Categoría: Travel & Leisure, Aviation

Travel & Leisure, Aviation

  • tripscan

    ‘Save the Whales’ was a shining success. Now can humpbacks save us from ourselves?

    Antarctic Peninsula

    CNN

    About 15 billion miles from where you sit, two 12-inch golden records are hurtling through outer space with multilingual greetings to the universe from 55 humans and one humpback whale.

    With a playlist curated by astronomer Carl Sagan and inspired by the way humpbacks use low frequencies to send messages across entire oceans, they were launched on NASA’s two Voyager probes in 1977.

    «As much as the sounds of any baleen whale, it is a love song cast upon the vastness of the deep.» Sagan wrote of the golden records.

    And, since 95% of the planet’s biggest species had been harpooned to oblivion at the time, it could’ve easily been the kind of love song that ends in tears.

    But almost a half-century later, the comeback of the humpback is arguably the greatest success story in the history of conservation. While artificial intelligence could one day help us understand the lyrics of those songs in space, new science is putting a dollar value on the life of a whale — and finding they provide so much more than blubber and song.

    «They’re literally seeding the upper parts of the ocean with the opportunity for plant life to grow,» veteran marine ecologist Ari Friedlaender explained while bobbing on a Zodiac raft off the Antarctic Peninsula. «And that’s what feeds the food for whales, birds, seals — everything. They’re basically farmers recycling nutrients and there’s more food available to them the more they’re around.»

    CNN followed an international team of whale experts throughout 2023, from Friedlaender’s lab at the University of California at Santa Cruz to humpback breeding grounds off the Pacific coast of Colombia, and their feeding grounds at the bottom of the world. While Friedlaender has been collecting whale data for more than 25 years, his work found new relevance after a team of economists from the International Monetary Fund estimated a single baleen whale provides about $2 million worth of Earth services, both in life and death.

    When baleen whales gulp vital nutrients like iron and nitrogen from the depths of the sea and defecate at the surface, they serve as the ocean’s biggest fertilizer pumps — feeding the tiny phytoplankton which produces half the world’s oxygen and captures as much planet-warming CO2 as four Amazon rainforests while holding up the bottom of the food chain.

    «That’s the gold,» smiled Chris Johnson, трипскан вход the global lead of whale and dolphin conservation at the World Wildlife Fund, as he held up a whale stool sample jarred from the chilly Antarctic water.

    «We have the poo. Repeat, we have humpback poo,» Eva Prendergast, the British polar scientist at the helm, radioed back to the Ocean Endeavor, the cruise ship serving as base.

    The team interacted with dozens of whales over the course of four days in Antarctica. They used specialized camera drones to measure body size and suction-cupped tags slapped onto the animals’ backs with a long pole to record the way they move while capturing whale’s-eye-view video.

  • Trump says U.S. will double steel tariffs to 50%

    President Donald Trump told U.S. steelworkers on Friday that he will double tariffs on steel imports to 50%.

    «We’re going to bring it from 25% to 50%, the tariffs on steel into the United States of America,» Trump said during remarks at U.S. Steel’s Irvin Works in West Mifflin, kraken33 Pennsylvania.

    Trump is visiting U.S. Steel after indicating last week that he will clear a controversial merger with Japan’s Nippon. Investors and union members are listening for answers from the president on what shape the deal he announced between U.S. Steel and Nippon will take.

    Trump described the deal as a «partnership» in a May 23 post on his social media platform Truth Social. The president said U.S. Steel’s headquarters would remain in Pittsburgh and Nippon would invest $14 billion over 14 months in the more than 120-year-old American industrial icon.

    Trump told reporters on Sunday that the deal is an «investment, it’s a partial ownership, but it will be controlled by the USA.» But the White House and the companies have provided little detail to the public on how the deal is structured since Trump’s announcement.

    President Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump arrives to speak during a visit to US Steel – Irvin Works in West Mifflin, Pa., on Friday, May 30, 2025.Saul Loeb / AFP-Getty Images

    U.S. Steel has described the deal as a «merger» in which it will become a «wholly owned subsidiary» of Nippon Steel North America but continue to operate as separate company, according to an April 8 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Sources familiar with the matter told CNBC’s David Faber that Nippon is expected to close its acquisition of U.S. Steel at $55 per share, the original offer the Japanese steelmaker made before President Joe Biden rejected the deal in January. Biden blocked Nippon’s proposed acquisition on national security grounds, arguing that it would jeopardize critical supply chains.

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    But Trump ordered a new review of the deal in April, softening his previous opposition to Nippon buying U.S. Steel. The president announced the «partnership» one day after the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) was supposed to conclude its review and make a recommendation on whether the companies had found ways to «mitigate any national security risks.»

    ‘National security agreement’

    Pennsylvania Sen. Dave McCormick told CNBC on Tuesday that the U.S. government will have a «golden share» that will allow it to decide on a number of board seats. U.S. Steel will have an American CEO and a majority of the board will come from the U.S. McCormick said.

    «It’s a national security agreement that will be signed with the U.S. government,» McCormick told CNBC’s «Squawk Box.» «There’ll be a golden share that will essentially require U.S. government approval of a number of the board members and that will allow the United States to ensure production levels aren’t cut.»

    The «golden share» likely wouldn’t take the form of an equity stake by the U.S. government, said James Brower, a partner at law firm Morrison Forrester’s litigation department. The committee that reviewed the deal, CFIUS, does not negotiate equity interests, Brower said.

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