Australia Detains Serbian Tennis Star Djokovic Over COVID-19 Visa Breaches

World tennis No.1 Novak Djokovic has had his visa canceled by Australian authorities and is facing deportation. He had received a COVID-19 vaccination exemption to defend his title at the Australian Open but has reportedly failed to provide proper evidence to border officials.

The Serbian is the defending Australian Open champion, and a nine-time winner of the event, but the government said Thursday he’s no longer welcome.

He was detained at Melbourne airport Wednesday for several hours before border force officials announced that he had not met immigration regulations and would be deported.

Djokovic’s father had claimed his son was being held “captive.”

Serbian President Aleksander Vucic said he was a victim of “harassment.”

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison is standing firm, though.

“On the issue of Mr. Djokovic, rules are rules and there are no special cases,” Morrison said. “That is the policy of the government, and it has been our government’s strong border protection policies and particularly in relation to the pandemic that has ensured that Australia has had one of the lowest death rates from COVID anywhere in the world. Entry with a visa requires double vaccination or a medical exemption. I am advised that such an exemption was not in place and as a result he is subject to the same rule as anyone else.”

With his visa revoked, Djokovic is now an “unlawful non-citizen” in Australia and is being held in immigration detention, where his movements are restricted after he was driven from Melbourne airport by government officials. It is also unclear whether Djokovic is allowed to communicate with his advisers, which is standard practice according to Australian law.

His lawyers are challenging the deportation order in Australia’s Federal Circuit Court.

The 34-year-old tennis star has not publicly confirmed his COVID-19 vaccination status.

He flew to Australia after being granted a controversial medical exemption. Tennis authorities said he had not received any special treatment, but many Australians, who have lived under some of the world’s toughest coronavirus restrictions, believed Djokovic had abused the system.

Australia’s states and territories Thursday reported more than 70,000 new COVID-19 cases. A total of 612,000 infections have been diagnosed in Australia since the pandemic began, according to official figures, 2,289 people have died.

More than 90% of the eligible population have been fully vaccinated.

To curb the spread of the virus, the Northern Territory imposed lockdown restrictions Thursday on unvaccinated residents, who must adhere to stay-home orders until next Monday. 

 

US Jobless Benefit Claims Hold Steady

First-time claims for U.S. unemployment compensation remained near a five-decade- low level last week, with employers retaining their workers and searching for more as the United States continues its rapid economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.

The Labor Department said Thursday that 207,000 jobless workers made first-time claims for unemployment compensation, up 7,000 from the revised figure of the week before. The weekly total of new claims has hovered around 200,000, for a month now.

Even with the increase in claims last week, the figures from the last several weeks were well below the 256,000 total in mid-March 2020, when the pandemic first swept into the United States and employers started laying off workers by the hundreds of thousands.

The diminished number of claims for unemployment benefits, down from a 2021 high of 900,000 in one week last January, shows that many employers are hanging on to their workers, even as millions have quit jobs to move to other companies offering higher pay and more benefits.

Many employers are looking for more workers, despite about 6.9 million workers remaining unemployed in the United States.

At the end of November, there were 10.4 million job openings in the U.S., but the skills of available workers often do not match what employers want, or the job openings are not where the unemployed live. In addition, many of the available jobs are low-wage service positions that the jobless are shunning.

U.S. employers added only 210,000 new jobs in November, a lower-than-expected figure. But overall, the U.S. has added 6.1 million jobs through the first 11 months of the year in a much quicker recovery than many economists had originally forecast a year ago. The unemployment rate dropped in November to 4.2%, a figure some experts had projected would not be reached until mid-2024.

Information on job growth in December and the unemployment rate is set for release on Friday.

The U.S. economic advance is occurring even as President Joe Biden and Washington policy makers, along with consumers, voice concerns about the biggest increase in consumer prices in nearly four decades – 6.8% at an annualized rate in November.

The surging inflation rate has pushed policy makers at the country’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, to move more quickly to end their asset purchases they had used to boost the country’s economic recovery, by March rather than in mid-2022 as originally planned.

On Wednesday, minutes of the Fed board’s most recent meeting showed that policy makers are eyeing a faster pace for raising the benchmark interest rate that they have kept at near zero percent since the pandemic started.

The Federal Reserve has said it could raise the rate, which influences the borrowing costs for loans made to businesses and consumers, by a quarter of a percentage point three times this year to tamp down inflationary pressures.

WHO Says New Coronavirus Variant in France Not a Threat – Yet

The World Health Organization says a new coronavirus variant recently detected in France is nothing to be concerned about right now.

Scientists at the IHU Mediterranee Infection Foundation in the city of Marseille say they discovered the new B.1.640.2 variant in December in 12 patients living near Marseille, with the first patient testing positive after traveling to the central African nation of Cameroon.

The researchers said they have identified 46 mutations in the new variant, which they labeled “IHU” after the institute, that could make it more resistant to vaccines and more infectious than the original coronavirus.  The French team revealed the findings of a study in the online health sciences outlet medRxiv, which publishes studies that have not been peer-reviewed or published in an academic journal.

Abdi Mahmud, a COVID-19 incident manager with the World Health Organization, told reporters in Geneva earlier this week that, while the IHU variant is “on our radar,” it remains confined in Marseille and has not been labeled a “variant of concern” by the U.N. health agency.

Meanwhile, an international team of health care advocates and experts is calling for 22 billion doses of mRNA vaccine to be administered around the world this year to stop the spread of the highly contagious omicron variant.  The team is urging the production of an additional 15 billion doses of mRNA vaccine, more than double the projected 7 billion doses.

The report says mRNA vaccines produced by Pfizer and Moderna have demonstrated the best protection against several variants by providing cross-immunity through so-called T-cells, an arm of the human immune system that kills virus-infected cells and keeps them from replicating and spreading.

The report was a collaboration among scientists at Harvard Medical School, Columbia University, New York University and the University of Saskatchewan and the advocacy groups PrEP4All and Partners in Health.

Australia Detains Serbian Tennis Star Over COVID-19 Visa Breaches

World tennis No.1 Novak Djokovic has had his visa canceled by Australian authorities and is facing deportation. He had received a COVID-19 vaccination exemption to defend his title at the Australian Open but has reportedly failed to provide proper evidence to border officials.

The Serbian is the defending Australian Open champion, and a nine-time winner of the event, but the government said Thursday he’s no longer welcome.

He was detained at Melbourne airport Wednesday for several hours before border force officials announced that he had not met immigration regulations and would be deported.

Djokovic’s father had claimed his son was being held “captive.”

Serbian President Aleksander Vucic said he was a victim of “harassment.”

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison is standing firm, though.

“On the issue of Mr. Djokovic, rules are rules and there are no special cases,” Morrison said. “That is the policy of the government, and it has been our government’s strong border protection policies and particularly in relation to the pandemic that has ensured that Australia has had one of the lowest death rates from COVID anywhere in the world. Entry with a visa requires double vaccination or a medical exemption. I am advised that such an exemption was not in place and as a result he is subject to the same rule as anyone else.”

With his visa revoked, Djokovic is now an “unlawful non-citizen” in Australia and is being held in immigration detention, where his movements are restricted after he was driven from Melbourne airport by government officials. It is also unclear whether Djokovic is allowed to communicate with his advisers, which is standard practice according to Australian law.

His lawyers are challenging the deportation order in Australia’s Federal Circuit Court.

The 34-year-old tennis star has not publicly confirmed his COVID-19 vaccination status.

He flew to Australia after being granted a controversial medical exemption. Tennis authorities said he had not received any special treatment, but many Australians, who have lived under some of the world’s toughest coronavirus restrictions, believed Djokovic had abused the system.

Australia’s states and territories Thursday reported more than 70,000 new COVID-19 cases. A total of 612,000 infections have been diagnosed in Australia since the pandemic began, according to official figures, 2,289 people have died.

More than 90% of the eligible population have been fully vaccinated.

To curb the spread of the virus, the Northern Territory imposed lockdown restrictions Thursday on unvaccinated residents, who must adhere to stay-home orders until next Monday. 

 

Omicron Is Milder Than Delta But Nothing to Sneeze At

Omicron may not cause as much lung damage as the delta variant of the COVID-19 virus, according to new lab studies.

That, plus vaccination, may help explain why patients with omicron are not being hospitalized or dying as often as patients infected with previous variants.

But omicron is still killing an average of 1,200 people each day in the United States, about equal to the peak of the second COVID-19 wave in July and August of 2020.

“If it’s milder compared to delta; delta was horrible,” said Joe Grove, a senior lecturer at the University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research. “This has not necessarily just turned into the common cold all of a sudden. It is still something that we should be concerned about.”

Plus, experts caution, omicron’s ferocious infectiousness means the less virulent virus can still do a lot of damage, especially among the unvaccinated who are elderly or have preexisting conditions.

Lighter on the lungs

A set of new studies in lab animals and petri dishes found that omicron did not infect lung tissue as much as previous variants. And it didn’t cause as much damage or inflammation when it did.

Omicron had no problem infecting tissues in the nose and throat. A preference for the upper airway might help explain why omicron is so infectious, Grove said.

“It’s going to be more easily coughed or sneezed out and spread more easily,” Grove said. “But I am speculating here.”

The lab results are promising, but what happens in lab animals doesn’t always translate to people, Dr. Mike Diamond, an infectious diseases professor at Washington University School of Medicine, cautioned.

“You might say, ‘Well, maybe it’s less severe,'” he said. “But we don’t fully even know that it’s less severe in humans yet.”

Doctors in South Africa said that omicron patients had not been not as sick when the variant swept through that country. Health officials in the United Kingdom reported similar observations.

But it’s not clear if those cases were milder because of the virus or because people were less susceptible.

“In the U.K. there was a very high vaccination rate,” Diamond noted. “And then in South Africa, a lot of people got infected in the first wave, so they’re naturally immune.”

Some encouraging signs are starting to come in. According to an early study in Ontario, Canada, unvaccinated people infected with omicron were 60% less likely to be hospitalized or die than those infected with delta.

Experts warn, however, that the risk of severe disease may be lower, but the odds of catching omicron are higher. The huge number of people infected cancels out the advantage of the milder virus.

Unvaccinated and hospitalized

That’s why hospitals in parts of the United States are filling up again.

In this wave, most hospitalized patients are unvaccinated, by an overwhelming margin.

In New York City, for example, where COVID-19 is spiking again, unvaccinated patients are being hospitalized at a rate 30 times that of vaccinated patients.

The highest rates of hospitalization are among those over 65.

Even if omicron is milder, “it seems to be still doing quite a bit of damage in unvaccinated people,” said University of Texas Medical Branch virologist Vineet Menachery.

“The good news is that there does seem to be a trend that this virus is less severe than previous waves, especially if you’re vaccinated,” he said. For those who got their shots, “the threat of severe disease is probably off the table for most people.”

“On the other hand, for people who are not vaccinated, I think the threat is just as big as it was in March of 2020,” Menachery added. 

US Advisers Endorse Pfizer COVID Boosters for Younger Teens

Influential government advisers are strongly urging that teens as young as 12 get COVID-19 boosters as soon as they’re eligible, a key move as the U.S. battles the omicron surge and schools struggle with how to restart classes amid the spike. 

All Americans 16 and older are encouraged to get a booster, which health authorities say offers the best chance at avoiding the highly contagious omicron variant. Earlier this week, the Food and Drug Administration authorized an extra Pfizer shot for kids ages 12 to 15, as well — but that wasn’t the final hurdle. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention makes recommendations for vaccinations and on Wednesday, its advisers voted that a booster was safe for the younger teens and should be offered to them once enough time — five months — has passed since their last shot. And while the CDC last month opened boosters as an option for 16- and 17-year-olds, the panel said that recommendation should be strengthened to say they “should” get the extra dose. 

CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky will weigh the panel’s advice before making a final decision soon. 

Vaccines still offer strong protection against serious illness from any type of COVID-19, including the highly contagious omicron variant, especially after a booster. But omicron can slip past a layer of the vaccines’ protection to cause breakthrough infections.

Studies show a booster dose at least temporarily revs up virus-fighting antibodies to levels that offer the best chance at avoiding symptomatic infection, even from omicron.

Fending off even a mild infection is harder for vaccines to do than protecting against serious illness, so giving teens a booster for that temporary jump in protection is like playing whack-a-mole, cautioned Dr. Sarah Long of Drexel University. But she said the extra shot was worth it given how hugely contagious the omicron mutant is, and how many kids are catching it. 

More important, if a child with a mild infection spreads it to a more vulnerable parent or grandparent who then dies, the impact “is absolutely crushing,” said Dr. Camille Kotton of Massachusetts General Hospital. 

“Let’s whack this one down,” agreed Dr. Jamie Loehr of Cayuga Family Medicine in Ithaca, New York. 

The vaccine made by Pfizer and its partner BioNTech is the only option for American children of any age. About 13.5 million children ages 12 to 17 have received two Pfizer shots, according to the CDC. Boosters were opened to the 16- and 17-year-olds last month. 

The CDC’s advisers were swayed by real-world U.S. data showing that symptomatic COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are between seven and 11 times higher in unvaccinated adolescents than vaccinated ones. 

If the CDC agrees, about 5 million of the younger teens, those 12 to 15, would be eligible for a booster right away because they got their last shot at least five months ago.

New U.S. guidelines say anyone who received two Pfizer vaccinations and is eligible for a booster can get it five months after their last shot, rather than the six months previously recommended. 

Children tend to suffer less serious illness from COVID-19 than adults. But child hospitalizations are rising during the omicron wave — the vast majority of them unvaccinated. 

During the public comment part of Wednesday’s meeting, Dr. Julie Boom of Texas Children’s Hospital said a booster recommendation for younger teens “cannot come soon enough.” 

The chief safety question for adolescents is a rare side effect called myocarditis, a type of heart inflammation seen mostly in younger men and teen boys who get either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. The vast majority of cases are mild — far milder than the heart inflammation COVID-19 can cause — and they seem to peak in older teens, those 16 and 17. 

The FDA decided a booster dose was as safe for the younger teens as the older ones based largely on data from 6,300 12- to 15-year-olds in Israel who got a Pfizer booster five months after their second dose. Israeli officials said Wednesday that they’ve seen two cases of mild myocarditis in this age group after giving more boosters, 40,000. 

Earlier this week, FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks said the side effect occurs in about 1 in 10,000 men and boys ages 16 to 30 after their second shot. But he said a third dose appears less risky, by about a third, probably because more time has passed before the booster than between the first two shots. 

 

Governments Worldwide Continue Imposing COVID Measures, 2 Years After Pandemic’s Start

Exactly two years after the World Health Organization issued an alert about “a cluster of cases of pneumonia of unknown cause” in the central Chinese city of Wuhan that evolved into the global COVID-19 pandemic, the world is now struggling under the weight of the fast-moving omicron variant of the coronavirus that sparked the disease. 

In Brazil, a surge of new COVID-19 cases driven by the omicron variant has prompted authorities in Rio de Janeiro to cancel its iconic Carnival street festival for the second consecutive year. 

Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes announced the cancellation Tuesday during a speech carried live online. Paes said the “nature” and “democratic aspect” of Carnival makes it impossible to control the potential spread of the virus. 

But Paes said the traditional procession of Rio’s samba schools into the city’s Sambadrome stadium will take place next month, as authorities will impose mitigation efforts to inhibit the spread of the virus among spectators.

In Hong Kong, chief executive Carrie Lam on Wednesday announced a two-week ban on flights from eight nations to blunt a possible fifth wave of COVID-19 infections driven by omicron. The ban on incoming flights from Australia, Britain, Canada, France, India, Pakistan, the Philippines and the United States takes effect Sunday.

Authorities in the semi-autonomous Chinese financial hub are keeping about 2,500 passengers of a Royal Caribbean cruise ship on board the vessel after discovering that nine passengers were close contacts of an omicron cluster in the city. The Spectrum of the Seas returned to Hong Kong on Wednesday, just days after leaving on a short cruise. The nine passengers were taken off the ship and placed in a quarantine center, where they have all tested negative. The remaining passengers and the ship’s 1,200 crew will have to undergo testing before they are allowed to disembark.

Italy has also imposed new measures to battle the virus, announcing Wednesday that COVID-19 vaccination will be mandatory, effective immediately, for people 50 and over. This requirement will remain in place until June 15, according to Reuters.

Overwhelmed by a new wave of coronavirus infections, Italy is one of the few European countries to announce such a measure. 

Since February 2020, when the pandemic began in Italy, the country has reported 138,000 deaths from the virus, the second highest death toll in Europe after Britain.

CDC statements

Meanwhile, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has added the Caribbean island nation of Aruba on its list of destinations considered as “very high” risk of exposure to COVID-19. The CDC designates as “Level 4” any destination with more than 500 cases per 100,000 residents over the past 28 days.

The CDC issued a statement Tuesday on its controversial new guidelines for people who have been infected with COVID-19. The federal agency came under fire last week when it cut the amount of time infected Americans should quarantine from 10 days to five as long as they have no symptoms, while also stating that testing was not necessary after that five-day period.

Independent health experts urged the CDC to revise the guidelines to include a recommendation to seek testing after the five-day isolation periods amid the ever-growing omicron outbreak. But the agency instead issued documents supporting its new recommendations, while saying at-home rapid tests are not a reliable indication that a person is no longer contagious.

The CDC is recommending that people wear face masks everywhere for five days after emerging from isolation.

U.S. numbers

The U.S. has also reached a record single-day number of COVID-19 cases, with more than 1 million infections reported on Monday, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

The record high comes as the country continues to battle the omicron variant, resulting in rapid infection across the country on the heels of the holiday season.

Top U.S. infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci warned Wednesday that Americans could not be complacent about the virus’ spread, saying that while the omicron variant is less severe, it may still overwhelm the country’s health system.

“[Omicron] could still stress our hospital system because a certain proportion of a large volume of cases, no matter what, are going to be severe,” Fauci told reporters during a White House briefing. 

According to Reuters, hospitalizations of COVID patients have risen by 45% in the past seven days and remain at over 111,000, a rate the country has not seen since January 2021.

Some information for this report came from the Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.

Royal Caribbean, Norwegian Cruise Cancel Voyages Amid Omicron Scare

Royal Caribbean and Norwegian Cruise Line on Wednesday canceled sailings amid rising fears of omicron-related coronavirus infections that have dampened the nascent recovery of the pandemic-ravaged cruise industry.

Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. called off its Spectrum of the Seas cruise for January 6 after nine guests on its January 2 trip were identified as close contacts to a local Hong Kong COVID-19 case.

The contacts have tested negative, but the cruise ship will return to Kai Tak Cruise Terminal in Hong Kong on January 5 to test all guests and crew who must take a second test on January 8, the company said.

A similar decision to cancel trips by Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. was made against the backdrop of the United States reporting the highest daily tally of any country for new coronavirus infections on Monday.

“Due to ongoing travel restrictions, we’ve had to modify a few sailings and unfortunately have had to cancel,” the 17-ship strong cruise operator said, with the embarkation dates for a few canceled sailings as far out as late April.

The cruise line, which requires everyone on board to be vaccinated, has also had to cut short a 12-day round trip from Miami on its Norwegian Pearl ship, citing “COVID-related circumstances.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had last week advised people to avoid cruise travel after launching investigations into onboard cases on more than 90 ships. The health agency starts a scrutiny if at least 0.1% of the guests test positive.

Norwegian Cruise said guests, who were supposed to embark on the canceled sailings on the eight ships, will receive full refunds and bonus credits for future bookings.

The omicron-led travel uncertainty is also causing guests on other sailings to cancel their bookings as a few ships have also had to skip ports due to onboard infections.

“We booked the cruise last March and assumed that things would be getting back to normal… by mid-December, I was mentally prepared for a change of plans,” said Holly Bromley, a consulting arborist, who canceled her booking on Norwegian Epic.

Meanwhile, bigger rival Carnival Corp. said it has not canceled any upcoming voyages, but its shares fell on Wednesday to close down 2.6%. Royal Caribbean lost 2.1% and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings 3.6%.

 

The Inside Story-Crossing the Frontier TRANSCRIPT

TRANSCRIPT

The Inside Story: Crossing the Frontier

Episode 21 – January 6, 2022

 

Show Open Graphics:

 

Voice of KANE FARABAUGH, VOA Correspondent:

 

All Systems go, Falcon 9 Blasts off into space.

With high expectations, changing the trajectory of U.S. space exploration.

And signaling a new era in the aerospace industry.

 

 

 

Kelly DeFazio, Lockheed Martin Orion Site Director:

 

We’re going to take humans farther then we’ve ever gone before.

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

A return to the moon. More trips to Mars. And increased competition from China.

 

 

 

Rocky Kolb, Astronomy and Astrophysics Professor:

 

China is gaining rapidly on the U.S.

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

On The Inside Story: Crossing the Frontier.

 

 

The Inside Story:

 

 

Unidentified launch announcer:

 

Ok and here we go. 10. 9. 8. 7.6.5.4.3.2.1. Ignition!  And liftoff! Liftoff of Falcon 9 and IXPE. A new set of x-ray eyes to view the mysteries of our skies!

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

Hi, I’m Kane Farabaugh reporting from Cape Canaveral, Florida, where launches again are becoming a more frequent occurrence, thanks to the commercialization of space transportation in recent years, and a new initiative by NASA to return astronauts to the moon and eventually get them to Mars.

It’s a dramatic turnaround from just a decade ago at the end of the Space Shuttle program, when the industry here in Florida realized it needed to diversify to be competitive nationally and globally.

 

 

 

Dale Ketcham, Vice President, Space Florida:

 

I wasn’t born here but I moved here and learned how to walk on Cocoa Beach three years before NASA was created.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Not only has Dale Ketchum grown up with the U.S. space program, he’s watched it transform the economies of communities surrounding NASA’s Kennedy Space Center several times since the 1950s.

 

 

Dale Ketcham, Space Florida Vice President:

 

The space program continued to progress, but it was always government focused.

 

 

Brian Baluta, Economic Development Commission of Florida’s Space Coast:

 

For 50 years roughly, Florida’s Space Coast was the place for launch.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Launch… but not production.  Most of the equipment used in the Apollo and Space Shuttle programs over those years was shipped to Florida for assembly.  When Atlantis touched down in 2011 on the final shuttle mission, it marked the end of an era in human spaceflight.  As launches decreased, the Space Coast’s economy suffered. 

 

 

 

Brian Baluta, Economic Development Commission of Florida’s Space Coast:

 

The job losses started to pile up and that happened to coincide with the Great Recession.  So it was really a one two punch for this area. In 2011, unemployment was 12 percent at that point. The economy and its outlook were not strong.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Brian Baluta, Vice President of the Economic Development Commission, or EDC of Florida’s Space Coast says that’s when his organization offered a concept that could change the fortunes of the area’s workforce –permanently. 

 

 

Brian Baluta, Economic Development Commission of Florida’s Space Coast:

 

And it started with taking the unusual step of reaching out to the companies who were likely to produce the successor to the Space Shuttle.  At the time it was called the Crew Exploration Vehicle and there wasn’t a contract for it yet.  But we reached out to Lockheed Martin and Northrup Grumman and Boeing – the companies that would likely compete and win for that contract, and we made the unusual pitch of – if you win the contract not only should you consider launching from Cape Canaveral, but you should consider assembling your spacecraft here.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

The concept took off.

 

 

Kelly DeFazio, Lockheed Martin Orion Site Director:

 

Just like diversifying a portfolio, if you diversify the area and your products you can ride through those lows.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Lockheed Martin won the contract to create NASA’s next generation spacecraft transporting humans back to the moon.  The Crew Exploration Vehicle, now called “Orion,” will be the capsule of the upcoming Artemis missions.  Some of Orion’s components are pieced together at Lockheed’s new Star Center near Titusville, Florida, which is a former home of Space Camp and the Astronaut Hall of Fame.

 

Kelly DeFazio, Lockheed Martin Orion Site Director:

 

The contractors and the government support teams are investing in the community. This particular center here was an 18 month, $20-million investment by Lockheed Martin and that is helping to expand the manufacturing footprint for the Space Coast and allowing us to be able to increase throughput over time as we rate and support our mission.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Kelly DeFazio is also a longtime resident of Florida’s Space Coast.  She now oversees the work at Lockheed Martin’s Star Center which includes creating wiring harnesses…

 

 

 

Unidentified technician:

 

This is basically the nervous system, so to speak, over the capsule.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

…and the application of thermal tiles that will protect the Orion capsule.

 

 

 

Unidentified technician:

 

The panel that covers the side hatch so the hatch would be basically where the while foam is.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

DeFazio says excitement is building.

 

 

Kelly DeFazio, Lockheed Martin Orion Site Director:

 

I think that it will start to become very clear with the launch of Artemis 1  that there is a difference, and you know what, we’re going to take humans farther than they have ever gone before.

 

 

Dale Ketcham, Space Florida Vice President:

 

When I was growing up with the original 7 astronauts in Cocoa Beach, it was really a frontier town. People were coming and going rapidly, only staying a little while.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

That Wild West frontier town description is also how Ketcham characterizes the present day Space Coast, with government contractors and private companies both jockeying for real estate and launch access. 

 

 

Dale Ketcham, Space Florida Vice President:

 

With the commercial sector coming, particularly after the retirement of the shuttle program, in many ways we’re going back… the workforce is younger.  Particularly with Space X.  They’re not afraid to fail.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Space X, Blue Origin, and Airbus’s One Web are just a few of the companies with facilities near the rocket launch pads at Kennedy Space Center, thanks in part to the efforts of the EDC and organizations like Space Florida, where Dale Ketchum now serves as Vice President.

 

 

Dale Ketcham, Space Florida Vice President:

 

We just had an announcement this week that there will be a small launch company called Astra coming here to build small rockets for small satellites which is a big new component of the whole space industry. They’re the first small rocket to come here. But we’ve also got Firefly, Relativity, coming, and others will be coming after that.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

The more the merrier says Ketchum.  Not only does it help the local economy, it also keeps the United States competitive globally in what he sees as a new space race.

 

 

Dale Ketcham, Vice President, Space Florida Vice President:

 

The Chinese will put more rockets into orbit than we will because the Chinese are competitive and very smart and very capable very well resourced and very committed, and they are the major competitors in space that will be our major competitor in space for our lifetime.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

One of the top generals in the U.S. Space Force says China’s space program has grown at “an incredible pace,” warning they could gain a military advantage over the United States if America does not step up its game.

 

There is hope among many in the U.S. aerospace industry that China’s success will provide the needed impetus for a new space race to advance exploration of the cosmos — perhaps in cooperation and not competition with China.

 

The steady stream of data Edwin Kite reviews from U.S. and Chinese rovers simultaneously exploring the surface of Mars keeps him busy at his University of Chicago laboratory. 

 

 

 

 

Edwin Kite, Planetary Geoscientist:

 

You can quickly go through a loop of making a discovery, forming a hypothesis based on that discovery and sending a new spacecraft to test it.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Gathering information in Kite’s field of study had traditionally been accomplished using telescopes and analyzing meteors and the few moon rocks U.S. astronauts brought to Earth in the 1960s and ’70s.

 

But the new Mars missions are helping Kite and his colleagues obtain a more direct and complete understanding of Mars, thanks to the information the craft and rovers from the different countries have collected throughout the red planet. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edwin Kite, Planetary Geoscientist:

 

We’re at a really early stage of Mars exploration. We’ve only scratched the surface of what there is to discover. We don’t know which country’s investigation is going to stumble over something that unlocks the next stage of exploration.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

During a U.S. House of Representatives appropriations hearing that was conducted remotely, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, a former astronaut and former U.S. senator from Florida, signaled alarm at the recent success of the Chinese space program, which he says isn’t confined to the red planet. 

 

 

 

 

Bill Nelson, NASA Administrator:

 

They want to send three big landers to the south pole of the moon… and that’s where the water is. And we are still a year or two away from a much smaller lander going there.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Which is why Nelson is urging lawmakers to support NASA’s Artemis program, which plans to return humans — including the first woman — to the moon, with Mars as an eventual destination. 

 

Nelson says China is on a similar path. 

 

 

 

Bill Nelson, NASA Administrator:

 

I think that’s adding a new element as to whether or not we want to get serious and get a lot of activity going on landing… humans back on the surface of the moon.

 

 

 

 

 

Rocky Kolb, Astronomy and Astrophysics Professor:

 

China is gaining rapidly on the U.S., and the Europeans are also in this space race. 

 

 

 

 

 KANE FARABAUGH:

 

Rocky Kolb, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Chicago, believes a new space race could be positive.   

 

Kolb would like to see the U.S. and Chinese space programs collaborate rather than compete. 

 

 

 

 

Rocky Kolb, Astronomy and Astrophysics Professor:

 

So there’s a lot of talent in China that we could make use of, and a lot of resources in China, and they have money to explore space.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

But both Kite and Kolb acknowledge there is a limit to how much cooperation can realistically occur between the United States and China. 

 

 

 

Rocky Kolb, Astronomy and Astrophysics Professor:

 

The technology involved in the peaceful exploration of space can also be transported to military uses.

 

 

 

 

Edwin Kite, Planetary Geoscientist:

 

There are legal barriers to bilateral collaboration between NASA and the Chinese space program. But those don’t apply to non-NASA funded work by academic institutions.

 

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Which is why Kite and Kolb and the scientific community they represent worldwide continue to pore over the tantalizing clues relayed from Mars in order to better understand the origins of our own planet and species — knowledge that Kolb says isn’t confined to national borders. 

 

 

 

 

Rocky Kolb, Astronomy and Astrophysics Professor: 

 

I think it would be great in the future if the U.S. could cooperate with China in the same way that now we cooperate with the European observatories and the European Space Agency.  It adds a lot to the table. So there’s a lot of talent in China that we could make use of, and a lot of resources in China, and they have money to explore space. And I think this is something that mankind should do together. And hopefully in the next few years we’ll have a better relationship in science and we will do it together.

There is only one Mars. It doesn’t belong to the U.S., and it doesn’t belong to China.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

The future of space travel looks promising with private investment fueling this phase of space exploration. According to a 2020 report by Space Capital, 8.9 billion dollars was invested in space companies through private financing.

 

Elon Musk and his aerospace company, Space X, are the leaders in NASA’s “Gateway to Mars” effort.

And the billionaire’s vision of constructing a spaceport in a town best known for its battlefield is receiving mixed reviews from those who live there.

 

From Boca Chica at the tip of Texas, here’s VOA’s Elizabeth Lee:

 

 

ELIZABETH LEE, VOA Correspondent:

At the southern tip of Texas called Boca Chica, along Texas Highway 4, you’ll see the historical site of the last battle of the American Civil War – and a few more minutes down the road there is another history making view – a spaceport that is the beginning of what could be interplanetary travel.

 

SpaceX has been building and testing prototypes for its next generation rocket called Starship, to one day, fly humans to the moon and Mars.

 

 

 

 

 

David Santilena, Rocket Ranch Boca Chica Owner:

 

People are going to want to come down and they’re going to want to see this, this crazy pushing the boundaries of what’s possible.

 

 

 

ELIZABETH LEE:

 

David Santilena is an airline pilot who has not been flying because of the pandemic. When SpaceX picked South Texas as the site of a spaceport for Starship, Santilena saw an opportunity.

David Santilena, Rocket Ranch Boca Chica Owner:

 

You know what? You only live once, so I bought it and then it was a tremendous amount of work but it’s really coming along.

 

 

 

ELIZABETH LEE:

 

He purchased land near SpaceX’s future spaceport and started building to make it a destination for space lovers to watch launches – with campsites and trailers for rent.

 

 

 

David Santilena, Rocket Ranch Boca Chica Owner:

 

If it lands, it’s going to be amazing. If it crashes, it’s going to be amazing.  Either way, I’m going to be there watching.

 

 

 

ELIZABETH LEE:

 

Residents have seen successes and failures, such as this high-altitude flight test that met a spectacular end.

 

SpaceX founder Elon Musk congratulated his team on social media saying, “we got all the data we needed.”

 

Musk describes South Texas as the gateway to Mars. He says he is highly confident humans can land on the Red Planet in six years. 

 

Since SpaceX broke ground in 2014 in South Texas, it’s been building and conducting tests for a working Starship, a rapidly reusable rocket that aims to make interplanetary space travel like air travel. The site has brought jobs to this area.

 

But progress comes at a price. Some residents who live in the village near the new spaceport say they’ve had to sell their homes to SpaceX at prices they wished were higher. In their place, SpaceX employees have moved in.

 

 

 

 

Maria Pointer, Former Boca Chica Area Resident:

 

We had a home that SpaceX needed, and that home was right in the middle of the compound for the production shipyard. We had no way to get away from the construction.

 

ELIZABETH LEE:

 

Maria Pointer negotiated with SpaceX and moved out in March, and SpaceX employees quickly moved in.

 

 

 

Maria Pointer, Former Boca Chica Area Resident:

 

I had to make lemonade out of lemons. I was not going to just take this lying down and say, ‘Oh woe is me they’re going to take everything I have.’ No, no I’m going to reinvent the Pointers so that we have fun.

 

 

 

ELIZABETH LEE:

 

The experience has been bittersweet for her.  From her new home, she’s enjoyed watching the development of the rocket prototypes and writing about it. But she wishes SpaceX could have picked a different location so her life wouldn’t be uprooted and the wildlife in the area stays preserved. 

 

Pointer will continue to write about SpaceX on social media for her followers, just as Santilena will share future launches with anyone who decides to stop by Rocket Ranch.

 

Elizabeth Lee, VOA News.

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

2021 was a historic year for all-things space – from the success of private spaceflight companies to robots exploring Mars in a road trip for the ages.

 

VOA’s Arash Arabasadi beams us through the Year in Space:

 

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI, VOA Correspondent:

This year, the world witnessed space history not once, not twice, but three times as the private spaceflight companies Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin, and SpaceX successfully launched their space tourism businesses.

 

Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic became the first to reach the space boundary – in early July…

While Jeff Bezos’ company, Blue Origin, flew a few days later and a bit higher on the anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

 

Among the passengers was pilot Wally Funk, who at the time became the oldest person in space at age 82.

 

But, just a few months later, 90-year-old actor William Shatner, claimed that title when he also rode aboard Blue Origin. Shatner made famous the role of Captain James T. Kirk on the iconic 1960s TV show, “Star Trek.”  

 

 

Misty Snopkowski, NASA:

 

If you take a step back and look at 2021, it’s been a really amazing year.  I think that, at this point, we’re kind of experiencing a renaissance in human spaceflight.

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI:

NASA’s Misty Snopkowski tells VOA SpaceX’s fundraiser flight for St. Jude Children’s Hospital – may have been the most significant of the year.

 

 

 

Misty Snopkowski, NASA:

 

Because Inspiration 4 was successful, I think that’s going to stimulate more activities in low-Earth orbit and really enable more people to go into space.

 

 

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI:

The entire mission was bankrolled by a billionaire on board the flight.

 

 

 

Greg Autry, Thunderbird School of Global Management:

 

Now, the private investment into space is bigger than the NASA budget. The private industry is putting more money into space than the government is into space, so this is definitely, in my opinion, the inflection point for the industry.

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI:

Autry says reusable hardware makes going into space cost-efficient and more eco-friendly than single-use rockets. But he adds that it probably won’t be us making those first trips.

Greg Autry, Thunderbird School of Global Management:

 

I think before you see people, though, you’ll probably see cargo.  So, you’ll see sushi coming from Tokyo to London in an hour. That’s crazy, but I know there are crazy people who will pay for that.

 

 

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI:

In other news this year, NASA landed on Mars.  The Perseverance rover – or Percy for short – and its travel buddy, the Ingenuity helicopter, began a quest for signs of ancient life.  The flight took about seven months before a dramatic landing on the Martian surface.

 

That’s all fine, says Autry, but he says the focus should be closer to home.

 

 

Greg Autry, Thunderbird School of Global Management:

 

We could run onto Mars, we could spend a lot of public money, we could stick that flag there, and bring back a soil sample and maybe discover life. But it wouldn’t have actually done anything for people on Earth, right?”

 

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI:

What would do something for people on Earth, he says, is eventually moving mining and manufacturing industries off the planet and onto the moon.

 

But before that happens, NASA plans to launch its Artemis (one) mission next February.  It is the first of three missions with the end goal of landing the first woman and next man on the moon by 2025.

NASA’s Snopkowski tells VOA future moon-missions will include a public-private partnership that will drive down costs for the space agency.

 

 

 

 

Misty Snopkowski, NASA:

 

One of NASA’s goals is to be just one of many customers, right, in this commercial space strategy that we’ve laid out.  And so, in that goal, NASA would be only purchasing what they need as far as goods and services go.

 

 

 

 

ARASH ARABASADI:

Before we turn the page on this year, a look at Space Oddities 2021.There was the first known French crepe made in space, tests on the immune systems of baby bobtail squid, and the first ever space games.

 

For 2022, look for more launches from the private spaceflight giants, NASA’s test trip to the moon, further research from Mars, and the U.S. Mint’s release of the Sally Ride quarter honoring the first American woman in space. 

Arash Arabasadi, VOA News.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

NASA recently revealed its next class of astronauts to train for missions to the moon and Mars.

Half of the 10 new astronauts are military pilots. One is a champion cyclist.

 

Outfitting the next generation of astronauts is a key component of the upcoming lunar mission.

 

A new NASA program has American college students competing to design a high-tech spacesuit for the next phase of interplanetary travel.

 

Bradley University student Zach Bachmann didn’t grow up thinking he’d be an astronaut.

 

 

 

 

Zach Bachmann, Student Team Lead:

 

I’m short, blind, and asthmatic so I can’t really be an astronaut if I wished to.

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

But a lifelong interest in video games and computers is putting him at the center of a nationwide effort to boost new space helmet technology for the next generation of astronauts.

 

 

 

Zach Bachmann, Student Team Lead:

 

I’ve always been into sci-fi and tech, so it sounded like this was kind of a cool project and I kinda just got wrapped into it.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

That “cool project” – NASA’s Spacesuit User Interface Technologies for Students, or S.U.I.T.S Design Challenge – allows college students to create spacesuit information displays within augmented reality environments.

 

 

 

Abby Irwin, Design Team Lead:

 

You still see the world around, but you would just have overlays.  So like the vitals would be an overlay, but they would still see the moon or whatever they are working on.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Abby Irwin works with Bachmann on Bradley’s S.U.I.T.S. team using the latest Microsoft Holo Lens to create and test their ideas.

 

 

 

Abby Irwin, Design Team Lead:

 

Our navigation we kind of got examples from flight software that pilots use and train with, but we also got like some ideas from the game Skyrim, how they do navigation in video games.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

While NASA has already announced a new spacesuit for the upcoming Artemis moon missions scheduled later this decade, the next challenge is figuring out the final version of the cutting-edge technology inside. That’s where S.U.I.T.S. plays a role.

 

Brandon Hargis, NASA Office of STEM Engagement Activity:

 

The idea was why don’t we put some funding toward having students contribute solutions to these technical challenges.

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

NASA’s Brandon Hargis says the S.U.I.T.s program helps NASA solve several old problems…

…. including handling the time delay communicating between the Earth and the Moon, and the longer lag time for signals to reach Mars.

 

 

 

 

Brandon Hargis, NASA Office of STEM Engagement Activity:

 

In this case 250,000 miles away from Earth on the moon, or several millions of miles away on Mars.  There’s somewhat of a delay in communications, (((end courtesy)) so if the astronaut has a little more autonomy to make some decisions based on the plan of the mission, augmented reality could help them do that.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

In a typical year, ten teams would travel to NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas to demonstrate their designs in person.  But due to the coronavirus pandemic, the current experience is all virtual and remote, giving more students a chance to participate.

 

 

 

 

Brandon Hargis, NASA Office of STEM Engagement Activity Manager:

 

Because we are doing this in a virtual environment this year, we actually invited twenty teams to participate in our virtual course online.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

Hargis says the students’ work has NASA ahead of schedule designing the technology.

 

 

 

 

Brandon Hargis, NASA Office of STEM Engagement Activity:

 

The work they are doing has spurred research in the field.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

When the first woman, and next men land on the moon, the design of the AR technology influenced by students like those at Bradley University will be there, right in front of astronauts’ faces, helping them boldly go, and do, what few have done before.

 

 

 

Abby Irwin, Design Team Lead:

 

I’m very proud of what we’ve come up with so far and where we could go.

 

 

 

Zach Bachmann, Student Team Lead:

 

I’m all for committing to more space exploration because it’s cool and ya know it’s the future.

 

 

 

 

KANE FARABAUGH:

 

That’s all we have for now.

 

I’m Kane Farabaugh here at The Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Connect with us at VOANews on Instagram and Facebook.

 

Stay up to date at VOANews.com 

 

See you next week for The Inside Story.

 

###

 

 

Biden Doubles Order of COVID Pills to Fight Omicron

President Joe Biden has directed his administration to buy an additional 10 million courses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 pill, Paxlovid, bringing the total to at least 20 million courses, as part of his strategy to combat omicron. He addressed the American public Tuesday as COVID-19 cases in the U.S. surge to record levels following the holidays. White House Bureau Chief Patsy Widakuswara has this report.

Rights Groups Urge Tesla to Close Showroom in China’s Xinjiang

U.S. human rights and trade groups on Tuesday blasted Tesla’s New Year’s Eve announcement that it had opened a showroom in Xinjiang, the latest foreign firm caught up in tensions related to the far-western Chinese region where detention camps have drawn heavy criticism. 

The Council on American-Islamic Relations, the largest U.S. Muslim advocacy organization, said Tesla was “supporting genocide.” Similar criticism came from a U.S. trade group, the Alliance for American Manufacturing, and U.S. senator Marco Rubio. 

 

“Elon Musk must close Tesla’s Xinjiang showroom,” the Council on American-Islamic Relations said on its official Twitter account, referring to Tesla’s founder. 

 

Xinjiang has become a significant point of conflict between Western governments and China in recent years. U.N. experts and rights groups estimate more than a million people, mainly Uyghurs and members of other Muslim minorities, have been detained in camps there. 

U.S. President Joe Biden and members of the U.S. Congress have pressed companies to distance themselves from Xinjiang. On December 23, Biden signed a bill barring imports of goods made in the region.

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said she would not comment directly on Tesla’s action, but generally the “private sector should oppose the PRC human rights abuses and genocide in Xinjiang,” she said. “The international community, including the public and private sectors, cannot look the other way when it comes to what is taking place in Xinjiang.” 

The United States has labeled China’s treatment of ethnic Uyghurs and other Muslims in Xinjiang as genocide. The United States and a few other countries plan a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics in February over the issue. 

China has rejected accusations of forced labor or any other abuses there, saying that the camps provide vocational training and that companies should respect its policies. 

Tesla, the world’s most valuable automaker, announced on December 31 that it was opening a showroom in Xinjiang’s regional capital, Urumqi.

“On the last day of 2021 we meet in Xinjiang,” Tesla said in a post on its official Weibo account. 

Other U.S. and European automakers or their Chinese partners have showrooms in Urumqi, a city of some 3 million people. German automaker Volkswagen AG has a car factory near Urumqi.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this story. The carmaker operates a factory in Shanghai and is ramping up production there amid surging sales in China. China has also become an export hub for Teslas headed to Europe and other markets. 

Musk last year had to smooth over relations with Chinese authorities after Teslas were banned from government properties because of concerns that data collected by the vehicles’ cameras was being transferred out of China. 

A number of foreign firms in recent months have been tripped up by tensions between the West and China over Xinjiang, as they try to balance Western pressure with China’s importance as a market and supply base. 

“There is this tension between global investors and the Chinese government. The global investors want market access. And the Chinese government says the cost of access is acquiescence,” said Michael Dunne, chief executive of Zo Zo Go, an investment adviser that works with automotive and technology companies doing business in China. 

In July, Swedish fashion retailer H&M reported a 23% drop in local currency sales in China for its March-May quarter after it was hit by a consumer boycott in March for stating publicly that it did not source products from Xinjiang. 

Last month, U.S. chipmaker Intel faced similar calls after telling its suppliers not to source products or labor from Xinjiang, prompting it to apologize for “the trouble caused to our respected Chinese customers, partners and the public.” 

Although some have been trying to reduce their supply chain exposure to the region, especially as Washington bans imports such as Xinjiang cotton and blacklists Chinese companies that it says have aided Beijing’s policy there, many foreign brands operate stores there.

 

US Manufacturing Catches Breath; Supply Logjam Starting to Break Up 

U.S. manufacturing activity slowed in December amid a cooling in demand for goods, but supply constraints are starting to ease and a measure of prices paid for inputs by factories fell by the most in a decade. 

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) survey on Tuesday also suggested some improvement in labor supply, with a gauge of factory employment rising to an eight-month high. Still, Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM manufacturing business survey committee, noted that “shortages of critical lowest-tier materials, high commodity prices and difficulties in transporting products continue to plague reliable consumption.” 

The survey does not fully capture the impact of the Omicron COVID-19 variant, which is rapidly spreading across the United States and abroad. Sky-rocketing infections could force workers to stay home and halt the tentative supply-chain progress. 

“There’s still a lot of ground to make up before supply chains fully normalize, but cooling prices and increased employment are positive signs,” said Will Compernolle, a senior economist at FHN Financial in New York. 

The ISM’s index of national factory activity fell to a reading of 58.7 last month, the lowest level since January 2021, from 61.1 in November. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in manufacturing, which accounts for 11.9% of the U.S. economy. 

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index would fall to 60.1. 

All of the six biggest manufacturing industries — chemical products, fabricated metal products, computer and electronic products, food, transportation equipment, and petroleum and coal products — reported moderate-to-strong growth. 

Manufacturers of fabricated metal products expressed optimism that “we have reached the top of the hill to start down a gentle slope that lets us get back to something that resembles normal.” Their counterparts in the chemical products industry said the “gut feeling says it’s getting easier to source chemical raw materials.” 

Machinery makers reported that “costs for steel seem to be coming down some.” They also noted improvements in “performance by suppliers” and “on-time deliveries.” But transportation equipment manufacturers said capacity remained “limited due to the global chip shortage.” 

The ISM survey’s measure of supplier deliveries declined to a reading of 64.9 from 72.2 in November. A reading above 50% indicates slower deliveries to factories. 

The ISM’s Fiore said transportation networks, a harbinger of future supplier delivery performance, were still performing erratically, but there are signs of improvement. 

Raw materials have been in short supply as global economies rebounded from the coronavirus pandemic. Shortages have also been exacerbated by the shift in demand to goods from services early in the pandemic. Millions of workers needed to produce and move raw materials remain sidelined. 

U.S. stocks were trading mixed, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 index having hit fresh record highs earlier in the session. The dollar was flat against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices were mostly lower. 

Price gauge falls 

The nascent signs of improvement in supply chains suggest inflation at the factory gate could soon begin to subside. The survey’s measure of prices paid by manufacturers tumbled to 68.2 last month, the lowest level since November 2020, from 82.4 in November. The 14.2-point plunge was the biggest since October 2011. 

This supports the Federal Reserve’s long-held view that the current period of high inflation is transitory. Inflation is well above the U.S. central bank’s flexible 2% target. 

“The report is consistent with our expectation that inflation will hit an inflection point probably in the first quarter of this year,” said Tim Quinlan, a senior economist at Wells Fargo in Charlotte, North Carolina. 

The ISM survey’s forward-looking new orders sub-index fell to a still-high reading of 60.4 from 61.5 in November. With customer inventories remaining depressed, the slowdown in new order growth is likely to be temporary or limited. 

Factories hired more workers, but turnover rates remained high, a trend which manufacturers said started in August. 

Indeed, a separate report from the Labor Department on Tuesday showed a record 4.5 million Americans voluntarily quit their jobs in November, which will put pressure on businesses to raise wages to attract workers. 

“Replacing those workers is proving unusually challenging,” said Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter. “This is the tightest labor market ever.”

There were 10.6 million job openings at the end of November. The high number of vacancies meant there was a 0.65 unemployed person per job opening, an all-time low. Before the pandemic, there were normally about 2.3 unemployed people per job opening. 

The ISM’s measure of manufacturing employment rose to an eight-month high of 54.2 from 53.3 in November. This, together with very low first-time applications for unemployment benefits, supports the view that job growth accelerated in December. 

According to a preliminary Reuters survey of economists, nonfarm payrolls likely increased by 400,000 jobs in December after rising by 210,000 in November. The Labor Department is scheduled to publish December’s employment report on Friday. 

 

 

Biden Touts Deal Delaying 5G Rollout by AT&T, Verizon

President Joe Biden touted an agreement Tuesday between wireless carriers and U.S. regulators to allow the deployment of 5G wireless technology in two weeks.

AT&T and Verizon said Monday they would delay activating the new service for two weeks following a request by Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. He cited airline industry concerns that the technology’s rollout could interfere with sensitive electronic systems on aircraft and disrupt thousands of daily flights.

The telecommunications giants’ announcement came one day after they maintained they would not postpone the introduction of the service. But they agreed to the delay amid pressure from the White House and aviation unions, and concerns expressed by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration.

Biden said in a statement Tuesday the “agreement ensures that there will be no disruptions to air operations over the next two weeks and puts us on track to substantially reduce disruptions to air operations when AT&T and Verizon launch 5G on January 19th.”

In an email Tuesday to employees, Verizon Chief Executive Hans Vestberg said the company saw no aviation safety issue with 5G, but added the FAA “intended to disrupt an already difficult time for air travel if we move ahead with our planned activation… We felt that it was the right thing to do for the flying public, which includes our customers and all of us, to give the FAA a little time to work out its issues with the aviation community.”

Buttigieg and FAA Administrator chief Steve Dickson said in a letter sent Monday to AT&T and Verizon that the agencies would not seek any further delays beyond January 19 if there are not any “unforeseen aviation safety issues,” according to Reuters.

The letter also reportedly said the agreement “will give us additional time and space to reduce the impacts to commercial flights.”

Some information in this report came from The Associated Press and Reuters.

Wildlife Rangers Use AI to Predict Poachers’ Next Moves

Rangers protecting threatened wildlife in Cambodia are using artificial intelligence to predict poachers’ next moves. Matt Dibble reports.

Off-Season ‘Cover’ Crops Expand as US Growers Eye Low-Carbon Future 

Illinois farmer Jack McCormick planted 350 acres of barley and radishes last fall as part of an off-season crop that he does not intend to harvest. Instead, the crops will be killed off with a weed killer next spring before McCormick plants soybeans in the same dirt. 

The barley and radishes will not be used for food, but Bayer AG will pay McCormick for planting them as the so-called cover crops will generate carbon offset credits for the seeds and chemicals maker. 

The purpose of cover crops is to restore soil, reduce erosion and to pull climate-warming carbon from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. The carbon trapped in roots and other plant matter left in the soil is measured to create carbon credits that companies can use to offset other pollution. 

The practice shows how the agriculture industry is adapting as a result of climate change. Farmers no longer make money merely by selling crops for food and livestock feed – they may also be paid for the role crops can play in limiting planet-warming emissions. 

More and more U.S. farmers are planting cover crops, from grasses like rye and oats to legumes and radishes. While some are converted into biofuels or fed to cattle, most are not harvested because their value is greater if they break down in the soil. 

Cover crops are a pillar of regenerative agriculture, and they are generally seen by environmentalists as an improvement over traditional agriculture. It is an approach to farming that aims to restore soil health and curb emissions through crop rotation, livestock grazing, cutting chemical inputs and other practices. 

Rob Myers, director for the Center for Regenerative Agriculture at the University of Missouri, estimates cover crop plantings swelled to as much as 22 million acres in 2021. That is up 43% from the 15.4 million acres planted in 2017, according to the most recent U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) data. 

“There are so many things pushing cover crops forward. The carbon payments are the newest thing. We’ve seen a tremendous farmer interest in soil health,” he said. 

Myers estimates that by the end of the decade between 40 million and 50 million acres of cover crops will be planted annually. 

The surge will likely accelerate as government and private conservation programs expand, experts say. 

An even greater expansion of cover crop acreage in coming years could be a boon to seed and fertilizer companies, though the companies say it is hard to predict which cover crops farmers will decide to plant. 

Companies including Bayer, Land O’Lakes and Cargill Inc have launched carbon farming programs over the past two years that pay growers for capturing carbon by planting cover crops and reducing soil tillage. 

Land O’Lakes subsidiary Truterra paid out $4 million to U.S. farmers enrolled in its carbon program in 2021 for efforts the company says trapped 200,000 metric tons of carbon in soils. 

Others are expanding from small pilot programs, including Cargill, which aims to increase its sponsored sustainable farming programs to 10 million acres by the end of the decade, up from around 360,000 acres currently. Seedmaker Corteva Inc boosted its carbon offering from three U.S. states to 11 for the 2022 season. 

Federal conservation programs have for years paid farmers to set aside environmentally sensitive lands such as flood plains or wildlife habitat, and the Biden administration plans to expand those programs. President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better legislation targeted some $28 billion for conservation programs, including up to $5 billion in payments to farmers and landowners for planting cover crops, though the bill’s fate remains unclear. 

‘Want to do it’ 

Much of the growth in cover crop plantings to date has been led by a limited number of conservation-conscious farmers pursuing other goals such as soil fertility or water management. Program payments rarely cover the cost of seeds and labor. 

“You’ve got to want to do it,” said McCormick, who has increased his cover crop acres more than tenfold over the past six years and received his first payment from Bayer this autumn. 

“If somebody wants to hand me a couple of bucks an acre for something I’m doing, I’ll take it. But I wouldn’t do it just for the incentive. I don’t think the incentives are great enough,” he said, adding that his main motivation is the role played by cover crops in improving soil and making his farm more drought tolerant. 

Similarly, Ohio farmer Dave Gruenbaum rapidly increased his cover crop plantings beginning five years ago after liquidating his dairy herd, expanding to all of his 1,700 acres in each of the past two years. 

“It’s about having something green growing year-round,” he said. “It’s amazing how the soil is changing.” 

Gruenbaum enrolled in a program administered by Truterra, which has helped to offset a portion of his planting and labor cost. 

Some experts caution that the shift to planting more off-season cover crops could result in narrower planting windows for farmers’ main cash crops, particularly if climate change triggers more volatile spring weather. 

Cover crop seed shortages are also likely. 

“There’s an incredible pulse of demand coming … The demand for seed is going to exceed supply so there’s going to be a huge supply challenge,” Jason Weller, president of Truterra, told an American Seed Trade Association conference in Chicago last month. 

While emissions from destroying the crops are minimal, some critics still say the practice will increase applications of farm chemicals as acres expand. 

Environmentalists say cover crop planting is still an improvement on traditional agriculture, which normally leaves fields fallow for half the year and foregoes an enormous amount of plants’ carbon-capture potential. 

“Cover crops can be a really important part of organic and regenerative farming systems,” said Amanda Starbuck, research director with Food and Water Watch. “But it all depends on how they’re being implemented.” 

China’s Economy Could Overtake US Economy by 2030

China’s economy will increasingly rely on state investment, high-tech development and domestic consumption – with less input from its past staple of export manufacturing – as it stands to overtake the United States in the coming decade, analysts predict. 

China’s GDP should grow 5.7% per year through 2025 and then 4.7% annually until 2030, British consultancy Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) forecasts. Its forecast says that China, now the world’s second-largest economy, would overtake the No. 1-ranked U.S. economy by 2030. Credit insurance firm Euler Hermes made a similar forecast. 

Chinese leaders have pushed over the past decade to rely more on value-added services over traditional factory exports, state media have said.  The Sino-U.S. trade dispute and early 2020 workplace closures due to COVID-19 have added pressure on manufacturing. 

Reducing factory output in China, foreign multinationals have been expanding outside China, targeting places such as Vietnam to avoid rising wages and environmental compliance costs. By offshoring in multiple countries they hope to head off any repeat of China’s early 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns that shut down factories.

 

China’s economy totaled $15.92 trillion in 2020, and market research firm IHS Markit estimates that it reached $18 trillion last year on export manufacturing growth and capital for new projects. The U.S. economy reached about $23 trillion last year, the market research firm said.

State investment

The country that’s already known for fast economic growth over the past 20 years would see the state take more control over key sectors after intervening in several, including the internet, in 2021, economists expect.

 

“Beijing has the funds and the unfettered domestic political power to use China’s large public treasury to make strategic investments in the service of the leadership’s national and global objectives,” said Denny Roy, senior fellow at the East-West Center think tank in Honolulu.

China scored 2.98 in 2018, up from 2.45 eight years earlier and approaching about three times the world average, on the Organisation for Economic Co-operation Development policy forum’s Direct Control Over Enterprises index. 

That means the government’s direct control over enterprises “well exceeded the open economy average” and “reflects China’s increasing emphasis on the role of the state in the economy under Xi Jinping,” the think tank Atlantic Council says in its October report China Pathfinder: Annual Scorecard .

Growth in tech hardware

Chinese leaders will probably prioritize tech, especially hardware that does not require constant innovation, as a growth engine, economists say.

State intervention in the internet sector won’t hobble expansion in semiconductors and infrastructure software, said Zennon Kapron, founder and director of the Shanghai-based financial industry research firm Kapronasia.

“If the country does become self-sufficient in terms of technology and then is able to sell and export those products and services that are based on the technology, then that would be a huge bump to its economy, because [that] is a key driver certainly of the U.S. GDP now,” Kapron said.

The U.S. economy will keep growing but without spurts through 2030, Kapron predicts.

China has a “huge base of engineers,” albeit less creativity than it needs to foster the “zany ideas” that drive development of new technology, said Douglas McWilliams, founder and executive deputy chairman of CEBR.

Consumer spending

Domestic spending has driven most of China’s economic growth before 2021 as the country reduced its exposure to the world in view of the Sino-U.S. trade dispute, McKinsey & Co. says in its China consumer report 2021. Supply chains have “matured and localized, and its innovation capabilities were enhanced” in turn, McKinsey & Co says.

That trend is likely to continue despite hits to income under lockdowns during the first year of COVID-19, analysts say. China’s population exceeds that of the United States by 3.5 times, though American consumers are wealthier on average.

“In the past five years, domestic consumption has … become a more significant growth driver as China’s domestic consumer market has grown dramatically in size,” said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist with IHS Markit.

Beijing’s leadership “aims to create more than 11 million new urban jobs and expand domestic demand and effective investment,” the official Xinhua News Agency said in mid-2021. Those measures, it said, “are expected to put the economy firmly back to pre-pandemic vibrancy.”

What if China overtakes US economy?

Status as the world’s largest economy does not confer any automatic advantages over others, economists said, but countries dependent on the Chinese economy would take note.

“There is no gold medal or anything like that,” CEBR’s McWilliams told VOA. “But when you’ve got more money to spend, you do have the ability to influence things, and China will have that ability to influence things.”

China would be better placed, he said, to advance its Belt and Road Initiative, a 9-year-old effort aimed at building land and sea trade routes through Asia, Europe and Africa in the form of infrastructure projects and investments.

Officials in Beijing are already leveraging their economy in disputes with other countries, said Roy of the East-West Center. China vies with four Southeast Asian governments over maritime sovereignty, contests a group of islets with Japan and has gotten into territorial standoffs with India since 2017.

“The result of that expectation (China surpassing the United States economically) has been a bolder PRC (People’s Republic of China) foreign policy that seeks to settle regional disputes in China’s favor and to de-legitimize U.S. regional and global leadership under the assumption that China is destined to set the new rules of international relations,” Roy said. 

Famous Australian Skin Cancer Ad Returns to the Airwaves

On the 40th anniversary of a famous skin cancer campaign, research has revealed that a high number of young Australians are not using sun protection. 

Australia has one of the highest rates of skin cancer in the world. A new multi-million-dollar awareness campaign hopes to repeat the success of the ‘Slip Slop Slap’ advertisement of the early 1980s.  

“Sid the seagull” the voice of the advertisement’s jingle, urged Australians to protect themselves from the sun with a shirt, sunscreen and a hat. It is an enduring message that has educated generations of people since it was released 40 years ago. 

But the government believes rates of skin cancer are too high. The disease kills about 1,300 Australians each year. Research has shown that more than a quarter of Australians do not use any protection from the sun’s ultra-violet radiation. 

Heather Walker, from the charity, the Cancer Council, says teenagers need to be reminded of the sun’s dangers. 

“We do have a lot of work to do particularly in the secondary school setting and with young adults. But encouragingly, older adults are using sun protection more. So, it does seem to be a dip in the lifecycle and then people do come back to sun protection, which is really encouraging. But the other group that needs a reminder in particular is men. So, in Australia twice as many men as women die from melanoma and that is a huge disparity,” Walker said.

Now, Australia is launching the first national skin cancer campaign in more than a decade. Sid the seagull’s famous ‘slip, slop, slap’ message has been updated to encourage Australians to also seek shade and slide on a pair of sunglasses. 

Health authorities have said that skin cancer is Australia’s most common cancer, and it is almost entirely preventable. 

The World Cancer Research Fund states that Australia has the highest melanoma rates in the world followed by New Zealand, Norway and Denmark. It is expected that 16,000 Australians will be diagnosed this year with melanoma, a malignant tumor associated with skin cancer, according to government figures. 

The Australian Cancer Council lists three main types of skin cancers: basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma. 

Markets Open 2022 With Records, Apple Briefly Hits $3 Trillion in Value

Global stocks began 2022 in bullish fashion, with major bourses notching records and Apple’s valuation briefly hitting $3 trillion as investors monitor the COVID-19 pandemic and looming central bank rate decisions. 

The CAC 40 index in Paris kicked off the rally with new intraday and closing records while Frankfurt’s DAX rose 0.9 percent in thin holiday trading. London and Tokyo were among global markets that were shuttered for holidays. 

On Wall Street, both the Dow and S&P 500 ended at records as indices pushed higher. 

Apple briefly climbed to $3 trillion in value, becoming the first U.S. company to hit that benchmark. The tech giant’s valuation later retreated, though its share price was 2.5 percent higher at the close. 

“Welcome to 2022, which is looking like 2021 so far for the equity market,” market analyst Patrick O’Hare at Briefing.com said. 

The market “looks as if it will keep riding the rails with the help of new inflows that are typically seen on the first trading day of a new month,” he added. 

Monday’s landmarks come on the heels of a series of all-time highs in December as markets continue to bet the latest surge in COVID-19 cases won’t derail economic growth. 

Comments from health experts characterizing the omicron variant as less lethal than earlier COVID-19 strains have boosted markets. 

A bigger question mark is the shift in monetary policy, with investors now betting that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates later this year.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note vaulted above 1.6 percent Monday, the latest indication of this expectation.

A note from Briefing.com said the rise in yields may also reflect “an improving perspective on the economy.” 

Oil prices

Elsewhere, oil prices finished a volatile session higher as eyes turn to the meeting of OPEC and other major producers on Tuesday. 

So far OPEC+ has resisted pressure by top oil-consuming nations, such as the United States, to more aggressively boost production.

The 23 members of OPEC+ are expected to continue to stay the course and modestly boost output at their monthly meeting to be held via videoconference. 

 

Biden Unveils Plan to Boost Competition in US Meat Industry

The United States will issue new rules and $1 billion in funding this year to support independent meat processors and ranchers as part of a plan to address a lack of “meaningful competition” in the meat sector, President Joe Biden said on Monday. 

The initiative comes amid rising concerns that a handful of big beef, pork and poultry companies have too much control over the American meat market, allowing them to dictate wholesale and retail pricing to profit at the expense of their suppliers and customers. 

“Capitalism without competition isn’t capitalism. It’s exploitation,” Biden said. “That’s what we’re seeing in meat and poultry industries now.” 

A recent White House analysis found that the top four meatpacker companies – Cargill, Tyson Foods Inc., JBS SA and National Beef Packing Co. – control between 55% and 85% of the market in the hog, cattle and chicken sectors. 

The Department of Agriculture (USDA) will spend the $1 billion from the American Rescue Plan to expand the independent meat processing sector, including funds for financing grants, guaranteed loans and worker training, said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who was speaking at an event with Biden. 

USDA will also propose rules this year to strengthen enforcement of the Packers and Stockyards Act and to clarify the meaning of “Product of USA” meat labels, which domestic ranchers have said unfairly advantage multinational companies that raise cattle abroad and only slaughter in the United States. 

Attorney General Merrick Garland, also speaking at the event, said “too many industries have become too consolidated over time,” and that the antitrust division of the Department of Justice has been chronically underfunded. 

The Biden administration issued an executive order last year that advocated a whole of government approach to antitrust issues. 

A central concern in agriculture has been meat prices, which have risen at a time when the White House is fighting inflation. An analysis in December by the White House economic council found a 120% jump in the gross profits of four top meatpackers since the pandemic began. 

Reaction to plan

The meat industry has said the White House analysis was inaccurate and criticized the new plan. 

National Chicken Council President Mike Brown called the plan “a solution in search of a problem.” 

North American Meat Institute spokesperson Sarah Little said staffing plants remains the biggest issue for meatpackers and that the White House plan would not address it. 

“Our members of all sizes cannot operate at capacity because they struggle to employ a long-term stable workforce,” she said. “New capacity and expanded capacity created by the government will have the same problem.” 

Eric Deeble, policy director at the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, cheered the plan, calling it a “very positive step to ensure farmers and ranchers receive fair prices.” 

The anticipated rulemaking under the Packers and Stockyards Act “could have a significant impact,” said Peter Carstensen, emeritus professor of law at University of Wisconsin-Madison and former antitrust attorney at the Department of Justice. But he noted that investment in independent processing itself would not address market concentration. 

Austin Frerick, deputy director of the Thurman Arnold Project at Yale University, an antitrust research center, said the plan does not go far enough to tackle the power of the top meatpackers. 

“I do not believe this (plan) will meaningfully change the concentration numbers,” he said. 

 

Ambulance Service for Poor Helps Residents of Nairobi’s Largest Slum

A community health service in Africa’s largest urban slum is helping poor people get affordable emergency services during the COVID pandemic.  The Kibera community emergency response team in Nairobi is offering a $1 monthly fee for access to emergency services, including an ambulance.  Victoria Amunga has more from Nairobi.

Camera:  Robert Lutta