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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/1/2012 9:42:18 PM
Top 10 Things Climate Change Is Making Worse Right Now














Written by Rebecca Leber, Ellie Sandmeyer

The onslaught of extreme weather and record temperatures this year have had an impact on people globally, directly through drought and temperature, and more indirectly impacting food prices and public transportation.

Here are 10 impacts we’re seeing right now that climate change is very likely worsening, in some cases playing a major role:

Rising Food Prices
Over half of the Continental U.S. is now facing severe drought–the worst in fifty years. As a result of extreme temperatures and little rain, corn production suffers although analysts predicted record production at the start of the year. In coming months, record-high food prices will continue to rise, affecting thousands of supermarket products. See also “Story of the Year: Warming-Driven Drought and Extreme Weather Emerge as Key Threat to Global Food Security.”

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Top photo: H.L.I.T./flickr; second photo: DMahendra/flickr


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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/1/2012 9:52:13 PM

New Seal Flu Could Pose Threat to Humans


TUESDAY, July 31 (HealthDay News) -- A new influenza strain found in New England harbor seals could potentially threaten people as well as wildlife, new research suggests.

Scientists cautioned that viruses like the newly discovered seal flu must be monitored in order to predict new strains and prevent a pandemic flu emerging from animals.

The report was published online July 31 in mBio.

"There is a concern that we have a new mammalian-transmissible virus to which humans haven't been exposed yet. It's a combination we haven't seen in disease before," report editor Dr. Anne Moscona, professor of pediatrics and of microbiology and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, said in a journal news release.

Another expert agreed that the flu strain could someday pose a threat to people.

"Infections that threaten wildlife and human lives remind us how our health is intermingled on this dynamic planet," said Dr. Bruce Hirsch, attending physician in infectious diseases at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y. He said that while transmission via direct contact between humans and harbor seals is unlikely, the virus could find other ways to get to people.

"A dangerous virus infecting mammals increases the risk to us -- not by direct infection -- but by evolutionary development of even more riskier strains," Hirsch explained. For example, he said, the strain might pass from seals to birds, expand its presence in the environment and mutate in ways that make it easily passed to or between humans.

Scientists from several organizations, including Columbia University and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, co-wrote the new report. They said that flu viruses found in mammals, such as the H1N1 "swine flu" that emerged in 2009, can put people's health at risk. The new seal flu, they warned, presents a similar threat to humans.

The researchers analyzed the DNA of a virus linked to the death of 162 harbor seals in 2011 off the coasts of Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine. Five autopsies revealed that the seals died from infection with a type of flu known as H3N8.

The report pointed out that the seal flu is very similar to a flu strain found in North American birds since 2002. The virus, the researchers noted, adapted to living in mammals. It also has mutations that are known to make viruses easier to spread and more dangerous. They added the seal flu, which is able to target a protein found in the human respiratory tract, may have the potential to move between species.

The researchers warned that pandemic flu can originate in unexpected ways, so preparation is essential.

"Flu could emerge from anywhere and our readiness has to be much better than we previously realized. We need to be very nimble in our ability to identify and understand the potential risks posed by new viruses emerging from unexpected sources," said Moscona. "It's important to realize that viruses can emerge through routes that we haven't considered. We need to be alert to those risks and ready to act on them."

Still, viral strains typically must undergo several key mutations to become the source of a human pandemic, Hirsch said.

"Each time the flu virus infects a cell, it is a roll of the dice," he said. "There are eight separate segments of genes inside the virus -- simple viral versions of chromosomes -- which recombine at random, producing unique viruses. Cells can be infected with multiple viruses, so a dangerous gene from a bird can get mixed in with a gene that makes it easy to infect humans."

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on the spread of flu viruses from animals to people.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/1/2012 9:54:55 PM
Dear friends, this is good news for a sore end-day issue!

Court orders Chevron to stop drilling for oil


SAO PAULO (AP) — A federal court has given Chevron Corp. and driller Transocean Ltd. 30 days to suspend all petroleum drilling and transportation operations in Brazil until investigations are completed into two oil spills off the coast of Rio de Janeiro.

The court says in a statement posted Wednesday on its website that each company will be fined 500 million reals, or about $244 million, for each day they fail to comply with the suspension.

About 155,000 gallons of oil crude began seeping from cracks in the ocean floor at the site of aChevron appraisal well in November. Chevron has placed the amount of oil that leaked at 110,000 gallons.

Two weeks later, the National Petroleum Agency said the seepage was under control. But in March, oil again started leaking and Chevron voluntarily suspended production in the field.

"Two environmental accidents in the space of just four months and the lack of equipment needed to identify the origin of the leaks and contain them, shows that the two companies do not have the conditions necessary to operate the wells in an environmentally safe manner," Judge Ricardo Perlingeiro said in his ruling.

Chevron said in an emailed statement it planned to appeal the court's decision.

"Chevron Brasil is confident that at all times it acted diligently and appropriately," the statement said adding that the company's "response to the incident was implemented according to the law, industry standards and in a timely manner. The source of the leak was contained in four days."

Petroleum agency head Magda Chambriard said last month that the November spill involved about 25 safety infractions for which Chevron will be fined up to 50 million reals, or about $25 million, the maximum allowed under Brazilian law.

Chambriard told the newspaper that the November spill involved about 25 safety infractions for which Chevron will be fined no more than 50 million Brazilian reals, or about $24.6 million.

Chevron has said that it underestimated the pressure in an underwater reservoir, causing crude to rush up a bore hole and eventually escape into the surrounding seabed about 230 miles (370 kilometers) off Rio de Janeiro's coast. The oil seeped from at least seven narrow fissures on the ocean floor, all within 160 feet (50 meters) of the wellhead. No oil reached Brazilian shores.

According to the petroleum agency, Chevron "was not able to correctly interpret the geology and local fluid dynamics" of the reservoir when the leak occurred. It blamed Chevron's water-injection practices for the reservoir pressure.

Earlier this year, Brazilian authorities banned Chevron from any new drilling or water-injection activities at working wells in the country.

In April, a Brazilian prosecutor filed an $11 billion lawsuit against Chevron and the Switzerland-basedTransocean for both the leak in November and the one in March, alleging they caused environmental damage. Prosecutors also asked that Chevron be temporarily prohibited from sending any profits made in Brazil outside the country.

A month before that lawsuit, federal prosecutors filed criminal charges against 17 Chevron and Transocean executives accusing them of environmental crimes, of misleading the petroleum agency about safety plans and of not providing accurate information after the spill. The charges carry a maximum penalty of 31 years in prison.

Judges must still decide if the cases will go to trial, which would be a lengthy process given the number of defendants, the case's complexity and the Brazilian legal system's room for numerous appeals.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/2/2012 4:35:10 PM

Half of US counties now considered disaster areas

Corn plants struggle to survive in drought-stricken farm fields in Jasper, Indiana July 24, 2012. REUTERS/ John Sommers II


ST. LOUIS (AP) — Nearly 220 counties in a dozen drought-stricken states were added Wednesday to the U.S. government's list of natural disaster areas as the nation's agriculture chief unveiled new help for frustrated, cash-strapped farmers and ranchers grappling with extreme dryness and heat.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's addition of the 218 counties means that more than half of all U.S. counties — 1,584 in 32 states — have been designated primary disaster areas this growing season, the vast majority of them mired in a drought that's considered the worst in decades.

[Share your story: How is the drought affecting you?]

Counties in Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wyoming were included in Wednesday's announcement. The USDA uses the weekly U.S. Drought Monitor to help decide which counties to deem disaster areas, which makes farmers and ranchers eligible for federal aid, including low-interest emergency loans.

To help ease the burden on the nation's farms, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on Thursday opened up 3.8 million acres of conservation land for ranchers to use for haying and grazing. Under that conservation program, farmers have been paid to take land out of production to ward against erosion and create wildlife habitat.

"The assistance announced today will help U.S. livestock producers dealing with climbing feed prices, critical shortages of hay and deteriorating pasturelands," Vilsack said.

Vilsack also said crop insurers have agreed to provide farmers facing cash-flow issues a penalty-free, 30-day grace period on premiums in 2012.

As of this week, nearly half of the nation's corn crop was rated poor to very poor, according to the USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service. About 37 percent of the U.S. soybeans were lumped into that category, while nearly three-quarters of U.S. cattle acreage is in drought-affected areas, the survey showed.

The potential financial fallout in the nation's midsection appears to be intensifying. The latest weekly Mid-America Business Conditions Index, released Wednesday, showed that the ongoing drought and global economic turmoil is hurting business in nine Midwest and Plains states, boosting worries about the prospect of another recession, according to the report.

Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the index, said the drought will hurt farm income while the strengthening dollar hinders exports, meaning two of the most important positive factors in the region's economy are being undermined.

The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.

Thursday's expansion of federal relief was welcomed in rain-starved states like Illinois, where the USDA's addition of 66 counties leaves just four of the state's 102 counties — Cook, DuPage, Kane and Will, all in the Chicago area — without the natural disaster classification.

The Illinois State Water Survey said the state has averaged just 12.6 inches from January to June 2012, the sixth-driest first half of a year on record. Compounding matters is that Illinois has seen above-normal temperatures each month, with the statewide average of 52.8 degrees over the first six months logged as the warmest on record.

"While harvest has yet to begin, we already see that the drought has caused considerable crop damage," Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said. In his state, 71 percent of the corn crop and 56 percent of soybean acreage is considered poor or very poor.

In South Dakota, where roughly three-fifths of the state is in severe or extreme drought, Vilsack earlier had allowed emergency haying and grazing on about 500,000 conservation acres, but not on the roughly 445,000 acres designated as wetlands.

Vilsack's decision to open up some wetland acres in a number of states will give farmers and ranchers a chance to get good quality forage for livestock, federal lawmakers said.

"The USDA cannot make it rain, but it can apply flexibility to the conservation practices," Sen. Tim Johnson, a South Dakota Democrat, said Wednesday. The USDA designated 39 of his state's counties disaster areas.

___

Associated Press reporter Chet Brokaw contributed to this report from Pierre, S.D.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/2/2012 4:40:23 PM
Permanent Food Crisis Plagues the Sahel in West Africa










The Sahel region of Western Africa is in a state of permanent food crisis, with more than a million children at risk of severe malnutrition say relief organizations Save the ChildrenandWorld Vision. The main reason is not drought (which the Sahel is prone to) or a deficit of food but chronic poverty.

As World Vision’s emergencies director Paul Sitnam says in the BBC, “The poorest of the poor people… have virtually no access to any food that is available on the market because of their chronic poverty.”

Sitnam emphasized that simply handing out food cannot solve the issues for an area with endemic problems including crop shortages and political insecurity in neighboring countries or (in the case of Mali) in their own borders. The international community needs to actually commit to developing the region by, says Sitnam, “ensuring that there’s family cohesion, assuring that there’s education, assuring that there’s infrastructure, and that the social safety nets get to take care of children and their families in the times of crisis.”

The Sahel is located on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert and includes Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Senegal and Chad.

At the end of July, Save the Children published a study that found that not only is malnutrition the underlying cause of death for 2.6 million children a year, but the number of children experiencing malnutrition has increased for the first time in a decade. The report also found that while there has been “massive progress” in reducing poverty and infant mortality and in providing education, but next to nothing in addressing malnutrition.

On August 12, the closing day of the London Olympics, the British government is hosting ahunger summit to “kickstart” world leaders’ effort to address hunger and malnutrition. With prices for corn and soy rising due to the US facing the worst drought in more than a century, the summit is well-timed and could be a welcome reality check after what may be called the controversies and excesses of the Games. Justin Forsyth, director of Save the Children, told the Guardian he hopes that a real commitment to ending malnutrition could be a legacy of the London Olympics as Beijing, Athens and Sydney found themselves with “new housing, sports arenas and urban regeneration.”

One doesn’t wish to downplay such hopeful goals but recent reports are that the Bird’s Nest Stadium designed by dissident artist Ai Weiwei for the Beijing 2008 Olympics has become an “abandoned museum piece.” It remains to be seen if real efforts can be made to fight hunger in the Sahel.

Related Care2 Coverage

Finding Solutions to Fight Malnutrition and Drought in West Africa

You Can Help 1,000,000 Children in the Sahel NOW

As Food Crisis Looms in Niger, Lives Hang in the Balance

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Photo by IICD



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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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