Monday, September 27, 2021

 

Group of doctors say UCP MLA showed ‘abysmal lack of understanding’ about public health system in comments on AHS


A group of Edmonton doctors is calling for a UCP MLA to apologize and resign for his public criticisms of Alberta’s provincial health authority.

On Saturday, UCP backbencher Shane Getson took to Facebook to claim Albertans should be “getting more bang for our buck” from the health-care system when dealing with the current wave of COVID-19.

The MLA for Lac Ste. Anne-Parkland took aim at the salaries of “those who run AHS,” suggesting in posts the province had the capacity to increase ICU beds by more than 1,000, a number referenced by Premier Jason Kenney early in the pandemic.

As COVID-19 continues to put major pressure on the province’s intensive care units, dozens of doctors from the Edmonton Zone Medical Staff Association signed a Monday open letter to Kenney calling for an apology and adding that Getson’s resignation would be “an appropriate way” for him to show regret.

The physicians said Getson’s comments amounted to a “malicious” personal attack on AHS CEO and president Verna Yiu, showed “an abysmal lack of understanding about our health system and public health,” and spread harmful misinformation.

“MLA Getson stating 1,000 ICU beds is magical thinking. He does not understand that tripling the number of ICU beds to 1,000 ICU beds requires time, money, space, and an immediate tripling of experienced, well-trained personnel, which is wishful thinking,” the letter said, adding that Alberta Health did not direct AHS to get to 1,000 ICU beds prior to the fourth wave.

Defending the efforts of AHS, it also laid the blame for the surge in COVID-19 cases at the feet of the government, accusing Kenney of gambling the stability of the health system and people’s lives on the belief that its reopening plan would not lead to an increase in hospitalizations and ICU admissions.

“Your gamble, premier, resulted in rising cases and hospitalizations. Deflecting to AHS leadership for not being prepared for a disaster you created and refused to plan for is ridiculous.”

Spokespeople for the UCP caucus and the premier’s office did not respond to requests for comment.

While the Alberta Medical Association and Canadian Paediatric Society joined a growing chorus of calls for a stronger set of public health measures, Kenney rejected the idea of imposing major lockdowns at this stage of the pandemic, saying on Sunday it made no sense for those who have been vaccinated.

“I know that it’s easy to sit on the sidelines and criticize governments across the world for their response, but we’re all trying to do our best,” he said on the Roy Green show.

lijohnson@postmedia.com

twitter.com/reportrix

View original article here Source

Tensions high between vaccinated and unvaccinated in Canada, poll suggests

Mon., September 27, 2021



A new poll suggests tensions over COVID-19 vaccines in Canada are high as frictions grow between those who are vaccinated against the virus and those who are not.

The Leger survey, conducted for the Association of Canadian Studies, found that more than three in four respondents hold negative views of those who are not immunized.

Association president Jack Jedwab says the relationships between vaccinated and unvaccinated Canadians are also viewed negatively by two out of three survey participants.

The online poll surveyed 1,549 Canadians between September 10 and 12.

A margin of error cannot be assigned to online polls, as they are not considered truly random samples of the population.

The survey found vaccinated people consider the unvaccinated as irresponsible and selfish, a view contested by those who are not immunized.

Some members of the latter group have been staging demonstrations outside hospitals and schools in recent weeks to protest vaccine passports and other public health measures.

"There's a high level of I would say antipathy or animosity toward people who are unvaccinated at this time," Jedwab said. "What you are seeing is the tension played out among family members and friends, co-workers, where there are relationships between people who are vaccinated and unvaccinated."

The situation creates friction and it is persistent, he added.

The survey results, he noted, also suggest the tensions between vaccinated and unvaccinated Canadians are on par with some of the other social, racial and cultural issues that divide the population.

"My sense is a lot of negative sentiment people feel towards certain groups is getting displaced by their feeling of antipathy toward those people who are unvaccinated," he said.

Jedwab said the survey also found divisions among people who are not immunized, with about one in four unvaccinated respondents holding negative views towards others with the same inoculation status.

The survey findings suggest that unvaccinated people personally justify their reasons for not being immunized, but will reject others' decision to follow the same course, said Jedwab.

An earlier association poll suggested unvaccinated Canadians are more worried about getting the vaccine than contracting COVID-19, and most Canadians would refuse to allow unvaccinated adults into their homes.

Jedwab said he expected tensions between the vaccinated and unvaccinated to ratchet up even higher as governments and employers continue to push for more people to get their shots.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 27, 2021.

Dirk Meissner, The Canadian Press
‘We weren’t thinking about other people’: unvaccinated Alberta man on his time in ICU with COVID-19

By Kirby Bourne 630CHED
Posted September 27, 2021 


As hospitals in Alberta fill up to the brim with COVID-19 patients, fear is growing that medical staff are about to make on-the-spot, life-and-death decisions. One doctor says some triage measures are already in place. Chris Chacon has more.
An Alberta man who recently spent time in the ICU with COVID-19 is sharing his story and pleading with those who are unvaccinated to receive the vaccine.

READ MORE: 58 Alberta ICU doctors pen letter saying it’s ‘not too late to change course’ on COVID-19 crisis


2:16 Kenney rejects calls for ‘fire break’ lockdown as Alberta’s COVID-19 crisis deepens

Bernie Cook tested positive for COVID-19 on Aug. 31. He had the Delta variant and says his health deteriorated rapidly.
\
“It was hitting me hard and I didn’t know what was going on, like whether or not I would live or not.”

A health-care worker holds up a phone to facilitate a video call while Bernie Cook is in the ICU with COVID-19. Credit: Alberta Health Services

He lost 30 pounds, shed muscle mass and now finds simple tasks, like climbing the stairs, difficult. During his interview with Global News, he was often out of breath just from sharing his story.

Cook said he was in the ICU for 11 days. His condition progressed quickly and he was intubated just a few days after being admitted to the hospital.

What people don’t realize, he said, is when the intubation tubes have to be removed, the patient is awake for the unpleasant process.

“I had to be a part of the process and literally my body convulsed from having the tubes taken out of my stomach and lungs. I did not enjoy that experience at all. It was a physical trauma to have that,” he said.

“I’m like, ‘Holy frick, how much more am I going to take here?'”

READ MORE: ‘It’s scary’: nurse explains what it’s like to be redeployed to the ICU during COVID-19 pandemic

Cook wasn’t vaccinated when he caught COVID-19. He said he isn’t against vaccinations, he just thought he didn’t need this one, saying he is a healthy guy and felt he could fight the virus if he caught it.

As of Monday, 83 per cent of eligible Albertans over the age of 12 had received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine. Almost 74 per cent were fully vaccinated.

A health-care worker helps Bernie Cook walk at the Peter Lougheed Centre in Calgary. Credit: Alberta Health Services

Cook says he understands people have free will, but urged anyone who isn’t fully vaccinated to get both doses as soon as possible.

Cook said everyone in his ward at the Peter Loughheed Centre in Calgary was unvaccinated except for one person who had received one dose. He was in one of three COVID wards in that hospital and said the health-care workers are overwhelmed.

“I talked to the nurses. I wanted to know what the hell was going on around me. I wanted to know… I mean, I could hear it. I could see it,” he said.

“Sometimes I really saw the stress because I’m around the nurses. I get to hear what they’re saying and I get to see what they’re doing.

“They’re they’re just overwhelmed. It’s beyond comprehension.

According to chief medical officer of health Dr. Deena Hinshaw, of the people admitted to Alberta’s ICUs with COVID-19 between June 1 and Sept. 23, 88 per cent were unvaccinated, while six per cent had one dose. Six per cent of ICU admissions were fully vaccinated.

“We’re clogging up the AHS system. We’re clogging it up,” Cook said of the unvaccinated.

“I think that if people saw that side of AHS, of how overwhelmed they were, I think they really would change their mind about getting the vaccine.”


READ MORE: Alberta doctors plead with new health minister for ‘fire break’ lockdown amid 4th COVID-19 wave

Cook’s daughter got married last weekend, an event he almost missed because of his ICU stay. While he was being intubated, he said his focus was to make it to that day, to push through and be there.

“So much happiness to be there… It felt so good. It’s like when I got intubated, (I thought) I’m not missing that for the frickin world.”

Now Cook is working to get his strength back. He said he was able to do five pushups on his knees on Sunday and did some curls with a six-pound weight.

But mainly he’s grateful to the health-care workers who helped him in the ICU.

“Despite it all, they’re so kind and compassionate to all of us that are in the units, which is a testament to their character.

“It really is their character. I am I am so proud of our AHS system, of our nursing staff.”

Anyone looking to receive their first or second dose of COVID-19 vaccine in Alberta can do so online or by calling 811.

On Monday, Alberta Health confirmed an additional 5,181 cases had been confirmed over the previous three days. Alberta no longer provides COVID-19 data on the weekend.

There were 1,882 new cases confirmed on Friday, 1,541 on Saturday and 1,758 on Sunday. There were 1,063 Albertans in hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 265 were in the ICU.


  



KENNEY & UCP REFUSE
'Life and death': Alberta Medical Association calls for 'fire-breaker' COVID-19 public health measures

Author of the article:Anna Junker
Publishing date:Sep 27, 2021 
Alberta Health Services staff in Calgary work on patients in a crowded intensive care unit. 
PHOTO BY SUPPLIED /Alberta Health Services

The Alberta Medical Association is calling for a “fire-breaker” set of public health measures in order to get the fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic under control as Alberta reports more than 5,000 new cases of COVID-19 since Friday.

Following a representative forum meeting over the weekend, the AMA is formally asking Premier Jason Kenney and Health Minister Jason Copping to implement the fire-breaker health measures, which physicians believe will aggressively control COVID-19 cases in order to protect the health-care system and keep Albertans safe.

“This is an immediate problem that needs to be acted on,” said Dr. Paul Boucher, AMA president, in a news release Monday.

“We are on the edge of a very dangerous cliff, one that will see physicians and other health-care workers making decisions on who does and does not receive care if case numbers continue on this path.”

Some fire-breaker measures could include the closure of nightclubs, casinos, bars and indoor dining at restaurants, the closure of gyms and indoor sports, and strictly limiting capacity at stores, malls and places of worship.

Boucher said the AMA recognizes there are negative consequences to hard lockdowns, but they see no other solution.

“It is now life and death,” said Boucher. “Albertans are tired and have been doing their part since this all started, and we do not make these statements lightly. These are indeed desperate times and we are disheartened that it has come to this. We need government to institute clear, decisive actions to immediately save our health-care system from collapse and protect Albertans.”



The letter comes as Alberta reported 5,181 new cases of COVID-19 since Friday, with 21,307 active cases across the province.

On Friday, there were 1,882 COVID-19 cases identified, while on Saturday there were 1,541 new cases and Sunday reported 1,758 new cases.

There are 1,063 Albertans hospitalized with COVID-19, an increase of two since Friday. Of those, 265 are in intensive care units, an increase of 22.

Twenty-three more deaths since Friday raised the provincial death toll to 2,645.

Meanwhile, in an open letter signed by 60 doctors from the AMA’s section of intensive care, the physicians say Alberta hospitals do not have the resources to properly provide care to the growing number of ICU patients.

The letter states as ICU capacity grows, staffing ratios per patient fall below the normal standard of care.

“The demand for ICU nurses is currently so high that we need to increase the number of patients assigned to each nurse.”

Alberta’s ICUs are running at well over double our normal capacity, driven by a growing number of severely ill COVID-19 patients, the AMA said.

“As intensive care physicians, it is our duty to ensure that we continue to help the critically ill at any time and any place within our province,” ICU section president Dr. Clinton Torok-Both said in a news release.

“Unfortunately, our ability to equitably provide intensive care to all Albertans remains under threat.”

As of Monday, there are 370 ICU beds open in Alberta, including 197 surge spaces. Of those, 38 have been opened in the last week.

Health-care systems in Alberta, Saskatchewan 'broken' by COVID surge, doctors say
Sep 27, 2021
CBC News
Dr. Aisha Mirza, an ER physician in Edmonton, and Dr. Hassan Masri, an ICU and critical care physician in Saskatoon, share how the provinces' hospitals and medical professionals are struggling amid a fourth wave of COVID-19. 

ICU capacity is at 84 per cent across the province, with 312 patients. The overwhelming majority of them have COVID-19. Edmonton ICUs are at 86 per cent of current capacity, the Central Zone is at 93 per cent, and the North Zone is at 100 per cent.

Calgary and the South Zone are operating at 80 and 81 per cent of current capacity, respectively

The Canadian Paediatric Society is also calling on the province to do more to protect children during the fourth wave of COVID-19.

In a letter, Ruth Grimes, CPS president, and Raphael Sharon, the board representative for Alberta, say while they support the latest public health measures announced on Sept. 16, they do not go far enough.

“Not only are we extremely worried about the direct health impacts of Alberta’s COVID-19 crisis on children and youth, we are anxious about the threat posed to their access to education, community supports and essential services,” the letter states.

The society is calling for mandatory vaccination for all adults working in schools or child care settings, or mandatory regular COVID-19 testing for those who cannot be vaccinated.

The society is also advising that indoor masking requirements be expanded to include all those over the age of two, including when seated at a desk or table, with limited exceptions including for eating/drinking, health conditions, or if they are unable to remove the mask without assistance.

They also advise mandatory testing, reporting and contact tracing of all COVID-19 cases in schools and child care settings.



Alberta’s fourth COVID-19 wave is the result of politics: Notley
‘The West Block’ host Mercedes Stephenson is joined by Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley to talk about the COVID-19 situation in Alberta. With ICUs operating well above capacity and the military offering help, Notley critiques the government response and is asked whether she thinks Premier Jason Kenney should step down.


Opposition NDP Leader Rachel Notley, meanwhile, says the province should be partnering with community groups and health-care professionals to go door to door to help those who are not yet vaccinated due to health, work concerns or a language barrier.

Those groups could be “having conversations and offering Alberta vaccines right there on people’s doorsteps,” Notley said.

As of end-of-day Sunday, 83 per cent of Albertans aged 12 and older who are eligible for a COVID-19 have received one dose, while 73.8 per cent are fully vaccinated.

— With files from The Canadian Press

ajunker@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/JunkerAnna
Sask. human rights code won't accommodate people refusing vaccination due to 'personal preference'

Sask. Human Rights Commission not accepting complaints based on objection to vaccinations

CBC News · Posted: Sep 27, 2021 
The Saskatchewan Human Rights Code does not protect those who refuse to get vaccinated against COVID-19 just because they don't want to, according to the province’s human rights commission. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Refusing to get vaccinated against COVID-19 due to "personal preference" doesn't have protection under the province's human rights code, according to the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission (SHRC).

"An individual who chooses not to be vaccinated based on personal preference does not have the right to accommodation under the Code," the SHRC says.

The Saskatchewan government's proof of vaccination or negative test requirement is set to take effect across the province starting Friday. It applies to all provincial and Crown corporation employees, along with anyone looking to enter certain businesses, event venues and other establishments.

Ahead of the implementation, the SHRC wrote a post on its website last week reminding people that vaccine mandates requiring proof of immunization or negative testing are "generally permissible" under the Saskatchewan Human Rights Code — "so long as individuals who are unable to be vaccinated due to a Code-protected characteristic are reasonably accommodated."

The code prohibits discrimination based on the following characteristics:
Race/perceived race or colour.
Place of origin, nationality or ancestry.
Religion or creed.
Family or marital status.
Sexual orientation.
Gender identity.
Sex, including sexual harassment or pregnancy.
Disability (physical or mental).
Receipt of public assistance.
Age (18 or more).

People who are not able to receive the COVID-19 vaccine — such as those with certain disabilities — are required under the code to have reasonable accommodations from their employers and service providers, the SHRC said, noting that's when testing requirements could come into play.

"Reasonable accommodation will differ on a case-by-case basis," it said.

Those who can't be vaccinated for medical reasons should be prepared to show a supporting doctor's note, the SHRC added.

Mask and vaccine complaints swamp human rights tribunal, but many aren't about true discrimination
ASK CBC NEWSFront-line workers shoulder burden of vaccine mandates

The commission said it plans to investigate any complaints of discrimination based on the code's "protected characteristics," but will not be accepting any that cite a personal objection to vaccinations or vaccination mandates.

Collecting information about a person's vaccination status is also not protected by the code, the commission noted. However, it said such info needs to be gathered and stored according to privacy legislation.


Ontario human rights watchdog says anti-vaxxers don't deserve special treatment


If you don't believe in getting the COVID-19 vaccine, Ontario's human rights law says you don't have the right to special accommodations.

A statement put out last week by the Ontario Human Rights Commission explains that anyone who "chooses not to be vaccinated based on personal preference does not have the right to accommodation under the Code."

In the province, human rights code prohibits discrimination based on creed, such as religious beliefs or practices; however, singular beliefs do not amount to creed, as stated in the code.

"Even if a person could show they were denied a service or employment because of a creed-based belief against vaccinations, the duty to accommodate does not necessarily require they be exempted from vaccine mandates, certification or COVID testing requirements," the statement says.

As of last Wednesday, Ontario implemented vaccine requirements for high-risk indoor settings. People must show proof that they're double vaccinated in order to be inside restaurants, nightclubs, concert venues, gyms and more.

Many people who don't believe in getting the vaccine have argued that not having access to these spaces is an infringement on their human rights.

Last week, People's Party of Canada candidate Darryl Mackie was arrested after he entered into a Tim Hortons in Oshawa and refused to show proof of a vaccine.

Mackie compared his actions to civil rights icon Rosa Parks and inspired others who share his beliefs to also refuse the new vaccine mandates.

In the same week as Mackie's sit-in, a mob of unmasked patrons sat-in at the food court inside of Toronto's Eaton Centre, also refusing to show proof of vaccination, as a way of pushing for their rights.

Canada Starts Cracking Down on Fringe Medical Groups

— Much like America's Frontline Doctors, groups up north are spreading misinformation

A collage of various Canadian Frontline Nurses and Concerned Ontario Doctors advertisements and social media.

In his Twitter profile picture, Patrick Phillips, MD, poses with a stethoscope. He tweets about how ivermectin could end the COVID-19 pandemic, encourages his over 36,800 followers to seek vaccine exemptions, and compares getting vaccinated to what Jewish people endured in Nazi Germany. Sound familiar? He wouldn't be out of place in America's Frontline Doctors, the group that's garnered much attention for their similarly provocative stances -- but the small maple-leaf flag by his name says otherwise.

Doctors and nurses casting doubt on COVID vaccination, masks, and other medical guidance aren't limited to the U.S. -- they're quickly amassing their own followings in Canada. Foremost among these collectives is perhaps the Concerned Ontario Doctors and Canadian Frontline Nurses, who a number of contrarian clinicians have aligned themselves with.

"I have the perception that subset, the very right-leaning political fringe, is more sizable in the U.S. than it is in Canada, but we have it here too," said David Juurlink, MD, PhD, a pharmacologist and internist in Toronto.

"To be quite honest, we've never really dealt with medical professionals until the pandemic," said Elizabeth Simons, deputy director of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network. "Typically they will keep a distance from the hate angle, but they're still standing shoulder to shoulder with hate-promoting groups and individuals."

"It's a growing problem for sure, [and] it's getting worse" with the introduction of proof of vaccine requirements for various events and businesses, she added.

Provincial professional medical regulators are starting to respond formally in an effort to combat misinformation spread by physicians, whose honorary MDs lend them and their associated fringe groups a veneer of credibility.

"When it comes to misinformation being spread by healthcare professionals, obviously it leads to bigger consequences," said Krishana Sankar, PhD, of ScienceUpFirst, an organization that works to combat misinformation in Canada and is partly funded by the Canadian Association of Science Centres. "That's because these are the trusted voices that we usually tell people to get their information from, to follow their guidance."

According to reports this week, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta (CPSA) confirmed that it had spoken directly to seven doctors after receiving complaints that they had been spreading misinformation about COVID-19 online. The Canadian Press reported that the regulatory body had also spoken with physicians who gave vaccine exemption letters to patients without clinical evidence.

"Spreading misinformation does not align with a physician's professional responsibility to their patients, and CPSA takes this very seriously. While we are unable to speak to individual cases, CPSA has a responsibility to Albertans to investigate regulated members who are sharing inaccurate and potentially harmful information," the group said in a statement.

Alberta has the highest number of past-week COVID cases in Canada, according to their government website, and one of the highest rates of infection.

Two other professional regulatory groups, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) and the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia (CPSBC) did not respond to requests for comment.

Concerned Ontario Doctors, perhaps the Canadian equivalent to America's Frontline Doctors, have amassed over 23,400 followers on Twitter; the group is led by Kulvinder Kaur Gill, MD, who has over 117,600 followers on the platform. Phillips also appeared in one of their videos, entitled "Medical Censorship and the Harms of Lockdowns."

Gill has been disciplined by the CPSO. Their records show that she had a "caution-in-person" in front of a College panel following an investigation of her practice and shows three separate "cautions." Her tweets from June and August 2020 alleged that lockdowns were harmful, testing and tracing were ineffective, and vaccines weren't necessary.

The medical community has criticized Gill in the past for promoting the use of hydroxychloroquine, which has been shown to be ineffective for the treatment of COVID-19.

Gill has also retweeted pro-hydroxychloroquine sentiments from Simone Gold, MD, JD, the founder of America's Frontline Doctors, CBC News reported.

In May, the CPSBC disciplined a family practice doctor, Stephen Malthouse, MD, according to CBC News. Malthouse sued the regulatory body after he received a letter from them stating he had been the subject of complaints from other doctors and would be investigated and prevented from speaking about issues related to COVID-19.

As for Canadian Frontline Nurses, they gained a degree of notoriety for their role in organizing protests outside Canadian hospitals for what they called "medical freedom" and "informed consent," i.e., their position against vaccines and immunization records. But Simons said the group is less expansive than they appear. "There are, like, two nurses that are actually involved in that," she said. "They often present themselves as being this massive number of people, but the reality is that it's quite a small fringe group."

The group has also retweeted Gold's tweets. One expert said he wasn't surprised by the overlap between the far-right groups. "The information that is typically trending or top on social media platforms comes primarily from the United States," said Aengus Bridgman, a PhD candidate in political science at McGill University in Montreal, who leads the Canadian Election Misinformation Project there. "A lot of the conspiratorial thinking -- fake cures like hydroxychloroquine, ivermectin -- has flown north. We are very exposed in Canada to that."

Simons said that medical professionals peddling in misinformation plays a part in real-world consequences of COVID conspiracy thinking. "They're held to such a standard. And they have such a responsibility to what's happening."

Juurlink said he's exhausted by fielding misinformation and debunking what patients have read or heard. "Some of those doctors have very, very sizable followings, they've got big megaphones and people listen to them," he noted. But he thinks that people inclined to believe medical professionals who align themselves with "Frontline"-like groups would have already harbored those views in the first place.

"They're kooks, they're outliers, they do not represent the consensus medical opinions," he added. "But they've got large followings and the reason they've got large followings is because people who share their beliefs of a political nature typically follow them."

  • author['full_name']

    Sophie Putka is an enterprise and investigative writer for MedPage Today. Her work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Discover, Business Insider, Inverse, Cannabis Wire, and more. She joined MedPage Today in August of 2021. Follow 

Miami's crypto-friendly mayor is pitching bitcoin miners on the city's nuclear facilities to shrink their carbon footprint

ewu@insider.com (Ethan Wu) 
© Lynne Sladky/AP Miami Mayor Francis Suarez. Lynne Sladky/AP

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez told the Wall Street Journal he has been pitching miners on his city's nuclear plants and crypto friendliness.

In June, Suarez made a similar pitch to Chinese firms displaced by Beijing's mining ban.

Outside of Miami, too, miners are eyeing other opportunities to link with nuclear energy sources.

Concerns about bitcoin's heavy environmental impact are pushing miners toward carbon-free nuclear energy as cities like Miami look to capitalize on the trend, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, who has fast become a beloved figure in crypto circles, told the Journal that he has been pitching bitcoin mining firms on his city's nuclear facilities and crypto friendliness.

A Miami-based nuclear plant owned by Florida Power & Light has been in talks with bitcoin miners over how to get ahold of cheap land near the facility to host mining rigs, Suarez told the Journal. He said worries about bitcoin's eco-unfriendliness "come from the fact that a lot of the mining was being done in coal-producing countries."


In June, Suarez made a similar pitch to Chinese firms displaced by Beijing's mining ban.

"The fact that we have nuclear power means that it's very inexpensive power," he told CNBC at the time. "We understand how important this is … miners want to get to a certain kilowatt price per hour."

While bitcoin mining is a highly energy-intensive activity, using nuclear power generates nearly zero carbon emissions or air pollution - presenting a seemingly tidy fix to a growing concern.

Outside of Miami, too, miners are eyeing other opportunities to link with nuclear energy sources.

Nuclear startup Oklo Inc. for example, has signed a 20-year deal to supply energy to Compass Mining through its mini reactor. Oklo CEO Jacob DeWitte told the Journal that he had received requests from other interested bitcoin miners, though federal approval is still forthcoming.

Bitcoin Bros and Nuclear Bros Have Found Common Cause
In the hunt for cheap, carbon-free energy, some miners have sought out partnerships with aging nuclear power plants.


By Shoshana Wodinsky

Cryptocurrency mining is a wildly energy-intensive endeavor that doesn’t only pump out more carbon emissions than some small countries, but is quickly racking up a small mountain range’s worth of electronic waste.

Now, apparently, we can add radioactive waste to bitcoin’s list of unfortunate environmental side effects. According to the Wall Street Journal, a number of bitcoin miners are striking up deals with local nuclear power plants. While nuclear is a carbon-free source of power for mining rigs, there are likely better uses of those electrons.

A handful bitcoin miners have sought money-making deals with some of the country’s struggling nuclear power plants, the Journal writes. One company, the Pennsylvania-based Talen Energy Corp., told the paper that it recently entered a “joint venture” with TerraWulf, a bitcoin operation that bills itself as the answer to “next-generation zero-carbon bitcoin mining,” whatever that means. According to the report, TerraWulf’s new mining facility will be parked next to Talen’s Pennsylvania plant, and will also be the size of “four football fields.”

With the U.S. nuclear fleet floundering as reactors reach—and even pass—retirement age, bitcoin mining could offer a way to keep operating. There are other options, though, including state-led bailouts. That would keep emissions-free electricity floating as the world races to install enough renewables to clean up the grid.

Some states that tried to woo bitcoin miners in an attempt to boost their economies, and nuclear power has played a key role in the sales pitch. Noted bitcoin fanboy and mayor of Miami Francis Suarez, for example, confirmed to Bloomberg that his office had been approaching crypto-mining companies with the prospect of setting up their operations alongside South Florida’s Turkey Point nuclear power plant.

It’s worth noting here that last month, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported on Turkey Point’s many, many safety issues, which includes multiple staff members being fired over the past year for forging safety inspections. So, uh, godspeed to Suarez and his pitch.

Bitcoin has developed a reputation for guzzling electricity and relying on the cheapest available sources, many of which are often heavily polluting. China’s coal plants kept the GPUs churning for the majority of the world’s mining operations until the country began cracking down on bitcoin. Natural gas plants have recently become mining hubs in Upstate New York. Though it burns cleaner than coal in terms of carbon dioxide, gas is also a major source of methane, a more potent greenhouse gas the world’s leading scientists recently sounded the alarm about.

Nuclear power offers zero carbon emissions to generate the power, though other parts of the process are a source of emissions. It also produces radioactive waste, of which there’s roughly 85,000 metric tons in the U.S. Figuring out what to do with it is an ongoing issue.
TC Energy's Coastal GasLink pipeline worksite blocked by fresh protests

Coastal GasLink crews are being prevented from accessing a work area near the Morice River

Author of the article:
Bloomberg News
Robert Tuttle
Publishing date:Sep 27, 2021 

Supporters of the indigenous Wet'suwet'en Nation's hereditary chiefs block the Pat Bay highway as part of protests against the Coastal GasLink pipeline, in Victoria, B.C., Feb. 26, 2020. 
PHOTO BY KEVIN LIGHT/REUTERS FILES


Work on TC Energy Corp.’s Coastal GasLink pipeline has been hampered by protesters who blocked access to a construction site in western British Columbia, threatening further delays to the natural gas conduit.

Coastal GasLink crews are being prevented from accessing a work area near the Morice River, an area that includes “several pieces” of heavy equipment staged for clearing and site preparation activities, Calgary-based TC Energy said in a release.

The access road to a drill site on the river was destroyed and blockades have been erected “to stop the drilling under the sacred headwaters that nourish the Wet’suwet’en Yintah and all those within its catchment area,” the Indigenous Environmental Network said in a news release, adding that there had been one arrest.

The latest flareup of protests is another snag in a project that’s already behind schedule because of COVID-19 work restrictions. The pipeline will supply natural gas to the future LNG Canada site in Kitimat, B.C., billed as the largest private-sector investment in Canada’s history.

TC Energy warned in July that it may suspend some construction work amid a quarrel with the LNG project’s backers over costs and scheduling.

The pipeline has faced opposition in the past from local indigenous groups, including members of the Wet’suwet’en Hereditary Chiefs. A standoff between pipeline workers and indigenous groups in early 2020 escalated into Canada-wide protest movement that blocked trains from moving goods and passengers across the country.

Bloomberg.com
In search of ‘Lithium Valley’: why energy companies see riches in the California desert


Firms say what’s underneath the Salton Sea could fuel a green-energy boom. But struggling residents have heard such claims before


An area along the Salton Sea that was once filled with water.

Photographs: John Francis Peters/The Guardian
by Aaron Miguel Cantú
in Calipatria
THE GUARDIAN
Mon 27 Sep 2021

LONG READ

Standing atop a pockmarked red mesa, Rod Colwell looks out at an expanse of water that resembles a thin blue strip on the horizon. The Salton Sea, California’s largest lake, has come and gone at least five times in the last 1,300 years, most recently in 1905, when floodwaters from the Colorado River refilled its basin.

A mid-century resort destination, the lake has since become an environmental disaster zone. Its waters, long fed by pesticide-laden runoff from nearby farms, have been steadily evaporating, exposing a dusty shoreline that kicks up lung-damaging silt into the surrounding communities of the Imperial Valley, where rates of asthma are alarmingly high.

But as disastrous as the disappearing Salton Sea is, powerful people believe that a vast reserve of lithium locked beneath it and the surrounding area holds the key to flipping the region’s fortunes.

Global demand for lithium, a metal vital for the batteries in electric cars and computer electronics, is projected to grow by 40 times in the next 20 years as renewable technologies become more ubiquitous. The earth deep below the southern Salton Sea is rich in hot, mineral-abundant brine that contains some of the world’s largest deposits of lithium, and Colwell and others envision a “Lithium Valley” that would establish California as a global production hub and employ thousands of workers for generations to come.

The earth deep below the southern Salton Sea is rich in hot, mineral-abundant brine that contains some of the world’s largest deposits of lithium. 

Colwell keeps track of the Salton Sea’s water levels because as it evaporates, more land becomes available for Controlled Thermal Resources, the Australia-based lithium mining and geothermal power company where he is CEO. On this “blank canvas” of exposed land, he imagines a grid filled with huge, steam-emitting facilities, a cathode manufacturing plant for batteries and solar panels, and rows of crops to remediate the salty white soils.

California is already pursuing a $206m lake restoration plan to try to reverse the Salton Sea’s fortunes. But people in the surrounding communities are still being sickened by the pollution – proof, says Colwell, of state failure.

“Let private enterprise deal with it,” he said of the shrinking lake. “We’re trying to commercialize an environmental disaster.”

California officials estimate about 600,000 tons of lithium could be produced every year in the Imperial Valley – an amount that would upend global supply chains, especially if related businesses like battery and cathode makers decided to relocate here.

As the sea evaporates, more land becomes available for Controlled Thermal Resources, an Australia-based lithium mining and geothermal power company. 

The state has convened a “Lithium Valley” commission to study the potential industry, which envisions thousands of clean energy jobs and an economic leg up for communities along the US-Mexico border, across from Mexicali, whose residents are among the state’s poorest. But many who live here say they’ve heard similar promises before. Some fear that lithium is just the latest example of how their homes and bodies are treated as an industrial experiment, especially as the commercial-level technology needed to get at the lithium is still in its very early stages.

This could be a game changer but we have to have an open mind and not believe the spinFernando Leiva, professor and lithium industry researcher

Fernando Leiva, a professor of Latin American and Latino studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has studied the effects of lithium mining in Chile, where tribes in the Atacama desert, home to the world’s largest lithium brine deposits, have seen little of the profit reaped by international mining companies who exploit the area.

It’s a concern that Leiva, who presented his research on Chile to the Lithium Valley commission this spring, sums up as “disaster capitalism”.

“The private sector now appears – they’re the ones that produced the global climate crisis that destroyed ecosystems, now they’re the ones that are going to save us,” he said.

“This could be a game changer but we have to have an open mind and not believe the spin. Understand the enthusiasm, but take it with a grain of salt.”
A ‘once in a lifetime’ green transition

The US government has a lithium supply problem. More than 80% of the world’s raw supply is mined in Australia, Chile, and China. The latter also controls more than half of the world’s lithium processing facilities and hosts three quarters of lithium-ion battery megafactories in the world; just a handful are in the US.

The Biden administration also believes securing domestic sources of lithium is vital to national security. In June, the administration released a blueprint for jumpstarting domestic lithium production and refining as well as battery manufacturing, and set a national electric vehicle sales goal of 50% by 2030.

  
The future lithium mining site being developed by Controlled Thermal Resources in the Salton Sea geothermal field, Imperial, California.

For Colwell, whose company has been preparing to break ground for eight years, it’s a mad dash to keep up with the increasing demand driven by renewable technologies.

“When music stops, someone’s not gonna have a chair and we won’t be able to produce enough [lithium], it’s as simple as that,” Colwell says. “This is a wonderful time of transition. We’ll never see it again in our lifetime, this green transition – it’s very cool to be part of it.”

In an initial stage of the project, named Hell’s Kitchen Lithium and Power, lithium extraction plants would be powered by geothermal energy, a renewable source of power harnessed when brine is brought up from underground and flashes into steam, spinning turbines.
Wetlands still active with wildlife, as the Salton Sea has receded, in Imperial Valley, California. 

The company estimates an initial lithium and geothermal plant will cost $520m to build and will produce 40,000 tons of lithium along with 130 megawatts of power a year by 2024. Thirty per cent of the energy would be used to extract lithium, and the rest would be sold, Colwell hopes, to car companies for charging stations as well as utility companies in California and Arizona. By decade’s end, as more of the Salton Sea dries up, Controlled Thermal Resources will be able to operate on nearly 7,300 acres.

The heart of the operation will be a minerals facility where small beads are used to suck lithium from brine to produce lithium carbonate, one of two types of lithium products used in electric car batteries. The novel technology has been tested by companies around the world this year, including the in US, China, and France.

Unlike the Salton Sea region, where lithium-rich brine sits deep underground in hot metamorphic reserves, salt lakes in Chile and Argentina don’t produce heat that can be converted to geothermal energy. Minerals from those lakes have typically been extracted using evaporation ponds, a slower process.

EnergySource’s geothermal power facility in the Salton Sea geothermal field. 

Over the last 10 years, rock mining for lithium has increased with global demand, but it won’t be enough to sustain it, according to Dave Snydacker, CEO of Lilac Solutions, the company providing the technology for Hell’s Kitchen.

“Brines contain most of the lithium in the world,” said Snydacker. “We need brine resources to come online and come online fast.”

Controlled Thermal Resources won’t reveal its investors, but in June, GM invested an undisclosed amount in exchange for first dibs on Hell’s Kitchen lithium, part of its $35bn pivot to electric cars.


‘The air is toxic’: how an idyllic California lake became a nightmare

Past promises, little follow-through


For all the hype, lithium in the Imperial Valley is far from an assured thing.

Speculators have sent the price of lithium and other metals soaring, encouraging investment but also threatening the affordability of electric cars. A mismatch of supply and demand for the metal could lead to an industry downturn in the near future, possibly affecting the region’s potential economic revival. That’s just one of several uncertainties, another one being whether governments can stimulate enough demand, sometimes in the face of fossil fuel opposition.

It wouldn’t be the first time that renewable enterprise and other grand ideas have failed to deliver benefits to residents in this community, a patch of desert between the Salton Sea’s southern edge and the US-Mexico border that was transformed into an agricultural breadbasket a century ago.

“The reality here is that we have seen international trade promises that have yet to be delivered, solar promises that have yet to be delivered, water promises … housing, geothermal, wind,” according to Tom Soto, a founder and managing partner at the Diverse Communities Fund who delivered the remarks to the Lithium Valley commission’s first meeting in March.

“There have been a lot of promises that were supposed to have been delivered to the most economically depressed, disadvantaged areas.”
We need more opportunities for children because they leave Рthey find nothing here in the valleyFlerida Ba̱ueles, resident and agriculture worker

More than a fifth of people in the Imperial Valley live below the poverty line and 85% are Latino; thousands also work here while commuting home to Mexico.

It’s also a land of vast inequality. In the town of Brawley, 20 miles away from 11 geothermal plants clustered by the Salton Sea, residents on the west side live in large houses with manicured lawns. These homes belong to ranch owners, law enforcement officers and other well-off people, according to Miguel Hernandez, the former communications coordinator for Comite Civico del Valle Inc, a community advocacy organization founded by farmworkers.
Advertisement

Hernandez, 31, moved to Brawley six years ago. He was born in Mexicali but, like many here, he grew up on both sides of the border. At Comite, where he worked until September before taking a job with the state, his work included building environmental literacy among residents.
Miguel Hernandez at the site of a facility that once formulated and stored pesticides and other toxic chemicals

Riding in the passenger seat with the air conditioner blasting, Hernandez observes abandoned buildings on the city’s main street, where faint clouds of dust billow from a nearby trucking company. We drive to the poorer east side of town, where a block of houses sits across the street from a former fertilizer factory now owned by Chevron. The Guardian spoke with residents who lived in that neighborhood about the lithium plans. Most hadn’t heard of them.

Flerida Bañueles stood underneath the pink roof of her house as temperatures reached 120F. Her three grown children had all left for San Diego because of a lack of opportunity here, she said. Bañueles said she wasn’t familiar with the lithium industry but she supported the idea if it brought more jobs to the region.

“I think it will be good. There will be more work – that’s much better because Brawley is very low in many things,” said Bañueles, a former agricultural worker in her 50s. “The jobs here are for six months or less, and we need more opportunities for children because they leave; they find nothing here in the valley.”

The nearby fertilizer plant is indicative of how industry needs have come at the expense of residents’ health, advocates said. In addition to toxic dust billowing from the Salton Sea, the valley’s air is choked by pesticides and diesel emissions from heavy trucks, powder from rock and mineral processing facilities, and even hay. High levels of industrial pollution from Mexicali affect people on both sides of the border.

Several of Bañueles’ neighbors on the block died of rare throat cancers, and she thinks it is related to the fertilizer plant. Dusty debris was removed from the site last year, and Comite Civico del Valle is surveying residents about their health.

The California department of toxic substances control is overseeing the site’s remediation. A spokesperson acknowledged that some residents could be experiencing symptoms from toxic dust but said officials had taken measures to ensure it wasn’t picked up by the wind, including by covering it with coconut fiber covers, monitoring particulate matter, and spraying it with a binding agent.
Children play in a water park on a hot June afternoon where temperatures reached 110 degrees, in Brawley

One selling point of local lithium boosters is that geothermal plants produce far less pollution and greenhouse gas emissions than fossil fuels do. The climate crisis is having a powerful impact on the region, making heat even less tolerable and depleting the Colorado River, where the Imperial Valley gets its water. (A potential risk is that the existing geothermal plants are located in an active seismic zone, where researchers in 2013 found a correlation between production and an increase in small earthquakes.)

Alan Diaz, a 33-year-old private tutor who works remotely, said that most young people who stayed couldn’t look forward to having social mobility. Public health and the environment were important, he said, but he would support practically anything that brings jobs.

“I want to see more state and federal representatives pay more attention to the Imperial Valley,” he said. “Because since we’re a Democratic county, they feel safe only tackling some issues but not really any hard questions. They should pay more attention to the people still living here.”

Funneling benefits upward


The Lithium Valley Commission, which has been tasked with presenting a state-industry blueprint to the California legislature in October 2022, is composed of lithium executives as well as social justice advocates and regional representatives, including the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians and the Quechan Indian Tribe.

The commission is exploring the plans of several companies to expand into lithium extraction. These include Controlled Thermal Resources; Berkshire Hathaway Renewables, which already operates 10 geothermal plants near the Salton Sea; and EnergySource, another player in the region’s geothermal industry.

The commission’s meetings have exposed a tension between corporate aspirations and the surrounding communities that continue to suffer from economic hardships. Berkshire Hathaway and others have pledged to hire hundreds more workers as they expand, but Luis Olmedo, the executive director of Comite Civico del Valle, has his doubts.

Luis Olmedo, the executive director of Comite Civico Del Valle, in Brawley.

Speaking at a meeting in May, he described the geothermal industry’s positive impacts as real but overhyped, and raised concerns the same could be true of lithium development.

“We are living at a time where we have been finding more and more that there have been inequities, and those inequities have resulted in disinvestment and creating extreme economic disadvantages, economic depressed areas, economic depressed neighborhoods.”

Past promises of community investment by renewable energy industries reinforce feelings of doubt. Even lithium is already tainted.

EnergySource is linked to an earlier bust, in which a startup declared it would hire hundreds at a lithium extraction facility attached to EnergySource’s geothermal plant in Calipatria. The arrangement fell through after anticipated investment from Tesla never arrived.

When these projects come in, these benefits tend to be funneled to the more affluentLuis Olmedo, Comite Civico del Valle

Similar disappointments abound: one solar project’s estimated 800 jobs are now a fraction of that after a private equity firm bought it.

Besides potential employment – which may not even benefit local residents if companies decide to hire people from outside the Imperial Valley – there’s a larger question of how to educate residents on engaging in civic life.

“When these projects come in, these benefits tend to be funneled to the more affluent in the valley because they’re the ones who are showing up in the meetings and are civically engaged and investing,” Olmedo told the Guardian.

A case in point was reported in the Desert Sun in 2017. Reporters found that a consulting firm had effectively captured the Imperial Irrigation District, the local authority that supplies water and power (and from which Controlled Thermal Resources is now leasing land). The district had approved solar projects and a battery storage project that personally benefited a small group of public officials and private executives.

One of those officials, James Hanks, is on the Lithium Valley Commission. (In an emailed statement, Hanks disparaged the Desert Sun’s reporting and said lithium extraction “may create hundreds of well paying jobs – jobs that our local, hard-working communities need”.)

The remains of structures at what was once a private club along the Salton Sea. 

For Fernando Leiva, the professor from Santa Cruz, these dynamics call to mind another ideological force alongside disaster capitalism: a “progressive neoliberalism” that is dominant in California and gaining currency worldwide, as western countries lean on private enterprise to lead an energy transition.

“It’s very hard for communities to navigate that confluence of interests,” he said.


In Brawley, across the street from the old fertilizer plant, Manuel Buenrostro stands on his sand-colored porch holding his state ID card, which shows that he just turned 90 years old. He worked decades ago on a ranch in Calipatria near the Salton Sea and recalls seeing dead fish washing up from the increasingly saline water.

Officials had communicated little with residents about how they were minimizing the sea’s pollution, he said in Spanish. He also hadn’t heard about lithium. He caught bits of information on the local news, but he wanted a chance to offer input.

“They haven’t even sent us a letter or anything about it,” Buenrostro said.

Next door, 70-year-old Frank Rodriguez prepares to take his wife to the doctor. A truck driver for a local beer distributor for 49 years – “I made people happy,” Rodriguez said – he was born and raised on the east side and has a daughter who now makes a living in San Diego.

For all the broken promises that he’s seen come and go, he’s still hopeful that lithium could bring better times.

“What I read is there’s going to be more jobs,” Rodriguez said. “But, you know, sometimes those things hold true and sometimes they don’t. I don’t know, man. It’s a good thing for the valley. And I’m kind of optimistic, but I wouldn’t know whether that’s the case or not.”