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BI becomes co-owner in Kongsberg Innovation for scaling of Norwegian technology and industry

BI Norwegian Business School becomes co-owner of Kongsberg Innovation and academic partner in a new joint initiative to help Norwegian technology companies realize growth ambitions in China, U.S, and Europe.

“We see a market need in supporting Norwegian tech companies that want to scale internationally. This collaboration connects the leading academic expertise within scaling with Norway’s leading industrial cluster. Together with BI, we look forward to scale Norwegian technology companies into the global market,” says Svein-Olav Torø, managing director at Kongsberg Innovation.

Kongsberg Innovation will build an ecosystem for innovation and entrepreneurship to strengthen international scaling of Norwegian technology and industry.

“This is an important investment that strengthens the interaction with Norwegian industry and industrial innovation hubs in Norway and internationally. Together, we will establish a leading business community that effectively creates value for Norwegian startups and scaleups for the future,” says Inge Jan Henjesand, President at BI Norwegian Business School.

The initiative aims to connect technology-based companies to industrial projects of national and international interest.

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IBM Uncovers Global Phishing Campaign Targeting the COVID-19 Vaccine Cold Chain

At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, IBM Security X-Force created a threat intelligence task force dedicated to tracking down COVID-19 cyber threats against organizations that are keeping the vaccine supply chain moving. As part of these efforts, our team recently uncovered a global phishing campaign targeting organizations associated with a COVID-19 cold chain. The cold chain is a component of the vaccine supply chain that ensures the safe preservation of vaccines in temperature-controlled environments during their storage and transportation.

Our analysis indicates that this calculated operation started in September 2020. The COVID-19 phishing campaign spanned across six countries and targeted organizations likely associated with Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance’s Cold Chain Equipment Optimization Platform (CCEOP) program, which we explain further in this blog. While firm attribution could not be established for this campaign, the precision targeting of executives and key global organizations hold the potential hallmarks of nation-state tradecraft.

Some details from IBM Security X-Force’s analysis of this activity include:

  • The Cover Story — The adversary impersonated a business executive from Haier Biomedical, a credible and legitimate member company of the COVID-19 vaccine supply chain and qualified supplier for the CCEOP program. The company is purportedly the world’s only complete cold chain provider. Disguised as this employee, the adversary sent phishing emails to organizations believed to be providers of material support to meet transportation needs within the COVID-19 cold chain. We assess that the purpose of this COVID-19 phishing campaign may have been to harvest credentials, possibly to gain future unauthorized access to corporate networks and sensitive information relating to the COVID-19 vaccine distribution.
  • The Targets — The targets included the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Taxation and Customs Union, as well as organizations within the energy, manufacturing, website creation and software and internet security solutions sectors. These are global organizations headquartered in Germany, Italy, South Korea, Czech Republic, greater Europe and Taiwan.
  • The How — Spear-phishing emails were sent to select executives in sales, procurement, information technology and finance positions, likely involved in company efforts to support a vaccine cold chain. We also identified instances where this activity extended organization-wide to include help and support pages of targeted organizations.

IBM Security X-Force has followed responsible disclosure protocols and notified the appropriate entities and authorities about this targeted operation.

Alert for the COVID-19 Supply Chain

IBM Security X-Force urges companies in the COVID-19 supply chain — from research of therapies, healthcare delivery to distribution of a vaccine — to be vigilant and remain on high alert during this time. Governments have already warned that foreign entities are likely to attempt to conduct cyber espionage to steal information about vaccines. Today, in conjunction with this blog, DHS CISA is issuing an alert encouraging organizations associated with the storage and transport of a vaccine to review this research and recommended best practices to remain vigilant.

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EU Pitches Transatlantic Agenda to Incoming US Administration

On December 2, the European Commission released an 11 page paper proposing a “new EU-US agenda for global change.” The paper proposes cooperation on four priorities:

  • COVID-19 and other emerging health challenges 
  • Climate change/sustainability 
  • Trade and technology policy 
  • Multilateral institutions and democracy

The paper is grounded in the premise that the combined weight of the transatlantic relationship is indispensable to solving global challenges (a theme frequently mentioned by the Biden campaign and transition team). In addition to broad principles, the paper flags a series of proposed “First Steps” to advance this agenda. Though the overall tone is ambitious in some areas, it stops well short of any kind of TTIP relaunch in terms of economic policy. The paper also argues that a more “autonomous” and “sovereign” Europe makes for a better partner for the United States. 

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Abbott/Roche Covid-19 hurtigtester til landets kommuner

Et prøveprosjekt i Oslo kommune viser at hurtigtestene som nå skal sendes til hele landet har en treffsikkerhet på 74,4 prosent. – Testene er gode, sier assisterende helsedirektør Espen Nakstad til VG.

Hurtigtestene blir fordelt etter kommunenes folketall, skriver Helsedirektoratet i et informasjonsbrev sendt til alle landets kommuner torsdag formiddag.

Helsedirektoratet har bestilt i alt 5 millioner hurtigtester, og omlag én million av disse skal fra 7. desember sendes ut til landets kommuner. Noen kommuner med utbrudd har allerede mottatt tester.

Fordeling vil skje etter innbyggertall slik at hver kommune skal få et antall hurtigtester tilsvarende 20 prosent av kommunens innbyggere, skriver Helsedirektoratet i brevet.

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3M Company – How we’re helping fight the pandemic

As the COVID-19 pandemic disrupts lives globally, 3M and its 96,000 employees continue to step up, applying our innovative thinking to develop solutions for a unique moment in world history.

3M responded early and rapidly to the pandemic, supplying critical products to dedicated frontline health care workers and first responders. By the end of 2020, we will produce 2 billion respirators globally – more than three times the amount we manufactured in 2019.  As of October 2020, 3M distributed 1.4 billion respirators globally and is on track to deliver 2 billion by the end of the year. 

Expanding manufacturing in the U.S. 

As a leading manufacturer of N95 respirators in the U.S., we are expanding our domestic manufacturing capacity.

At 3M’s Aberdeen, South Dakota, plant, a new 120,000-square-foot expansion to the 330,000-square-foot facility has added more manufacturing lines and automated equipment. That will help 3M increase N95 production in the U.S. to 95 million per month by the end of the year. The expansion is expected to add 100 jobs at Aberdeen’s 3M facility – that’s on top of the 200 jobs added at the plant since the beginning of the pandemic.  

But that’s not the only way 3M is helping. In addition to N95 respirators, 3M has ramped up production of other solutions used in the response to COVID-19, including hand sanitizers and disinfectants. 

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Interview: Giovanni Caforio, PhRMA Chairman and CEO of Bristol Myers Squibb

This year our industry has worked tirelessly to combat the COVID-19 virus, including developing effective therapeutics to treat COVID-19 and vaccines to prevent future infections. At the same time, the nation’s political environment remained turbulent, and systemic societal issues were brought to the forefront, all while we continued to socially distance and readjust our work and personal lives around the pandemic.  

I had the opportunity to connect with outgoing PhRMA chairman Giovanni Caforio, Chairman and CEO of Bristol Myers Squibb, about the remarkable year that was 2020, how the innovative biopharmaceutical industry will continue to address patients’ needs, and why he is hopeful for the future.

Stephen Ubl (SU): While this year has been challenging for us all, there have been bright spots, like watching people, companies and governments work together to fight this pandemic. I think people are starting to see just how difficult the R&D process is and how our industry works on behalf of patients. How do you think COVID-19 will impact the publics’ long-term appreciation of science and the industry?

Giovanni Caforio (GC): I think the pandemic and the response of the pharmaceutical industry has given the public intimate insight into the way this industry works – the complexity of processes related to developing and testing treatments, the investment and infrastructure needed to advance them, and the real value medicines can provide in advancing human health. When medicines and vaccines suddenly become topics of intense interest for everyone in the world, the role of industry and our researchers in advancing science and addressing public health challenges becomes more prominent and better understood.

That said, COVID-19 has amplified many challenges facing health care systems around the world. And with COVID-19 cases again on the rise, we are not out of the woods yet. We know as an industry we can do better in many areas. We will continue to build on the fruitful learnings we have gained from combatting COVID-19, which have demonstrated the positive impact of greater levels of collaboration and the role of technology in medicine development. Elsewhere, we can do more and have a significant role to play in contributing to addressing health inequalities.  Many companies are instituting real change to ensure diverse communities are represented in the medicine development process, while also establishing strategies to ensure all patients can obtain the medicines they need, regardless of socioeconomic, racial, and geographical differences.

Our progress and initial successes demonstrate the possibilities inherent in medical innovation and what can be achieved when the world’s scientists, researchers, governments and health organizations join together to promote the development of innovative medicines. It is important that we do not lose the momentum created during the last few months.

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Interview: Airthings CEO Øyvind Birkenes

Tell us about Airthings, why it was established, the products and what problem they were coming to solve?

Airthings was established in 2008 by three CERN scientists with the goal being to educate on the prevalence of radon and offer accurate, user-friendly radon detectors to the masses, making them as common as smoke detectors. We have evolved and expanded since then to become the market leaders in the indoor air quality space. 

What is the connection between indoor air safety and outdoor air quality? How do you take this into account when offering indoor air quality solutions and products? 

No matter if it’s indoors or outdoors, air quality matters as a whole. Typically people are more aware of air pollution outdoors, but the reality is that we spend 90% of our time indoors, and concentrations of damaging pollutants are between two to five times higher indoors than outdoors. Over recent decades, many chemicals have become more prevalent in our homes due to increased use of synthetic building materials, air-tight properties, pesticides, and household cleaners. Buildings are becoming more airtight and without proper ventilation, we can be exposed to these pollutants over long periods of time, which can lead to serious health problems.

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Nordic lead on shipping’s decarbonisation

Have Nordic countries laid down a roadmap for the rest of the world to follow when it comes to decarbonising shipping? New research from the International Transport Forum (ITF) believes so. Its recently published Lessons from the Nordic Region report concludes that Nordic countries are among those with the highest ambition and greatest number of maritime technology demonstrations in the world. Consequently, the Forum has showcased the pioneering efforts being made by Nordic countries to reduce the environmental impact of maritime shipping, aiming to encourage more cohesive global decarbonisation efforts.

The report, initiated by the Nordic Council of Ministers and funded by Nordic Energy Research, found that accelerated innovation is important in a sector dependent on long-lasting assets like ships and that policy is a “critical tool” to stimulate the deployment of maritime low-carbon technologies.

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Reuters: Norway cuts gas exports as plant shuts over strike

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway’s Nyhamna gas export terminal is closing down as security guards at the plant go on strike, cutting volumes by an expected 50 million standard cubic metres (mcm) of gas per day, system operator Gassco said on Saturday.

Gassco said on Friday the plant would have to close unless the planned strike was called off, triggering a spike in British gas prices.

“Gassco is in the middle of safely shutting down Nyhamna. Our focus today is to reroute gas to minimise the negative effect, especially towards the UK,” Alfred Hansen, head of Gassco’s operations, told Reuters.

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Norway is the safest country for expats to move to in 2021, new study shows

A study by MoverDB revealed the top international locations for expats to move to remotely post-coronavirus, highlighting the cities with the best safety, quality of life, cost of living, salary, work-life balance, and the percentage of expats.

With COVID-19 stunting the travel plans of millions of expats this year and forcing many to return to their home countries, the study wanted to find out which cities still heavily rely on expats to support the economy and provide a better quality of life.

Whilst living and working abroad may seem like a pipe dream right now, MoverDB identified the top international locations for expats to move to remotely post-coronavirus, analyzing the cities with the best safety, quality of life, cost of living, salary, work-life balance, and the percentage of expats.

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