Friday, April 23, 2021

BREAKING NEWS
Supreme Court rules Sinixt are not 'extinct'

In a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court of Canada says the Sinixt Nation, whose reservation is in Washington State, have constitutionally protected Indigenous rights to hunt in their ancestral territory north of the border.

Olivia Stefanovich
CBC  4/23/2021

Richard Desautel, middle, a Sinixt man from Washington state, stands outside the Nelson, B.C., courthouse with members of the Colville Confederated Tribes after his acquittal at the trial level on March 27, 2017.

Canada's highest court has upheld the acquittal of Richard Desautel, the Sinixt member who tried to reverse the federal government's 65-year-old claim that an Indigenous nation from British Columbia's Interior no longer exists.

In a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court of Canada says the Sinixt Nation, whose reservation is in Washington State, have constitutionally protected Indigenous rights to hunt in their ancestral territory north of the border.

This is a breaking story, a previous version is below.

Canada's highest court will issue a ruling today that could reverse the federal government's 65-year-old claim that an Indigenous nation from British Columbia's Interior no longer exists.

The Supreme Court of Canada ruling will determine whether the Sinixt, whose reservation is in Washington state, have an Indigenous right to hunt in their ancestral territory north of the border.

The case began in 2010 when Sinixt leaders sent one of their members, Richard Desautel, to shoot and kill an elk in their traditional territory of the Arrow Lakes region in southeastern British Columbia to reclaim their identity in Canada.

Desautel phoned the B.C. Conservation Officer Service after his successful hunt to report himself and was charged.




Desautel argued his right to hunt for ceremonial purposes in the traditional territory of the Sinixt is protected by Section 35(1) of the Constitution, which recognizes and affirms the rights of Indigenous Peoples.

But the Crown maintained Desautel didn't have rights protected by the Constitution because he wasn't part of any recognized Indigenous group in Canada.

Desautel won at every level of the B.C. court system — laying the groundwork for the Sinixt to be formally recognized again as an Indigenous people by the Supreme Court.

The Sinixt are part of the Salish people who primarily occupied territory in the B.C. interior and northwestern United States.

"A favourable ruling ... will be quite a historic moment for the Sinixts," said Mark Underhill, counsel for Desautel and a partner at Arvay Finlay LLP in Vancouver.

© Getty Images Desautel was charged with breaking British Columbia's Wildlife Act after he shot and killed a cow elk near Castlegar in 2010.

Hunting is how the Sinixt people practise their culture and their very identity is bound up with their territory, which stretches from West Kootenay to Nelson and all the way up to Revelstoke, B.C, said Underhill.

Not being able to use their traditional lands has taken a tremendous toll on multiple generations of Sinixt people, he said.

"You always have that tie back to the land, no matter where you are," Underhill said.

"To have it illegal to be able to practise your culture, it just really impacted those people."
An important case on both sides of the border

A favourable ruling could have broad implications for other Indigenous groups with ties to Canada. Underhill said those groups would have to show they maintained a continuous presence in Canada for thousands of years.

"That will open the door for them hopefully to have their rights recognized in Canada," he said.

The trial judge held that the Sinixt engaged in hunting, fishing and gathering in their traditional territory in the Arrow Lakes area before and after first contact in 1811.

The trial judge said Desautel was exercising his traditional right to hunt for ceremonial purposes guaranteed under the Constitution, and the application of the Wildlife Act unjustifiably infringed on that right.


Desautel was acquitted.

The Supreme Court of British Columbia also dismissed a summary conviction appeal, as did the B.C. Court of Appeal. The B.C. government appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada on the grounds that it's a case of national significance.

The Sinixt say they lived in the north-south valley stretching from present-day Kettle Falls, Wash., to Revelstoke, B.C. well into the 1700s. Eighty per cent of their pre-contact traditional territory is in Canada.

Smallpox and the arrival of missionaries, miners and settlers pushed the Sinixt out of the West Kootenay region of B.C. and off their territory. Some moved south to the U.S., taking up residence on the Colville Confederated Tribes Reservation in the late 1800s.

In 1902, the federal government set aside a reserve for the Arrow Lakes Band, which included a few Sinixt members who remained in their traditional territory in Canada.

In 1956, the last living member of the Arrows Lakes Band died and the federal government declared the Sinixt "extinct" and without the rights of a First Nation in Canada.

REPORTING FROM THE OIL PATCH
New emission-cutting goals called 'aggressive,' 'ambitious' and.....

CALGARY — New greenhouse gas emission cutting targets are being described as "extremely aggressive," "ambitious" and illogical" by members of the Canadian oilpatch after they were rolled out at a virtual climate summit of world leaders on" Thursday.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau committed to slash Canada's GHGs by 40 to 45 per cent by 2030 and President Joe Biden vowed to cut emissions in the United States by 50 to 52 per cent in the same time frame.

"These are obviously extremely aggressive targets being laid out by leaders in Canada and the U.S. and I think there's absence of process or plan behind the targets. But you need to start with the targets, I understand that," said Kevin Neveu, CEO of Calgary-based Precision Drilling Corp., which operates in both Canada and south of the border.

"I think the objectives they are trying to achieve, we agree with and support," he added.

There are solutions available today such as using grid electricity, renewable energy or natural gas that would allow the drilling industry to meet the emission targets for its operations, said Neveu, adding he urges the governments to continue to support research that will allow the broader oilpatch to also cut emissions.

Grant Fagerheim, CEO of Whitecap Resources Inc., said he also supports efforts to reduce emissions but disagrees with the way the new Canadian targets are being rolled out.

"Having aspirational targets with no practical or scientific methodologies is illogical," he said.

"It seems like the federal government is working against the industry and not working with it. That's the frustration. There's no consultation. … We should be using science, not just political wherewithal to reduce (emissions)."

The Canadian industry is being compelled to cut methane emissions by 45 per cent by 2025 and is facing a rising tide of carbon taxes, he pointed out.

"We've reduced our direct emissions (at Whitecap) by over 30 per cent since 2017 but you don't get recognized for it," said Fagerheim.

Video: Canada pledges at least 40% reduction in emissions by 2030 (cbc.ca)

BIG OIL WHINES
"Where is the reward program, where is the incentivizing program? Versus the penalizing program?"

In an emailed statement, the CEO of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers defended his members' record in reducing emissions without directly commenting on the scale of the new emissions targets.

“Canada’s natural gas and oil industry has made emissions reduction a priority; not only setting goals, but showing how it can be done," said Tim McMillan.

"For example, in the oilsands industry, average GHGs per barrel have dropped 21 per cent since 2009
and, with current technologies under development, are projected to drop by an additional 20 to 27 per cent by 2030, demonstrating production growth can be compatible with emissions reductions."

AS GREEN OPPONENTS POINT OUT PER BARREL IS NOT TOTAL EMISSIONS COSTS FROM ACTUAL PRODUCTION OVERALL

The new targets are "ambitious" and achieving them will require all Canadians to co-operate and change the way they work, said Sneh Seetal, a spokeswoman for oilsands producer Suncor Energy Inc.

She added that the company is pleased with initiatives unveiled in the federal budget earlier this week to support and promote the use of carbon capture utilization and storage to offset GHG emissions.

"We’re encouraged by the political commitments coming out of today’s Leader’s Summit on Climate" said Jesse Semko, spokesman for pipeline company Enbridge Inc.

"Enbridge is committed to doing its part to reduce emissions and achieving our goal of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050."

The company is upgrading equipment and using solar self-power projects to meet its operational electricity requirements, while investing in renewables like offshore wind and emerging technologies such as hydrogen, renewable natural gas and carbon capture, utilization and storage, he said.

Spokesman Reg Curren declined to comment on the new targets on behalf of Cenovus Energy Inc. but said the oilsands producer remains committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050 and will complete an analysis to set new near-term targets this year.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 22, 2021.

Companies in this story: (TSX:PD, TSX:SU, TSX:ENB, TSX:WCP, TSX:CVE)

Dan Healing, The Canadian Press


Cargill to build new Canadian canola plant as demand booms

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) - Cargill Inc will build a $350-million canola plant in Regina, Saskatchewan, the U.S. agribusiness said on Thursday, in the latest project that aims to profit from booming demand for oilseeds.

 Reuters/Denis Balibouse FILE PHOTO: A Cargill logo is pictured on the Provimi Kliba and Protector animal nutrition factory in Lucens

Canola futures hit record highs this week and soybeans have hit multi-year tops as demand for canola to process into vegetable oil and animal feed exceeds supply.

Refiners are also planning to produce renewable diesel from canola and soybeans to comply with government mandates in Canada and several U.S. states to make cleaner-burning fuels.

"There's going to continue to be strong pull, we believe, into countries like China, from a food perspective," Jeff Vassart, President of Cargill's Canadian unit, said in an interview. "We do see increasing demand for renewable diesel too and we want to make sure that we're positioned for it."

The plant will have capacity to crush 1 million tonnes of canola annually.

Privately held Cargill expects the plant to start operating by early 2024, creating 50 full-time jobs.

Cargill said it would also modernize its two canola crush facilities in Camrose, Alberta, and Clavet, Saskatchewan to increase volume.

In March, rival Richardson International said it would double its canola-crushing capacity at Yorkton, Saskatchewan, making it Canada's largest such plant. Cargill also said last month it would expand its U.S. soybean-crushing capacity.

Vassart said the company is confident that Canada will produce enough canola to match demand, as farmers boost yields and, to a lesser extent, expand plantings. If production does not increase enough, Canada may export less canola seed, he said.

Canadian canola stocks are expected to dwindle to an eight-year low by midsummer, but Cargill expects to be able to continue crushing at a strong pace, Vassart said.

(Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg and Rithika Krishna in Bengaluru; editing by Grant McCool)



Exxon, BP, and Shell fall after New York City sues the major oil companies for misrepresenting their role in climate change


wdaniel@businessinsider.com (Will Daniel) 
EARTH DAY 2021

 
© REUTERS/Scott Morgan Then-2020 Democratic presidential candidate and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio talks with the media at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., August 11, 2019. REUTERS/Scott Morgan

BP, Shell, and Exxon Mobil all fell on Thursday after NYC sued the oil giants for misrepresenting their role in climate change.

The lawsuit came from mayor Bill de Blasio's office after a similar case was dismissed by the 2nd Court of Appeals in Manhattan.

"My Earth Day message to Big Oil: See you in court," De Balsio wrote in a letter announcing the lawsuit.

Shares of Exxon, BP, Shell fell Thursday on news New York City is suing the oil companies along with the American Petroleum Institute for "systematically and intentionally deceiving New Yorkers" on climate change issues, according to a press release from the office of the mayor.


The lawsuit was filed in the Supreme Court of the State of New York in the County of New York by the mayor's office on Thursday.

It calls out defendants for allegedly violating New York City's Consumer Protection Law (New York City Administrative Code §§ 20-700 et seq.) with false advertising.

Specifically, the suit alleges oil companies have 1) used product promotions to convince consumers that the purchase and use of their products is beneficial in addressing climate change.

And 2) have used "greenwashing campaigns" directed at NYC consumers to falsely present themselves as corporate leaders in the fight against global warming.

NY
Air Chernobyl? Tourists get chance to fly over nuclear disaster zone

By Sergiy Karazy and Margaryta Chornokondratenko
REUTERS 
4/23/2021
Reuters/GLEB GARANICH A view shows the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant during a tour to the Chernobyl zone

KYIV (Reuters) - Ukrainian nuclear agency worker Viktor Kozlov received an unusual birthday gift from his wife Maryna: tickets for a 90 minute flight over Chernobyl, site of the world's worst nuclear disaster.
© Reuters/GLEB GARANICH People take a tour to the Chernobyl zone

The trip gives passengers a bird's eye view of the abandoned buildings in the ghost town of Pripyat that once housed nuclear workers, and the massive domed structure now covering the reactor that exploded on April 26, 1986.

On the flight, run by Ukraine International Airlines, passengers craned their necks, pointed and took pictures on their phones of the site that has become one of the country's major tourist destinations.

The disaster, which struck during a botched safety test at the plant 110 km (70 miles) north of the capital Kyiv, forced tens of thousands of people to abandon the area permanently, leaving wildlife behind to thrive in the contaminated zone.
© Reuters/GLEB GARANICH People take a tour to the Chernobyl zone

"I read a lot about the Chernobyl accident and I know every second of the disaster timeline," Kozlov, whose interest in the industry was prompted by having grown up in another town with a nuclear plant, said during the flight.
© Reuters/GLEB GARANICH People take a tour to the Chernobyl zone

Gallery: Ukraine eyes UNESCO status for abandoned Chernobyl wasteland (Reuters)
Air Chernobyl? Tourists get chance to fly over nuclear disaster zone (msn.com)













Children's beds are seen in a kindergarten near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the abandoned city of Pripyat, Ukraine, April 12. REUTERS/Gleb Gar
24 SLIDES © Reut
ers

Children's beds are seen in a kindergarten near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the abandoned city of Pripyat, Ukraine, April 12. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

"I was surprised by the nature around the plant. It looks so pure, nature won over a human here," he added.

Thirty-one plant workers and firemen died in the immediate aftermath of the disaster, mostly from acute radiation sickness. Thousands more later succumbed to radiation-related illnesses such as cancer, although the total death toll and long-term health effects remain a subject of intense debate.

As Ukraine marks the 35th anniversary of the accident, the former Soviet republic will apply for Chernobyl to receive UNESCO World Heritage status to attract more visitors and funding to develop the area.

Before the coronavirus pandemic, the site became more popular with tourists thanks to the HBO series "Chernobyl" in 2019.

For Pilot Yevhen Nechyporenko, the flights over Chernobyl reminded him of his childhood when he spent summer holidays near the area.

"It attracts people like a magnet. Also by looking at these places from above, you imagine yourself there," he said in the cockpit.
© Reuters/GLEB GARANICH A view shows the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant during a tour to the Chernobyl zone

"It is very interesting to look closely into every detail of the area, into what is happening there, what changes took place around the plant and in the town, how the nature is developing and taking over."

(Editing by Matthias Williams and Alison Williams)

Ransomware's perfect target: Why one industry needs to improve cybersecurity, before it's too late

Danny Palmer 
ZDNET
4/23/2021

© Image: iStock

A number of shipping vessels have been found to be operating with almost no cyber security infrastructure at all.

© Provided by ZDNet
Why is ransomware such a big threat and how do you defend your network against it?
Watch Now

Ransomware attacks against the shipping and logistics industry have tripled in the past year, as cyber criminals target the global supply chain in an effort to make money from ransom payments.

Analysis by cybersecurity company BlueVoyant found that ransomware attacks are increasingly targeting shipping and logistics firms at a time when the global COVID-19 pandemic means that their services are required more than ever before.

Ransomware attacks have become a major cybersecurity problem for every industry, but a successful attack against a logistics company could potentially mean chaos – and an extremely lucrative payday for attackers.

The nature of the industry and the potential impact of how disruption can affect all of the supply chain might mean that an affected organisation pays the ransom demand, perceiving it to be the quickest, most effective way of restoring the network – despite law enforcement and cybersecurity experts warning victims that they shouldn't encourage cyber criminals by paying ransoms.

"Shipping and logistics companies are large businesses that are highly sensitive to disruption, making them perfect targets for ransomware gangs," Thomas Lind, co-head of strategic intelligence at BlueVoyant, told ZDNet.

2017's NotPetya cyberattack demonstrated the amount of disruption that can occur in these scenarios, when shipping firm Maersk had vast swathes of its network of tens of thousands of devices across 130 counties encrypted and knocked offline in an incident that cost hundreds of millions in losses.

But despite this high profile cyber event demonstrating the need for good cybersecurity strategy, according to BlueVoyant's report, shipping and logistics companies need to "dramatically" improve IT hygiene and email security to make networks more resilient against ransomware and other cyberattacks.

That includes fixing vulnerabilities in remote desktops or ports, something that 90% of the organisations studied in the research were found to have. Vulnerabilities in RDP systems like unpatched software or using default or common login credentials can provider cyber attackers with relatively simple access to networks.

"When unsecured, ransomware attackers are able to gain access to a system and then move laterally in order to most effectively compromise and lockdown a target network," said Lind.

"Companies are not adequately securing themselves – and we haven't seen any industry with worse protections in place than supply chain and logistics."

In some cases, it isn't ransomware groups that are breaching logistics and shipping companies, but merely opportunistic cyber criminals who know they'll be able to sell the credentials on for others to use to commit attacks.

SEE: Hackers are actively targeting flaws in these VPN devices. Here's what you need to do

Shipping and logistic companies have vast networks – but there are cybersecurity procedures that can improve their defences against cyberattacks. These include securing port and network configuration so that default or easy-to-guess credentials aren't used and to, where possible, secure the accounts with two-factor authentication.

"Ransomware gangs don't hide what they're doing: they hit remote desktop protocol (RDP) and other remote desktop ports. Especially in a time when many companies set up remote desktops for remote workers, this is a critical issue," said Lind.

Organisations should also update and patch software in a timely manner so cyber criminals can't take advantage of known vulnerabilities to gain access to networks.

cbc.ca



SASKATCHEWAN
Muskoday First Nation is going off the grid by going solar


Duration: 02:18

Community leaders say it reinforces their commitment of protecting the environment and Mother Earth
Nitric Oxide joins the fight against COVID-19
FAST & FURIOUS LAUGHING GASSES PANDEMIC

A Canadian-based company using Nitric Oxide (NO) to treat topical and respiratory infections has found success using their product to combat COVID-19. In an interview with Chris Miller, Chief Scientific Officer and Cofounder at SaNOtize, we learn about the company that is attacking the virus before it can attack you.

Chris Miller published his first review article on Nitric Oxide in 1992, he says, “I was trying to figure out what to research in my Ph.D. and I had read an abstract about the molecule nitric oxide, so while I knew very little about it at the time, I had an epiphany and Nitric Oxide answered the questions about what I would be doing for the rest of my life.” Miller had been working as a respiratory therapist prior to his Ph.D. and says “I was working with gasses and helping people on life support, so I wanted to learn more about a gas that had been previously considered poisonous.” Miller explains that there was no way to easily measure NO in those days and it was contained in high pressure cylinders, so his team focused on making devices to measure and deliver NO. “In those days, the recently retired Bruce Murray was my right hand man, he stuck by me for decades on this journey.” Murray and Miller worked with another large company to use NO as an approved drug to save infants with Blue Baby Syndrome from 1998 on, significantly decreasing the amount of related deaths.

Miller shares that “during that time I became fascinated with finding that the NO produced in our bodies works as our first line of defence in our innate immune system and basically did another Ph.D. trying to see how we could use this outside the body to help reduce microbes and infection.” The high pressure cylinders were cumbersome so the team started to explore how they could create and deliver nitric oxide in a liquid and with the help of major grants and his new business partner, Dr. Gilly Regev. Regev and Miller began working together in 2009 and created a liquid that kills microbes very fast. The liquid treatment was developed as far as phase 2 human trials, proving safe and effective for potential use for chronic sinusitis and diabetic foot ulcers. Originally, the team wanted to use their findings to help combat the common flu and cold but knew those would be expensive undertakings, so, prior to the pandemic, they were focusing on uses much cheaper to develop. Miller himself would use the nasal spray before and after plane rides and found the method effective to keep him free of common respiratory illnesses for the past decade.

The pandemic changed the focus for team SaNOtize, as they decided to jump in right away to see if they could help in the fight against the SARS-CoV-2 virus, or COVID-19 infection. In March 2020 they began independent lab testing at Utah State University and showed that their NO releasing solution could eradicate the SARS-CoV-2 virus in under two minutes. The SaNOtize nasal spray works similarly to a hand sanitizer for the nose. Miller explains “if you think you’ve been exposed to the virus, you can spray the mist into your nose, which is the major entry point for COVID. The NO in the liquid acts as a physical and chemical barrier using multiple mechanisms to combat the virus.” Miller shares, “If you think of the COVID spike proteins like a key, and your cells like a lock, one mechanism of action is that the NO twists the spikes into a knot so the key cannot enter the lock, and another mechanism is that it acts like pouring glue into the lock itself so the key cannot insert.” He adds, “also if NO gets into the lock/cells, it prevents replication of the virus.”

Miller and Regev’s company has finished a phase 2 clinical trial in the United Kingdom (UK), where “we had a breakthrough that proved a rapid and impressive reduction in SARS-CoV-2 in infected people -- the study conducted by the Ashford & St. Peter’s Hospital in London to people who self-administered the nasal spray, basically eradicated high levels of the virus in 24-72 hours. The most impressive point was it worked equally well against the mutant UK variant of the virus.” These findings have been submitted for publication in a medical journal, and the company has filed these with Health Canada to support their drug submission. Even though the NO is very low, administered topically and approved as an over the counter device in other countries, in Canada NO is already approved as a prescription drug and SaNOtize is obligated to go through the lengthy process of prescription drug for use as a nasal spray to prevent and treat COVID-19 infection in people. Miller states “we have met with Health Canada and are working on the process for submission for emergency use during the pandemic. They have been very helpful and we are working together to get rapid approval- it can never go fast enough but we are still going as fast as we can while keeping the public safe so we don’t cut corners and can prove the safety for users.” The group is designing and starting, under Canada Health’s direction, two phase 3 trials, one for prevention, and one for treatment. Interested parties can keep an eye on their website for future advertisements looking for participants. Miller says “we hope the public helps us with the prevention trial, there will be eligibility criteria, but also we need informed consent. Sadly, someone needs to be grouped in the 50% that receive a placebo of only salt water and are at risk of contracting COVID, but from a risk-benefit perceptive, this study is the only way to get SaNOtize approved as a drug.”

Currently only two countries approve the use of SaNOtize nasal spray to combat COVID-19 infection, but the goal is to make the product affordable and accessible to all, especially in places where vaccines are not readily available. It is in mass production in Israel, as “we couldn’t get access to manufacturing sites in Canada or many parts of the world because vaccine production is, understandably, tying up factories’’. Mass production was instead started in Israel and the current singular production line is producing 20 bottles a minute around the clock. Three more production lines have been ordered and will soon begin, quadrupling the rate at which the product is made for countries like Israel and Bahrain where it has been approved for use. Many countries are currently reviewing the studies and considering approving the use of the SaNOtize nasal spray and the company hopes to eventually bring production back to Canada.

The nasal spray could be especially effective in other countries who don’t have the vaccine. Miller hopes SaNOtize “could bridge the gap while these countries wait for the vaccine” and aid in the prevention of COVID -19 infection. He adds “what I love most about our nasal spray is that this was never just designed just for treating/preventing COVID-19 infection, the effectiveness does not seem to differ by variant, and works on all viruses including the flu and common cold viruses”. This new tool in the tool belt that could reduce the necessity of masking, as the small and simple bottle can be carried in a purse or pocket and sprayed once or twice a day when a person has been possibly exposed.”

Those interested in supporting the work of SaNOtize can continue to encourage regulatory and government agencies to “help small companies like ourselves to be able to move innovative ideas like this forward.” Not a large Pharma company, SaNOtize is not as equally equipped to fund large prevention trials costing tens of millions of dollars to conduct. Many government, non-profit agencies and countries are getting on board with sponsoring and helping to fund the trials, but Canada has not offered financing assistance at this time.

In the meantime, the group is “working with the World Health Organization and other foundations who see the potential of the nitric oxide nasal spray, and want to move forward”. Groups in India, Mexico, and Brazil are working with SaNOtize to get emergency approvals so that their unique corner of the globe can have equal access to the new weapon combatting COVID-19.

Elizabeth Thompson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Temple City Star

Nevada sees lithium ‘white gold rush’ as demand set to skyrocket

In the Nevada desert, there’s a quiet frenzy building over a rare resource that will be crucial to meeting the country’s goals to slow down climate change.


VIDEO The 'white gold rush': Inside a lithium mine, where stores of recyclable energy lie

Lithium, the crucial component in batteries for electric vehicles and renewable energy storage, has mostly been produced in countries like Australia, Chile and China.

There’s only one commercial lithium mine operating in the U.S., a facility in Silver Peak, Nevada, that has been using ponds to evaporate groundwater and harvest lithium since the 1960s. At least two more mines are waiting for final approval to begin construction, one of which would produce enough lithium for 400,000 electric vehicles a year for the next 50 years, according to the company.

 ABC NewsMORE: Why 2021 is shaping up to be a pivotal year for electric vehicles

But demand is set to explode as much as 1000% by 2030, according to the Energy Information Administration, and possibly even more if more countries continue to adopt policies to encourage the adoption of electric vehicles and renewable energy. And with President Joe Biden's push to manufacture more electric vehicle components in the United States, the focus has turned to how and where the country can collect rare minerals like lithium responsibly
.
ABC News ABC News Chief Meteorologist Ginger Zee and Albemarle Global Business Director Eric Norris tour the company's lithium mine in Silver Peak, Nevada, on April 13, 2021.

At the facility in Silver Peak run by Albemarle Corporation, neon blue pools of water from an underground aquifer evaporate for 12 to 18 months until the company can remove the lithium in a powderlike form, which is then processed into the form used to make batteries.

“It's the lightest metal known to man; it's very energy dense," Eric Norris, lithium president for Albemarle, said.

"That reactivity in nature makes it hard to come by, so you can find it is in the surrounding mountains here and the clays, but not in very what we consider economic concentrations," he said. "So, what's happening here in this closed basin over tens of thousands of years is Mother Nature, and we do get some rain here, not a lot, gradually bringing it into this valley."
ABC News ABC News Chief Meteorologist Ginger Zee and Albemarle Global Business Director Eric Norris tour the company's lithium mine in Silver Peak, Nevada, on April 13, 2021.

Extracting lithium, like any kind of mining, can still create greenhouse gas emissions and toxic waste that could threaten the environment, though one argument for increasing the amount of mining in the United States is increased oversight of those impacts compared to other countries. The amount of the mineral is also finite, and the country will need more ways to recycle lithium-ion batteries if they continue to be used in the future.

MORE: Biden administration faces increasing calls to stop companies from 'greenwashing'

Norris said Albemarle is working to produce lithium as efficiently as possible, so they can fulfill the promise that electric vehicles produced with it are better for the environment.

"This is very important to the automotive industry. Our customer base, they're very focused on this, because the promise they're giving to you as a consumer is, this is going to be good for the earth, right? So, they've got to make sure their supply chain is doing it responsibly,” he told ABC News.

Some environmental advocates are also worried about the impact more production would have on another desert resident that relies on lithium: a rare wildflower that grows on lithium-rich soil called Tiehm’s buckwheat.


© ABC News The area of southwestern Nevada known as Rhyolite Ridge is the site of a proposed mine to harvest minerals like lithium, but is also the home of a rare wildflower called the Tiehm''s Buckwheat.

Patrick Donnelly, Nevada state director for the Center for Biological Diversity, has been working to block one of the proposed mines that he says threatens the wildflower. He said there’s a “white gold rush” for lithium in Nevada and that while he knows lithium is important to tackling the climate crisis, he also thinks it’s important to protect biodiversity in the region.

“This special little wildflower is the reason that we're standing here today,” he told ABC News' chief meteorologist, Ginger Zee.

“For our part, and as we said, if they could build this mine without destroying this little wildflower, you know, we would probably walk away from this mine and go find a gold mine to fight instead," he said.MORE: Giant screens, spartan interiors: Electric vehicles go high tech

Donnelly and the Center for Biological Diversity have filed to declare Tiehm’s buckwheat an endangered species, which would trigger more protections from activity in the area.
© Patrick Donnelly/Center for Biological Diversity via AP, FILE This June 1, 2019, file photo provided by the Center for Biological Diversity shows Tiehm's buckwheat blooming at Rhyolite Ridge in the Silver Peak Range of Western Nevada.

West of Silver Peak, the Rhyolite Ridge Project would extract lithium and boron from the ridge by drilling and blasting ore, crushing it and then drawing the minerals out with diluted sulfuric acid, according to the company’s website.

Ioneer, the company planning the Rhyolite Ridge mine, disputes claims its operation would drive the buckwheat to extinction and says it believes it can relocate and protect the plants.MORE: Mine OK'd in Trump's last days may boost Biden energy plan

“We are going to put enormous effort to support this plant and to expand this plan and create a conservation zone that we will never let anybody ever touch,” Ioneer CEO James Calaway told ABC News.

Calaway said that even with the company’s plans, he can’t 100% guarantee the Tiehm’s buckwheat would survive forever, but that it would be a shame if that was the only reason to deny the project.

“To have any chance to meet the targets for electrification in the United States and not be wholly dependent on the Chinese, we really do need to build this project, and we need to build it now, because the time is very important. We are reaching a point where we're going to have excess demand around the world versus supply,” he told ABC News.

© ABC News The Tiehm's Buckwheat is a rare wildflower that has adapted to grow on lithium-rich soil, but advocates say faces threats from mining activity.

The debate over Nevada’s white gold rush could pose a test for the Biden administration and whether the government can balance the demand for domestically produced minerals to be used in clean energy technology with the strain increased mining could put on the desert ecosystem around it.

Donnelly said the world is facing an extinction crisis as well as the climate crisis and that even as more minerals such as lithium are needed, there needs to be more conversation about how to do so without harming the environment.MORE: Rare wildflower could jeopardize lithium mine

“Our advocacy to protect this little wildflower here does not mean that we're trying to avoid those hard questions or we're fighting working on lithium as part of our future,” he said.

“And so, you know, we need to have a reckoning about how to do it without destroying biodiversity.”

ABC News’ Lissette Rodriguez and Andrea Amiel contributed to this report.

For more on this story, check out the It's Not Too Late: Earth Day Special, available on Hulu and wherever you stream ABC News Live at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 22.

Lithium treats intellectual defects in mouse model of Bardet-Biedl Syndrome

Learning and memory problems were linked to defective cilia

PLOS

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IMAGE: IMAGE OF CILIA IN A MOUSE BRAIN USING SCANNING ELECTRON MICROSCOPY, IMAGED AND PROCESSED BY CALVIN S. CARTER. view more 

CREDIT: CALVIN S. CARTER

Mice with symptoms that mimic Bardet-Biedl Syndrome (BBS) have difficulty with learning and generating new neurons in the hippocampus. However, according to a new study by Thomas Pak, Calvin Carter, and Val Sheffield of the University of Iowa, published April 22nd in the journal PLOS Genetics, these mental defects can be successfully treated with lithium.

BBS is a rare genetic disorder that causes intellectual disability, vision loss and obesity, and sometimes kidney problems and extra fingers and toes. It is one of several ciliopathies, which are diseases that stem from defective cilia--tiny, finger-like projections on the surface of cells that play important roles in moving fluids, sensing the environment and signaling between cells. Pak, Carter, Sheffield and colleagues wanted to learn more about how ciliopathies cause intellectual disability, so they studied a type of mouse with the same symptoms as people with BBS.

In the new study, the researchers showed that normal mice could quickly be trained to associate a specific environment to a fearful event, but the BBS mice had a harder time with fear memory. Further investigation showed that these learning problems come from an inability to make new neurons in the hippocampus. Treating the mice with lithium, however, increased cell production and improved their learning and memory.

Intellectual disability is the most common type of neurodevelopmental disorder, but few drugs are available to treat it. The new study suggests that lithium may be an effective treatment for the learning and memory defects caused by BBS, and the researchers suggest that further studies should be performed to test the use of this FDA-approved drug. The new findings also demonstrate a novel role for cilia in learning and memory in the brain, potentially improving our understanding of the mechanisms that cause intellectual disability.

Pak adds, "A mouse model of a cilia disease, Bardet-Biedl Syndrome, has impaired fear memory and hippocampal neurogenesis. In this mouse model, lithium treatment improves fear memory and hippocampal neurogenesis."

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Peer-reviewed Experimental study Animals

In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Genetics:

http://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1009484

Citation: Pak TK, Carter CS, Zhang Q, Huang SC, Searby C, Hsu Y, et al. (2021) A mouse model of Bardet-Biedl Syndrome has impaired fear memory, which is rescued by lithium treatment. PLoS Genet 17(4): e1009484. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009484

Funding: This work was supported by National Institute of Health grants (https://www.nih.gov/) RO1 EY011298 and R01 EY017168 (to VCS), and the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust (https://www.carvertrust.org) to VCS. The work was also supported and greatly facilitated by the core facilities funded by National Institute of Health grants (https://www.nih.gov/) P30 EY025580 (PI: VCS). AAP was supported by the Brockman Foundation (https://brockmanfoundation.org/), the Louis Stokes VA Medical Center resources and facilities(https://www.cleveland.va.gov/locations/directions.asp), project 19PABH134580006, and American Heart Association-Allen Initiative in Brain Health and Cognitive Impairment (https://alleninstitute.org/what-we-do/frontiers-group/partnerships/aha-allen-initiative), NIH-NIA RO1AG066707. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing interests: The authors have declared that n