
But one day they handed him a very different sort of script It was the Shipping Forecast. He was an announcer, which meant he read the news. RM: Peter started working for the BBC back in the 60s. I used to work for the BBC for about a lifetime and a half, and one of the things I did there was to read the Shipping Forecast. RM: And that voice you hear reading it is Peter Jefferson Southwest 4 or five increasing 5 or 6 occasionally 7 later occasional rain moderate or good. RM: This cryptic, mesmerizing mumbo-jumbo is the Shipping Forecast, the UK’s nautical weather report.

Rain or showers moderate or good, occasionally poor. PJ: Viking North Utsire Southwesterly 5 to 7. RM: Four times every day, on radios all across the British Isles, a BBC announcer begins reading from a seemingly indecipherable script. PJ: And now the shipping forecast issued by the Met Office on behalf of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency at double 015 on Monday the 21st of September. "Serac, your reliable partner for hygienic bottle & cup filling solutions. We listen, adapt & deliver machines for your unique needs.RM: And now 99% Invisible, I’m Roman Mars. While he says no country has preferential access to the Indian market, he does think high-value dairy products and ingredients from well developed markets will be in demand as the country grows and commercializes. Rattray has been producing dairy in India for more than a decade.

Next up is Earl Rattray, chair of the India New Zealand Business Council and a founding director of Fonterra. policymakers make inroads in both the short and long run? Bomer shares her experience and insights.

As a former negotiator, Bomer has sat across the table from India’s top trade officials. Trade Representative for agricultural affairs and commodity policy. How then can the United States gain significant market access? In the latest episode of The Dairy Download, we speak with two experts about the policy and business opportunities ahead for dairy trade.įirst up is Sharon Bomer Lauritsen, former assistant U.S. The world’s most populous country consumes more dairy than any other country in the world, but it also produces the most milk.
