Business
PTA suspends licences of five LDI operators over unpaid dues | The Express Tribune
ISLAMABAD:
The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has suspended the licences of five Long Distance and International (LDI) telecom operators for failing to pay government dues amounting to billions of rupees.
LDI operators collectively owe Rs80 billion to the government. This includes Rs24 billion in principal and Rs56 billion in late payment surcharges, which have accumulated over the years.
In an attempt to avoid payment, the operators filed multiple writ petitions in court, arguing that the PTA lacked the legal authority to demand these charges.
However, the court ruled that the petitions were not maintainable. Following the court’s dismissal of the cases, the PTA proceeded to suspend the licences of the five LDI operators.
The PTA conducted individual hearings for each of the five companies to address the issue of outstanding dues, but the operators failed to provide any concrete commitment toward payment.
The PTA has issued separate orders for each of the five defaulting LDI companies, instructing all cellular mobile operators to immediately terminate telecommunication services to them. Class Value-Added Service (CVAS) licence holders have also been directed to cease all services to these firms without delay.
According to official data, out of a total of 13 LDI operators, licences for four companies were renewed in 2024. Licences for seven others expired the same year, while the remaining two are set to expire in 2025 and 2026, respectively.
Business
Ben & Jerry’s: Row deepens as three board members removed
Three members of Ben & Jerry’s independent board will no longer be eligible to serve in their roles, after the ice cream company introduced a new set of governance practices.
These include a nine-year limit set on board members’ terms. Chair Anuradha Mittal, who earlier said she had no plans to resign under pressure, is among those affected.
The move was criticised by the company’s co-founder Ben Cohen, who called it a “blatant power grab designed to strip the board of legal authority and independence”.
His remarks are the latest in a long-running row between Ben and Jerry’s and its owner over the Cherry Garcia maker’s social activism and the continued independence of its board.
The BBC understands that Ms Mittal will leave the company immediately, while board members Mr Dodson and Ms Henderson will go at the end of this year.
“Anuradha Mittal, Daryn Dodson, and Jennifer Henderson have served this company with integrity and courage. Over many years, they helped the board make bold, often difficult decisions to uphold Ben & Jerry’s social mission,” said Mr Cohen.
Ben & Jerry’s said the move is aimed “to preserve and enhance the brand’s historical social mission and safeguard its essential integrity.”
The Vermont-based firm is now owned by The Magnum Ice Cream Company, after a spinoff from Unilever last week that created the world’s largest standalone ice cream maker.
A spokesperson for Magnum said the firm wanted to build and strengthen Ben & Jerry’s “powerful, non-partisan values-based position in the world”.
But Ben & Jerry’s would be destroyed as a brand if it remains with Magnum, Mr Cohen told the BBC.
Ben & Jerry’s was sold to Unilever in 2000 in a deal which allowed it to retain an independent board and the right to make decisions about its social mission.
Since the sale there have been deepening clashes between the Vermont-based brand and Unilever, with this conflict now inherited by Magnum.
In 2021, Ben & Jerry’s refused to sell its products in areas occupied by Israel, resulting in its Israeli operation being sold by Unilever to a local licensee.
Co-founder Jerry Greenfield left Ben & Jerry’s in September after almost half a century at the firm, deepening a dispute with parent company Unilever.
In a letter shared on social media by Mr Cohen, Mr Greenfield said Ben & Jerry’s had lost its independence after Unilever put a halt to its social activism.
Business
Amazon Layoffs: Tech Giant Cuts More Jobs In These Domains, Separate From 14,000 Global Firings
Last Updated:
Amazon cuts 84 jobs in Seattle and Bellevue, separate from 14000 global layoffs, citing routine business reviews. CEO Andy Jassy links future reductions to generative AI expansion.
Amazon to cut more jobs
The spree of layoffs doesn’t appear to be ebbing despite large-scale firings in tech giants. Amazon has reportedly cut 84 jobs, separate from 14000 corporate layoffs in October globally, according to a report of Greekwire.
Amazon said as reported by Greekwire that these job cuts aren’t linked to broader workforce actions. “Each of its businesses regularly reviews its organizational structure and may make adjustments as a result. Terming it a “routine process”.
“We’ve informed a relatively small number of employees that their roles will be eliminated as the result of individual business decisions,” said Amazon spokesperson Brad Glasser. “We don’t make decisions like this lightly,” he added, noting that the company is providing affected employees with 90 days of full pay and benefits, transitional health coverage, and job placement services.
As a new State law the State’s new version of the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, known as the WARN Act. requires companies/employers to disclose all terminations within 90 days of a prior notice, Amazon intimated the Washington Authorities.
According to an Amazon filing, the separations are set to take place between February 2 and February 23, 2026, affecting staff across more than 30 office locations in Seattle and Bellevue, along with six remote employees based in Washington.
The roles impacted reportedly include software development engineers, program managers, recruiters, HR specialists and UX designers, spanning levels from entry-level positions to directors and principals.
Amazon said employees were informed beginning in early November and were given at least 89 days’ advance notice, well above the 60-day requirement under the law. The company added that employees who secure internal transfers before their separation date will not be laid off.
In June, CEO Andy Jassy, who has aggressively sought to cut costs since becoming CEO in 2021, said that he anticipated generative AI would reduce Amazon’s corporate workforce in the next few years.
Jassy said at the time that Amazon had more than 1,000 generative AI services and applications in progress or built, but that figure was a “small fraction” of what it plans to build. Jassy encouraged employees to get on board with the company’s AI plans after it announced plans to invest $10 billion building a campus in North Carolina to expand its cloud computing and artificial intelligence infrastructure.
December 16, 2025, 08:36 IST
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Business
The giant heat pumps designed to warm whole districts
Chris BaraniukTechnology Reporter
MVV EnergieThe pipe that will supply the heat pump, drawing water from the River Rhine in Germany, is so big that you could walk through it, fully upright, I’m told.
“We plan to take 10,000 litres per second,” says Felix Hack, project manager at MVV Environment, an energy company, as he describes the 2m diameter pipes that will suck up river water in Mannheim, and then return it once heat from the water has been harvested.
In October, parent firm MVV Energie announced its plan to build what could be the most powerful heat pump modules ever. Two units, each with a capacity of 82.5 megawatts.
That’s enough to supply around 40,000 homes, in total, via a district heating system. MVV Energie aims to build the system on the site of a coal power plant that is converting to cleaner technologies.
The scale of the heat pumps was determined partly by limits on the size of machinery that could be transported through the streets of Mannheim, or potentially via barges along the Rhine. “We’re not sure about that yet,” says Mr Hack. “It might come via the river.”
One person well aware of the project is Alexandre de Rougemont, at Everllence (formerly MAN Energy Solutions), another German company that also makes extremely large heat pumps. “It is a competition, yeah,” he says. “We’re open about it.”
Heat pumps soak up heat from the air, ground or, in these cases, bodies of water. Refrigerants inside the heat pumps evaporate when they are warmed even slightly.
By compressing the refrigerant, you boost that heat further. This same process occurs in heat pumps designed to supply single homes, it just happens on a much larger scale in giant heat pumps that serve entire city districts.
As towns and cities around the world seek to decarbonise, many are deciding to purchase large heat pumps, which can attach to district heating networks.
These networks allow hot water or steam to reach multiple buildings, all connected up with many kilometres of pipe. Ever bigger models of heat pump are emerging to meet demand.
“There was a lot of pressure on us to change the heat generation to new sources, especially renewable sources,” explains Mr Hack as he discusses the decommissioning of coal-fired units at the Mannheim plant. The site is right by the Rhine, already has a hefty electricity grid connection, and is plugged in to the district heating network, so it makes sense to install the heat pumps here, he says.
He notes that the technology is possible partly thanks to the availability of very large compressors in the oil and gas industry – where they are used to compress fossil fuels for storage or transportation, for example.
MVV EnergieWork on the Mannheim project is due to start next year. The heat pumps – with a combined capacity of 162MW – are set to become fully operational in the winter of 2028-29. Mr Hack adds that a multi-step filter system will prevent the heat pumps sucking up fish from the river, and that modelling suggests the system will affect the average temperature of the river by less than 0.1C.
Installations such as this are not cheap. The Mannheim heat pump setup will cost €200m ($2.3m; £176m). Mr de Rougemont at Everllence says that, at his company, heat-pump equipment costs roughly €500,000 per megawatt of installed capacity – this does not include the additional cost of buildings, associated infrastructure and so on.
EverllenceEverllence is currently working on a project in Aalborg, Denmark that will be even more powerful than the system in Mannheim, with a total capacity of 176MW. It will use smaller modules, however – four 44MW units – and is due to become operational in 2027, when it will supply nearly one third of all heating demand in the town.
Those 44MW machines are actually the same ones used in a previous project, now fully operational, to the south of Aalborg in Esbjerg. There, they don’t run at maximum capacity but rather supply 35MW each.
Large hot water storage tanks, each able to hold 200,000 cubic metres of liquid, will give the system added flexibility, adds Mr de Rougemont: “When the electricity price is high, you stop your heat pump and only provide heat from the storage.”
Veronika Wilk at the Austrian Institute of Technology says, “Heat pumps and district heating systems are a great fit.” Such systems can harvest heat from bodies of water or even wastewater from sewage treatment plants.
Dr Wilk notes that, when you use multiple large heat pumps on a district heating network, you gain flexibility and efficiency. You could run two out of four heat pumps in the autumn, say, when less heat is required than during the depths of winter.
Getty ImagesAll the systems mentioned so far harvest energy from water sources but, less commonly, very large heat pumps can use the air as a heat source, too. Even in a relatively cold city such as Helsinki.
“The sea in front of Helsinki is too shallow,” explains Timo Aaltonen, senior vice president of heating and cooling at Helen Oy, an energy firm. “We calculated that we would need to build a tunnel more than 20km long to the ocean, to get enough water [with a] temperature high enough.”
Helsinki is in the process of radically overhauling its district heating system. The city has added heat pumps, biomass burners and electric boilers to a 1,400km network that links up nearly 90% of buildings in the Finnish capital, adds Mr Aaltonen.
Heat pumps convert single kilowatt hours of electricity into multiple kilowatt hours of heat but electric boilers can’t do this and are therefore considered less efficient.
I ask why Helen Oy decided to install hundreds of megawatts of these boilers and Mr Aaltonen says that they are cheaper to install than heat pumps and having them also means he and colleagues don’t have to rely entirely on the air, which is limited in terms of how much heat it can provide at scale. Plus, the electric boilers can help to soak up surplus renewables and provide an electricity grid-balancing function, he says.
There are no heat pumps in the UK that rival the systems under development in Denmark, Germany and Finland. However, some new district heating networks are on the way, such as the Exeter Energy Network, which will supply the University of Exeter and other customers.
The minimum planned capacity of the network is 12MW. It will feature three 4MW air-to-water heat pumps, with the first unit due to become operational in 2028.
Keith Baker at Glasgow Caledonian University, who researches district heating systems, says the UK has opportunities to make more of this technology. Water in disused mines, which maintains a relatively stable temperature, is beginning to supply larger heat pumps here, for example.
Post-industrial and rural areas where there is adequate space to install heat pumps and heat storage tanks are “the sweet spots”, he says.
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