However, the exchange costs both Eternal Ice and karma. Unlike other map currency vendors, there is no daily limit for exchanging currency with the vendor in Bjora Marches.
You can buy these for 2,688 karma plus 75 Eternal Ice Shards. The karma merchant Anette Eymundrdottir sells: This is particularly helpful for anyone who is working on the Skyscale collection. Now the question is, what should you do with Eternal Ice Shards? Exchange Eternal Ice For Map Currenciesįor many players, the best use for Eternal Ice Shards is exchanging them for map currencies from other maps. You may even have earned an Eternal Ice node for your home instance. has provided $516 million in humanitarian aid to Afghanistan since August and loosened some restrictions in December to make it easier for humanitarian groups to provide aid without running afoul of sanctions on the Taliban.If you have spent much time in the GW2 Bjora Marches map, you have probably accumulated a lot of Eternal Ice Shards. officials stressed that this is only the beginning of a multi-step, months-long process, which will require actions from the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve and financial institutions that would ultimately administer the funds. claimants who have claims that they have brought into court."īetween the lines: U.S. "We have an independent judiciary and legal system here."I think we are acting responsibly to ensure that a portion of that money can be used to benefit the people of the country where this money was given."."We have $7 billion of assets in the United States that are owned by a country where there's no government," the official said.official stressed that this is an "unprecedented" situation - and that the idea the government could ignore a federal court decision is "flatly wrong." What they're saying: Pressed on whether the administration felt it was acting "responsibly" in light of the catastrophic humanitarian crisis, a senior U.S. and be subject to ongoing litigation from 9/11 victims' families. Even if the court allows half of the assets to be transferred for the benefit of the Afghan people, more than $3.5 billion would remain in the U.S.The families of 9/11 victims have sued the Taliban and are seeking access to the funds in federal court, meaning that any future transfer to Afghanistan for humanitarian purposes will depend on the court's decision.financial institutions to transfer the $7 billion in frozen Afghan assets to a consolidated account held at the New York Fed. Up to a million Afghan children under the age of five could die by the end of the year due to malnutrition and lack of basic services, according to UNICEF.ĭetails: The executive order will require U.S.The crisis has been fueled by mass unemployment and the cessation of international financial aid, which had been the source of over 40% of Afghanistan's GDP under the previous government.Afghanistan is facing an extreme humanitarian crisis, with more than 23 million people suffering from acute hunger. Why it matters: Biden has come under significant pressure to release the U.S.-held assets, which belong to Afghanistan's central bank and were frozen after the Taliban's takeover in August. President Biden signed an executive order on Friday to help enable $7 billion in frozen Afghan assets to be divided between humanitarian relief for the people of Afghanistan and the families of 9/11 victims.