Swansea University

Meet J.A. Baker – the influential nature writer you’ve probably never heard of

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Transcending both nature writing and environmentalism, his novel continues to inspire and speak to new generations.

Key Points: 
  • Transcending both nature writing and environmentalism, his novel continues to inspire and speak to new generations.
  • It showcases Baker’s life, highlights how The Peregrine still resonates today, and considers how his nature writing influenced the Essex landscape.
  • To hold them and look up at the sky – Baker’s Essex sky.
  • Born in Chelmsford, Essex in 1926, Baker dreamed of being a writer, but his father deeply disapproved of the idea.
  • He found love, got married, and worked in various jobs he disliked, eventually settling at the Automobile Association.
  • The Peregrine recounts the story of a bird over ten winters, but Baker’s archive is the story of a very private man.
  • Baker’s landmark book, The Peregrine, is part-love letter and part-eulogy to a bird of prey under threat from human actions.
  • Between 1940-1946, the government’s Destruction of Peregrine Falcons Order resulted in a cull of hundreds of peregrines to protect carrier pigeons that they prey on.

Leaving a legacy

  • The Peregrine has influenced other high-profile naturalists and conservationists including Sir David Attenborough, who narrated the audiobook, and author Robert Macfarlane.
  • Baker’s legacy resonates deeply with inspiring filmmakers such as Shaunak Sen and Werner Herzog who said of The Peregrine: “It’s a most incredible book.
  • Today, peregrines are once again back in Baker’s Essex sky.
  • Alongside Hetty Saunder’s brilliant biography of Baker, My House of Sky (2017), the exhibition draws upon his archive and some little-known letters of his from the Richard Burton Archives at Swansea University that give an extraordinary glimpse into his life.


Sarah Demelo does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Steel Jupiter's Indoor Air Innovation Receives EPA Device Determination

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 20, 2024

BETHLEHEM, Pa., Feb. 20, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Steel Jupiter has achieved a major development milestone with the recent issuance of a device determination from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for the company's unique and innovative "Zinnia Technology-Coated MERV 8 Air Filter." The EPA's determination confirms that the Zinnia-coated filter operates through dual-action aerosol trapping mechanisms under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA).

Key Points: 
  • BETHLEHEM, Pa., Feb. 20, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Steel Jupiter has achieved a major development milestone with the recent issuance of a device determination from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for the company's unique and innovative "Zinnia Technology-Coated MERV 8 Air Filter."
  • The EPA's determination confirms that the Zinnia-coated filter operates through dual-action aerosol trapping mechanisms under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA).
  • With the regulatory path now established, Steel Jupiter can proceed with its go-to-market plan, which includes performance testing multiple filter types across various real-world operational and environmental factors in simulated and actual settings, working with leading indoor air experts.
  • Steel Jupiter anticipates completing this final validation testing over the next several months.

ControlUp Accelerates International Expansion; Adds Ben Lancaster and Simon Townsend to Sales Leadership Team

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 7, 2024

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 7, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- ControlUp, the industry leader in Digital Employee Experience (DEX) management, today announced a new strategic focus on international growth, including expansion throughout Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) and Asia Pacific/Japan (APJ). Spearheading the new international expansion strategy is Ben Lancaster who has been named ControlUp's Vice President, International Sales. To further accelerate ControlUp's international growth is Simon Townsend, who joins ControlUp as Global Field CTO.

Key Points: 
  • Spearheading the new international expansion strategy is Ben Lancaster who has been named ControlUp's Vice President, International Sales.
  • To further accelerate ControlUp's international growth is Simon Townsend, who joins ControlUp as Global Field CTO.
  • "I am pleased to place the execution of the ControlUp international expansion strategy in the talented hands of Ben and Simon.
  • Ben Lancaster is a senior sales leader well known for his solid sales discipline and end user computing relationships throughout Europe.

Four good news climate stories from 2023

Retrieved on: 
Saturday, December 30, 2023

We don’t want to give you the wrong idea: things are bad. Antarctic ice sheets are melting, the fossil fuel lobby was everywhere at the COP talks, and even solutions like electric cars have their problems. And that just covers the past few weeks of this newsletter. But to end 2023 we’d like to focus on a few of the more optimistic stories we have run over the past year. This roundup of The Conversation’s 2023 climate coverage comes from our weekly climate action newsletter. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 30,000+ readers who’ve subscribed.1. We have skyscraper-sized wind turbines now Back in January, we asked Simon Hogg, executive director of Durham Energy Institute, about huge new wind turbines being built in the North Sea.

Key Points: 


We don’t want to give you the wrong idea: things are bad. Antarctic ice sheets are melting, the fossil fuel lobby was everywhere at the COP talks, and even solutions like electric cars have their problems. And that just covers the past few weeks of this newsletter. But to end 2023 we’d like to focus on a few of the more optimistic stories we have run over the past year.
This roundup of The Conversation’s 2023 climate coverage comes from our weekly climate action newsletter. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 30,000+ readers who’ve subscribed.

1. We have skyscraper-sized wind turbines now

  • Back in January, we asked Simon Hogg, executive director of Durham Energy Institute, about huge new wind turbines being built in the North Sea.
  • Nonetheless, ever bigger wind turbines have been a key reason why Britain has managed to shift much of its electricity generation from fossil fuels to renewables over the past decade.
  • Read more:
    Wind turbines are already skyscraper-sized – is there any limit to how big they will get?

2. Solar power keeps getting cheaper and more adaptable


Britain is, of course, more windy than sunny. But in much of the world, solar power is the real game changer. Yet one issue with solar is that we may run out of material needed to produce silicon cells – the main sort of solar panels you see in solar farms or on rooftops. Therefore many academics are looking for alternatives.

  • Perhaps perovskite will become the new silicon, or maybe some other technology will dominate in future, but what’s clear is that solar power is fast becoming even cheaper and more accessible.
  • Read more:
    Perovskite: new type of solar technology paves the way for abundant, cheap and printable cells

3. On the menu: mammoth meatball

  • Scientists recently created a meatball made of the flesh of extinct woolly mammoth.
  • This in itself isn’t the good news: no one is proposing we fix climate change with prehistoric food.
  • But it’s proof that cellular agriculture, sometimes called “lab-grown meat”, can work.

4. Climate change tipping points can be a good thing too

  • The Conversation has covered these scenarios extensively over the years, most recently in a piece by authors of the major new tipping points report.
  • Climate-related technologies or social and political behaviour can also pass similar tipping points, beyond which something better becomes inevitable.
  • Read more:
    Climate 'tipping points' can be positive too – our report sets out how to engineer a domino effect of rapid changes

English language training (ELT) market size in China to grow by USD 70.81 billion from 2021 to 2026; Growth driven by the rise in the number of international schools - Technavio

Retrieved on: 
Friday, June 30, 2023

In addition, the increasing number of private investments and the globalization of businesses have further fueled the growth of the segment.

Key Points: 
  • In addition, the increasing number of private investments and the globalization of businesses have further fueled the growth of the segment.
  • Berlitz Corp. - The company offers English Language Training for Government exams, corporate training, summer camps for kids, and private and group sessions of English training.
  • ChinaEDU Corp. - The company offers English Language Training for elementary school, junior high school, and high school students in China.
  • English Language Training (ELT) Market in China 2022-2026: Market Dynamics
    The market is driven by the rise in the number of international schools.

Udemy Appoints Genefa Murphy as Chief Marketing Officer

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, June 28, 2023

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Udemy (Nasdaq: UDMY), a company dedicated to improving lives through learning, today announced the appointment of Genefa Murphy to the newly created role of Chief Marketing Officer, effective July 10, 2023.

Key Points: 
  • SAN FRANCISCO, June 28, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Udemy (Nasdaq: UDMY), a company dedicated to improving lives through learning, today announced the appointment of Genefa Murphy to the newly created role of Chief Marketing Officer, effective July 10, 2023.
  • In this role, Murphy will lead Udemy's worldwide marketing organization and will report directly to Udemy’s President and CEO, Greg Brown.
  • Genefa has a proven track record for building global brands and brings extensive experience leading marketing initiatives for fast-growing software and technology companies that cater to businesses and consumers.
  • Murphy joined Micro Focus through the acquisition of Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s software business where she had previously held numerous consulting, product, marketing and go-to-market positions.

Unprecedented marine heatwave underlines the urgency to clean up UK rivers and coasts

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, June 20, 2023

But as the UK’s coastal seas boil under what is an unprecedented marine heatwave, these calls have new urgency.

Key Points: 
  • But as the UK’s coastal seas boil under what is an unprecedented marine heatwave, these calls have new urgency.
  • At the time of writing, some areas off the coast of England are up to 5°C warmer than usual.
  • Stopping the flow of pollution into our rivers is no longer a luxury for another day, but an urgent necessity.
  • Failing to clean up our water systems now will result in the loss of marine and aquatic life, undermining the functioning of our natural world.

Algal growth

    • However, these increased nutrient levels stimulate the growth of various types of algae in seawater, including those in the water, on seagrass leaves and on sediments.
    • Seagrasses primarily extract nutrients directly from the sediment, while algae can access them in the water more effectively.
    • However, when the water becomes overwhelmed by excessive algae growth, seagrass struggles to keep pace and eventually deteriorates.

Seagrass is suffocating

    • In 2021, one study estimated that 88% of seagrass meadows worldwide are exposed to nutrient inputs from wastewater.
    • Over the past two years, we’ve been documenting the health of seagrass meadows around the UK at Project Seagrass (a marine conservation charity dedicated to saving the world’s seagrass) and Swansea University.
    • These results support our suspicion that the excess nitrogen found in seagrass primarily originates from sewage discharges and nutrients running off farmland.

Costly pollution

    • Interestingly, seagrass meadows can also play a crucial role in controlling nutrient pollution.
    • Research has demonstrated the significant financial value of seagrass meadows in terms of their capacity to absorb and store nutrients.
    • This nitrogen release was more than three times the annual nitrogen load carried by rivers to Sweden’s north-west coastline.
    • In our view, addressing water pollution, specifically from fertilisers and sewage, is just as urgent as tackling the climate and biodiversity crises.

APRU Appoints Professor Thomas Schneider as New Chief Executive

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 2, 2023

The Association of Pacific Rim Universities (APRU) announced today that it had appointed Professor Thomas Schneider as its new Chief Executive, effective January 1, 2023.

Key Points: 
  • The Association of Pacific Rim Universities (APRU) announced today that it had appointed Professor Thomas Schneider as its new Chief Executive, effective January 1, 2023.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230202005513/en/
    In announcing the appointment, APRU Chair and Chancellor of UCLA Professor Gene D. Block said, “Professor Schneider will bring considerable skills, knowledge, and experience to his new role, and I am confident that he has the ability to lead APRU into its next phase.
  • A native of Germany, Professor Schneider studied at the University of Zurich, the University of Basel, and the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris.
  • Professor Schneider was selected after an extensive global search by the APRU Search Committee led by Professor Rocky Tuan, Vice-Chair of APRU and Vice-Chancellor and President of The Chinese University of Hong Kong, and search partner Perrett Laver.

Underlining Wins L'Oréal and Unilever Top Executive Tobias Kuetscher

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 10, 2023

MIAMI, Jan. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Rising beauty startup Underlining has officially announced the appointment of Tobias Kuetscher as its new Chief Growth Officer.

Key Points: 
  • MIAMI, Jan. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Rising beauty startup Underlining has officially announced the appointment of Tobias Kuetscher as its new Chief Growth Officer.
  • In his new role, Kuetscher will work to strengthen the company's multi-channel growth initiatives and lead the firm's global expansion.
  • "We are thrilled to have been able to excite Tobias Kuetscher with our extraordinary success story and win him for our leadership team," said Raz Romanescu, CEO and co-founder of Underlining.
  • Prior to joining the Underlining team, Kuetscher served as Unilever's General Manager for both the European and Asia-Pacific regions.

Centauri Therapeutics Strengthens Senior Leadership Team With Three Key Appointments

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Professor Roblin held senior leadership positions for over 20 years at Bayer and Pfizer, where he oversaw the successful development of several infectious disease therapeutics, including azithromycin, ciprofloxacin, and moxifloxacin.

Key Points: 
  • Professor Roblin held senior leadership positions for over 20 years at Bayer and Pfizer, where he oversaw the successful development of several infectious disease therapeutics, including azithromycin, ciprofloxacin, and moxifloxacin.
  • I am thrilled to be joining the senior team as CEO, as we work to progress novel immunotherapeutic candidates to the clinic.
  • The new appointments join Centauris esteemed Dr Mike Westby, Chief Scientific Officer (CSO), and Pamela Brown, Head of Chemistry, to further strengthen the senior leadership team.
  • Dr Mike Westby, CSO, Centauri Therapeutics, commented: We are delighted to welcome all three members to our senior leadership team following our recent Series A close.