Tag: Poland

  • Rare wildlife spotted in Poland

    Rare wildlife spotted in Poland

    Two unusual black wolves that are believed to be siblings, were caught on camera crossing a stream in a forest in Poland, according to a conservation organization.

    The rare sighting, which was captured on video last year, has prompted the SAVE Wildlife Conservation Fund Poland to retrieve scat droppings in the forest that the wolves were observed in, so scientists can learn more about the genetics of the black wolves.

    The Associated Press reported that the video camera was set up by Joanna Toczydlowska, a project coordinator with the wildlife organization, to study beavers.

    But she was surprised when she reviewed the recorded footage and saw wolves instead. She decided to leave the camera in place to learn more about the rare animals.

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    This image, made from video provided by SAVE Wildlife Conservation Fund Poland, shows a rare black wolf crossing a stream in a Polish forest last summer.  (SAVE Wildlife Conservation Fund Poland via AP)

    “It’s something new and unusual,” Toczydlowska told the wire service.

    In one of the clips captured, a gray wolf and black wolf crossed a stream in the forest, though slowly as the water was nearly up to their bellies. Once near the other side, the two wolves jumped onto the bank before walking away.

    In another clip recorded in the fall, two black wolves and a gray wolf were seen crossing the same stream.

    The researchers would not disclose the location of the sightings, in order to protect the rare wolves.

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    Black and Gray Wolves

    The rare wolves were spotted crossing a stream. (SAVE Wildlife Conservation Fund Poland via AP)

    In Poland, the majority of the nearly 3,000 wolves are gray with red or black accents.

    The black fur is likely from a genetic mutation that occurred with domesticated dogs thousands of years ago.

    In Europe, dark fur is rare, though in Yellowstone National Park in the United States, at least half of the wolf population has black fur.

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    Gray Wolf

    One of the black wolves was spotted with a gray wolf. (SAVE Wildlife Conservation Fund Poland via AP)

    Toczydlowska said the two black wolves were likely siblings and about a year old, which she hypothesized on the basis that wolves travel in families and the two were about 66 pounds. She also said at least one of the black wolves spotted was a male.

    Wolves were nearly extinct in Poland by the 1950s, though the population has rebounded in recent years, particularly in the central part of the country.

    Toczydlowska and her colleagues help educate the public on how to safely live in areas inhabited by packs of wolves.

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    “For people, it’s a new phenomenon,” Roman Gula, head of the organization’s wolf monitoring project, told the AP. “Education is one of our major, major goals.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Europe’s best kept secret: Poland, the region’s economic tiger

    Europe’s best kept secret: Poland, the region’s economic tiger

    Nothing seems to get in the way of Poland going from strength to strength despite being part of the sluggish European Union. There are multiple reasons why and many facets, including the country’s outstanding defense spending and its conservative Donald Trump-like approach to illicit immigration.

    Late last month, Poland’s economy was estimated to have grown by 2.9% last year, according to the country’s StatOffice. That performance trounces Europe’s single currency area, also known as the eurozone, by more than threefold; it eked out a mere 0.7% over the same period. 

    Poland’s growth also overtook the U.S., which grew a robust 2.5% in the 12 months through December. 

    “The last year or two has seen a boom, and it’s getting publicity,” says Mateusz Urban, a senior economist at Oxford Economics in Warsaw, Poland, told FOX Business. “There really is a European tiger right at Germany’s door.”

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    Consumers walk by a shopping center in Warsaw, the capital of Poland, July 4, 2024.  (Dominika Zarzycka/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    This isn’t a one-off event. By 2024, Poland’s economy had grown to 11 times as big as in 1986. That considerably outpaces the U.S., which grew its economy to be six times as big over the same period, according to data from Trading Economics. 

    Urban says a big part of Poland’s fast growth involved unlocking human capital after the collapse of the Soviet Union. During the many decades of USSR rule, the government devoted a lot of effort to educating people in math, science and engineering, and the ongoing impact of those universities and schools is still much appreciated. 

    “These kinds of institutions have a long-lasting legacy,” Urban said. “After 1989, Poland inherited quite a well-organized system that managed to produce a good number of specialists in mechanical engineering and information technology.”

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    That focus on science, tech, engineering and math helped the country build an impressive tech sector estimated to be worth $32 billion, or 4.5% of the economy this year, according to the Mordor Intelligence research company. 

    Polish workers are also “very hardworking, with high standards, and cheaper to employ than people in the United Kingdom,” Elias Haddad, a senior markets strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in London, told FOX Business. 

    Another factor Poland is benefiting from is the appointment of EU veteran Donald Tusk as prime minister in December 2023. Previous to him, the Polish Law and Justice Party, led by Mateusz Jakub Morawiecki, had been sanctioned by the European Commission [EC] due to the belief that Poland’s judiciary was not independent of the government. 

    “The party were not abiding by some of the EU rules,” Haddad says.

    flags

    The white and red national flag of Poland and the flag of the European Union in Brandenburg.  (Patrick Pleul/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The result was the EC held back EU funds meant to help Poland. But now with Tusk firmly in the hot seat, EU money should all be released, giving the economy yet another boost.

    While the country is growing fast, it is also on the front line of NATO, the military alliance founded after WWII, bordering Ukraine. The country is expected to spend 4.7% of its GDP on defense this year, which is a larger percentage than any other NATO member, and it led the way in 2024 as well. 

    “We are aware that Germany won’t be able to rescue Poland,” Urban says. “That’s why the government is pushing spending to near 5% of GDP.” 

    For decades, Germany failed to reach its NATO commitment of spending at least 2% of GDP on defense, according to the World Bank. In 2024, it reached 2.1%.

    While Poland has responded positively to the Ukraine-Russia war during that time, it has also taken on a burden of more than 7 million refugees from Ukraine. 

    “Since the war, we became an attractive place for immigration and refugees,” Marcin Klucznik, a senior advisor for the world economy team at the Polish Economic Institute, told FOX Business. 

    Make POland great again hat

    A man wears a “Make Poland Great Again” cap while attending the Independence March celebrating the 106th anniversary of Poland regaining independence in Warsaw, Poland Nov. 11, 2024. (Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    However, that massive influx has led to discussions of who Poland wants to attract to its country, Klucznik says. Last month Rafał Trzaskowski, a candidate for Poland’s presidency, requested the government stop paying so-called child benefit subsidies to Ukrainians with children but who aren’t officially working. He has stated that only those working and paying their taxes should get aid from the state.

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    Klucznik said the country is conservative and cautious with its immigration policy. 

    “We are aware of some of the mistakes made by other European countries such as Germany, France and the U.K., and we want to avoid some of that,” he said. 

    In particular, those three large countries have failed to get many immigrants to integrate fully into the local culture. 

  • Poland president says Trump’s ‘comeback’ reverses the ‘hurt, damage’ done by Biden

    Poland president says Trump’s ‘comeback’ reverses the ‘hurt, damage’ done by Biden

    The President of Poland, Andrzej Duda, is expressing his hope for clear and efficient international relations under President Donald Trump’s second administration – the alleged opposite of what the European nation faced with the Biden White House.

    “I belong to those European politicians and to those European observers who are looking at the comeback of President Donald Trump to the White House in a very calm way,” President Duda told FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo via translator at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

    During his first week in the Oval Office, Trump reversed many of the policies penned during President Joe Biden’s tenure, including export limitations on artificial intelligence chips to Poland.

    “In Poland, we have a feeling that we have been hurt by this decision,” Duda said, “and there is a deep sense of disappointment with this policy and decisions taken by President Biden and his administration.”

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    “As a result of that decision, Poland has found itself among the countries which are not in the first tier of U.S. allies. So we have been pushed to second or even third tier of those countries who are not very highly trusted by the United States. So it is also my feeling, my personal feeling that it has caused some hurt and damage here in Poland,” he expanded.

    Poland President Andrzej Duda tells FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo how President Donald Trump will make the Central European country a “first tier” ally again. (Getty Images)

    Duda met with Trump last April in New York where they had “a very long discussion” about the expected foreign policy changes between the two nations. 

    In Friday’s “Mornings with Maria” appearance, Duda said he’s awaiting the “continuation” of Trump’s “experience” gained during his first four years as president.

    “He has brought forward very clear arguments concerning relations between the United States and European countries, especially those rich countries, those very affluent countries. And the arguments that President Donald Trump has presented have been very logical and very clear,” Duda noted. 

    “And I do believe that Donald Trump is right.”

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    Poland and the U.S. share similar views on domestic border security, according to Duda, and both countries are “determined” to end Russia’s war on Ukraine which began nearly three years ago. 

    “[Trump] is very much determined and he’s got this very out-of-the-box view of politics. So if he’s saying that, I believe that this is going to come true,” Duda said, “it is going to happen.”

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