murder of many innocent Chamoru people, after which his crew reportedly cannibalized these bodies to replenish their health. The first recorded European history of cannibalism in the Pacific was thus by white people eating natives, and not the other way around.

That was the gruesome beginning of Western consumption of The Pacific, and it has continued ever since. And since the trespasses of Magellan, James Cook, and many others like them, it has been fashionable for Outsiders to project their imperial fantasies of Paradise onto the Pacific Islands, erasing like the military airstrips and concrete resort hotels of Honolulu the lives of real people and the bitter truths of the very colonization they themselves and their forebears wrought upon those islands on behalf of various empires.10 Many artists, from Picasso to Gauguin, were particularly notorious for this in their pursuit of the primitive fantasy that they sought in Pacific Island cultures. Gauguin, for example, gladly invited himself to Tahiti and the Marquesas Islands, where he spread syphilis and slept with teenage girls, all the while painting a vision of an eden that existed as if solely for the pleasure of European hetero-hungry men. And despite this, French tourists still seek out their dream of the Polynesian wahine dusky maiden, and Air Tahiti Nui has Gauguin paintings decorating the interior of its aircraft. And for all the fantasies of Pacific Paradise there are just as many nightmares of a Pacific Hell; for the Pacific Islands regularly show up in Western imaginationsincluding in journalism and contemporary art11as the condemned nuclear wastelands of the past or the doomed bleached reefs and submerged homelands of the future, often devoid of the Pacific Islanders for whom these places matter the most.

Thus, the Pacific has long been consumed in very concrete ways, absent its deeper coral histories and of S/pacific localities and local communities in all their diversity. So my hope here is to advocate against one-sided consumption and rather for a more equal conversation, collaboration, and engagement with Oceania and the artists of the Pacific Islands region. It is not my intention to attempt a history of art in Oceania, which would be audacious and inadequate, given that I am not an art historian, nor has that been my research specialization up until now. There are many meticulous art historians and curators, such as Peter Brunt, Nicholas Thomas, Sean Mallon, and their colleagues, who have done magnificent work in this arena with their Art in Oceania: A New History,12 and later, the Oceania exhibition in 201819 at the Royal Academy in London and Muse du Quai Branly in Paris. This show, which painstakingly pulled together hundreds of works by people all over Oceania from past centuries, gathered from European collections and mindfully chosen with regard to the integrity of their provenance, also included a substantial body of works from contemporary Pacific artists that were highly engaged with urgent questions over colonialism, militarism, racism, war, the environment, and globalization. Still, this exhibit was criticized, for example, by Native Hawaiian curator Noelle Kahanu, one of its advisors, who lamented that although these precious objects, many imbued with immense spiritual and ancestral significance, were presented in Europe, the show was also significant in that those [Pacific people] who would most benefit, who would most deserve to see that which is here, [were] absent.13 She added that it remained the task of the visitor to draw their own connections to realize the violent history that confined such collections to European audiences, far away from the Pacific Ocean, with the work of contemporary Islander artists asked to bear the burden of interpreting all of this, as is if it were an afterthought. This is a crucial critique that echoes those previously leveled against the Muse du Quai Branly itself, which anthropologist Margaret Jolly argued enables a forgetting of modern arts primitivist colonial collusion, concluding that if cultures are talking [there], it appears that only certain people are party to those conversations and empowered to talk.14 And so, although Oceania was a breathtaking exhibit that marked a turning point in the reframing of art made by Pacific Islanders, perhaps with a more coral-like attention to the lives of real communities and real artists with names, this was only the beginning of truly embracing indigenous art from Oceania on the global scene.

There has, nonetheless, been momentum building toward a fairer conversation and reclamation of agency by Pacific artists closer to home for many decades, and Pacific art is linking more and more with indigenous art around the world in fascinating and exciting ways, with the advance of social media and better communications facilitating more trans-indigenous and global connections with audiences worldwide and in the international art world. For over forty years, the Festival of Pacific Arts and Culture (FESTPAC) has been held every four years to celebrate and perpetuate indigenous Pacific Islander art throughout the region, most recently in Guhan in 2016. Aotearoa-New Zealand has also long been a major, thriving center for Pacific art, as a gathering place of both Mori indigenous communities and the Pacific Islander diaspora in urban spaces like Auckland and Wellington, who have had to negotiate the tough tensions of settler colonialism and racism but have nurtured rich and meaningful government-sponsored protocols and indigenous arts support infrastructures that foster effective creative production and networking. More recently, however, indigenous art, especially from Oceania, has gained an international foothold, such as in the formation of the Honolulu Biennial or the latest iteration of the Sydney Biennale, which featured mainly indigenous and First Nations artists.15

But these kinds of spaces and movements are still few and far between, and are lacking in significant parts of the greater Pacific Ocean area, particularly in smaller islands and up in the northern hemisphere, such as in Japan, where art from Oceania still means dusty artifacts devoid of context or genealogy on display at the National Museum of Ethnology in Osaka. Isolated showings of contemporary Pacific artists have been held from time to time, most recently in the 2015 Aichi Triennale or 2020 Yokohama Triennale,16 but these works have not been linked to larger conversations around decolonization or confrontation with Japans colonial pastnor has there yet been any meaningful curatorial project that brings Pacific Islanders into conversation with the indigenous communities of Japan, such as Ainu or Okinawans. Mayunkiki, a contemporary Ainu musical artist from the colonized northern lands of Ainu Moshir (commonly known as Japans Hokkaido), was invited to participate in the recent Sydney Biennale, but for the most part Ainu artists today are virtually unknown in Japaneven if, for example, Ainu cultural histories have been featured (or appropriated) in the work of Japanese artists, such as Nara Yoshitomo. Works by Okinawan artists, whose ancestral Ryky Kingdom was overthrown and annexed by Japan, have gained international attention in recent years, such as the art of Yamashiro Chikako or Miyagi Futoshi, both of whom reference the gritty realities of war and militarism in past and present Okinawa in their work. Okinawan Ishikawa Maos stunning oeuvre of photography and activist writing has for decades shown how Japanese public complicity in the Japanese-American military embrace perpetuates more racism, base construction, and sexual violence against women and girls in Okinawa; yet her workwhich is, in fact, highly nuanced and conscious of interisland tensionsis almost impossible to show in Tokyo. As recently as 2019, when Ishikawa was granted a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Photographic Society of Japan, a photo of hers was censored from the accompanying exhibitionan image depicting a likeness of prime minister Shinzo Abe being crushed by one of the huge concrete blocks used to cover the reef and build the new base in Henoko.

I remember being with Samoan/Rarotongan/Tahitian artist Michel Tuffery in Kanaky (the indigenous name for New Caledonia) many years ago, marveling at the exhibition Kanak: LArt est une Parole, a show which was curated by Emmanuel Kasarhrou and shared between the Jean-Marie Tjibaou Cultural Centre in Noumea and Muse du Quai Branly (a rare example of art collected in Europe being shared back in its place of origin). As we walked through this exhibition, the first of its kind to gather intricate carvings and sculptures, masks, and other creations of centuries of Kanak heritage, I remember looking at Michel, who stood silent, seemingly awestruck. He was not beholding these items as artifacts in glass cases mounted on plinths but rather conversing, it seemed, with their ancestral creatorshuman beings who could have been ancestors along the Great Migration, people who had encoded messages and knowledge and wisdom into these treasures. Visibly moved, he looked up at me and said, You can just feel the mana leaping out at you, cant you?

Mana is a Polynesian word, which has some equivalents in other Pacific languages as well, meaning something along the lines of power, a life force or energy that can flow through all humans and objects and places, and can be cultivated. More importantly, it is appreciated and respected. There is also the Polynesian notion of tapu, which basically means sacred and is where the adapted English word taboo comes from, mainly because tapu can essentially mean so sacred that it is off-limits to ordinary people. This is similar to the Marshallese concept (which would commonly be thought of as Micronesian) of mo, which also imbues places and people and things with a sacredness and energy, similar to mana, that only chiefs and other powerful people can access.17 As the authors of the book Art in Oceania emphasize, art from these communities has thus been not only about aesthetics but also about transmitting power and purpose through carvings, intricate tattoos, weavings, barkcloth, paintings, drawings, sculptures, performances, songs, dances, and other creations that communicate and convey this kind of mana or energy for the community and for other generations.18 As is true for most indigenous communities, art often belongs to a space of ritual and even sacredness.

Mana can be felt in the work of Mori artist Lisa Reihanawho represented New Zealand in the 2017 Venice Biennale with her phenomenal and epic multimedia piece In Pursuit of Venus Infected (part of an installation entitled Emissaries)which imbues her work with a ceremonial consciousness and multiple perspectives that embrace the diversity and collective trauma of transoceanic and transcolonial encounter in the Pacific Islands. Focusing on the expeditions of James Cook in Polynesia, whose mission was in part to observe the transit of Venus from the South Pacific while also discovering and claiming Australia for Britain, Reihanas work digitally hijacks the eighteenth-century decorative wallpaper designed by Joseph Dufour based on painter Jean-Gabriel Charvets romantic and orientalist vision of a Polynesian utopia. Animating this wallpaper with meticulously rendered live-action reenactments of the violence, resistance, wretchedness, and messiness of these encounters between specific Islander communities and white colonists, Reihana subverts (infects) this paradise with Oceanian agency. The artist, who has pointed out that POV can stand for both pursuit of Venus and point of view,19 reconfigures the narratives of first contact that are common throughout the islands colonized by British Empire, defying the hackneyed trope of Cooks heroism that runs through so much of Western versions of Pacific history. Reihana explained to me that the inclusion of scenes of contact with Aboriginal Australians, who suffered enormously as a result of Cooks conquests, in the final iteration of the work were a way of bringing the story around full circle and honoring the very first migrants to the greater Pacific (the first Aboriginal people likely arrived nearly sixty thousand years ago in what we call Australia today) and the last migrations of Pacific Islanders to Aotearoa to become Mori (over seven hundred years ago). In the scrolling, we see seamless scenes and audioscapes, moments of confusion, despair, rape, and murder, disease and dispossession of Islandersbut we also see the boredom, sickness, and discontent of the white settlers, the extensive gifting of objects and knowledge by Islander elders to Joseph Banks and others in Cooks crew, the fluidity of faaffine third-gender Samoans, the angry responses of chiefs, the myriad rituals of mourning and war, and the ritual return of Cooks dismembered remains to the British after he has been killed in Hawaii. While her work critiques a Cook-centric narrative arc that deals mainly with the southern hemisphere and a story that is most familiar to Polynesians, it is a project that resonates powerfully with indigenous and colonized, marginalized people all over Oceania and everywhere else. Her art speaks on its own terms to collections of indigenous art and compels curators to rethink how and what they exhibit with respect to real people and the communities they belong to.20 It broadcasts mana across horizons in ways that help to fuel a trans-indigenous conversation about decolonization. It is coral infecting concrete: creating space to ritually acknowledge these trespasses and reclaim stolen narratives.

Creating space for conversation, respect, and ritual is perhaps one of the most central elementsboth in practice and outcomeof art from Oceania. We see this even in the work of emerging artists from the region, such as Auckland-based young urban Pacific Islander artist collective FAFSWAG, who see themselves as navigating together as a family around core values of mutual respect for each other and for their communities, while also holding space for marginalized queer indigenous and Pacific Islander youth.21 Functioning together as a group and also as individual artists, their projects have crisscrossed interactive filmmaking initiatives, online spaces, Instagram-driven drag vignettes, vogue ball events and sites,22 and reconfigurations of postcolonial gender and sexuality, drawing on tradition and bravely tackling missionary and other Western influences to carve out a queer and gender-nonconforming genealogy of their own that is built on support and care. As artists Elyssia Wilson-Heti and Tanu Gago point out, their collective navigation is also an important model for artist support in the predominantly white world of contemporary global arthow to move through space and how to define success on their own terms.23

Increasingly aware of this honoring of space, family, community, process, and agency, the Asia Pacific Triennial, held by the Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) in Brisbane, Australia, has embraced more and more art from Oceania in its recent iterations, learning from its mistakes and using more grassroots approaches to engage on equal terms with local practitioners. Ritual matters in all encounters in Oceaniaan asking for permission to enter, the granting of that permission, the mindfulness that one is on someone elses land, and some form of ritual to bless this new connection and relationship, or the return of people who have come back. The opening ceremonies for the 9th Asia Pacific Triennial (APT9) in 2018 were not only emblematic of this kind of respect for ones hosts and the ceremonies of joining and gathering; they were, in fact, also a fundamental part of activating and blessing the art itself and bringing people together. The Welcome to Country, led by representatives of the different indigenous custodial communities of the land where the gallery sits, began with a number of protocols in which all artists and visitors were invited to participate, together with brief speeches, songs, chants, and words of welcome. In return, artists from different indigenous communities were invited to respond with their own gifts and performances. Watching these rituals unfold, as artists from Kiribati, Bougainville, and Aotearoa shared their responses, it was clear that space was being made for connection, that something was being opened in the true sense. Ishikawa Mao, whose early photographs were on exhibit, explained to me that she was impressed by the solidarity between marginalized groups and the honoring of ancestral land, having never seen anything like this in Japanwhere she has always felt like an outsider to the scene.

Curator Sana Balai (center, with microphone) and members of Womens Wealth at the opening of the 9th Asia Pacific Triennial, Queensland Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia, November 2018.Photo: Greg Dvorak. Courtesy of the author.

Womens Wealth, an exhibition within APT9, cocurated by Sana Balai, together with at least twenty women artists, is a stellar example of how Pacific art can be conceived and exhibited in ways that are beneficial to local places and communities while also facilitating further connections. Emphasizing an onsite intensive weeklong workshop in Bougainville, a matrilineal society that has been heavily colonized by mining and strained by years of civil war, the project emphasized and celebrated womens ingenuity and resilience and encouraged them to share and create together. Exhibited together with Habitat, 2018, a powerful video work by Bougainvillean/Australian artist Taloi Havini that compassionately helped to contextualize the trauma of capitalism and patriarchal power around the Panguna region, while articulating the many intricate works made by these womenmost of whom were present for the opening in Australiathis was a showing of Pacific art in the truest sense: grounded in both tradition and contemporary social engagement. It was also grounded in a larger conversation that had more to do with a living, breathing community and land than with the air-conditioned white cube.

Approaching its thirtieth iteration, I am humbled to be able to work as cocurator with Ruth McDougall and Ruha Fifita for the next (10th) Asia Pacific Triennial to be held in late 2021, for which I am helping to facilitate a similarly workshopped and collaborative curatorial process together with Micronesian counterparts in Northern Oceania.24 As part of this, I have been fortunate to team up with Marshallese artist Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner and observe her process, which is also deeply imbued with a consciousness for ritual. Jetnil-Kijiner, who has become known globally for her influential climate change activism and charismatic spoken-word art, is keenly aware of the challenges of nuclear testing and ecological disaster her country faces. Setting aside the important but repetitive quotes and statistics that render Marshallese people as victims of military and ecological colonialism, her work enacts and channels a deeper sense of indigenous spirituality, drawing on legends and chants to stand up to the horror of atomic catastrophe and displacement, while opening space to grieve and express anger. She expresses her fury passionately and evocatively, rightfully calling out the abuses of the past and present but simultaneously and gracefully rising above them. One example of this is how in her video work Anointed (2018), conceived in collaboration with cinematographer Dan Lin, Kathy voyaged to the former nuclear testing site of Enewetak Atoll, where local communities returned to live after American soldiers in the 1970sin an inadequate gesture of compensationburied tons of irradiated surface soil (only a fraction of the horrific amount of waste generated) under a colossal concrete cap. Standing atop this domeknown by local Islanders as the Tombshe places coral stones atop the concrete, a ritual gesture of mourning and purification. This work, like all of Kathys art, is simultaneously a call to action, a lament, and an act of healing that summons local knowledge and projects it defiantly, resistantly, throughout the world. It is fluent, literally and figuratively, in the language of coral, honoring living and dying and the endurance of culture and identity via the resilient reef.25

Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner holding a basket of coral stones on the concrete dome of Runit Island, which houses radioactive waste from nuclear testing at Enewetak Atoll, from her video work Anointed,2018 (HD digital video, 6 min). Photograph and cinematography by Dan Lin.Image courtesy of Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner.

The international art world seems more concerned with concrete than with coral. It is a world that moves and functions primarily in terms of material culture and money, in the logistics of transporting and exhibiting, buying and borrowing physical objects, and privileges those histories of Things over the ephemeral, the microscopic, the ritual, the coralline, the contradictory. But opening up to coral and what it offers us in terms of deep time, deep connections with origins, compassion, care, may be the shift that is needed in these challenging times. Art from Oceania, and art grounded in indigenous thinking in general, provides hints for how to do this.

And in considering the ocean, I return to where I began in saying that valuing and opening minds to ocean space requires us to value the intimate and specific passages, traversings, and encounters of real people who connect the dots and link these islands together across that ocean space. As with the Indian, the Atlantic, the Mediterranean, and the Arctic, Oceanian space is a space of turbulence, violence, and changenothing truly pacific at all. I argue for S/pacificity, for the awareness that the ocean is no voidit is inhabited and alive and loved, and it has much to teach us. Sensing the entirety of the ocean is one thing, but what truly matters is to learn from those who know how to navigate, weather, resist, and ride its waves.

Greg Dvorak is Professor of Pacific and Asian History and Cultural Studies in Tokyos Waseda University (Graduate School of Culture and Communication Studies / School of International Liberal Studies). Having grown up in the Marshall Islands, the United States, and Japan, he specializes mainly in themes of postcolonial memory, gender, militarism, resistance, and art in the Oceania region. Founder of the grassroots art/academic network Project Sango, he serves as cocurator for the Asia Pacific Triennial of Art and other exhibitions. Among other publications, he is the author of Coral and Concrete: Remembering Kwajalein Atoll between Japan, America, and the Marshall Islands (University of Hawaii Press, 2018).

2020 e-flux and the author

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S/pacific Islands: Some Reflections on Identity and Art in Contemporary Oceania - E-Flux

New Zealand’s NBL will return next month with ’18in18′ campaign – FIBA

Photo from:canterburywildcats.com

AUCKLAND (New Zealand) - Oceania basketball is starting to spring back to life with the scheduled opener of the SALs National Basketball League (NBL) "18IN18" next month in Auckland, New Zealand following the slated Australias Womens National Basketball League (WNBL) also in November.

Basketball New Zealand announced the development in cooperation with Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED), Auckland Council, and NBL led by General Manager Justin Nelson.

The upcoming tournament will play 18 straight days featuring 18 straight games including regular-season games and playoffs among six NBL teams at the Pullman Arena in south Auckland.

Elite women squads Etco Auckland Dream, Capital Swish, Alloyfold Canterbury Wildcats, Platinum Homes Harbour Breeze, Firebrand Otago Gold Rush and Waikato Wizards are the participating clubs slugging it out for the prestigious SALs NBL 18IN18 starting 19 November to 6 December.

All games will be broadcasted live on Sky Sport.

Were delighted to be staging another premium basketball event in Auckland. Not only is Auckland home to a fantastic basketball community but, when it comes to staging events and welcoming people into their city, Auckland does it so exceptionally well. That was evident at the recent Sals NBL Showdown earlier this year, said Nelson.

We cant wait to call Pulman Arena our home for the event, its an outstanding facility for players and supporters. It is a sporting hub for the community and we very much want to enjoy our time in and around the south Auckland community.

The Auckland hosting of Sals NBL 18IN18 is the second major tourney in the bustling city after the 2019 FIBA Olympic Qualifiers in West Auckland that featured Sky Sport Tall Ferns, China, South Korea, and the Philippines.

But more than basketball, this big event is being seen as a major boost to the tourism and economy of the region amid the grappling effects of the pandemic.

There is a real appetite for live sporting content and this competition will provide Aucklanders the chance to watch the countrys best in action," added ATEED Head of Major Events Richard Clarke.

Basketball is a great spectacle from the stands and on television, and were delighted that south Auckland will be the hub for the season. Not only will it showcase one of our best sporting venues, but also our region as a top destination for events."

Earlier this month, Basketball Australia also announced that its 2020 Chemist Warehouse Womens National Basketball League (WNBL) will push through as planned in the north Queensland, making a strong signal that Oceania basketball could be back to good, old days sooner than later.

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New Zealand's NBL will return next month with '18in18' campaign - FIBA

Aus business growth in Asia in the slow lane – BlueNotes

With the China crisis yet again drawing attention to Australias heavy dependence on the export of commodities to Asia, calls for more on the ground investment to facilitate services exports have been growing. The argument goes that commodities can often by exported with little investment on the ground but taking Australian services to the emerging middle-class markets requires people and infrastructure to be physically present.

The new ABS data appear to suggest there is a greater correlation between offshore affiliates and services exports than goods exports, although it is hard to disaggregate goods and services produced on the ground by the affiliates and those brought in from Australia.

Nevertheless, the offshore affiliates sold $A89 billion of services which is equivalent to 90 per cent of Australias official services export value compared with $A123 billion of goods exports which is only 32 per cent of Australias total goods exports.

While Australia has an obvious comparative advantage in commodities exports, services exports are seen as having stronger long-term growth as Asian economies mature away from infrastructure construction and manufacturing. These figures suggest investment will be a necessary driver of services export success.

It is often noted how private businesses small and large seem to have more appetite for the risks involved in Asian investment than the big publicly listed companies that face fund manager demands for quick and regular quarterly profits. But these data suggest the pacesetters in Asian investment are the Australian subsidiaries of foreign owned multinationals (MNCs) which are using Australia as a base for Asian investment.

Almost 700 of the Australian affiliates operating abroad are owned by MNCs. But 80 per cent of these businesses are operating in Asia or Oceania (largely New Zealand), whereas only 29 per cent of fully Australian owned offshore affiliates are operating in Asia or Oceania. This is perhaps not surprising since it is unlikely an Australian MNC subsidiary would be investing in the US or Europe from where these multinationals typically come. And this investment trend was apparent back in 2003.

The little understood importance of Australian-based MNCs in leading Asian investment is better revealed in unpublished analysis of these data by Austrade economist Divya Skene which shows those MNC affiliates in Asia are performing much better than fully Australian-owned subsidiaries.

Her calculations show return on equity (ROE) for the MNC affiliates in Asia was 16 per cent compared with 5 per cent for the Australian-owned businesses. The margin was even greater in Southeast Asia where the MNC businesses earnt 20 per cent compared with 3 per cent for the Australian owned ones.

This is quite a stunning finding for Australian based companies but it is positive for the periodic government campaigns to promote Australia as a base for MNC regional operations. A new industry group recently launched to pitch this idea to foreign companies planning to exit Hong Kong due to concerns about increased Chinese control.

The finding means Australian expertise and products may be making their way to Asia via the little appreciated backdoor of MNC investment. But this is not so good for soft power projection because on the ground it is likely this business engagement will be seen as coming from the MNCs home country rather than Australia.

Greg Earl is the editor of Asia Society Australia's monthly publication Briefing Monthly and was a former south east Asia correspondent for the Australian Financial Review.

This article draws on articles published by Asia Society Australias Briefing Monthly and the Lowy Institutes The Interpreter.

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Aus business growth in Asia in the slow lane - BlueNotes

Automotive Seats Market worth $60.0 billion by 2025 – Exclusive Report by MarketsandMarkets – PRNewswire

CHICAGO, Oct. 16, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the new market research report"Automotive Seats Marketby Type & Technology (Heated-Powered, Heated-Ventilated, Heated-Memory, Heated-Ventilated-Memory, Heated-Ventilated-Memory-Massage), Trim & Frame Material, Component, Vehicle (ICE, Electric, OHV) and Region - Global Forecast to 2025",published by MarketsandMarkets, the Automotive Seats Market is projected to grow to USD 60.0 billion by 2025 from USD 51.9 billion in 2020, at a CAGR of 2.9%. Factors such as Inclination of consumers towards more comfort and luxury features would drive the automotive seat market.

Browsein-depth TOC on"Automotive Seats Market"

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Passenger Car Segment is estimated to hold the largest share in Automotive Seat Market

Owing to the higher production of passenger cars compared to all vehicle types, automotive seats in this segment lead the market. The trend of automotive seats is different in each region. For instance, Asia Oceania, which contributes ~54% to the total passenger car segment, is dominated by the small/economy car segment since the second row of these cars is equipped with bench seats due to their compactness. As consumers in this segment in this region are price-sensitive, the adoption of innovative seating technology is limited here compared to the Americas and Europe.

Powered and combination of powered & heated seat

While traditionally, powered seats were installed only in premium vehicles, currently, they are also being installed in most mid-end SUVs. Demand for SUVs is increasing in Asia Oceania, especially in China, Japan, India, and South Korea. OEMs in India are launching compact SUVs in the mid-price range, which is expected to create a positive outlook for powered seats.

The hot climate in Asia Oceania results in minimal demand for heated sets in the region. Most cars sold in North America and Europe are SUVs. Therefore, the application of powered seats in these regions is expected to be higher. The adoption rate of powered & heated seats is higher in North America due to the cold climatic condition. These two are the largest markets for heated & powered seats due to the willingness of customers to pay for comfort & luxury.

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Asia Pacific: The largest automotive seat market

Owing to the large-scale production of vehicles, Asia Oceania is the largest market for automotive seats and accounted for ~50% of the market in 2019. India, Indonesia, and Thailand logged an annual growth of approximately 3%, 7%, and 6% in vehicle production between 2017 to 2018. The demand for SUVs has significantly increased, especially in China, owing to the improving economic environment, low crude oil prices, and rising per capita income. OEMs in India are launching cost-effective, compact SUVs in the mid-price range to attract buyers. This increasing demand for SUVs will lead to demand for various combinations such as 60/40, 40/20, 40/20/40 for second/third row seating. SUVs are equipped with powered, memory, massage, and heated seats to provide comfort to the passenger and driver. In terms of material, synthetic leather is more widely used since it is more flexible in terms of configuration, is available in more colors, and is cheaper than genuine leather. Therefore, it is the preferred choice of OEMs, especially in Asia Oceania.

The Automotive Seats Market is dominated by global players and comprises several regional players as well. The key players in the automotive seat industry are Adient Plc (US), Lear Corporation (US), Faurecia (France), Toyota Boshoku Corporation (Japan), and Magna International (Canada).

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Plastics for Electric Vehicle MarketBy Plastic Type (ABS, PU, PA, PC, PVB, PP, PVC, PMMA, HDPE, LDPE, PBT), Application & Component (Dashboard, Seat, Trim, Bumper, Body, Battery, Engine, Lighting, Wiring), EV Type and Region - Global Forecast to 2025

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VATICAN World Missionary Sunday: Mission ‘never stops’ and calls everyone – AsiaNews

Catholics number 1.328.993.000, 17.73 % of the global population. Archbishop Rugambwa: "The mission touches and transforms all sectors and areas of life in order to save humanity and creation". Msgr. Dal Toso: the fund to help local Churches cope with this period of pandemic to date has financed 250 projects for a total of 1, 299, 700 US Dollars and 473,410 Euros.

Vatican City (AsiaNews) - Catholics number 1,328,993,000, 17.73 % of the world population, and have increased by 15,716,000. The data, released today with reference to the year-end 2018, on the one hand confirms the vitality of Catholicism, but on the other it indicates that there is still a need for people ready to bring the teaching of Jesus to the world.

It is a mission that "never stops" and calls "each of us to bring God's love to everyone and especially to the most needy," observed Msgr. Protase Rugambwa, secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, speaking at the Vatican at the presentation of the World Mission Sunday which is celebrated on Sunday 18 October on the theme "Here I am, send me".

" The mission must touch and transform all sectors and areas of life in order to save humanity and creation: families, jobs, factories, schools, politics, the environment, etc. (seeLk1:38). We are invited to respond to Gods call, in a free and conscious manner and to be available for the Lord to send us. This is the mission: Who will I send? Here I am, send me!. Together with the Pope, he continued, We want, today with him too, to invite all the faithful to reconfirm their willingness and their active participation in the Churchs ever more necessary and urgent mission of evangelisation. In what way? Through prayer, sacrifice, reflection, and material aid for the important purpose of helping and supporting the missionary work that is carried out, in the name of the Pope, by the Pontifical Mission Societies. ".

In this regard, Msgr. Giampietro Dal Toso, president of the Pontifical Mission Societies (PMS) spoke about the universal fund for the missions, to which, he recalled, the hurches from all over the world collaborate in the universal fund. It is not merely aid from north to south, but a criterion for communication and circularity, where everyone contributes for the good of all. It is an all but unique example of this form of sharing, also economic, between Churches. .

Mons. Dal Toso also stressed that It is the task of the Pontifical Mission Societies to finance pastoral projects, and it is therefore inherent to the life of the Church which gradually establishes its structures throughout the world. This too is a specific element. Although the financial issue is neither the first nor the most important for the Pontifical Mission Societies, money is however a necessity, just as every soul needs a body. In this regard I would like to add a word on the fund instituted on behalf of the Holy Father to assist the local Churches in facing this period of the pandemic. Up to the present, 250 projects have been approved and financed, for a total of 1,299,700 US dollars, and 473,410 Euros. The funds originate from collections carried out in various countries thanks to our national directorates, a total of around 120.

Among the initiatives carried out, he also indicated "support for Christian families in Bangladesh, a tiny and extremely poor minority in a country often tried by natural cataclysms".

Returning to the statistics on the Catholic Church, presented by "Fides", the increase in the number of Catholics in the world - and it is the third consecutive year - is more marked in Africa (+9.208.000) and in America (+4.458.000) followed by Asia (+1.779.000) and Oceania (+177.000).

However, priests continue to decrease: they are 414,065 (-517). A substantial decrease is recorded in Europe (-2.675) added to which is America (-104). The increases are recorded in Africa (+1.391), Asia (+823) and Oceania (+48).

On the other hand, the number of permanent deacons is again growing (+610), reaching the number of 47,504. The most consistent increase is confirmed in America (+293), followed by Europe (+271), Oceania (+25), Africa (+13) and Asia (+8).

Non-priest religious decreased (-594), reaching the number of 50,941 and women religious (-7,249) who are now 641,661. For both, Asia is in countertrend: religious (+87) and religious (+1,218) are increasing.

On the other hand, the number of lay missionaries has increased to 376,188 (+20,388) and the major seminarians, diocesan and religious (+552), now reaching 115,880. The increases are recorded in Africa (+964), Asia (+354) and Oceania (+52). They decrease in Europe (-696) and in America (-122).

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VATICAN World Missionary Sunday: Mission 'never stops' and calls everyone - AsiaNews

World’s largest sailing cats return to Whangrei – New Zealand Herald

Mouse Trap arriving in Whangrei Harbour with fenders placed, ready for docking. Photo / Jodi Bryant.

One of the world's largest sailing catamarans has arrived in Whangrei Harbour to undergo a major refit.

Mouse Trap, a 34m superyacht, has returned to Oceania Marine Refit Services for the second time in a year to undergo three months of maintenance, a full paint job and new teak decks.

Built in 2012, Mouse Trap, which sleeps eight and with a crew of six, has been based in the South Pacific for the last three years and has returned to Whangrei for servicing, Oceania Marine Refit Services client liaison and marketing manager Jim Loynes said.

"She's been going between there and us for around three years. We looked after them last time so the plan was always that they would return."

He said Mouse Trap had been "one of the lucky ones" - one of six, he believes, to be let into the country with a border exemption for refit work.

The process involved Covid-testing before departure, two weeks' quarantine carried out both during the voyage and upon arrival, followed by another test before both crew and vessel left the dock.

The luxury vessel, which reaches a top speed of 12 knots, boasts a dining area with a 360-degree view over the ocean, an entertainment and relaxation area, a spa pool and sun loungers. An additional exterior salon has a sun lounge and bar.

Mouse Trap is one of two of the world's largest cruising catamarans to return to Oceania Marine Refit Services within a year. Douce France which is 42m and currently in French Polynesia, is set to return as well.

One of the most famous sailing yachts in the world, Douce France is secretly known as "the gentle giant" and said to also be one of the most prestigious offerings in the luxury-crewed yacht charter market today.

It has a unique 250-bottle wine cellar, with a selection of the world's most famous wines on board.

Last month two luxury vessels left Port Nikau after being worked on in Whangrei.

They were Odyssey, belonging to New Zealand's richest man, Graeme Hart, and Imagine, an (approximate) 44m luxury performance/cruising yacht.

Odyssey had been undergoing a refit - its second maintenance visit to Whangrei in the past year, while it is believed Imagine had the mast removed before heading to Auckland for maintenance and returning to Whangrei to have the mast refitted.

Whangrei's growing marine industry has increasingly been attracting luxurious yachts, with the impressive line-up visible at Port Nikau from across the harbour at Onerahi.

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World's largest sailing cats return to Whangrei - New Zealand Herald

Death in paradise: the aftermath of nuclear testing in Australia and Oceania – DiEM25

The United States of America is the first nuclear power and the only one to have used its weapons for a military purpose. During World War 2 in 1945, two Japanese cities were bombed by US nuclear bombs (Hiroshima on August 6th and Nagasaki August 9th ). The devastating result was approximately 225,000 people either dead or wounded. The number of deaths in Hiroshima and Nagasaki due to exposure to lethal radiation is still being discussed, but it is certainly in the thousands.

However, even though nuclear weapons were never used again for military purposes, nuclear testing took (and continues to take) a toll on thousands of lives in Australia and Oceania.

The United States conducted about 1,054 nuclear tests from 1945 to 1992, and 105 of them (1945-1962) were made at Pacific Test Sites (Marshall Islands, Kiribati) causing the contamination of huge areas controlled by US troops. In the Pacific, this caused rising numbers of cancer and birth defects, especially on the Marshall Islands where 67 tests were made and many Marshallese were forced to leave their homes in contaminated areas.

France has made over 193 nuclear tests in the Pacific between 1960 and 1996, mostly on Mururoa and Fangataufa atolls that belong to French Polynesia, as well as 17 tests in Algerian Sahara. Tahiti, the most populated island of French Polynesia, was exposed to 500times the maximum accepted levels of radiation. The impact has spread as far as to the tourist island of Bora Bora.

Civilians and the military participating in nuclear tests (more than 100,000 of them) have experienced diarrhea, skin injuries, blindness, and cancer. Their children have additionally suffered from birth defects.

From 1953 to 1963, there were over 20 bigger and smaller British A- bomb tests in Emu Farm, and the Maralinga and Montebello Islands of Australia. Overall, over 1200 peoples were exposed to radiation in the country, most of them Anangu people living in the Maralinga area. The UK has also made nuclear tests on overseas territories such as the Malden Islands and Christmas Island ( the present Republic of Kiribati).

There are two answers. One is that loss of loved ones, of the way you live your life, of the nature that surrounds you, the loss of home cannot be repaid or replaced with anything else. The other is that aforementioned governments did little.

The US has awarded more than $63 million to Marshallese with radiogenic illnesses despite the fact that the Tribunal only has $45.75 million to award for both health and land claims. France is still avoiding paying reparations to Tahitians.

As for the joint venture of the UK and Australia, the truth is that tests were approved and conducted in the first place because British officials were misinforming Australians. The Maralinga Tjarutja (Council) of Anangu people has a compensation settlement with the Australian government, and they are receiving $13.5 million.

75 years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we must ask ourselves: Why are we so callous about many Hiroshimas and Nagasakis that happened over the following decades? Did we let them happen just because they took place in far-off islands in the Pacific or in the Australian desert?

This means that the governments of the US, UK, France and Australia must pay just reparations to the affected countries and regions. Progressives of the world must act united against the threat of nuclear holocaust and create a political climate in which it would be possible to take action on an international level in order to ban the production, storage and use of nuclear weapons.

This can be done if nuclear powers, followed by all member states, sign the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

Aleksandar Novakovi is a historian and dramatist. He is a member of DSC Belgrade 1 and the thematic DSC Peace and International Policy 1

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Death in paradise: the aftermath of nuclear testing in Australia and Oceania - DiEM25

The Impact of Geography on our Worldview – Observatory of Educational Innovation

There are manyvideoson the internet making fun of people in the United States for their ignorance about geography. There is even atrendon the Tik Tok application about this. But how much is due to an educational problem and how much because of the way geography was taught? What impact can this subject have on a person's worldview?

Much of the problem arises because United States citizens do not recognize America as a continent, which annoys Latin Americans (and rightly so). However, this confusion is due to the way they are taught geography. Like people in other countries such as Australia and England, they believe that there are seven continents, namely, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia. In contrast, countries like Mexico are taught that there are five: Africa, Europe, Asia, America, and Oceania/Australia. In Japan, people learn that there are six continents: Africa, Antarctica, Australia/Oceania, Eurasia, North America, and South America.

How the world's division is presented is an essential part of how knowledge of the world is organized. The fact that there are so many differences explains the discontent surrounding the subject.

Even the Olympic Games'logoincludes five interconnected rings representingfive inhabited continents, but which are these, and why is there no universal agreement about what are the continents?

What is a continent, and how is it divided?

To understand why there are so many discrepancies in the number of continents, we must understand what the word "continent" means.

The American Institute of Geosciencesdefines a continent as "one of the planet's main landmasses, including the drylands and continental platforms." Other Anglo-Saxonpagesdefine it as "a large uninterrupted landmass surrounded by water." Even the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) describes it the same way, "Every one of the large tracts of land separated by the oceans." According to this second definition, North and South America should be one continent, just like Eurasia.

Geopolitics is one factor influencing the number of continents, depending on the source and the country. For example, all models consider Africa a continent. Europe and Asia are one sizeable continental mass. They can be taken as two continents, even while77%of Russia is in Asia and is a transcontinental country partly in Europe.

Another model divides the land masses according to thetectonicplates. There are 15 tectonic plates, of which seven have about ten million square miles and correspond approximately to the continents' shapes above them, following the model of seven continents.

Continents or cultural regions? Physical vs. cultural geography.

Although these classifications are somewhat arbitrary and debatable, it is essential to have a designation of the world by zones that serve as a starting point for more information, such as what the countries are like, their cultures, art, food, ethnicity, and businesses, etc. These aspects tend to make people generalize the attributes of people in the continents, for example, to believe that all of South America speaks Spanish, including Brazil, which does not.

Other examples may be to say "Asian food," rather than Japanese or Chinese, or to describe "African music" or "European art." These generalizations even apply to people, describing someone with almond-shaped eyes as having Asiatic features without considering that India is also in Asia. The people there generally do not have almond-shaped eyes.

One way to see the world is byregion, something that geographers do to facilitate their studies. In this model, there are eight regions, namely, Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa, Europe, North America, Central America and the Caribbean, South America, Africa, and Australia and Oceania.

Philip Bouchard, educator, writer, and software designer, writes that if the world were divided into cultural regions, such as sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia, South Asia (consisting of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh), and the Middle East (from Morocco to parts of Afghanistan); it would be easier to sort the world and categorize the countries by culture.

America's case is more complicated. According to Bouchard, several people in the United States draw the line between North and South America at the southern extremity of Mexico. They do not include the countries of Central America in North America; yet, it is part of their standard geographical definition. If America were to be divided by cultural regions, the Central American countries are part of Latin America. The rest would be Anglo-America, composed of the United States and Canada.

Then there would be the following regions:

Europe

Middle East

Sub-Saharan Africa

South Asia

Oriental Asia or East Asia

Anglo-America

Latin America

To reach his conclusion, Bouchard focused on the following three concepts:

1) Each defined region must occupy a contiguous area of land.

2) Each region should be home to hundreds of millions of people.

3) A flat (non-hierarchical) model like this works best when the whole is divided into about seven parts, although it may have plus or minus one or two.

The above criteria, however, do not include Australia or island nations. If the adjoining land area requirement were removed, for example, Australia could be grouped with Anglo-America and England. The writer concludes by saying that traditional models based on physical geography are not ideal for learning about cultural geography. Understanding this concept helps to understand the world better and the ability to absorb details more quickly and have more accurate cultural generalizations.

The other side of geography: the maps

Learning geography goes beyond cultural regions or defining continents. Reading a map also has a significant impact on the way the world is observed. Plans are a teaching tool that are visual representations that shape the way the planet is understood.

Maps represent information, but their interpretation varies greatly depending on the context and the type. As on continents, there are different versions of plans, and they have different impacts on how people see the world.

Harley and Woodwarddescribethem, saying, "Maps are graphical representations that facilitate a spatial understanding of things, concepts, conditions, processes or events in the human world."

There are physical maps that show details and identify physical characteristics like rivers and mountains, and geographic ones that demonstrate landmasses. Political maps focus on dividing territories into concepts such as local authorities, states, and countries. Others are divided by language to highlight dialects in a physical area or country, and weather maps show things like sun, clouds, rain, and much more.

Historically, geographic maps have served to illustrate different points in time and the priorities of the creators, such as including a larger or smaller country. The HistorianDirk Raatdescribes how the Old World peoples, "the medieval Europeans and their New World counterparts organized space according to philosophical and religious principles." This means that the maps represent more than the landmasses. They include how people see themselves and their beliefs concerning the land they occupy, demonstrating that the maps have an inherently social and political weight.

The geographic maps are distorted.

In 1569, Gerhardus Mercator, a European cartographer, created a world map that remains popular today, theMercator Projection. It has straight lines that represent constant directions on the surface of the earth, helping to navigate but not to visualize the sizes of the masses.

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The Impact of Geography on our Worldview - Observatory of Educational Innovation

Wini credits basketball as part of success – FIBA

HONIARA (Solomon Islands) - Lysa Wini is trailblazing a path for women in the Solomon Islands with her burgeoning career and she credits her basketball experience as one of the keys to her success.

Wini, currently a consultant for the Sky Islands Coordinator for Islands and a Ph.D. Researcher for One Ocean Hub of Strathclyde University in Glasgow shared that her passion for basketball is a driving force in her growth as a person and as a professional.

"I have played basketball since I was young and it has always been my passion. The sport of basketball has given me so much that's why I will always be grateful and put effort into giving back to the game," said Wini, who represented the Solomon Islands in international competitions from 1999 to 2015.

Photo: 2016 FIBA Oceania Women's Empowerment Program participants

After retiring from international competition in 2015, Wini assumed the Secretary position for the Solomon Islands Basketball Federation and joined the FIBA Oceania Women's Empowerment Program in 2016.

"The Women's Empowerment program by FIBA Oceania was a life-changing experience for me. At that point, I was at the crossroads of my life trying to find myself because I have been playing basketball my whole life. The group of women I was able to interact with taught lessons that gave me the confidence I needed to grow and be confident with my capabilities," shared Wini, who has a postgraduate certificate in Diplomacy & International Affairs from the University of the South Pacific.

"The stories shared by the participants and mentors certainly did the right job in empowering the women in the program and has inspired me to push forward and be bold with my dreams and ideas," she added.

Since 2018, Wini has traveled all over the world as a speaker or a panelist in conferences including the 2018 European Society for Oceanists Conference in the United Kingdom, 2018 World Oceans Explorers Club in the United States of America, 2018 UN Nippon Foundation Sustainable Blue Economy Conference in Kenya and the 2019 Preparatory Phase of the UN Decade of Ocean Science in Denmark.

Photo:D-fenders Team Building Activity - Hike at Barana Nature Park

Wini, a mother to two kids shared the context of basketball's male-dominated culture in their country and how she believes that the sport can be a good platform to promote equality with their ability to play the sport.

"Solomon Islands basketball is male-dominated society but having the experience of playing in the national team, I was able to command respect from other players because I can what they do," Wini said. "

It's given me the confidence to interact with people both on and off the court." she added

Photo: Wini coaching the U19 Women's team in FIBA U19 Ocean Championship in Fiji 2014

The former coach of the Solomon Islands U19 Women's team has repeatedly attributed her success to her experience with basketball and hopes to provide the same chance for young girls in the Solomon Islands through the D-Fenders youth program,which she started with Debbie Sade, Willie Sade, and Kellington Simeon

"The D-Fenders program invites youth players to have an opportunity to play under the club and also for us to provide mentorship to young kids. I want to be able to empower kids at a young age and show them that they are capable of achieving their dreams if they believe in themselves," Wini said.

"We started this in 2008 and have continued to volunteer our efforts for the program to be able to provide a safe space for learning for our youth. It's been a great journey and I will continue to help out as much as I can," she added.

FIBA

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Wini credits basketball as part of success - FIBA

How to watch the Teamfight Tactics OCENA Qualifier Finals – Dot Esports

A total of 24 of the best Teamfight Tactics players from the Oceania and North American regions will battle it out this weekend for a seat at the Galaxies Championship in September.

Scheduled to take place on Sept. 3 to 4, the TFT Galaxies Championship will feature 16 competitors from the Regional Finals, two of whom will be representing the Oceania and North American regions. For the last 12 weeks, players have grinded for top-ranked spots on the ladder while also earning qualifier seeds via the OCE, Cloud9, and Liquid Galaxy Qualifiers.

And all that work has led to 24 players who will compete at the OCENA Qualifier finals this weekend for a chance to play at the TFT Galaxies Championship and take home a piece of the $200,000 prize pool.

The OCENA Qualifier Finals will take place over the course of two days. Coverage begins at 8pm CT on Aug. 14 and 15 via the Riot Games Twitch channel. Fans can also watch their favorite players compete on their own streams. Those who tune into the main broadcast will catch TFT gurus DoA, Kien, thatsPRIMAL, and Becca casting the tournament.

Day one of the OCENA Qualifier Finals will feature 24 players divided up into three lobbies of eight. Competitors will play a total of seven Swiss rounds, with the eight players who have the most points at the end of the day advancing to the next round. Players are awarded points in each round based on their standings in the lobby, with first-place earning eight points and eighth place gaining only one.

The second day of competition is somewhat different, with points resetting and the first player to reach 16 points winning the OCENA finals. Once a winner is declared, the player with the most points will finish second. Both players will then advance to the TFT Galaxies Championship on Sept. 3.

The first player to reach 16 points and then a first place finish will be the OCENA Final winner and OCENAs first seed representative in the Galaxies Global Championship, said Riot. After a winner is declared, the player with the most points earned across Day Two games will secure second-place and will be the second OCENA seed at the Galaxies Global Championship.

The 24 players competing at the OCENA Qualifier Finals earned their spots several different ways. A total of 16 players qualified via ladder rank. The Cloud9 and Liquid Galaxies tournament each produced two qualifiers. And four players earned a spot via the OCE Qualifiers.

The Teamfight Tactics OCENA Qualifier Finals will run from Aug. 14 to 15, starting at 8pm CT both days via the Riot Games Twitch channel.

Update Aug. 10 7:40pm CT: Riot Games updated the incorrect format information for day two of the OCENA Qualifier Finals. Information from Riot had previously stated second place needed to earn eight points to qualify for the Galaxies Championship.

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How to watch the Teamfight Tactics OCENA Qualifier Finals - Dot Esports

COVID-19 infections breach 20 million mark: Pace of pandemic stabilising but where are the world’s hotspots? – Times Now

The world has now recorded over 20 million cases of COVID-19.  |  Photo Credit: iStock Images

Over six months from when the first case of COVID-19 was detected at a seafood market in the city of Wuhan, China, the total number of infections across the world has now breached 20 million, marking yet another grim milestone in the story of the pandemic. It will also be only a matter of days now before the number of fatalities caused by the virus exceeds 750,000.

That being said, the World Health Organisation's chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has typically been less than optimistic in his assessment of the pandemic in the past, issued a rare statement of encouragement saying, there are green shoots of hope and that it's never too late to turn the outbreak around.

The numbers seem to validate the WHO chief's statement. Although cases continue to rise, the rate at which they are trending upward has appeared to stabilise. Since mid-July, roughly one million cases are being recorded daily.

It took 94 days for the first one million infections to be registered, and 86 days on from that landmark, the ten million mark was reached. Over the last month and a half, the numer of COVID-19 infections has doubled.

A substantial contribution to the rise in infections in recent days has come from Latin America and the Carribean. This is currently the worst-affected region recording over 56 lakh cases and more than 220,000 deaths. 576,583 infections have been recorded in the last seven days alone.

Asia follows closely behind with 495,663 infections over the same period. Canada and the United States with 379,017 infections, Europe with 153, 879, Africa with 89,644, the Middle East with 74,588 and Oceania with 3,372 make up the rest.

Although the infection is spreading more rapidly in Asia, Canada and the United States, the second worst-affected region, has registered over 51 lakh infections and 172,300 deaths. The death rate has slowed significantly in the United States but it is Africa with 23,582 deaths that is the least affected region.

More than half of all cases in Oceania have originated in South Africa which has risen up the ladder in recent weeks to become the fifth worst-affected country, behind the United States, Brazil, India and Russia.

Despite global rates stabilising, there isn't much reason for cheer in India. The subcontinent recorded the highest number of fresh cases globally over the last seven days with more than 402,000 ahead of even the United States that continues to be, by far, the worst affected nation. The US recorded 376,471 infections over the last week, ahead of Brazil (301,745), Colombia (69.830) and Peru (49,174).

It is important to note though that the testing rate of a country has a direct and pronounced relationship with the number of infections recorded in a country. Several countries do not have the requisite resources to carry out widespread testing, and currently only use tests in conjunction with contact-tracing exercises.

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COVID-19 infections breach 20 million mark: Pace of pandemic stabilising but where are the world's hotspots? - Times Now

Fluxx, Centus, and Devmarta on the Oceanic and South Asian Six August 2020 Majors – SiegeGG

The next two Six August 2020 Majors are upon us, with the action continuing with the APAC South subregions of Oceania and South Asia. The games and the teams are certainly going to be new and exciting to learn more about, so be sure to tune in later at 6 PM AEST (UTC+10).

In order to know more heading into the APAC North mini-major about what to expect and how teams are preparing for the tournament, a few interviews were in order. As such, SiegeGG spoke to Wildcard Gaming coach Bharath "Fluxx" Sukesh, kami coach Antoni "Centus" Lagemann, as well as APAC North and European League caster James "Devmarta" Stewart.

To read up on everything you need to know about the mini-majors, check out our companion article as well.

Your team made some personnel changes after Season 11 of the Pro League and came back incredibly strong, only dropping a single map through the Six Masters 2020 campaign. Would you say this matched your own pre-season expectations and how did you guys achieve this?

We all knew the team had the potential to be stronger than before, and so from Day 1 we just made sure we put in the work to make our team strong once again. We knew it'd take some time for two new players to settle in, and learn our playstyle, our system, and were aware that all teams may have a honeymoon phase when they make roster changes, so we just made sure we didn't get carried away with anything, and we just worked towards our common goal.

From when we made our roster changes, we said this roster's in it for the long haul, and it's been nice to see our work pay off during the season and playoffs, but I wouldn't say we played our best Siege, we can be better.

With the first stage now over, what are your thoughts on this new APAC format? Has the South Asian scene caught your eye and what do you expect from them at this mini-major?

There's positives and negatives for the new format. Changes to APAC North are really beneficial for the region, it's incredibly competitive now and great to watch, but it's left APAC South in a strange position.

The introduction of South Asia into the scene is fantastic and it's great to see new teams getting to compete for their shot towards the global stage. However, their region's matches weren't really broadcasted on the main channel or promoted via social media, so it missed exposure from there. I'm looking forward to seeing how those teams develop as time goes on.

I personally don't agree with only a single team from Oceania getting SI points -- I'd rather a split like it is in LATAM.

What are your expectations from this mini-major and who do you see being your biggest threat?

Sadly there's only three teams in the mini-major, so it doesn't leave much room for predictions, and we're already in the grand-final, so it's just a matter of preparing for both kami and Knights, and paying attention to ourselves in the leadup to the grand final.

The 2-0 win in the Six Masters grand-final doesn't properly convey how close the maps actually were, so I would say kami are definitely hungry to get their revenge, but I believe in my team. We just need to take it one round at a time and I'm confident we can pull through if we're on the ball on game day.

Your team is still org-less, but went from strength to strength in the Six Masters 2020 campaign. Would you say this matched your own pre-season expectations and how did you guys achieve this? Is an organisation soon to come?

We went into the season with high expectations, expecting to be top two. Especially in the beginning, we ran into a lot of smaller problems stacking up which lost us some games we should not have lost. We went ahead and did our best to fix those and were mostly successful nearing the second half of the season. We definitely didn't perform to our own standards in the online stages, but were able to do so in the playoffs.

We have been in talks and negotiations with multiple organisations over the last season and beyond which often were stopped due to financial complications that came with the current global pandemic. At this point in time, we are still looking for an organisation to represent us in the upcoming stages.

With the first stage now over, what are your thoughts on this new APAC format?

I personally like the current format we have in the Oceanic and South APAC regions to get to the qualifiers -- the only thing that I and a lot of other players/teams from the ANZ region don't like is the SI points distribution. I understand why it is set up this way but I am still not convinced it is the best way for our region to develop new talent and show it off internationally.

We have scrimmed a few of the top teams from the South Asian region and they definitely have potential but run into the same problem that ANZ had when it first came part of the international scene; lack of experience. I'm not sure what exactly to expect from them at the mini-major, to be honest, but I'm looking forward to seeing their scene develop.

What are your expectations from this mini-major and who do you see being your biggest threat?

At the mini-major, the biggest goal is to win first place to get a lot of Six Invitational points. Also, with a record of nine wins and one loss, and each player having a strong ability, Giants Gaming is the most threatening team.

The tournament will also see the use of the combined APAC North and European broadcasting studio in Paris, with the talent there covering all three APAC mini-majors this coming week.

It will thus have the omission of prominent Australian casters Jessica "Jess" Bolden and Devmarta, who are still in Australia, with the latter in a Melbourne that declared a state of emergency over the COVID-19 pandemic a few days ago.

However, despite his predicament, Devmarta was certainly happy to let us pick his brain on what we have to expect from this upcoming tournament.

What is APAC? Could you sum that up for us?

Contrary to what most people believe, Rainbow Six Siege esports in APAC has been highly active since the game's release, and teams have been challenging themselves to hone their craft and be the best even long before Japan, South Korea, South East Asia, and Oceania were introduced to the Pro League in 2017. So, it's important to credit these teams and players who have been involved in esports as long or longer than the household names from Europe and North America.

That said, APAC has had it's fair share of challenges which have made it much more difficult for teams to commit their lives to and improve in Rainbow Six Siege; geography and ping restricting inter-regional scrims, less funding to compensate players for their time, and less opportunities and global events such as the Pro League, Majors, SI and Minors.

Despite these challenges APAC has come a long way in three years; APAC North finally provides teams across Asia to compete between sub-regions instead of in separate Pro Leagues which has increased the overall skill of the league, Oceania is slowly seeing more funding and support such as salaries and larger prize pools, plus Fnatic leaving Oceania leaves an opportunity for other Oceanic teams to fill, and countries from South Asia are finally included in the global circuit. This progress has allowed teams like Giants and Wildcard to flourish and in my view improve to the point of rivalling the top teams across the world.

So what should you look out for when watching APAC? Creativity and a breath of fresh air from teams like FAV Gaming, Xavier, and Cyclops who bring hectic and unusual playstyles and operator picks. Highly coordinated team play and chemistry from teams like Wildcard and Giants, where rounds play like clockwork, and an overall fast paced game that is super entertaining to behold.

You have been greatly involved with the APAC North and Oceanic scenes. What are the key highlights from those scenes, as well as South Asia, that we should be looking out for?

APAC has had a long journey through adversity, persevering through issues not prevalent in Europe and North America, but finally the time for APAC to shine is now. APAC has serious talent and a willingness to think outside the box, teasing unusual operator and loadout choices like Finka, Blitz, shotguns, but what's more actually making it work consistently.

Keep your eye out for strategic mayhem from teams like Cyclops and Xavier, and for clockwork coordination from teams like Wildcard, Giants, and FAV.

What are your expectations from teams such as Wildcard Gaming and Giants Gaming at their respective mini-majors?

One of the most exciting things to me in the development of APAC across the last six months is how far Wildcard and Giants have come since their recent disappointments at Six Invitational in February.

Wildcard dominated the Six Masters, only dropping a single map through the entire league and playing flawlessly through the playoff bracket. Since SI, Wildcard made two roster changes, replacing veterans NeophyteR and Derpeh with young gunners Gio and Pat, who have both thrived on their new team. Mix together good communication, talented individual players and a clockwork-coordinated team chemistry and you have the unbeatable kings of Oceania that is Wildcard.

Tune in to see the spanking new Parisian studio on the official Twitch and YouTube channels andcatch some high-octane APAC Siege over the course of the next six days, starting in a few hours, from 6 PM AEST (UTC+10).

As always, make sure to check back here for continued coverage and follow us on Twitterfor more.

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Fluxx, Centus, and Devmarta on the Oceanic and South Asian Six August 2020 Majors - SiegeGG

List 3/4 of sports events affected by coronavirus pandemic – The Republic

GYMNASTICS

Artistic World Cup in Melbourne, Australia, from Feb. 20-23: China team withdrew.

All-Around World Cup in Milwaukee on March 7: Russia team withdrew.

Artistic World Cup in Baku, Azerbaijan, from March 14, Day 3 of 4, canceled.

Artistic World Cup in Doha, Qatar on March 18-21 postponed to June 3-6, postponed.

All-Around World Cup in Stuttgart, Germany on March 20-22 canceled.

Aerobic World Cup in Cantanhede, Portugal on March 27-29 canceled.

All-Around World Cup in Birmingham, England on March 28 canceled.

Rhythmic World Cup in Pesaro, Italy on April 3-5 postponed to June 5-7, postponed.

Acrobatic World Cup in Sofia, Bulgaria on April 3-5 postponed.

All-Around World Cup in Tokyo on April 4-5 canceled.

Artistic Jesolo Cup in Italy on April 4-5 canceled.

Rhythmic World Cup in Sofia, Bulgaria on April 10-12 postponed to June 29-21, postponed.

Acrobatic World Cup in Puurs, Belgium on April 10-12 canceled.

Rhythmic World Cup in Tashkent, Uzbekistan on April 17-19 postponed.

Aerobic World Cup in Tokyo on April 18-19 canceled.

Trampoline World Cup in Brescia, Italy on April 24-25 postponed to June 19-20, postponed.

Rhythmic World Cup in Baku, Azerbaijan on April 24-26 postponed.

Artistic womens European championships in Paris on April 30-May 3 postponed to Kyiv, Ukraine from Dec. 17-20.

Artistic Asian championships in Tokyo on May 2-5 canceled.

Trampoline European championships in Gothenburg, Sweden on May 7-10 moved to Sochi, Russia from April 29-May 1, 2021.

Pan American championships in Utah Valley, United States on May 7-10 postponed.

Rhythmic Asian championships in Tokyo on May 8-10 canceled.

Rhythmic World Challenge Cup in Portimo, Portugal on May 8-10 postponed.

Aerobic world championships in Baku, Azerbaijan on May 14-16 postponed.

Artistic World Challenge Cup in Varna, Bulgaria on May 14-17 postponed.

Rhythmic European championships in Kyiv, Ukraine on May 21-24 postponed to Nov. 26-29.

Trampoline African championships in Swakopmund Namibia, Namibia on May 27-29 postponed.

Artistic mens European championships in Baku, Azerbaijan on May 27-31 postponed to Dec. 9-13.

Acrobatic world championships in Geneva on May 29-31 postponed to June 18-20, 2021.

Artistic World Challenge Cup in Cairo on June 5-8 postponed.

Artistic World Challenge Cup in Koper, Slovenia on June 11-14 canceled.

Artistic World Challenge Cup in Osijek, Croatia on June 18-21 postponed.

Artistic World Challenge Cup in Mersin, Turkey on June 26-28 canceled.

Trampoline World Cup in Arosa, Switzerland on July 3-4 canceled.

Rhythmic World Challenge Cup in Minsk, Belarus on July 3-5 postponed.

Rhythmic World Challenge Cup in Moscow on July 10-12 postponed.

HANDBALL

Olympic womens qualifying event in Podgorica, Montenegro from March 20-22 postponed to March 19-21, 2021.

Olympic womens qualifying event in Lliria Spain from March 20-22 postponed to March 19-21, 2021.

Olympic womens qualifying event in Gyr, Hungary from March 20-22 postponed to March 19-21, 2021.

Olympic mens qualifying event in Trondheim, Norway from April 17-19 postponed to March 12-14, 2021.

Olympic mens qualifying event in Paris from April 17-19 postponed to March 12-14, 2021.

Olympic mens qualifying event in Berlin from April 17-19 postponed to March 12-14, 2021.

African womens championships in Yaounde, Cameroon from Dec. 2-12 postponed to June 11-20, 2021.

HORSE RACING

Dubai World Cup on March 28 canceled.

Grand National in Liverpool, England on April 4 canceled.

Kentucky Derby in Louisville on May 2 postponed to Sept. 5.

2000 and 1000 Guineas Stakes in Newmarket, England on May 2-3 postponed to June 6-7, no spectators.

Preakness Stakes in Baltimore on May 16 postponed to Oct. 3.

Derby and Oaks in Epsom, England on June 5-6 postponed to July 4.

Belmont Stakes in New York on June 6 postponed to June 20, no spectators.

Gold Cup at Ascot, England on June 18, no spectators.

ICE HOCKEY

NHL from March 12 suspended.

KHL from March 17 suspended. From March 25 canceled.

Mens world championship in Switzerland from May 8-24 canceled.

Womens world championship in Nova Scotia, Canada from March 31-April 10 canceled.

Womens world championship Division I Group A in Angers, France from April 12-18 canceled.

Womens world championship Division I Group B in Katowice, Poland from March 28-April 3 canceled.

Womens world championship Division II Group A in Jaca, Spain from March 29-April 3 canceled.

Mens world championship Division I Group A in Ljubljana, Slovenia from April 27-May 3 canceled.

Mens world championship Division I Group B in Katowice, Poland from April 27-May 3 canceled.

Mens world championship Division IV in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan from May 3-5 canceled.

Womens Challenge Cup of Asia in Manila, Philippines from Feb. 23-28 canceled.

Womens Challenge Cup of Asia Division I in Manila, Philippines from Feb. 23-28 canceled.

National League in Switzerland from March 2 suspended. From March 13 canceled.

Elite League in United Kingdom from March 13 canceled.

Mens Olympic qualifiers in Bratislava, Slovakia; Riga, Latvia; Norway from Aug. 27-30 postponed to Aug. 26-29, 2021.

Champions Hockey League in Europe due to start on Sept. 3 postponed to Oct. 6.

US-Based Professional Womens Hockey Players Association tour of Japan from March 4-7 canceled.

JUDO

Paris Grand Slam from Feb. 8-9: China team withdrew.

Dusseldorf Grand Slam in Germany from Feb. 21-23: China team withdrew.

Rabat Grand Prix in Morocco from March 6-8 canceled.

Winterthur European Cup in Switzerland from March 7-8 canceled.

Ekaterinburg Grand Slam in Russia from March 13-15 canceled.

Santiago Pan American Open in Chile from March 14-15 canceled.

Sarajevo European Cup in Bosnia and Herzegovina from March 21-22 canceled.

Lima Pan American Open in Peru from March 21-22 canceled.

Tbilisi Grand Prix in Georgia from March 27-29 canceled.

Antalya Grand Prix in Turkey from April 3-5 canceled.

Asian Oceania championships in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia from April 17-18 canceled.

Nordic championships in Reykjavik, Iceland from April 25-26 postponed to Sept. 12-13.

European championships in Prague from May 1-3 postponed to Nov. 8-10.

Baku Grand Slam in Azerbaijan from May 8-10 canceled.

Orenburg European Cup in Russia from May 16-17 canceled.

Doha Masters in Qatar from May 28-30 canceled.

Budapest Grand Slam in Hungary from June 12-14 suspended.

Celje-Podcetrtek European Cup in Slovenia from June 20-21 canceled.

Guayaquil Pan American Open in Ecuador from June 20-21 canceled.

African championships in Rabat, Morocco from June 25-27 canceled.

Hohhot Grand Prix in China from June 26-28 canceled.

Pan American championships in Montreal from June 26-28 canceled.

Potsdam European Cup in Germany from June 27-28 canceled.

Aktau Asian Open in Kazakhstan from July 4-5 postponed.

KARATE

Karate 1 Premier League in Rabat, Morocco from March 13-15 canceled.

European championships in Baku, Azerbaijan from March 25-29 canceled.

See the article here:

List 3/4 of sports events affected by coronavirus pandemic - The Republic

Asia and Oceania Virtual Premiere of award-winning Dutch documentary DOWN to EARTH – The Netherlands and You

News item | 05-08-2020 | 00:00

Date: Saturday 22 August 2020

Time: 05.00-07.00pm, SG time / 11.00am-01.00pm, NL time

Register here for the DOWN to EARTH Asia and Oceania Virtual Premiere

ONE SUMMER. ONE JOURNEY. TIME TO LISTEN. TIME TO ACT.

The Netherlands Embassy in Singapore is excited to support the DOWN to EARTH (DTE) Collective's initiative and invites people in Singapore and the region to join this once only, free-of-charge, virtual screening of DOWN to EARTH.

DOWN to EARTH is an award-winning Dutch documentary taking you on a journey to visit the Earth Keepers, the native wisdom teachers around the world who hold the keys to a better future.

Leaving behind city life, a Dutch couple (Renata Heinen and Rolf Winters) together with their three young children, embark on the journey of a lifetime. They travel the ends of the earth searching for a new perspective on life. They gain access to tribal sages never filmed or interviewed before, withouth a crew or schedule, just one backpack and one camera each. And the curiosity to listen.

DOWN to EARTH premiered at the UN Global Climate Summit in Paris. It became the longest running documentary in Dutch cinemas.

The DTE Collective encourages going on this journey and watching the film with others. Please share the premiere announcement with family, friends, colleagues, schoolmates and your community to watch the film for free and from the comfort of your couch. The online event will start with an introduction and be followed by a Q&A session.

Seen by over 275,500 people who have been inspired by the Earth Keepers into action.

Follow this link:

Asia and Oceania Virtual Premiere of award-winning Dutch documentary DOWN to EARTH - The Netherlands and You

Oceania & South Asia Six August 2020 Majors – Everything You Need to Know – SiegeGG

Thanks to COVID-19, the Six Major set to be held in the United States can't go on. But, in its place, there will be a set of regional so-called "mini-majors", set to crown regional champions at a smaller scale.

APAC North will be the first subregion to play its mini-major, coming just two weeks after the first stage of the regular competition ended on the 4th of August. Concurrently running will be the APAC South Division's South Asia and Oceanic mini-majors, with their first games on the 6th of August.

All three majors will culminate with grand finals on the 9th of August, so here is all you need to know about the next two coming up -- the Oceanic and South Asian Six August 2020 Majors.

Jump To:

In Oceania, the top three from the Six Masters 2020 Finals will be taking part in a single-elimination tournament, with the top seed -- Wildcard Gaming -- getting a bye straight into the grand final. The sole semi-final will be a Best-of-Three (Bo3), while the grand final will be a Best-of-Five (Bo5).

Over in South Asia, the top-four from the first stage of the South Asian Nationals will be taking part in a similar single-elimination tournament. The two Bo3 semi-finals will be then followed up by a Bo5 grand final, much like their Oceanic contemporaries.

The first day of play for the Oceanic and South Asian regions will be on the 6th of August, with games starting at 6 PM AEST (UTC+10) for the former and at 5 PM IST (UTC+5:30) for the latter. South Asia will then conclude its tournament on the very next day at 5 PM IST as well, while Oceanic fans will have to wait until 5 PM AEST on the 8th of August.

The prize purse of US$30,000 (A$41,900) for Oceania and the US$15,000 (1,125,700) will be split as follows, with Six Invitational (SI) points also awarded:

Oceania

South Asia

The Six Invitational Points will go towards qualification for the currently-tentative Six Invitatational 2021, with the winners of the Oceanic tournament getting 330 and the South Asian getting 275.

Oceania

Over in Oceania, there are only three teams in attendance, chosen from the top-three of the Six Masters 2020 Finals.

Ethan, Pat, Gio, Diesel, EmoRin, syliX (coach) and Fluxx (coach)

Headed into this tournament as the top-seed and the definite favourite to take the win, Australia's second-most successful team will be keen on making its mark following the departure of Fnatic to APAC North. A near-lossless Six Masters regular season was followed up by a playoffs run that saw the team avoid dropping even a single map and its players will be disappointed with anything less this time again.

JackDaddy, Cutie, Mangoz, ItBeStyle, JKR, and Centus (coach)

Coming in as the second seed,kami has been going from strength to strength. The team had finished third in the Six Masters 2020 regular season, but had surprised many with a comfortable 2-0 win over a then-favoured Team SiNister. While having lost to Wildcard Gaming twice,kami showed great improvement the second time around, and will be hoping that third time is the charm at this mini-major.

Dino, Stryder, Hayward, Juicy, Jsh, and Pikniq (coach)

Coming in as a slight surprise, Pittsburgh Knights was not a team that was 'supposed to' be here. Having finished an incredible 12 points behind Team SiNister in the regular Six Masters 2020 season, the Knights had managed a rather comfortable 2-1 upset over them in the playoffs. With flashes of strength against even the favourites of Wildcard Gaming, the Knights will be hoping to surprise their intial opponents ofkami in this second attempt.

South Asia

DOC7ER, Hasib, Mii7, NINJAFREAK, Taha, M4KER, and FATAR

The winners of the first stage of the South Asian Nationals, MercenarieZ had only come together just before its qualifiers. The team had made it to the grand final of the South Asian Nationals without dropping a map, but had needed a stunning reverse-sweep comeback to beat Union Gaming on the backs of multiple clutches and a map advantage. Somewhat surprised to have got so far, the team will be hoping to carry on its form in this mini-major.

Beat, EX7, Jittery, Poseidon, Sparko, Daggerfist, and Exterr

Union Gaming, the giants of South Asia, would have been certainly unhappy with the South Asian Nationals loss. The team had won most of the local tournaments held before the Nationals and had been a mere two rounds away on two maps from beating MercenarieZ in the grand final. Certainly still one of the favourites, Union will be hoping to beat KIRA E-Sports a second time after having lost 0-2 the first time and reaffirm its status as the best in South Asia.

AviM, DAFT, R4ttl3r, amarhbk, Atharv, and Khajiit

Third-seeded KIRA E-Sports come into this mini-major with little known about them, given that their games had all been played offline. However, a 2-0 victory against the eventual finalists of Union Gaming and then a 1-2 loss against them in the lower bracket speaks to this KIRA roster being not too far behind the favourites.

Cruzi, Firefly, Ishan, Lusty_Boi, and QB

Even less is known about MonkaS in terms of their play style, as only the grand final of the South Asian Nationals had been streamed. However, this roster did push proceedings to maximum regular time across its 0-2 loss to eventual champions MercenarieZ, but was destroyed 0-7, 1-7 against Union Gaming. More work is to be done for this team, but it is clear that there is the potential for an upset here.

The broadcast will be done from the brand-new Paris studio, designed for the APAC North Division and European League, with all three APAC mini-majors set to be cast from that venue. The talent, too, will be consistent with the APAC North event, with the following hosts, casters, and analysts:

Make sure to tune in for the games, starting tomorrow on the 6th of August at 6 PM AEST (UTC+10), as APAC sets out in search for its Asian, South Asian, and Oceanic champions. Also check back here for more coverage and follows us on Twitterfor instant updates.

Read more:

Oceania & South Asia Six August 2020 Majors - Everything You Need to Know - SiegeGG

Nissan launches virtual showroom in Philippines, Brand first in Asia and Oceania – Automotive World

Nissan in the Philippines has enhanced its digital strategy with the introduction of the brands first virtual showroom in the Asia & Oceania region, giving customers immersive online access to the current Nissan line-up.

Nissan is dedicated to shaping an innovative, human-centric future for the Philippines. The launch of the first virtual showroom in the region for Nissan is a strong example that we consistently innovate to benefit the customer journey, especially in the face of challenges such as the pandemic, says President and Managing Director for Nissan in the Philippines Atsushi Najima.

Thevirtual showroomin the recently updated Nissan Philippines website allows customers to move around and interact with every vehicle in the current Nissan line-up on display. Simulating the experience inside physical Nissan dealerships around the country, the virtual showroom offers a 360-degree view of both the virtual space and each product, as well as allows the customer to zoom in and out and navigate to every direction. This newly developed 360-degree view component is also the first for the brand to launch globally.

Each of the vehicles on display have clickable hotspots to instantly show more information about the car, and its key features. Exterior hotspots lead to a carousel view of the main vehicle information and leads to the vehicles landing page. Interior hotspots have been customized to lead to a 360-degree view inside the vehicle, additionally providing more digital hotspots to deliver information on car specifications.

The enhanced websites landing pages for each vehicle are now equipped with an interactive viewing feature, adding a colorizer option where customers can view the vehicles various color variants in various angles. Each vehicles landing page also have new product walk-around videos that share the excitement of discovering Nissan products, and highlights the benefits of Nissan Intelligent Mobility for vehicles with these features.

Under a secure and safe new normal, the virtual showroom is one innovative way for us to push possibilities so that customers can seamlessly experience the Nissan brand from a digital platform right until they drive our vehicles. The virtual showroom not only brings new kind of excitement in experiencing Nissan products for Filipinos, but also ensures that our customers remain safe during the pandemic, concludes Najima.

SOURCE: Nissan

See the original post here:

Nissan launches virtual showroom in Philippines, Brand first in Asia and Oceania - Automotive World

Where Are All The Cruise Ships? – Forbes

While we see the images of parked airliners lined up on taxiways and wing-to-wing at various airports around the world, where are all the cruise ships?

Living across from the Port of Miami, months after the pause on cruising, ships continue to sail in and out on a daily basis. That sort of makes sense. One might guess they need to refuel and get more provisions. But clearly, unlike airliners, the over 300 cruise ships that are out there, arent just static, shutdown, mothballed, and tied up somewhere.

Despite the pause on cruising, ships are on the move. Where are they going? Who's on board? Why not ... [+] just park them like airliners?

Looking at Cruisemapper.com heightened my intrigue. While its apparent some of these vacation wonderlands anchor offshore for periods of time (below), they also seem to be on the move, in some cases on long voyages (above).

Cruise ships anchored near Great Habour Cay in the Bahamas.

To find out whats going on, I reached out to the three biggest operators of cruise ships.

Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings operates the Oceania and Regent Seven Seas brands in addition to its namesake. They responded first and politely declined to offer answers to my questions about what was going on just beyond the horizon.

Royal Caribbean Group, which counts Royal Caribbean, Celebrity, Silversea, Azamara, TUI, and Hapag-Lloyd in its portfolio was next up, and gave me a glimpse into whats going on.

A spokesperson told me that ships come in an out of port for fuel and provisions. He noted that due to restrictions on repatriating crew, ports acted as hubs where members transferred from one ship to another, not necessarily to disembark.

Since onboard staff come from a multitude of countries, and it was often impossible to get them home via scheduled airline flights, Royal Caribbean chartered full airliners to fly them there.

While he declining to talk specifics, an example as I understood it might be Indonesian and Philippine passports holders on several were ships transited to a single vessel while making a port stop. That vessel then sailed to a country that had given Royal Caribbean permission to transfer the crew to charter flights that would fly them to their home nations.

Describing the repatriation as monumental, the entire operation wasnt completed until the end of June. Ships that when sailing had over 8,000 passengers and crew now are staffed by around 100 team members.

He also pointed out that there isnt enough space in ports to dock all its ships, hence the cluster of ships anchored offshore.

Carnival Corporation was last to get back to me, but presented the most comprehensive picture of whats taking place out at sea.

A spokesperson noted none of the companys now 90 ships, down from 105 before the pause - 15 are leaving the fleet - are currently in U.S. waters.

The industrys largest player, its brands include Carnival, Princess, Holland America, Cunard, Seabourn, Aida, Costa, and P&O.

The Carnival Corp. representative said it utilized 49 ships that traveled over 400,000 nautical miles around the world, along with chartered aircraft, to repatriate over 80,000 crew members. So in other words, some of those long voyages I was seeing on Cruisemapper.com were a result of sailing onboard teams back to their home countries.

The lockdown circumstances, restrictions, closures, various rules around the world and reductions in commercial air made it difficult to use normal means to repatriate crew members from over 130 countries, he said.

Challenges not only included sailing or flying crew home. Back in May, Bill Burke, the companys chief maritime officer told Cruise Business issues with test results and certification delayed for weeks repatriation thousands of Filipino employees. He noted some crew live in countries where borders were closed to both maritime and air arrivals.

Now that repatriations are done, why not just mothball the ships?

It turns out the remaining ships are in what Carnival calls a warm layup, positioned around the world, including the Caribbean, Europe, Asia and in the eastern Pacific.

Warm layup is where most of the ships major systems continue to operate to make sure they function normally over time and the ship can quickly be put back into service.

A cold layup shuts down most of the ships systems for a longer-term period of inactivity for the ship, by the way.

According to Carnival, the ships in warm layup are staffed with crew members at what is called safe-manning levels, which for larger ships is an average of about 100 crew members including deck officers navigating the ship, engineers in charge of propulsion and power, a security team, and hotel and kitchen staff, along with medical professionals for any crew needs.

There are approximately 12,000 crew members remain on Carnival Corp. ships for safe-manning duties.

Whats life like on these ghost ships?

The Carnival rep said most crew members are staying alone, per protocol for disease mitigation, and in guest cabins with a window or balcony. They have access to outdoor spaces, movies, Internet, and are able to stay in touch with family and friends.

If you want a closer look, several crew still aboard the ships are posting vlogs on Youtube.

Follow this link:

Where Are All The Cruise Ships? - Forbes

Washing hands or wearing gloves, which is the more effective way to prevent Covid? Experts offer some insights – The Financial Express

The first thing that the WHO recommended in the fight against the pandemic was hand hygiene. So by now, everyone knows that hand washing is one of the key measures to prevent Covid transmission. However, there is a lack of access to basic amenities like water and soap in many countries, which also have limited healthcare capacity.

Researchers from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington in the US found that without access to soap and clean water, over two billion people in low- and middle-income nationsa quarter of the worlds populationhave a greater likelihood of transmitting the virus than those in wealthy countries. In another study, published in the journal, Environmental Health Perspectives, more than 50% people in sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania lack access to effective hand washing. The study found that in 46 countries, more than half of the people lacked access to soap and clean water. In India, Pakistan, China, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Indonesia, more than 50 million people in each country were estimated to be without hand washing access, according to the study.

As the contactless business becomes the new normal, a host of products now address the issue of touchcontactless dining, payments, delivery, work solutions and even social interaction via video chat. Additionally, the newest Apple Watch update, watchOS 7, will have a feature that can detect when the wearer is washing their hands and prompt them to do it for at least 20 seconds. The feature, expected to be out in the fall, will rely on motion sensors and sounds to know when the wearer is washing hands. When it is detected, the watch will set a 20-second countdown timer.

Hand washing is easier and more recommended than wearing gloves. We touch a variety of thingsfrom the mobile phone to the bathroom doorin a span of a few minutes and if done wearing the same pair of gloves, the germs can get carried to different surfaces. If one continues to use the same pair of gloves throughout the day, it becomes a source of infection, whereby we can spread the virus to others, as well as to ourselves while inadvertently touching our face. Hand washing with soap and water is the most desirable and effective way. Sanitiser can be used in places where there is no access to water and soap. It is impossible to sanitise gloves with sanitisers and as such, the habit of wearing gloves should be discouraged for better hygiene, says Ajay Agarwal, head of department, internal medicine, Fortis Hospital, Noida.

Being contactless does not always guarantee safety, according to Tulika Bhati, housekeeping manager, Hilton Garden Inn, Saket, New Delhi. We follow a high standard of sanitation and disinfection where cleanliness is not restricted to the rooms, but to the experience too. Our staff needs to maintain personal hygiene and sanity at all times. Gloves can be considered unsafe as bacteria produced from body fluids like sweat may thrive for hours and cross-contaminate food objects and surfaces. Use of disposable gloves and masks is uncompromisable under any circumstances, she says.

Products like CPD Alco-Sterile, a nanotechnology-based spray that provides Continuous Disinfection Technology, help disinfect high-contact areas like workspaces, airports, railways, hospitals, malls, etc. But the need to sanitise continuously is important. Gloves frequently touch different surfaces, so it gives you a perceived notion of safety, but the contamination levels are very high. Rather hand washing is good for personal hand hygiene, says Ashish Kapur, director, CPD INDIA, which manufactures CPD Alco-Sterile.

Gloves, which are primarily recommended for doctors and other healthcare workers, reduce the risk of exposure to blood-borne pathogens during surgery. KK Aggarwal, president, Confederation of Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania (CMAAO) and Heart Care Foundation Of India (HCFI), says gloves are an integral part of PPE kits. Hand hygiene is a must, both before and after gloving, even for healthcare workers. Gloves are not an assured protective mechanism against the virus, as wearing them may still lead to spread of the infection. If you touch a surface or any object that is potentially contaminated, the virus could stick to the gloves and can spread the infection, says Aggarwal, who has been the past national president of the Indian Medical Association (IMA).

Contactless processes have also caused a sort of phobia among people. We do not tend to wash hands when gloved. Hence, gloves need to be periodically changed, especially by those who handle food and edible items. They can use degradable plastic gloves instead of surgical ones. Gloves need to be worn if you are continuously working on the food counter and should be replaced every time you leave and come back. Washing hands is better than sanitising, but sanitisers mostly mask germs, whereas hand washing removes them, says Manoj Kutteri, wellness director, Atmantan Wellness Centre, Pune.

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Washing hands or wearing gloves, which is the more effective way to prevent Covid? Experts offer some insights - The Financial Express