How Inclement Weather Informs Risk Assessments | Thomas Fox jdsupra.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jdsupra.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Overview I am pleased to report that over the year to 31 October 2020 the Company s net asset value ( NAV ) total return per Ordinary share was 8.9%. This compares favourably with a total return of 8.2% from the Company s benchmark, the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return Index (in sterling terms), and reflects a significant recovery following the fall in the NAV of more than 11% for the first half of the financial year. The Ordinary share price total return for the year was 12.2%, as the discount to NAV at which the Company s shares trade narrowed slightly, to 13.4%, from 15.4% at the start of the financial year. At the time of writing, the discount to NAV stands at 13.0%.
Aberdeen Emerg IncCo (LSE:AEMC) | RNS | Aberdeen Emerg IncCo proactiveinvestors.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from proactiveinvestors.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
https://www.afinalwarning.com/493051.html (Natural News) It’s easy to feel powerless when 5G towers are being installed right next to people’s homes, sometimes right outside their bedrooms, putting their families at untold risk from a technology that all signs indicate is very dangerous.
However, there are some promising signs that telecommunication companies may be losing their battle to impose 5G against people’s will, at least in some places.
For example, the Swiss government has appointed a group of experts tasked with probing the risks of introducing 5G. Meanwhile, the Swiss Federation of Doctors urged caution, saying that “as long as there is no scientific proof that raising the radiation limits will not impact health, one must refrain from raising them.”
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Our global food system is primary driver of biodiversity loss
A new Chatham House report highlights that the global food system is the primary driver of biodiversity loss.
Biodiversity loss will continue to accelerate, unless we change the way we produce food. Further destruction of ecosystems and habitats will threaten our ability to sustain human populations.
The new report calls for an urgent reform of food systems, suggesting three interdependent actions: changing global dietary patterns, protecting and setting aside land for nature, and farming in a more nature-friendly and biodiversity-supporting way.
Policy makers are urged to take a system-wide approach to account for the impacts of food systems, develop global guidance for change, and translate this to national targets.