Market Growth Drives Reorganization of Integrated Cryogenic Solutions Unit of Nikkiso Clean Energy and Industrial Gases Group

TEMECULA, Calif., Sept. 21, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries’ Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (Group), a part of the Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japan) group of companies, is pleased to announce the reorganization of their Integrated Cryogenic Solutions Unit (ICS). As the result of both ICS’ growth and tremendous market opportunities in renewable and green energy, ICS will now split into two Functional Units effective October 1, 2022.

The new “Nikkiso Fueling and Solutions” Unit will continue driving the business growth in hydrogen fueling market, natural gas fueling market, skid-mounted system, and turnkey systems. Mike Mackey (currently Senior Vice President of ICS) will be President of Nikkiso Fueling & Solutions. All current ICS staff and facilities will remain part of this new Unit.

The new “Nikkiso Energy Infrastructure & Strategic Projects” (NESP) Unit will expand the Group’s offerings to provide turnkey solutions for energy infrastructure including geothermal plants, compressed hydrogen distribution systems, energy recovery solutions, and offshore marine fueling systems. They will also provide full turnkey support for Nikkiso Cosmodyne plants. Joseph Pak (current president of ICS) will serve as President of NESP.

Nikkiso Expander Application Technique (NEAT) department, headed by Dr. Reza Agahi, will be part of the NESP unit.

“These changes are being made to better serve our customers and allow us to expand our portfolio of solutions for the growing global zero-emissions mandate,” according to Peter Wagner, CEO of Nikkiso CE&IG. “They further support our vision to be ‘Leading the change to a healthier world’.”

With these changes, Nikkiso continues their commitment to be both a global and local presence for their customers.

ABOUT CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (now a member of Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) member companies manufacture and service engineered cryogenic gas processing equipment (pumps, turboexpanders, heat exchangers, etc.), and process plants for Industrial Gases, Natural gas Liquefaction (LNG), Hydrogen Liquefaction (LH2) and Organic Rankine Cycle for Waste Heat Recovery. Founded over 50 years ago, Cryogenic Industries is the parent company of ACD, Nikkiso Cryo, Nikkiso Integrated Cryogenic Solutions, Cosmodyne and Cryoquip and a commonly controlled group of approximately 20 operating entities.

For more information, please visit www.nikkisoCEIG.com and www.nikkiso.com.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Global Africa Business Initiative inspires business, political, and cultural leaders to advance equitable growth for the continent

Part of UN General Assembly week, UN Global Compact initiative sparks new strategies for African development and business

United Nations, New York, Sept. 21, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed closed the inaugural Global Africa Business Initiative (GABI) conference this week, calling on partners in government, industry, and philanthropy to contribute toward a vision of sustainable, equitable growth; and to accelerate business opportunities on the African continent.

“The solidarity we’re looking for in the world will come home to roost, and it will be in Africa. Right now, the leadership and the solutions are coming from the continent,” said Ms. Mohammed.

Under the headline Unstoppable Africa, the two-day GABI launch event brought together business, non-profit, political, media and cultural leaders to create a new growth roadmap and realize the immense, untapped business and investment opportunities offered by the $2.5 trillion African market.

“We must unleash the potential of young people and there is no better way than through entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship creates jobs using the power of innovation, creativity, and technology,” said President Paul Kagame of Rwanda in video remarks.

Across more than 40 panels and speeches, thought leaders addressed challenges and opportunities facing African economic development across politics, trade and finance, medicine, fashion, sports, non-profits, arts, and music. Speakers identified technological innovation as a source of recent and potential future growth in sectors ranging from telecom to medicine to finance, noting that the relative lack of existing tech infrastructure is actually an opportunity, making possible a more efficient transition into newer, more modern systems.

Thought leaders and investors explored strategies for unlocking the continent’s financial sector. Discussions included the announcement of the $1 Billion African Women Impact Fund, launched with a $60 million investment by Standard Bank Group. Sport and culture were also a focus, emphasizing that Africa is home to several vibrant, rapidly growing centers of athletic, entertainment, and creative economic output – with rapidly growing audiences and consumers to match.

Organized by the UN Global Compact in partnership with the African Union, UNDP Africa, the UN Economic Commission for Africa and the UN Office of the Special Advisor on Africa, the Global Africa Business Initiative is supported by Afreximbank, Google, Rockefeller Foundation and Mastercard Foundation. Speakers included UN Secretary General António Guterres; Vera Songwe, former Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa; H.E. Moussa Faki Mahamat, Chairperson, African Union Commission; H.E. Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda; Eric Adams, Mayor of New York City; Strive Masiyiwa, businessman and philanthropist; Benedict Oramah, President and Chairman, Afreximbank; Sanda Ojiambo, Assistant Secretary-General and CEO, UN Global Compact; Adam Silver, CEO of the National Basketball Association; Bela Bajaria, Head of Global TV Netflix; Masai Ujiri, Vice Chair and President of the Toronto Raptors; Robert Smith, Vista Equity Partners; Melinda Gates, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation; Angélique Kidjo, Grammy Award-winning musician and activist; Omoyemi Akerele, Founder, Style House Files and Lagos Fashion Week; Julie Gichuru, Mastercard Foundation; Ruth Porat, Chief Financial Officer of Alphabet and Google; Dr. Rajiv Shah, President, Rockefeller Foundation; Antha N. Williams, Bloomberg Philanthropies; Lindeka Dzedze, Executive Head of Institutional Clients, Standard Bank Group; and Dr. Senait Fisseha, Director of Global Programs at Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation.

“Africa is unstoppable. Africa is an essential part of global business and a major investment destination. Africa includes some of the world’s fastest growing economies. And Africa has more — much more — to offer,” said UN Secretary-General Guterres António Guterres in opening remarks which can be read in full here.

In the coming months, GABI and the UN Global Compact will continue to provide opportunities for leaders to consider the forward direction of Africa’s growth.

To view a gallery of downloadable photos of the conference, please click here.

A compendium of key quotes from conference speakers can be found here.

About the Global Africa Business Initiative (GABI)

Africa has staked its position as the cornerstone of the world’s future. The continent is now positioned to be the most important driver of global business with a $2.5 trillion market opportunity. The Global Africa Business Initiative is designed to highlight opportunities on the continent where every sector of the economy from manufacturing to agriculture to services to finance is on a growth trajectory. The environment is primed for ambitious plays, for an infusion of creative and decisive moves for economic growth and sustainable development. To learn more and register to attend visit www.gabi.biz

About the United Nations Global Compact

As a special initiative of the UN Secretary-General, the United Nations Global Compact is a call to companies everywhere to align their operations and strategies with Ten Principles in the areas of human rights, labor, environment and anti-corruption. Our ambition is to accelerate and scale the global collective impact of business by upholding the Ten Principles and delivering the Sustainable Development Goals through accountable companies and ecosystems that enable change. With more than 15,000 companies and 3,000 non-business signatories based in over 160 countries, and 69 Local Networks, the UN Global Compact is the world’s largest corporate sustainability initiative — one Global Compact uniting business for a better world.

For more information, follow @globalcompact on social media and visit our website at www.unglobalcompact.org

United Nations Global Compact
(212) 907-1301
media@unglobalcompact.org

Cambodia returns 92 Vietnamese tricked into working in scamming jobs

A total of 92 Vietnamese citizens who were tricked into Cambodia to work under the promise of “light work with high wages” have been sent back home.

They were received by the Tay Ninh Province Border Guard Command at Vietnam’s Moc Bai Border Gate on Wednesday.

State-controlled media reported that 56 of them escaped from Casino Lucky 88 in Bavet City, Svay Rieng province on Sept. 17. The remaining people were said to have been discovered by the Cambodian Police who forced the owner of the establishment to hand them over to the local authorities.

At 14.30 p.m. on Sept. 17, 60 Vietnamese nationals fled the casino  in Bavet Kandal hamlet, and headed towards the Bavet border gate. Four people were caught by the casino’s guards and taken back.

A video spread on social media networks the same day showed the Vietnamese workers fleeing in the rain and heading for the border gate which is opposite Vietnam’s Moc Bai border gate in Tay Ninh province.

The Vietnamese Embassy in Cambodia, asked local authorities to investigate and verify the case. The Vietnamese side also requested the Cambodian side to intervene and rescue the remaining Vietnamese citizens at the casino. At the end of the afternoon, Cambodian Police asked it to hand over 11 more Vietnamese nationals.

Vietnam’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that since the beginning of the year about 600 Vietnamese citizens went to Cambodia to work on the promise of “light work, high salary.” They were then forced to work on online scams, mistreated, beaten or asked to call their relatives to receive ransom money in order to return home.

The 92 received by the Border Guards of Tay Ninh province are currently having their identities verified by the authorities so they can return them to their registered residences in Vietnam.

In a related development on Wednesday the Investigation Department of Dong Nai Province police said they had detained two people named Vuong Chi Thanh and Trinh Phu Quoc, living in Phu Loi commune, Dinh Quan for acting as brokers, sending Vietnamese to Cambodia to work illegally.

Binh Dinh Provincial Police are also verifying a request to help from a family in Tuy Phuoc district about their son being tricked into working in Cambodia. He had reportedly informed his family that they must pay a ransom of VND 120 million (U.S.$ 5,000) to be returned home.

Junta threatens prison, execution for supporting Myanmar opposition

Anyone in Myanmar found to have provided as little as one kyat in financial support to anti-junta groups or engaged with anti-junta content on social media now faces anywhere from two years in prison to execution, according to a spokesman for the military regime.

Deputy Minister of Information Major General Zaw Min Tun told reporters at a press conference in the capital Naypyidaw on Tuesday that donating to or supporting Myanmar’s shadow National Unity Government (NUG), ousted lawmakers of the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), or the anti-junta People’s Defense Force (PDF) paramilitary group is punishable under Myanmar’s anti-terrorism law.

Purchasing treasury bonds or lottery tickets for the groups is also subject to punishment, he said, adding that “donating just a single kyat” – approximately one-five-hundredth of a U.S. cent – could earn the offender a minimum of a decade behind bars.

“Whether you ‘like’ or ‘share’ [an anti-junta social media post], you are violating Section 124 (b) of the Penal Code [for incitement to destroy the state]. You can be sentenced anywhere from three years to 10 years in prison and you can also be charged a fine,” Zaw Min Tun said.

“The reason you are subject to a 10-year prison sentence or a death sentence for donating just one kyat is because it is in violation of [the Anti-Terrorism Act]. You need to understand that. Even if you don’t understand the law, the law will not forgive you.”

In addition to violating Myanmar’s anti-terrorism law and inciting the public against the state, Zaw Min Tun also said such actions are in breach of the country’s Electronic Communications Law. A conviction under the charges is punishable by a minimum sentence of two years in prison and a maximum sentence of death.

A resident of the commercial capital Yangon, who declined to be named for security reasons, told RFA Burmese that the junta is trying to deter support for the opposition through threats.

“These tyrants will do anything in their power to stop people from supporting the opposition, but the people will do whatever they can to support them,” she said.

“The more they make life difficult for us, the closer we will be to victory [against the regime]. It might be a bit challenging now [to support the opposition], but we will make sure that we can help them.”

A veteran high court lawyer told RFA on condition of anonymity that while providing support to anti-junta movements can be subject to prosecution, Myanmar’s law says nothing about jailing people for simply liking posts on social media.

“Giving ‘Likes’ [online] is our right. It’s already mentioned in the provisions of civil rights and the basic rights of citizens under the [military-drafted] 2008 Constitution,” he said.

“Based on what [Zaw Min Tun] said, action can be taken against someone for the content of their comment or even the way the text is written.”

‘Facing a crisis’

A spokesman from the Dawei Ashaytaw PDF group in Tanintharyi region said the junta is threatening people with legal provisions because its leadership is afraid that the wider public will take up arms to challenge its rule.

“We have witnessed the rising number of deaths of military soldiers in Sagaing and Magwe regions,” he said.

“We believe that there is a lack of unity within the army. And so, they are making threats to raise morale within the army as well as a deterrent to the people.”

The spokesman warned that such threats could lead to a drop in domestic contributions to the armed opposition.

Political analyst Than Soe Naing called the junta’s statements “illegal and excessive.”

“They are talking too much about the law. But as usual, the law is whatever they say it is,” he said.

“So if those laws are used as the basis for action, we must say that democracy in Myanmar has completely fallen into darkness.”

Kyaw Zaw, spokesman for the office of NUG President Duwa Lashi La, told RFA that the junta is becoming increasingly desperate in its actions.

“All they can do now is threaten and terrorize the public. And that is what they are doing,” he said.

“Saying that people will be arrested and charged for donating a single kyat … is because they are facing a crisis. They are afraid because they are in their last hour. They know they are going to lose and they know what is coming.”

According to Thai NGO Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma), junta authorities have arrested nearly 15,600 civilians since the military seized power in a Feb. 1, 2021 coup, nearly 12,500 of whom have been sentenced or remain in detention. The group says authorities have killed more than 2,300 civilians over the last 20 months, mostly during peaceful anti-junta protests.

Translated by Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.