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Bechtel Completes Australian LNG Production Project

Bechtel Completes Australian LNG Production Project

Gladstone, Australia – Bechtel has successfully delivered and installed all of the modules for the first liquefied natural gas production train at the GLNG facility on Curtis Island in Queensland, Australia.

The successful installation marks a major milestone in the construction of the plant, which will consist of two production trains, designated Trains 1 and 2.

Train 1 is made up of 82 modules that were built at a Bechtel-managed module yard facility in the Philippines and transported to Curtis Island over a 19-month period.

The modules for Train 2 are being constructed at the same facility and shipped to the island. The final modules for the second train are scheduled to be delivered and installed later this year.

US-based Bechtel is acting as the engineering, procurement, and construction contractor for three LNG facilities on Curtis Island.

GLNG, Queensland Curtis LNG, and Australia Pacific LNG are all being built simultaneously, side-by-side, making these projects the largest concentration of Bechtel work anywhere in the world.

In addition, the company is the principal contractor for the Chevron Wheatstone LNG project in Western Australia and constructed Australia’s first LNG facility, at Darwin, in 2005.

Global engineering giant Bechtel operates through five global business units that specialize in civil infrastructure; power generation, communications, and transmission; mining and metals; oil, gas, and chemicals; and government services.

Since its founding in 1898, Bechtel has worked on more than 25,000 projects in 160 countries on all seven continents. The company is currently involved in diverse projects in nearly 40 countries.

07/10/2014

IBM Opens New Security Center in Costa Rica

Heredia, Costa Rica – IBM recently celebrated its 10 year anniversary in Costa Rica with the opening of its latest Security Operations Center (SOC).

Through an initial investment that includes infrastructure and education, the center will allow IBM to address the growing security needs of its clients in the region.

With this new center, the first in Costa Rica, IBM adds to the existing services offered in the country including cloud, business analytics, project management, human resources, financial services and more.

Open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, the security center of operations team will monitor the latest security events experienced by IBM clients, assess their potential impact on the business and ensure that IBM clients’ infrastructure is configured to handle the latest threats.

As a result of this analysis, IBM “will help to protect people, data, applications, transactions and the infrastructure for all businesses in the region,” the company said.

Since IBM opened its Costa Rica operations, the company has created a number of new jobs and development opportunities for employees while helping build low income family housing.

The company has also introduced several educational initiatives, providing student scholarships through a program sponsored by Costa Rican Investment Promotion Agency (CINDE), university courses focused on key subjects like security and cloud computing, and reading companion software for 12 educational centers that are designed to help citizens improve knowledge of the English language.

IBM has the world’s largest security services practice, with more than 6,000 skilled security services professionals, all of who have a unique handle on the “threat landscape.”

Through this latest facility and its 10 SOCs located in the US, Poland, Japan, Brazil, Belgium, India and Australia, IBM manages and monitors 15 billion security events every day for more than 4,000 clients.

07/08/2014

USCOC, NAM Oppose More Sanctions on Russia

Washington, DC – In a major policy shift, the US Chamber of Commerce (USCOC)  and National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), two of the largest business groups in the US, have publicly come out in opposition to the sanctions imposed by the White House on Russia following that country’s February military incursion into neighboring Ukraine.

The groups ran newspaper advertisements last week in several publications including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Washington Post, asserting that “the only effect” of additional sanctions would be “to bar US companies from foreign markets and cede business opportunities to firms from other countries.”

Both groups had, previously, confined their opposition to the sanctions in a series of private meetings with Obama Administration officials.

The ads ran under the headline, “America’s Interests Are at Stake in Russia and Ukraine“.

Its text read: “With escalating global tensions, some US policymakers are considering a course of sanctions that history shows hurts American interests. We are concerned about actions that would harm American manufacturers and cost American jobs. The most effective long-term solution to increase Americas global influence is to strengthen our ability to provide goods and services to the world through pro-trade policies and multilateral diplomacy.”

Jay Timmons, NAM president and CEO, wrote, “History shows that unilateral sanctions don’t work. President Reagan recognized this reality three decades ago when he lifted the ineffective grin embargo on the Soviet Union.”

The only effect of such sanctions, Timmons said, “is to bar US companies from foreign markets and cede business opportunities to firms from other countries. It’s time to put American jobs and growth first.”

US workers and industries, wrote USCOC President and CEO, Thomas J. Donohue, “pay the cost of unilateral economic sanctions that have little hope of increasing the United States ability to achieve its foreign policy goals.”

Both the US and European Union have imposed penalties against Russian companies, as well Ukrainian supporters of the separatists with Russian President Vladimir Putin threatening to retaliate against US and European companies if broader sanctions are imposed.

US officials have said that the current sanctions now in place have fueled a record $60 billion capital outflow in the first quarter of this year, as well as losses in Russia’s stock market and currency.

The Ukrainian government, the US and its European Union allies say Russia is fueling the conflict by providing manpower and weapons including tanks and anti-aircraft missiles to separatist rebels in Ukraine.

07/08/2014

 

 

Longshoremen Approve Port of Charleston Contract

Charleston, SC – Members of an International Longshoremen’s Association local that represents approximately 14,500 workers voted to approve a strike at Port of Charleston docks last week, but workers have not yet walked off the job, officials said.

The local labor contract is separate from the master contract ratified last year by the ILA and US Maritime Alliance.

Kenneth Riley, president of ILA Local 1422 said it is not unusual for a union to authorize a strike at this point in the process and there is not imminent threat of a strike, and that it has requested federal arbitration.

“The strike vote gives us the authorization if it comes to that,” he said. “We don’t anticipate that, and we are nowhere near that. The ILA remains optimistic and is hoping for similar outcome this time around. With that in mind, the ILA has invited the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service to assist to break the stalemate.”

The longshoremen’s union has not taken action to halt cargo movement at the local marine terminals, according to Billy Adams Jr., executive director of the South Carolina Stevedore Association.

Adams said that ILA workers have threatened to walk off the docks in the past.

Riley said the ILA has been trying to negotiate with the South Carolina Stevedore Association for a new labor contract, noting its membership has rejected the employer’s “best and final offer.” The ILA is reportedly pushing for higher pensions and to perform work currently handled by state ports authority employees.

“Management was asked to give them their best and final offer,” Adams said. “We were still in negotiations when they asked for our best and final offer.”

07/07/2014

 

Texas-based SoftServe Acquires German Software Developer

Austin, TX – Global software application developer SoftServe Inc. has acquired UGE UkrGermanEnterprise GmbH, a German company specializing in high quality individual software development, business software solutions, and IT consulting.

The acquisition represents SoftServe’s continuing commitment to serve the growing needs of the European market with best-in-class technology solutions and applications.

UGE UkrGermanEnterprise GmbH offers a comprehensive suite of nearshore outsourcing services from developing complex solutions to individual tailored software needs.

Additionally, UGE GmbH “provides highly skilled development teams and IT consulting on site or remotely,” SioftServe said in a statement.

Based in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, UGE UkrGermanEnterprise GmbH provides high quality software solutions to their customers in banking, insurance, industry and public services industry sectors.

The company’s services range from the design of webpages via the development of web based applications up to the implementation of big and complex software solutions  The company’s list of clients includes Panasonic, Sanyo, Commerzbank, and GFT.

07/03/2014

 

US Retailers “Overconfident” on Cyber Security Issues

Portland, OR – US retail firms are confident in their ability to quickly detect data breaches, despite industry research to the contrary, according to a recent survey conducted by Dimensional Research and Oregon-based security management firm Tripwire.

When asked how quickly their organizations would detect a breach, 42 percent said it would take 48 hours, 18 percent said it would take 72 hours, and 11 percent said it would take a week, the survey said.

While 35 percent of respondents were “very confident” and 47 percent were “somewhat confident” that their security controls could detect rogue applications, most breaches go undiscovered for weeks, months or even longer, the research found.

The 2014 Trustwave Global Security Report reveals that the retail sector is the top target for cyber criminals, comprising 35 percent of the attacks studied with an average 229 days taken to detect a security breach.

The report also states that the number of firms that detected their own breaches dropped from 37 percent in 2012 to 33 percent in 2013. Some 85 percent of point-of-sale intrusions took weeks to discover, and 43 percent of web application attacks took months to detect.

The survey evaluated the attitudes of 154 retail organizations on a variety of cyber security topics.

“I always say that trust is not a control, and hope is not a strategy,” said Dwayne Melancon, chief technology officer for Tripwire. “Unfortunately, this data suggests that a lot of retailers are far too hopeful about their own cyber security capabilities.

Despite “ample historical evidence that most breaches go undiscovered for months,” he said, “There is clearly a significant disconnect between perception and reality, even though the repercussions for failing to meet the required level of rigor around cyber security has led to the recent removal of retail executives and board members.”

The survey also found that 70 percent of respondents said that the recent, nationally-reported Target security breach has affected the level of attention executives give to security in their organizations and that 26 percent of respondents don’t evaluate the security of business partners, such as HVAC contractors who were implicated in the Target breach.

07/03/2014

The Cooper Companies to Acquire UK-based Sauflon Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

Pleasanton, CA – The Cooper Companies Inc. has entered into definitive agreements to acquire Sauflon Pharmaceuticals Ltd, a UK-based manufacturer and distributor of soft contact lenses and solutions.
The transaction is valued at approximately $1.2 billion.

Sauflon forecasts revenue of approximately $210 million for its fiscal year ending October 31, 2014, up approximately 22 percent year-over-year.

Commenting on the acquisition, CooperVision said it “will now be able to offer a multi-tier daily strategy that includes a full suite of silicone hydrogel and hydrogel lenses, including options within all categories — spheres, torics and multifocals.”

The daily segment, it said, “is the fastest growing segment of the soft contact lens market and this transaction positions CooperVision as the premier company in this space.”

The transaction is subject to regulatory approval and is anticipated to close prior to fiscal year end, October 31.

07/02/2014

EXIM Defends Itself Against Defunding Campaign

Washington, DC – With talk of defunding its operations circulating on Capitol Hill, the US Export-Import Bank (EXIM) has released its latest Annual Competiveness Report to Congress in an effort to “underscore the need for continued EXIM support for American exporters to help level the playing field in an increasingly competitive global marketplace.”

According to the report, while for decades, global export competition was governed by international standards put in place to ensure that companies could compete on free-market factors like price and quality rather than on aggressive government financing, today the global marketplace is changing.

“While 100 percent of official support for trade operated under these international rules 15 years ago, today that number has plummeted to 34 percent. Currently Russia, China and other countries offer subsidies and financing terms – including support of their state-sponsored companies – that threaten American jobs and export opportunities,” it said.

The report also stated that “the rapid growth of export financing from three Asian competitors: Korea, Japan and China.”

Those countries, it added, “provided significantly more export-credit support to their respective domestic companies and industries than did the United States in 2013.”

“Unregulated Competition is Expanding”

In addition, the report asserts that unregulated competition is expanding and commercial banks have largely withdrawn from pockets of the export-finance arena, including providing support for small businesses.

“The United States faces more robust competition from export-credit agencies offering terms that are not regulated by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which encourages global export competition based on free-market principles and mutually agreed-upon standards,” it said.

For example, EXIM support for all of its $15 billion in medium- and long-term financing was regulated by the OECD Arrangement, but other OECD member countries offered more than $60 billion alone of unregulated export financing support (on top of $83 billion in export financing governed by the OECD Arrangement).

“Nations that are not subject to the OECD framework, including Brazil, Russia, India and China, provided $115 billion in trade-related financing,” according to the study.

Unregulated support, it said, totaled substantially more than all OECD-regulated support, “a trend the report expects to continue and one which is poised to place US exporters at a competitive disadvantage absent the tools made available by EXIM.”

The report also stated that “the appetite of commercial banks for long-term projects continued to diminish” since the implementation of Basel III and other banking reforms.

“As liquidity sources for certain projects remain scarce, export-credit agency support has become more necessary to fill gaps in the trade finance marketplace and ensure that American exporters remain competitive,” it said.

“Consequently, US exporters will continue to rely upon EXIM support as they seek to take advantage of emerging economies and the 95 percent of consumers that live abroad.”

In the statement accompanying the report, EXIM Chairman and President Fred P. Hochberg, said, “There is no stronger brand in the world than ‘Made in America,’ but the increasingly aggressive approach by some foreign competitors in the export financing marketplace presents an ever-growing threat to US jobs.”

The bank’s job, he said, “is to back American workers and ensure that US exporters, especially small businesses, remain competitive and have the support they need to export their products and create jobs here at home.”

07/02/2014

Dairy Groups Demand Greater Market Access

Washington, DC – Two major US dairy industry groups are saying they will oppose any transpacific trade pact if Japan and Canada “continue to limit their markets to increased US dairy exports.”

Japan and Canada “are dragging their feet…and US negotiators must insist on “meaningful dairy market access,” the National Milk Producers Federation and the US Dairy Export Council said in a recent letter to US Trade Representative, Michael Froman and Secretary of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack.

The two industry groups said Canada “would probably be guided by Japan in deciding on any changes to its dairy market access” and that any negotiations to forge the Transpacific Partnership (TTP) would have to address New Zealand government programs that are seen to benefit Fonterra, the world’s biggest dairy exporter that controls nearly a third of global dairy trade.

“Our support for TPP is not unconditional,” said the letter, signed by 39 US dairy companies and cooperatives.

“The elements cited here, which largely remain unresolved, must be concluded in a positive manner or our industry will find it difficult to support the final agreement.”

The TPP’s stated goal is to eliminate tariffs and other barriers to goods and services trade. USTR Michael Froman said after the Singapore round of TPP talks in May that the US “is pressing for tariffs to be eliminated to the maximum extent possible.”

A spokesman for Froman said the US “had made it clear to trading partners that it expected the final TPP agreement to reflect the ambitious goals all countries signed up to.”

Like all exporters, he added, “America’s dairy farmers have a lot to gain through the Trans-Pacific Partnership and we are working hard to unlock opportunities for them throughout the Asia-Pacific region.”

The TPP would consist of 12 nations that account for two-fifths of the world economy and a third of global trade.

07/02/2014

 

 

Boeing Completes Mexico Satellite Project


El Segundo, CA – Boeing has finished production of a trio of communication satellites for the Mexican government.

The $1 billion contract for the “Mexsat” project was signed in 2011 calling for Boeing to design and manufacture two 702HP geo-mobile satellites and contract with the Virginia-based Orbital Sciences Corp. to build the third, a GEOStar-2.

The Orbital-built satellite was completed in 2012 and was successfully launched atop an Ariane 5 rocket in December of that year.

The development of two ground stations in Iztapalapa and Hermosillo was included in the contract and will serve to relay space-based signals to the satellites once they are deployed to their full 134-foot length.

Both Boeing 702HP satellites are equipped with five solar panel “wings” and an antenna roughly the size of a basketball court.

The company has already provided Mexico with five satellites dating back to 1985 with the last launched in 1998 and still in service.

Boeing said it will launch the first 702HP in early 2015 on a Russian Proton-M rocket with the second set to be sent aloft aboard an Atlas V by 2016.

07/02/2014