Day: June 5, 2019

Democratic Hopeful Warren Proposes $2T ‘Green Manufacturing’ Plan

Democratic U.S. presidential hopeful Elizabeth Warren proposed on Tuesday spending $2 trillion on a new “green manufacturing” program to address climate change that would invest in research and exporting American clean energy technology.

The manufacturing program is the first in a new series of “economic patriotism” proposals Warren is unveiling intended to create American jobs and help U.S. industry.

“This is going to be a big plan for bold structural changes,” Warren said at a campaign rally in Detroit, Michigan.

Warren told the crowd of about 500 in a facility that teaches manufacturing skills that her proposal would be paid for by cutting subsidies in the oil and gas industry. Additionally, by all companies paying more taxes, she said, singling out Amazon.com.

Among the more than 20 Democrats in the field hoping to challenge Republican President Donald Trump in November 2020, Warren has distinguished herself as the most prolific proposer of new policy positions.

Several candidates have offered climate-related policy proposals, including Washington Governor Jay Inslee, who has made it the singular focus of his campaign, and former Vice President Joe Biden, who also announced a climate plan on Tuesday.

Warren said she had not read Biden’s proposal when asked by reporters after her campaign event.

The newest proposal from Warren, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, lays out how she would carry out some of the policy goals outlined in the Green New Deal, which has the backing of liberal members of her party.

Warren began touting the proposal in a campaign trip to Michigan, a Midwestern state with a large manufacturing sector that shocked political observers in 2016 when voters backed Trump and helped propel him to the White House.

“When we’re talking about manufacturing, when we’re talking about real expertise, we’re talking about Detroit,” Warren said.

The plan is likely to draw criticism from opponents who will argue the price tag is too high and that trying to quickly overhaul the U.S. energy sector would have crippling economic effects.

But Warren also released an evaluation of her three-part proposal conducted by Moody’s economist Mark Zandi, who argued the plan would help the economy on a large scale.

“There is no free lunch, and big businesses, oil and gas companies, and multinationals pay for the cost of this plan,” Zandi wrote. “The economy benefits, although it would take more than a decade for this benefit to be fully realized.”

The first part of Warren’s plan calls for spending $400 billion over 10 years on clean energy research and development.

Warren said she believes the United States could one day use no fossil fuels. “It’s part of our technological bandwidth,” she said in a brief news conference after the Detroit rally.

Next, Warren proposed increasing the amount the United States spends on “American-made clean, renewable, and emission-free energy products for federal, state, and local use, and for export.”

Warren said the United States currently spends $1.5 trillion on defense procurement, which she called “bloated,” and argued that an equal amount should be spent on clean energy.

As part of this proposal, Warren would require companies that sell to the federal government pay their employees at least $15 an hour, that employees receive 12 weeks paid family and medical leave and be able to form unions. Labor practices were included in Green New Deal proposals.

Finally, Warren called for creating a new federal office responsible for trying to get foreign countries to purchase U.S. clean energy technology.

Likening it to programs that help foreign countries buy U.S.-made weapons, Warren would allocate $100 billion to assist countries buying U.S. energy technologies.

While acknowledging ambitious goals that liberal advocates have supported to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net-zero by 2050, Warren said it was important that other countries cut emissions as well.

“We need other countries to slash their emissions, and that means we need to supply the world with clean energy products (at low enough prices to displace dirty alternatives) to put us on the right path,” Warren wrote on Medium.

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Argentina Supreme Court Upholds Glacier Protection Law

Argentina’s Supreme Court upheld the country’s glacier protection law Tuesday, rejecting an effort by mining giant Barrick Gold Corp. to have it declared unconstitutional.

The decision was praised by environmentalists and marked a setback for one of the world’s biggest gold miners. 

 

Barrick argued that the 2010 law could affect its projects near glacial areas in Argentina. But the top court said Barrick had not proved that the law curbing mining on and around the country’s glaciers to protect water supplies caused any damage to the company.

Barrick owns Pascua-Lama, a high-altitude mine that straddles the Argentina-Chile border. It also runs the Veladero mine in Argentina’s San Juan province.

The Argentine law broadly defines glaciers, so it protects not only the icy masses most people think of but also “rock glaciers” and frozen groundwater on mountaintops where glaciers have melted away from the surface. The Argentine National Glacier Institute, which had a big hand in drafting the law, pushed the definition because it is believed most glacial water actually comes from such reserves.

“We celebrate the ruling because there’s no doubt that glaciers must be protected,” Greenpeace Argentina spokesperson Gonzalo Strano said in a statement.

“Barrick’s request to declare the unconstitutionality of the national law was a perverse play that fortunately lost,” Strano said. “Now, the law must be followed and Veladero must be closed. We can no longer allow mining on Argentine glaciers.” 

 

Representatives at Barrick could not immediately be reached for comment.

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Falls a ‘Major Epidemic’ for Older Americans

From late-night tumbles on the way to the bathroom to accidents outdoors, more and more elderly Americans are dying after a fall, with the risk doubling since 2000, according to a study published Tuesday.

The figures confirm a trend that has also been observed in Europe. 

In the United States, the absolute number of deaths among people over 75 years old attributed to falling almost tripled from 2000 to 2016 (8,613 to 25,189).

While the population has grown since that time, it still represents a doubling in the rate of such deaths for men as well as women, according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

The research was led by Klaas Hartholt at the Reinier de Graaf Groep in the Netherlands.

“Approximately one in three persons aged 65 years or older falls every year,” Marco Pahor, director of the Institute on Aging at the University of Florida, wrote in an editorial on the subject for the journal. 

“Falling is a potentially catastrophic and life threatening event for older persons.”

High cost

But the risk of death from head trauma and internal bleeding isn’t where it ends. Fractures to hips, knees or ankles can mark the start of a vicious cycle: hospitalization, reduced independence, physical rehabilitation and long-lasting effects on morale and mental health.

One in five people who break their hips will never walk again, according to Atul Gawande, a doctor and the author of the book “Being Mortal.”

In the U.S., the costs linked to falls is among the most expensive categories for hospital care.

“Falls represent a major emerging epidemic among older persons,” Pahor told AFP.

In the Netherlands, Spain, Australia and Canada where falls were also recently studied, the trend has been similar since 2000. In France, the problem is described as a “major public health issue.”

Links to medication

The reasons for the spike have not been well studied, but geriatricians have some ideas.

It’s possible that the elderly of today are more active than those of the past. Rising obesity levels could also play a role since it is linked to a weakening of the muscles.

Perhaps most of all, though modern medicine has done a good job of improving the treatment of chronic illnesses, it has neglected quality of life for people in their old age.

“Unfortunately, some medications can increase fall risk,” Elizabeth Burns, a health scientist at the Centers for Disease and Control who co-authored the JAMA study, told AFP.

“Some medications, like psychoactives, can cause side effects such as vision impairment, confusion, and sleepiness,” she said, adding that the use of such drugs including opioids has increased substantially in recent years. 

George Taler, a geriatrician at the MedStar Washington Hospital Center who makes home visits in the U.S. capital, added that the method he most favors for lowering the risk of falling is simple: “de-prescribing” medication that is no longer necessary.

Studies have shown that when the number of prescription drugs taken daily is four or more, dizziness and loss of balance rise significantly.

“We’re very good at writing prescriptions for medications. We’re not so good about taking them away, even when they’re no longer helpful or necessary,” Taler told AFP.

“I’ll just give you a case today: this is an older woman who’s had multiple falls, and she has swelling in her ankles.

“Well, if I gave her a prescription for a diuretic to get rid of the swelling, and all the fluid disappears, she is likely to have a fall from dehydration. So we need to adjust the medicine to her reality.”

Physical exercise

Another study published in JAMA led by Teresa Liu-Ambrose at the University of British Columbia found that physical exercise played a role in reducing falling.

In a relatively small experiment carried out in the Greater Vancouver area with around 300 septuagenarians, researchers tested the effectiveness of the Otago Exercise Program, a home-based program supervised by a physical therapist.

It involves numerous strength-building exercises for knees, hips and ankles as well as balance-training (including walking backwards, standing on a leg, etc), repeated three times a week with participants asked to also walk 30 minutes at least twice per week.

The physical therapist visited at various intervals to keep things on track, with their fifth and final visit six months after the program began.

The program “significantly reduced the rate of subsequent falls” compared to those in a control group, but the researchers cautioned that the results required replication in other clinical settings.

One thing that has intrigued researchers has been the positives associated with physical exercise even when it did not increase muscle mass.

“The very act of exercise just makes people more aware of their body, more aware of their space, feeling better about themselves,” said Taler. “And even though we may not be able to measure that, it still has its measurable benefits in terms of falls.” 

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