Saturday, May 01, 2021

Fishing for chips: Making the case for a homegrown Canadian semiconductor industry

Barbara Shecter
POSSTMEDIA
4/30/2021 

© Provided by Financial Post A microchip manufactured by NXP Semiconductors NV, on a printed circuit board (PCB) at CSI Electronic Manufacturing Services Ltd. in Witham, U.K.

Natalia Mykhaylova’s Toronto-based company WeavAir sells sensor and data-collection technology designed to improve air quality, cut maintenance and energy costs, and improve efficiency in places ranging from mass transit hubs to hotels.

Customers and prospective buyers started asking for something that would measure viruses and bacteria in the air after COVID-19 was declared a pandemic last year, but the technology didn’t exist. Mykhaylova, whose background includes degrees in chemical engineering and pharmacology, decided to build it.

“We started work on development of a new technology, a new detector, that can in real time detect the presence of bacteria and viruses in the air,” she said. “We are building a new optical system and we are miniaturizing what is available into a much smaller form … or the size of the device.”

She holds up a small box, not much bigger than a flash drive, which houses the semiconductor she and her team designed. It may be small, but if Canada hopes to carve out a spot in the upheaval roiling the competitive global semiconductor market dominated by the United States and Asia, its best hope may lie with people such as 34-year-old Mykhaylova
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© WeavAir Natalia Mykhaylova, founder of Toronto-based WeavAir, couldn’t find a semiconductor that would do what customers were asking for. So she and her team built it.

The nearly US$490-billion global semiconductor industry is in a massive period of flux. Over the past several months, it has been beset by trade wars, supply chain problems and even a factory fire, all of which have been blamed for the chip shortages disrupting the automobile and consumer electronic sectors. The issues were serious enough to prompt United States President Joe Biden’s administration to convene an urgent meeting in mid-April with industry heavy-hitters including the CEO of Intel Corp., and to call for billions of dollars in spending to boost the supply of semiconductors, the silicon and crystal powerhouses of electronic and sensor devices colloquially known as chips.

Demand for consumer electronics and the semiconductors that power them has skyrocketed during the pandemic, further pressuring supplies needed for computers and sensors in the automobile industry, causing massive disruptions. As a result, losses could end up in the billions of dollars and manufacturers in Canada have not been immune. In February, a General Motors Co. plant in Ingersoll, Ont., was idled by the chip shortage, with more than 1,000 workers eligible to collect layoff benefits.

Given the impact across North America, the U.S. has pledged to reclaim ground lost to semiconductor technology and manufacturing powerhouses in Asia, and there is a growing cadre of of professionals in the sector who believe Canada, too, has an opportunity to stake a claim in the global tech shakeout — building on a legacy of innovation dating back to the heyday of Nortel Networks Corp. in the 1990s.

The Ottawa-based company was once a semiconductor manufacturer, but those operations were sold to Geneva-based STMicroelectronics International N.V. for about $100 million in 2000. Other Canadian high-flyers in the sector before the dot-com bust that year were Mitel Networks Corp. and JDS Uniphase Corp.

Mary Ng, Canada’s Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade, said her government is committed to rebuilding cutting-edge tech companies based in Canada. A close relationship between Canada and the U.S. should accelerate this process, she said.

“I see this as an opportunity for Canada and the U.S. to build together, for us to collaborate together (and) then to sell them to the rest of the world,” she said. “Canada has a strategic advantage in the already existing robust relations and preferential access to this market.”

Ng was on hand in March when the government announced nearly $5 million in funding for Markham, Ont.-based ventureLAB’s Hardware Catalyst Initiative, Canada’s first silicon incubator. She said the decision to invest was easy, given the plan to accelerate the commercialization of homegrown companies that can compete globally in sectors including health care, consumer electronics, telecommunications, smart energy and transportation.

VentureLAB has received $13 million in combined government and corporate funding, and Ng noted there is built-in Canada-U.S. cooperation through a partnership with Silicon Catalyst, the world’s largest incubator for semiconductor startups, which is based in Silicon Valley.

“The development of these startups and these scale-ups presents an opportunity,” she said, adding that the government is committed to “ensuring that growth is anchored in Canada as they scale and pursue opportunities in the international marketplace.”

WeavAir is among the first 16 startups backed by VentureLab, and Mykhaylova said she hopes to use the testing, business planning and mentorship the incubator provides to get her virus-detecting technology from prototype to production, hopefully by the third quarter of this year.

Melissa Chee, VentureLab’s chief executive, said she believes Canada can develop a hardware industry by scaling up startups and tapping the talent in world-recognized science, math, and technology programs at Canadian universities.

© VentureLab Melissa Chee, VentureLab’s chief executive.

Investing now could, in turn, also make Canada a more appealing place for international chip companies to do business, Chee said. The efforts have already attracted Nuvia Inc., a Santa Clara, Calif.-based silicon design company founded by some of the brains behind the chips that power Apple devices, which, on the heels of raising US$240 million, opened its first international office last year in the Greater Toronto Area.

Chee is fond of quoting a figure from the California-based Semiconductor Industry Association that states each semiconductor job creates almost five indirect jobs in a global industry that generates US$7 trillion in economic activity.

“That’s a very high multiplier. These are highly technical and advanced manufacturing skill sets, so very important for Canada,” she said, adding that these jobs are integral to expanding the green economy including electric cars. “I think it really underpins the key sectors we care about … that’s all based on electronics and semiconductors.”

Canada is not a major player in manufacturing semiconductors, with companies such as Teledyne Technologies operating specialty manufacturing facilities in Edmonton and Bromont, Que., while the world’s largest foundries are located in Taiwan, South Korea, China and the U.S.

Canada’s revenue from semiconductor and other electronic component manufacturing is projected to grow to US$3.8 billion dollars by 2024, according to Statistica.com. By comparison, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world’s biggest chipmaker, raked in revenue of US$47.78 billion in 2020.

© Ann Wang/Reuters files The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) is pictured at its headquarters, in Hsinchu, Taiwan.

Despite the small size of Canada’s manufacturing base, Chee thinks Canada could eventually grow a large enough industry presence to attract a foundry expansion from Asia, with others suggesting this would provide proximity to the North American market without having to locate in the U.S., where contentious issues including national security have made commercial and trade relations tense in recent years.

But Gordon Harling, a longtime industry player who worked as an engineer at Novatel Communications Ltd. and in research and development at the semiconductor division of Mitel Networks, said Canada gave up the opportunity to stake a claim in large-scale semiconductor and hardware manufacturing more than two decades ago.

That’s when he sold Goal Semiconductor Inc., a Montreal-based company he founded, to Taiwanese company Mosel Vitelic Inc., which planned — along with Quebec’s Société générale de financement — to build a multi-billion-dollar microchip wafer manufacturing plant in the province. However, the project failed to secure funding from Ottawa and Quebec, and Harling said the cost of such an undertaking has only skyrocketed since then. What’s more, he said, chips are constantly getting smaller, making the expensive manufacturing facilities obsolete in about 10 years.

“I don’t think Canada is going to open the purse wide enough to do that,” he said.

Hand-wringing over Canada’s ability to turn innovative technology into a viable commercial profit centre has been going on for years. A 2007 report by the Information Technology Association of Canada urged the country, and particularly Ontario, to revitalize the “microelectronics” sector to regain ground in a fast-evolving global industry where manufacturing costs were skyrocketing and consolidation was underway.

But instead of trying to compete in what Harling called “commodity” semiconductors, Canada should focus on building niche specialty products, said the chief executive of CMC Microsystems, a not-for-profit that creates and then shares platforms to reduce costs and speed up technology development and adoption.

For example, photonics, which use light to do functions usually carried out by electronics, as well as mechanical sensors (MEMS) and quantum devices.

This isn’t the kind of chip technology that drives the main computer in a car, Harling said, but it has specialty applications including optical data communication, lighting and displays, which can be used in sectors including manufacturing, telecommunications and health sciences.

“My personal opinion is that Canada probably doesn’t want to compete head to head with China or the U.S. on commodity car computers with very low profit margins,” he said. “But we can make the hundreds of other devices that are necessary for the car.”

Specialized sensors are integral to the automotive industry for the operation of in-car displays, air bags, radar, tire pressure gauges and the like. Silicon photonics can also be used to carry video signals to seat backs in commercial aircraft and eliminates electromagnetic interference with flight systems.

4HOURDAY,4DAYWEEK,40HOUR$PAY
© Courtesy Urban Stalk Semiconductors power robotics and other functions at Urban Stalk, a Hamilton, Ont.-based start-up moving agriculture from fields to city centres.

The technology has applications ranging from autonomous vehicles and bio-medical manufacturing to components for smart cities, clean technology and food security infrastructure.

Harling said the tech’s versatility makes an ideal investment beachhead for Canada to stake a claim in the ongoing chip sector shake-up.

To that end, CMC is getting ready to pitch a five-year, $140-million plan to federal and provincial governments that, if funded, would focus on photonics, mechanical sensors and quantum devices, from research and development through to the building of manufacturing capacity and a supply chain to commercialize made-in-Canada components and systems.

“All of these technologies are (used) to create advanced components and all are necessary in multiple applications,” Harling said, adding that they require many of the same highly qualified personnel skills, the same “clean room” facilities and similar equipment and processes.

Car chip shortage shines light on fragility of U.S. supply chain

“Being very good at one of them means you can transfer some of those skills to another area.”

He estimated that his organization’s multi-year plan would create more than 4,000 skilled jobs, and suggested that some of the intellectual property would only be made available to Canadian-controlled companies, so the country will be less exposed next time there is disruption in the global chip supply.

“(This is) about growing and reinforcing the value chains in some of the areas where Canada could potentially dominate,” he said.

Mykhaylova, meanwhile, has her own domination plans. Her company, WeavAir, is preparing to take a big step forward this fall to deploy its homegrown, virus-sniffing chip technology.

“We will have a product that is reliable enough to be put in commercial operations to be tested at scale … a couple of hundred to deploy in buildings,” she said.

It’s a small step, perhaps, but one that her backers hope is only the start.

Financial Post

• Email: bshecter@nationalpost.com | Twitter: BatPost
 THE UNHOLY STATIST ALLIANCE OF LIBERALS AND NDP

New broadcasting bill could regulate all your Facebook, Instagram and YouTube posts, experts say

Rachel Gilmore 
GLOBAL NEWS
30/4/2021

Recent government changes to the bill meant to modernize the Canadian broadcasting act could expand regulation to everything individual Canadians put on Facebook, Instagram or YouTube.

© Getty Images Content you upload to YouTube, Instagram and Facebook could be subject to CRTC regulations.

The bill, in its current state, would turn the YouTube video of a kid’s soccer game, or the Instagram reel you posted of your brunch, into a “program” that could be subject to regulation under the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission’s (CRTC) rules.

"It's your Facebook post. It's your tweet. It's your cat videos. It's your pictures of your children and grandchildren and that sort of stuff," said Peter Menzies, a former CRTC vice-chair and past newspaper publisher.

"What it means is that somebody will be watching that, from the government, or a government regulator, and will be able to order it to be taken down if they find that it doesn't suit whatever purposes they have."

One goal of the proposed law is to ensure large online streaming services contribute to the "creation, production and discoverability of Canadian content," according to Camille Gagné-Raynauld, a spokesperson for the Canadian heritage minister.

"The bill specifically targets professional series, films, and music. Ensuring that large broadcasters, online or not, contribute to our broadcasting system is a crucial element in asserting our cultural sovereignty in English, French and Indigenous language," she explained.

VIDEO


 "Liberals propose new Canadian Broadcast Act rules for online streaming platforms"


More broadly, the bill is aimed at modernizing the Broadcasting Act to reflect the fact that Canadians consume things like music and movies differently nowadays -- often using streaming services or social media.

By bringing platforms like YouTube and Netflix under the Act, they'd be forced to pay a portion of their revenue into the Canada Media Fund, which funds Canadian programming, and would be forced to make Canadian content more visible on their platforms.

Originally, the law exempted user-generated content from regulation – so the videos you post wouldn’t be subjected to Canada’s rules for broadcasters, like the ones Global News have to follow.

But on Friday, the government decided to take that provision out of the bill.

“The effect of the removal is to take the position that all user-generated content, all TikTok videos, Instagram uploads, YouTube videos and the like … all that content is subject to CRTC regulation,” explained Michael Geist, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa.

Currently, the CRTC dictates a certain percentage of television programs and music on the radio has to be Canadian content.

This bill would extend those rules to social media -- so the TikTok algorithm could be required to offer up more Canadian videos, or YouTube might have to recommend artists like Arcade Fire and Arkells.

Read more: Broadcasters, Netflix push politicians on separate visions for sweeping regulation changes

The current legislation extends those requirements to individual users too.

"Putting the CRTC in charge of the entire...internet, I mean, that's like putting a logging company in charge of the Great Bear Rainforest," Menzies said.

"It's not going to end well."


And while the government insists that individual Canadians won’t be hauled in front of the regulator to atone for the lack of Shania Twain in their playlists, there’s still one big issue with the legislation, according to the experts: platforms like Facebook, Instagram and YouTube will carry the onus for ensuring the content you upload meets those CRTC rules.

“Social media companies (would be) legally responsible for all these videos that users post as though they're somehow broadcasting programs,” explained Emily Laidlaw, Canada research chair in cybersecurity law at the University of Calgary.

Read more: Liberals propose new rules for streaming platforms like Netflix, Spotify

She warned that if those changes go through, social media giants might just leave.

“They're either going to heavily regulate this or they're going to exit the market. Canada is not exactly a big market for them, so I would not be surprised if there is significant pushback by social media,” said Laidlaw.

Menzies agreed that this bill may prompt companies to toy with leaving the Canadian market.

"Any company, when faced with uncertainty or what they might believe is unfair treatment or inappropriate treatment or even unconstitutional treatment, I mean, companies sit down and they develop options," he said.

"I'm quite sure that's one of the options that's on the table."

Despite the concerns from experts, the government isn't worried about the possibility of these companies leaving Canadians behind.

"There is no realistic scenario where Canadians are banned by platforms," said Gagné-Raynauld.

"The amendment to remove section 4.1 would effectively allow the CRTC to potentially require contributions from platforms that curate professional content, like YouTube. All major foreign companies have informed us they intend on respecting the laws and regulations of this country."

Video: Petition to create support fund for Canadian musicians

Global News contacted YouTube, Facebook and Instagram to ask whether the latest change to the bill could force them out of the Canadian market. The companies did not directly answer that question.

“Like many, we were surprised to see the Heritage Committee extend Bill C-10 to include social media and user-upload services and apps,” wrote a spokesperson for Google, which owns YouTube, in an emailed statement.

“This potentially extends CRTC regulation to all audio and audio-visual content on the internet, which has profound implications for not just social media, but virtually all websites, podcasting, online hosting and much more.”

The company said YouTube remains “concerned” about the “unintended consequences” of the bill.

“Until we see the final legislation, we cannot predict or comment on the breadth of impacts on YouTube and our users,” the spokesperson wrote.

Facebook gave a similarly vague response when asked directly if they’d consider an exit from the Canadian market -- but they did not rule it out.

“We haven't yet had a chance to fully review the changes,” a Facebook company spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement.

“We know that creating rules to govern speech online is complex and important work, and we look forward to being consulted as the government develops their plans."

Video: Music fans feeling mixed as Neil Young, other artists sell song rights

For Canadian musicians, though, the legislation is getting at an issue they say needs to be addressed.

“Global platforms like Spotify have been incredible for a lot of Canadian artists, and it's important to keep that playing field level,” said Andrew Cash, a former NDP MP who now serves as president and CEO of the Canadian Independent Music Association.

Video: Instagram unveils its new safety features

He added that many companies "are paying" the artists.

The issue at hand, rather, is about ensuring the same rules apply across all platforms, according to Cash. If the government hadn't removed the bill's section that exempted user-generated content, Cash said, social media companies would have been left out of the new rules.

"Fundamentally, what's happening here is that the rules that are going to apply to something like Spotify or Apple Music have to apply to YouTube as well. And that's the issue," Cash said.

He said he believes the legislation is "attempting to clarify" the grey areas of the music streaming world

“It’s never been super easy to make a living in the arts, for sure. But it's a lot harder when the playing field isn't even and the chips are stacked up against you … I think if the playing field evens out, you're going to see the market change. And our feeling is it is going to change for the better.”

He said he supports the legislation as it stands now, despite concerns being voiced by the social media companies.

“Music’s a great way to … get rich, but a lousy place to make a living,” Cash said.

“And I think C-10 has the potential to move us closer to a place where it's a better place to make a living.”
VINFAST 
Vietnam's answer to Tesla has U.S. in its electric sights
THIS POST FORDISM IS CAPITALIST PRODUCTION WITH AUTHORITARIAN CHARACTERISTICS

By James Pearson and Phuong Nguyen 
REUTERS 4/30/2021

5
© Reuters/THANH HUE A labourer works in VinFast's factory in Hai Phong City

HAIPHONG, Vietnam (Reuters) - Move over Tesla, how about a VinFast?

That's the proposition being offered by the automobile arm of Vietnam's largest conglomerate, Vingroup. It's betting big on the U.S. market with its VinFast line of cars and hoping that electric SUVs and a battery leasing model will be enough to woo consumers away from homegrown market leaders like Tesla and General Motors Co.

A recent arrival on the automotive scene and the No. 5 car brand in Vietnam, VinFast is not short on ambition, with its sights set on a U.S. listing and a valuation of as much as $60 billion, according to two sources familiar with its plans.


(GRAPHIC: VinFast fifth in terms of Vietnam sales in 2020 - https://graphics.reuters.com/VIETNAM-VINFAST/rlgvdzyjgvo/chart.png)

It will launch in North America and Europe in 2022, CEO Nguyen Thi Van Anh told Reuters, joining a crowded field of players seeking to compete with Elon Musk's Tesla, including a slew of loss-making upstarts fuelled by a Wall Street fundraising craze.

"We are going to North America - U.S., Canada - and Europe at the same time. In Europe, we're going to Germany, France and the Netherlands," Van Anh said in an interview at the company's sprawling factory complex near the northern port of Haiphong.

Standing behind VinFast is Vingroup, Vietnam's answer to a South Korean chaebol or catch-all conglomerate. Founded as an instant noodle business in post-Soviet Ukraine, the company's trajectory has mirrored that of Vietnam, one of Asia's fastest-growing economies, with interests spanning real estate, resorts, schools, hospitals and smartphones.

Even with such formidable local backing, VinFast has its work cut out as industry giants such as General Motors, Toyota and Volkswagen spend tens of billions of dollars to develop electric and driverless vehicles.

Founded in 2017 with a team led by former General Motors Co executives, the company is aiming to compete on vehicle size and price – pitching an electric SUV that Van Anh described as "more luxurious" than those currently on offer.

VinFast cars will also come with a battery leasing scheme that means the cost of the battery, one of the most expensive components of an electric car, will not be included in the final price.

"I'm going to give you a better product. I'm giving you an SUV. I'm giving you a more spacious car," said Van Anh, who will relocate next month from Hanoi to Los Angeles to head VinFast's U.S. operations.

According to a presentation prepared by the company for potential investors, VinFast cars will be cheaper compared to other electric-vehicle (EV) models.

A Tesla SUV sells for around $50,000, but Van Anh, who declined to discuss potential competitors, would not be drawn on how much a VinFast SUV would sell for. Two of the company's three electric models are destined for the United States, where the company is targeting annual sales of 45,000 cars, she said.

(GRAPHIC: Sales of battery electric vehicles in the U.S. market - https://graphics.reuters.com/VIETNAM-VINFAST/rlgvdzdojvo/chart.png)

AN EDGE OVER THE COMPETITION?


There is precedent for Asian carmakers cracking the U.S. market. Toyota in the 1970s and Hyundai in the 1980s overcame initial scepticism with products that eventually stole market share from U.S. manufacturers.

VinFast, which achieved annual sales of around 30,000 units last year in Vietnam and has yet to make a profit, faces an uphill battle.

"Their biggest challenge is convincing consumers that they have a solid product and a compelling value proposition," said Bill Russo, head of Shanghai-based consultancy Automobility Ltd and a former Chrysler executive.

"The product itself looks to have the right appearance and features, but this will only get you in the game. Winning requires a technology or business model edge over the competition."

(GRAPHIC: VinFast finances - https://graphics.reuters.com/VIETNAM-VINFAST/dgkvlyobmpb/chart.png)

The company is betting its battery leasing scheme – where customers would pay a monthly amount roughly equivalent to what the average consumer might spend on petrol – will win over U.S. customers.

When the battery, which uses cells from South Korea's Samsung SDI, is at 70% of its full lifespan, VinFast will replace it, Van Anh said.

A similar scheme has already been rolled out in China by Tencent-backed electric vehicle maker Nio, whose ES6 SUV has a starting price of around 358,000 yuan ($55,272).

No EV maker can compete with Tesla in the near future, according to Michael Dunne, chief executive of automotive consulting firm ZoZo Go, pointing to the U.S. company's across-the-board strengths.

"But the good news is that companies like VinFast do not have to beat Tesla to win. All they really need to do is convert a portion of the 65 million consumers who bought gasoline-powered cars in 2020 to switch over the electrics," said Dunne.

VinFast, whose manufacturing facility in Vietnam has the capacity to churn out 250,000 cars a year, is planning on conducting most of its U.S. sales online, removing the need for a costly dealership network. It has had 15,000 advance orders so far for its VF e34 electric car in Vietnam.

The company has hired Jeremy Snyder, a 10-year Tesla veteran, as its U.S. Chief Growth Officer.

Snyder told Reuters he was VinFast's first employee on the ground in the United States but, between full-time employees and consultants, the company now has around 100 people working there.

"It's very exciting to bring Vietnam and the United States closer through VinFast," he said.

TAPPING THE SPAC?

Vingroup's founder, Pham Nhat Vuong, Vietnam's richest man, has pledged to invest $2 billion of his own money into the car division and Vingroup has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into VinFast by issuing international bonds and selling off stakes in other units.

But expansion over the years has pushed up Vingroup's debt and losses at some of its ventures have squeezed its cashflow. To turbocharge its growth, VinFast will need more cash. The company is looking at tapping into a funding frenzy in the United States, where investors, including some of the world's biggest money managers, have poured billions into auto startups via blank-check companies known as special-purpose acquisition companies or SPACs.

Three sources with direct knowledge of the plans said VinFast was leaning towards a SPAC, although Van Anh declined to comment on when or how the company would generate funding in the United States.

Officials from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will visit Vietnam soon to meet with Vingroup executives about its efforts to list, two separate sources said. If VinFast does list in the United States it will be the first Vietnamese company to do so. "When it happens, how it happens, whether by SPAC or by another method, we'll make the right decision at the same time," said Van Anh.

There are hundreds of SPACs searching for companies to take public and investors are desperate to identify the next Tesla, whose stratospheric market rally has made Musk one of the world's richest men.

Nio, which made a net loss last year of $860 million, has a market cap of around $67 billion, according to its New York stock listing and sold just under 44,000 cars last year, close to what VinFast is targeting in the United States.

A stream of EV-related startups notched up multi-billion dollar valuations last year despite not having products ready to sell but their shares have taken a knocking recently.

VinFast likes to distinguish itself from other EV startups.

"If you look at some of the SPAC deals that already happened, they do not really have what we currently have," said Van Anh.

"Even if we don't have a product in the world market, we have the products here."

($1 = 6.4771 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Additional reporting by Khanh Vu in Hanoi, Kane Wu in Hong Kong and Norihiko Shirouzu in Shanghai; Editing by Carmel Crimmins)
NO WAY TO CELEBRATE MAY DAY
Port of Montreal to resume operations as legislation forces dock workers back to work


MONTREAL — Operations at the Port of Montreal were expected to resume gradually beginning Saturday after the Senate passed legislation forcing striking workers back on the job.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The House of Commons approved the bill Thursday, and it was debated and approved by the Senate late Friday.

The Maritime Employers Association issued a brief statement Saturday saying activities at the port would gradually ramp up.

The Port of Montreal said resuming operations and reestablishing the normal flow of goods will take several days and clients waiting to import or export goods should expect delays.

"The process established by the legislation will lead to establishing a new collective agreement between the parties, with no possibility of work stoppages," the port authority said in a statement.

"While a prior settlement between the parties would have been preferable, the strategic character of port operations has led to a decision that highlights the need to resume this major economic activity."

About $275 million worth of goods moves through Port of Montreal docks each day, including food, pharmaceuticals and construction equipment.

Michel Murray of the Canadian Union of Public Employees local that represents the dockworkers has called the federal back-to-work legislation an attack on the workers' constitutional right to strike.

He told reporters at a May Day protest in Montreal on Saturday the union would take legal action and file complaints with the International Labour Organization.


A spokeswoman for the union confirmed that its members would be back on the job as of Sunday.

The new legislation stipulates that a mediator-arbitrator will be selected in the coming days and the most recent collective agreement will be extended until a new deal is established.

The 1,150 workers at the port have been without a contract since December 2018.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 1, 2021.

The Canadian Press
THE BEGINING OF THE STIMULUS
Americans' personal income shot up 21.1% in March, a record dating back to at least 1946

© Steven Senne, File via AP Passers-by examine a storefront window on Boston's Newbury Street shopping district. Personal income and spending both jumped in March. Steven Senne, File via AP


Personal income for Americans climbed by 21.1% in March, the Commerce Department said Friday.

It's the highest on record in data that goes all the way back to 1946; spending was up by 4.2%.

The income jump was supported by the $1.9 trillion stimulus signed into law by President Biden.

Income for American households in March surged by the largest amount ever, fueled by massive fiscal stimulus released by the US government to limit the economic damage from the COVID-19 health crisis.

Personal income soared by an estimated 21.1% last month, or by $4.21 trillion, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said Friday. The figure compares to a 20.3% increase expected in an Econoday survey of economists. The March figure marked a swing from February's income decline of 7%.

The monthly income leap was the biggest on record in data that goes back to 1946.


THE ORIGINAL GIG WORKER

"Incomes soared as a result of the stimulus payments made under the March relief bill," said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, in a Friday note, referring to the $1.9 trillion stimulus package that President Joe Biden signed into law, which unleashed $1,400 checks to most Americans.

Income readings "will correct in both April and May, but income from employment will rise much more strongly over the next few months and, in any event, most of the payments have not yet been spent," wrote Shepherdson.

The Commerce Department's report also showed that spending, or personal consumption, leapt by 4.2% last month. "The jump in March spending ... was clearly signaled by the retail sales numbers," Shepherdson said.


Retail sales pushed higher by 9.8% in March to a record $619.1 billion, the Census Bureau said earlier this month.


Jason Furman, a Harvard economics professor and chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers to former President Barack Obama, wrote on Twitter about the unique nature of the report. He noted that the real disposable personal income shooting up 23% was a one-time bump attributable to stimulus checks, and that it normally takes about two years for real personal consumption expenditures to shoot up by 3.6%.

The White House commented that the report shows the importance of government support during the pandemic. It said the largest contribution to income during the pandemic came from government benefits, which were up over $300 billion over the month (almost $4 trillion at an annualized rate). Americans' saving rate of 28% was the second-highest on record, it noted, and much higher than the average pre-crisis saving rate of 7.5%.

Sen. Bernie Sanders wrote of the report on Twitter that "We are BEGINNING to create an economy that works for all. But more must be done," and called for an increase of the minimum wage, universal healthcare, lower prescription drug costs, student-debt forgiveness, and higher taxes on corporations and the wealthy.
First of its kind nuclear project about creating new energy solution in Canada

Canada's SMR (small modular reactor) Action Plan provides concrete steps to help achieve its 2030 climate reduction targets under the Paris Agreement, and overall goal of net-zero emissions by 2050 using nuclear energy to get there. Global First Power, a joint venture between USNC-Power and Ontario Power Generation (OPG) is well on its way to developing a commercial demonstration project, the first of its kind that will set the stage for future deployment of SMRs, said Ken Darlington, USNC-Power’s vice-president of corporate development.


The project, located at Chalk River, has been ongoing for a number of years and the 50-50 partnership was formed mid-2020. “This is not a pilot plan,” said Mr. Darlington. “It is really the design that is intended to be put into market.” The reactor can generate up to five megawatts (MW) of electricity so it is sized more for the remote and off-grid market such as mining projects and small communities. “Canadian Nuclear Laboratories (CNL) has a program to site this SMR at Chalk River and we’re at the third stage of their four-stage process,” he said. “We’re the only company at the stage. All the others are still at stage one.”


Global First Power has signed a project hosting agreement with CNL and Atomic Energy Canada Limited (AECL) for the whole site of the project and is the only project in Canada right now with an actual site. “We’re also in the second stage of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission’s (CNSC) safety process on the licencing,” he added. “That is very high level.”

“This project is about taking an idea, putting a lot of work and a lot of money into it and taking this to hardware to prove itself,” said Mark Mitchell, president of USNC-Power. He is responsible for the development of the company’s technology. There are about a dozen families of technologies and about 140 advanced reactor designs, of which a dozen are currently being discussed in Canada.

“The technology we are deploying is not actually that new,” said Mr. Mitchell. “The first nuclear reactor technologies used gas cooling graphite moderated reactors and in fact, this is that type. The technology we are deploying is not actually that new. The specific type is a high temperature gas cooled reactor and the first of those were built in the late 1950s so our philosophy is not to try to use the most advanced technology but to try technology that is to some extent proven, that has a track record that we understand, and deploy in a slightly new way that makes use of its advantages.”

“There are a lot of real advantages to nuclear technology,” he added. “Specifically, the fuel has a high-energy density. It generates power for a long time (there’s very little waste). It’s in the micro reactor size range which is the 5 MW Ken was talking about. Our reactor is specifically designed for Canadian climates. We can put it down for about 20 years. We don’t have to refuel it. We don’t have to replace it.” After 20 years, the reactor can be shut down, cleaned up, decommissioned and taken away. “That’s the kind of idea behind the use of this technology.”

“The fact that there’s reactors of a similar type out there operating gives us something to refer to,” he said. There’s a track record that can be referred to. “There’s no free pass from the regulatory agencies, but at least there’s not a lot of unknown unknowns and that’s going to help us. The good thing is there’s no surprises and there’s people we can call and talk to.”

The Chalk River project is really helping the Canadian regulatory framework to evolve for this new generation of nuclear technology evolve because right now the licencing process is very much predicated on large scale older nuclear technology, said Mr. Darlington. “Part of what we’re doing at Chalk River is really working with CNSC in their preparations to adapt to this type of technology and the fact that we’re looking at multiple deployments in remote areas. It triggers a number of things they need to think about to facilitate projects and that’s one of the goals of Chalk River.”

The CANDU reactors currently in operation in Ontario, across Canada and globally are clearly safe and set the industry standard, Mr. Mitchell said. “They have a really good performance and Canada is one of the leading providers of reactors in the world. What new technologies give you is potentially improved safety but with much, much simpler systems and much less expense, as well as different ways of scaling and different ways of operating. That’s the opportunity in this. CANDU is a great technology but they’re pretty big. There’s a lot of Canada that’s not grid connected that can’t use a thousand megawatts of power so it’s not really a fair apples to apples comparisons to compare safeties. I think our approach and our technologies are all, in USNC-Power’s case, at achieving industry leading safety. That’s with industry leading economics and in a different way.”

One concern that has arisen about SMRs relates to their transportation. “It will be possible to fuel and transport the reactors but just because you can do it, should you do it is always the question, right?” asked Mr. Mitchell. “A reactor that hasn’t been used is essentially just a big pile of steel and materials. It’s not inherently risky. But again, it’s heavy and hard to transport, so we would probably not transport a whole reactor, not even if it’s technically possible. You can be assured of the safety of that.”

In terms of waste, packaging and transporting waste is something that’s technically quite achievable and done every day, he added. “We don’t think we’d change anything in terms of the industry and the trick with these micro reactors is the waste they generate is so small it’s almost vanishing, I’ll put it that way. In terms of numbers, I’ll say the generation of low level waste will be maybe a drum a year. That’s not a lot of waste. Over its lifetime that’s 20 drums. Can you safely store, transport and dispose of this type of material? Yes. Is it easier than larger volumes? Probably, yes.”

Part of planning for safety is mitigating how often you have to transport fuel or transport waste, added Mr. Darlington. “So our reactor design considers 20 years of fuel. Yes, transportation of fuel needs to happen but it’s not something that will happen every three or four years or even yearly so you don’t have an ongoing risk associated with fuel disposal.”

Engagement is part of their first priority at the Chalk River project, Mr. Darlington said. “We see the regulatory side, licencing in Canada as inevitable. The social licence is really where you need to invest that time. At Chalk River it started on day one. There’s multiple First Nations engaged in that process and there’s been various agreements reached with them. Our last community town hall featured 5,000 people. You can’t just walk in somewhere and say here’s a reactor off you go. It does need to start at an early stage and it requires trust and investing in those relations. It’s also about making First Nations and Indigenous peoples part of the process and offering them real opportunity beyond being a beneficiary of the project but potentially having economic benefits as well.”

“We’re not asking people to accept something based on trust,” added Mr. Mitchell. “We’re actively building an SMR in a very controlled environment. The laboratory at Chalk River is an excellent place for things like this. There’s good infrastructure that’s already had nuclear reactors there and a community that understands the technologies. I think that gives you a way of showing people, not just telling them.”

Nuclear energy and SMRs is an enormous opportunity for Canada, Mr. Darlington said. “The energy density of a nuclear energy reactor is phenomenal when you compare it to other types of energy. As an example, one 5 MW microreactor displaces 250 million litres of diesel fuel over its 20-year life. That represents 600,000 tonnes of C02 emissions averted. If you look at a mining operation that requires 20 MW and you have four units to meet that need, you’re displacing a billion litres of diesel fuel and you’re displacing the supply risk and potential carbon taxes. There are absolutely climate change advantages to SMRs. With 2030 targets and 2050 targets, the resources industry is positioning to start to make a real change. Timing is very important for us and for them to start showing that reduction in those emissions and it’s tangible.”

The goal is for the reactor to be operational by 2026, which aligns with CNL program to site an SMR by that date, said Mr. Darlington. “We optimistically think it could be sooner but that is the date that is currently scheduled and that we’re working towards for commissioning and start up and operations.”

Lori Thompson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Manitoulin Expositor
ANOTHER DELAWARE RADICAL
Senator Tom Carper Proposes EPA Adopt Plan Ending Gas Vehicle Sales By 2035



Senator Tom Carper (D-Del.) is urging the U.S. to follow more progressive anti-pollution standards by aiming to end sales of new gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035.

Leigh Vogel/Getty Images Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE) questions Neera Tanden, nominee for Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), at her confirmation hearing before the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs committee on February 9, 2021 at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC. In a letter to the EPA, carper is proposing the administration aim to phase out gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035.

Carper, who chairs the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, sent a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday saying the administration should follow the standards of a deal brokered between California and automakers to achieve Biden's plan of slashing America's greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030.

"Strong policies in the United States will encourage those investments to be made here," Carper wrote in the letter to EPA Administrator Michael Regan that was obtained by the Associated Press. He cited likely U.S. gains in "research and development, manufacturing and ultimately export opportunities in automotive technology."

Under Carper's proposal, the EPA would apply California's 2019 framework agreement on emissions standards reached between Ford, Volkswagen, Honda, BMW and Volvo. That deal would cut greenhouse gas emissions by 3.7 percent per year from 2022 through 2026, raise fuel economy requirements by a like amount and give automakers credits toward meeting the requirements for selling zero-emissions battery electric and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.


Greta Thunberg Boldly Tells World Leaders On Climate Change: 'Choose Wisely'


After that, the administration would have to enact much stricter standards to meet Carper's goals. Half of all new vehicles sold would be electric by 2030 and sales of new gasoline-powered passenger vehicles would be banned by 2035.

"If the U.S. does not establish a robust policy that leads to zero-emission vehicle deployment, combined with appropriate incentives, we will be at risk of losing our automotive jobs and industry leadership to other nations, as well as enduring unnecessary public health impacts from pollution," Carper wrote.

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

Carper noted that the industry is already moving in the direction of zero-emission electric vehicles and that it's critical to lay markers now to ensure that the U.S. positions itself as a top player in auto manufacturing over foreign competitors such as China.

Carper's push comes as the Biden administration takes steps to reverse former President Donald Trump's bid to end California's ability to set its own automobile tailpipe pollution standards. That move could pave the way for the U.S. to broker an industrywide deal that follows California's agreement, although reaching such an agreement faces challenges.

Most of the rest of the auto industry, for instance, opposed the California deal and sided with Trump in rolling back the standards to a 1.5% increase in fuel economy per year through 2026. In early talks with the Biden administration last month, a coalition of automakers said it wanted mileage standards lower than those brokered by California.

Biden has said he wants stronger standards to deal with the effects of climate change, and in his address to Congress on Wednesday he said the U.S. "can own the electric car market." His climate proposal, however, does not detail the greenhouse gas reductions that his administration envisions for each sector of the economy.

Biden's top climate adviser, Gina McCarthy, appeared to signal that deeper cuts in emissions would have to come from sectors other than the auto industry to reach the goals.

To increase sales of electric vehicles, the administration plans to spend $15 billion to build a half-million charging stations by 2030 as well as offer unspecified tax credits and rebates to cut the cost.

However, experts said it will be difficult to replace the 279 million passenger vehicles now on U.S. roads—most of which burn gasoline—with electric vehicles in less than 15 years. The average U.S. vehicle is now nearly 12 years old, so they stay on the roads longer than in the past. And without an immediate change, the number of gasoline-powered vehicles will continue to grow. IHS Markit predicts it will be 284 million by 2025.

Each year, automakers sell about 17 million new vehicles in the U.S., most of them running on gasoline. If every new vehicle sold were electric starting today, it would take more than 16 years to replace all of the gasoline vehicles.
© Orlin Wagner)/AP Photo In this Monday, April 5, 2021 file photo, a Tesla electric vehicle charges at a station in Topeka, Kan. With strong sales of its electric cars and SUVs, Tesla on Monday, April 26, 2021 posted its seventh-straight profitable quarter. Sen. Tom Carper is proposing to phase out gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035. Orlin Wagner)/AP Photo

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Duration: 03:53 




Bestselling author and investigative journalist Patrick Radden Keefe discusses his new book Empire of Pain, which looks at the family behind the marketing and sale of OxyContin - a drug that helped create the opioid drug



BLM = RACE HATERED OF WHITE VOLK
Oklahoma state GOP lawmaker compares Black Lives Matter to KKK on House floor

Celine Castronuovo 
THE HLL 30/4/2021


An Oklahoma state Republican representative on Thursday garnered outrage from fellow lawmakers for comparing the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement to the Ku Klux Klan (KKK)
.
© Getty Images Oklahoma state GOP lawmaker compares Black Lives Matter to KKK on House floor

The comment occurred during discussions regarding an Oklahoma House bill that would ban "critical race theory" at state college and universities as well as other designated topics on sex and race.

Rep. Justin Humphrey (R) said the KKK, the centuries-old white supremacist group, was "terrible."

"Everybody agrees on this floor that they have burned, that they have threatened, that they have destroyed, that's what they're famous for," he added.

Humphrey then asked the education bill's co-author, GOP state Rep. Kevin West if he would "agree that when people burn, threaten, kill, intimidate, that they are a terrorist group, and that Black Lives Matter meet that same description?"

The comment was met with audible gasps from some other lawmakers, before West responded, "I would agree."

Democratic state Rep. Emily Virgin then asked that lawmakers avoid using profane, obscene or indecent language on the House floor, prompting Humphrey to apologize for his word choice.

Local ABC affiliate KOCO-TV reported that a small group of protesters then went to Humphrey's office following the comments.

When reached for comment, Humphrey told The Hill that while he supports "every Black movement that" participates in "peaceful protests," he doubled down on his argument that "BLM is a terrorist group."

"There is no country that does more for civil rights than America," he added, though he noted that "there has been injustice done to the Black community."

Humphrey in his explanation for why he supported the education bill cited the famous quote from the late civil rights icon and leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who said he had a "dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

"I think that's what we've lost," he told The Hill. "We're teaching race, we're teaching hatred toward race."

The House bill, first proposed in February, in part prohibits state colleges and universities from requiring sexual diversity training or counseling, and also bans school employees from teaching specified topics on race and sex, including that "one race or sex is inherently superior to another race or sex," and that an individual "by virtue of his or her race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive."

The bill, which passed 69-19 on Thursday, was already passed by the Oklahoma Senate, and now heads to Gov. Kevin Stitt's (R) desk for approval.


Wind energy could generate 3.3 million jobs within five years, industry body claims

Anmar Frangoul CNBC 4/30/2021

Around the world, governments are laying out targets to cut emissions and increase renewable energy installations.

Any move away from fossil fuels will be a significant challenge requiring huge change.

© Provided by CNBC A rope access technician standing on the hub of a wind turbine.

The expansion of the wind energy industry could create 3.3 million jobs in the next five years, according to analysis from industry body the Global Wind Energy Council.

The projection includes direct roles in onshore and offshore wind as well as jobs across the sector's value chain. The latter comprises jobs in areas such as installation, manufacturing, project planning and development, operation and maintenance and decommissioning.

These roles would service an industry forecast to install an extra 470 gigawatts of onshore and offshore capacity between 2021 and 2025, the GWEC said.

The Brussels-based organization's outlook for jobs is based on what it described as "market growth data" from GWEC Market Intelligence and "global studies by the International Renewable Energy Agency … on job creation for onshore and offshore wind projects from 2017 and 2018."

Joyce Lee, the council's head of policy and projects, said Thursday the energy transition would "have to accelerate over the next decade to safeguard our chances of achieving carbon neutrality by mid-century."

"The good news is that the transition offers net employment and economic gains," Lee said. "Governments across the world can tap into the socioeconomic benefits by setting more ambitious renewable energy targets, streamlining permitting for wind projects, and building energy markets that account for the true costs of fossil fuels."

Around the world, governments are indeed laying out targets to cut emissions and increase renewable energy installations, with a number aiming to make wind energy a crucial tool in their pivot away from fossil fuels.

Last month, for instance, the U.S. said it wanted to expand its offshore wind capacity to 30 GW by 2030, a move the Biden administration hopes will generate thousands of jobs and unlock billions of dollars in investment in coming years.

Across the Atlantic, the U.K. wants its offshore wind capacity to hit 40 GW by 2030, while the European Union wants offshore installations to amount to at least 60 GW by the end of this decade and 300 GW by 2050.

Despite these targets, the reality on the ground shows that for many countries, any move away from fossil fuels will be a significant challenge requiring a huge amount of change.

In the U.S., for example, fossil fuels comfortably remained the biggest source of electricity generation in 2020, according to the Energy Information Administration.








Cancer rates much higher in medieval Britain than previously realized, study suggests

By Katie Hunt, CNN  30/4/2021

The earliest description of cancer is from an ancient Egyptian papyrus, and going back further, even dinosaurs suffered a form of the disease. But cancer long has been thought to have become a common disease only in the last two centuries or so.

© Cambridge Archaeological Unit/St John's College The remains of numerous individuals were unearthed on the site of the former Hospital of St. John the Evangelist in the city of Cambridge, UK. Skeletal remains were investigated as part of the study.

This is, in part, down to longer life expectancies, habits like smoking, and exposure to tumor-inducing chemicals post-industrial revolution.

However, new research published in the journal Cancer on medieval skeletons has suggested that cancer was more widespread than previously realized -- although still less common than today.

In the first study of its kind, researchers from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom analyzed 143 skeletons from six cemeteries from the Cambridge area that were dated to between the sixth and 16th centuries. To detect malignant lesions, the team focused on three areas most likely to contain secondary malignant growth in people with cancer -- the spinal column, pelvis and thigh bone.

The scientists visually inspected the bones and used radiographs and computed tomography scans. The team found that 3.5% of the individuals showed evidence of metastatic cancer -- that is, when the malignant tumor spreads to a different part of the body from where it started.

"The majority of cancers form in soft tissue organs long since degraded in medieval remains. Only some cancer spreads to bone, and of these only a few are visible on its surface, so we searched within the bone for signs of malignancy," said Piers Mitchell, a senior research associate and director of the Ancient Parasites Laboratory at the University of Cambridge's department of archaeology, in a news statement.

Taking into account data on modern populations that shows CT scans detect bone metastases around 75% of the time and the proportion of cancer deaths that involve spread to the bone, the researchers estimated that 9% to 14% of medieval Britons developed cancer.

"Modern research shows a third to a half of people with soft tissue cancers will find the tumor spreads to their bones. We combined this data with evidence of bone metastasis from our study to estimate cancer rates for medieval Britain," explained Mitchell, the study's lead author.

Major affliction


Prior research into cancer rates using the archaeological record has been limited to examining the surface of the bone for lesions. These past studies suggested that cancer was rare, affecting less than 1% of the population, the study said.

"Until now it was thought that the most significant causes of ill health in medieval people were infectious diseases such as dysentery and bubonic plague, along with malnutrition and injuries due to accidents or warfare," said coauthor Jenna Dittmar, who was an associate researcher at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge while undertaking the study analysis.

"We now have to add cancer as one of the major classes of disease that afflicted medieval people," Dittmar said in the statement.

Even with this higher estimate, cancer was still much less widespread in medieval times than in modern Britain, where there is a 40% to 50% prevalence of cancer at time of death, the study said.

Unanswered question


One key question that remains unanswered, the study said, is to what extent the effects of tobacco smoking and the toxins and pollutants from industrialization have had on the risk of developing cancer.

"The best way we have to answer this question would be to study data from before the Industrial Revolution of the 1700s and 1800s and before tobacco became available in Britain following the transatlantic settlement of the Americas by Europeans in the 1500s," the study said.

The researchers said the study did have limitations. Diagnosing cancer in those lain dead for many centuries is challenging -- skeletons can't describe their symptoms or have blood tests. Plus, other diseases during life can cause changes in bones that may mimic the lesions made by metastases, and decomposition can also affect the bone after death.

Also, the sample size was limited by the number of available skeletons with good preservation of the spine, pelvis and thigh bone, which leads to a larger margin of error.

"We need further studies using CT scanning of apparently normal skeletons in different regions and time periods to see how common cancer was in key civilizations of the past," Mitchell said

.
© Jenna Dittmar A human vertebra dating back to medieval times shows evidence of cancer

Pakistan decries EU parliament's move on blasphemy laws

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan on Friday decried a move by the European Parliament, which a day earlier adopted a resolution demanding Islamabad allow freedom for religious minorities and asked the EU to reconsider the South Asian country's preferential trade status.

The European Parliament appealed on Islamabad to free a Christian couple — Shagufta Kausar and her husband Shafqat Emmanuel — who have been on death row since 2014. The two were convicted of insulting Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

It also urged Pakistani authorities to repeal the country's controversial blasphemy laws, provide Kausar and Emmanuel with needed medical care and “immediately and unconditionally” overrule their death sentence.

It also expressed concern at increasing online and other attacks on journalists and human rights activists and asked Pakistan to take steps to ensure their safety.

Under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws, anyone accused of insulting Islam can be sentenced to death if convicted. Just the mere accusation of blasphemy can cause riots and incite mobs to violence and killings.

The foreign ministry in Islamabad released a statement expressing the government's disappointment at the European resolution, saying it “reflects a lack of understanding in the context of blasphemy laws and associated religious sensitivities in Pakistan — and in the wider Muslim world”.

However, it is unlikely that Islamabad will act on the charged issue. Radical Islamists parties have in recent years held violent rallies to stop the government from making any changes in the blasphemy laws.

Kausar and Emmanuel were arrested in 2013 on suspicion of sending a blasphemous text message to a local cleric in eastern Punjab province, an allegation they denied. The two were tried and sentenced to death in 2014. Since then, their appeals have been pending in the Lahore High Court.

According to domestic and international human rights groups, blasphemy allegations in Pakistan have often been used to intimidate religious minorities and to settle personal scores.

A Punjab governor was killed by his own guard in 2011 after he defended a Christian woman, Aasia Bibi, who was accused of blasphemy. She was acquitted after spending eight years on death row and left Pakistan for Canada to join her family after receiving threats.


Munir Ahmed, The Associated Press




Pope enables Vatican prosecutions of cardinals, bishops


ROME — Pope Francis has sent another message to Vatican-based cardinals and bishops that he intends to hold them accountable for criminal misconduct: He removed the procedural obstacles that had spared them from being prosecuted and judged by the Vatican’s lay criminal tribunal.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

A new law published Friday makes clear that Vatican city-state prosecutors and judges have jurisdiction over Holy See cardinals and bishops and need only the pope’s consent to proceed with investigations and trials against them.

The law abrogated a regulation that said only the tribunal’s highest appeals court, which is made up of three cardinals, could judge cardinals and bishops accused of criminal offences.

The reform is the latest sign that after eight years of preaching about ending corruption and other criminal activity in the Holy See, Francis is taking concrete steps to make it easier to hold his own cardinals and bishops accountable while emboldening Vatican prosecutors to go after them.


On Thursday, he passed a different law forcing Vatican superiors to declare their finances are clean, and set a 40-euro ($48) cap on work-related personal gifts received by any Vatican employee. The gift cap was seen as a way to cut down on the rampant practice of financial gift-giving to Holy See clerics.


Friday's reform follows Francis’ decision last year to strip a senior Vatican official, Cardinal Angelo Becciu, of his privileges as a cardinal in a move seen as laying the groundwork for Becciu to possibly be put on trial.

The allegations against him aren’t clear, however, and Becciu hasn't been charged with any crime.

Becciu has said Francis cited a 100,000-euro donation he made using Holy See funds to a charity run by his brother. Becciu has denied wrongdoing, noting that he had full authority to disburse the funds, the money was destined for the charity, not his brother, and the money never left the diocesan bank account into which it was deposited.

Becciu was also involved initially in a London real estate venture that is now the subject of a Vatican corruption investigation. But the key transaction under scrutiny occurred after he was promoted.

The new procedural law Friday would presumably make unnecessary any move to strip other cardinals of their privileges before an indictment is handed down.

In an introduction to the new regulation, Francis said it was important to make sure everyone is equal under the law.

Within the church’s in-house canon law system for church crimes, cardinals and bishops are judged only by the pope, who is an absolute monarch with exclusive legislative, executive and judicial power in the Vatican. That privilege extended also to the criminal code of the city-state’s tribunal in ways that led to some anomalies in recent years.


In one famous case, prosecutors decided to not even investigate the cardinal whose Vatican apartment was renovated using a half-million dollars in donations intended for the pope’s children’s hospital. The hospital president who diverted the funds to the renovation project was convicted by the Vatican tribunal. But the cardinal who benefitted from the crime wasn’t even called to testify, much less investigated.

More recently, a British judge expressed perplexity that the current Vatican hierarchy had seemingly been spared investigation in the London real estate corruption case. The judge, ruling in a related asset seizure case, questioned why the Vatican secretary of state and his No. 2 hadn’t even provided witness statements about the London deal, when documents and evidence indicated they had authorized it.

The text of the new law was published without comment near the back of Friday's editions of the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano.

Nicole Winfield, The Associated Press


Venezuelans celebrate beatification of 'doctor to the poor'

CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelans on Friday celebrated the beatification of Jose Gregorio Hernandez, a medic who became known as the "doctor of the poor" while treating the ill during the Spanish flu pandemic in the early 20th century.

© Reuters/MIRAFLORES PALACE Beatification mass of doctor Jose Gregorio Hernandez, in Caracas

© Reuters/CNB.JGB Beatification mass of doctor Jose Gregorio Hernandez, in Caracas

Pope Francis in 2020 began the process of his beatification, which precedes sainthood in the Roman Catholic tradition.

That process was completed on Friday in a Caracas ceremony led by papal nuncio Aldo Giordano and other Venezuelan church leaders.

Giordano called for Hernandez's intervention to help the South American nation obtain coronavirus vaccines for its inoculation campaign, which has been mired in partisan differences.

© Reuters/MIRAFLORES PALACE Beatification mass of doctor Jose Gregorio Hernandez, in Caracas

"May the blessed Jose Gregorio intercede so that access to vaccines can be achieved together, without divisions," Giordano said. "(Hernandez) is able to unite all his compatriots, independent of their social, political and economic differences."




Video: Pope urges countries to speed up vaccinations, share shots with poor countries (NBC News)

Pope Francis, the first Latin American pontiff, in a video released on Thursday said he hoped the beatification would foment solidarity among Venezuelans, who for decades have been bitterly divided by politics.

© Reuters/MIRAFLORES PALACE Beatification mass of doctor Jose Gregorio Hernandez, in Caracas

Hernandez, the fourth Venezuelan to be beatified, was born in the Andean state of Trujillo in 1864. He died in 1919 after being hit by a car in Caracas, and his devotees spent decades petitioning the Vatican to put him on the path to sainthood.


 
© Reuters/CNB.JGB Beatification mass of doctor Jose Gregorio Hernandez, in Caracas

In 2017, the church attributed a miracle to Hernandez for saving the life of a young girl, Yaxury Solorzano, who was shot in the head during a robbery attempt.


Doctors had said Solorzano would be disabled if they managed to save her life, but she recovered and was able to walk just weeks after leaving the hospital, according to church records.

Solorzano's mother had prayed to Hernandez for her daughter's salvation. Both mother and daughter were present for Friday's ceremony.


High ranking government officials including Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza, and parliament chief Jorge Rodriguez were present for the ceremony.

(Reporting by Mayela Armas, Writing by Brian Ellsworth, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)



B.C. First Nation joins calls for Ottawa to step in on review of Alberta coal project

A British Columbia First Nation has joined calls for the federal government to step in on the environmental review of a proposed open-pit coal mine in Alberta's Rocky Mountains.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Ktunaxa First Nation, the first group outside Alberta to ask for Ottawa's involvement, says it has little faith in the province's ability to hear their concerns over Montem Resources' Tent Mountain project. They say it would have effects beyond the provincial boundary, impairing their ability to practice their treaty rights.

"Due to the location, size and lifespan of the proposed project, the (Ktunaxa) consider that it will likely cause significant adverse impacts on the Ktunaxa Nation’s Indigenous rights and interests," says the letter written to federal Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson.

Montem Resources is proposing to resume mining on a site near Coleman, Alta., last mined in 1983. Documents filed with Alberta's regulator say the company would only need 750 hectares.

But the Ktunaxa say those documents gloss over the fact that Tent Mountain would dump waste rock and water in B.C. and needs permits from B.C. authorities. They also point out Tent Mountain would be immediately adjacent to as many as four other open-pit coal mines.

"The potential for the project to contribute to regional cumulative effects is therefore also a deep concern," the letter states.

The letter points out the mine comes suspiciously close to the production threshold that would automatically trigger a federal review.

"This raises the prospect that the project description has been tailored specifically to avoid a federal (assessment)."

The Ktunaxa say their experience in the federal-provincial review of Benga Mining's Grassy Mountain project leaves them with little faith in a review conducted only by Alberta.


"Without a federal environmental assessment, the Alberta government will not conduct any, much less meaningful and legally sufficient, consultation with the (Ktunaxa) to address and accommodate for the Project’s impacts," the letter says.

The Alberta government has announced plans for a series of five regional meetings with Alberta First Nations, but no plans for B.C.

The letter says Ktunaxa people fear losing that land for treaty-guaranteed traditional purposes including hunting, gathering, collecting medicines, ceremonies and cultural continuity.

"These effects will be compounded by the cumulative disturbance to the regional landscape," they write.

Montem Resources did not respond to a request for comment.

The Ktunaxa are only the latest group to request Ottawa join the assessment. The Kainai and Siksika First Nations in southern Alberta, as well as environmental groups and local landowners, have asked for the same.

Montem has stated in investor materials that the federal assessment agency has already ruled that federal participation isn't required.

However, an email from the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada to Montem suggests that's not the whole story. The company was told the minister could still designate the project for a federal review.

"The Minister of Environment and Climate Change (has) the authority to designate the project if, in the Minister’s opinion, the carrying out of project activities may cause adverse environmental effects or public concerns related to those effects warrant the designation," the email says.

Wilkinson has until June 1 to respond to those requests. A spokeswoman in his office said the decision will likely come around that date.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 30, 2021.

— Follow Bob Weber on Twitter at @row1960

Bob Weber, The Canadia