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International Science Conference: Innovations To Ease Environmental Stressors
The twenty-seventh International Conference on the Unity of the Sciences (ICUS XXVII) Gathers solutions to environmental problems
Washington, DC – Easing global problems like deforestation, desertification and the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria will have profound benefits for humanity, speakers told a recent two-day virtual science conference.
Seventy-one scholars from 13 countries attended ICUS XXVII, which was held online on April 23-24, 2021 EDT. The conference series, sponsored by the Hyo Jeong International Foundation for the Unity of the Sciences (HJIFUS), focuses on finding the most promising scientific solutions to environmental problems on a global level, said HJIFUS Pres
gathers solutions to environmental problems
Easing global problems like deforestation, desertification and the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria will have profound benefits for humanity, speakers told a recent two-day virtual science conference. Seventy-one scholars from 13 countries attended ICUS XXVII, which was held online on April 23-24, 2021 EDT. The conference series, sponsored by the Hyo Jeong International Foundation for the Unity of the Sciences (HJIFUS), focuses on finding the most promising scientific solutions to environmental problems on a global level, said HJIFUS President, Dr. Douglas Joo. It is no exaggeration to say that the preservation of our environment is the most pressing and weightiest issue humanity faces today, said Dr. Sun Jin Moon in the Founder s Address, quoting her mother, Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, co-founder of ICUS with her late husband, Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon.
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SADE OGUNTOLA reports that experts in the country are divided over COVID-19 vaccines and drugs as some believe that government should encourage local researchers to produce them locally, just as some local production of vaccines would take years to happen during which many more Nigerians would have died.
The COVID-19 pandemic has surely ravaged the whole world raking up unexpected mortality figures. Surprisingly, Africa has been largely spared, taking into consideration the number of fatalities recorded on the entire continent which is far lower than the reported figures in some individual countries in Europe.
However, while the vaccine has become available in Europe and America since December 2020 and inoculation has started in earnest, Nigeria, like many African countries, is still waiting for its first consignment of vaccines slated for late January, even as the death toll surges.