Wednesday, May 19, 2021

America Is on a Road to a Better Economy.
 But Better for Whom?

The federal government is undertaking the largest stimulus program in American history. 

The payoff could be more widely shared than usual.

Credit...Illustration by Ardneks

LONG READ

By Ben Casselman
May 18, 2021
 The New York Times

The plunge the U.S. economy took last spring was so precipitous that the charts from the time look, literally, like cliffs. Industrial output fell 12.7 percent in April 2020, the worst drop since records began a century earlier, as entire industries shut down virtually overnight. Airline travel, as measured by the number of people passing through T.S.A. checkpoints, fell 94 percent in a month — from two million people on March 1 to just 124,000 on April 1. In two months, employers cut 22 million jobs, more than in every recession in the last 50 years, combined.

“This thing is going to come for us all,” the economist Martha Gimbel, now an adviser to President Biden, said in April 2020, when the full extent of the damage was just beginning to hit home. She meant every industry, every income group, every class of worker — not just flight attendants and line cooks but also white-collar workers in supposedly recession-proof industries. Even sectors that were initially thriving in lockdown, like personal entertainment and home improvement, would feel the pinch once enough people saw their paychecks evaporate. No industry is recession-proof in a recession that shuts down the entire economy.

That was the dominant view at the time. But it was wrong. “This thing” didn’t come for us all. It came for the restaurants, the hotels, the movie theaters and for thousands of other businesses and millions of workers. But the ripples didn’t spread as far as economists feared. The financial system didn’t melt down. White-collar workers didn’t lose their jobs en masse. The factories and construction sites that shut down in April had mostly reopened by June.

A year later, the recovery is in full swing. Restaurants are open again. Airports are filling up. The United States has regained two-thirds of the jobs lost last spring, and is closing the remaining gap at the pace of hundreds of thousands of jobs a month. In his annual letter to shareholders a year ago, Jamie Dimon, the C.E.O. of JPMorgan Chase, warned of a “bad recession” that could rival the 2008 financial crisis; in this year’s edition, he predicted a multiyear boom.

Amid the euphoria, the government’s closely watched monthly jobs report showed that hiring in April was a quarter of what economists had expected, and down sharply from March. It was a stark reminder: The pandemic isn’t over. A robust recovery isn’t guaranteed. The U.S. economy still faces a long climb back to health — and the most vulnerable workers will, inevitably, be the last to benefit. The number of jobs held by college graduates in April was back almost to its pre-pandemic level; among those with a high school diploma or less, there is still a gaping hole of more than 3.5 million jobs.

Counting all the various Covid relief packages passed under two presidents, the United States has now pumped more than $5 trillion into the economy.

Political leaders and policymakers from President Biden on down have talked about the need to create a post-pandemic economy that is better than the one we left behind last year. The question is: Better for whom? The pre-pandemic economy, too, was praised in some corners as the best in decades, but it was still one in which the unemployment rate for Black Americans was twice that of white Americans, where someone could work a full-time job 52 weeks a year and still stay mired in poverty and where people’s toehold in the middle class was so tenuous that, within weeks of losing their jobs last spring, many were left idling in their cars in a miles-long line at a local food bank. “We need a different economy than the one we had, because the one we had clearly was not resilient,” says William Spriggs, a Howard University economist.

And yet in the next breath, Spriggs allows that he is optimistic that we actually will build a different economy this time, one in which jobs are plentiful, wages are rising and prosperity is widely shared. That optimism stems in part from the relatively strong recovery so far, and partly from the federal government’s ongoing efforts to keep it on track. But it also stems from the fact that after a crisis that laid bare the deep inequities in the U.S. economy, policymakers, journalists and voters are all less likely to accept without question a recovery that reaches only a small segment of the population.

The first two decades of the 21st century were a parade of economic disappointments: The bursting of the dot-com bubble was followed by a recession; which was followed by a “jobless recovery”; which was followed by another burst bubble, this time in housing; and another, even worse, recession; and another, even weaker, recovery.


Officially, the Great Recession ended in June 2009, but it took two years for U.S. gross domestic product to return to its pre-recession level, and six years for unemployment to do so. Long-term joblessness didn’t even stop rising until the recession had been over for nearly a year, and it didn’t get back to its pre-2008 normal until well into 2018. Year after year, forecasters predicted that this was the year that growth would finally pick up and wages would rise and prosperity would be widely shared. And year after year they were wrong. The pessimism became so ingrained that by 2019, when things were, finally, actually pretty good, the dominant economic narrative was about what would inevitably cause the next recession. (“Global pandemic” did not tend to make the list.)

Judged against that grim benchmark, this recovery already looks like an improvement. The consensus is that G.D.P. will return to its pre-pandemic level sometime this quarter, and possibly already has. The unemployment rate is on pace to get there sometime next year. Turn on CNBC these days, and the debate is not over the risks of a weak recovery but over the possibility of runaway inflation, a problem usually associated with an economy that’s running too hot, not one that’s trying to get back on its feet after a crippling recession.

This recovery is different, in part, because this recession was different. The last crisis, like most recessions, was caused by a fundamental imbalance — the housing bubble — that had to be resolved before the economy could start growing again. Construction workers and mortgage brokers had to find jobs in other industries. Households had to get out from under unsustainable debt loads. Banks and other financial institutions had to write off hundreds of billions in bad loans.

This time, there was no imbalance. Things were basically going fine, and then an outside force, what economists call an “exogenous shock,” turned the world upside-down. If we could somehow have pressed “pause” until the pandemic ended, there would have been no reason for a recession at all.

Of course, there is no “pause” button. That’s why everyone was so worried about the ripple effects last year. Restaurants can’t pay waiters when they have no customers. Waiters can’t pay rent when they have no jobs. Landlords can’t pay their mortgages when their tenants don’t pay rent. Banks can’t make new loans when borrowers stop making payments. And so on and so on, until what began as an isolated crisis caused by a specific set of circumstances has turned into a general pullback in activity across the economy.

Except that never really happened this time. Evictions, foreclosures and bankruptcies all fell last year. The financial system, as anyone who has checked their 401(k) balance lately can attest, did not collapse. Perhaps the most shocking statistic in a year of shocking economic statistics is this one: In what was, by many measures, the worst year since at least World War II, Americans’ income, in aggregate, actually rose.

How is this possible? Because of the other reason this recovery is different: the federal government. Counting all the various Covid relief packages passed under two presidents, the United States has now pumped more than $5 trillion into the economy. That dwarfs not just what the U.S. has spent in any previous recession, but also the aid provided in almost any other large country.

Here’s what that money meant in the real world: When the economy shut down last spring, the federal government stepped in to ban most evictions and made it easy for borrowers to delay payments on their mortgages and student loans. It expanded access to nutrition benefits, school-lunch programs and other emergency relief programs. The Federal Reserve bought hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of bonds to keep credit flowing and avoid a repeat of the 2008 crisis.

Most important, the government gave people money. Lots of money. By April of this year, the typical middle-class family of four had received more than $11,000 through successive rounds of direct payments. That doesn’t include the expanded child tax credit that was part of the latest aid bill, which is worth up to $3,600 per child.

The CARES Act, which Congress passed in late March 2020, also provided $600 a week in extra unemployment benefits to laid-off workers, and created a whole new program — Pandemic Unemployment Assistance — to cover freelancers, gig workers and other people who ordinarily don’t qualify for benefits. And it created the Paycheck Protection Program, which gave out more than half a trillion dollars in low-interest — and in many cases, forgivable — loans to small businesses, most likely preventing thousands of employers from going under entirely.

The government didn’t get everything right. Much of the economic response to Covid was deeply, frustratingly flawed. People spent weeks battling their way through busy signals and overloaded websites to claim their benefits, often only to see their payments suspended because of a lost piece of paperwork or a data-entry error. Small-business aid was snapped up by businesses that didn’t really need the help (and in some cases weren’t small), while restaurants, retailers and concert venues that were truly struggling became ensnared in a tangle of red tape and, in some cases, simply gave up. Congress, which reacted with such uncharacteristic speed in the spring, quickly fell back into its old partisan patterns, with Democrats pushing for more spending, Republicans for less — resulting in a monthslong delay in aid during a critical period last fall.

“Their fiscal policy response was, in the beginning, on the money — it was exactly what we needed,” says Michelle Holder, an economist at John Jay College in New York. “But the long view was not necessarily taken into account with regard to how long it was really going to take our country to slog through this pandemic.”

But as bad as it was, the scale of the hardship would have been far worse without the abundant government response. Researchers at Columbia University found that the federal aid kept 18 million Americans out of poverty last April and 13 million in January. The image of Americans lining up at food banks is, appropriately, seared on our collective memory, and measures of food insecurity did rise in the pandemic. But government aid almost certainly saved far more people from hunger, says Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, a Northwestern University economist who has studied food insecurity during the pandemic. She notes that data from the Census Bureau shows rates of hunger dropping sharply after government aid checks arrived in January and March.

And the aid didn’t just rescue millions of individual families. It also arguably rescued the economy itself. Last spring, for example, landlords across the country feared that tenants who had lost their jobs would start missing rent payments. But that never happened at a large scale. According to data from the National Multifamily Housing Council, which represents apartment owners and managers, 80 percent of tenants paid rent on time last May, and 95 percent paid by the end of the month — both comparable to the previous year, despite an eviction moratorium that lowered the stakes for nonpayment.

Researchers at the JPMorgan Chase Institute, using data from thousands of checking accounts, found that practically as soon as the CARES Act aid began flowing, spending among low-income consumers rebounded fully to its pre-pandemic level. In other words, unlike in virtually every other recession on record, millions of people lost their jobs, but they didn’t have to stop spending. More than anything else, that is what put us on track to avert a downward spiral.

“It doesn’t look like it’s going to happen,” says Louise Sheiner, a former Federal Reserve economist who is now at the Brookings Institution. “The fiscal support is what will prevent it from happening.”



Credit...Illustration by Ardneks


U.S. employers added 266,000 jobs in April. In any normal time, that would represent a good month for hiring; in the two years leading up to pandemic, job growth averaged a bit under 200,000 jobs per month. But in the context of an economy that is still down more than eight million jobs from February 2020, it represented an alarming deceleration (770,000 jobs were added in March). It also further inflamed an already-simmering debate over the best way to help the economy. Democrats looked at the unexpectedly weak job growth and saw evidence of an economy still in need of government aid. Republicans looked at it and saw evidence that government aid was contributing to the problem — that enhanced unemployment benefits were discouraging people from looking for jobs, leading to a shortage of available workers.

Still, few economists expect the weakness to last. Goldman Sachs, in a note to clients after the disappointing jobs report, said it expected job gains to average 800,000 per month between May and September, which would still represent a faster recovery than after any crisis in recent memory. Speed matters because a principal lesson of the last recession is that the victims of a slow recovery are disproportionately the most disadvantaged workers. Wage growth for all but the highest-earning workers didn’t begin to pick up in earnest until nearly a decade into the recovery from the last recession. The Black unemployment rate didn’t fall below 10 percent until 2015, six years after the recession ended. (The unemployment rate never hit 10 percent for white people in the first place.)

‘There is going to be a tendency to look at those numbers and say, “Mission accomplished,’ before it is time.”

Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chairman, has repeatedly cited racial and other disparities as a reason for trying to revive the economy as quickly and completely as possible. People at the bottom of the income ladder enjoyed just a few years of decent gains before the pandemic cut the recovery prematurely short. The faster we can get back there, the sooner they can begin to enjoy those gains again. “Those who have historically been left behind stand the best chance of prospering in a strong economy with plentiful job opportunities,” Powell said in a speech at a National Community Reinvestment Coalition conference in early May. “Our recent history highlights both the benefits of a strong economy and the severe costs of a weak one.”

Low-income families are starting in a much different place from where they were in the last recovery. Indeed, American households are, on average, in the best financial shape in decades. Debt levels, excluding home mortgages, are lower than before the pandemic. Delinquencies and defaults are down, too. And Americans in aggregate are sitting on a mountain of cash: $6 trillion in savings as of March, more than four times as much as before the pandemic.

Averages, of course, don’t tell the full story. The wealthy, and even the merely affluent, have done exceedingly well during the pandemic. They have, by and large, kept their jobs. They have seen the value of their stock portfolios soar. And they have spent less on vacations, restaurant meals and other services. For those at the other end of the economic spectrum, the picture looks very different: Many of them lost their jobs, had no investments to start with and needed every penny of the aid they received to meet basic living expenses, if they managed to get that aid at all.

Those diverging fortunes are what commentators have called the “K-shaped recovery” — rapid gains for some, collapse for others. But that narrative is incomplete. Millions of people have been financially devastated, but many more have not been. Most low-wage workers kept their jobs, or got them back relatively quickly. Many of them will emerge from the pandemic in better financial shape than they entered it, thanks in large part to successive rounds of government aid. Low- and middle-income families came out of the last recession mired in debt, and spent years trying to climb out of that hole. That reality colored their financial decisions long after the recession was over: whether to buy a house, whether to go to college, whether to take a chance on that new job or that new career or that new city. This time around, many people will have the opportunity to make their choices free of that burden.

The lesson of both this crisis and the last one is that policy matters. In the last recession, an initially fairly robust response petered out too quickly, leading to a decade of stagnation. That hasn’t happened this time, but it still could. Unless the April jobs numbers are indicative of a broader slowdown — something hardly any forecaster thinks is especially likely — the aggregate economic statistics are going to start looking very strong in the coming months. “There is going to be a tendency to look at those numbers and say, ‘Mission accomplished,’ before it is time,” says Nela Richardson, chief economist for ADP, a payroll-processing firm.

That is what happened a decade ago. But this time, far more people are paying attention. Inside the White House, economists have zeroed in on the labor-force participation rate among Black women as a key measure of economic health. Powell, at the Fed, now talks in virtually every public appearance about race and inequality — topics that previous Fed chairs typically tiptoed around or avoided altogether. Journalists who covered the aftermath of the last recession are more likely to question the notion that the economy is good just because the unemployment rate is low.

Kristen Broady, a fellow in the Brookings Institution’s Metropolitan Policy Program, says that people are finally paying attention after years of being preached to that public-policy discussions should focus less on aggregate statistics. Recently, journalists and policymakers have been bringing up the subject with her, rather than the other way around. That, as much as anything, is cause for optimism.

“This is the first time,” she says, “that I have hope.”



Ben Casselman writes about economics, with a particular focus on stories involving data. He previously reported for FiveThirtyEight and The Wall Street Journal. @bencasselmanFacebook

A version of this article appears in print on May 23, 2021, Page 48 of the Sunday Magazine with the headline: Road to Recovery. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

SHAMEFUL 
Pandemic puppies returned to shelters as COVID-19 restrictions lift

Pet adoptions rose 12 percent in 2020.
ADOPTION DOES NOT MEAN RENT AND RETURN


By Jenna Romaine | May 12, 2021

Story at a glance

Shelters are reporting high rates of returning and surrendering dogs adopted during the pandemic, as well as other pets.

Some animal rescues have noted a large portion of the owners surrendering their dogs were first-time pet owners.

The returns coincide with the easing and lifting of coronavirus restrictions in many states.


Rescuing and buying pandemic puppies was all but a trend when the coronavirus first swept the nation last year, and now shelters are seeing that trend fizzle out as the pandemic wanes, with people heading back to their local shelters to return their now-grown dogs.

When the pandemic started, Moms and Mutts Colorado Rescue "couldn't rescue enough dogs to meet the demand," Aron Jones, executive director of the shetler, told USA TODAY.

This sentiment is echoed by a multitude of shelters.

Mirah Horowitz, executive director of Lucky Dog Rescue in Arlington, Va., told the Washington Post in January 2021, “There just haven’t been a lot of animals to take in. It’s been tough getting animals.”

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Data collected by PetPoint supports this, finding that pet adoptions rose 12 percent in 2020.

Now at Moms and Mutts Colorado Rescue, Jones stated the rate of returned animals has doubled its typical amount, and a majority of the surrendered dogs are about 1-year-old.

"The trends that we've seen is the people who adopted, either they didn't have any other dogs or pets or they were first-time dog owners, and I think that was the biggest thing," Jones said.

The surrendering of these dogs coincides with cities and states easing and lifting coronavirus restrictions as more and more of the population becomes vaccinated, allowing these owners to return to work, go out to socialize more often and even take trips.

But returning and even rehoming a dog has traumatic effects on the animal.


"They get used to a routine pretty quickly. They get used to the family, they get used to their space, they get used to their routine and schedule they have," Ashley Roberts, program manager for adoptions, fosters, and transports at Lucky Dog Animal Rescue, said. "It's really scary for them."

It can also lead to elongated stays in shelters for these returned dogs, or even eventual euthanasia, as the dogs being returned tend to have aged, and older dogs have a 25 percent chance of being adopted, whereas puppies have a 60 percent chance, according to the ASPCA.

Owners returning their pets has risen 82.6 percent since 2020, though it has dropped 12.5 percent compared to 2019, which may reflect the coinciding adoption surge, according to Best Friends Animal Society.


“There’s no reason people going back to work can't successfully keep their pets, with some adjustments and planning," the Best Friends Animal Society director of public relations, Eric Rayvid, said. "Our pets have been there for us and provided companionship and comfort through an extremely difficult year, and we should honor the commitment we made to them through adoption."
Jaguars could be reintroduced to southwestern US, new study argues

"We see reintroducing the jaguar to the mountains of central Arizona and New Mexico as essential to species conservation, ecosystem restoration and rewilding."

By Jenna Romaine | May 18, 2021

(tane-mahuta/iStock)

Story at a glance

A paper published this month advocates for jaguars to be reintroduced in Arizona and New Mexico.

Hunting and the destruction of their habitat led to the animal’s extinction in the area in 1964.

Only 1.1 percent of the area proposed for the reintroduction is developed.


Scientists and environmentalists argue that jaguars should be reintroduced in the southwestern United States in a new article published in the journal Conservation Science and Practice.

The Wildlife Conservation Society, Pace University, and the Center for Biological Diversity, among other groups, are advocating to reintroduce the jaguar to Arizona and New Mexico, where a combination of hunting and the destruction of their habitat led to the animal’s extinction in the area in 1964.

“We see reintroducing the jaguar to the mountains of central Arizona and New Mexico as essential to species conservation, ecosystem restoration and rewilding,” the paper states.

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The world’s third-largest big cat following tigers and lions, up to 150 adult jaguars could be released into the 31,800-square-mile area ranging from Arizona to Mexico and the population sustain itself for about 100 years, the authors say. Only 1.1 percent of the chosen area is developed, meaning a low-level of human interaction and greater access to water and prey.

The U.S. Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the National Park Service manage more than 68 percent of the prospective area, while the White Mountain and San Carlos Apache tribes manage approximately 13 percent.

“Jaguars have been part of the American faunal assemblage for nearly 1.5 million years, but are now reduced as a matter of government policy,” the paper states, adding, “The jaguar's loss is also a loss for the nation, the ecology of the Southwest, and the jaguar as a species. Our world's natural heritage is diminished nearly everywhere; here is a model for who, where, how and why people should invest in restoring it. For the jaguar, America's Great Cat, the question is when.”

Groups call for reintroduction of jaguars in US Southwest

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Environmental groups and scientists with two universities want U.S. wildlife managers to consider reintroducing jaguars to the American Southwest.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

In a recently published paper, they say habitat destruction, highways and existing segments of the border wall mean that natural reestablishment of the large cats north of the U.S.-Mexico boundary would be unlikely over the next century without human intervention.

Jaguars are currently found in 19 countries, but biologists have said the animals have lost more than half of their historic range from South and Central America into the southwestern United States largely due to hunting and habitat loss.

Several individual male jaguars have been spotted in Arizona and New Mexico over the last two decades but there’s no evidence of breeding pairs establishing territories beyond northern Mexico. Most recently, a male jaguar was spotted just south of the border and another was seen in Arizona in January.

Scientists and experts with the Wildlife Conservation Society, the Center for Landscape Conservation, Defenders of Wildlife, the Center for Biological Diversity and other organizations are pointing to more than 31,800 square miles (82,400 square kilometers) of suitable habitat in the mountains of central Arizona and New Mexico that could potentially support anywhere from 90 to 150 jaguars.

They contend that reintroducing the cats is essential to species conservation and restoration of the region's ecosystem.

“We are attempting to start a new conversation around jaguar recovery, and this would be a project that would be decades in the making,” Sharon Wilcox of Defenders of Wildlife, one of the study’s authors, said in an interview. “There are ecological dimensions, human dimensions that would need to be addressed in a truly collaborative manner. There would need to be a number of stakeholders who would want to be at the table in order to see this project move forward.”

Under a recovery plan finalized by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Mexico as well as countries in Central and South America are primarily responsible for monitoring jaguar movements within their territory. The agency has noted that the Southwestern U.S. represents just one-tenth of 1% of the jaguar's historic range.

Environmentalists have criticized the plan, saying the U.S. government overlooked opportunities for recovery north of the international border.

While the recovery plan doesn't call for reintroductions in the U.S., federal officials have said efforts will continue to focus on sustaining habitat, eliminating poaching and improving social acceptance to accommodate those cats that find their way across the border.

The habitat highlighted by the conservation groups is rugged and made up mostly of federally managed land. They say it includes water sources, suitable cover and prey.

Fish and Wildlife Service biologists have yet to review the latest study, but such a proposal would likely face fierce opposition from ranchers and some rural residents who have been at odds with environmentalists and the Fish and Wildlife Service over the reintroduction of Mexican gray wolves. That program has faced numerous challenges over the past two decades and while wolf numbers are trending upward, ranchers say so are livestock deaths.

Jaguar advocates said losses could be mitigated through compensation programs like those established as a result of the wolf program.

Then there's the question of where the jaguars would come from. Advocates say a captive breeding program could be developed over time and jaguars from existing wild populations could be relocated.

Wilcox said there are many factors — some understood and others still being studied — that influence the movement of jaguars.

“But this is a vast area with suitable vegetation,” she said. “It’s populated with the right kind of prey for these cats and given its elevation and its latitude, it might provide an important climate refugium for the species in the future.”

___

The story has been updated, based on corrected information from one of the study authors, to show the area of suitable habitat identified by the scientists is more than 31,800 square miles (82,400 square kilometers), not 3,125 square miles (nearly 8,100 square kilometers).

Susan Montoya Bryan, The Associated Press


For the first time ever, veterinarian saves the eye of a tiger in operation

A Sumatran tiger named “Ratna” underwent corneal surgery.

By Joseph Guzman | May 18, 2021

getty


Story at a glance

Staff at the Shepreth Wildlife Park discovered Ratna’s left eye was deteriorating and she developed a problem in her conjunctiva.

It was discovered she had a corneal ulcer.

Veterinarians were able to successfully surgically repair the big cat’s eye.


A veterinarian in the United Kingdom has successfully carried out what is believed to be the first corneal surgery on a tiger and has saved the animal’s eye.

BBC News reports a 17-year-old Sumatran tiger named Ratna that lives at Shepreth Wildlife Park near Cambridge has recovered after surgery to restore her eyesight.

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Ratna had a cataract removed from her left eye years before she and her daughter were moved to the wildlife park in 2019.

Staff had been keeping a close watch on the tiger’s eye as she needed daily eye drops and noticed the condition of Ratna’s eye was deteriorating as she developed a problem in her conjunctiva, the pink part of the eyeball.

It was discovered she had a corneal ulcer.

“I think perhaps she’d managed to jab her eye on a stick of bamboo in her enclosure,” David Williams, a surgeon from the Queen’s Veterinary School Hospital at the University of Cambridge, told the BBC.

She underwent an operation in February to treat the condition but her eye continued to get worse.

The next day Williams, along with veterinarian Steve Philp from the International Zoo Veterinary Group, carried out the first hood graft procedure on a big cat.

The surgery is not uncommon among domestic cats and dogs.

“It’s like we might do with any domestic cat - but with a lot more anaesthetic,” Williams told the BBC.

“But I don’t think anyone’s ever done this before in this species.”

Williams said Ratna’s eyesight “wasn’t fantastic” after her initial cataract surgery but the idea of the corneal surgery was to save the eye itself.

“We have stopped the problem giving her any pain,” he said.

Chernobyl is showing signs of a possible new nuclear accident, scientists say

Nuclear reactions are smoldering again.

By Christian Spencer | May 17, 2021

Story at a glance:

Radioactive waste is smoldering in a part of Chernobyl that is unreachable.

Two chemical experts heed caution of another explosion.

The fatal 1986 explosion left the place a ghost town.


Scientists are warning that another explosion could occur in Chernobyl due to the spike in neutron numbers in an underground room called 305/2.

The numbers may indicate that new fission reactions are taking place, and there’s a possibility the smoldering nuclear reaction — in a room that’s currently unreachable — could lead to an explosion, Business Insider reported.

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"[It is] like the embers in a barbecue pit," Neil Hyatt, a professor of nuclear materials science and engineering at the University of Sheffield Lecturer, told Science magazine.

Fellow scientist, Maxim Saveliev, a senior researcher with the Institute for Safety Problems of Nuclear Power Plants (ISPNPP) in Kyiv, Ukraine, agrees with Hyatt, saying "there are many uncertainties, but we can't rule out the possibility of [an] accident."

The Chernobyl disaster was a nuclear accident near the No. 4 reactor in the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, close to the city of Pripyat in the north of the Ukrainian SSR. The April 26, 1986 disaster is considered the worst nuclear disaster in history for the amount of money it cost and the number of lives lost. The Chernobyl disaster is one of two energy-related accidents that were rated a level 7, the maximum.

About 50 people were killed, and the explosion resulted in thousands of radiation-related deaths.

As of now, the New Safe Confinement (NCS), a $1.8-billion protective confinement shelter, was built in 2019 to stop the contamination of radioactive.

The NSC was also created to lower the neutron counts, with Saveliev saying the issue of a possible explosion might resolve itself.

After 35 years, the evacuated city still resembles a ghost town.
Obama on UFOs: 'There's footage and records of objects in the skies that we don't know exactly what they are'

The Pentagon has recently confirmed several videos showing Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon are real and were recorded by the U.S. military.


By Joseph Guzman | May 18, 2021

Story at a glance

During an appearance Monday night on The Late Late Show with James Corden, Obama was asked if he had a theory on what the unidentified objects could be.

VIDEO 

“There’s footage and records of objects in the skies that we don’t know exactly what they are,” Obama said.

“We can’t explain how they moved, their trajectory. They did not have an easily explainable pattern,” he said.

Former President Obama is weighing in on unidentified flying objects as a growing number of videos captured by the U.S. military showing the mysterious sightings have been made public.

During an appearance Monday night on The Late Late Show with James Corden, Obama was asked if he had a theory on what the unidentified objects could be.

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“When it comes to aliens, there are some things I just can’t tell you on air,” Obama joked before answering the question.

“But what is true — and I’m actually being serious here — is that there’s footage and records of objects in the skies that we don’t know exactly what they are,” Obama said.

“We can’t explain how they moved, their trajectory. They did not have an easily explainable pattern,” he said.

“So I think that people still take seriously trying to investigate and figure out what that is. But I have nothing to report to you today,” he added.

The former president’s comments come as the Pentagon has recently confirmed several videos showing Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon (UAP) are real and were recorded by the U.S. military.

A video released this week shows a spherical object off the coast of San Diego in 2019 flying above the water for several minutes before disappearing into the ocean.

A "60 Minutes" report that aired this week also included interviews with several former Navy pilots who described encounters with UAPs.

The U.S. government is expected to release a report on UFO sightings to Congress in June.

Darwin’s Arch, famed Galapagos Islands rock formation, collapses

The formation is considered a premier diving location
Only the two stone supporting columns remain


19 May, 2021

The formation, which is found in the northern part of the archipelago and named after the famous English biologist Charles Darwin. Photo: AP


Darwin’s Arch, a famed natural rock formation in the Galapagos Islands that is popular with divers, photographers and cruise-ship tourists, has collapsed from erosion, Ecuadorean environmental officials said.

Photographs posted on social media by Ecuador’s Environment Ministry showed rubble from the curvature of the arch visible in the ocean, with the two supporting columns still standing.

“We report that the iconic Arc of Darwin collapsed,” the ministry wrote in Spanish on its Facebook page.


Only the two stone supporting columns remain. Photo: AP



The arch, named for British naturalist Charles Darwin, stands at the northernmost tip of the Galapagos Islands, a volcanic archipelago in the Pacific Ocean 965km (600 miles) west of Ecuador.

Once a part of Darwin’s Island, the arch is famed for the variety of underwater life teeming nearby, including schools of hammerhead sharks.

Tourists are not allowed to set foot on the arch or island.

“Obviously all the people from the Galapagos felt nostalgic because it’s something we’re familiar with since childhood, and to know that it has changed was a bit of a shock,” said Washington Tapia, director of conservation at Galapagos Conservancy. “However, from a scientific point of view, it’s part of the natural process. The fall is surely due to exogenous processes such as weathering and erosion which are things that normally happen on our planet.”

Additional reporting by Associated Press

Leonardo DiCaprio leads $43M effort to restore the Galápagos Islands

"More than half of Earth’s remaining wild areas could disappear in the next few decades if we don’t decisively act."

By Jenna Romaine | May 18, 2021

Leonardo DiCaprio and partners pledged $43 million toward a mass conservation effort to rewild the Galápagos Islands.

Part of Ecuador, the 19 islands located in the Pacific Ocean are home to an abundance of captivating wildlife

Ninety-seven percent of the land is a designated national park, and 50,000 square miles of the surrounding ocean is protected by the Galápagos Marine Reserve.

Leonardo DiCaprio and a group of environmental foundations and organizations have pledged $43 million toward a mass conservation effort to rewild the Galápagos Islands.

The initiative is being undertaken in coordination with Re:wild — founded this year by longtime climate activist DiCaprio and a group of conservation scientists — the Galápagos National Park Directorate, Island Conservation, Ecuador’s Ministry of Environment and Water, and Charles Darwin Foundation.

Part of Ecuador, the 19 islands located in the Pacific Ocean are home to an abundance of captivating wildlife, such as great white sharks, the blue-footed booby and the giant tortoise. Ninety-seven percent of the land is a designated national park, and 50,000 square miles of the surrounding ocean is protected by the Galápagos Marine Reserve.

“When I travelled to the Galápagos Islands, I met with Paula Castaño and other environmental heroes in Ecuador working day in and day out to save one of the most irreplaceable places on the planet,” DiCaprio said. “Around the world, the wild is declining. We have degraded three-quarters of the wild places and pushed more than 1 million species to the brink of extinction. More than half of Earth’s remaining wild areas could disappear in the next few decades if we don’t decisively act.”

DiCaprio and partners' pledge will go toward restoring Floreana Island, which houses 54 threatened species, as well as reintroducing 13 species that had gone extinct in the area. Among those is the Floreana mockingbird, which is the first mockingbird Charles Darwin reported.

The pledge will also fund a captive breeding initiative for the pink iguana, as well as attempt to conserve and protect Galápagos marine life from the effects of ecotourism.

Castaño will be taking over DiCaprio's Instagram and Twitter accounts to highlight the dangers facing the Galápagos Islands and how his large audience can help.

“Up to 97% of the land area of the Galápagos Islands comes under national park status. We are not trying to remove humans from the picture,” Castaño said. “We are trying to all work together to rewild these ecosystems, and support the community as well. They want to be able to continue to thrive together with nature.”

“The environmental heroes that the planet needs are already here,” DiCaprio said. “Now we all must rise to the challenge and join them.”

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Remote Nagurskoye military base is key to Russia’s power across Arctic

Russia’s northernmost military base is bristling with missiles and radar

Moscow has sought to assert its influence over wide areas of the Arctic


Associated Press
Published: 19 May, 2021

A radar facility on the Alexandra Land island near Nagurskoye, Russia. Photo: AP

During the Cold War, Russia’s Nagurskoye airbase was little more than a runway, a weather station and a communications outpost in the Franz Josef Land archipelago.

It was a remote and desolate home mostly for polar bears, where temperatures plunge in winter to minus-42 Celsius (43 degrees below zero Fahrenheit) and the snow only disappears from August to mid-September.

Now, Russia’s northernmost military base is bristling with missiles and radar and its extended runway can handle all types of aircraft, including nuclear-capable strategic bombers, projecting Moscow’s power and influence across the Arctic amid intensifying international competition for the region’s vast resources.

The shamrock-shaped facility – three large pods extending from a central atrium – is called the “Arctic Trefoil” and is painted in the white-red-and-blue of the national flag, brightening the otherwise stark vantage point on the 5,600km (3,470-mile) Northern Sea Route along Russia’s Arctic coast. Other buildings on the Island, which is called Alexandra Land, are used for radar and communications, a weather station, oil storage, hangars and construction facilities.

Russia has sought to assert its influence over wide areas of the Arctic in competition with the United States, Canada, Denmark and Norway as shrinking polar ice from the warming planet offers new opportunities for resources and shipping routes. China also has shown an increasing interest in the region, believed to hold up to one-fourth of the Earth’s undiscovered oil and gas.

Bastion anti-ship missile systems on the Alexandra Land island near Nagurskoye, Russia. Photo: AP


Russian PresidentVladimir Putin has cited estimates that put the value of Arctic mineral riches at US$30 trillion.

Tensions between Russia and the West will likely loom large over Thursday’s meeting of the Arctic nations’ foreign ministers in Reykjavik, Iceland, where Moscow is set to take a rotating chairmanship in the Arctic Council.

“We have concerns about some of the recent military activities in the Arctic,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Tuesday after arriving in Iceland for talks with foreign ministers of the eight members of the Arctic Council. “That increases the dangers of accidents and miscalculations and undermines the shared goal of a peaceful and sustainable future for the region. So we have to be vigilant about that.”

A more accessible Arctic becomes proving ground for US-China jockeying
6 May 2021


The Russian base, which sits about 1,000km south of the geographic North Pole, was built using new construction technologies as part of Kremlin efforts to bolster the military amid spiralling tensions with the West following Russia’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.


A Russian Il-76 military cargo plane on Alexandra Land island near Nagurskoye, Russia. Photo: AP


The following year, Russia submitted a revised bid for vast territories in the Arctic to the United Nations, claiming 1.2 million sq km of Arctic sea shelf, extending more than 650km from shore.

While the UN pondered that claim and those from other nations, Russia has said it sees the Northern Sea Route as its “historically developed national transport corridor,” requiring authorisation from Moscow for foreign vessels to navigate along it. The US has dismissed Russia’s claims of jurisdiction on parts of the route as illegitimate.

Moscow has declared its intention to introduce procedures for foreign ships and assign Russian pilots for guidance along the route, which runs from Norway to Alaska.

Denmark to spend more on strengthening Arctic defence
12 Feb 2021


As part of that effort, Russia has rebuilt and expanded facilities across the polar region, deploying surveillance and defensive assets. A base in the similar trefoil shape and patriotic colours to the one in Nagurskoye is on Kotelny Island, between the Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea on eastern end of the shipping route, also with missiles and radar.

Admiral Alexander Moiseyev, chief of Russia’s Northern Fleet, said last week that Moscow has the right to set navigation rules along the shipping lane.

“Practically the entire Northern Sea Route goes through Russia’s territorial waters or the country’s economic zone,” Moiseyev told reporters aboard the Peter the Great missile cruiser. “The complex ice conditions make it necessary to organise safe shipping, so Russia insists on a special regime of its use.”

Nato is increasingly worried about the growing Russian military footprint in the Arctic, and Washington sent B-1 bombers to Norway this year.

“Increased Russian presence, more Russian bases in the High North, has also triggered the need for more Nato presence, and we have increased our presence there with more naval capabilities, presence in the air, and not least, the importance of protecting transatlantic undersea cables transmitting a lot of data,” Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said.

‘Arctic is dying’: grim warning after biggest North Pole mission
12 Oct 2020


Moiseyev fretted about the US military assets in Norway, saying it has led to an “increase of the conflict potential in the Arctic”.

The Russian Foreign Ministry last week fumed at a US nuclear submarine calling at a Norwegian port, saying it reflected what it described as “Oslo’s course for the militarisation of the Arctic”.

Since Putin visited the Nagurskoye base in 2017, it has been strengthened and expanded. It now houses a dedicated tactical group that operates electronic surveillance, air defence assets and a battery of Bastion anti-ship missile systems.

A runway has been extended to accommodate all types of aircraft, including Tu-95 nuclear-capable strategic bombers, said Major-General Igor Churkin, who oversees air force operations at the base.
Coronavirus: Brazil senators say anti-China views hurt country’s access to Covid-19 vaccines


In parliamentary inquiry into president’s handling of coronavirus, senators blamed Bolsonaro and his inner circle for vaccine ingredient delays

The pandemic has claimed over 435,000 lives in Brazil but just one in eight adults have been fully vaccinated


Reuters
Published:  19 May, 2021

A surge of Covid-19 cases this year has raised Brazil’s death toll to more than 435,000, and the country is short of vaccines. Some 85 per cent of the vaccines administered in Brazil were from China’s Sinovac. Photo: AFP


Brazilian senators on Tuesday accused the country’s former foreign minister of undermining efforts to obtain 
Covid-19 vaccines after he used anti-China rhetoric during the pandemic.

In a parliamentary inquiry into far-right President Jair Bolsonaro’s handling of the world’s second-deadliest outbreak of the novel coronavirus, senators blamed the president and his inner circle for delays in deliveries from China of active ingredients to make Sinovac Biotech’s vaccine in Brazil.

Ernesto Araujo, who was replaced as foreign minister in March, told senators on Tuesday (Brazil time) that Bolsonaro’s disparagement of the Chinese vaccine did not affect relations with Brazil’s largest trade partner or delay vaccine supplies.

Araujo last year published an article entitled “The Comunavirus Has Arrived” where he argued that the novel coronavirus was part of a plan for global domination.

In the hearing, he denied the article disparaged China.

“It was not a reference to coronavirus but to an ideological virus, coined by another author, that creates the conditions for a global communist society,” he told the Senate commission.

Senator Katia Abreu, a farmer and former agriculture minister, said Araujo’s views and those of the Bolsonaro government had hurt exports to China, where the approval of dozens of Brazilian meatpacking plants had been held up in Beijing.

China export delay halts Sinovac Covid-19 vaccine production in Brazil
13 May 2021


Araujo said his criticism of China’s ambassador to Brazil last year was not an attack on China but a complaint about the diplomat’s “unacceptable” tweet, which said the Bolsonaro family was a “huge poison” for Sino-Brazil relations.

The diplomat’s tweet, which he quickly deleted, was prompted by the president’s son Eduardo Bolsonaro, then chair of the House foreign relations committee, blaming authoritarianism in China for preventing faster action against the pandemic.

Attacks on China by members of Bolsonaro’s inner circle further soured diplomatic relations last year. The spat was laid to rest when Bolsonaro called President Xi Jinping and the two presidents agreed to work together to fight the coronavirus.

A surge of Covid-19 cases this year has raised Brazil’s death toll to more than 435,000, and the country is short of vaccines. Just one in eight Brazilian adults have been fully vaccinated. Through April, 85 per cent of the vaccines administered in Brazil were from China’s Sinovac.

Meanwhile, Brazil’s Butantan biomedical institute said on Tuesday China would reduce its shipment of pharmaceutical ingredients for producing Covid-19 vaccines next week to 3,000 litres (790 gallons) from 4,000.

China critic Bolsonaro links pandemic to ‘biological warfare’
6 May 2021


This means the shipment scheduled for May 26 would now make 5 million doses of the Coronavac shot, Butantan said, instead of the 7 million Sao Paulo state Governor Joao Doria had tweeted on Monday.

Butantan, which is backed by the state of Sao Paulo, is producing the Coronavac vaccine with China’s Sinovac.