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Security concerns: India's new rules will bar Chinese companies in power sector
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Pentagon Displays Technology of the Future

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Carla Babb



Robot teammates and "snake" arms that can find a crack .005 millimeter long were just two of the U.S. military's latest technological innovations on display at the Pentagon this week.
The Defense Laboratory Enterprise showcased more than 80 exhibits on its biennial Lab Day on Thursday. The enterprise is a network of 63 defense laboratories, warfare centers and engineering centers that operate across the United States, and the event provided the Defense Department community with an up-close look at projects in various stages of development and readiness.
Here are some of VOA's favorites:
Soldier Visual Integrated Technology
Imagine a soldier comes across a suspicious object that she has never seen before. As she stops to explore, she immediately sees an enemy fighter and has to spring into action without time to fully raise her weapon's sight up to her eye. And she's unable to see another enemy lurking around the corner.
With Soldier Visual Integrated Technology, the soldier can better see her surroundings and needs less time to react to dangers accurately.
Ronald Geer, a staff sergeant assigned to the Army's Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center, says SVIT wirelessly links three pieces of technology on the soldier: a reticle eyepiece, a thermal device on the gun and a communications system attached to the chest.
"What this is going to do is increase my speed and lethality on the battlefield, especially in a close combat situation," Geer said. "I don't have to worry so much about raising my weapon to an exact point where I'm able to view through this [his thermal device], because as I raise the weapon, what this is looking at, I'm able to immediately see pulled into the reticle device."
The connectivity also allows soldiers to use their guns to see what's around a corner without having to move their bodies into harm's way.
SVIT updates in real time as well, providing a way to virtually "mark" obstacles or enemy weaponry so that other soldiers can see what the SVIT user views.
Remote Access Nondestructive Evaluation
Jokingly called a "snake on a plane" by some at the Air Force Research Laboratory, R.A.N.D.E. (pronounced Randy) is a robotic arm that can wriggle through an opening as small as 7 centimeters to inspect the interior of aircraft wings or other structures without dismantling them.
Senior Materials Engineer Charles Buynak told VOA that any sensing device can be attached to R.A.N.D.E. to look for minute structural defects.
"We're looking for things on the order of 1/50,000th of an inch [.00508mm] — before a crack becomes a major thing ... and becomes a serious problem to the aircraft," Buynak said.
The system is driven by a controller from an Xbox 360 home video game console. Buynak said that makes R.A.N.D.E. easy for young operators to use. Another reason is that the Air Force wanted to take advantage of technologies already available.
"Why go spend money developing something that's easily available that we can adapt to our application here?" he said.
Robots as teammates
The U.S. Army is developing ways to use robots not as tools but as teammates. The Army Research Laboratory displayed several robots this week that can be used as hosts for developing software algorithms for artificial intelligence and machine learning purposes.
Stuart Young, chief of the Asset Control and Behavior Branch, told VOA the goal is to protect soldiers by using technology to "manipulate unknown objects in an unknown world."
His team is trying to develop AI algorithms that can generalize and understand what's going on in a robot's environment. "And then once we have that information," Young said, "we can manipulate it to accomplish the mission that the robot needs to accomplish."
Such robot missions could range from breaching an enemy's defensive position to removing improvised explosive devices, or just moving large objects out of the way while soldiers are in a safer location.

Coal Price to Remain Stable on China Policies

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While in the first four months of 2017 coal imports into China surged 33 percent year-on-year (y/y), these imports are now expected to slow as China's domestic coal production is expected to rise in Q2-2017.
Weakening coal demand from China should give rise to increasing coal supplies in Asia and Australia and therefore pressure on the coal price (this explains the weakening coal price since the year-start). However, China is expected to remain committed to its policy of intervening in its domestic coal production (by cutting working days in the coal mines) in order to support the coal price and make the coal sector a profitable business for miners (when the coal price falls below 535 yuan - approx. USD $78 - per ton, then Chinese authorities curb coal production).
Most of China's coal miners had to cope with net losses between 2015 and mid-2016 amid very weak coal prices. Matters improved drastically in the second half of 2016 when coal prices surged high after China decided to cut coal production. At the start of 2017 coal prices again weakened due to rising coal production in China as well as in other key coal producing nations.
Basically the key reason why China wanted to push the coal price into higher territory in the second half of 2016 is that China's non-performing loan (NPL) ratio in the domestic banking sector had risen to 2.3 percent in 2015. The main reason for this rising NPL ratio was that China's coal mining companies had trouble to repay debt.
However, demand for coal is undermined by China's decision to limit the number of new coal-fired power stations. Still, given the relation toward its banking system, China is expected to remain committed to keep the coal price stable at around USD $75 per ton in the remainder of 2017.

ENERGY NEWS-OPEC-fueled oil price rally extends into second week

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More North Korea workers leave Malaysia after assassination

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The last group of North Korean workers in Sarawak, Malaysia, left after nearly 300 workers returned home in April, following the assassination of Kim Jong Nam in February. File Photo by Yonhap/EPA
May 22 (UPI) -- A group of North Korean workers have left Malaysia after their employers did not renew their expired work permits.
The 35 workers sanctioned by the North Korean state are returning home although they could have stayed in the Malaysian province of Sarawak legally, The Borneo Post reported Monday.
"Since there is no directive not to recruit North Korean workers, why their employers did not continue the contracts, I am also not sure," said Malaysian Deputy Home Minister Datuk Masir Kujat. "The fact remains that no one applied for renewal of their work permits. So upon expiry, these 35 North Korean workers with valid permits just left the state."
There are now no North Korean workers in Sarawak, according to the Malaysian official.
The report comes more than a month after 296 North Koreans reported themselves to Malaysian authorities as the government rolled out new visa requirements after the assassination of Kim Jong Nam, the older half-brother of Kim Jong Un, at an airport in Malaysia.
Although Malaysia revoked visa-free entry for North Korean nationals after the slaying of the older Kim, the country still offers working permits to North Koreans.
North Koreans are hired to work in labor-intensive sectors like coal mining and construction.
The flow of workers from North Korea to Malaysia began in the 1980s, when the country's founder, Kim Il Sung, still presided over state affairs but also delegated the running of the government to his son Kim Jong Il.
Tensions between Malaysia and North Korea in the aftermath of the assassination ended after Malaysian nationals who were detained in North Korea returned home and three North Koreans were released and allowed to board a flight to Beijing.

Trump arrives in Israel, says 'great opportunity' for peace

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) listens to President Donald Trump speak at a welcoming ceremony at Ben Gurion Airport outside Tel Aviv, Israel, on Monday. President Trump is on a two-day visit to Israel and the Palestinian town of Bethlehem. Photo by Debbie Hill/UPI 
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May 22 (UPI) -- Speaking from Jerusalem, U.S. President Donald Trump said Israel has a "great opportunity" for peace in the Middle East because "people have just had enough ... of the bloodshed and the killing."
Trump on Monday arrived in Israel, where he will meet with Israeli leaders and participate in traditional ceremonies. After Air Force One landed in Tel Aviv, the Israeli capital, Trump boarded Marine One, the presidential helicopter, to travel to Jerusalem.
While speaking alongside Israeli President Reuven Rivlin before closed-door talks, Trump said he was "treated incredibly well" in Saudi Arabia, where the U.S. president visited in the first leg of his first foreign trip as U.S. president.
While in Jerusalem, Trump said he noticed a "tremendous, well, really good feeling toward Israel" when he visited the kingdom.
"I will say one of the things I think you can call call an outreach, but what's happened with Iran has brought many other parts of the Middle East toward Israel and you could say that's one of the -- if there's a benefit, that would be the benefit because I've seen such a different feeling toward Israel from countries that as you know were not feeling so well about Israel not so long ago, and its brought a lot of folks together ... that is a real positive. We're real happy about that," Trump said.
"Every challenge creates opportunities," Rivlin said in response to Trump's comment.
"You have a great opportunity right now," Trump added. "There's a great feeling for peace throughout the Middle East. I think people have just had enough. They've had enough of the bloodshed and the killing, and I think you're going to see things starting to happen."
Following a meeting with Rivlin, Trump will later lay a wreath at the Yad Vashem World Holocaust Remembrance Center before speaking at the Israel Museum. Trump will also later meet with Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu and hold a press conference before a private dinner.
On Tuesday, Trump is scheduled to meet with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Bethlehem and discuss Middle East peace. On Wednesday, Trump will visit Pope Francis at the Vatican before meeting with Italian President Sergio Mattarella. On Thursday, Trump will meet with Belgium's King Philippe, Prime Minister Charles Michel and other officials prior to visiting the European Union headquarters.
Trump also plans to have a working lunch with recently elected French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday, and later meet with NATO leaders, accompanied by U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis.
Trump will stay in Sicily for the final two days of his trip for the G7 summit, where he will speak to U.S. and NATO allied servicemembers and their families.

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