Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, January 6, 2019

As China feels US tariffs bite, a chill spreads around the world

A vendor waits for customers at his market stall in Shenyang in China’s north-eastern Liaoning province. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images

 and  in Beijing-

Talks begin this week in Beijing to end the trade war – and even titans such as Apple are feeling its impact

It epitomises China’s position in the global economy that a seismic warning about its health last week came from a US company: Apple. The iPhone maker cut sales forecasts, citing the unforeseen “magnitude” of the economic slowdown in China – a vital growth market. At the same time the head of Baidu, China’s biggest search engine, warned his employees that “winter is coming” in the world’s second-largest economy.

If China is indeed entering an economic winter, then the chill will spread around the globe. Forty years after communist China opened its doors to trade with the west in a dash for growth, the country’s mix of free-market policies and central planning faces one of its sternest tests.
China’s central bank said on Friday it was cutting the amount of cash that banks have to hold as reserves for the fifth time in a year, freeing up $116bn (£92bn) for new lending, as it tried to reduce the risk of a sharp economic slowdown.

This week US negotiators will travel to Beijing for a crucial round of talks with their Chinese counterparts in an attempt to break the deadlock in a year-long dispute over trade tariffs. Global markets, worried about the impact of tariffs on growth, have suffered a jump in volatility over recent months, with investors oscillating between exuberant optimism and despondency about the outcome.
tcome.
Despite a near 20% fall in the US stock market between October and last month, some investors believe there are reasons for hope. They think Beijing might blink first in talks because the Chinese have much to lose by maintaining their objections to President Trump’s demands over trade imbalances, market access and alleged abuses of intellectual property.

Beijing has downplayed the impact of extra tariffs on around £200bn of Chinese imports into the US. But the evidence from businesses and commentators inside China is clear: the dispute is hurting. And Trump’s threat to impose tariffs on almost $300bn of extra imports in March, including a 25% charge on imported cars, would be catastrophic.

“China’s economy was already set to slow in 2019, but the trade dispute has added to it another set of intense pressures,” said Shehzad Qazi, managing director of China Beige Book International, an analysis firm that specialises in the Chinese economy.
China’s exporting regions in the south have felt the impact most. “While it would be a mistake to attribute this primarily to the trade war, the severe deterioration in foreign orders, especially in the export-sensitive Guangdong region, stands out as a stark example of the pain the tariff war is already causing. If tariffs escalate further after 1 March, the added pressure on the Chinese economy will prove excruciating,” Qazi said.

In December, local media in the manufacturing hub of Shenzhen reported that Mindrey Medical, a medical equipment company, had dismissed more than 200 employees, all recent graduates. The company responded saying that it had “needed staff with more experience”.

Companies in Guangdong have been letting workers off early for the Chinese New Year break, known as Spring Festival, which usually last a few weeks. Janus, an electronics manufacturer in Dongguan, in Guangdong province, let workers off from 1 December until 30 April.
Wang Changqiu, the manager of Tuke, a sports equipment factory in Guangzhou in Guangdong, said the firm had started to feel the impact of the trade war. Tuke exports almost all its products and just under half go to the US. The firm has already been hit by the weakening yuan, which has cut into slim profit margins. The company had been trying to reduce its reliance on the US market, said Changqiu. “The trade war is bad for us and it impacts not only us, but our customers. We’re very worried,” he said.

The slowdown is also being felt in China’s hinterland. In Chengdu, the largest city in the south-western province of Sichuan, blocks of shops in the new business district of Chengdu High Tech Zone have been empty for months. A property manager said the company that owns them had been trying to sell them quickly because it needed the money.

In Wuhouci, a Tibetan neighbourhood popular with tourists, streets were mostly empty over the new year, a two-day national holiday in China. A shop owner selling Buddhist art and iconography said business had been hard over the past year. “No one has money to buy anything,” he said.
The impact of the US tariffs is expected to be felt more keenly starting from this month, now that major shopping seasons – Black Friday, Christmas, and China’s Singles’ Day on 11 November – have passed, analysts say.

China’s small and medium-sized manufacturing companies, traditionally the backbone of the economy, are bearing the brunt, according to Ye Tan, an independent economist based in Shanghai. “Economic figures have already started to reflect the downturn but we cannot tell exactly how awful it is,” Ye said. “For some technology companies or larger companies that have bargaining power, the impact is not so big.”

Underscoring Beijing’s weak position, President Xi Jinping backtracked on a ban on US soybeans in the summer and last month cut an extra tariff on car imports. These concessions preceded Trump’s agreement to suspend for 90 days the almost $300bn of further tariffs he had planned to impose this month – and start talks.
But Xi has more than just his battle with the US to contend with. Since the 2008 financial crisis, China’s large state-owned enterprises, most of which are involved in heavy manufacturing or energy production, have only kept going with heavy borrowing.

In an attempt to rein in the most indebted firms and foster a move away from manufacturing, in 2017 Beijing imposed tighter borrowing restrictions. These were also designed to dampen a property market that had led to steep price rises in the big cities. However, they served to undermine consumer confidence and slow growth, to the extent that some government advisers fear there could be social and political unrest.

Yu Yongding, a former member of the central bank’s monetary policy committee, who has advised policymakers for years, was quoted by the China Business News as saying: “China’s experiences in the last 40 years have told us that all the problems will worsen if we can’t maintain economic growth rate at a certain level.

“Without a certain level of economic growth speed, structural adjustments or economic system reform will be baseless,” said Yu, who is a senior research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Diana Choyleva, a longtime China watcher and head of consultancy Enodo Economics, believes modern China is in the midst of its most difficult test yet. “In my 20 years of covering China’s economy and markets, this is the most worried I’ve ever been about the party’s ability to keep the show on the road.”

Last week the central bank changed the definition of a small business to allow more firms to benefit from low borrowing rates. Economists estimate that this will result in the release of $210bn into the economy in the form of cheap loans.

An auto parts factory in Huanghua City, north China’s Hebei Province. Photograph: Xinhua/Barcroft Images

Choyleva said the various stimulus policies will give the first half of the year a boost before growth falls back again. She has told her clients to sell shares in Chinese companies whenever the local market rises because the boost to values will be short-lived.

But while the reports of suffering of Chinese exporters might cheer the US negotiating team, they don’t hold all the cards. Apple and General Motors have complained that the tariff war is hurting their businesses too, as China is a vital market.

The White House is also waking up to the prospect of a slowing economy now that the effects of tax cuts in 2017 are waning. With re-election in 2020 uppermost in Trump’s mind, he must consider the electoral benefits of a long battle with China against the negative impact on economic growth. As Apple indicated last week, this could be a deep winter for everyone.

Wang Xueying contributed additional reporting

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Moscow says FBI arrested Russian a day after it detained ex-U.S. Marine



Maxim RodionovBarbara Goldberg-JANUARY 5, 2019

MOSCOW/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Russian Foreign Ministry said on Saturday the United States had detained a Russian citizen, a day after Moscow arrested the former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan on suspicion of spying.

Whelan was taken into custody by Russia’s Federal Security Service on Dec. 28. His family have said he is innocent and that he was in Moscow to attend a wedding.

The ministry said the United States detained Russian citizen Dmitry Makarenko on Dec. 29 on the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. commonwealth in the Pacific Ocean, and had transferred him to Florida.

“... Makarenko, born in 1979, has arrived on Saipan Island with his wife, underage children and elderly parents. He was detained by FBI personnel at the airport right after his arrival,” the ministry said.

The U.S. Embassy in Moscow could not immediately be reached for comment. A State Department spokesman in Washington referred a request for comment to the Department of Justice, which did not immediately respond.

Papers filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida show Makarenko was accused in June 2017 by federal prosecutors of conspiring with another man, Vladimir Nevidomy, to export defense articles including night-vision scopes from the United States to Russia without U.S. approval.
Makarenko, who was listed as a resident of Vladivostok, was declared a fugitive from U.S. justice in Jan. 2018. Nevidomy, a resident of Hallandale Beach, Florida, pleaded guilty in June 2018 and was sentenced to 26 months in prison, the court papers showed.

The accusations from both sides could further complicate a strained relationship between Moscow and Washington, despite the professed desire of Presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin to build a personal rapport.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said this week that Washington had asked Moscow to explain Whelan’s arrest and would demand his immediate return if it determined his detention is inappropriate.

Britain cautioned Russia on Friday that individuals should not be used as diplomatic pawns. Whelan also holds a British passport.

The Russian ministry said in its statement that Moscow diplomats had not been able to reach Makarenko in Florida and said Washington had yet to explain his detention.

Before Moscow gave details of Makarenko’s detention, experts had speculated that Moscow could exchange Whelan for Russian nationals held by Washington.

Commenting on that possibility, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said on Saturday:
 
Slideshow (2 Images)

“I see no reasons to raise this issue in context of exchanges. We should undergo all the procedures needed in this situation,” Interfax news agency quoted Ryabkov as saying.

Whelan’s Toronto-based twin brother David Whelan told Reuters on Saturday that U.S. embassy officials met with his sibling on Wednesday and would visit him again next week.

“He seemed as well as can be expected in a Russian jail. He was missing a lot of personal necessities, like toilet paper, that aren’t provided,” David Whelan said in a telephone interview. “So the State Department has helped us set up an account ... so that he can buy the supplies that he needs.”

Reporting by Maxim Rodionov in Moscow and Barbara Goldberg in New York; Additional reporting by Yeganeh Torbati in Washington; Editing by Alison Williams and Diane Craft

Ramsgate port dredged as no-deal Brexit preparations gather steam

4 Jan 2019
The DUP has declared again today that it won’t vote for Theresa May’s deal, so a disorderly Brexit is becoming a distinct possibility, triggering a frenzy of preparations more akin to times of conflict.
University leaders warned today that such a Brexit would be catastrophic for research and funding.
More than 1,000 English and Scottish police officers are being trained for extra duty in case of a hard border on the island of Ireland.
And then there are the ports being prepped for an armada of emergency ferries.

As Hodeidah's ceasefire holds, life begins to trickle back into the city


A UN-brokered truce has brought an uneasy peace and some hope to the Yemeni city's residents, just when they feared the worst
A Yemeni boy sells freshly-caught fish in the embattled Red Sea port city of Hodeidah on 1 January (AFP)

Friday 4 January 2019 
SANAA - The ceasefire in Yemen's Hodeidah may be fragile, occasionally threatened by skirmishes and just days old, but it has breathed new life into the Red Sea port city.
More and more, people are walking in the streets without fear of bombardment or snipers.
Shutters are rising in abandoned shops, while the once-ubiquitous sounds of explosions and air strikes have become a scarcity since the truce took hold on 18 December.
It is a happy outcome for Hodeidah's residents, who, before United Nations-brokered talks between pro-government forces and Houthi rebels resulted in the truce, were suffering under a ferocious battle for control of the city.
Ibrahim Haidar, a pharmacist in Hodeidah, told Middle East Eye that the city's residents are "inhaling peace" again after more than five months of violence.
"Peace is the most important issue for us. If there is peaceful environment, we can work and feed our families. But war is the source of everything bad," he said.
If there is peaceful environment, we can work and feed our families. But war is the source of everything bad
- Ibrahim Haidar, Hodeidah resident
Like many other shopkeepers, Haidar reopened his pharmacy almost immediately after the UN ceasefire monitoring team arrived in the city on 23 December.
"People trust the UN, and the presence of the UN team in Hodeidah means that no party will dare to violate the truce. This has encouraged displaced people to return and people to resume their investments in the city," he said.
The UN envoy for Yemen arrived in Sanaa on Saturday for talks to shore up the ceasefire, AFP said.
Martin Griffiths is scheduled to hold talks in Sanaa with Houthi rebel leaders before visiting Saudi capital Riyadh to meet Yemeni government officials. Houthi sources said Griffiths would visit Hodeida city on Sunday.
While in Sanaa he will also meet retired Dutch general Patrick Cammaert, who has been appointed by the UN to head a truce monitoring team.
Some fighting has broken out since the UN team, led by Cammaert, entered the city. However, the skirmishes have been limited to Hodeidah's outskirts, keeping the ceasefire largely unblemished.
Grooms sit during their weddings on a street of the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah, days after a ceasefire was ratified by Yemen's warring parties (Reuters)
Before the ceasefire took hold, Houthis and pro-government forces battled just a few kilometres from Hodeidah's highly strategic port.
Some 70 percent of all Yemen's food imports and humanitarian aid passes through the facility, and with 16 million Yemenis currently on the brink of famine, a humanitarian catastrophe could have erupted were fighting to reach the port.
Luckily work there has not been interrupted for a single day, and many basic items remain available in Hodiedah's markets and elsewhere in Yemen.
"Food items, medicines and all commodities are available in the market," Haidar said.
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But Yemen is also suffering under a severe economic crisis, with the rial losing more than half its value since the war broke out in 2015 and prices rising in tandem.
So not only are many basic items prohibitively expensive for Yemenis, the battle for Hodeidah has also cost much of the city's population their jobs.
"The next urgent step, which residents of Hodeidah need, is withdrawal of warring parties out of the city, so people can resume their work in fishing, farming and other jobs," Haidar stressed.
Many of Hodeidah's residents are farmers, labourers or fisherman, but the war has devastated agricultural land, impeded fisherman and forced factories to close.

Return from displacement

Since fighting in and around Hodeidah erupted in June, more than half a million people have been displaced, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.
However, in the past two weeks many of those displaced have returned to their homes after months seeking safety elsewhere.
Nasser al-Buraey, 41, fled his house in Hodeidah's al-Hali district in July for the rebel-held capital Sanaa after the battles approached his neighbourhood. Once in Sanaa, he and his family lived inside a school which has been turned into a camp for the displaced.
"In Sanaa, I lived with my five children and wife inside one classroom, and we suffered so much trying to get food, medicine and all other needs," Buraey told MEE.
"Moreover, my children stopped studying because I cannot afford it."
Buraey used to work as a courier in Hodeidah city, but he sold his motorbike to pay for transportation to Sanaa and some basic items for his family there.
Now he is unemployed and without any income.
"The camp supervisors used to provide us with meals, but the food was never enough for us. In all ways life in the camp was worse than life amid war," he said.
People gather near stalls with used tools on a street in Hodeidah (Reuters)
When Buraey heard about the ceasefire in Hodeidah he became very optimistic that he could take his family home, who craved the warmth of the Red Sea city after weeks in wintry Sanaa.
"The ceasefire came at the right time, as the cold of Sanaa in recent weeks has been unbearable and my children suffered from bad headaches because of the weather," Buraey said.
"I was cautious about returning to my house, but when the UN team arrived to Hodeidah, immediately next day I returned my house."
I was cautious about returning to my house, but when the UN team arrived to Hodeidah, immediately next day I returned my house
- Nasser al-Buraey, Hodeidah resident
Though Buraey is now unemployed in Hodeidah, he is happy to be home. His friends occasionally give him some work to do in the market, so he has just enough money to buy food for his family.
Humanitarian organisations play an important role in helping Hodeidah's residents, and according to Haidar their presence in the city has increased following the ceasefire.
"When the fierce clashes arrived to the city some organisations fled the city before us, which was a normal result of the battles. But when people started to return the city, the organisations resumed their work," he said.
"Some organsations reopened their offices in the city and, most importantly, we began to receive food and other basic items."

Safety in Sanaa

Not all people displaced from Hodeidah city have returned to their homes.
Many are still scattered across several provinces, as their houses lie between the Houthi and the pro-government forces lines.
Abu Mohammed fled his house near Hodeidah's airport in July when the area became an early front line in the pro-government assault on the Houthi-held city.
Now he and seven of his family live in a small tent buffeted by winds near Sanaa's old city.
He has not returned to Hodeidah because his house is between the two warring parties.
"No one wants to live inside a tent in this cold weather, but we cannot return to our house and the only choice is to live inside a tent," he said.
A woman displaced from the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah looks from a tent shelter in Sanaa (Reuters)
Abu Mohammed is thinking about going back and pitching up a tent in Hodeidah. He is unemployed, so cannot afford to rent a home in the city.
He's concerned, though, that there are many needy people in Hodeidah and fewer humanitarian groups and initiatives present, so it might be more difficult to feed his family.
''There are some people in Sanaa who know my suffering and they help me with food, but in Hodeidah I may not find people to help me," he said. "Peace is not enough for me unless there is food for my family."
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Abu Mohammed used to work as a labourer in Hodeidah’s markets, but now he depends on charitable people to help him find food. Sometimes he begs people in mosques to help him with money to buy some commodities for his family.
Back in Hodeidah, Haidar hopes things will only improve further, so wealth and more displaced people can return to the city.
The ceasefire is the first step towards a peaceful solution, he noted.
"This is the first time that the warring parties adhered to a ceasefire, so I hope this is the first step towards the implementation of the outcomes of peace talks that can lead to the end of the war," he said.

Kerala’s conservative backlash stems from vote bank politics


While it is obvious that the temple entry issue is being used by the political parties to garner support ahead of the April-May parliamentary elections, there has been a long-standing dispute over the ‘tradition’ of not allowing women of the reproductive age (10 to 50) to worship at the temple

logoSaturday, 5 January 2019 

Kerala has been in unprecedented political and social turmoil since 28 September 2018. It was on that day that the Indian Supreme Court had allowed women of all age groups to worship at the 800-year-old shrine for Lord Ayyappa at Sabarinala.

Conservatives Hindus were up in arms against the judgment,as leftists and liberals braced themselves to face a conservative onslaught.

The highest Court in the land had struck downRule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Rules, 1965 which barred women of “reproductive age” (10 to 50) from worshiping at the shrine devoted to a deity who is believed to be celibate.

Initially, the Court’s verdict only triggered a verbal debate between conservatives and traditionalists, on the one hand,and progressiveson the other. But given the support the verdict was getting from the ruling Left Democratic Front (LDF) –withthe State Government offering to give Police protection to women who want to worship at the hill shrine–theissue got politicised, though the Government’s intention was merely to implement a Court order.

The BharatiyaJanata Party (BJP), which is in power in the Central Government in New Delhi, quickly sensed the political value of the issue in Kerala, where it isyet to make its presence felt.

In the 2014 parliamentary electionsthe BJP did not get a single seat from the 20 up for grabs and in the 2016 State Assembly electionsit got just one of the 140 seats. This is quite strange since Kerala has large and politically-organised Muslim and Christian populations. In theory, Kerala should be a happy hunting ground for a Hindutva party like the BJP, but in practice it has not been.

No wonder then that the BJP, which is now trying hard to enter SouthIndia, should want to reawaken and build a Hindutva constituency for itself. And the fact that the next Indian parliamentary elections are due in April-Maythis yeargives this project some urgency.

The BJP reawakened the dormant pro-Hindutva and conservative Hindu and caste outfits in Kerala. And, with the help of the head of the Ayyappa temple, a local Prince who is committed to maintaining tradition as he sees it, kicked off a movement opposing the verdict.

The once-militant Nair Service Society (NSS), which had forced Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to dismiss Kerala’s first Communist government in July 1959, was reactivated. The NSS filed an appeal against the Supreme Court judgment. The appeal is to be heard on 22 January this year.

With the BJP taking up the issue against the LDF Government, the Congress party, which sees the LDF as its principal rival in the State and the BJP as its rival at the all-India level, also jumped into the fray to claim a share of the political cake.

To awaken the left, and the non-communal and liberal constituency,the LDF organised a 631-km-long women’s human wall (the VanithaMadhil), a human chain across Kerala. To counter this, the Hindutva outfits under the umbrella organisation Sabarimala Action Council (SAC) shut down the State on Thursday with a call for a dawn-to-dusk hartal.

A BJP activist was sacrificed in the struggle while the temple authorities carried out a “purifying rite” after two women sympathisers of the LDF, Bindu and Kanakadurga, offered worship at thetemple with Policeprotection.

The State Congress party also joined the protests and announced that it is observing Thursday as a “Black Day,” leaving the CPI(M)-led Government to hold the fort against a mounting conservative offensive.

Controversy over tradition 

While it is obvious that the temple entry issue is being used by the political parties to garner support ahead of the April-May parliamentary elections, there has been a long-standing dispute over the ‘tradition’ of not allowing women of the reproductive age (10 to 50) to worship at the temple.

The traditionalists say that Lord Ayyappa is a celibate and that his celibacy has to be protected from women of the reproductive age group.But others say that Lord Ayyappa is gender neutral because he was born of the union of Lord Shiva and Lord Vishnu (with Vishnu coming in the form of Mohini, a celestial seductress). Therefore, it is argued that gender and the reproductive age group should not be an issue with him at all.

The progressivesalso point out that the current dispute is between the need to maintain the sanctity of a claimedor a controversial tradition and the need to enforce a constitutional right to gender equality. The latter should get precedence in this day and age, they argue.

Hinduisation of Buddhist deity?

According to historian A. Sreedhara Menon, there was no bar on entry of women till 1950. It was in 1950 that the “Hinduisation” of the Ayyappa temple and the Ayyappa cult began, he avers. And with “Hinduisation” came the ban on women of the reproductiveage group.Menon proffers the theory that the Ayyappa cult was originally Buddhist but itacquired Brahmanicalovertones over time.

Unlike Brahminical Hinduism, the Ayyappa cult is non-casteist and equalitarian, he points out. It stresses not elaborate and expensive rituals butsimple abstemiousness.

“Ayyappa devotees strictly follow non-violence, vegetarianism and abstention from sex during the two months before the pilgrimage. It resembles the Ahimsa principles practiced by Buddhists,” Menon is quoted as saying.

In her chapter in ‘Introduction to Kerala Studies,’M.Srikala Nair says that LordAyyappa is but a representation of the NilakanthaAvalokiteswara depicted in the Buddhist texts.

Unlike Brahminical Hinduism, which is exclusivist, the Ayyappa cult is non-discriminatoryand syncretic, representing a long-standing folk-level integration of religions in India. This is seen when Ayyappa devotees visit a shrine for a Muslim devotee of his called Vavar (or Babar) on their way to the hill-top Ayyappa shrine. And when they come down after worship at the Ayyappa temple, the devotees visit a church to return their malas (string of beads) which they had worn as part of the period of abstemiousness ahead of the pilgrimage.

It is said that the ‘Hinduisation’ of the ancient and indigenous Ayyappa cult began in 1950 when a major fire damaged the temple. The Hindu Mahamandalam, which cropped up at that time, called for a hartal (general strike) andconducted a ceremony to re-install the idol and purify the temple on 25June1950.

Under the leadership of Akhila Bhartha Ayyappa Seva Sangam, an ‘AyyappaJyothi’ (Ayyappa’s Torch) was ceremonially taken around Kerala and Tamil Nadu.Later, restriction on the entry of women was enforced, albeit, fitfully and imperfectly under Rule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Rules, 1965.

But a definitive ban came only after a 1991 Kerala High Court ruling, it is said.

Both the conservatives and progressives had presented their cases on various occasions in the past, and continue to do so. The progressives point out that the ban on women was never strictly imposed. It is recalled that in 1939, the Maharani of Tranvancore had conducted a ritual for her child in front of the sanctum sanctorum.

The Director of the Travancore Devaswom Board (which regulates the affairs of Hindu temples) had submitted in writing in 1991 that the ban on women was not part of the temple’s customs. It is also pointed out by Malayalam writer N.S.Madhavan that as recently as 1986, a dance sequence in the Tamil film NambinaalKeduvadhillai, starring Jayashree, was shot on the 18steps leading to the temple.

According to some accounts, in the past, women were barred only on three occasions in a year. Others say that they could go up to a point but not the sanctum sanctorum and that they are only forbidden to take the holy 18 steps towards the sanctum sanctorum.

Brazil Was a Global Leader on Climate Change. Now It’s a Threat.

Jair Bolsonaro’s government could roll back decades of progress on clean energy and reducing deforestation.

A view of an 800-hectare solar farm in Pirapora, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, on Nov. 9, 2017. (Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images)
A view of an 800-hectare solar farm in Pirapora, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, on Nov. 9, 2017. (Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images)

No photo description available.
BY , 
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This coming November, delegates from nearly every country had been scheduled to gather in Brazil to discuss climate change at the 25th United Nations Conference of the Parties. When the meeting was planned, Brazil seemed a logical choice to host it. Not anymore.
Brazil depends more on renewable energy sources (including biofuels) than any of the world’s other large energy consumers. And between 2005 and 2012, it also ran a successful campaign to reduce deforestation by about 80 percent. But the election of Jair Bolsonaro as Brazil’s president has thrown the country’s status as an environmental beacon into doubt.

In November 2018, Brazil withdrew its offer to host the climate conference, citing the government transition process and budgetary constraints. Bolsonaro, who took office Jan. 1, clearly believes that economic development is at odds with environmental protection and that considerations about the planet should not be allowed to inhibit industry, particularly Brazil’s huge agricultural sector. During the campaign Bolsonaro earned the support of Brazil’s agribusiness lobby, the ruralistas, which make up one of the country’s most powerful congressional blocs. While corporate campaign donations are illegal in Brazil, many wealthy ruralistas are able to self-fund their campaigns and get elected; as a result, they have become a powerful force in Congress, and Bolsonaro needs their backing.

The newly inaugurated president has grumbled that environmental policy is “suffocating” the economy. He has threatened to withdraw Brazil from the Paris agreement on climate change (although he recanted after an international backlash). His environment minister, Ricardo Salles, is a former legal director of the Brazilian Rural Society, an agricultural group, and was fined this past December for changing plans for an environmentally protected area to benefit businesses in the state of São Paulo when he was head of an environmental agency there. Bolsonaro has also promised to remove some protections for the Amazon rainforest, including by rolling back indigenous reserves, such as Raposa Serra do Sol—he has advocated for agriculture and mining exploration there and said the area is too large for its inhabitants. In one of his first acts as president he shifted the power to regulate and create indigenous reserves—which account for about 13 percent of Brazil’s territory, including vast swaths of rainforest—from the National Indian Foundation agency to the agriculture ministry. On the plus side, Bolsonaro does advocate expanding wind and solar energy and reducing dependence on coal and oil for power generation, but he has offered few details on how he plans to do so. He also supports ethanol incentives, popular with Brazil’s sugar cane lobby, but has expressed no plans to support other forms of clean transport.

Brazil already has one of the cleanest electricity portfolios in the world.Throughout 2018, about 65 percent of its electricity supply came from large hydropower projects, and more than 15 percent came from wind, solar, and biomass. Interest in large-scale hydropower development is waning, as most remaining potential projects are located in environmentally sensitive or indigenous areas. Meanwhile, auctions for wind and solar projects have generated bids to produce renewable power at some of the lowest prices in the world and attracted $6 billion of investment in 2017.

Even if large-scale hydropower development has reached a point of diminishing returns, there is still progress to be made on other renewable sources. For now, wind power accounts for nearly 8 percent of electricity supply. Solar makes up just 0.5 percent but is growing at an impressive clip. Bolsonaro’s campaign website proposed speeding up environmental licensing for small-scale hydroelectric plants and developing a local industry to produce, install, and maintain solar panels in the country’s impoverished northeast, which is home to abundant solar and wind resources. However, the new president himself has scarcely addressed the issue in public remarks, and it’s unclear that renewable energy will be a priority for his government.

Meanwhile, as the largest car market in Latin America—it accounts for over half the region’s vehicle sales—Brazil also needs to build on advances in reducing transport sector emissions. It is already the world’s second-largest biofuels producer, and it has the largest market of flex-fuel vehicles, which can run on pure ethanol. The RenovaBio program, launched by the government in 2017, aims to reduce the carbon intensity of gasoline by 10 percent by 2028. The program will do this by introducing carbon savings credits that incentivize fuel distributors to blend their products with more biofuels. The aim is to gradually increase the share of biofuels in Brazil’s total fuel supply from 20 percent to nearly 30 percent. Since the election last October, Bolsonaro has expressed his support for Brazil’s biofuels sector, a stance consistent with his close ties to agricultural interests. Thus biofuels are one point where agricultural and environmental interests converge, a political opportunity that Bolsonaro could seize.

The country also has a nascent but promising electric vehicles market. Electric vehicles improve local air quality and, when charged with renewable electricity, produce zero emissions—something biofuel cars cannot achieve. São Paulo and nearby Campinas have been regional leaders in launching public fleets of electric buses, which are estimated to be less expensive over their lifetime than conventional buses because of lower fuel and maintenance costs. There is potential for a new local industry, too. For now, few electric vehicles are made in Brazil. But in 2015, the Chinese car and bus manufacturer BYD opened its first Latin American factory in Campinas to make buses, and the company is expected to begin manufacturing electric vehicle battery cells in Amazonas state using locally sourced lithium by the end of the year. This development demonstrates how promoting clean transport policies can also create jobs and boost economic development, something that may well appeal to Bolsonaro.

But the most important contribution Brazil can make to global climate health is reducing deforestation.But the most important contribution Brazil can make to global climate health is reducing deforestation. Under the Paris climate agreement, Brazil committed to eliminating illegal deforestation in the Amazon and reforesting 12 million hectares by 2030. The country’s efforts in this respect matter on a global scale: The Amazon is estimated to contain 10 percent of the world’s biomass, absorbing and storing massive amounts of atmospheric carbon dioxide. In 2015, 46 percent of Brazil’s greenhouse gas emissions resulted from land use change, such as deforestation and increase in croplands, and the huge decline in Brazil’s emissions between 2005 and 2012 owed mostly to a reduction in deforestation. This suggests that progress is possible, but the rise in deforestation since 2012 means Brazil has to do more. Unfortunately, Bolsonaro has actively undermined forest protection efforts, foreshadowing dire results.

Policies to promote renewable power, clean transport, and conservation have made Brazil a global climate role model in recent decades, but Bolsonaro represents a serious threat to this progress and could lead to the tragic loss of a major world economy from the coalition fighting climate change.
Between now and 2027, the country’s power capacity is projected to grow by more than 30 percent, and renewables will account for only 71 percent of this growth. In other words, clean energy will not even keep pace with demand, much less increase as a share of power in the energy mix. Electricity regulators must oversee the upgrading of the grid to integrate more intermittent renewable energy sources like wind and solar and increase incentives for small-scale generation, such as rooftop solar panels. Tax exemptions, currently offered for solar panels and the like in more than 20 states, should be expanded.

In the transport sector, the expansion of biofuels should not come through clearing protected land for sugar cane production, but rather through land productivity gains, for example through more efficient and sustainable use of fertilizer. And although electric car battery prices continue to fall, the price of electric cars is still prohibitive for most Brazilians. New incentives (and an end to fuel subsidies, which, unfortunately, has proven highly unpopular in the very recent past) will be required to encourage their uptake.

Finally, Brazil must expand protected areas and safeguard existing ones, including indigenous reserves, from encroachment. It should improve deforestation monitoring and better enforce the forest code while also strengthening this set of regulations with more severe penalties. The country could explore an emissions trading scheme, something that is being tested by more than 30 major Brazilian companies. Such a scheme could allow for companies to offset carbon emissions with reforestation, which has a low average cost relative to other mitigation efforts. Although these policies run counter to many of Bolsonaro’s plans, they are critical to fighting global warming and would even yield economic benefits for Brazil.

In addition to preserving biodiversity and combating climate change, deforestation abatement has economic benefits, even for the agricultural industry that supports Bolsonaro. Precipitation regulation provided by the Amazon, through water absorbed through trees’ roots that later evaporates from their leaves, adds between $1 billion and $3 billion of value each year through increased rainfall and agricultural productivity, according to estimates.

If Bolsonaro makes good on his promises regarding renewable energy and biofuels, he could wind up helping the environment in some ways. But his government must still address other issues such as halting deforestation, a measure that is critical to environmental protection but not detrimental to the economy. Bolsonaro has expressed a desire to promote local industry and investment; now that he is at the helm, he must recognize that he has ample opportunity to promote policies that will benefit both the economy and the environment.

Fish fumes blamed for allergy death of Brooklyn boy


fresh whole cod
The boy's grandmother was cooking cod (stock image) when he became ill

4 January 2019
Authorities investigating the death of an 11-year-old boy in Brooklyn are said to be looking into whether fish cooking nearby could have been to blame.
Cameron Jean-Pierre, who had a fish allergy, fell unconscious on New Year's Day at his grandmother's house.
An official cause of death from a medical examiner is still pending.
But his family have told US media they believe he died after a severe asthma attack was prompted by fish protein he inhaled in the air.
"They thought that he left... I guess they forgot something at the house and went back, and he went in the house and then he inhaled the fish," she told ABC News.
His mother says Cameron was first diagnosed with the allergy at school, after becoming sick after a lunch.
Ms Pottingr said she wants his story to serve as a warning to other parents whose children have allergies.
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Cameron's father, Steven Jean-Pierre, told the Washington Post newspaper that he gave his son a nebuliser device when he began to wheeze and gasp, but it failed to restore his breathing.
"He gave me two kisses, two kisses on my face. He said, 'I feel like I'm dying.' I said, 'Don't say that. What are you talking about. Don't say that.'"
When police arrived they found the 11-year-old unconscious and unresponsive. He was later declared dead at a nearby hospital.
Brookdale Hospital Medical CenterCameron was rushed to Brookdale Hospital Medical Center in Brooklyn
Fish is one of the eight most-common allergens required by federal law on food labelling.
Although direct consumption is the most obvious source of risk from foods, the American College of Asthma and Immunology recommends people with fish allergies should also avoid areas where it is cooking, because proteins may be released into the air.
US reality television star Bethenny Frankel, who also has a severe fish allergy, revealed on Thursday a flight she was on was forced to turn around because of bass being cooked on board.
She shared her experience in a series of posts and said she had warned the airline in advance.
Ms Frankel described the environment on-board as a potential "death trap" for sufferers.
She shared the story of Cameron's death to her 1.6m followers as a warning on the dangers of airborne allergens.