Section II of Weekly Edition 49 of 2019
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Logistics (Overweight)
December 13, 2012 Industry Report Logistics (Overweight) Daewoo Securities Co., Ltd. Winner takes all Jay JH Ryu +822-768-4175 Oversupply to end; Top-tier firms to gain market share [email protected] Almost two decades of oversupply has taken its toll on the logistics industry, cutting freight rates in half. In the next five to ten years, however, we expect the oversupply situation to ease as the market becomes increasingly consolidated. Among the various segments of the logistics industry, warehousing and parcel delivery are anticipated to post the strongest recoveries. Warehousing margins are already improving on the back of recent supply shortages and geographic barriers to entry. Parcel delivery rates have plunged since the early 2000s, but we expect the segment to experience the logistics industryÊs fastest market consolidation on the back of M&A efforts (which have been underway for the past five years), shutdowns of underperformers, and the strengthening cost competitiveness of top-tiers. In 2013, CJ Korea Express (Korex) will merge with CJ GLS, and the merged entityÊs Seoul metropolitan area parcel terminal will be completed in 2014, accelerating consolidation. Meanwhile, trucking remains in a state of oversupply due to an increase in the number of trucks since the 1998 Asian financial crisis. Over the long term, however, the trucking business is also likely to see a steady recovery on the expansion of the logistics market and limited supply. The third-party logistics (3PL) segment, which accounts for about 60% of the logistics industry, is anticipated to continue to grow, aided by: 1) policy support and 2) the consolidation of the logistics market. -
Weekly Edition 49 of 2019
Notices 6126 -- 6278/19 ADMIRALTY NOTICES TO MARINERS Weekly Edition 49 05 December 2019 (Published on the ADMIRALTY website 25 November 2019) CONTENTS I Explanatory Notes. Publications List II ADMIRALTY Notices to Mariners. Updates to Standard Nautical Charts III Reprints of NAVAREA I Navigational Warnings IV Updates to ADMIRALTY Sailing Directions V Updates to ADMIRALTY List of Lights and Fog Signals VI Updates to ADMIRALTY List of Radio Signals VII Updates to Miscellaneous ADMIRALTY Nautical Publications VIII Updates to ADMIRALTY Digital Services For information on how to update your ADMIRALTY products using ADMIRALTY Notices to Mariners, please refer to NP294 How to Keep Your ADMIRALTY Products Up--to--Date. Mariners are requested to inform the UKHO immediately of the discovery of new or suspected dangers to navigation, observed changes to navigational aids and of shortcomings in both paper and digital ADMIRALTY Charts or Publications. The H--Note App helps you to send H--Notes to the UKHO, using your device’s camera, GPS and email. It is available for free download on Google Play and on the App Store. The Hydrographic Note Form (H102) should be used to forward this information and to report any ENC display issues. H102A should be used for reporting changes to Port Information. H102B should be used for reporting GPS/Chart Datum observations. Copies of these forms can be found at the back of this bulletin and on the UKHO website. The following communication facilities are available: NMs on ADMIRALTY website: Web: admiralty.co.uk/msi Searchable Notices to Mariners: Web: www.ukho.gov.uk/nmwebsearch Urgent navigational information: e--mail: [email protected] Phone: +44(0)1823 353448 +44(0)7989 398345 Fax: +44(0)1823 322352 H102 forms e--mail: [email protected] (see back pages of this Weekly Edition) Post: UKHO, Admiralty Way, Taunton, Somerset, TA1 2DN, UK All other enquiries/information e--mail: [email protected] Phone: +44(0)1823 484444 (24/7) Crown Copyright 2019. -
Comparative Connections, Volume 12, Number 4
Pacific Forum CSIS Comparative Connections A Quarterly E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations edited by Carl Baker Brad Glosserman 4th Quarter (October – December) 2010 Vol. 12, No.4 January 2011 http://csis.org/program/comparative-connections Pacific Forum CSIS Based in Honolulu, Hawaii, the Pacific Forum CSIS operates as the autonomous Asia- Pacific arm of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1975, the thrust of the Forum‟s work is to help develop cooperative policies in the Asia- Pacific region through debate and analyses undertaken with the region‟s leaders in the academic, government, and corporate arenas. The Forum‟s programs encompass current and emerging political, security, economic/business, and oceans policy issues. It collaborates with a network of more than 30 research institutes around the Pacific Rim, drawing on Asian perspectives and disseminating its projects‟ findings and recommendations to opinion leaders, governments, and publics throughout the region. An international Board of Governors guides the Pacific Forum‟s work. The Forum is funded by grants from foundations, corporations, individuals, and governments, the latter providing a small percentage of the forum‟s annual budget. The Forum‟s studies are objective and nonpartisan and it does not engage in classified or proprietary work. Comparative Connections A Quarterly E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations Edited by Carl Baker and Brad Glosserman Volume 12, Number 4 Fourth Quarter (October - December) 2010 Honolulu, Hawaii January 2011 Comparative Connections A Quarterly Electronic Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations Bilateral relationships in East Asia have long been important to regional peace and stability, but in the post-Cold War environment, these relationships have taken on a new strategic rationale as countries pursue multiple ties, beyond those with the US, to realize complex political, economic, and security interests. -
Birdlife Australia
z BirdLife Australia BirdLife Australia (Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union) was founded in 1901 and works to conserve native birds and biological diversity in Australasia and Antarctica, through the study and management of birds and their habitats, and the education and involvement of the community. BirdLife Australia produces a range of publications, including Emu, a quarterly scientific journal; Wingspan, a quarterly magazine for all members; Conservation Statements; BirdLife Australia Monographs; the BirdLife Australia Report series; and the Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. It also maintains a comprehensive ornithological library and several scientific databases covering bird distribution and biology. Membership of BirdLife Australia is open to anyone interested in birds and their habitats, and concerned about the future of our avifauna. For further information about membership, subscriptions and database access, contact: BirdLife Australia Suite 2-05, 60 Leicester Street Carlton VIC 3053 Australia Tel: (Australia): (03) 9347 0757 Fax: (03) 9347 9323 (Overseas): +613 9347 0757 Fax: +613 9347 9323 E-mail: [email protected] © BirdLife Australia This report is copyright. Apart from any fair dealings for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without prior written permission. Enquires to BirdLife Australia. Recommended citation: Purnell, C., Crosby, M., Moon Y,. M. 2017. Conserving Shorebirds of the Geum Estuary: Year 1 Annual Report. BirdLife report to Woodside Energy. This report was prepared by BirdLife Australia with support from Woodside Energy Australia. -
Transit, Traffic Control, and Telecoms: Crossing the “T’S” in Sino-Korean Exchange
China-Korea Relations: Transit, Traffic Control, and Telecoms: Crossing the “T’s” in Sino-Korean Exchange by Scott Snyder Korea Representative, The Asia Foundation The dramatic entry of 25 North Korean refugees into the Spanish Embassy in Beijing – an event staged by a network of international North Korean human-rights activists – has highlighted the plight of North Korean refugees, put at risk an informal network of primarily South Korean nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that had assisted North Korean refugees to come to Seoul with tacit approval from the Chinese government, and presented the governments in Beijing and Seoul with a knotty issue they have repeatedly tried to avoid. Although the trade relationship continues to develop at a breakneck pace with South Korean efforts to crack China’s telecommunications and Internet services sectors, China’s exports to South Korea these days are not so impressive: North Korean refugees, drugs, illegal migrants, and an increasingly serious “yellow dust” of spring, which interrupted Korean daily life due to high levels of poisonous particles from the Gobi Desert in Inner Mongolia. (No wonder Beijing faces a chronic trade deficit with Seoul!) Perhaps most striking this quarter is that despite a visit to China by National Assembly Speaker Lee Man-sup in January and a two-day visit to Beijing by ROK Foreign Minister Choi Sung-hong to discuss South Korea’s latest diplomacy with the North and to manage growing concerns regarding PRC management of North Korean refugee issues, the real action in the relationship this quarter has been driven by NGOs and business interests. -
Comparative Connections, Volume 9, Number 2
Pacific Forum CSIS Comparative Connections A Quarterly E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations edited by Brad Glosserman Sun Namkung 2nd Quarter (April-June) 2007 Vol. 9, No. 2 July 2007 www.csis.org/pacfor/ccejournal.html Pacific Forum CSIS Based in Honolulu, Hawaii, the Pacific Forum CSIS operates as the autonomous Asia Pacific arm of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1975, the thrust of the Forum’s work is to help develop cooperative policies in the Asia Pacific region through debate and analyses undertaken with the region’s leaders in the academic, government, and corporate arenas. The Forum’s programs encompass current and emerging political, security, economic/business, and oceans policy issues. It collaborates with a network of more than 30 research institutes around the Pacific Rim, drawing on Asian perspectives and disseminating its projects’ findings and recommendations to opinion leaders, governments, and publics throughout the region. An international Board of Governors guides the Pacific Forum’s work. The Forum is funded by grants from foundations, corporations, individuals, and governments, the latter providing a small percentage of the forum’s $1.2 million annual budget. The Forum’s studies are objective and nonpartisan and it does not engage in classified or proprietary work. Comparative Connections A Quarterly E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations Edited by Brad Glosserman and Sun Namkung Volume 9, Number 2 Second Quarter (April-June) 2007 Honolulu, Hawaii July 2007 Comparative Connections A Quarterly Electronic Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations Bilateral relationships in East Asia have long been important to regional peace and stability, but in the post-Cold War environment, these relationships have taken on a new strategic rationale as countries pursue multiple ties, beyond those with the U.S., to realize complex political, economic, and security interests. -
Comparative Connections a Quarterly E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations
Comparative Connections A Quarterly E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations South Korea-North Korea Relations: Playing with Fire Aidan Foster-Carter University of Leeds Ten years have passed since Ralph Cossa first asked me to write for this esteemed journal. Comparative Connections was young then. Launched in mid-1999, then as now its remit was to cover and track East Asia‟s key bilateral relationships: with the US and regionally. At the outset, inter-Korean relations must have seemed too insubstantial to be included. That changed in 2000: the annus mirabilis which saw the South‟s then president, Kim Dae-jung, fly to Pyongyang in June and hold the first ever North-South summit meeting with the man who still leads the North, Kim Jong Il. The former, but thankfully not the latter, was awarded the year‟s Nobel Peace Prize for this among other achievements. At the time this seemed, and was, a breakthrough. The summit was not just a one-off photo-op. We did not yet know that money had gone under the table to bring it about. Even so, to write as I did then of “the wholly new phase of regular and substantive inter-Korean dialogue that has ensued – ministerial and defense talks, family reunions, economic deals, transport links, and more” – was not mistaken. Seven years followed in which inter-Korean relations moved forward. Not evenly, not enough, and not reciprocally – but forward, none the less. Another sentence that I wrote a decade ago, on the broader vista, is painful to reread now: In a for once happily inapt metaphor, diplomatically speaking the DPRK blazed away on all barrels in all directions during the past year, apparently seeking better ties across the board, both reviving old alliances and embarking on new ones. -
Selected Speeches of President Moon Jae-In
SELECTED SPEECHES SELECTED Moon Jae-in President of the Republic of Korea SELECTED Ⅲ SPEECHES Ⅲ May 10, 2019 Moon Jae-in President of the Republic of Korea of the Republic of President Jae-in Moon − May 10, 2020 Moon Jae-in President of the Republic of Korea SELECTED SPEECHES Ⅲ May 10, 2019 − May 10, 2020 Special Talk with President to Mark Two Years in Office May 9, 2019 1 2. Address at Sweden’s Riksdag June 14, 2019 3. “Manufacturing Renaissance Vision” Declaration Ceremony June 19, 2019 4. Welcoming Dinner for U.S. President Donald Trump at Cheong Wa Dae June 29, 2019 3 2 4 5 6 5. Visit to Parts and Materials Production Site August 7, 2019 6. 74th Liberation Day Ceremony August 15, 2019 7. Address at United Nations Climate Action Summit September 23, 2019 7 9 10 8. 71st Armed Forces Day Ceremony October 1, 2019 9. Foreign Diplomatic Corps Reception at Cheong Wa Dae October 18, 2019 10. Town Hall 2019: Answering People's Question November 19, 2019 8 11. Welcoming Dinner for 2019 ASEAN-ROK Commemorative Summit in Busan November 25, 2019 12. ASEAN-ROK Commemorative Summit November 26, 2019 13. 1st Mekong-ROK Summit November 27, 2019 11 12 13 14. 2020 New Year Press Conference January 14, 2020 15. Pan-Government COVID-19 Countermeasures Meeting February 23, 2020 16. 101st March First Independence Movement Day Ceremony March 1, 2020 14 15 16 Preface We have compiled the speeches and remarks delivered to the people by the President Inter-Korean relations did not see very much progress last year, but the fact that our people during the third year of the Moon Jae-in Administration.