Categories
Australia

Betting companies required to provide gamblers with financial statements, but ex-punter says it’s not enough

Betting companies will now be required to send clear statements of gambling wins and losses to their customers following the implementation of federal rules this month.

With Australian gambling losses among the highest per capita in the world, the new monthly activity statements are intended to help gamblers make better decisions by providing a clear picture of their spending.

“For some people, they might look at it and say, ‘Well, this is just too much — I find it confronting and I need to do something about it,'” Financial Counseling Australia policy director Lauren Levin told ABC Radio Perth.

“It might lead to calling up [a gambling support group] or calling up one of the financial counseling services, or the national debt helpline, and saying, ‘I think that I need to talk to someone about this.'”

The change was among recommendations by the 2018 National Consumer Protection Framework for Online Wagering, which came up with 10 measures to address rising social harms related to online betting.

According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, the country’s losses from legal gambling totaled $25 billion in 2018-2019, creating severe consequences for the finances, mental health and relationships of problem gamblers and their families.

A study by the Behavioral Economics Team of the Australian Government found people who received activity statements were more likely to reduce the amount of their bets, although it would not reduce the frequency of their betting.

A ‘tokenistic’ measure

Peter, whose full name has been withheld for privacy reasons, is a former gambler who lost his career and his marriage before finding support through Gamblers Anonymous.

An example of an activity statement showing the amounts of wins and losses and graph of the account-holder's spending.
An example of the statements activity gamblers will now receive from betting companies.(Supplied)

Peter now provides support for others via Gamblers Anonymous and says the change is a “tokenistic” measure that avoids taking more drastic and controversial steps that will have greater effect.

“The single biggest impact that we can have in Australia would be for governments to ban electronic advertising of gambling, the same way that they did for alcohol, and cigarettes,” Peter said.

“They banned advertising of those because it was costing governments a fortune through the health system, whereas gambling is very much a hidden epidemic where the costs are largely borne by the gambler, the gamblers’ families, the gambler’s employer, the people they steal from .”

Peter said he had seen a “scary” increase in members who were young men betting on sport through phone apps.

He said providing activity statements might provide some “small benefit” for new gamblers who had not yet realized the extent of their spending.

“But for anyone who’s an established gambler or who’s got an established gambling problem, that will have no effect at all,” Peter said.

Gamblers focus on wins

University of Sydney School of Psychology Professor Sally Gainsbury is the director of the Gambling Treatment and Research Clinic.

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Categories
US

Russia “ready to discuss” prisoner swap now that Brittney Griner sentenced

Russia said Friday it was “ready to discuss” a prisoner swap with Washington at the presidential level, a day after the drug conviction of US basketball star Brittney Griner.

Despite tensions soaring between Russia and the US since the launch of Moscow’s military intervention in Ukrainethe former Cold War rivals appeared to be edging closer to a new prisoner exchange.

The White House has urged Russia to accept its offer of a deal for the release of Griner and former US Marine Paul Whelan, who was sentenced to 16 years in prison on espionage charges.

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday said Moscow was willing to discuss the matter.

“We are ready to discuss this subject, but only within the framework of the (communication) channel established by presidents Putin and Biden,” Lavrov told a press conference on a visit to Cambodia.


Viktor Bout, Russian arms dealer, at center of possible prisoner swap

02:23

“There is a special channel established by the presidents and despite certain public declarations, it is still functional,” he added.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who spoke to Lavrov about the exchange Last Friday, said Washington will be “pursuing” discussions with Russia.

He also said Griner’s conviction put a spotlight on the “Russian government’s use of wrongful detentions to advance its own agenda using individuals as political pawns.”

WNBA player Griner was sentenced to nine years in a Russian penal colony Thursday and ordered to pay a fine of one million rubles ($16,590) for possessing and smuggling narcotics.

The two-time Olympic basketball gold medalist and Women’s NBA champion was detained at a Moscow airport in February after she was found carrying vape cartridges with cannabis oil in her luggage.

The Phoenix Mercury player was coming to Russia to play club basketball with UMMC Ekaterinburg during the US off-season — a common path for American stars seeking additional income.

Griner pleaded guilty to the chargesbut said she did not intend to break the law or use the banned substance in Russia.

“I want the court to understand it was an honest mistake that I made while rushing, under stress, trying to recover from post-Covid and just trying to get back to my team,” Griner said in her final statement before the verdict.

Griner had testified that she had permission from a US doctor to use medicinal cannabis to relieve pain from her many injuries, and had never failed a drug test.

The use of medical marijuana is not allowed in Russia.

Griner’s legal team said they plan to appeal the “unreasonable” verdict.

President Biden called Griner’s conviction “unacceptable” and said Washington would “work tirelessly” to secure her release.

Blinken has said Washington put forward a “substantial proposal” for the exchange of Griner and Whelan.

The highest-profile Russian prisoner in the United States is Victor Bouta 55-year-old arms trafficker dubbed the “Merchant of Death,” who is serving a 25-year sentence.

There is no official confirmation that Washington has offered to exchange him.

Bout’s wife, Alla, on Friday expressed her sympathies to Griner’s family, saying she hoped her husband and the US athlete will be able to return home.

“Sympathy has no citizenship and nationality, it is a universal human emotion,” she told Russian news agency RIA Novosti, expressing hope that Russia and the US would “come to an agreement.”

Moscow and Washington have already conducted one prisoner swap since the start of Moscow’s Ukraine offensive.

In April, Washington exchanged former US Marine Trevor Reed for convicted drug smuggler Konstantin Yaroshenko.

in to handwritten letter from Griner that was delivered to the White House last month, the WNBA player wrote how terrified she is that she may be imprisoned in Russia “forever.”

Griner’s wife Cherelle told “CBS Mornings” that when she read the letter, she could feel the fear that Griner was experiencing.

“She is probably the strongest person that I know, so she doesn’t say words like that lightly. That means she truly is terrified that she may never see us again. You know, I share those same sentiments,” Cherelle Griner said.


Cherelle Griner says President Biden wrote a letter back to Brittney Griner

03:15

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Categories
Business

Why Mitsubishi Won’t Be Bringing a Full EV to Australia Just Yet

As one of Australia’s most popular automakers, Mitsubishi has been holding back internationally from releasing a mainstream electric vehicle. Instead of jumping onto battery EVs, Mitsubishi Australia wants to stick with PHEV (plug-in hybrid electric vehicle) technology… At least for now.

Over in Japan, Mitsubishi recently released the eK X, a short-range EV for inner city driving, developed alongside an identical Nissan model (Mitsubishi, Nissan and Renault have a strategic alliance). It’s not something you’d expect to come to Australia, with a limited range and speed, but that’s the point. Right now, Mitsubishi doesn’t see electric vehicles as a good choice for the Australian market.

On a recent press trip to Adelaide with Mitsubishi, I got the opportunity to speak with Shaun Westcott, the CEO of Mitsubishi Australia.

The Mitsubishi team showed media images of Westcott testing a new vehicle in the Simpson Desert. After chatting with him, it’s clear Westcott is an advocate of cutting emissions, but why isn’t Mitsubishi going all-electric in Australia?

“At the moment, if we had to switch to pure electric, all we’re really doing is shifting the problem from the tailpipe to the power station,” Westcott told Gizmodo Australia.

“We’re in Australia. We’re not in Norway, we’re not in Europe.”

Last year it was reported that 24 per cent of the Australian energy grid was powered by renewables. In Norway, the example cited by Westcott, 98 per cent of the grid is made up of renewable energy.

This is a jaw dropper, by any measure, but it is something that we can work towards in Australia. As we reported earlier this week, the Australian government entered a Bill to cut our emissions by 43 per cent below what it was in 2005, and to do it before 2030. We also reported that the ACT will be phasing out gas power by 2045.

And a lot of these points back to the transport sector.

In 2020, it was reported that the Australian transport sector, as a whole, makes up 18.9 per cent of all emissions. This figure varies at the state level, which is why the ACT is so bent on phasing petroleum vehicles out by 2035 (because the transport sector makes up the majority of emissions in the territory).

So then, why is Mitsubishi bringing PHEV technology back? Why hasn’t Mitsubishi launched an electric competitor to the Hyundai Ioniq 5 or the Kia Niro?

“At the moment, we have insufficient charging infrastructure in this country,” Westcott said.

“It’s going to require billions of dollars and a number of years to build all of that. Whether that money comes from private enterprise or whether it comes from government, it’s going to take time to do that.”

It’s hard to disagree with Westcott on this point in the Australian market. Transition-wise, with 76 per cent of our grid still being powered by fossil fuels, you’re really only transferring emissions from one sector to another by driving an electric vehicle.

That is unless you’re charging your electric vehicle off of your own renewable energy, which many users do. Australia has the most solar per capita of any country in the world, and when we consider daily driving distances, Aussie car owners typically drive for 34 kilometers per day on average (which largely defuses the argument of EVs having a lower range).

mitsubishi australia EV
Mitsubishi Australia sticking to a plug-in hybrid EV for now, despite releasing the I-MiEV in the 2000s. Image: Zachariah Kelly/Gizmodo Australia

The Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross (from last year) and the upcoming Outlander use a battery first and petrol second approach. Where other PHEVs may run battery and petrol motors synchronously, Mitsubishi’s petrol motor functions as a generator, converting fossil fuels into battery energy.

If you go really fast, the petrol engine will start providing energy to the front wheels, but for most uses, it can be functionally an electric car, charged in the garage with the petrol engine disabled at speeds below 70km/h (though the battery of the new Outlander only provides 84km range without petrol-to-battery generation).

“Our customers use our previous generation Outlander in fully electric mode 84 per cent of the time,” Westcott added.

“Other research shows that only 19 per cent of Australians… are prepared to go straight into EV, right now, today.

“What we believe is that our technology allows people to transition. It allows them to experience EV, and the benefits of EV, without having the range anxiety, without having to worry about a charging station… I think it gives you the best of both worlds. We need to inform, educate and expose, which is what we think the PHEV allows us to do. It allows us to reduce emissions by 84 per cent right now with zero dollars spent on infrastructure.”

Westcott was able to confirm that Mitsubishi is moving in the direction of rolling out PHEV technology more across its brand (including in the upcoming revival of RALLIART), though he was unable to provide a timeframe.

Though how long does the PHEV concept have in Australia? What will it take and how long will it take for Australian cars to go all-electric?

Australia doesn’t have fuel-efficiency standards, which electric vehicle lobbyists believe are key to unlocking the EV market in the country, and it’s true that we don’t have a massive array of public electric car charging stations built out.

Though there is enthusiasm to change this, we’ll likely be waiting some time, just as we’ll need to wait for Australia’s grid to become more reliant on renewables.

The future may be electric, but it will take us some time to get there.

Categories
Entertainment

James Franco scoring Fidel Castro role slammed for appropriation by John Leguizamo

James Franco is stirring up controversy yet again, with news he has been cast to play former Cuban leader Fidel Castro in a new film, Alina of Cuba, according to Deadline.

This will be one of Franco’s first acting roles since he was sued for sexual misconduct in 2019. But the sexual scandal is not the only reason people are upset with the casting news, Fox News reports.

The movie will follow the story of Castro’s illegitimate daughter, Alina Fernandez, who did not know who her powerful father was until she was 10.

Shortly following the announcement, actor John Leguizamo shared his outrage over the casting on social media.

He wrote, “How is this still going on? How is Hollywood excluding us but stealing our narratives as well?”

The Colombian-born actor wrote of Franco, “he ain’t Latino!”

Franco has Portuguese and Swedish ancestry on his paternal side, as well as Russian Jewish from his maternal side.

Leguizamo’s social media commentary continued with his condemnation of the industry, writing, “No more appropriation Hollywood and streamers! Boycott! This F’d up!”

This certainly isn’t the first time Hollywood casting has angered potential viewers.

Scarlett Johansson was cast in Ghost in the Shell as Motoku Kusanagi, a character who first appeared in Japanese manga.

Others were upset and questioned why Emma Stone was cast to play a Hawaiian woman in Hello.

Leguizamo’s reps did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

This article originally appeared on Fox News and has been reproduced here with permission

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Categories
Sports

Novak Djokovic’s wife gets into spat with Racquet magazine after it called out the unvaccinated star

Tennis star Novak Djokovic’s wife slammed Racquet Magazine for questioning the unvaccinated player’s decision to continue entering tournaments in countries he is barred from traveling to due to Covid-19 regulations.

Djokovic, 35, withdrew from the upcoming hard-court tournament in Montreal Thursday because he is not vaccinated against Covid-19 and is therefore not allowed to enter Canada.

For the same reason, as things stand now, he will also not be able to compete in the US Open later this month.

Racquet Magazine responded to the news Djokovic had pulled out of the Montreal Open by tweeting: ‘Dunno why this guy keeps entering tournaments hoping they’ll change their rules for him.’

His wife, Jelena, 36, was quick to come to his defense as she took aim at the publication as she quote tweeted: ‘Is this a real, international tennis magazine?! Wow.’

She also tagged the ATP Tour and one of their publicists, Nicola Arzani, along with a series of emojis displaying bewilderment and embarrassment.

The magazine responded, claiming they would ‘love’ to see the Serbian play in New York at the US Open later this month.

Hi Jelena! We’d love to see your husband play in New York, along with the rest of the tennis world, ‘she posted it. ‘Hopefully he’ll decide he can follow the rules.’

Tennis star Novak Djokovic's wife, Jelena (left) came to the tennis star's defense on Twitter

Tennis star Novak Djokovic’s wife, Jelena (left) came to the tennis star’s defense on Twitter

She slammed Racquet Magazine for questioning why the unvaccinated player continued to enter tournaments in countries he is barred from traveling to due to Covid-19 regulations

She slammed Racquet Magazine for questioning why the unvaccinated player continued to enter tournaments in countries he is barred from traveling to due to Covid-19 regulations

The Wimbledon champion will not be able to compete in the US Open as things currently stand

The Wimbledon champion will not be able to compete in the US Open as things currently stand

Jelena was quick to hit back with the specifics, questioning the logic behind the original tweet.

Hi! Based on tennis rules and ranking – Novak’s entry in the tournament was automatic,’ she said. ‘So, what was the logic behind your tweet?’

Racquet replied by insisting Djokovic should withdraw from all the events he cannot play due to his unvaccinated status now rather than wait until the last minute.

Jelena was quick to hit back with the specifics, questioning the logic behind the original tweet

Jelena was quick to hit back with the specifics, questioning the logic behind the original tweet

It wrote: ‘As of right now, he’s also automatically entered into Cincy and the USO—is he gonna withdraw from them now knowing he doesn’t want to follow rules or wait until the last minute like he’s just done for Montreal?

‘Or maybe after the draw is made like he did in Indian Wells?

‘Not trying to disrupt your Friday night, but since you came our way, it’d be great to get him to take his stand by withdrawing from those events now so the whole tennis world isn’t talking about him not getting a shot for weeks to eat.

‘A stand is only a stand if one takes it.’

The publication claimed Djokovic should withdraw from the events he cannot play in now

The publication claimed Djokovic should withdraw from the events he cannot play in now

Djokovic’s wife continued the spat as she argued that the publication should take a stand itself and stick to writing about tennis.

‘His most important stand is to be a tennis champion,’ she said. ‘And he took it. I mean, a stand is a stand.

‘Given that you are a tennis magazine- maybe focus on that in the weeks to come? Take a stand. Be what you are meant to be. A tennis magazine that writes about tennis.’

The 36-year-old fired back that the magazine should 'take a stand' itself

The 36-year-old fired back that the magazine should ‘take a stand’ itself

Djokovic has said he won’t get the shots, even if that means he can’t go to certain tournaments. He missed the Australian Open in January after being deported from that country and needed to sit out two events in the United States earlier this year.

Unvaccinated foreign citizens can’t go to Canada or the US, so Djokovic pulled out of Montreal a day before the draw is scheduled to take place for the tournament and is expected to have to sit out the US Open, which starts in New York on August 29.

However, the 21-time Grand Slam winner said on social media earlier this week that he remains hopeful he will be allowed in the tournament and will be ready to go should he get the OK.

‘I am preparing as if I will be allowed to compete, while I await to hear if there is any room for me to travel to US,’ Djokovic wrote. ‘Fingers crossed!’

He proved he was preparing a he posted a video to his Instagram of him practicing.

Djokovic said he remains hopeful he will be allowed to play at the US Open in August

Djokovic said he remains hopeful he will be allowed to play at the US Open in August

It is not the first time Jelena has been embroiled in an online slanging match as she was previously involved in a debate after prominent tennis journalist Ben Rothenberg called her husband an ‘anti-vax poster boy.’

After Djokovic’s win in the Wimbledon men’s final, Rothenberg asked him whether he would get vaccinated soon in order to compete at the US Open in August.

‘You do still have time to get vaccinated before New York to make it in time for the US. Is that something you’ve completely closed your mind to as an option going forward?’ asked Rothenberg in the post-match press conference.

Djokovic’s reply was strong and succinct: ‘Yes.’

Rothenberg then took to Twitter to label the star Serb an ‘anti-vax poster boy’ who has played in his last Grand Slam for the year, unless there is a ‘swift change in US immigration law’.

Jelena didn’t take too kindly Rothenberg’s description of her husband and kicked off the very public online spat by taking issue with the description.

It is not the first time Jelena has been embroiled in an online slanging match over her husband

It is not the first time Jelena has been embroiled in an online slanging match over her husband

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Categories
Australia

Perrottet to concede election was a disaster for Liberals, wants more women in parliament

“One of the most important rights of party members is the power to select candidates to represent your values. I want more women, more diversity, and the best talent for our future.”

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In his last major address to party members before the March election, he will warn that “to win the future, we must also focus relentlessly on the people that we serve”, a veiled criticism that the party was too inward-looking during its failed federal election campaign.

“Since 2011, the NSW Liberal government has shown that Liberal values ​​put into action to get results. And we have a decade of delivery to provide it,” Perrottet will say.

He will also criticize his Labor opponents for failing to support his long-term commitment to overhauling stamp duty in favor of a broad-based land tax.

“NSW soon faces a choice. A choice between our party of progress and Labor’s party of protest,” he will say.

“They prefer populism over principle. Government control over individual choice. The Opposition are offering higher property taxes locking in stamp duty forever.”

Liberal MPs will vote for a new deputy at a party room meeting on Tuesday, where Treasurer Matt Kean and Transport Minister David Elliott will face off for the position, which has no major role other than dealing with internal party matters.

However, the deputy leader can choose their portfolio and Elliott has reportedly said he would demand to be treasurer, which would push Kean out of the role.

The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.

Categories
US

How Nebraska law enforcement found evidence linking man to Laurel homicides

Investigators said a string of physical evidence at two crime scenes led them to the man suspected of killing four people Thursday in Laurel, Nebraska. Court documents reveal how Nebraska law enforcement compiled evidence against the 42-year-old Jason Jones, who was found by a state patrol SWAT team badly burned in his home across the street from one of the murder scenes. Around 3:11 am, Laurel Fire and EMS arrived at the first crime scene and located a woman “lying inside the back door of the residence in a pool of blood,” according to court documents.The woman, identified as 53-year-old Michele Ebeling, was pronounced dead on the scene.According to court documents, Ebeling appeared to have suffered two gunshot wounds, one to the chest and one to the head. Burn marks were observed on the floor, walls and furniture at the first crime scene, indicating a fire had occurred, according to court documents. First responders also observed the smell of smoke and the smell of gasoline from inside the house. According to court documents, law enforcement also saw a red fuel container inside the front door of the residence and a “discolored trail on the floor,” indicating an accelerant was used. After obtaining a search warrant, officers located a black backpack in the kitchen of the first residence, according to court documents. Several receipts were inside the backpack, including one dated Aug. 3 at 4:41 pm, to a Cubby’s Gas Station in Laurel. The credit card used for the purchase was in Jason Jones’ name. There was also a receipt to Fleet Farm in Sioux City for the purchase of a 6-gallon auto shutoff gas can, along with a fuel tank and camping backpack. A third receipt was to Rath’s Mini Mart in Laurel, dated Aug. 3 at 7:49 pmAccording to court documents, law enforcement found security camera video at Rath’s Mini Mart that shows Jones pumping gas into two cans just before 8 pm on Wednesday.At the second crime scene, first responders found smoke and soot damage consistent with a fire, according to court documents. Law enforcement found three deceased parties, all with gunshot wounds, inside the residence. The three victims at the second residence were identified as 86- year-old Gene Twiford, 85-year-old Janet Twiford and 55-year-old Dana Twiford.Further investigation of the scene showed a pry bar was used to gain access to the rear door of the residence, which investigators found on the ground near the rear door, according to court documents. A magazine to a firearm was also found in this area, and law enforcement found a firearm and a Molotov cocktail inside the residence, according to court documents. The firearm found in the residence was identified as a black Ruger 57, which records showed was purchased by Jones in 2021, according to court documents. When Jones was taken into custody, law enforcement said he had severe burns. Nebraska State Police said he was airlifted to a Lincoln hospital and is in serious condition as of Friday morning. According to court documents, Jones was arrested on four counts of first-degree murder, two counts of first-degree arson and four counts of use of a firearm to commit a felony.

Investigators said a string of physical evidence at two crime scenes led them to the man suspected of killing four people Thursday in Laurel, Nebraska.

Court documents reveal how Nebraska law enforcement compiled evidence against the 42-year-old Jason Jones, who was found by a state patrol SWAT team badly burned in his home across the street from one of the murder scenes.

Around 3:11 am, Laurel Fire and EMS arrived at the first crime scene and located a woman “lying inside the back door of the residence in a pool of blood,” according to court documents.

The woman, identified as 53-year-old Michele Ebeling, was pronounced dead on the scene.

According to court documents, Ebeling appeared to have suffered two gunshot wounds, one to the chest and one to the head.

Burn marks were observed on the floor, walls and furniture at the first crime scene, indicating a fire had occurred, according to court documents. First responders also observed the smell of smoke and the smell of gasoline from inside the house.

According to court documents, law enforcement also saw a red fuel container inside the front door of the residence and a “discolored trail on the floor,” indicating an accelerant was used.

After obtaining a search warrant, officers located a black backpack in the kitchen of the first residence, according to court documents. Several receipts were inside the backpack, including one dated Aug. 3 at 4:41 pm, to a Cubby’s Gas Station in Laurel. The credit card used for the purchase was in Jason Jones’ name. There was also a receipt to Fleet Farm in Sioux City for the purchase of a 6-gallon auto shutoff gas can, along with a fuel tank and camping backpack. A third receipt was to Rath’s Mini Mart in Laurel, dated Aug. 3 at 7:49 pm

According to court documents, law enforcement found security camera video at Rath’s Mini Mart that shows Jones pumping gas into two cans just before 8 pm on Wednesday.

At the second crime scene, first responders found smoke and soot damage consistent with a fire, according to court documents.

Law enforcement found three deceased parties, all with gunshot wounds, inside the residence.

The three victims at the second residence were identified as 86-year-old Gene Twiford, 85-year-old Janet Twiford and 55-year-old Dana Twiford.

Further investigation of the scene showed a pry bar was used to gain access to the rear door of the residence, which investigators found on the ground near the rear door, according to court documents. A magazine to a firearm was also found in this area, and law enforcement found a firearm and a Molotov cocktail inside the residence, according to court documents.

The firearm found in the residence was identified as a black Ruger 57, which records showed was purchased by Jones in 2021, according to court documents.

When Jones was taken into custody, law enforcement said he had severe burns. Nebraska State Police said he was airlifted to a Lincoln hospital and is in serious condition as of Friday morning.

According to court documents, Jones was arrested on four counts of first-degree murder, two counts of first-degree arson and four counts of use of a firearm to commit a felony.

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Categories
Business

ASX lithium shares facing ‘insatiable’ demand amid global funding gap

Image source: Getty Images

ASX lithium shares are charging higher today.

Leading lithium stocks Liontown Resources Ltd (ASX: LTR) is up 4.96% in early afternoon trade and Pilbara Minerals Ltd (ASX: PLS) shares are up 3.61%.

This week, both ASX lithium companies presented at the Diggers & Dealers Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia.

As attendees heard, the long-term demand outlook for lithium – a lightweight, conductive metal critical in electric vehicle (EV) and home storage batteries – remains very strong amid rapid global growth in EV markets.

This, as the battery metals industry is looking at a US$42 billion funding shortfall to meet that soaring demand, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.

Growing future deficits in lithium supply forecast

According to Pilbara’s presentation at Diggers & Dealers, the expected deficit in lithium by 2040 is the equivalent to some 18 Pilgangooras. The ASX lithium share was referring to its Pilgangoora project, one of the largest hard rock lithium-tantalum deposits on Earth.

It said the forecast deficit comes “with likely pricing implications”.

Lithium prices have already leapt almost 500% since this time last year.

According to Pilbara Minerals CEO Dale Henderson (quoted by Bloomberg), “The appetite is insatiable. Any producer in lithium is very popular at the moment.”

In its presentation, Liontown Resources pointed to research from global consulting firm Boston Consulting Group (BCG). BCG expects overall lithium demand growth of approximately 20% per year from 2020 through to 2035. This will be mostly driven by increased demand for EV and energy storage system (ESS) batteries.

Liontown CEO Tony Ottaviano said (courtesy of Bloomberg):

I don’t want us to come across as self-indulgent because we have immense respect for our customers, but the simple fact is it takes five to eight years to bring greenfield supply online in tier-one jurisdictions.

Ottaviano said that “interest was low” when the ASX lithium share approached car makers and other manufacturers for its first offtake.

“Roll the clock forward and we are seeing a completely different commercial posture,” he added.

How have these two ASX lithium shares been performing?

Over the past 12 months, the Pilbara share price is up 42% while the Liontown share price has gained 74%. That compares to a full-year loss of 7% posted by the All Ordinaries Index (ASX:XAO).

Roll the clock back five years, and these ASX lithium shares have really shot the lights out.

If you’d invested in the Pilbara five years ago, you’d be sitting on gains of 689%. As for Liontown, its shares have surged an eye-popping 14,550% in five years.

Categories
Entertainment

Sun & Sea: Operatic artwork is ‘strange thing I’ve ever seen’

It’s meant to astonish those who are lucky enough to witness it, yet what’s going on in this picture is creeping some people out.

Bikini-clad women lie sprawled on beach towels as they sun themselves, while men dressed in shorts relax and children build sandcastles.

But there’s a twist; these people are not at the beach. Instead, they’re inside a building, and there are fully dressed spectators watching from above and scrutinizing their every move.

The picture has some social media users puzzled, with comments that it looks like a scene from a bizarre prison movie.

“You’ve got people packed in, and some people watching them like they’re at the beach but they’re not at the beach, they’re in a building with sand in it,” one social media commenter said.

“Without a doubt this has to be the strangest footage I’ve seen in my whole life … It’s pretty crazy, pretty wild, pretty out there.”

Another commented it could be like a “prison for the super rich”, while a third said it looks like a “prison floor”.

It turns out that it’s actually the artwork/opera Sun&Seawhich has traveled to different art galleries around the world, each time looking a little different.

The “beachgoers” are opera singers, and they sing as nature around them crumbles.

Many who have seen the display have raved about it, calling it “extraordinary”.

“There is less a feeling of doom than an elegy of beautiful sadness,” one audience member wrote.

In 2019, the opera won the coveted Golden Lion at the 2019 Venice Biennale, while representing Lithuania.

At the time, Guardian reported that visitors looked down at the display from a minstrel’s gallery inside an old naval warehouse in the Venice Arsenale.

More recently, the piece was featured at Iceland’s Reykjavik Art Museum in June this year for the city’s arts festival, featuring black sand from the volcanic country’s coastline.

Sun&Sea project curator Lucia Pietroiusti has an intriguing description of the display. “Imagine a beach. The burning sun, sunscreen and bright bathing suits and sweaty palms and legs,” she said.

“Tired limbs sprawled lazily across a mosaic of towels. Imagine the occasional squeal of children, laughter, the sound of an ice cream van in the distance.

“The musical rhythm of waves on the surf, a soothing sound. The crinkling of plastic bags whirling in the air, their silent floating, jellyfish-like, below the waterline. The rumble of a volcano, or of an airplane, or a speedboat.

“Then a chorus of songs – everyday songs, songs of worry and of boredom, songs of almost nothing. And below them, the slow creaking of an exhausted Earth, a gasp.”

The performance loops continuously, for four hours each day and the audience can come and go as they please.

Upcoming tour locations include Helsinki, Barcelona and Lisbon.

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Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022 medal tally: Brittany O’Brien and Daniel Golubovic win silver for Australia

There were no gold medals for Australia on the eighth day of the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, but two silvers and seven bronze medals kept the nation at the top of the leader board.

There were podium finishes for Australian athletes in diving, wrestling, gymnastics and athletics.

You can check out how the latest batch of medals were won in our Commonwealth Games blog, or have a look at the medal winners and the top 10 medal standings by country below:

Day 8 medal results:

Silver:

  • Brittany O’Brien, diving, 1 meter springboard
  • Daniel Golubovic, athletics, decathlon

Bronze:

  • Sam Fricker and Shixin Li, diving, synchronized 3 meter springboard
  • Esther Qin, diving, 1 meter springboard
  • Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva, gymnastics, rhythmic individual all-around
  • Jayden Lawrence, wrestling, 86 kilogram freestyle wrestling
  • Sam Carter, athletics, T53/54 1,500 meters
  • Domonic Bedggood and Cassiel Rousseau, diving, 10 meter synchronized platform
  • cedric dubler, athletics, decathlon

Birmingham 2022 medal standings:

POSITION

TEAM

G

yes

B.

TOTAL

1

Australia

fifty

44

46

140

two

England

47

46

38

131

3

Canada

19

24

24

67

4

new zealand

17

eleven

13

37

5

India

9

8

9

26

6

Scotland

8

8

19

35

7

south africa

7

7

8

22

8

Nigeria

7

3

6

16

9

wales

4

5

10

19

10

Malaysian

4

4

3

eleven

posted