Researchers Complete First-Ever Detailed Map of Global Coral

In this August 2018 photo provided by the Allen Coral Atlas, fish swim on a reef at Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands. (AP)
In this August 2018 photo provided by the Allen Coral Atlas, fish swim on a reef at Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands. (AP)
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Researchers Complete First-Ever Detailed Map of Global Coral

In this August 2018 photo provided by the Allen Coral Atlas, fish swim on a reef at Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands. (AP)
In this August 2018 photo provided by the Allen Coral Atlas, fish swim on a reef at Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands. (AP)

Researchers have completed a comprehensive online map of the world’s coral reefs by using more than 2 million satellite images from across the globe.

The Allen Coral Atlas, named after late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, will act as a reference for reef conservation, marine planning and coral science as researchers try to save these fragile ecosystems that are being lost to climate change.

The group announced completion of the atlas Wednesday and said it is the first global, high-resolution map of its kind. It gives users the ability to see detailed information about local reefs, including different types of submarine structure like sand, rocks, seagrass and, of course, coral.

The maps, which include areas up to 50 feet (15 meters) deep, are being used to inform policy decisions about marine protected areas, spatial planning for infrastructure such as docks and seawalls and upcoming coral restoration projects.

“Our biggest contribution in this achievement is that we have a uniform mapping of the entire coral reef biome,” said Greg Asner, managing director of the Atlas and director of Arizona State University’s Center for Global Discovery and Conservation.

Asner said they relied on a network of hundreds of field contributors who gave them local information about reefs so that they could program their satellites and software to focus on the right areas.

“And that lets us bring the playing field up to a level where decisions can be made at a bigger scale because so far decisions have been super localized,” Asner said. “If you don’t know what you’ve got more uniformly, how would the UN ever play a real role? How would a government that has an archipelago with 500 islands make a uniform decision?”

The atlas also includes a coral bleaching monitor to check for corals that are stressed due to global warming and other factors.

Asner said about a third of the world’s reefs had not previously been mapped in this kind of in-depth way, and many not at all.

The project began in 2017 when Allen’s company, Vulcan Inc., was working with Ruth Gates, a Hawaii researcher whose idea of creating “super coral” for reef restoration was funded by the philanthropic foundation.

Gates and Vulcan brought in Asner because of his work with the Global Airborne Observatory that had been mapping reefs in Hawaii at the time.

Allen, who said he wanted to help save the world’s coral reefs, liked the idea of using technology to visualize data, so Gates connected the group with a satellite company called Planet, and Allen funded the project for about $9 million.

The University of Queensland in Australia used artificial intelligence technology and local reference data to generate the layers on the atlas. Anyone can view the maps for free online.

Both Allen and Gates passed away in 2018, leaving Asner and others to carry on their work.

“Ruth would be so pleased, wouldn’t she?” Asner said. “She would just be tickled that this is really happening.”

He said about a third of the calls he is getting are from researchers who hope to use the maps to “be sure that their planning and their reef restoration work is going to have its max efficacy.”

When Gates found out she was sick, she selected friend and colleague Helen Fox from the National Geographic Society to help communicate with conservation groups about how to use the tool.

“It really was a global effort,” said Fox, who is now the conservation science director for Coral Reef Alliance. “There were huge efforts in terms of outreach and helping people be aware of the tool and the potential scientific and conservation value.”



Gilead's Breast Cancer Drug Fails to Meet Main Goal of Late-stage Study

Gilead Sciences Inc pharmaceutical company is seen in Oceanside, California, US, April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Gilead Sciences Inc pharmaceutical company is seen in Oceanside, California, US, April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
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Gilead's Breast Cancer Drug Fails to Meet Main Goal of Late-stage Study

Gilead Sciences Inc pharmaceutical company is seen in Oceanside, California, US, April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Gilead Sciences Inc pharmaceutical company is seen in Oceanside, California, US, April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

Gilead Sciences said on Friday its breast cancer drug Trodelvy did not significantly lower the risk of disease progression in patients when used as a first-line treatment, failing to meet the main goal of a late-stage study, Reuters reported.

Gilead said an early trend for extending overall survival, a key measure of treatment efficacy, was observed favoring patients treated with Trodelvy, compared to chemotherapy.

The data for overall survival, however, was not mature at the time of the primary analysis, the company said, adding that the study will continue to assess this secondary goal.

Trodelvy was being tested in patients with HR+/HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer, the most common subtype of the cancer, as a first-line treatment following hormone therapy.


Dubai Hookah Maker AIR to Go Public in US

Smoking paraphernalia is seen during the "Expocannabis" fair on its opening day in Leganes, outside Madrid, January 26, 2007. REUTERS/Susana Vera
Smoking paraphernalia is seen during the "Expocannabis" fair on its opening day in Leganes, outside Madrid, January 26, 2007. REUTERS/Susana Vera
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Dubai Hookah Maker AIR to Go Public in US

Smoking paraphernalia is seen during the "Expocannabis" fair on its opening day in Leganes, outside Madrid, January 26, 2007. REUTERS/Susana Vera
Smoking paraphernalia is seen during the "Expocannabis" fair on its opening day in Leganes, outside Madrid, January 26, 2007. REUTERS/Susana Vera

Dubai's AIR, the owner of hookah brand Al Fakher, said on Friday it had agreed to go public in the US through a merger with blank-check firm Cantor Equity Partners III, in a deal valuing the combined company at $1.75 billion.

The special purpose acquisition deal comes as this unconventional route to the public markets has regained popularity in the United States after years of subdued activity, following poor share performance and regulatory roadblocks.

Hookah use has grown in the US in recent years as lounges and cafes offering flavored smoking become more common, frequented by younger consumers in urban areas.While the product is often marketed as a social or cultural activity, US health agencies continue to warn that hookah smoke contains many of the same harmful chemicals found in cigarettes.

A SPAC is a shell firm that raises money through an IPO to merge with a private business and take it public, offering companies an alternative route to the market bypassing the longer and costlier traditional IPO process.

Dubai-based AIR said it generated $375 million in revenue and $150 million in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization for its core products in 2024.

It has eight production facilities across the United Arab Emirates, the European Union and third-party partners, supporting more than 90 markets globally with established distribution networks, the company said.

Al Fakher, its most valuable business, makes flavored hookah and had 14 million consumers worldwide as of 2024.American financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald is the backer of the SPAC taking AIR public.

A total of 116 SPACs have completed initial public offerings so far this year, according to SPAC Research, compared with 57 in 2024.

The companies expect the deal to close in the first half of 2026, after which the combined entity, AIR Global Limited, will trade on the Nasdaq under the "AIIR" ticker symbol.


James Bond Fantasist Jailed for 7 Years in UK for Trying to Spy for Russia

Actor Daniel Craig poses for photographers on the red carpet at the German premiere of the new James Bond 007 film "Spectre" in Berlin, Germany, October 28, 2015. (Reuters)
Actor Daniel Craig poses for photographers on the red carpet at the German premiere of the new James Bond 007 film "Spectre" in Berlin, Germany, October 28, 2015. (Reuters)
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James Bond Fantasist Jailed for 7 Years in UK for Trying to Spy for Russia

Actor Daniel Craig poses for photographers on the red carpet at the German premiere of the new James Bond 007 film "Spectre" in Berlin, Germany, October 28, 2015. (Reuters)
Actor Daniel Craig poses for photographers on the red carpet at the German premiere of the new James Bond 007 film "Spectre" in Berlin, Germany, October 28, 2015. (Reuters)

A British man who would "dream about being like James Bond" was jailed Friday for seven years after trying to spy for Russia.

Howard Phillips, 65, was found guilty in July for trying to pass information about former Defense Secretary Grant Shapps, who he knew, to two men who he believed were Russian intelligence agents. However, the ‘agents’ were undercover British intelligence agents, The AP news reported.

“You were prepared to betray your country for money,” Justice Bobbie Cheema-Grubb told Phillips at his sentencing hearing at Winchester Crown Court, in the south of England.

The judge said that Phillips had “a personality with narcissistic tendencies and an overblown sense of his own importance."

The trial heard that Phillips intended to assist Russian agents between the end of 2023 and May 2024 — Shapps was defense secretary between August 2023 and July 2024 when his Conservative Party was ousted from power and he lost his seat in Parliament at the general election.

Specifically, the trial heard how Phillips had tried to hand over Shapps’ contact details as well as the location where he kept his private plane to “facilitate the Russians in listening on British defense plans.”

The defendant’s ex-wife told the court that Phillips “would dream about being like James Bond,” and watched films about the British secret services because he was “infatuated with it.”

In a victim impact statement read to the court, Shapps expressed his shock at learning of Phillips’ activities. He recalled going to dinner at Phillips' home in 2002.

“What is unacceptable is one individual’s reckless behavior exposing my entire family to the extremely serious risks that come from a foreign intelligence service’s activities," he said.

Bethan David, head of the Crown Prosecution Service’s Counter Terrorism Division, said the conviction sends “a clear message to anyone considering spying for or assisting Russia.”