Monday, August 23, 2021

Climate change is an infrastructure problem – map of electric vehicle chargers shows one reason why

















While a gas station might be 72 miles away, an EV charger may be much farther. 
Pgiam via Getty Images

August 23, 2021 

Most of America’s 107,000 gas stations can fill several cars every five or 10 minutes at multiple pumps. Not so for electric vehicle chargers – at least not yet. Today the U.S. has around 43,000 public EV charging stations, with about 106,000 outlets. Each outlet can charge only one vehicle at a time, and even fast-charging outlets take an hour to provide 180-240 miles’ worth of charge; most take much longer.

The existing network is acceptable for many purposes. But chargers are very unevenly distributed; almost a third of all outlets are in California. This makes EVs problematic for long trips, like the 550 miles of sparsely populated desert highway between Reno and Salt Lake City. “Range anxiety” about longer trips is one reason electric vehicles still make up fewer than 1% of U.S. passenger cars and trucks.

This uneven, limited charging infrastructure is one major roadblock to rapid electrification of the U.S. vehicle fleet, considered crucial to reducing the greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change.

It’s also a clear example of how climate change is an infrastructure problem – my specialty as a historian of climate science at Stanford University and editor of the book series “Infrastructures.”
The Conversation, CC BY-ND

Over many decades, the U.S. has built systems of transportation, heating, cooling, manufacturing and agriculture that rely primarily on fossil fuels. The greenhouse gas emissions those fossil fuels release when burned have raised global temperature by about 1.1°C (2°F), with serious consequences for human lives and livelihoods, as the recent report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change demonstrates.

The new assessment, like its predecessor Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C, shows that minimizing future climate change and its most damaging impacts will require transitioning quickly away from fossil fuels and moving instead to renewable, sustainable energy sources such as wind, solar and tidal power.

That means reimagining how people use energy: how they travel, what and where they build, how they manufacture goods and how they grow food.
Gas stations were transport infrastructure, too

Gas-powered vehicles with internal combustion engines have completely dominated American road transportation for 120 years. That’s a long time for path dependence to set in, as America built out a nationwide system to support vehicles powered by fossil fuels.

Gas stations are only the endpoints of that enormous system, which also comprises oil wells, pipelines, tankers, refineries and tank trucks – an energy production and distribution infrastructure in its own right that also supplies manufacturing, agriculture, heating oil, shipping, air travel and electric power generation.

Without it, your average gas-powered sedan wouldn’t make it from Reno to Salt Lake City either.

Gas-powered vehicles have dominated U.S. road transportation for 120 years and have a web of infrastructure supporting them. Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Fossil fuel combustion in the transport sector is now America’s largest single source of the greenhouse gas emissions causing climate change. Converting to electric vehicles could reduce those emissions quite a bit. A recent life cycle study found that in the U.S., a 2021 battery EV – charged from today’s power grid – creates only about one-third as much greenhouse gas emissions as a similar 2021 gasoline-powered car. Those emissions will fall even further as more electricity comes from renewable sources.

Despite higher upfront costs, today’s EVs are actually less expensive than gas-powered cars due to their greater energy efficiency and many fewer moving parts. An EV owner can expect to save US$6,000-$10,000 over the car’s lifetime versus a comparable conventional car. Large companies including UPS, FedEx, Amazon and Walmart are already switching to electric delivery vehicles to save money on fuel and maintenance.

All this will be good news for the climate – but only if the electricity to power EVs comes from low-carbon sources such as solar, tidal, geothermal and wind. (Nuclear is also low-carbon, but expensive and politically problematic.) Since our current power grid relies on fossil fuels for about 60% of its generating capacity, that’s a tall order.

To achieve maximal climate benefits, the electric grid won’t just have to supply all the cars that once used fossil fuels. Simultaneously, it will also need to meet rising demand from other fossil fuel switchovers, such as electric water heaters, heat pumps and stoves to replace the millions of similar appliances currently fueled by fossil natural gas.
The infrastructure bill

The 2020 Net-Zero America study from Princeton University estimates that engineering, building and supplying a low-carbon grid that could displace most fossil fuel uses would require an investment of around $600 billion by 2030.

The infrastructure bill now being debated in Congress was originally designed to get partway to that goal. It initially included $157 billion for EVs and $82 billion for power grid upgrades. In addition, $363 billion in clean energy tax credits would have supported low-carbon electric power sources, along with energy storage to provide backup power during periods of high demand or reduced output from renewables. During negotiations, however, the Senate dropped the clean energy credits altogether and slashed EV funding by over 90%.

Of the $15 billion that remains for electric vehicles, $2.5 billion would purchase electric school buses, while a proposed EV charging network of some 500,000 stations would get $7.5 billion – about half the amount needed, according to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.

As for the power grid, the infrastructure bill does include about $27 billion in direct funding and loans to improve grid reliability and climate resilience. It would also create a Grid Development Authority under the U.S. Department of Energy, charged with developing a national grid capable of moving renewable energy throughout the country.

The infrastructure bill may be further modified by the House before it reaches President Joe Biden’s desk, but many of the elements that were dropped have been added to another bill that’s headed for the House: the $3.5 trillion budget plan.

As agreed to by Senate Democrats, that plan incorporates many of the Biden administration’s climate proposals, including tax credits for solar, wind and electric vehicles; a carbon tax on imports; and requirements for utilities to increase the amount of renewables in their energy mix. Senators can approve the budget by simple majority vote during “reconciliation,” though by then it will almost certainly have been trimmed again.

[Over 100,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today.]

Overall, the bipartisan infrastructure bill looks like a small but genuine down payment on a more climate-friendly transport sector and electric power grid, all of which will take years to build out.

But to claim global leadership in avoiding the worst potential effects of climate change, the U.S. will need at least the much larger commitment promised in the Democrats’ budget plan.

Like an electric car, that commitment will seem expensive upfront. But as the recent IPCC report reminds us, over the long term, the potential savings from avoided climate risks like droughts, floods, wildfires, deadly heat waves and sea level rise would be far, far larger.


Author
Paul N. Edwards
William J. Perry Fellow in International Security, Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University
Disclosure statement
Paul N. Edwards is one of 234 Lead Authors of the 2021 Working Group I report for the Sixth Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. This article reflects his personal views. His previous work relevant to this article was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Sloan Foundation.


Science a 'weapon,' Kansas (R) Sen. Mike Thompson says. 
TRUE! 
AGAINST IGNORANCE & IRRATIONALITY!
Climate change experts fact-check him.

Jason Tidd
Topeka Capital-Journal
KANSAS



Do humans and carbon dioxide have no effect on climate change? Is science being weaponized, and are scientists comparable to Nazi propagandists?


That's what one politician told the Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association during its annual convention in Wichita last week. Sen. Mike Thompson, a Republican from Shawnee, is the chair of the Senate utilities committee. He is also a retired meteorologist.

The convention was held one week after the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's sixth assessment report was released. International officials referred to its findings as a "code red for humanity."


More:'Code red for humanity': UN report gives stark warning on climate change, says wild weather events will worsen

Following are eight claims Thompson made during a seminar on "The Weaponization of Climate Science" — and what the climate experts at the University of Kansas contacted by The Topeka Capital-Journal had to say in response.


Do humans have 'zero control' over climate change?


Thompson: "Climate change has been happening since Earth has been around naturally, natural cycles, with stuff that's more powerful than anything humans can do. And so it's pure hubris to think that we should be spending billions of dollars — or now trillions of dollars — on mitigating climate change for something we have zero control over. And that includes trying to change our energy policy to fit that by going more green, with the renewables, which are not reliable."

Kees Van der Veen(Department of Geography & Atmospheric Science professor): "As reported in the IPCC Report, we cannot explain recent temperature trends (i.e. over the last century or so) without taking into account the warming effect from anthropogenically produced carbon dioxide. That is, natural processes (volcanos, solar activity, etc) are not enough to explain the recent warming trend. See Figure TS.7 in the Technical Summary of the WGI IPCC Report that was just published."

More:  Kansas senator compares climate change message to Nazi propaganda. Here's what else was said at oil convention.


Does burning fossil fuels and increasing carbon dioxide affect climate change?


Thompson: "We can burn fossil fuels. We can put things into the environment that might change the environment, but it's not going to change the climate. Reducing CO2 will have nothing to do with changing the climate on this planet. ... CO2 is a greenhouse gas, but it's a very tiny one. Water vapor does 95% of the stabilization of the temperature of this planet. ... With carbon dioxide right now, we could double, triple quadruple the amount of CO2, it is not going to change the amount of warming on this planet or the temperature on this planet at all."

Van der Veen: "Burning fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide: any hydrocarbon source (fossil fuel) plus oxygen produces carbon dioxide and water, plus a lot of energy that we as society use. This is a straight-forward chemical reaction.

"It has been known since the 19th century that CO2 is a greenhouse gas (from laboratory experiments conducted at the time). No one denies this and every introductory textbook will tell you that conditions on Earth are favorable for life as we know it exactly because of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere. Compare conditions on Mars (no atmosphere to speak of) and Venus (atmosphere consisting of 96% carbon dioxide). If we look over the last million years, temperature variations corresponding with glacial cycles are linked with similar variations in atmospheric carbon dioxide. Water vapor is indeed a strong greenhouse gas that is likely to amplify warming brought about by carbon dioxide — this is called a positive feedback in the climate system."

Does green and renewable energy work, and is it reliable?

Thompson: "The renewables, which are not reliable. Green energy, which doesn't work. ... And of course, it's green, but it kills the birds. And, of course, it's full of all sorts of toxic materials. And then during the course of a winter outbreak ... look what provided the energy, it was oil and it was gas, and it was coal."

Shannon O'Lear(director of the Environmental Studies Program and a Department of Geography & Atmospheric Science professor): "The fossil fuel based infrastructure on which much of the world relies would not be possible without considerable and sustained government subsidies and support of large corporations. What could it look like if renewable energy received the same amount of support and protection? Energy storage solutions mean that wind power can still be effective even if the wind is not blowing right now. Granted, expanding renewable energy will require a new business model, because key inputs such as wind and solar radiation are freely available, do not require international trade agreements, and do not generate waste that requires additional problem solving."

Van der Veen: "One might want to expand one's view to other countries, such as Germany and elsewhere in Europe where 'green energy' plays a greater role in society and increasingly replaces fossil fuels as energy source."
Is becoming net carbon neutral by 2050 possible?

Thompson: "BP, Exxon Mobil, they all put the promos on Sunday morning, they have the windmills and everything. They say they're gonna go net carbon neutral by 2050, or whatever year it is. It's impossible to do, it's virtually impossible to do. And a lot of it has to do with these ESG standards, because they are being forced into these ESG standards by financial institutions. ... it's a complete distortion of our economy."

Van der Veen: "Where there is (political) will there is a way — who would have imagined the Internet only three decades ago or the phenomenal growth in online retail, spurred on by Amazon? — just to name one example of rapid societal changes occurring despite naysayers stating it could not be done."



Does global warming exist, and can it kill people?


Thompson: "Science has just become a weapon. So we basically turned real science into we're all gonna die in 12 years, OK. And unfortunately, this is the culmination of the dumbing down of America. People buy this stuff. They hear it on the news. They think global warming is real. We're all gonna die."

Van der Veen: "Strawman argument – no credible scientist will say that we are all going to die, let alone in 12 years! But one has only to look around to see impacts of warming already happening, be it more frequent storms, tornados and landslides brought on by wildfires or clear-day flooding in Miami.

"It would be wise for politicians and other officials to read the actual IPCC Reports — or at least the appropriately titled 'Summary for Policy Makers.' These Reports are a far cry from the sensationalist headlines or sound bites that Senator Thompson apparently attributes to science."
Are mitigation strategies, such as carbon sequestration, a waste of money?

Thompson: "From the climate mitigation standpoint, there really, like I said, if you look, there really isn't much we can do. We could spend money, but it would be fruitless. The climate is going to change on its own. … Bottom line is, there's nothing we can do to change the climate. Nothing at all.

"CO2 sequestration sounds like the dumbest idea I've ever seen in my life."

Van der Veen: "I agree that CO2 sequestration, or any other proposed geo-engineering 'solution' is not a real or permanent solution and mostly a waste of money (and energy!!)"

Would more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere be good for agriculture?

Thompson: "If you do some studies on carbon dioxide, plants thrive at high levels of CO2. ... In fact, there was a Harvard study that showed plants are hardier, more drought resistant, produce more crops at about 1200 parts per million — three times what we have in the atmosphere right now. So it's actually beneficial to have more CO2. And since we've seen higher levels of CO2, we've seen a greening of the planet. We've seen a lot more forestation we've seen a lot more green, which counteracts any potential warming that we have.

O'Lear: "Although plants may grow larger leaves with increased levels of CO2, the nutrient quality in those plants becomes diluted and causes knock down effects throughout the foodchain. Research at Kansas State University has demonstrated this point and why it is a concern both for agriculture and for ecosystem resilience. For instance, lowering the nutritional value of biomass could lead to a decline in some species of grasshoppers only to contribute to swarms of other species of grasshoppers that could damage crops. Beyond grasshoppers, other species and types of animals could be negatively affected."

More:Tallgrass of the Kansas prairie is changing along with the climate. It's now grasshopper-killing junk food.


Is messaging on climate change comparable to Nazi propaganda?


Thompson: "Why are we spending billions and billions of dollars subsidizing an energy source that we cannot rely on when we absolutely need it. It's just basically because of propaganda. And you go back to the Nazi era, this guy Edward Bernays actually helped Woodrow Wilson institute, he helped some big tobacco companies institute smoking in America, promote smoking. And basically he said, you know, you tell a lie big enough, you keep telling it, eventually it becomes true. That's what's happening in America today. And Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister, actually studied Bernays, because he knew it worked. He saw that it worked.

"And of course, if you control the language, you control the narrative. And what has happened since we started on this global warming or climate change path, is that ... they have controlled the language."

O'Lear: In response to the comments on energy subsidies: "This point is true for fossil fuels in our current, deeply networked system. Case in point: the recent cyber attack on the Colonial Pipeline and the resulting gas shortages on the East coast."

More:Colonial Pipeline reportedly pays $5M in cryptocurrency to hackers to end ransomware cyberattack

Van der Veen: "Or think back to the last hurricane hitting the Gulf Coast and disrupting energy supplies and following temporary shortages and price hikes.

"It is interesting that Senator Thompson brings up Edward Bernays and his influence on advertising. As documented extensively by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway in their book 'Merchants of Doubt' many of the strategies developed by Bernays and the advertising agency Hill and Knowlton originally for the tobacco industry, were later used by the fossil fuel lobby to discredit or deny the reality of climate change cause by humans burning fossil fuels.

"And one could argue that some continue to deploy these tactics to discredit or deny climate change."
ONTARIO

One Kids Place workers' union votes for strike mandate

Conciliation date set for Sept. 16

Author of the article: Michael Lee

Publishing date: Aug 17, 2021 • 
One Kids Place staff, represented by the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, have voted in favour of a strike mandate. The union has cited a new working hours model as an outstanding issue. PJ Wilson/The Nugget

Unionized workers at One Kids Place in North Bay have voted in favour of possible strike action.

Members represented by the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) voted 97 per cent in favour of a strike mandate, a statement Tuesday from the union said.

In total, the union says some 73 professionals represented by OPSEU delivered the mandate to its bargaining team.

“A strong strike vote hands the bargaining team a powerful tool,” OPSEU president Warren (Smokey) Thomas said in union’s statement.

“It tells management that members are solidly behind their team, even if it means a strike. It’s a clear sign the employer is on the wrong track.”

One Kids Place is a charitable, non-profit organization that provides a range of services, including occupational therapy, speech-language therapy, physiotherapy, social work, therapeutic recreation, an infant hearing program, autism services and clinics.

Staff at One Kids Place have been without a contract since March 31, the union says.

Although members have voted in favour of a strike mandate, a strike will not happen right away.

OPSEU regional vice-president Tara Maszczakiewicz from OPSEU Region 6 told The Nugget that a conciliation date has been set for Sept. 16.

If no resolution is found, a conciliation officer will report the outcome to the Minister of Labour, Training and Skills Development. The minister will then send a written notice to the union and employer, commonly known as a ‘no board’ report.

A legal strike or lockout can then begin 17 days later, prior to which the parties can continue negotiating.

In the statement from the union, Maszczakiewicz says most matters have been settled, with the exception of the employer’s attempt to impose a new model for working hours.

“OKP employees have long been successfully flexing hours to meet client needs,” she said.

“Now the employer wants to impose a casual-worker model, where hours can change from day-to-day, week-to-week, with limited ability to flex hours.”

Maszczakiewicz told The Nugget that most members have extra responsibilities caring for children or elderly parents.

“The employer’s model would cause upheaval to members’ lives and would affect services to the children they care for,” Maszczakiewicz is quoted saying in OPSEU’s statement. “This is not acceptable and we’ll stand our ground on this.”

One Kids Place executive director Brenda Loubert said she is limited in what she can comment on regarding the negotiations, but said she hopes a resolution will be reached.

She added that there always are opportunities to go back to the table, even with a ‘no board’ report.

mlee@postmedia.com

Nepalese Gurkhas end hunger strike over UK military pensions


Veterans call off ‘fast unto death’ strike after 13 days as British officials agree to talks over pension rights grievances.

Gurkha military veteran Dhan Gurung, who served as a corporal in the British 

Army's 2nd Gurkha Regiment, takes part in a 24-hour stint of a 13-day hunger 

strike opposite the front gates of Downing Street in London, on Monday, 

July 26, 2021 [Matt Dunham /AP]

Nepalese Gurkha military veterans have ended a 13-day hunger strike after the United Kingdom’s government agreed to discuss their longstanding grievances over pension rights.

Thousands of Gurkhas, who are renowned as hard and loyal fighters, have served in the British army but until 2007, did not enjoy the same pay and conditions as British soldiers.

Those who served before 1997 still receive only a fraction of their British counterparts’ salary as it was assumed they would return to Nepal after leaving the army, where the cost of living is significantly lower.

Gurkha veterans previously lost a legal challenge against the situation, and say it has left some 25,000 older Nepalese veterans out of pocket.

The Gurka Equal Rights group tweeted that on Thursday, British officials agreed to talks with the Nepalese Embassy over the issue.

“The hunger strike has now been called off! Thank you everyone for your support and love,” the group said.

The UK’s Ministry of Defence said it was “happy” the group ended the strike and that it looked forward “to meeting with the group next month alongside the Nepali Ambassador to move forward together”.

“Our primary concern is always the health and welfare of our serving personnel and veterans, and this strike was not a course of action we encouraged,” the ministry said in a statement.

Protester hospitalised

The “fast unto death” strikers had camped under makeshift shelters opposite British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Downing Street office for nearly two weeks.

One protester, Dhan Gurung, was taken to hospital on Wednesday. His wife, Dev Kumari Gurung, dismissed reports he had a heart attack.

He had been feeling weak and had high blood pressure but was determined to carry on, she told the AFP news agency.

Surrounded by flowers and candles left by supporters, the demonstrators wanted the government to resolve their complaints about alleged discrimination and inequalities.

The Gurkhas have become renowned for their loyalty and bravery since they first served as part of the Indian army in British-ruled India in 1815.

Some 200,000 Gurkhas fought alongside British troops in both world wars, as well as the conflicts in the Falklands, Iraq and Afghanistan.

There are about 2,700 Gurkhas currently enlisted in Britain’s armed forces.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

BC

Rio Tinto, union to meet THIS week as Kitimat aluminum smelter strike enters fourth week

While the meeting will not involve negotiations, it does give both sides another opportunity to discuss a framework for moving forward.

riotintokitimatstrike
Rio Tinto workers on strike in Kitimat pictured on July 28. As the strike enters its fourth week, officials from Rio Tinto and Unifor Local 23o1 will meet in Vancouver next week to see if negotiations can be renewed.

As the Kitimat aluminium smelter strike enters its fourth week, Rio Tinto and the union will hold another meeting in Vancouver next week to see if negotiations about a collective agreement can be renewed.

On Aug. 12, a similar meeting was held in Kitimat between top officials from Rio Tinto’s Montreal headquarters and Unifor Local 2301’s president to see if negotiations could resume between both parties in hopes of ending the stroke at the aluminum smelter which began in July 25.

However, no updates were provided by Rio Tinto or Unifor as to what happened during the Aug. 12, meeting and if both parties would head back to the table.

Information about next week’s meeting was sent out to Rio Tinto employees through a company memo on Aug. 17.

“After the meeting held on August 12 and follow up conversations, Rio Tinto and Unifor Local 2301 have agreed to meet early next week in Vancouver with a view to assess the potential restart of negotiations between parties,” said Rio Tinto in the memo.

While the meeting will not involve negotiations, it does give both sides another opportunity to discuss a framework for moving forward.

The memo also states that both parties have agreed that no other communication would be made until next week’s discussion takes place.

The strike began in Kitimat on July 25 after seven weeks of failed bargaining efforts between Unifor and Rio Tinto on matters of employee benefits and use of contractors among other issues.

No details have been provided as to what’s involved in contract talks save for the union which published information stating the company was proposing a series of benefits reductions.

Rio Tinto has denied that allegation but has not provided details on what it did propose, stating the contents of the negotiations to be confidential.

Local governments and leaders, including the District of Kitimat, City of Terrace, Haisla Nation, Skeena BC Liberal MLA Ellis Ross and NDP MP Taylor Bachrach called on Rio Tinto and Unifor Local 2301 to resume talks amidst fear of economic disruptions in northwest B.C.

Rio Tinto strike not impacting Nechako River levels

Water flow on the river is more then 30% above the seasonal average
I WOULD SAY THAT IS AN IMPACT FOR THE BETTER
WATER IS LIFE

Nechako River WEB
Water levels on the Nechako River were above average where it crosses under the Cameron Street Bridge on Friday.

Water flow on the Nechako River is more than 30 per cent above average for this time of year, but the cause has more to do with snow than aluminum, according to a local expert.
Rio Tinto operates the Nechako Reservoir to provide water to its hydro-electric power facility at Kemano. The Kemano generating station powers the company’s Kitimat aluminum smelter, which is running at 25 per cent capacity due to a four-week-long strike by workers. Water from the reservoir flows to generate power at Kemano, and into the Nechako River via the Skins Lake Spillway and the Cheslatta River.
Wayne Salewski, president of the Vanderhoof-based Nechako Environment and Water Stewardship Society, said he hasn’t seen any changes in Rio Tinto’s operation of the Skins Lake Spillway since the start of the strike by Unifor members in Kitimat.
“(The Nechako) is a little high. The river was really full,” Salewski said. “One of the reasons is the snowpack on the mountains… was above average by quite a bit. That resulted in a tremendous amount of inflow into the reservoir.”
Levels on the Nechako Reservoir went from being below-average last year to essentially full-capacity by this summer, he said.
According to data reported online by Rio Tinto the Nechako Reservoir level peaked at just above 2,799 feet in mid-July, roughly two feet above typical reservoir levels. As of Thursday, the reservoir had dropped to 2,796.84 feet – roughly half a foot above typical levels.
Salewski said he’s spent more than 100 hours on the river this summer, and seen “just a nice, continuous flow through” the Skins Lake Spillway.
Water flow on the Nechako at Vanderhoof on Thursday was measured at 318.78 cubic metres per second – 31 per cent above the seasonal average of 243 cubic metres per second. Water discharge from the Skins Lake Spillway was more than 105 cubic metres per second above the summer minimum level of 170 cubic metres per second.
Rio Tinto is continuing to run the Kemano power station and is selling the surplus power to the BC Hydro grid, Salewski said. A spokesperson for Rio Tinto confirmed that.
“The demand for electricity this summer was extraordinary, with the heat,” Salewski said.
Operation of the Kemano power station has been deemed an essential service the BC Labour Relations Board, allowing it to continue operations during the strike.
“Our top priority in the watershed is to continue managing the Kemano hydro-power facility and the Nechako Reservoir safely, to protect the environment and the diverse interests of our host communities,” a Rio Tinto spokesperson said in an email.
Power demand at the Kitimat smelter is only one factor in making river flow decision, and regular adjustments are made based on current and projected weather.
Negotiations between Rio Tinto and Uniform Local 2301 are expected to resume in Vancouver next week, according to a company memo issued to employees on Tuesday. The strike began on July 25, after seven weeks of failed bargaining efforts regarding issues of employee benefits and the use of contractors, along with other issues.
-    With files from Binny Pau, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter/Terrace Standard



NIGERIA
Resident Doctors Still On Strike Due To Lack Of Trust – NMA

Channels Television
Updated August 23, 2021



A deep distrust of the Federal Government’s ability to implement its promises is behind the prolonged strike of resident doctors across the country, the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) said on Monday.

“The problem we face is that when agreements are signed, everybody goes to sleep,” NMA President, Innocent Ujah, said during his appearance on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily.

“So there is this distrust among workers. And this is not good for the country; because we expect that those who work for our President should be truthful, honest and should comply with the agreement.”

There were indications that the three-week-old strike would soon be called off after the doctors, under the aegis of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) met with Federal Government representatives in Abuja over the weekend.

The meeting was brokered, in part by the NMA, which is the parent body of all doctors in the country.





But the resident doctors refused to sign the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) produced at the end of the meeting, citing the government’s decision to institute a court action over the strike.

The resident doctors also said the government must reverse its ‘no work, no pay’ policy.
‘Impoverished’ Doctors

Meanwhile, a NARD spokesperson, Julian Ojebo, has said the resident doctors will not resume unless their benefits have been paid.

Ojebo, while speaking on Sunrise Daily, said resident doctors have been left ‘impoverished’ by the government’s inability to meet its demands.

“We are not on strike for added allowances; we are not on strike for any other thing,” Ojebo said. “We are on strike for our normal due salaries that you have not paid from January to July.




“We are talking about salary shortfalls that you have not paid from 2014 to 2016. We are talking about monies you have not paid for our medical residency training program. These are the issues on the table, and these issues have not been resolved.”

He noted that signing MoUs was an academic exercise that does nothing to address the doctors’ demands.

“Payment of our benefits are the only actionable plans that can actually make us sign any memorandum of agreement of terms,” he said.

“Other than these, I don’t think we are being fair.”


A recurring problem


The resident doctors had earlier embarked on a strike in April.

The strike was suspended within ten days after the doctors met with Federal Government representatives and an agreement was signed for implementation.

But nothing was done to implement the agreement, NARD has said, prompting the resumption of the strike action.

“Twenty-one days of strike action in this country is unacceptable,” the NMA chief Ujah said on Monday. “But the problem is that some people are not doing their work.

A photo combination, created on August 23, of President of the Nigeria Medical Association, Innocent Ujah and Chairman, Communication and Communique, at the National Association of Resident Doctors, Julian Ojebo.


“This strike is avoidable. In April, we were able to convince our colleagues to suspend the action, and nothing happened anymore.

“They gave a period of notice to government, again nothing happened.

“The issue is about distrust. So government has to implement at least some of the demands.

“If the government does its own bit, there is no reason why resident doctors should not go back to work. They are not happy that when issues are raised, implementation becomes a problem.”

 GERMANY

Lack of emergency service rule - court prohibits nursing staff strike

Photo by Hush Naidoo JadeIn Berlin's state-owned hospitals, the Charité and the Vivantes hospitals, the week starts with an industrial action by the nursing staff. They demand, after the applause in the pandemic, a collective agreement on better staffing ratios. The strikers want to protest in front of the Vivantes headquarters in Reinickendorf. Afterwards it is to go in a demonstration at noon to the Charité-Virchow-Campus in Wedding.

According to information from the Daily Mirror, the Vivantes board has obtained a temporary injunction prohibiting the strike by the nursing staff. The reason given by the labor court was the lack of an emergency service agreement. Formally, the court's decision applies only to Vivantes.The Senate is now exerting pressure on the board of the state-owned hospital chain to sign a corresponding emergency service rule with Verdi. Then the strike could probably continue until Wednesday, as the union has announced.

On which wards are nursing staff on strike - and what is the impact?

On Monday, employees at Vivantes and Charité went on strike. "At each of the sites, 30 to more than 100 employees are on strike," said Meike Jäger, Verdi's chief negotiator.On Tuesday, twelve teams at Vivantes hospitals and seven teams at the university hospital, which is also owned by the state, are to walk off the job. According to Verdi, at least one ward would be affected in almost all of the eight Vivantes hospitals and on the three Charité campuses - from Steglitz-Zehlendorf to Marzahn-Hellersdorf, from Spandau to Neukölln. So far, there is talk of normal wards in gastroenterology, surgery and geriatrics.Up to and including Wednesday, only a few hundred of thousands of hospital employees will probably strike, but Verdi is already threatening: if the employers do not move, they will have a vote on an indefinite strike of greater proportions starting on August 30. Then, in September, all union members could be called to an "enforcement strike." Tens of thousands of treatments in the affected wards would have to be canceled for the time being.

Charité has already postponed about 2,000 treatments until after Wednesday, and Vivantes is likely to have the same number. So far, Verdi and the management boards of Charité and Vivantes have not reached a formal emergency service agreement.

Why are these emergency service agreements so important?

Scheduled interventions that can be postponed are canceled in crises: that was the case at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, and it is also common practice in the event of a strike. This does not apply to emergencies and time-critical operations (as in tumor treatment). For this, both sides agree on deployment modalities. This time, that hardly succeeds.

The management boards of Charité and Vivantes want to classify as many patients as possible as acute cases that cannot be rescheduled; the Verdi negotiators fear for the effectiveness of the industrial action. The union wants entire teams to go on strike, which means that wards will ultimately be closed - otherwise hardly anyone will feel the impact of the strike. Sick people who are already in bed will of course be cared for, said the Verdi negotiators. If no emergency service agreement is reached, a standard based on weekend services will be maintained.

However, Berlin's labor court issued a temporary injunction following a complaint by Vivantes: a strike without emergency services could lead to "danger to life and limb" of patients, and the union would - to put it simply - have to bow to the employers' emergency service ideas. The decision relates to kitchen and cleaning staff. However, it restricts the nursing strike.

What are the strikers demanding - and is an agreement in sight?

Verdi is demanding a "relief collective agreement": a fixed key for more nursing staff. In addition, the collective agreement of the public sector should apply to cleaning, transport and kitchen staff of Vivantes subsidiaries, which in individual cases can mean 800 euros more in monthly wages. This alone would cost Vivantes up to 35 million a year, according to the board, and the indebted hospital chain could not afford it.

According to Verdi's demand, at least ten percent more specialists would have to be employed in nursing. For the Charité, this means that about 500 more nursing staff would be needed in addition to the 4,700 currently employed. The labor market does not currently provide these, said Charité personnel manager Carla Eysel. If the university hospital were to commit itself to the Verdi personnel quotas, these could only be implemented if 80,000 fewer patients were cared for each year. Because clinics are paid per diagnosis with "case lump sums", there would then be less money from the health insurance companies, which would mean that jobs would have to be cut.

A formal, but in politics weighty problem comes in addition: Charité and Vivantes belong to Berlin's municipal employers' association. The umbrella organization of municipal employers (VKA) acts on behalf of this KAV, which, according to its statutes, would have to negotiate any collective agreement on relief itself.The Charité board offered the union a company-specific agreement that would be "as effective as a collective bargaining agreement," Eysel said: a strike clause would be included in a service agreement so that previously agreed staffing ratios could be enforced through industrial action. An agreement is not in sight.

What does the state government say - and what does the opposition say?

Politicians from the red-red-green coalition declared their solidarity with the nursing staff, while the responsible senators - Dilek Kalayci (Health) and Matthias Kollatz (Finance), both SPD - remained more silent. Labor Senator Elke Breitenbach (Left Party) was clear, calling the strike "legitimate". But Breitenbach is also part of the state government, which apparently sees no solution. Some in the health service and opposition say: The senate could help quite fast for hospitals, if that is also legally complicated.CDU top candidate Kai Wegner announced that the applause for the nursing staff in the Corona crisis was "a great sign," but now "tangible improvements" are needed: "There are not better working conditions without a better staffing ratio."

Wegner described the core problem as "the fact that the Senate is not fulfilling its investment obligation" - meaning the scarce funds to modernize buildings and technology. "As a result, hospitals are forced to cross-finance mandatory maintenance costs with per-case flat rates" - an accusation that is also being leveled at the hospitals themselves. Berlin's hospital association talks of 350 million euros a year to tackle dilapidated buildings and a lack of digitization.Florian Kluckert, health policy spokesman for the FDP in the House of Representatives, says: "Not only since Corona has the Berlin hospital landscape been on a drip and a permanent patient in intensive care." He says the Senate must equip the state-owned hospitals so that they are "competitive." Because the patients could have their postponed treatments, Kluckert does not say, also in other, privately-economically operated hospitals catch up.



Photo by Hush Naidoo Jade

 

PORTUGAL

SEF strike causes 4 hour queues at airport

By TPN/Lusa, in News · 23-08-2021

The waiting time at Lisbon airport's border control for flight arrivals from non-Schengen space, reached 3:43 on 22 August, according to an official source from ANA - Aeroportos de Portugal, due to the SEF strike.

However, at departures, the maximum waiting time was 35 minutes during the morning, according to the airport management company.

According to ANA, the partial strike by workers of the Foreigners and Borders Service (SEF), which began on 14 August, continues without having "relevant impact on the remaining airports".

The workers' protest aims to be "considered in the restructuring process" of the SEF, which involves changes to the entity, recalled last week the leader of the Union of Investigation, Inspection and Borders Inspectors (SIIFF), Renato Mendonça.

The union leader recalled that the law obliges them to "summon workers' representative structures and lead them to participate" in collective negotiations, but that the Government has taken an autocratic stance, which to continue implies continuing the strike and "advancing towards ways of fight harder. And that makes another kind of impact.”

Renato Mendonça explained that the partial strike will take place at least until the end of August and that the greatest impact has been in Lisbon, a strategy that he says aims to "cause a smaller impact on the flow of passengers and on the normal functioning of airports", which he claimed to be "easily verified by the fact that the queues have reached their peak of four hours".

The leader, last week, already estimated as "possible that the same happens" given the "high" number of flights expected for this weekend.

The strike was called by the SIIFF due to the lack of response from the Government on the future of the inspectors, following the approval of the bill that "provides for the transition of police powers of SEF to the PJ, PSP and GNR".

The strike did not count, however, with the participation of the Union for the Investigation and Inspection Career of the Foreigners and Borders Service (SCIF/SEF).

The protest began on 14 August and partially covers all employees working at the country's main border posts.

Unions consider strike over Brussels Airlines staff shortages

Credit: Belga

Staff working for Brussels Airlines are discussing strike action towards the end of August if demands to ease pressure on cabin crews are not met.

A strike notice, set for an indefinite period, was filed after talks over staffing issues failed last Thursday. Brussels Airlines had proposed 20 new recruitments, but unions said this was not sufficient to ease the workload.

“The management categorically refuses to negotiate structural solutions for the improvement of the collective agreements imposed by Lufthansa in 2020,” reads an announcement from the union.

Related News

“The unions and their representatives will now inform the staff. They have been under pressure since the beginning of the summer period, following a long period of economic unemployment,” it adds, according to Belga.

Exactly what measures will be taken in response will be decided in talks with employees. While a strike remains one possible outcome, it is less preferable for the unions given the impact it will have on passengers.

“It is not the intention to punish the travellers,” Olivier Van Camp from the socialist trade union explained to local media.

The management of Brussels Airlines has said it would continue to seek solutions, condemning “any social action that could harm customers and affect the workload of other staff members”.

The Brussels Times

Harvard Grad Student Union To Hold Strike Authorization Vote Beginning Sept. 13


HGSU-UAW last held a strike authorization vote in October 2019, which gave the union authorization to hold a nearly month-long str
ike in December. By MyeongSeo Kim

By Cara J. Chang and Meimei Xu, Crimson Staff Writers
UPDATED: Aug. 22, 2021 

Harvard Graduate Students Union-United Automobile Workers plans to hold a strike authorization vote beginning Sept. 13 following five months of bargaining for its second contract with Harvard.

Two-thirds of voters must vote to authorize a strike and, if authorized, the union’s bargaining committee can call for a strike at any time.

“It’s not a strike for the sake of a strike — it’s a strike because we have learned that it’s only pressure that’s going to move Harvard,” HGSU-UAW President Brandon J. Mancilla said in an interview.

On July 12, Harvard’s graduate student union accepted the University’s offer to extend its current contract to Aug. 31. The two sides have reached tentative agreements for five articles, but several key issues remain unresolved, including compensation, discrimination and harassment procedures, and union security.

In June, more than 600 HGSU-UAW members committed to organizing a strike in a letter to the University. The union announced the strike authorization vote at a general membership meeting Aug. 10.

The scheduled vote would be the union’s second strike authorization vote. In December 2019, HGSU-UAW went on strike for nearly a month in a bid to secure its first contract, ultimately moving to mediation and ratifying a one-year contract in July 2020.

Harvard administrators have begun preparations for a potential strike. In an email to University faculty and school leadership Friday, Deputy Provost Peggy Newell and Director of Labor and Employee Relations Paul R. Curran wrote that the University remains “firmly committed” to participating in negotiations in good faith and reaching an agreement with the union, but noted schools and departments should plan for a potential strike.

“With HGSU-UAW raising the potential for a strike in the fall semester, it is critical that Schools and Departments begin local contingency planning for managing the impacts of a strike,” they wrote.

If the strike authorization vote is successful, the union does not need to strike immediately. In 2019, HGSU-UAW went on strike nearly two months after its successful authorization vote. The union and the University will continue to negotiate regardless of the vote’s outcome; the union scheduled the vote for early in the fall, Mancilla said, to allow the union and the University enough time to negotiate a contract during the semester.

“A [strike authorization vote] is also for the University to know that plans are ongoing, that members are deciding, but it’s giving them a chance to engage in negotiations with us in order to avert a strike,” Mancilla said.

The union and University have already moved to proposing “packages” of contract articles, rather than proposals on individual articles, Mancilla also said.

Harvard’s latest proposals include a roughly 9 percent increase in compensation and benefits from the inaugural contract, which includes a $1.55 million increase in existing benefit pools, a new preventative dental insurance option, the extension of eligibility for the benefit pools to hourly workers, and percentage raises in wages, University Provost Alan M. Garber ’76 wrote in an email to Harvard affiliates on Thursday.

Harvard has not changed its stance on one of the union’s key bargaining goals: allowing members to pursue complaints of identity-based discrimination, sexual harassment, and academic retaliation under union grievance procedures that allow for third-party arbitration. The University maintains that such complaints should fall under University policies.

Union bargaining committee member Ash E. Tomaszewski wrote in a statement that some of Harvard’s proposed changes — particularly percentage raises instead of bonuses and the inclusion of hourly workers in benefit pools — are “significant,” but that the package was ultimately unacceptable to the union.

“Their move on salaried percentage raises and hourly [workers’] fund access is significant but is still very far from meeting need or being remotely justifiable,” Tomaszewski wrote. “Our members know this and don’t buy the University’s weak attempt to get us to sell out survivors and give up on real recourse for a raise that doesn’t even account for inflation.”

Mancilla also said that the union does “not plan to agree to the details Garber outlined in his message.”

Mo Torres, a HGSU-UAW member and Sociology Ph.D. candidate, wrote in an email he believes the authorization vote will strengthen member participation and the union’s negotiating position.

“The more student workers involved in the process, the more democratic our union, and the more successful we’ll be overall,” he wrote.

He plans to vote for authorization to give the bargaining committee “as many tools as possible at their disposal to help us win a better contract that’s fair and just.”

CORRECTION: Aug. 22, 2021

Due to an editing error, a previous version of this article misstated the threshold for a strike authorization vote to pass. Under the UAW Constitution, two-thirds of voters must vote yes, not two-thirds of union membership.

—Staff writer Cara J. Chang can be reached at cara.chang@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @CaraChang20.

—Staff writer Meimei Xu can be reached at meimei.xu@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @meimeixu7.