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the 2020 hopefuls are out in full force. many of the candidates are spending the day in the crucial state of south carolina, hoping to win over voters. right now these four candidates are attending the black economic alliance forum and making their pitches to african-american voters there. let s check in now with cnn s political reporter rebecca buck. this is extremely important, any appearance in south carolina. what messages do these candidates need to deliver? reporter: well, that s right, fred. as you know, the majority of democratic voters, the democratic electorate here in south carolina will likely be comprised of black voters. so the message that the candidates will be sending here today is directly going to impact their chances here in the palmetto state in the democratic primary, and this is a place where vice president joe biden remains extremely strong, even among african-american voters. so these candidates are going to be looking to chip away at his strength,
New-yorkUnited-statesJapanParisFrance-general-FranceIranCubaChinaPunta-canaLa-altagraciaDominican-republicGartner reports that low-code technologies will remain on a strong trajectory for 2021 and beyond, companies to rapidly build and deploy use cases without reliance on professional programmers. The complexity of IoT makes the skills barrier higher than in most other enterprise verticals. We like to argue that the value of low-code platforms is even higher for industrial companies, says Martin Thunman, CEO and co-founder of Crosser. With this financing round we aim to bring more innovative low-code solutions to the market, all aimed to help industrial companies move faster in their digitalization journey by putting the power of innovation in the hands of non-developers, often called citizen developers.
GermanyJapanParisFrance-generalFranceStockholmSwedenSaarlandNorrbottenNorbottenMadridSpain05.02.2021 Climate crisis is causing lakes to shrink
Authors of scientific article call for more attention to regions with falling water levels
Climate change is impacting not only the oceans, but also large inland lakes. As the world’s largest lake, the Caspian Sea is a perfect example of how a body of water can and will change. In an article in the Nature journal
Communications Earth & Environment, Dr. Matthias Prange of MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen, and his colleagues discuss the possible ecological, political and economic consequences, as well as viable solutions.
Caspian-seaOceans-generalOceansAzerbaijanIranTurkeyTurkFrankp-wesselThomas-wilkeCommunications-earth-environmentIpccPanel-on-cliA former resident of Moynaq, in the autonomous region of Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan, remembers a time when the Aral Sea meant bustling fishing villages and days spent by the sea’s shore. “I was five or six the last time I saw ships in the sea when we went swimming,” says Marat Allakuatov.
The ships are long gone, like much of the lake.
Soviet mismanagement
This is largely down to years of Soviet-era mismanagement on a truly monumental scale. In 1960, the USSR took the decision to use the vast, arid plains of the region surrounding the Aral Sea for cotton farming, a water-heavy crop. Lacking sufficient hydraulic infrastructure, the Soviet state began an immense plan to divert two rivers, Sir Darya and Amu Darya, through a 500 kilometre-long channel to irrigate the cotton fields. Diverting the rivers – which fed the Aral Sea – deprived the lake of much of its water flow.
Caspian-seaOceans-generalOceansAmu-daryaLebapTurkmenistanKazakhstanSir-daryaKazakhstan-generalKarakalpakstanQoraqalpog-istonUzbekistan