Categories
US

Energy prices have dipped, but oil stocks are still a buy: Investor

Oil prices have fallen sharply from their recent peaks, but there’s still a case for buying oil stocks, according to Bill Smead, chief investment officer at Smead Capital Management.

That’s because energy prices are likely to stay high or even increase further, he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Thursday.

He described the slide in crude prices as “the first significant correction” in a bull market that started in the spring of 2020 after prices crashed.

“You have this huge move, you go from $20 a barrel to $120 and then you pull back — and now people are going, ‘Oh yeah, that’s all over, that’s going to cure the inflation right there,'” Smead said.

We like the oil stocks here. You can buy ’em here, Warren Buffett is buying it here.

bill smead

Chief investment officer, Smead Capital Management

But several factors suggest that prices are going to increase, he said.

The US has to replace 180 million barrels of strategic reserves that were drawn down to meet demand, and supply remains tight, he pointed out.

“What happens when China’s economy gets open in full … get past their quarantines and just get out,” he asked, suggesting that demand will come back up again.

Covid flare-ups in China have spurred lockdowns this year, and caused consumption of energy to drop in the world’s most populous country.

Read more about energy from CNBC Pro

Demand will likely to spring back when more movement restrictions are eased.

“We like the oil stocks here. You can buy ’em here, Warren Buffett is buying it here,” Smead said.

Brent crude futures and US West Texas Intermediate futures both soared to levels above $120 per barrel this year, but are now at $96.88 and $90.88 per barrel, respectively.

Still, both benchmarks are more than 40% up from a year ago.

— CNBC’s Thomas Franck and Yun Li contributed to this report.

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Categories
Entertainment

Nana Thai Style Hotpot and BBQ review Melbourne Review 2022

169 Bourke St
melbourne,
VIC
3000

view map

opening hours dinner nightly
Features Licensed, Groups
Prices Cheap (mains under $20)
Phone 0452 645 165

I’ve heard it said by snarky locals and visitors alike: people in Melbourne love to queue up. Shoes, croissants, nightclubs – if there’s a queue, let’s get in it and see what’s at the end when we arrive. I usually have the opposite reaction. If I must stand in line to get something, it’s unlikely I want that thing.

But, occasionally, the reason for the line is valid. Sometimes, the thing at the end of the queue is so good – and so exclusive – that an hour spent standing on the footpath is a small price to pay.

If you’ve taken the tram along Bourke Street after 5pm in the past year, it’s likely you’ve seen just such a queue outside Nana Thai Style Hotpot and BBQ. The crowd is mainly young and mainly Asian, a demographic which might be more food-obsessed than any other in our gloriously diverse and food-infatuated city.

The gold-domed barbecue is surrounded by a well that's filled with bone broth.

The gold-domed barbecue is surrounded by a well that’s filled with bone broth. Photo: Bonnie Savage



The line begins to form in the late afternoon every day for the 5.30pm opening; its presence alone was enough to pique my interest. What was behind the small storefront that you couldn’t get elsewhere without standing outside in the cold?

The answer is a fantastic hybrid of barbecue and hotpot called mu kratha or mookata that owners Nuttanan Lohayanjaree and Panta Thanapaisan looked for in vain when they moved to Melbourne from Thailand. Nana Thai was originally a pop-up, but Lohayanjaree and Thanapaisan opened the permanent location on Bourke Street in 2020. The queues were almost immediate.

The barbecue comes as a set for two people ($39), and includes a mix of meat and seafood – pork neck, pork belly, squid, prawns, pork liver – that you grill on a gold-domed barbecue heated from beneath with a gas grill. Around the dome is a well that’s filled with bone broth; a pot with extra broth comes on the side. How you proceed from there is entirely up to you. There are no instructions given by the efficient but rushed staff, and there’s really no wrong way to go about it.

Raw ingredients ready for the hotpot-barbecue hybrid.

Raw ingredients ready for the hotpot-barbecue hybrid. Photo: Bonnie Savage



Some prefer to grill their meat slowly and carefully, seasoning the grill with the hunk of pork fat provided, adding each element one at a time, allowing it to cook and swiping it through the broth and the provided sweet and spicy barbecue sauce, before moving on to the next protein.

Others cram as much stuff onto the grill as possible, moving it into the soup as it’s done, adding mushrooms and noodles and cabbage from a second platter to create a barbecue-hotpot amalgam, then scooping it into soup bowls before eating it. There’s a raw egg to add to the mix, and a spicy and tangy sauce to add to your soup bowl that’s shot through with onions.

Nana Thai also offers a straightforward hotpot for two ($39) that comes without the barbecue element. If you’re in the mood for soup and soup alone – and if you crave intestine and marinated chicken, which the barbecue doesn’t have, but the hotpot does – this is a lovely option. But there’s all manner of hotpot in Melbourne, and I probably wouldn’t wait in line just for the version at Nana’s. For a big group with people who are happy sharing, it’s a nice thing to add to the mix, though.

Crab papaya salad.

Crab papaya salad. Photo: Bonnie Savage



Nana’s also has a huge menu of Northern Thai dishes, most of them larbs, salads and soups of various sorts. If you don’t want the barbecue or hotpot and you don’t want to wait in line, these other dishes are available to pre-order and take away, as well as via various delivery apps.

They are mostly intensely spicy – ​​prepared, as the menu warns, to Thai-taste heat levels. And they’re fantastic: raw blue crab and green papaya salad with fermented fish ($20) comes swimming in lime, fish sauce, chillies and funk.

The Mama tom yum soup ($20) is not the often-miserly offering found at your neighborhood Thai joint: broth with a few carrots and celery. Here, it combines instant noodles, deep-fried pork belly, prawns, calamari, pork balls and egg in a bright and fragrant bowlful.

Mama tom yum soup.

Mama tom yum soup. Photo: Bonnie Savage



The line might seem like a lot to deal with – even on a recent freezing Tuesday night at 6pm, the wait was over an hour – but the staff do everything they can to streamline the process. Menus are handed out and orders taken while you’re standing on the street; by the time you make it to your stools and no-frills table, your food will already be waiting for you, the grill hot, the broth bubbling.

Stumbling out an hour later, full and happy, someone passed me to the crowd and asked, “Is it worth the wait?” Without hesitation, I replied, “Absolutely.”

Vibes: Bright, colourful, crowded, utilitarian

Pork and basil stir-fry.

Pork and basil stir-fry. Photo: Bonnie Savage



Go to dish: BBQ set for two ($39)

Drinks: Soda, milk tea, a handful of basic beers

Cost: $39 for two, excluding drinks

https://www.nanathaistylehotpotandbbq.com/

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Categories
Sports

Melbourne Storm, Brandon Smith, hip-drop tackle, Gold Coast Titans, Tino Fa’asuamaleaui, Craig Bellamy, Match Review Committee, Pat Carrigan

Storm star Brandon Smith was placed on report for an alleged hip-drop tackle on Titans skippers Tino Fa’asuamaleaui — and Craig Bellamy has pleaded the Match Review Committee to ignore the “hysteria”.

Smith took out the legs of Fa’asuamaleaui and his teammates Tanah Boyd and Sam McIntyre immediately threw up their arms in protest.

Fox League commentators Dan Ginnane and Shane Flanagan made no mention of the tackle until the Gold Coast lock pulled up licks.

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Replays then showed Smith took out the legs in ugly fashion and referee Peter Gough placed him on report.

“I understand it’s wet and he’s sliding, but it’s (that) he throws his legs out which drops the weight on the back foot, it’s on report,” Gough told Melbourne captain Jesse Bromwich.

“That could be very big. Only a two-man tackle not the familiar three-man tackle where that result occurs,” Ginnane said.

“It doesn’t really matter. You can’t do it, we know you can’t put your weight on the back of the legs when the player is going away from you and he gets himself in a bad position.”

Brandon Smith’s tackle on the Titans captain.Source: Getty Images

It comes after Broncos star Pat Carrigan copped a four-game ban for a hip-drop tackle last weekend that broke the leg of Tigers gun Jackson Hastings — an event that was heavily publicized.

Storm coach Craig Bellamy pleaded with the MRC in the post-match press conference to ignore the reports, hoping his star utility remains on the field.

“I just hope it gets judged on the tackle, not some of the hysteria that has gone on this week,” Bellamy said.

“That is all we ask.

“If you go on one last week, but how many have there been? If there is one in however many games since the last one.

“Pat Carrigan doesn’t go out on the field to break Hastings’ legs, they are an accident.”

Bellamy also said he didn’t believe hip-drop tackles were a big issue in the modern game.

“I don’t see it as a real big issue in the game, but I understand that it can injure people, but there hasn’t been a whole heap this year I don’t think.

“I just hope it gets judged on that and not on it being in the news a lot this week.”

Smith’s tackles was heavily debated on the Fox League halftime panel by ex-players Mick Ennis and Corey Parker.

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“We watched it in full speed live, Brandon Smith is just making the tackle and he falls off the tackle and the fact Tino went on that out line dragged Brandon Smith along with him,” Parker said.

“When you slow it all down to the enth degree like we do it doesn’t look great, but he’s just hanging on.

“If you don’t want to end up in that position then Brandon Smith has to let go of the tackle, otherwise what does he do, it’s a complete accident.

“I don’t see it as a genuine hip drop like we saw with Pat Carrigan last week. If he’s not to end up in that position, he needs to let go which completely goes against everything we talk about in rugby league.

Ennis agreed with Parker but said the tackle would be a “big concern” for the Storm.

“All the talk this week was two players holding the man up then that third tackler coming in and showing no duty of care, I don’t like the position that Tino gets in at the end but I’m not sure what else Brandon Smith could do there other than let go of the tackle,” Ennis said.

“Do we put that down to the duty of care? Is that where we’re going? Maybe we have to, where we’re eliminating players from getting in that position.

“That was a real difficult one, he just ended up in that unfortunate position Brandon Smith and I’m not sure what else he could have done.”

MORE NRL NEWS

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Categories
Australia

Bunbury Outer Ring Road construction halted with 11th hour Federal Court injunction

An 11th hour Federal Court injunction has temporarily halted the construction of a contentious major highway project in Western Australia.

Clearing of bushland to make way for the $1.25 billion Bunbury Outer Ring Road began this week to a chorus of backlash from local community members who say the highway will cause irreversible environmental damage.

The injunction issued late on Friday by the Federal Court of Australia prevents Main Roads and its contractors from conducting any more clearing work on the southern section of the road through the semi-rural community of Gelorup.

Clearing of the land, which sits on a 40-year-old road reserve, began on Monday following a visit to the site by former Greens leader Bob Brown.

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Categories
US

‘They all knew’: textile company misled regulators about use of toxic PFAS, documents show | PFAS

A French industrial fabric producer that poisoned drinking water supplies with PFAS “forever chemicals” across 65 sq miles (168 sq km) of southern New Hampshire misled regulators about the amount of toxic substance it used, a group of state lawmakers and public health advocates charge .

The company, Saint Gobain, now admits it used far more PFAS than regulators previously knew, and officials fear thousands more residents outside the contamination zone’s boundaries may be drinking tainted water in a region plagued by cancer clusters and other health problems thought to stem from PFAS pollution.

Saint Gobain in 2018 agreed to provide clean drinking water in the 65-sq-mile area as part of a consent agreement with New Hampshire regulators, and damning evidence suggesting it used more PFAS than previously admitted surfaced in a trove of documents released in a separate class-action lawsuit.

“People are sick, there are really high cancer rates and people literally have died, so when you see what’s happening and the company acts like this – it’s really upsetting,” said Mindi Messner, a state representative who analyzed the documents and sent them to the New Hampshire attorney general and state regulators.

Saint Gobain has denied wrongdoing. PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are a class of about 12,000 chemicals used across dozens of industries to make products resist water, stains and heat. The highly toxic compounds don’t naturally break down, and are linked to cancer, thyroid disease, kidney problems, decreased immunity, birth defects and other serious health problems. They have been called “forever chemicals” due to their longevity in the environment.

Saint Gobain Performance Plastics’ Merrimack, New Hampshire, plant had for decades treated its products with PFOA, one type of PFAS, to make them stronger. The company released PFOA from its smokestacks and the chemicals, once on the ground, moved through the soil and into aquifers. Hundreds of residential and municipal wells pull from the groundwater.

As the company and New Hampshire department of environmental services (DES) negotiated the 2018 consent agreement, company officials repeatedly said they didn’t use pure PFOA, or didn’t have a record of using it, but instead used a diluted PFOA mixture of which the toxic chemical only comprised about 2%.

In a 2016 letter to state regulators, Saint Gobain wrote that it “never used [pure PFOA] as a raw material at any point in time” in Merrimack, and in 2014 told the EPA it “is not and never has been a… user of PFOA per se anywhere in the United States.”

The diluted PFOA wouldn’t spread as widely as pure PFOA, and the modeling that determined the boundaries within which Saint Gobain would be responsible for providing clean drinking water supplies and remediating contamination was developed with the diluted solution as an input.

But the documents released as part of the lawsuit show Saint Gobain knew it used pure PFOA years before the consent decree.

Among the evidence are 2003 emails between company employees explicitly stating the Merrimack facility treated its fabric with pure PFOA. Meanwhile, a former Saint Gobain attorney who is now whistleblowing testified that sales records from 3M, which sold PFOA to Saint Gobain, show the company bought “hundreds if not thousands” of pounds of pure PFOA. The 3M sales records are under seal in the class-action suit.

And a salesman for DuPont, which also sold PFAS products to Saint Gobain, testified last year that he had “learned that they were using [pure PFOA] …and adding it to our products”.

The modeling used to develop the original contamination zone’s boundaries is “fundamentally flawed” because it did not account for the pure PFOA, an engineer hired by Saint Gobain testified in February.

Saint Gobain no longer denies that it used pure PFOA; however, in a statement to the Guardian, the company wrote it “vehemently denies any allegation it withheld data, or misled, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services”. The information was “not new” because it was in 90,000 documents it gave the DES since 2016, the company wrote.

Messmer said she’s skeptical of that explanation: “If you throw 90,000 papers at someone, is that really notifying them?”

In response to a follow-up question about why it developed the consent decree modeling assuming diluted PFOA instead of pure PFOA, the company said the type of PFOA was only “one factor considered in setting the boundaries”.

In their July letter to the attorney general’s office and DES, Messmer and other lawmakers asked for an investigation and to expand the boundaries of the contamination zone. The state has “sound legal basis to hold Saint Gobain fully accountable for their pollution, including beyond the current [boundary]”, the letter reads. The attorney general’s office told the Guardian it is reviewing the documents while the DES did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Some are also frustrated with the DES. Documents show it knew it didn’t have Saint Gobain’s complete PFAS purchase records from before 2004, but still entered into the consent agreement.

“The regulatory agency is broken, and I’m really angry with the state departments that are supposed to be there to protect the environment and residents,” said Laurene Allen, a Merrimack resident and clean water activist. “Think of the harm that could have been prevented.”

The documents reveal a company executive stating in 2006 that Saint Gobain “ought to downplay the potential health risks” of PFOA relative to other PFAS, and argue there are “no proven” health risks. But a 1995 company memo shows management had issued a decree to stop using PFOA “because of its toxicity and long half-life”.

The company had also in 2006 conducted blood tests for PFOA on its employees but the results remain under seal, and the plant’s previous owner in 1980 investigated why its male employees were experiencing impotence and “polymer fever”.

“They all knew,” Messmer said.

Categories
Entertainment

Haotian Qi and Esther Song, principals with Opera Australia

We both love eating. She cooks Korean food, I cook Chinese food. Sometimes I try cooking Korean food but no, no. Something is not right. I put in everything according to the YouTube tutorial but it’s just different. I say, ‘Okay, fine.’

Singing together is great fun. We can really feel each other when we sing. It’s a couple thing. I know when she’s going to breathe, and when she’s going to need to sing very high, and I will follow her. Some people want to show off themselves, but I love to be an accompanist for my wife.

Esther: I noticed Haotian at the conservatorium because he was tall, quite handsome, good at singing. And he was very nice. I really liked hanging around with him. After we started going out in 2018, it just flowed like water to marriage. We knew we were meant for each other.

“Haotian loves books. I like sports. When I said to him, ‘Let’s play tennis,’ he was like, ‘Isn’t it dangerous?’ ”

Before meeting Haotian, I once asked my mum, ‘Is there such a thing as real love, like I’ve seen on TV, in dramas and movies? The kind where you would die for them? Does this happen?’ Because I’d never felt that. I didn’t think I could live with one person for my whole life because everyone has flaws, and you would always think about them. Haotian has flaws, of course. He’s very stubborn. That’s one of the first that comes to my mind. But when I was going out with him, I was ready to embrace everything. I loved everything about him.

I came to Australia from Korea with my parents when I was six. Like Haotian, I don’t have siblings. I’ve never felt loneliness, though. My parents never left me. Haotian was often by himself, looking at TV, or with his grandma, because his parents were busy. My mum and dad are very encouraging, whereas Haotian’s dad was saying to him, ‘You’re not good enough.’ So he is always doubting himself.

But Haotian is a person who gives a lot. When someone is in trouble or needs help, he will give it. I think that’s what I love most about him. I saw that quality in his parents from him too. My mother-in-law is so nice. She treats me like a real daughter. Apparently she really wanted a daughter and was upset that she had a boy.

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I’m kind of an in-your-face, excited girl. I’m quite fiery and bouncy. Haotian is calmer. He’s a thinker and a reader. He loves books. He i like sports. When I first said to him, ‘Let’s play tennis,’ he was like, ‘Isn’t it dangerous?’ He didn’t want to play, but he ended up loving it. Afterwards I said, ‘Let’s play golf.’ He was like, ‘That’s not really a sport, is it?’ I dragged him to a lesson and he was so good. That’s his favorite sport of him now.

Koreans like to do everything fast. We’re a fast nation. But the Chinese people do things slowly. In a 60kph zone, Haotian is driving at 40. I’m like, ‘why?’. He says, ‘We have to be safe.’ We’ve had a lot of those arguments. When I went to China, they were eating and having tea the whole day. Koreans don’t like that. We just eat and finish. When Haotian came to Korea, we went to a buffet. After 30 minutes, he had just started eating and everyone else was finished, looking at him.

We both get so nervous before we perform. We’re nervous for the whole day, though with him you can never tell. Backstage, right before we go on, we’re still nervous. But when we start, we forget. We have an amazing duet in The Barber of Seville [touring regional Australia until mid-September]. If he’s not nice to me, I’m going to sing SW fast. I’m a coloratura soprano and he’s a baritone, so it’s going to be very hard for him to keep up.

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To read more from good weekend magazine, visit our page at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and BrisbaneTimes.

Categories
Australia

Forgotten Melbourne uncovered in Bennetts Lane development

Preserved under layers of concrete for more than a century, a forgotten melbourne has been uncovered by developers starting work on a new office tower in the CBD.

A cow’s femur, food storage jars, grease for hair styling and an ink well were just some of the items discovered at the site, on the coroner of Little Lonsdale and Bennetts Lane.

Extent Heritage chief executive Ian Travers said the finds provided a “glimpse of what early life in Melbourne was like”.

The dig is in preparation for the construction of the Bennett’s Lane development in Melbourne’s CBD. (Nine)
Some of the items discovered at the site, on the coroner of Little Lonsdale and Bennetts Lane in Melbourne. (Nine)

Remains of mid to late 19th-century terraces and cottages have also been unearthed among the artifacts.

“It’s a remarkable demonstration of the development of the city from the earliest colonial development of Port Phillip which became the City of Melbourne,” Travers said.

“This is really the first collection of material culture that the first European inhabitants brought with them.”

Travers said artifacts discovered were in well-preserved.

Preserved under layers of concrete for more than a century, a forgotten Melbourne has been uncovered. (Nine)

“The level of preservation of the structural remains along with the artifacts is really giving us a level of detail that isn’t recorded in the historical records,” he said.

“These were just not written about and now we can fill in these gaps.”

The dig is in preparation for the construction of the Bennett’s Lane development, a 20-storey office building with a retail and entertainment precinct.

Developers Perri Projects and Pellicano are now working with archaeologists from Extent Heritage to document the discoveries.

A cow’s femur, food storage jars, grease for hair styling and an ink well were just some of the items discovered at the site. (Nine)

The developers said the precinct would incorporate the newly discovered artifices and re-purpose some of the bluestone and brick materials salvaged during the excavation.

Lord Mayor Sally Capp said she was thrilled to see parts of Melbourne’s history preserved and salvaged.

“When heritage elements are identified, it’s important for them to be incorporated into the completed development and we are going to see that happen here on Bennetts Lane,” she said.

The precious artifacts countries have wanted back for centuries

“We are going to see the artifacts and their stories brought to life in this development.”

Categories
US

1 dead in shooting at Mirage hotel on Las Vegas strip

One person was fatally shot inside a Las Vegas hotel room Thursday night, prompting authorities to place the entire building on lockdown.

The shooting occurred inside a hotel room on the eighth floor of the Mirage on the Las Vegas Strip, police said.

Another two people are believed to have been injured in the shooting, according to the local station 8 News, which cited a source with knowledge of the investigation.

Metropolitan police are stationed outside The Mirage in response to a fatal shooting in the hotel-casino on Thursday, Aug. 4, 2022, in Las Vegas.
Police are responding to a fatal shooting that occurred in the Mirage hotel-casino late Thursday night.
AP

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department asked the public to avoid the area as the situation and investigation are still active. The gunman remains at large.

Videos posted to Twitter show a heavy police presence at the hotel and hotel guests said no one is being let into or out of the building as officers go room to room to check on guests. In one video, an officer can be seen carrying a ballistic shield.

Police officer during shooting at Mirage hotel
The shooting occurred inside a hotel room on the eighth floor.
@saeed_ahmed on Twitter
Shooting at Mirage hotel in Vegas
Las Vegas authorities are requesting that people avoid the area.
@saeed_ahmed on Twitter

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Categories
Entertainment

Kate Middleton meeting outside train toilet on way to Commonwealth games stuns dad

Proving she’s a Duchess for the people, Kate Middleton took a train to the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham when she got talking to a young boy outside the toilets, thinking he was lost.

It turns out the eight-year-old’s dad, journalist Matthew Syed, was on the train with him – but had just popped to the loo.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Prince William takes ‘helicopter parent’ to new level

For more Royal Family related news and videos check out Royal Family >>

When he got out, he was shocked and delighted to discover his son in conversation with royalty, noticing the two were “chatting merrily” as he approached.

The incident unfolded on Tuesday in a first-class carriage heading to the Games.

His son was having “a whale of a time,” Syed said.

“As I am doing my thing, I hear him talking to a woman in the vestibule,” Syed wrote for The Times.

“’Are you here alone?’ she asks.

“’No, my dad is in there,’ he says, pointing to the lavatory.”

Kate Middleton, Duchess of Cambridge leaves the Women’s Hockey Group Stage games on day five of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games. Credit: Stephen Pond/Getty Images

Syed and his son, named Ted, were on their way to watch a table tennis event, the journalist explained, saying he “stopped in his tracks” when he realized Ted was talking to the Duchess of Cambridge.

“’Kate?’ I blurted out,” he revealed.

“There are no security guards in the vestibule; not armed guards.

“But here is the Duchess of Cambridge, chatting with my son.”

Journalist Matthew Syed, pictured, wrote about his son meeting Kate Middleton. Credit: Getty

‘really nice’

Later, Ted told him he thought she was “really nice.”

“She had no idea she was chatting to the son of a journalist,” Syed wrote.

“The monarchy is in consummate hands.”

Sharing his story on social media, the dad revealed he “almost fell over” when he came out of the toilet to find the royal.

The Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and daughter Charlotte, seven, spent the day in Birmingham attending official engagements.

An animated Princess Charlotte was seen sitting in the audience of the swimming and later hockey with her parents.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with their daughter Princess Charlotte of Cambridge as they watch the gymnastics at the Arena Birmingham. Credit: David Davies – PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images

They also made an appearance at the gymnastics, watching the ends of the men’s horizontal bar and women’s floor exercise.

Similar to younger brother Prince Louis’ memorable appearance during the Queen’s Jubilee weekend, Charlotte was seen pulling animated faces as she watched the competition.

For more engaging royal content, visit 7Life on Facebook.

Woman attacked by koala on highway.

Woman attacked by koala on highway.

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Categories
Australia

WA Health crackdown on store vape sales puts retailers on notice after 15,000 products seized

The WA Government has cracked down on the illegal sale of vapes across more than 30 State stores, uncovering half-a-million dollars worth of e-cigarettes with many containing undisclosed amounts of nicotine.

Revealing the haul of more than 15,000 disposable vapes, WA Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson said the products imported from overseas are often labeled incorrectly and can contain nicotine.

Of the vapes currently seized, testing through ChemCentre has shown two-thirds of the collection contained undisclosed nicotine — with quantities in some instances equivalent to 50 cigarettes.

The State’s chief pharmacist Meeghan Clay said the vapes can be sold for between $30-$50.

She said many of the seizures had come through tip-offs via WA Police’s Crime Stoppers and included pop-up sales at small stores and delis.

“The hardest ones for us to find are the pop-ups because they’re not as obvious,” she said.

“We’re seeing a very, very small number of vapes now that are stating ‘zero nicotine’. My major concern with that is that these companies are not as scrupulous as ethical companies.

“Our big concern is that although there are a small number of vapes in the stores that don’t have nicotine, there is nothing to stop that company in three months’ time from adding nicotine and still saying ‘zero nicotine’ on the label.

“These have never been legal in Western Australia and we have been doing compliance activities for a number of years now, but we have now stepped it up quite significantly.”

Ms Sanderson said young people can be drawn to the addictive devices by manufacturers using sweet flavors such as bubble gum, grape and strawberry.

The Minister said the Health Department had put 3000 retailers on notice, reminding them of the ongoing sale restrictions.

“We want retailers to do the right thing. We’ve started with our education program,” she said.

The maximum penalty for a breach of the relevant provisions of the Medicines and Poisons Act 2014 is $45,000, while possession of nicotine without a prescription can fetch penalties of up to $30,000.

“It is important that the community remembers that retailers remember it is illegal to sell vapes,” she said.

“It is illegal to purchase a vape without a prescription and you get that prescription from your GP as part of quitting smoking.

“There’s some evidence, but it is limited, that vaping can help adults who want to quit smoking but there are many other mechanisms that you can use.

“It’s always important that if you want to quit smoking, you talk to your GP first.”

Anyone who believes a retailer is selling illegal e-cigarettes or vapes is urged to ‘dob-in-a dealer’ by contacting Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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