Wednesday, May 03, 2023

South Korea community doctors launch strike in protest over nursing law

Doctors and nursing assistants in South Korea go on a partial strike to protest against the Nursing Act, calling for a presidential veto of the bill on May 3.
Screengrab/YouTube

SEOUL - More than 10,000 South Korean community doctors and certified nursing assistants went on strike on Wednesday (May 3), protesting a nursing bill they fear would hurt their jobs even as it improves nurses' pay and working conditions.

The bill, passed in parliament last week, was primarily designed to help nurses, who have been suffering from burn-out and a shrinking talent pool while fighting on the frontlines against Covid-19.

But doctors see the bill as opening the door for nurses to provide treatment without a medical license, while nursing assistants say it would expand jobs for registered nurses at the expense of theirs. They urged President Yoon Suk-yeol to veto the bill and lawmakers to rewrite it.

An official at Yoon's office said it would decide after discussions with medical groups and the ruling party.

More than a dozen groups staged the strike, including the Korean Medical Association, which represents all doctors in South Korea but did not specify the number of participants. The Korean Licensed Practical Nurses Association, the largest grouping of nursing assistants, said about 10,000 members joined.

The impact of the strike was seen as limited, as most protesters used their holidays or shortened business hours in the afternoon, and major hospitals were operating normally.

But the groups said they would go on a general strike nationwide on May 17 if their demands were not met, which would most likely cause disruptions in a medical system already hit hard by the protracted battle against Covid-19.

"The law should be fair and sensible," Lee Pil-soo, president of the Korean Medical Association, told a news conference on Tuesday, asking the government to make a "fair, reasonable" decision.

The Korean Nurses Association, which has pushed for the legislation, says nurses had long been exposed to hostile work environments and abuses, and the bill would help provide better health care without damaging the interests of doctors and assistants.

The health ministry, which had played a mediating role between doctors and nursing groups, blamed the main opposition Democratic Party for using its majority in parliament to pass the bill.

Officials expressed concerns that the divide among medical workers could derail their cooperation and undercut the health system.

The ministry said on Wednesday it has asked larger hospitals and clinics to extend business hours and maintain 24-hour emergency care services.

The pendant is 20,000 years old. Ancient DNA shows who wore it

A top view of the pierced elk tooth discovered in the Denisova Cave in southern Siberia is seen in this undated handout picture. Scientists have recovered the DNA of a woman from the tooth, which was used as a pendant 19,000 to 25,000 years ago.
Reuters

WASHINGTON - Inside a Siberian cave that has been an archeological treasure trove, an elk's canine tooth - pierced to become a pendant - was unearthed by scientists with care to avoid contaminating this intriguing artefact made roughly 20,000 years ago.

The pristine collection of the pendant from Denisova Cave paid dividends. Scientists on Wednesday (May 3) said a new method for extracting ancient DNA identified the object's long-ago owner — a Stone Age woman closely related to a population of hunter-gatherers known to have lived in a part of Siberia east of the cave site in the foothills of the Altai Mountains in Russia.

The method can isolate DNA that was present in skin cells, sweat or other bodily fluids and was absorbed by certain types of porous material including bones, teeth and tusks when handled by someone thousands of years ago.

Objects used as tools or for personal adornment - pendants, necklaces, bracelets, rings and the like - can offer insight into past behaviour and culture, though our understanding has been limited by an inability to tie a particular object to a particular person.

"I find these objects made in the deep past extremely fascinating since they allow us to open a small window to travel back and have a glance into these people's lives," said molecular biologist Elena Essel of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature.

The researchers who found the pendant, which was determined to be 19,000 to 25,000 years old, used gloves and face masks when excavating and handling it, avoiding contamination with modern DNA. It became the first prehistoric artefact linked by genetic sleuthing to a specific person. It is unknown whether the woman made or merely wore it.

Essel said in holding such an artefact in her own gloved hands, she felt "transported back in time, imagining the human hands that had created and used it thousands of years ago".

"As I looked at the object, a flood of questions came to mind. Who was the person who made it? Was this tool passed down from one generation to the next, from a mother to a daughter or from a father to a son? That we can start addressing these questions using genetic tools is still absolutely incredible to me," Essel added.

The pendant's maker drilled a hole in the tooth to allow for some sort of now-lost cordage. The tooth alternatively could have been part of a head band or bracelet.

Scientist Elena Essel of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology works in the institute’s clean laboratory in Leipzig, Germany on the pierced elk tooth discovered in the Denisova Cave in southern Siberia in this undated handout picture. PHOTO: Reuters

Our species Homo sapiens first arose more than 300,000 years ago in Africa, later spreading worldwide. The oldest-known objects used as personal adornments date to about 100,000 years ago from Africa, according to the University of Leiden's Marie Soressi, the study's senior archeologist.

Denisova Cave long ago was inhabited at different times by the extinct human species called Denisovans, Neanderthals and our species. The cave over the years has yielded remarkable finds, including the first-known remains of Denisovans and various tools and other artefacts.

The new nondestructive research technique, used at a "clean room" laboratory in Leipzig, works much like a washing machine. In this case, an artefact is immersed in a liquid that works to release DNA from it much as a washing machine lifts dirt from a blouse.

By linking objects with particular people, the technique could shed light on prehistoric social roles and division of labor between the sexes or clarify whether or not an object was even made by our species. Some artefacts have been found in places known to have been inhabited, for instance, by Homo sapiens and Neanderthals simultaneously.

"This study opens huge opportunities to better reconstruct the role of individuals in the past according to their sex and ancestry," Soressi said.

Go First gone: Engine troubles, Covid-19 bring down India's third-largest airline

People wait to claim refunds after their flights were cancelled, from the Go First airline ticketing counter at the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India on May 3.
Reuters

      NEW DELHI - Before the Covid-19 pandemic, Go Airlines (India) Ltd said it was one of the few profitable airlines in a country that is known for its staunchly price-conscious customers, a market where two big players have collapsed in the last 11 years.

      The company's ultra-low-cost model and near-total reliance on one aircraft type helped it make money, until engine issues that began about five years ago worsened and it reported heavy losses in the last three fiscal years.

      The cash-strapped carrier, India's third-biggest and best known as Go First, filed for bankruptcy on Tuesday (May 2), blaming "faulty" Pratt & Whitney (P&W) engines for the grounding of about half its fleet.

      It owes financial creditors 65.21 billion rupees (S$1.1 billion), and has now "exhausted all financial resources", according to its filing with the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) seeking insolvency proceedings.

      The move comes as its bigger domestic rival IndiGo is pitting Boeing BA.N against Airbus in record jet order talks to meet surging post-Covid demand. Go First's plight is also a blow to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's goal of turning India into a global aviation hub like Dubai or Singapore.

      A Go First airline, formerly known as GoAir, Airbus A320-271N passenger aircraft prepares to take off from Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India on May 2. PHOTO: Reuters

      IndiGo has also had to ground planes because its P&W engines faced problems, but its bigger fleet with diverse engines, and its deeper pockets, meant it could overcome the troubles better than Go First.

      Grounded

      By April, Go First had to ground more than 50 per cent of its 54 Airbus 320neos fitted with P&W engines, up from 31 per cent in 2020, according to the filing seen by Reuters. Engine failures have cost Go First 108 billion rupees in lost revenue and expenses, it said.

      The airline cancelled 4,118 flights in the past month, affecting 77,500 passengers, and it warned of more cancellations "if urgent actions are not taken for its survival and resolution", according to the filing.

      "The deterioration in the company's financial performance was also accentuated by the outbreak of Covid-19 which resulted in crippling restrictions on air travel and use of public transport," the filing said.

      P&W, which is owned by Raytheon, said in a statement late on Tuesday it was committed to the success of its customers and that "we continue to prioritize delivery schedules for all customers".

      The airline started operations in 2005 and is owned by bed sheets-to-biscuits Wadia Group, one of India's oldest conglomerates.

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      Air India fined $49,000 for its handling of unruly passenger who urinated on woman

      The Wadias will not exit the airline and are looking for a resolution with P&W, Go First Chief Executive Kaushik Khona said in an interview, adding the insolvency proceedings were aimed at reviving the airline and not selling it.

      The Wadia family has pumped 32 billion rupees into the airline in the past three years, 75 per cent of that in the past year, Go First said.

      "The Wadia Group, in particular (chairperson) Nusli Wadia, has always tried to see that the company and the airline operations go on, on a normal basis," Khona said.

      "There is no question of Wadia Group having any intention to exit or move out."

      Mark Martin, CEO at aviation consulting firm Martin Consulting LLC, said Go First's troubles would cost others, too.

      "Go First and IndiGo have been let down severely by Pratt & Whitney. And that will cost India, travellers, and banks severely," he said.

      Mexican president accuses U.S. of funding groups hostile to his administration

      CGTN

      Mexican President Andres Manuel López Obrador at a press conference at the National Palace, Mexico City, Mexico, May 1, 2023. /CFP


      Mexican president asked his U.S. counterpart Joe Biden to stop the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) from funding groups hostile to his government, according to a letter presented to journalists on Wednesday, echoing previous Mexican criticism of U.S. interventionism.

      Speaking at a press conference, Andres Manuel López Obrador read from a letter he sent to President Biden the day prior.

      "The U.S. government, specifically through USAID, has for some time been financing organizations openly against the legal and legitimate government I represent," he said in the letter.

      "This is clearly an interventionist act, contrary to international law and the relations which should prevail between free and sovereign states."

      The letter calls for Biden's intervention, saying the U.S. State Department in recent days announced that USAID would increase its funding toward such organizations.

      The Mexican president's news briefing came a day after he met with U.S. Homeland Security adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall, to discuss coordination ahead of the end of U.S. asylum restrictions at the Mexico-U.S. border.

      López Obrador had in 2021 sent a similar letter asking USAID to withdraw funding allocated to non-governmental organizations including Mexicans against Corruption and Impunity (MCCI), as well as USAID-backed Article 19.

      The U.S. State Department, USAID, MCCI and Article 19 did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But it's reported that the U.S. has proposed a $63.1 billion 2024 budget for the State Department and USAID, which it says will help to "continue to promote U.S. national interests and lead the world in tackling global challenges."

      (With input from Reuters)

      Mexico slams USAID funds as 'interventionist'

      President Lopez Obrador says USAID’s funding to organisations opposed to his government is "interventionist act", calling on Biden administration to intervene, according to a letter presented to media.


      AFP
      Lopez Obrador did not specify which Mexican groups the US should stop funding. / Photo: AFP

      Mexico's president has asked his US counterpart Joe Biden to stop the United States Agency for International Development [USAID] from funding groups hostile to his government, according to a letter presented to journalists, echoing previous Mexican criticism of US interventionism.

      "The US government, specifically through USAID, has for some time been financing organisations openly against the legal and legitimate government I represent," President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said in the letter on Wednesday.

      "This is clearly an interventionist act, contrary to international law and the relations which should prevail between free and sovereign states."

      He did not specify which Mexican groups the US should stop funding, but he has in the past accused several media organisations of being part of a conservative movement against his government.

      The letter calls for Biden's intervention, saying the US State Department in recent days announced that USAID would increase its funding toward such organisations.

      Mexico in 2021 had sent a similar letter asking USAID to withdraw funding allocated to non-governmental organisations critical of its government.

      A spokesperson for USAID on Wednesday stressed the United States and Mexico's "deep partnership."

      "We are committed to working with a variety of local partners, including civil society, to drive inclusive, sustainable, locally-led development," the spokesperson said, noting that "USAID also partners with Mexico's development agency AMEXCID" on migration issues.



      Article 19, MCCI

      Lopez Obrador has previously criticised USAID-backed free speech group Article 19 as well as Mexicans against Corruption and Impunity [MCCI], which for years has reported on alleged corruption and lack of transparency in the current and previous administrations.

      The State Department, MCCI and Article 19 did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

      The latest letter comes days after Lopez Obrador backed a proposal to scrap Mexico's freedom of information body, INAI.

      Lopez Obrador argues that many autonomous bodies are biased against him and waste public funds.

      On Tuesday, the US launched a new program intended to defend journalists around the world from legal threats.

      The State Department has said there are credible reports of restrictions on free expression and media in Mexico — the deadliest country for journalists last year.

      The US has proposed a $63.1 billion 2024 budget for the State Department and USAID, which it says "will make it possible for us to continue to promote US national interests and lead the world in tackling global challenges."

      At loggerheads

      The Mexican president has recently been at loggerheads with the US on several issues.

      He has accused the Pentagon of spying on his government following the leak of sensitive documents in the US.

      He also blames the US for the fentanyl crisis, which causes about 70,000 deaths per year in the latter, saying this is "America's problem."

      Recently, he denounced the charges against former president Donald Trump, calling them a "smear campaign" used to hurt his 2024 election bid.

      WHO dismisses lead Covid-19 origins investigator for sexual misconduct

      Peter Ben Embarek, a member of the World Health Organization team tasked with investigating the origins of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), holds a chart during the WHO-China joint study news conference at a hotel in Wuhan, Hubei province, China on Feb 9, 2021.
      Reuters

      GENEVA - The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday (May 4) that it has dismissed a senior scientist, known for his role as the head of an international mission to China to probe the origins of Covid-19, for sexual misconduct.

      The UN agency said Peter Ben Embarek, a Danish scientist who previously headed up its 'One Health' initiative on diseases jumping from animals to humans, was removed from his post last year. In a response to Reuters, Ben Embarek said he contested the accusation of harassment and was challenging the sanction.

      "Peter Ben Embarek was dismissed last year following findings of sexual misconduct against him that were substantiated by investigations, and corresponding disciplinary process," said WHO spokesperson Marcia Poole.

      Poole said the cases that led to the dismissal occurred in 2015 and 2017. The agency was first made aware of them in 2018. The WHO did not provide further details of the misconduct allegations.

      Ben Embarek said that a single incident in 2017 "was settled immediately in a friendly way". He said he could not comment further as both he and the WHO are bound by confidentiality agreements until a resolution is reached.

      "I am not aware of any other complaints and no other complaints have ever been brought to my attention," Ben Embarek said in a digital message. "I duly contest the qualification of harassment and I am quite hopeful in the defense of my rights."

      Ben Embarek is the most senior WHO official known to have been dismissed since the UN agency launched a series of reforms to improve its response to sexual misconduct. He has often been quoted in the media about the origins of the pandemic. His dismissal can be appealed through the UN internal justice system.

      He was the lead WHO representative on a trip to China in 2021 that aimed to investigate where Covid-19 came from. The team made global headlines with their conclusion that bats were the most likely initial hosts, eventually leading to a pandemic in humans. They had also determined that a leak of the virus from a laboratory in China was "highly unlikely", despite calls from various scientists to probe that possibility.

      Ben Embarek later said that there had been some political pressure on the team, including from outside China, but that nothing in the report had been changed as a result. He did not identify the source of such pressure.

      The WHO has overhauled its handling of sexual abuse and misconduct cases after a 2021 inquiry found that dozens of aid workers, including some from WHO, had been involved in sexual abuse and exploitation during an Ebola crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

      The agency said that people are more willing to come forward about sexual misconduct and that it is taking action where allegations are substantiated. It has started a monthly report on disciplinary action taken.

      Democrat Colin Allred launches 2024 bid against Ted Cruz

      Rep. Colin Allred. Photo: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images.

      Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas) on Wednesday announced his bid to unseat Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) in 2024.

      Why it matters: Allred is the highest-profile Democrat vying to unseat Cruz, who is one of just a handful of potentially vulnerable Senate Republicans up for reelection this cycle.

      Driving the news: In a video posted to social media on Wednesday, Allred took aim at Cruz’s support for baseless 2020 election fraud claims in the lead-up to Jan. 6 and his ill-fated trip to Cancun in 2021.

      • “When I left the NFL, I thought my days of putting people on the ground were over. Then, Jan. 6 happened,” says Allred, while standing on a football field.
      • “I took off my jacket and got ready to take on anyone who came through the door,” he continues, “And Ted Cruz? He cheered on the mob, then hid in the supply closet.”

      The backdrop: Allred, a former Tennessee Titans linebacker and Obama administration official, won his House seat in 2018 by unseating Republican incumbent Pete Sessions in one of the most closely watched races in the country.

      • He won a 7-point reelection victory in 2020 and was then redistricted into a safer seat, easily winning in 2022.

      The other side: “Democrats have once again turned to a far-left radical to run for Senate. Not only does Colin Allred vote with Nancy Pelosi 100% of the time, but his voting record is completely out-of-touch with Texas,” Cruz campaign spokesperson Nick Maddux said in a statement.

      • Cruz, a former state solicitor general, won an upset GOP primary victory for the U.S. Senate in 2012, followed by a 16-point general election win.
      • However, the high-profile former presidential candidate and right-wing firebrand won reelection by just 3 points in 2018 against former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who shattered fundraising records.
      FTC: Facebook misled parents, failed to guard kids’ privacy

      By BARBARA ORTUTAY
      yesterday

       This photo shows the Facebook's Messenger Kids application on an iPhone in New York, Feb. 16, 2018. U.S. regulators say Facebook misled parents and failed to protect the privacy of children using its Messenger Kids app. The Federal Trade Commission says Facebook misrepresented the access it provided to app developers to private user data. As a result, the FTC on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 proposed sweeping changes to a 2020 privacy order with Facebook — now called Meta — that would prohibit it from profiting from data it collects on users under 18.
       (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, file)


      U.S. regulators say Facebook misled parents and failed to protect the privacy of children using its Messenger Kids app, including misrepresenting the access it provided to app developers to private user data.

      As a result, The Federal Trade Commision on Wednesday proposed sweeping changes to a 2020 privacy order with Facebook — now called Meta — that would prohibit it from profiting from data it collects on users under 18. This would include data collected through its virtual-reality products. The FTC said the company has failed to fully comply with the 2020 order.

      Meta would also be subject to other limitations, including with its use of face-recognition technology and be required to provide additional privacy protections for its users.

      “Facebook has repeatedly violated its privacy promises,” said Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “The company’s recklessness has put young users at risk, and Facebook needs to answer for its failures.”

      Meta called the announcement a “political stunt.”

      “Despite three years of continual engagement with the FTC around our agreement, they provided no opportunity to discuss this new, totally unprecedented theory. Let’s be clear about what the FTC is trying to do: usurp the authority of Congress to set industry-wide standards and instead single out one American company while allowing Chinese companies, like TikTok, to operate without constraint on American soil,” Meta said in a prepared statement.

      The Menlo Park, California company added that it will “vigorously fight” the FTC’s action and expects to prevail.

      Facebook launched Messenger Kids in 2017, pitching it as a way for children to chat with family members and friends approved by their parents. The app doesn’t give kids separate Facebook or Messenger accounts. Rather, it works as an extension of a parent’s account, and parents get controls, such as the ability to decide with whom their kids can chat.

      At the time, Facebook said Messenger Kids wouldn’t show ads or collect data for marketing, though it would collect some data it said was necessary to run the service.

      But child-development experts raised immediate concerns.

      In early 2018, a group of 100 experts, advocates and parenting organizations contested Facebook’s claims that the app was filling a need kids had for a messaging service. The group included nonprofits, psychiatrists, pediatricians, educators and the children’s music singer Raffi Cavoukian.

      “Messenger Kids is not responding to a need — it is creating one,” the letter said. “It appeals primarily to children who otherwise would not have their own social media accounts.” Another passage criticized Facebook for “targeting younger children with a new product.”

      Facebook, in response to the letter, said at the time that the app “helps parents and children to chat in a safer way,” and emphasized that parents are “always in control” of their kids’ activity.

      The FTC now says this has not been the case. The 2020 privacy order, which required Facebook to pay a $5 billion fine, required an independent assessor to evaluate the company’s privacy practices. The FTC said the assessor “identified several gaps and weaknesses in Facebook’s privacy program.”

      The FTC also said Facebook, from late 2017 until 2019, “misrepresented that parents could control whom their children communicated with through its Messenger Kids product.”

      “Despite the company’s promises that children using Messenger Kids would only be able to communicate with contacts approved by their parents, children in certain circumstances were able to communicate with unapproved contacts in group text chats and group video calls,” the FTC said.

      Meta critics applauded the FTC’s action. Jeffrey Chester, the executive director of the nonprofit Center for Digital Democracy, called it a “a long-overdue intervention into what has become a huge national crisis for young people.”

      Meta, and with its platforms like Instagram and Facebook, Chester added, “are at the center of a powerful commercialized social media system that has spiraled out of control, threatening the mental health and well-being of children and adolescents.”

      The company, he added, has not done enough to address existing problems — and is now unleashing “even more powerful data gathering and targeting tactics fueled by immersive content, virtual reality and artificial intelligence, while pushing youth further into the metaverse with no meaningful safeguards.”

      As part of the proposed changes to the FTC’s 2020 order (which was announced in 2019 and finalized later), Meta would also be required to pause launching new products and services without “written confirmation from the assessor that its privacy program is in full compliance” with the order.

      Meta has 30 days to respond to the FTC’s latest action.

      Blank-check firm bite to take stake in Canadian food company

      Bite Acquisition Corp., a blank-check company led by a former Merrill Lynch executive, plans to merge with Canadian plant-based food company Above Food Corp.

      The deal will provide about US$44 million in gross proceeds to Regina, Saskatchewan-based Above Food, according to a statement Monday, confirming an earlier report by Bloomberg News. It expects to use the money to pay to develop facilities and for working capital. 

      Above Food owns grain terminals and railway infrastructure for moving food commodities and is also a supplier of ingredients, private-label packaged goods and other food products. It has a small lineup of brands including Tuno, a plant-based tuna alternative, and Loma Linda, which sells simple vegetarian meals in packages.

      Specialty ingredients and packaged goods have significant room for growth, President and Co-Founder Martin Williams said in an interview. Those two categories could rise to 60 per cent of revenue this year, from about 40 per cent last year, he said. “We focus on staples — things that go into the grocery cart every day.”

      Bite, which focuses on the food and restaurant sectors, closed a $200 million initial public offering in early 2021 during a boom in blank-check offerings. The popularity of such investment vehicles has since soured amid tighter credit and greater scrutiny from regulators, and Bite transferred its listing from the New York Stock Exchange to the NYSE American board earlier this year.

      The special-purpose acquisition company is led by Alberto Ardura Gonzalez, a former investment banker with Merrill and Deutsche Bank in Latin America.

      Above Food was established in 2019 and announced a merger a year later with Purely Canada Foods, a producer of plant-based proteins. Its shareholders will maintain about a 70 per cent stake after the deal, according to the statement.

      The companies said the transaction implies an enterprise value of more than $300 million. Bank of Montreal’s capital markets division and EarlyBirdCapital are the financial advisers to Bite.

      Bite Acquisition rose 0.4 per cent to $10.35 at 1:38 p.m. in New York.

      Vancouver port traffic dips in 2022, hinting at economic slowdown to come

      Cargo volumes at Canada's largest port fell by three per cent last year as the global economy began to show signs of a slowdown.

      Though grain and fertilizer exports surged in the second half of 2022, the gains were not enough to offset a sputtering start to the year caused by a weak 2021 harvest and lingering supply chain problems, the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority said Monday.

      After more than a year of rising container traffic, imports also declined by four per cent amid softer consumer demand and overstocked inventories, port authority CEO Robin Silvester said in a phone interview.

      Despite the decrease, he stressed that more capacity is "desperately needed" due to rising trade and population forecasts down the line. A new container terminal that would boost that capacity by nearly 50 per cent, dubbed the Roberts Bank Terminal 2 Project, received federal cabinet approval last month — a critical step — but still requires various permits to proceed.

      A green light from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans is expected to take at least a year, he said, with permits also needed from B.C.'s Environmental Assessment Office.

      Cruises were one area to come roaring back after a two-year hiatus, with a record 307 vessels dropping anchor in Vancouver — though the number of passengers still fell 24 per cent below 2019 levels.

      The cruise-ship wave shows no signs of ebbing, Silvester said from his waterfront office, where the Grand Princess, Koningsdam and Norwegian Jewel were visible through the window. Meanwhile a bumper grain crop in 2022 along with sharply reduced supply out Russia and Belarus — fallout from the former's invasion of Ukraine — point to increased grain shipments this year.

      But container traffic in Canada has continued to drop off as Canadians tighten budgets amid higher interest rates and ongoing inflation.

      In March, container volumes across the country fell nearly 12 per cent year over year, according to the National Bank of Canada.

      "We still have softer consumer spending. And we're certainly also hearing about congestion in the supply chain with full warehouses in the main population areas around Toronto and Montreal, stock not clearing through the system as quickly as normal," Silvester said.

      Sluggish movement of the corrugated steel boxes reflects lagging economic output — preliminary figures from Statistics Canada suggest the economy contracted by 0.1 per cent in March. 

      "Container trade normally tracks pretty closely with GDP. So when we're seeing GDP down, then we expect to see container trade down," Silvester said.

      Greg Rogge the port authority's director of land operations, said in a March interview that the port expects container traffic to fall by two to three per cent this year.

      Nonetheless, the port handled its second-highest annual volume of containers on record last year, Silvester noted — though 28 per cent of them were empty, compared with 18 per cent in 2020. The higher proportion owed to lower grain exports and higher freight rates, the port said.

      Meanwhile, a 12-day strike by more than 150,000 federal public servants — now over for the vast majority after a tentative deal was announced — has already started to dent container cargo, with more of it bound for East Coast ports via the Panama Canal, Silvester said.

      "Shipping lines are always nervous about the risk of having containers stuck behind the picket line," he said.

      In spite of ongoing supply chain hurdles and a stalling economy, Silvester highlighted bright spots on the near-term horizon.

      "At this stage, 2023 is set to be a strong year with very strong grain volumes with the recovery from the drought in 2021," he said, adding that potash and steelmaking coal traffic remain hot commodities.

      Last year, overall cargo volume fell to 141.4 million tonnes from 146.5 million tonnes in 2021.

      Fertilizer shipments increased by 13 per cent, while coal and petroleum products rose six per cent each, according to the port. Construction and materials traffic jumped 15 per cent.

      Grain dropped 23 per cent and forest products fell seven per cent.

      This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 1, 2023.

      • Project progress under Impact Assessment Act remains slow: Report

      The approvals process for major projects in Canada continues to be slow and cumbersome under revamped environmental assessment legislation, according to a new report.

      The report, released Monday by the Canada West Foundation — a Calgary-based think-tank — analyzed the 25 projects submitted under the federal Impact Assessment Act since it came into force three-and-a-half years ago. It found almost all of the projects submitted under the legislation remain in the first two phases of a four-part process.

      That's concerning, said report author Marla Orenstein, given that the Impact Assessment Act — formerly known as Bill C-69 — was intended to speed up the application process for major infrastructure and resource projects in the country.

      "These projects are complex and nuanced and have a great deal of impact ... that’s why they wound up in the review process in the first place," Orenstein said.

      “At the same time, it’s not terribly encouraging that three-and-a-half years in, we’re seeing projects just entering Phase 2 of a four-phase process. This doesn’t seem to bode well for getting projects out the other side in a relatively tidy way.”

      The Impact Assessment Act's predecessor, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act of 2012, was also regularly criticized for its excessively long project approval timelines. Under that process, according to Canada West Foundation data, it took almost 3.5 years on average for projects to either receive approval or be terminated, with some projects taking over 10 years.

      Orenstein said while it's good that Canada's regulatory process is robust and thorough, the federal government is facing a looming 2030 deadline to meet its own climate goals of reducing the country's greenhouse gas emissions by 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels. 

      She added doing so will require large-scale and swift deployment of infrastructure — everything from carbon capture and storage technology to hydrogen facilities to electricity transmission lines.

      "It takes a long time to plan projects and to build them," Orenstein said. 

      "If something takes eight years or six years just to get through a regulatory process, we have no hope of meeting those net-zero goals. It just can't happen."

      The Liberal government announced in its federal budget in March that it will unveil a plan aimed at speeding up the permitting process for major infrastructure projects before the end of the year.

      The government also earmarked $1.3 billion in Budget 2023 to be used by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada, the Canada Energy Regulator and 10 other departments to improve regulatory efficiency.

      “I think there is a real recognition from the federal government that this is a problem, and this is an obstacle to achieving their targets," said Mike Holden, chief economist of the Business Council of Alberta, which counts among its members some of the country's largest energy companies.

      For much of the past decade, Canada's energy sector has complained of lengthy permitting timelines and regulatory uncertainty slowing down everything from major oil pipeline projects to the development of a liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry in this country.

      Holden said it's difficult to measure the cost of regulatory delays and difficulties to the Canadian economy. Project proponents, investors, host communities, Indigenous groups and taxpayers all bear some of the financial burden.

      But Holden said perhaps the biggest economic damage comes in the form of opportunity loss, in that some companies may choose to not put projects forward at all rather than face an unclear regulatory process and timeline.

      "Because right now they're being asked to invest sometimes hundreds of millions of dollars, and sometimes years and years of process, into an uncertain outcome at the end of the day," he said. "And that's a tough ask for a lot of businesses."

      Under the legislation, the Impact Assessment Agency is mandated to complete the first phase of the approvals process — the "planning" phase — within 180 days of the project's application. 

      However, that process may also be extended via “stop clock” requests by the project proponents. According to the Canada West Foundation, 80 per cent of the projects currently within the federal review process required a clock stoppage for reasons that included the pandemic, additional time for Indigenous consultation and ballooning requirements for information from proponents. 

      This meant that though the Impact Assessment Agency consistently met its legislated deadline of 180 days, with clock stoppages it took projects an average of 332 days to complete Phase 1.

      Major projects that fall under the federal Impact Assessment Act include pipelines, mining, nuclear power facilities, liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities, transmission lines, oilsands mines and fossil-fuel powered electricity generation facilities.

      South of the border, companies have raised similar complaints about regulatory slowness and permitting delays. U.S. President Joe Biden has pledged to improve communication and co-operation among federal agencies to accelerate permitting and environmental reviews in that country.

      This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 1, 2023.