Students on school trip injured in bus crash

SURAT THANI – Nine students on a field trip received minor injuries when their chartered bus sideswiped a car and then veered off the highway in heavy rain in this southern province on Tuesday.

The crash occurred on Highway 44 (Surat Thani-Krabi) near kilometre marker 117+200 in Kanchanadit district about 4pm, Kanchanadit Rescue reported.

The double-decker bus was carrying 37 students and two teachers from Na San School in Surat Thani. They were travelling back from a field trip to Khanom district in Nakhon Si Thammarat, about 100 kilometres from the school.

The bus crew comprised the driver and two assistants.

Rescuers said it was raining at the scene. The bus had run off the road and into some trees before coming to a halt. It did not overturn.

Three boys and six girls, aged between 11 and 12, had complained of arm and leg pain after the crash and were taken to Kanchanadit Hospital.

A grey sedan was stopped nearby. It had damage to its front left side. Two passengers also sustained minor injuries, rescuers said.

Police said it appeared there was a small collision after which the bus driver lost control and the bus veered off the rain-soaked road.

The investigation was continuing.

Office of the Attorney General winding up Hun Sen audio case

The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) is finalising the case of the leaked audio clip between Cambodian Senate President Hun Sen and former prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra.

Watcharin Phanurat, OAG deputy director-general, said on Tuesday the office has ordered the Cyber Crime Investigation Department 1 to supervise the case, with him leading the probe committee.

Investigators have already questioned numerous witnesses, including Ms Paetongtarn and one individual who reported on Hun Sen’s usage and behaviour on Facebook.

The authenticity of the audio clip does not need to be verified, he said, as Ms Paetongtarn was ruled ethically unfit to continue serving in her post by the Constitutional Court.

The OAG’s case on the audio clip is separate from that conducted by the Constitutional Court, according to Mr Watcharin.

He said the OAG’s investigation focuses on whether Hun Sen had any intention to instigate chaos or turmoil among Thais and if he violated Section 116 of the Criminal Code and the Computer Crime Act.

The investigation is set to finish in the coming weeks before it is submitted to the attorney-general, with only that figure able to decide on the accusation against Hun Sen, as it is considered an extraterritorial case.

The OAG may also probe another case to decide if Hun Sen’s offences involve terrorism and harm against the public, leading to the loss of life and property.

Police complaints to that effect have been filed by both the people and public offices in many areas in Thailand, said Mr Watcharin.

Somkiat to lead Honda’s Superbike charge with Dixon

Honda Racing Corporation (HRC) has announced that Somkiat Chantra will join Jake Dixon at the Honda HRC factory team for the 2026 FIM Superbike World Championship season.

Both riders are proven Moto2 race winners with extensive world championship experience. Somkiat’s representation of Asian motorsport and Dixon’s European racing heritage combine to form a talented international line-up with the speed and ambition to challenge at the sharp end of WorldSBK.

Somkiat, 26, currently competes in the MotoGP World Championship with Idemitsu Honda LCR, having stepped up to the premier class in 2025.

A graduate of the Asia Talent Cup, which he won in 2016, Somkiat progressed through the FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship before joining Moto2 with Idemitsu Honda Team Asia in 2019. He made history as the first Thai rider to win in Moto2 with victories at the Indonesian GP — Mandalika (2022) and the Japanese GP — Motegi (2023).

Dixon, 29, currently competes in the Moto2 World Championship with the Elf Marc VDS Racing Team. Runner-up in the 2018 British Superbike Championship, Dixon has established himself among the leading Moto2 riders with six Grand Prix victories.

“We are pleased to welcome Somkiat Chantra and Jake Dixon as factory riders for the Honda HRC WorldSBK Team from 2026. Somkiat, the first Thai rider ever to win in Moto2 and to race in MotoGP, now takes an important new step within the Honda family, extending his career at the international top level as the first Thai rider to compete full-time in the Superbike World Championship as a factory rider,” said Taichi Honda, HRC general manager.

“Dixon, a multiple Moto2 Grand Prix winner, has consistently demonstrated the speed and determination required to succeed in a championship as competitive as WorldSBK. Together, their talent, experience, and racing spirit will be valuable assets as we continue to strengthen our position in the series,” he added.

Market still ‘wrong’ on climate

As business, government and nonprofit leaders debate the future of climate action ahead of the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Brazil, the global economy remains vulnerable to acute and chronic climate-driven shocks whose impact could be more severe than that of the 2008 global financial crisis. At a time when many governments and businesses continue to underestimate and underprice physical climate risk, we must remember that neither financial markets nor regulators are always right. What if their current complacency about climate risks is catastrophically wrong?

The 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath showed how fast our expectations can be shattered. In the mid-2000s, deregulation and simplification were the norm: balance sheets were run thin, and profits and losses ran high. Financial engineering boomed as risks were packaged, diluted, and obfuscated, and as credit was given where it hadn’t been earned.

In the face of all this, expressions of concern were drowned out by the din of transactions. But the signs were there. The fundamentals were not right.

By late 2008, the global economy was teetering on the brink of collapse. In the space of days, longstanding banking giants were swept away. Only government bailouts prevented the entire financial system from melting down.

The post-crisis banking sector looks very different from the one that preceded it. Owing to tougher rules and tighter oversight, good governance and resilience restored trust in the banking sector. Long-term investors — pension funds and insurance companies — patiently endured years of expensive recovery before value was restored and dividends resumed. If the banks had gone, so, too, would those holdings, and most of today’s financial system with them.

The post-crisis era was marked by collective humility and acceptance of systemic risk. This was reflected in the Financial Stability Board’s recognition in 2015 of climate change as perhaps the greatest systemic threat of all.

Ten years later, however, our systems and processes remain ill-equipped to measure and manage the systemic risks posed by climate change. With the focus on climate issues slipping down investors’ agendas, this is a dangerous lapse. From broken supply chains and damaged assets to infrastructure shocks, public health crises, and community disruption, many businesses are already feeling the profound impact of climate change.

Nor is the problem confined to headline-grabbing disasters. Subtle, chronic effects are quietly eroding value, often in ways that our systems are ill-equipped to detect or manage. Once again, the fundamentals are not right.

Data from NASA underscores this point. US satellites show that the intensity of extreme weather events is now double the average recorded in the 2003-20 period. This trend has tragic consequences for human well-being. In Africa, for example, 23 million people faced acute hunger in 2023, owing to record droughts.

The global economy is also taking a beating. Research by the World Economic Forum finds that weather-related damage to businesses, infrastructure, and other fixed assets may have almost tripled since 2000. The bill for the last decade topped $2 trillion, with costs in 2022-23 alone reaching $451 billion.

Yet rather than take steps to mitigate these risks, many investors, corporations, and governments continue to incentivise activities that compound them. Leading companies must battle to convince their boards and investors to buy into forward-looking strategies. Banks — the traditional stewards of opportunity — are struggling to manage lending risk associated with new and emerging technologies. The business case for pre-emptive resilience and innovation just isn’t clear enough to overcome the allure of the status quo. In other words, markets are getting things very wrong once again.

One exception is the insurance industry. Experts at pricing risk, these firms are learning fast. Between 2023-24, climate-related disasters forced insurers to shell out $143 billion in claims payments. More and more of them are doing the math and concluding that climate coverage simply doesn’t add up. They must either hike premiums to exorbitant levels or exit the disaster-risk market altogether.

The latter scenario is all too likely. Gnther Thallinger, a board member at the global insurer Allianz, recently warned that “entire regions are becoming uninsurable” as key asset classes degrade “in real time”. If markets haven’t realised this, that is because it takes time to work through the system.

The parallels to past crises are clear. Again, expressions of concern are being drowned out. This time, though, the stakes are higher, the effects are more widespread, and the consequences will be irreversible. The global economy has a massive blind spot, and unlike in 2008, there is no one on the winning side of the short bet. We all will lose.

Of course, there is a difference between a systemic blind spot and an ordinary one. We know the spot is there, but our financial system cannot address it until it is translated into monetary terms. For this, we need to mobilise executive action across the private sector to improve how we measure, manage, and respond to climate risks. Working with capital providers, standard setters, and policymakers, we need to align actionable information with the need to allocate capital towards climate-change mitigation and adaptation.

But having the numbers is not enough. To paraphrase Ernest Hemingway, climate collapse is a process that happens slowly, then all at once. Businesses and investors must create and maintain the capacity for rapid change within our organisations and across our value chains and spheres of influence. This starts with humility and acceptance of systemic risk.

The 2008 financial crisis shocked the world and demonstrated that nothing can be taken for granted. The stakes now are far higher, and there can be no bailouts. We must pursue pre-emptive action, and we must do it immediately. ©2025 Project Syndicate

New Covid-19 strain arrives in Thailand

Thailand has recorded 33 cases of the new Covid-19 strain XFG so far this year, most of them in Bangkok, according to the Department of Medical Sciences.

The department said on Tuesday that XFG, also known as Stratus, has become the dominant Covid-19 strain worldwide and case numbers are rising. However, there is no evidence to show that its symptoms are more severe than those caused by other strains.

Thailand recorded its first XFG case in April and as of Sept 24 there were 33 cases, 23 in Bangkok.

Most cases had mild symptoms such as fever, coughing, sore throat, runny noses and headaches. No one had to be admitted to a hospital, the department said.

Although the XFG strain has not caused severe symptoms, people should always protect themselves by washing hands frequently and avoiding crowded places, it said.

The Department of Disease Control earlier reported that for the year to July 14, Thailand had 589,352 reported cases of Covid-19 and 239 fatalities.

Banpu acquires Bedrock for $370m

Energy conglomerate Banpu Plc has acquired Bedrock Production Llc, which owns upstream and midstream assets in the Barnett Shale in Texas, in the US. The transaction is valued at US$370 million or roughly 12 billion baht.

The company said the budget for the acquisition comes from the issuance of senior notes totalling $260 million and the issuance of new BKV shares to Bedrock Energy Partners Llc amounting to 5.2 million shares, with a total value of $110 million, said Sinon Vongkusolkit, chief executive of Banpu.

“The gas business in the US serves as one of the key pillars for achieving an energy balance, while generating strong cash flow under our energy symphonics strategy,” he said.

The company has focused on other key gas production facilities, power trade and carbon capture technology, which are expected to increase its revenue in the future.

However, the divestments will enable Banpu to scale up the operations of its core operated high-return assets.

This BKV acquisition reflects the company’s continued growth, leveraging the synergy between its strong expertise in high-quality natural gas resources and existing midstream pipeline infrastructure.

This shared infrastructure reduces operating costs, maximises operational efficiency, optimises capital efficiency, enhances competitiveness and significantly increases natural gas reserves.

Banpu said the acquisition further strengthens BKV’s Barnett Shale portfolio with 97,000 acres along with critical midstream infrastructure and an additional 108 million cubic feet equivalent of natural gas of production in the second quarter, comprising 63% natural gas and 37% natural gas liquids.

The assets include 1,121 producing wells and an additional 0.8 trillion of cubic feet of natural gas equivalent of proven reserves. The acquisition adds 50 new drill locations with equivalent 10,000-foot and 80 low-cost refrac locations.

As a result of this acquisition, BKV has recognised the revenue from the operation of this asset from Sept 29, 2025.

The divestments follow Banpu’s announcement in 2023 that it would create continuous growth in the energy business value chain in the US, as well as accelerate its transition towards greener energy.

Banpu sees a positive trend in the US energy industry, enabling the firm to expand its business.

The firm anticipates generating long-term additional revenue from its carbon capture, utilisation and sequestration technology installed at its Barnett shale field.

Vorapak unfazed by loan scandal barbs

A Pheu Thai MP has questioned the government’s decision to appoint Vorapak Tanyawong as deputy finance minister, citing corruption charges filed against him by the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) in relation to the Energy Earth loan scandal.

The issue arose during Monday night’s parliamentary debate on the government’s policy statement under Section 162 of the Constitution, chaired by Deputy House Speaker Mongkol Surasajja.

Loei MP Lertsak Pattanachaikul of Pheu Thai reminded the chamber that in February, the NACC charged Mr Vorapak, then chief executive of Krungthai Bank, and 32 others with allegedly approving loans based on falsified information to benefit Energy Earth Plc. He warned that placing an individual under investigation in charge of financial institutions could erode public trust, particularly in light of the scandal’s scale, which involved tens of billions of baht.

Drawing comparisons with the Stark Corporation fraud, he argued that the Energy Earth case also inflicted widespread economic harm on investors.

Mr Lertsak detailed two key allegations: loans backed by non-existent Indonesian mines used as collateral, and a loan to Earth Holding that was allegedly employed to manipulate Energy Earth’s stock price.

These approvals, he claimed, paved the way for the company to issue debentures worth billions, later sold to thousands of retail investors, thereby deepening financial losses.

“This is not about discrediting the minister’s honour,” Mr Lertsak said. “It is about safeguarding the nation’s interests. Holding a ministerial post is a matter of national dignity.”

He pressed Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul to explain how he could justify the appointment, and what assurances he could offer should the NACC later secure a conviction.

In his response, Mr Vorapak maintained that the allegations were not new and had already been examined when he was appointed advisor to then-Finance Minister Pichai Chunhavajira.

Mr Vorapak further noted that the company only defaulted in 2016, after his departure, due to a sudden withdrawal of creditor support.

“The real damage came after my term ended,” he said. “The facts show this was not fabricated business, but a liquidity crisis beyond management’s control.”

Taiwan says ‘will not agree’ to making 50% of its chips in US

TAIPEI – Taiwan “will not agree” to making 50% of its semiconductors in the United States, the island’s lead tariff negotiator said Wednesday, as Washington pressures Taipei to produce more chips on US soil.

Vice Premier Cheng Li-chiun’s remarks came after US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said he had proposed to Taiwan a 50-50 split in chip production.

“I want to clarify that this is the US’s idea. Our negotiation team has never made a 50-50 commitment to a chip split,” Cheng told reporters in Taipei.

“Please be rest assured that we did not discuss this issue this time, and we will not agree to such a condition,” she said.

Cheng spoke after returning from Washington where she said negotiations over US tariffs on Taiwanese shipments “made some progress”.

Taiwan is struggling to finalise a tariff deal with Washington, after President Donald Trump’s administration imposed a temporary 20% levy that has alarmed the island’s manufacturers.

Trump has also threatened to put a “fairly substantial tariff” on semiconductors coming into the country.

Soaring demand for AI-related technology has fuelled Taiwan’s trade surplus with the United States — and put it in Trump’s crosshairs.

More than 70% of the island’s exports to the United States are information and communications technology, which includes chips, the cabinet said in a statement Wednesday.

In a bid to avoid the tariffs, Taipei has pledged to increase investment in the United States, buy more of its energy and increase its own defence spending to more than three percent of gross domestic product.

Taiwan produces more than half of the world’s semiconductors and nearly all of the high-end ones.

The concentration of chip manufacturing in Taiwan has long been seen as a “silicon shield” protecting it from an invasion or blockade by China, which claims it as part of its territory — and an incentive for the United States to defend it.

In an interview with NewsNation broadcast over the weekend, Lutnick said having 50% of Taiwan’s chip production in the United States would ensure “we have the capacity to do what we need to do if we need to do it”.

“That has been the conversation we’ve had with Taiwan, that you have to understand that it’s vital for you to have us produce 50%,” he said.

“Our goal is to get to 40% market share, and maybe 50% market share, of producing the chips and the wafers, you know the semiconductors we need for American consumption, that’s our objective.”

England’s ‘outsiders’ aim to break trophy drought at Women’s Cricket World Cup

LONDON – England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt hopes her team of “outsiders” can thrive at the Women’s Cricket World Cup as they seek to end a painful eight-year trophy drought.

The team are one of the best-funded in the women’s game but have been overshadowed in recent years by Australia and India.

Since winning the 50-over World Cup at Lord’s in 2017, England have fallen short on the global stage, raising questions about their ability to cope under intense pressure.

They were beaten finalists in 2022, losing by 71 runs to Australia despite an impressive 148 not out from Sciver-Brunt.

England have also underperformed at T20 World Cups, losing to South Africa in the semi-finals in 2023 and failing to make it out of the group stage last year.

Earlier this year they were put firmly in their place by Australia, suffering a humiliating 16-0 loss in the multi-format Women’s Ashes.

But there have been signs of progress under the leadership of all-rounder Sciver-Brunt and coach Charlotte Edwards, both of whom have only been in their posts since April.

England defeated reigning world champions Australia and co-hosts India in tournament warm-up matches, though Sciver-Brunt accepts they will still be the teams to beat.

– ‘Outsiders’ –

“We were never going to be going in as favourites, that’s India and Australia, but not having that label will hopefully free us up,” she said.

“The expectation of being outsiders will spur us on, I guess, but internally we have certain expectations to put something out that we are proud of and compete against the very best teams.

“In terms of the last few world tournaments we’ve been disappointed not to get the results we wanted because we set standards as an England side.

“But having a new coach and new captain, hopefully that is a fresh start in terms of not dwelling on previous tournaments.”

England begin their campaign against South Africa in Guwahati on Friday.

And while a winning start is clearly the aim, the round-robin format of the one-day international tournament, also featuring matches in Sri Lanka, means there is plenty of time to overcome a loss.

Sciver-Brunt, 33, is one of four survivors in the England squad from the victorious 2017 side, together with former skipper Heather Knight, Tammy Beaumont and Danni Wyatt-Hodge.

Back then, England opened their tournament with a defeat by India before recovering strongly.

“We lost our first game in 2017 and came full circle to beat the same team in the final,” said Sciver-Brunt.

“In these tournaments it’s not about how you start, it’s how you finish and if you peak at the right time.”

The minimum expectation for England, whose players now enjoy high-profile domestic competition thanks to the women’s Hundred, will be a semi-final spot.

Mindful of the slow, turning pitches they will encounter in the subcontinent, England have travelled with a quartet of spinners — a decision that led to veteran seamer Kate Cross’s omission from their 15-strong squad.

England’s Sophie Ecclestone is the world’s top-ranked bowler in women’s ODIs, with fellow slow left-armer Linsey Smith, off-spinner Charlie Dean and leg-spinner Sarah Glenn also available to Sciver-Brunt.

Central goes big for Halloween

To celebrate spooktacular Halloween, Central Pattana unleashes 13 haunted houses featuring Thai ghosts at 13 Central shopping centres, nationwide.

Until Oct 31, “Thailand’s Halloween Fest 2025” is held under the concept of “House Of Horror: One House, Every Kind Of Monster” and offers special activities and promotions throughout the month.

At CentralWorld, visitors can expect a fancy parade, trick-or-treating, mini concerts, face-painting as well as costumes and accessories for everyone to dress up and immerse themselves in Halloween festivities.

Thirteen haunted houses with 13 concepts at 13 Central shopping centres nationwide are as follows:

Central Rama 3 hosts “The Haunted Farm” until Oct 18.

Brave “The Ward – The Haunted Hospital” at Central Udon until Oct 31.

Experience immersive horror “Nightmare District” at Central Hatyai from Oct 9-31.

Central Pinklao hosts “Unleash The Fear” from Oct 11-31 where visitors must survive five scary rooms.

For an extended Halloween, Central Ayutthaya’s “Scream House” awaits brave souls from Oct 15-Nov13.

Central Mahachai’s haunted house summons all spooky Thai ghosts from Oct 16-Nov 2.

Brave Central Salaya’s “Haunted School” from Oct 21-Nov 3.

“The Cursed 4th Floor” haunts Central Suratthani from Oct 21-29.

Central Si Racha stands out with a Japan-inspired haunted house. “Yurei Night – The Legend Of A Haunted Night In The Edo Period Of Japan” runs from Oct 22-31.

“Freeze – The Ghost Freezer” at Central Rayong challenges the brave ones to survive the nerve-wracking horror of an abandoned building from Oct 23-26.

Another extended Halloween takes place at Esplanade Ratchada from Oct 24-Nov 16. Experience horrors through all senses with “Art Meets Fear”.

Central Ladprao debuts its first haunted house, “Haunted Passage, The Cursed Tunnel”, from Oct 27-31.

The brave little ones are invited to join the inflatable “Halloween – Haunted House Maze” at Central Chanthaburi from Oct 31-Nov 2.

At CentralWorld, there are other Halloween-inspired activities to enjoy. On Oct 31, dress up in adorable ‘Little Monster’ costumes and enjoy trick-or-treating with candy and treats distributed throughout the shopping centre. From Oct 25-31, join Halloween workshops on the sixth floor. Find mini concerts on the first floor. Lastly, brave ‘The Haunted Gallery’ where Thai folklore and Japanese yokai culture are unleashed through the lens of various artists.

The other activities include Central Ramindra’s Halloween yoga on Oct 4, Central Udon hosts “Monsters On The Race” on Oct 26, while Central Korat hosts a Halloween run where participants run away from ghosts on Oct 31. Expect spooky parades at 20 Central branches nationwide! Spooky workshops take place at 28 Central branches nationwide. Some Central host Halloween-inspired markets, too!

Lastly, new Central X members who meet spending conditions at participating shops and F and B outlets between Oct 10-31 at Central shopping centres nationwide (except Central Rattanathibet and Central Krabi), receive a movie ticket from SF Cinema or Major Cineplex.