Thursday, February 03, 2022

This paleontologist says animals — including humans — are just 'guests in a microbial world'

Andy Knoll wins prestigious Crafoord Prize for his work studying life during Earth's first 3 billion years

Andy Knoll, pictured in Newfoundland, has spent decades studying layers of bedrock and the fossils of tiny, microscopic organisms to understand the early history of life on Earth. (Submitted by Andy Knoll)

After decades of studying rocks and discovering the secrets of life on Earth during the planet's first three billion years, paleontologist Andy Knoll has been awarded the prestigious Crafoord Prize in geosciences.

The annual $ 8-million science award is considered a complement to the Nobel Prizes. 

"You can't say that something like the Crafoord prize is a dream fulfilled because nobody would ever dare to dream about that kind of thing," Knoll told As It Happens host Carol Off. "But it's just a wonderful feeling and it's nice to share it with friends and colleagues."

Throughout his career, the Harvard professor went out in search of answers for how life on Earth evolved before the existence of animals. What he came up with was a geological, biological and chemical analysis of bedrock and the fossils of tiny, microscopic organisms hidden within.

"Knoll is an incredibly versatile researcher who has taught and inspired many younger researchers in his field," Stefan Bengtson, member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences' class for geosciences, said in a press release announcing the winner.

Knoll spoke with Off about his groundbreaking discoveries on biochemical evolution. Here is part of their conversation.

You've described rocks as being like a library that you can read to learn more about the history of the planet. Just tell us a bit about what you mean by that.

I'm always fond of telling my students that we live on a planet that records its own history, and that history is recorded in the physical, chemical and sometimes biological features of sedimentary rocks that are laid down, bed upon bed, through time. And it really is like a library. 

If you want to understand what the Earth was like millions of years ago, the clues to that are sitting in rocks that were deposited billions of years ago. Once you learn to read the language … you see the library everywhere you go.

I just hit this rock with a hammer and it split in two — and there was this fossil. Something that you know, lived millions of years ago and no one had ever seen before. And that was just exciting. To this day, discovery excites me.- Andy Knoll, paleontologist and winner of the Crafoord Prize in Geosciences for 2022

Some of the more exciting things in that library, of course, are when people discover fossils of dinosaurs and great and fascinating creatures. But you studied what you call "the boring billion." 

I think dinosaurs are great, too … but they existed for only a short time in the whole history of the Earth. And, in fact, animals have only existed for the last 15 per cent of our planet's history. Fundamentally, Earth was a microbial planet, and it still is. 

A big part of that is what's called "the boring billion," which is essentially the time just before the advent of animals … when Earth seemed fairly quiet. Some of the chemical signals that we see going into overdrive on the eve of animal evolution were more or less invariant. We do find fossils there, and we now know that all of the features of cell biology and molecular biology that made animals possible were really hammered out during this interval.

Earth was an unusual place during that time. Different from today [and] different from the very early Earth in ways that we're still learning about. So in a sense, it's unfair to call it "the boring billion" because it actually offers us some of the most interesting challenges we have in terms of understanding how Earth has changed through time.

It's amusing when you say that it was relatively quiet. I guess microbial life isn't as noisy as some of those shrieking dinosaurs.

There are more bacteria in your body than there are human cells. And that's true, pretty much, of all animals. So I'm not kidding when I say that animals are guests in a microbial world.

When did you first become fascinated with what is inside of rocks?

I was about 10 when I think my father was conscripted to drive my brother's junior high school class to a science outing where they collected fossils. And to be honest, I think my brother could have cared less about it. But I just hit this rock with a hammer and it split in two — and there was this fossil. Something that, you know, lived millions of years ago and no one had ever seen before. And that was just exciting. To this day, discovery excites me.

Knoll, pictured in Greenland, is the winner of the Crafoord Prize in Geosciences for 2022. (Submitted by Andy Knoll)

Including discoveries that reveal so much about what we're going into. I mean, to go back so far to learn things that we now know instruct what may be coming in the future. And one of those things that you were able to explore and to explain for the first time is something called "the great dying." Can you tell us about that?

In the last 500 million years, in the age of animals, there have been five times when biological diversity plummeted sharply over a very short interval of time —so-called mass extinctions. And the largest of those took place about 252 million years ago, and we now appreciate that that coincides with almost unthinkably large volcanism [the eruption of molten rock onto the Earth's surface.]

This is volcanism a million times larger than anything ever seen by humans or our immediate ancestors…. It dawned on me that events at the end of that time interval would have put a lot of CO2 into the atmosphere. And this was actually before you would read about global warming every day in the paper.

But I just spent literally three months in the library reading the results of every physiological experiment on CO2 and animals that I could find. And interestingly enough, what I came up with was a means of explaining which groups suffered during that "great dying," which were relatively tolerant. And that turns out to be pretty similar to the groups that we think are most at risk and most likely to emerge relatively unscathed from 21st-century global change.

But when you talk about what happened with all of that volcanic activity that released all that CO2 and created this great dying, the CO2 emissions that are now being released … is done by us, right? So how does it compare?

The important thing is perhaps not so much the magnitude of the CO2 emissions, but the rate at which CO2 is being added. 

I think it's fair to say that technological humans are emitting CO2 into the environment at rates that in Earth's history have only been matched by Earth's greatest volcanic cataclysms. So we are changing the Earth in a way and at a rate that is geologically unusual. And at times in the past, when Earth's environment has changed at comparable rates, it has been bad news for biology.

But you've also shown that when there have been these events like the great dying or these cataclysmic moments for the Earth, that life bounces back. Should that give us any encouragement?

There's good news and bad news there. 

The good news is that, yes, in the wake of mass extinctions, ecosystems are re-established. Life diversifies again. 

The bad news is that this happens on a scale of millions of years. So what we do in the 21st century is essentially permanent on any timescale that we might think about as humans. 


Written by Mehek Mazhar. Interview produced by Kate McGillivray. Q&A edited for length and clarity.

Famed blind lawyer Joy Luk has fled Hong Kong and wants refugee status in Canada



From her apartment in Toronto, famed Hong Kong lawyer Joy Luk says she wants to apologize to her family — one she doesn’t think she’ll ever visit again in her beloved hometown.

Luk, who is blind, rose to notoriety fighting for people with disabilities and helping pro-democracy protesters on the front lines of demonstrations in Hong Kong in 2019 with instant legal counsel. Images of Luk, a bullhorn hanging off her shoulder, grabbed attention around the world during those protests.

But on Dec. 20, after about 10 minutes of questioning by authorities, the 44-year-old took a morning flight out of the city to South Korea and on to Toronto, where she says she intends to stay. Luk has applied for refugee status, pointing to harassment by authorities in Hong Kong over her political activism and fears for her safety there.

Her decision has been kept a secret until today.

“I would like to say sorry to my family members there. I will put them in trouble,” Luk told the Star, “because of my active participation in this campaign for freedom in Hong Kong.”

Luk’s grandfather swam to freedom from mainland China to Hong Kong with his family, including her father who was not yet 10 years old at the time, in the 1950s. Her grandfather told her the Chinese Communist Party is not trustworthy, and she holds the family’s story close with her belief that freedom and democracy are a core value for humanity.

Monday, the day she reveals her intent to stay in Canada, is the first anniversary of her father’s death.

Now, with many of her friends in jail or having been arrested — including Canadian singer Denise Ho — for their involvement in the pro-democracy movement, Luk said she comes to Canada under a shadow of sadness.

In Hong Kong, Luk fought for better accessibility for people with disabilities before unrest in the city grew into massive protests against laws that opponents charged would be used to silence critics of Beijing and breach the autonomy guaranteed to the region by the Sino-British Joint Declaration, which laid out the stipulations of Hong Kong’s handover to mainland China in 1997.

But she said she has no intention of settling into a quiet life and is vowing not only to continue her fight for Hong Kong’s civil rights, but also to expose the Chinese Communist Party’s influence campaigns in Canada.

“My mission here is not for my safety only,” Luk said. “I also want to do something letting people in Canada know more about why they will be at risk just like people in Hong Kong if they do not do anything in response to China’s strategy.”

Such influence operations have become a greater concern for Canadian authorities. Experts have been warning about activity by the Chinese Communist Party’s United Front Work Department in Canada for years.

The department is tasked with furthering the agenda of the CCP and seeks to network with people of influence in foreign countries. Meanwhile, observers and Canadian security agencies have also been concerned by the intimidation of activists in this country and potential interference in elections here by Beijing-linked organizations.

Last year, the director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, David Vigneault, warned China’s government was targeting activists in Canada with intimidation campaigns.

“It is very difficult to avoid China’s influence, especially when I listen to Chinese radio here,” Luk said.

Luk said she’s already arranged meetings with members of Parliament and will be a guest lecturer at Ryerson University to speak about equal opportunity for disabled people and social movements.

Her presence is a welcome addition to Toronto, said Winnie Ng of the Toronto Association for Democracy in China, which has been helping Luk since her arrival in Canada. The association calls Luk a “key figure” in the 2019 Hong Kong protests.

Ng said Luk’s background in Hong Kong can help Canadian officials navigate the new concerns the CCP represents for Canada.

“In a way, her presence is a boost for our morale,” Ng said. “Her expertise, her lived experience, we’re hoping, will help part of the advocacy team to speak to MPs, lawmakers and policy-makers.”

But Ng said her presence also underscores the need for Canada to make good on promises to help pro-democracy protesters come to Canada despite any convictions they may have related to protests.

“We should practise what we preach,” Ng said.

Her organization also wants the federal government to broaden the scope of political asylum.

In the meantime, as she awaits word of her refugee application, Luk said she’s getting used to the cold weather in Toronto and struggling to come to terms with the reality she will likely never return to Hong Kong.

“Without any change of the government or the leadership of China, I will have no chance to come back to Hong Kong. It is my homeland. I am very sad,” she said. “I just want to cry.”



UN demands Taliban provide info on two more missing women activists


Afghan women chant slogans and hold banners during a protest in Kabul 
(AFP/Wakil KOHSAR) (Wakil KOHSAR)

Thu, February 3, 2022, 10:35 PM·2 min read

The United Nations has demanded the Taliban provide information on two more women activists allegedly detained by the group this week -- bringing to four the number missing this year.

Since returning to power in August the Taliban have cracked down on dissent by forcefully dispersing women's rallies, detaining critics and beating local journalists covering protests.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said late on Thursday it had sought "urgent information" on the reported detentions of two more women activists by the Taliban in Kabul this week.

"UN repeats its call for all 'disappeared' women activists & relatives to be released," it said on Twitter.

US special envoy to Afghanistan Rina Amiri also called on the Taliban to respect women's rights.

"If the Taliban seek legitimacy from the Afghan people & the world, they must respect Afghans' human rights -- especially for women," she said on Twitter.

UNAMA did not reveal the names of the two women activists missing this week, but another rights advocate told AFP that Zahra Mohammadi and Mursal Ayar had been arrested by the Taliban.

"Zahra, a dentist, used to work in a clinic. She has been arrested along with her father," the activist said, asking AFP not to reveal her name.

Ayar was arrested on Wednesday after a male colleague asked her for her address so he could come to hand over her salary, the activist said.

"That's how she was trapped. The Taliban found her and arrested her."

The latest detentions come less than a month after a pair of women activists -- Tamana Zaryabi Paryani and Parwana Ibrahimkhel -- went missing after participating in a Kabul protest.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights has expressed concern for them and four of their relatives, who all remain missing.

The Taliban have denied any knowledge of their whereabouts and say they are investigating the matter.

The Taliban have promised a softer version of the harsh rule that characterised their first stint in power from 1996 until 2001.

But the new regime has been swift to bar women from most government jobs and close the majority of girls' secondary schools.
The Chess World Is Losing Its Mind Over One Grandmaster Potentially Trolling Another

At 'chess Wimbledon,' Sergey Karjakin played Magnus Carlsen to a draw, upsetting fans

By
Ari Notis
Monday, 31/01/2022

Here’s Magnus Carlsen at last year’s Tata Steel, in a pose fit for this year’s Tata Steel.
Photo: Dean Mouhtaropoulos (Getty Images)


A championship on the line. A move so cold and calculated it has to be a troll (probably). A vitriolic fanbase armed with keyboards and anonymous screen names. And you thought these sorts of things only happened in video games. But even chess, a turn-based strategy game first released for wooden boards some 1,500 years ago, isn’t immune.

Last week, during the annual Tata Steel Chess Tournament (aka “chess Wimbledon”) in Wijk aan Zee, the Netherlands, one chess grandmaster didn’t seem to be playing to win. Sergey Karjakin, a top chess player who was once the youngest grandmaster in modern history, was playing Magnus Carlsen, currently considered the best chess player on the planet, to a draw, possibly intentionally.

A draw might not sound like such a big deal—tie games happen all the time across disciplines—but the stakes couldn’t have been higher for Carlsen. You see, Carlsen has long been gunning for an even 2,900 rating in Elo rankings, widely considered the gold standard in measuring skill in chess. Last month, ahead of chess Wimbledon, Carlsen tweeted out a GIF of a swimmer alongside a simple caption: “2,900.”

Named after its inventor, Arpad Elo, and adopted in the 1960s and ‘70s by the world’s chess leagues, the Elo ranking system is a series of mathematical calculations designed to determine the planet’s best chess player at any given time. If you win a match, you go up in your ranking. Lose a match, and you go down. Your relative ranking compared to your opponent factors in as well, so if you play to a draw against a lower-ranked opponent, they’ll gain points. You, however, will lose some. On the whole, the Elo ranking system functions not unlike the behind-the-scenes weighted ranking systems you’d see in, say, a competitive first-person shooter or a multiplayer online battle arena.

At the moment, according to the stat-tracking site 2700chess.com, Carlsen is sitting at the top of the Elo rankings with 2,868.1 points, down from a record of 2,882. (For some background about why hitting 2,900 is such a notoriously insurmountable climb, The Guardian’s Leonard Barden has a terrifically thorough rundown.) Since he’s at the top, if he wants to gain any points, Carlsen can’t lose and can’t play to a draw. He has to win.

During their match, Karjakin started with white pieces, meaning he got to go first. As noted by Bruno Dias, a games writer who worked on Where the Water Tastes Like Wine, chess players who start with white pieces have the offensive advantage and thus tend to play more aggressively. But Karjakin opened with a move called the Ruy López, which is viable at all levels but is also considered one of a handful of openings beginners should learn. The match wound in what’s known (and hated) as a short draw.

Immediately after the match, Karjakin tweeted, succinctly, “#drawmagnus #saynoto2900.”

It’s unclear if Karjakin intentionally played Carlsen to a draw or was simply pivoting after the fact to reframe the draw for some post-match ribbing. Chess fans seem convinced it’s the former.

“Imagine being so scared of playing Magnus that you’ll play in to this opening with white, and then have the audacity to tweet this,” one wrote. “Sounds like an excuse. Are you THAT afraid of Magnus??,” echoed another. Others taunted Karjakin over his world championship matches against Carlsen in 2016, which resulted in several forced draws. Some sneered at the notion that a player could go from world contender to single-minded troll. (“Talk about character development.”) But few topped remarks from chess coach Yosha Iglesias, who wrote, “Short draws are like masturbation: Everyone does it and it’s perfectly fine, as long as you don’t brag about it on Twitter.”

Ultimately, Carlsen trounced his competitors and won the tournament, making it his eighth Tata Steel victory. Last night, Karjakin tweeted a congratulatory note to Carlsen, saying “for me, it was a very solid tournament—too solid sometimes,” followed by three thinking-face emojis.

Representatives for Karjakin and Carlsen did not respond to requests for comment in time for publication.




GAIA IS ALIVE

Growing Ground “Bulge” Detected Near Three Sisters Volcanoes

Three Sisters Volcanoes

Aerial view northward along glaciated summits of South Sister, Middle Sister, and North Sister volcanoes. Credit: Photograph by John Scurlock

Scientists detect rejuvenated uplift near South Sister volcano.

Using satellite imagery and sophisticated GPS instruments, Cascades Volcano Observatory geophysicists have detected a subtle increase in the rate of uplift of the ground surface about 3 miles (5 km) west of South Sister volcano, Oregon. Episodes of increased uplift have been observed in this area before, and the volcano’s alert level and color code remain at NORMAL / GREEN.

Data from satellite radar images show an uplift of about 0.9 inches or 2.2 cm (about the width of an adult’s thumb) occurred between the summer of 2020 and August 2021 across an area 12-mile (20-km) in diameter. GPS data from a volcano monitoring station near the center of uplift measured at least 0.2 inches (0.5 cm) of uplift since August 2021.

Three Sisters Volcanoes Satellite Radar Interferogram

Satellite radar interferogram spanning June 19, 2020, to August 13, 2021, and showing the ground motion in the direction of the satellite. The maximum uplift, indicated by the red color, is about 2.2 centimeters (0.85 inches), and it is located to the west of South Sister. The HUSB continuous GPS site is marked by the large black dot. Earthquakes that occurred during the time period spanned by the interferogram are indicated by small black dots. Credit: USGS

Additionally, seismologists observed brief bursts of small earthquakes in October 2021, December 2021, and January 2022. Most of these shallow earthquakes are too small to locate precisely; those located are inside the uplifted area.

USGS geologist Dan Dzurisin is near Sisters, in Central Oregon, to set up portable GPS monitoring equipment to track something that’s been going on for 25 years and still goes on today. It’s uplift, a subtle rise in the ground’s surface, in an area west of South Sister volcano.

Uplift began in the mid-1990s and was first observed in radar satellite imagery. The USGS, working with the Forest Service, installed permanent monitoring stations to track the rate at which the area was uplifting.

In addition, every summer Dr. Dzurisin sets out GPS stations to collect ground deformation data. While radar satellites provide a picture of the entire area, these temporary GPS stations give very accurate measurements of how individual points have moved. Dr. Dzurisin and summer intern Natalea Cohen show you how they set up the semi-permanent GPS stations and talk about the importance of the work.

One thing that can cause uplift is magma moving around underground, or in particular, magma rising from greater depth in the earth up to a shallower depth, which forces the surface to move upward in a very broad area. Remarkably, this process has caused very few earthquakes. So, if you’re not using satellite radar data or some other form of data to look for it, episodes like this may have happened in other places and maybe in Central Oregon as well, and we just didn’t know it.

USGS scientists are monitoring this activity as carefully and thoroughly as they can, and will continue to monitoring the area for as long as it goes on, to gain a greater understanding of this process.

Tracking Uplift Near Three Sisters Volcanoes

Uplift occurred in the same general region in the mid-1990s. During the 25 years between 1995 and 2020, the area rose approximately 12 inches or 30 cm (the height of a 2-liter soda bottle) at its center. Although the current uplift rate is slower than the maximum rate measured in 1999-2000, it is distinctly faster than the rate observed for several years before 2020.

Three Sisters Volcanoes GPS Motion

Comparison of vertical GPS motion measured at station HUSB (top) with earthquake depth (bottom). Red line is a 60-day average of the cleaned GPS time series plotted in gray. Earthquakes are plotted with respect to their magnitudes. The swarm in 2004 represents the vast majority of earthquake in the vicinity of the deforming region. Earthquake information is from the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network. Credit: USGS

The uplift is attributed to small pulses of magma accumulating at roughly 4 miles (7 km) below the ground surface. While any magmatic intrusion could eventually lead to a volcanic eruption, an eruption would likely be preceded by detectable and more vigorous earthquakes, ground movement (deformation), and geochemical changes. In general, as magma moves upward during an intrusion, it causes continued or accelerated uplift, fractures rock to generate swarms of earthquakes, and releases significant amounts of volcanic gases, such as carbon dioxide. We do not detect any of these signs currently.

CVO scientists will closely monitor data in the coming months and issue further updates as warranted.


Geologists ‘closely monitoring’ rising magma under Three Sisters volcanic region

OREGON

Geologist: 'Things are coming back to life now'

south sister fall_1537767742534.jpg.jpg

South Sister, Oregon (KOIN)PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — The Pacific Northwest is well known for its stunning summits and plentiful peaks, but are the mountains moving? 

In a USGS Hazard Notification statement Monday, Cascades Volcano Observatory announced their scientists have tracked an increased rate of ground uplift in the Three Sisters volcanic region. 

Using satellite radar images and GPS units, USGS scientists have tracked an increased rate of uplift for a 12-mile diameter region, 3 miles west of the South Sister volcano. According to USGS, the data suggests the ground rose 0.9 inches (2.2 cm) from June 2020 to August 2021.

Scott Burns, a geology professor at Portland State University, told KOIN 6 News while episodes of increased uplift have been observed in this region before, the cause is what local scientists are excited about.

“The Three Sisters area is an area that we’ve been studying for the last 25 years,” Burns explained. “It’s very exciting because magma is moving up underneath the volcano … the last major volcanic eruption in Oregon, which was 2,000 years ago, was right there in that area.”

While the catalyst for the current uplift is unconfirmed, geologists have been able to credit previous soil shifts at the South Sister location to small pulses of magma accumulating approximately 4 miles below the earth’s surface. 

According to Burns, increased uplift is not the only thing impacted by the observed magmatic intrusion. 

Interferogram image made from InSAR monitoring, showing 1995-2001 ground uplift in the Three Sisters. Courtesy USGS

“We believe that the magma is rising about four miles below the surface. And, and so associated with that, a lot of times you’ll have very small earthquakes,” Burns said. “In December and in January, we had a series of very small earthquakes, showing that there is some movement of magma. The question is, what type of magma is it going to be, and what type of volcano?”

Before the recent increase, the USGS stated the rate of uplift at the South Sister location had reportedly slowed down since scientists first recognized the phenomenon in the mid-1990s. 

“From 1995 to 2020, the area rose approximately 12 inches (30 centimeters) at its center,” USGS stated in a recent release. “Although the current uplift rate is slower than the maximum rate of about 2 inches per year measured in 1999-2000, it is distinctly faster than the rate observed for several years before 2020.”

Despite the excitement, USGS and Burns have said that the public is not in any immediate danger. The volcano status is currently listed as “green,” and there is no sign of an imminent eruption.

“While any magmatic intrusion could eventually lead to a volcanic eruption, an eruption would likely be preceded by detectable and more vigorous earthquakes, ground movement (deformation), and geochemical changes,” stated USGS. “In general, as magma moves upward during an intrusion, it causes continued or accelerated uplift, fractures rock to generate swarms of earthquakes, and releases significant amounts of volcanic gases, such as carbon dioxide. We do not detect any of these signs currently.”

Burns told KOIN 6 News, a team of scientists with Cascades Volcano Observatory will continue to closely monitor uplift at the site and will be ready if a threat is detected. 

“We have great maps for the whole Three Sisters area,” Burns explained, “So if it[the volcano] does come back to life, we will know which people are going to have to get out of the way and be prepared for it.”

He continued, “The good news is we’re prepared for it … We’re still at ‘green,’ but things are coming back to life now. Mother Nature writes her own history book, so it will be interesting to see what she will come up with this time.”

CAPITALI$T PARADISE
Costa Rica: Central America's green pin-up


Thu, 3 February 2022

In this file photo taken in 2018, a woman casts her vote at a polling station in San Jose in 2018 
(AFP/-)
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This file photo taken in 2019 shows a view of the Gandoca-Manzanillo National Wildlife Refuge in Limon, Costa Rica
 (AFP/Ezequiel BECERRA)


A view of a crowded street during sunset in San Jose in 2019
 (AFP/Ezequiel BECERRA)


Costa Rica is known for neutrality, strong democracy and political stability
 (AFP/Ezequiel BECERRA)

Costa Rica, which elects a new president Sunday, is a small country thriving on ecotourism. Its neutrality, strong democracy and political stability have earned it the nickname of Central America's Switzerland.

Here are four facts about the country of more than five million people:


- Beacon of peace -


Independent since 1821, Costa Rica is considered a model of democracy in Central America.

A short civil war in 1948 led to the abolition of the army and helped put in place the country's political stability.

In the 1980s, when several other Central American countries were mired in civil wars, neutral Costa Rica acted as peace broker, earning then-president Oscar Arias Sanchez the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987.

It saw a political shift in 2014, when the two rightwing parties that had shared power since the 1960s -- the PLN and PUSC -- suffered an historic defeat as centrist Luis Guillermo Solis was elected president.

Outgoing president Carlos Alvarado is from the same party.

On the international stage Costa Rica has fought for disarmament and for a total end to nuclear weapons and the strengthening of the non-proliferation regime.

Over recent years it has seen an increase in organised crime, largely due to the drug trafficking that has ravaged its neighbours.

- Green paradise -


With its stunning beaches on the Pacific and Caribbean coasts, its lush rainforests and imposing volcanoes, Costa Rica has become known as a green democracy and global leader for its environmental policies.

Nature reserves cover a quarter of Costa Rica's 51,000 square kilometres (19,700 square miles), territory that hosts five percent of the world's biodiversity.

It is one of the few countries to have banned blood sports and to have shunned exploitation by the mining and oil giants, which are the main source of income for many Latin American countries.

Over the last decade the environment has nevertheless come under strain from economic development, with a poor administration of protected areas, increasing air, ground and water pollution, and damage caused by the cultivation of pineapples.

Costa Rica is nevertheless the only tropical country which has managed to reverse deforestation, according to the World Bank.

It has invested heavily in clean energy, passing the threshold of generating electricity exclusively from renewable energy 300 days in one year, in 2017.

The nation has vowed to eliminate the use of fossil fuels by 2050.

- Decades of growth -

Costa Rica has seen 25 years of regular economic growth, thanks to the opening up to foreign investment and a gradual liberalisation of foreign trade.

Its main exports are bananas, pineapples and coffee. It is also the world's biggest exporter of butterflies.

GDP per capita has tripled since 1960, but in 2020 it contracted by 4.1 percent due to the Covid pandemic.

In 2021 growth was expected to reach 3.8 percent, according to the World Bank.

The poverty rate that year rose to 23 percent, according to official statistics.

Costa Rica has a top-notch social security system and has invested heavily in education.

It is ranked 62nd out of 189 countries on the UN's Human Development Index.

The tourism sector represents eight percent of GDP, but was hammered by the pandemic.

A member of the OECD since 2021, the country has been trying to attract digital nomads to boost its economy.

- Land of asylum -

More than 100,000 Nicaraguans, fleeing the violent crackdown on anti-government protests, have taken refuge in Costa Rica.

A conservative, religious country, but with a long tradition of opening its arms to asylum seekers, Costa Rica has taken in hundreds of lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people who were persecuted in their home countries in Central America.

ber-ang/jmy/fg/bc/mlm


Ex-heavyweights resurrected in Costa Rica polls, but election still unclear


Former Costa Rica president Jose Maria Figueres leads a tight and bloated field ahead of elections (AFP/Ezequiel BECERRA)

David GOLDBERG
Thu, February 3, 2022,

There is a feeling of uncertainty hanging over one of Latin America's most stable democracies as Costa Rica heads to the polls on Sunday with a crowded presidential field and no clear favorite.

Often referred to as the region's "happiest" country, Costa Rica is nonetheless grappling with a growing economic crisis and the ruling Citizen's Action Party (PAC) is set for a bruising defeat.

The economy has tanked under the progressive program of President Carlos Alvarado Quesada and the PAC candidate, former economy minister Welmer Ramos, seems to be paying the price for sky-high anti-government feeling, polling just 0.3 percent.

"The ruling party is completely weakened and has no chance" after two successive terms of office, said political analyst Eugenia Aguirre.

"The presidential unpopularity figure of 72 percent is the highest since the number was first recorded in 2013," she added.

It means the country's traditional political heavyweights -- the centrist National Liberation Party (PLN) and the right-wing Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) -- could return to the fore.

According to one poll published this month, former president Jose Maria Figueres (1994-98) of the PLN leads with just over 17 percent, while PUSC's Lineth Saborio is on just under 13 percent.

Until PAC's Otton Solis reached the second round run-off in 2006, the PLN and PUSC had enjoyed decades of a near political duopoly.

To win outright in Sunday's first round, a candidate needs 40 percent of the vote, otherwise there will be a run-off on April 3 between the top two.

Costa Rica is known for its eco-tourism and green policies: its energy grid is 100 percent run on renewable sources.

Unlike many of its volatile neighbors, Costa Rica has no army, has had no armed conflicts since 1948 and no dictator since 1919.

But the worsening economic situation has hit confidence in the political class. And with 25 presidential candidates, more than 30 percent of the 3.5 million voters are undecided.

Despite the country's stable reputation, voters under 40 have only known "periods in which not only problems have not been resolved, but they have worsened," university student Edgardo Soto, who says he does not know who to vote for, told AFP.

Unemployment has been steadily rising for more than a decade and sat at 14.4 percent in 2021.

Poverty reached 23 percent in 2021 with debt now a staggering 70 percent of GDP.

"If someone expects to find a bed of roses, that won't be the case with this government," Saborio, 61, told AFP.

"Costa Rica is in a moment of social, economic and political crisis."

- Pent-up frustrations -


Apathy and abstentionism have always been issues in Costa Rica's elections. In 2018 the abstention rate was over 34 percent.

With so many undecided, Costa Rica's opinion polls can be notoriously poor reflections of what will happen in an election.

In 2018, Alvarado Quesada was running sixth with 5.6 percent in polls but ended up beating evangelical Christian singer Fabricio Alvarado Munoz by 20 points in the run-off. Quesada cannot stand for re-election.

Alvarado Munoz, of the right-wing New Republic Party (PNR), was third in this month's poll with a little over 10 percent.

He commands loyal support from the Christian community, which makes up around 20 percent of Costa Rica's five million population.

In fourth is economist Rodrigo Chaves of the newly formed centrist Social Democratic Progress Party, on eight percent, with the top left-wing candidate Jose Maria Villalta of the Broad Front on 7.5 percent.


Figueres, 67, says the crowded field "is a reflection of this whole frustration that has built up."

"If there are 25 options it is because the parties are not understanding the needs of a society that is changing before their eyes."

Not everyone is feeling blue ahead of the poll.

"I understand why the people are distrustful ... they have been cheated for years. But this time there is more hope," said Chaves.

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