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In a special ceremony in Singapore, the 2023 winners of The Earthshot Prize were announced Tuesday 7th November. The prizes were awarded to a number of companies, organisations and individuals who are pioneering clean energy technology in Asia. The winning innovations will drive the region’s climate action and support a sustainable world. The prizes were presented in partnership with GenZero, Temasek Trust and the WildAid Marine Programme, and sponsored by GRST, S4S Technologies, Boomitra, and Accion Andina.
The winners were recognised for their contributions in advancing and scaling up their clean energy solutions to tackle global warming, with the prizes providing them with funding and acceleration to scale up their impact. The winners will be provided with a grant of up to $10 million, as well as access to a range of resources and networks that will help them grow their businesses. The prizes were announced at a special event in Singapore, co-hosted by the World Economic Forum on Sustainable Development and the UN Environment Program.
SANTIAGO, Jan 31 (Reuters) – Khir Johari’s The Food of the Singapore Malays: Gastronomic Travels Through the Archipelago has won this year’s triennial NUS Singapore History Prize, beating five other shortlisted books. Johari’s richly illustrated tome took 14 years to write and weighs 3.2 kilograms. The winner was chosen by a jury chaired by NUS Asia Research Institute distinguished fellow Kishore Mahbubani and comprised novelist Meira Chand; economist Lam San Ling; historian Peter Coclanis; and archaeologist John Miksic.
Miksic said he hoped Ms Hidayah’s book would show that “you don’t need to be a historian to write a history of Singapore.” He added that her work’s use of primary sources, particularly her personal inputs from growing up in Kampong Gelam, made it unique among the 26 submissions for this year’s prize.
Educated at the University of Poona and Oxford, Professor Rajeev Patke has written six books on literature studies and has edited or co-edited seven more. His areas of expertise are in modernism and postcoloniality. In addition to his teaching, he has also contributed to the development of research in the area of digital humanities and has lectured around the world. He is currently the Director of the Humanities Division at NUS College. He is also a visiting professor at the Université de Paris I, Sorbonne. He has been a member of the Academy since 2012.