Tag Archives: surging

US food banks struggle to feed hungry amid surging prices

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — U.S. food banks already dealing with increased demand from families sidelined by the pandemic now face a new challenge — surging food prices and supply chain issues walloping the nation.

The higher costs and limited availability mean some families may get smaller servings or substitutions for staples such as peanut butter, which costs nearly double what it did a year ago. As holidays approach, some food banks worry they won’t have enough stuffing and cranberry sauce for Thanksgiving and Christmas.

“What happens when food prices go up is food insecurity for those who are experiencing it just gets worse,” said Katie Fitzgerald, chief operating officer of Feeding America, a nonprofit organization that coordinates the efforts of more than 200 food banks across the country.

Food banks that expanded to meet unprecedented demand brought on by the pandemic won’t be able to absorb forever food costs that are two to three times what they used to be, she said,

Supply chain disruptions, lower inventory and labor shortages have all contributed to increased costs for charities on which tens of millions of people in the U.S. rely on for nutrition. Donated food is more expensive to move because transportation costs are up, and bottlenecks at factories and ports make it difficult to get goods of all kinds.

If a food bank has to swap out for smaller sizes of canned tuna or make substitutions in order to stretch their dollars, Fitzgerald said, it’s like adding “insult to injury” to a family reeling from uncertainty.

In the prohibitively expensive San Francisco Bay Area, the Alameda County Community Food Bank in Oakland is spending an extra $60,000 a month on food. Combined with increased demand, it is now shelling out $1 million a month to distribute 4.5 million pounds (2 million kilograms) of food, said Michael Altfest, the Oakland food bank’s director of community engagement.

Pre-pandemic, it was spending a quarter of the money for 2.5 million pounds (1.2 million kilograms) of food.

The cost of canned green beans and peaches is up nearly 9% for them, Altfest said; canned tuna and frozen tilapia up more than 6%; and a case of 5-pound frozen chickens for holiday tables is up 13%. The price for dry oatmeal has climbed 17%.

On Wednesdays, hundreds of people line up outside a church in east Oakland for its weekly food giveaway. Shiloh Mercy House feeds about 300 families on those days, far less than the 1,100 families it was nourishing at the height of the pandemic, said Jason Bautista, the charity’s event manager. But he’s still seeing new people every week.

“And a lot of people are just saying they can’t afford food,” he said. “I mean they have the money to buy certain things, but it’s just not stretching.”

Families can also use a community market Shiloh opened in May. Refrigerators contain cartons of milk and eggs while sacks of hamburger buns and crusty baguettes sit on shelves.

Oakland resident Sonia Lujan-Perez, 45, picked up chicken, celery, onions bread and and potatoes — enough to supplement a Thanksgiving meal for herself, 3-year-old daughter and 18-year-old son. The state of California pays her to care for daughter Melanie, who has special needs, but it’s not enough with monthly rent at $2,200 and the cost of milk, citrus, spinach and chicken so high.

“That is wonderful for me because I will save a lot of money,” she said, adding that the holiday season is rough with Christmas toys for the children.

It’s unclear to what extent other concurrent government aid, including an expanded free school lunch program in California and an increase in benefits for people in the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, will offset rising food prices. An analysis by the Urban Institute think tank in Washington, D.C. found that while most households are expected to receive sufficient maximum benefits for groceries, a gap still exists in 21 percent of U.S. rural and urban counties.

Bryan Nichols, vice president of sales for Transnational Foods Inc., which delivers to more than 100 food banks associated with Feeding America, said canned foods from Asia— such as fruit cocktail, pears and mandarin oranges— have been stuck overseas because of a lack of shipping container space.

Issues in supply seem to be improving and prices stabilizing, but he expects costs to stay high after so many people got out of the shipping business during the pandemic. “An average container coming from Asia prior to COVID would cost about $4,000. Today, that same container is about $18,000,” he said.

At the Care and Share Food Bank for Southern Colorado in Colorado Springs, CEO Lynne Telford says the cost for a truckload of peanut butter —40,000 pounds (18,100 kilograms)_has soared 80% from June 2019 to $51,000 in August. Mac and cheese is up 19% from a year ago and the wholesale cost of ground beef has increased 5% in three months. They’re spending more money to buy food to make up for waning donations and there’s less to choose from.

The upcoming holidays worry her. For one thing, the donation cost to buy a frozen turkey has increased from $10 to $15 per bird.

“The other thing is that we’re not getting enough holiday food, like stuffing and cranberry sauce. So we’re having to supplement with other kinds of food, which you know, makes us sad,” said Telford, whose food bank fed more than 200,000 people last year, distributing 25 million pounds (11.3 million kilograms) of food.

Alameda County Community Food Bank says it is set for Thanksgiving, with cases of canned cranberry and boxes of mashed potatoes among items stacked in its expanded warehouse. Food resourcing director Wilken Louie ordered eight truckloads of frozen 5-pound chickens —which translates into more than 60,000 birds— to give away free, as well as half-turkeys available at cost.

For that, Martha Hasal is grateful.

“It’s going to be an expensive Thanksgiving, turkey is not going to cost like the way it was,” said Hasal as she loaded up on on cauliflower and onions on behalf of the Bay Area American Indian Council. “And they’re not giving out turkey. So thank God they’re giving out the chicken.”

——

AP reporters Terence Chea in Oakland and Ashraf Khalil in Washington contributed to this story.

Read original article here

Southwest and British Airways deals send Velocys shares surging

pic4you | E+ | Getty Images

Shares of London-listed fuels technology firm Velocys rose by more than 40% on Wednesday after it announced two deals related to the supply of aviation fuel.

In a statement, the company said its subsidiary, Velocys Renewables, had entered into an agreement with Southwest Airlines.

The deal relates to a planned biorefinery in Mississippi, with Southwest set to buy an expected 219 million gallons of sustainable aviation fuel at a fixed price across a period of 15 years.

“After blending, this will enable approximately 575 million gallons of net zero SAF,” Velocys said. The Bayou Fuels biorefinery is slated to start commercial delivery of fuel “as early as 2026.”

In addition to the deal with Southwest, Velocys Renewables signed a memorandum of understanding with the International Consolidated Airlines Group. Again, the deal is connected to the Bayou Fuels project.

According to Velocys, it “covers the purchase by IAG’s constituent airlines, which includes British Airways, Aer Lingus and Iberia amongst others, of an expected 73 million gallons of SAF, in aggregate, at a fixed price.”

Read more about clean energy from CNBC Pro

The purchase contract is due to last for 10 years from 2026. Post blending, the equivalent of 192 million gallons of net zero SAF will be generated.

In a statement issued alongside Velocys’ announcement, IAG’s CEO, Luis Gallego, described the agreement as “another important step towards achieving our goal of 10 per cent sustainable aviation fuel use by 2030.”

Although the European Union Aviation Safety Agency says there’s “not a single internationally agreed definition” of sustainable aviation fuel, the overarching idea is that it can be used to reduce an aircraft’s emissions.

According to Velocys, Bayou Fuels will focus on processing waste from the lumber and paper industries, which it describes as “woody biomass forest residue that would otherwise rot on the forest floor or contribute to forest fires.”

Carbon capture and storage technology will be used at the project to allow for what Velocys calls “the commercial-scale production of SAF with an extremely negative carbon intensity.”

Aviation’s challenge

As concerns about sustainability and the environment mount — the World Wildlife Fund describes air travel as “the most carbon intensive activity an individual can make” — discussions around aviation are increasingly focused on how innovations and ideas could cut its environmental footprint.

In a recent interview with CNBC’s Steve Sedgwick, Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary was cautious when it came to the outlook for new and emerging technologies in the sector.

“I think … we should be honest again,” he said. “Certainly, for the next decade … I don’t think you’re going to see any — there’s no technology out there that’s going to replace … carbon, jet aviation.”

“I don’t see the arrival of … hydrogen fuels, I don’t see the arrival of sustainable fuels, I don’t see the arrival of electric propulsion systems, certainly not before 2030,” he went on to say.

“So it will certainly be after my career in the airline industry is finished … but I hope it will get here before the end of our mortal lives.”

Read original article here

San Diego Home Prices Surging Once Again – NBC 7 San Diego

U.S. home prices jumped in August by a near-record amount from a year earlier, as Americans eager to buy a home drove up prices on a dwindling number of properties.

The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index soared 19.7% in August compared with a year ago. That increase is just below July’s 20% jump, which was the largest gain on records dating back to 2000. Home prices are now at all-time highs in all 20 cities in the index.

As many struggle to find affordable housing, NBC 7’s Artie Ojeda shows how some people are making a giant decision to move into a tiny living space.

Phoenix reported the biggest price increase among the 20 cities that make up the index, as it has for more than two years. Its home prices increased 33.3% in August compared with a year earlier. Home prices in San Diego jumped 26.2%, the second highest, and Tampa’s home prices rose 25.9%, the third-largest gain.

Home sales have been healthy for most of this year, spurred by an ongoing desire among many people for greater space to wait out the coronavirus pandemic. Mortgage rates have also been historically low, though they have risen in recent weeks, and many Americans have become wealthier since the pandemic as stock prices have moved steadily higher, enabling them to afford a new home.

There are signs that the rapid price gains of the past year are cooling a bit. August’s price increases, compared with a year ago, were slightly lower than in July, the first decline in annual price gains since June 2020. And price increases slowed in 12 of the 20 cities in the Case-Shiller CoreLogic index.

“The slowing acceleration in home prices suggests that buyer fatigue is setting in, particularly among higher-priced homes,” said Selma Hepp, CoreLogic Deputy Chief Economist.

Mortgage rates rose to 3.1% last week, the highest since April, according to mortgage-buyer Freddie Mac.

That increase likely pushed more people to look for and buy homes, before rates move even higher. Sales of existing homes jumped 7% in September.

Potential buyers still have relatively few homes to choose from, with just 1.27 million houses on the market in September, down 13% in the past year. That’s pushed many buyers to move quickly.

Homes are typically selling within 17 days of hitting the market, according to the National Association of Realtors, and 86% of homes sold in September were on the market for fewer than 30 days.

Read original article here

Natural Gas Prices Are Surging. Here Are the Stocks to Tap the Rally.

Royal Dutch Shell operates a plant in Qatar, known as Pearl GTL, that transforms natural gas into liquid fuels.


Stuart W. Conway/Shell International Limited

Text size

Natural gas has long been oil’s poor step-cousin, a commodity that many ignore until they have to pay their heating bill.

Now, natural gas is the lead player in a drama that is gradually dragging down the world economy. A surge in the price of the commodity—along with other fuel sources, like coal and propane—is forcing countries to reduce factory production, and could drive heating and electricity prices sky-high this winter.

Analysts have already been downgrading global growth forecasts based on the energy crunch. Goldman Sachs recently forecast that China wouldn’t grow at all in the third quarter versus the prior quarter, in part because of its energy problems. In the United Kingdom, power companies serving nearly two million people have gone out of business.

In the U.S., natural-gas futures rose above $6 per million British thermal units (BTUs) during the week, nearly quadrupling from their pandemic lows. Oil demand is rising with gas, as some utilities are likely to switch their input fuel to oil as gas stays expensive.

The problem is even more acute in places that have to import more of their fuel. Europe and Asia are bidding up the cost of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, to secure enough for winter. European gas prices have roughly quadrupled from their five-year average, and were recently trading at a record $32 per million BTUs, according to S&P Global Platts Analytics. The Asian benchmark price hit an all-time high of $34 on Thursday.

There is no simple answer for why multiple energy sources are expensive and scarce today. A cold spell late last winter in Europe led to low levels of gas in storage. U.S. producers, which account for the largest share of gas production in the world, have held back on drilling new wells as they work to get their balance sheets in line after years of overspending. The Chinese economy had been rebounding, causing demand to surge just as supplies were running low. And the prices of other commodities such as coal have been rising too, making it difficult for power producers like utilities to switch their input fuels. Oil and gas have also been beset by the same problems facing all global markets—too few workers to move the fuel.

Climate change’s role in the power crunch is also tricky. Carbon emissions are leading to more severe weather that is damaging energy infrastructure. One reason oil and gas supplies are low now is that Hurricane Ida damaged infrastructure in the Gulf of Mexico, taking substantial supplies off line.

But combating climate change also brings challenges. The transition to cleaner fuels hasn’t always gone smoothly. One reason European power prices have increased is that the wind simply didn’t blow enough in recent weeks to power turbines that make up a growing portion of the Continent’s power supply.

“There will be two parties in this debate,” says Daniel Yergin, an expert in energy markets who is vice chairman at IHS Markit. “One is saying let’s go faster, and the other is saying you’re going too fast. Don’t constrain investment when you don’t really have sufficient alternatives to replace what you’re constraining.”

For investors, the power crunch opens up new opportunities. It could be months before the market comes back into balance. A cold winter could lead to even higher prices that would not only sap economic growth but possibly cause political upheaval.

The obvious beneficiaries would seem to be natural-gas producers. But it isn’t quite so simple, in part because most producers have already hedged their 2021 production and most of their 2022 output at lower prices. “Any of the hedges even for next year are well under $3,” says Truist Securities analyst Neal Dingmann.

He thinks that investors can still get natural-gas exposure, and benefit from rising oil prices too, by purchasing stocks of oil companies that also happen to be large gas producers.

Among those are


Cimarex Energy

(ticker: XEC), which won shareholder approval this week to merge with


Cabot Oil & Gas

(COG). Cabot is unhedged on 2022 production as of its latest earnings report. Similarly, dry natural gas and natural gas liquids account for nearly half of production at


Marathon Oil

(MRO), which also has reported relatively few hedges for this year and next, Dingmann says.

Larger oil companies tend not to hedge production, either. Among the biggest beneficiaries could be


Royal Dutch Shell

(RDS.B), a major producer of propane, whose prices have also skyrocketed, Dingmann notes. “In the third quarter, I think people are going to be very surprised” by how much these companies make from gas, he says.

Another way to play these dynamics is to invest in companies that are key cogs in the global supply system, like


Cheniere Energy

(LNG), whose terminals on the Gulf Coast allow U.S. gas to be processed and shipped overseas. Small-cap


Tellurian

(TELL) offers exposure to the same theme, though it is more speculative.

“It’s excellent for LNG companies,” says Rebecca Babin, senior energy trader at CIBC Private Wealth Management. “There was concern that there was overinvestment in LNG as recently as two years ago.” No longer.

Some petrochemical companies could benefit, too. Chemical plants need natural gas to run. Those with operations in the U.S. are in better shape because they’re paying relatively less, notes Rich Redash, the head of global gas planning at S&P Global Platts. That could benefit


Dow

(DOW) and


LyondellBasell Industries

(LYB). b

Write to Avi Salzman at avi.salzman@barrons.com

Read original article here

Surging Yankees move ahead of Red Sox in standings with sweep

The last time the Yankees finished a series against the Red Sox, they’d lost three of four at Fenway Park — including two in brutal fashion and trailed the first-place Sox by nine games.

Less than three weeks later, the Yankees swept Boston out of The Bronx, winning their sixth straight, 5-2, Wednesday night and broke a three-way tie for the two AL wild-card spots.

Andrew Heaney, last seen getting pummeled again by the long ball in the cornfields of Iowa, allowed just one run over seven innings and the lineup used a four-run second inning to provide the offense.

And Anthony Rizzo, in his return from the COVID IL, had a two-run single in the second.

Aroldis Chapman, also coming off the injured list (left elbow inflammation) made things interesting in the ninth, allowing a run and leaving with runners on the corners with two outs.

Lucas Luetge got Kevin Plawecki to ground into the hole, where Andrew Velazquez made a sliding stop and a strong throw to first which Rizzo picked in time to get Plawecki. The play was upheld on review.

Anthony Rizzo belts a two-run single in the second inning of the Yankees’ 5-2 win over the Red Sox.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Heaney had allowed eight homers in his first three starts since arriving in a trade with the Angels and his home run woes continued in the top of the first.

After Kiké Hernandez opened the game by driving a ball to the wall in right that Aaron Judge tracked down, Heaney gave up a two-out opposite-field shot by Xander Bogaerts into the second deck in right to put the Yankees in an early 1-0 hole.

But Heaney was superb after the first and gave up just one hit and a pair of walks following the homer in his seven-inning outing, matching a season-high.

The Yankees broke through in the bottom of the second, as Giancarlo Stanton led off with a sharp single to left and Rougned Odor walked on a close 3-2 pitch by Nick Pivetta.

Gary Sanchez followed with a bloop to right that a charging J.D. Martinez nearly caught.

But the ball squirted out of his glove. Martinez threw to second, where Odor was initially ruled out on a force, but the Yankees challenged the play and it was reversed.

That brought up Brett Gardner with the bases loaded and no one out. Gardner’s sacrifice fly to center tied the game at 1-1.

Velazquez’s single up the middle drove in Odor from second to make it 2-1.

With LeMahieu at the plate, Velazquez stole second. LeMahieu hit a chopper to Rafael Devers’ left at third and Devers made an excellent stop and throw to get LeMahieu at first and prevent the runners from moving up — briefly.

Rizzo, who’d been out since Aug. 8, singled when Bobby Dalbec couldn’t handle his hard grounder to first. Sanchez and Velazquez both scored to build a 4-1 lead.

Velazquez added another RBI single in the eighth to drive in Sanchez and extend the Yankees’ lead to 5-1.

Heaney bounced back from the Bogaerts homer to retire seven straight and didn’t allow another hit until Plawecki led off the fifth with a single.

It was a stark turnaround from Heaney’s first three outings, when he’d given up 15 runs in 15 innings.

Zack Britton returned to his eighth-inning role and retired the side in order, as he tries to regain his form for the stretch run.

The one concern of the night was Chapman, who was shaky after having not pitched since Aug. 5.

He allowed a mammoth homer to Hunter Renfroe and struggled with his command, going to a full count against Hernandez and walking Bogaerts.

With Bogaerts on first and one out, Rizzo made a nice play on Devers’ hard grounder for the second out.

Martinez then came to the plate and ripped a single to right, ending Chapman’s night, as the Yankees went to Luetge to face Plawecki.

Read original article here

Orange County coronavirus: Mayor of Florida county home to Disney World sounds alarm on surging Covid cases

“These numbers are extraordinary. We are seeing nearly 1,000 new cases in Orange County daily. Those are the numbers we saw at the highest peak last year,” Mayor Jerry Demings, a Democrat, said Monday during a news conference. “So a thousand a day is extraordinary. We are now in crisis mode.”

Urging the county’s residents to get vaccinated, Demings added: “We, as a community, need to work together to slow the spread.”

“Residents are still getting vaccinated, but at a slow pace. We need to move the needle faster. 61.59% of Orange County residents ages 12 and above have had at least one shot of the vaccine,” he said.

The comments from the mayor come as Florida is seeing a surge in coronavirus cases, with every county in the state listed as having “high” levels of community transmission, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

CNN has reached out to Disney for comment.

Orange County hosts not only Walt Disney World and Universal Studios Orlando Resort, but also SeaWorld Orlando. The parks dropped many of their pandemic-era rules in recent months, including temperature checks for guests. Fully vaccinated guests do not need to wear face masks in the parks, and while Universal isn’t requiring social distancing among visitors, its website says the park encourages “all guests to keep a safe distance between travel parties.”

Over the past week, Florida accounted for nearly a quarter of all new cases in the United States — more than any other state.

The case rate in the state over the past week — about 49 new cases per 100,000 people each day — is more than three times the US rate of about 16 new cases per 100,000 people each day. Only Arkansas and Louisiana had higher case rates over the past week.

Florida also reported more Covid-19 deaths than any other state over the past week — a total of 282 over the past week — the sixth highest per capita rate of deaths in the country.

The state has fully vaccinated 48.5% of its residents, according to data from the CDC — below the US rate of 49.1%.

Read original article here

COVID Cases Surging in California a Month After Reopening | Lost Coast Outpost

A month after California’s reopening lifted most pandemic restrictions, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are rising, worrying public health officials as they contend with the more infectious Delta variant and the lagging pace of vaccinations in some communities.

Los Angeles County has drawn particular concern, with five straight days of more than 1,000 new cases, a five-fold increase from mid-June.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on June 15 officially ended the state’s stay-at-home and mandatory mask orders affecting 40 million people, allowing most businesses to fully reopen. Vaccinated or not, many unmasked Californians eagerly crowded into reopened stores, restaurants, churches and sporting events..

The fallout: On Wednesday, nearly 3,100 new COVID-19 cases were reported, compared to 700 on June 15. And the state’s test positivity rate – a measure of how much virus is circulating in a community – jumped from 0.08% to 3%, according to the California Department of Public Health.

The actual numbers of cases remain small, however, compared to the peak of California’s devastating winter surge, when new daily cases topped 50,000.

Case counts and testing results can fluctuate because of reporting delays. But public health officials in some areas have reported notable spikes in cases and hospitalizations.

Between June 12 and July 12, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Orange counties saw the biggest jumps in the 7-day average of COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people, excluding very low-population counties, according to a CalMatters data analysis. San Francisco’s case rate nearly quadrupled to slightly more than six cases per 100,000 people. Los Angeles’ case rate nearly tripled, and Orange County’s more than doubled.

About 1,935 people were hospitalized statewide with confirmed or suspected cases on Wednesday, up about 54% compared to hospitalizations on reopening day. Hospitalization rates spiked in Yolo, Marin, El Dorado, Sonoma and Alameda counties.

Nearly all of the new cases, hospitalizations and deaths have been seen in unvaccinated people. About 40% of Californians remain unvaccinated.

Which raises the question: Did California reopen too soon?

Not necessarily, according to Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, a University of California, San Francisco infectious disease specialist.

“I think we were a very good place in California when we reopened,” Chin-Hong told CalMatters. “And we had no idea what the Delta variant was going to do.”

California waited longer than most states to reopen fully, Chin-Hong pointed out. “We always expected an increase in cases after that.”

California’s regional surges echo those around the nation, with COVID-19 cases rising by more than 50% this past week in 31 states and hot spots reemerging in Missouri, Arkansas and Florida.

Across California, the Delta variant as of July 7 has been found in 1,085 COVID-19 patients whose test results were genetically sequenced, according to the state public health agency. But as a percentage of the state’s cases, it has grown incredibly fast, from just 2.2% of all tests sequenced in April to about 43% of all tests in June.

Chin-Hong says it’s important to distinguish between infections and those that cause serious symptoms or death, because COVID-19 vaccines remain strongly protective against both, even against the Delta variant.

The death rate has actually declined slightly since reopening day; with most California seniors vaccinated, serious cases are seen far more often in younger people, who are more likely to survive the disease. About 70% of the state’s COVID-19 cases as of July 7 were seen in people under age 50.

Improved treatments, including monoclonal antibodies, also have improved patients’ chances.

Still, 30 deaths were reported statewide on Wednesday. About 1,935 people were hospitalized statewide with confirmed or suspected cases, up about 54% compared to the number of hospitalizations on June 15.

Chin-Hong said unvaccinated Californians accounted for nearly all of the hospitalizations and deaths. So-called breakthrough infections remain exceedingly rare in fully-vaccinated people, a tiny fraction of 1% among more than 20 million Californians.

There was a lot of second-guessing before and after Gov. Gavin Newsom’s decision to largely end pandemic restrictions in mid-June.

In late May, Santa Clara County public health officer Dr. Sara Cody – who helped spearhead one of the nation’s first shelter-in-place orders – voiced concerns about the state’s pace of reopening and warned of a potential surge in cases.

Two weeks after California’s reopening, Los Angeles County health director Dr. Barbara Ferrer recommended residents once again wear masks as the Delta variant surged throughout the state and nationwide.

But Chin-Hong suggests that these COVID-19 surges will become a regular part of life in California, much like flu season. It’s just that unvaccinated people will be far more likely to be hospitalized and die, he said.

“Just like there will be two Americas, there will be two Californias: the California of the vaccinated and the California of the unvaccinated,” he said. “If (non-elderly) people didn’t get a flu shot, they’ll probably do fine but with COVID, you’re going to have a very different trajectory.”

###

CalMatters data editor John Osborn D’Agostino contributed to this report. CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

Read original article here

Covid cases are surging again in Latin America and the U.S., WHO officials warn

People hold their arms after receiving the Johnson & Johnson vaccine against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), as part of a government plan to inoculate Mexican border residents on its shared frontier with the United States, in Tijuana, Mexico June 17, 2021.

Jorge Duenes | Reuters

Covid infections are rapidly rising again in the U.S. and Latin America as more contagious variants spread, putting the entire region at risk, World Health Organization officials said in a briefing Wednesday.

Renewed spikes in infections are also exacerbating instability and violence across several countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, officials said, noting political upheaval in Haiti, Cuba and other nations as the delta variant takes hold in the Americas.

“Many countries, including the United States, are seeing a resurgence of infections in North America, the U.S. and Mexico are reporting an increase in new infections across most states, many Central American nations are also seeing cases,” Dr. Carissa Etienne, director of the Pan American Health Organization, the WHO’s regional bureau for the Americas, said Wednesday.

Central American and Caribbean countries like El Salvador, Guatemala, Cuba and the Virgin Islands are also seeing upticks in the number of new infections.

Thousands of protestors in Cuba took to the streets this week over frustrations with a crippled economy hit by food and power shortages. The rare protests, the largest the communist country has seen since the 1990s, come as the government struggles to contain the coronavirus pandemic, pushing the island’s fragile health-care system to the brink.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters Monday that Cubans were “tired of the mismanagement of the Cuban economy, tired of the lack of adequate food and, of course, an adequate response to the Covid-19 pandemic.”

The seven-day average of new cases in Cuba is up more than fourfold over the last month to 5,659 over the last seven days from an average of 1,256 a day in mid-June, according to CNBC’s analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Deaths on the small island nation have also climbed from about 10 a day a month ago to roughly 32, the data shows.

Overall, deaths and hospitalizations have been declining in South America in recent weeks. But with cases on the rise again officials expect hospitalizations and deaths, which often lag by a few weeks, could soon follow.

Cases in Argentina and Colombia are at record highs as new infections surpass levels seen at the beginning of the pandemic, according to Etienne. Nearby countries like Honduras and Guatemala have not secured enough vaccine doses to immunize even 1% of their population, which could be disastrous if increasing infections from nearby countries spill over, she said.

Colombia, along with Brazil, Cuba and Haiti are seeing situations where political unrest and waves of protests are making it even more difficult for health workers and residents to access lifesaving resources and maintain public messaging to encourage vaccinations.

“Growing violence, instability and crowded shelters could become active hotspots for Covid transmission,” Etienne said. “Limited supplies and violence are also hindering the ability of health workers to safely care for patients in need. In some cases, patients may be avoiding seeking to due to safety concerns.”

PAHO officials are working to get vaccines to Haiti where the island hasn’t yet begun to vaccinate its residents even though it was allocated 760,000 doses of AstraZeneca’s shots through the COVAX Facility, a WHO-backed effort to distribute doses to low-income nations across the world, according to The Washington Post. Violence erupted there following the assassination of President Jovenel Moise last week.

PAHO also warned about countries reopening their economies too soon, warning that countries that have successfully deterred initial waves of infection usually proceed to ignore necessary public health measures like masks and social distancing, leaving themselves open to renewed increases in cases by variants that may bypass vaccine protection.

“Health and well-being must be prerequisites for reactivating the economy in the context of Covid-19 because if the pandemic is not brought under control, economic reactivation will be very difficult,” Etienne said.

— CNBC’s Amanda Macias contributed to this article.

Read original article here

Surging California wildfire prompts Nevada evacuations

BECKWOURTH, Calif. (AP) — A Northern California wildfire exploding through bone-dry timber prompted Nevada authorities to evacuate a border-area community as flames leapt on ridgetops of nearby mountains.

The Beckwourth Complex — a merging of two lightning-caused fires — headed into Saturday showing no sign of slowing its rush northeast from the Sierra Nevada forest region after doubling in size only a few days earlier.

The fire was one of several threatening homes across Western states that are expected to see triple-digit heat through the weekend as a high-pressure zone blankets the region.

On Friday, Death Valley National Park in California recorded a staggering high of 130 degrees Fahrenheit (54.4 Celsius). If verified, it would be the hottest high recorded there since July 1913, when the same Furnace Creek desert area hit 134 degrees Fahrenheit (56.6 degrees Celsius), considered the highest reliably measured temperature on Earth.

California’s northern mountain areas already have seen several large fires that have destroyed more than a dozen homes. Although there are no confirmed reports of building damage, the fire prompted evacuation orders or warnings for hundreds of homes and several campgrounds in California along with the closure of nearly 200 square miles (518 square kilometers) of Plumas National Forest.

On Friday, ridgetop winds up to 20 mph (32.2 kph) combined with ferocious heat as the fire raged through bone-dry pine, fir and chaparral. As the fire’s northeastern flank raged near the border, the Washoe County Sheriff’s Office asked people to evacuate some areas in the rural communities of Ranch Haven and Flanagan Flats, north of Reno.

“Evacuate now,” a Sheriff’s Office tweet said.

Hot rising air formed a gigantic, smoky pyrocumulus cloud that reached thousands of feet high and created its own lightning, fire information officer Lisa Cox said Friday evening.

Spot fires caused by embers leapt up to a mile (1.6 kilometers) ahead of the northeastern flank — too far for firefighters to safely battle, and winds funneled the fire up draws and canyons full of dry fuel, where “it can actually pick up speed,” Cox said.

Nearly 1,000 firefighters were aided by aircraft but the blaze was expected to continue forging ahead because of the heat and low humidity that dried out vegetation. The air was so dry that some of the water dropped by aircraft evaporated before reaching the ground, Cox said.

“We’re expecting more of the same the day after and the day after and the day after,” Cox said.

The blaze, which was only 11% contained, officially had blackened more than 38 square miles (98 square kilometers) but that figure was expected to increase dramatically when fire officials were able to make better observations.

Meanwhile, other fires were burning in Oregon, Arizona and Idaho.

In Oregon, pushed by strong winds, a wildfire in Klamath County grew from nearly 26 square miles (67 square kilometers) Thursday to nearly 61 square miles (158 square kilometers) on Friday in the Fremont-Winema National Forest and on private land. An evacuation order was issued for people in certain areas north of Beatty and near Sprague River.

That fire was threatening transmission lines that send electricity to California, which along with expected heat-related demand prompted California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday to issue an emergency proclamation suspending some rules to allow for more power capacity.

The state’s electrical grid operator also issued a statewide Flex Alert from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, calling for consumers to voluntarily conserve electricity by reducing the use of appliances and keeping the thermostat higher during evening hours when solar energy is diminished or no longer available.

In north-central Arizona, increased humidity slowed a big wildfire that posed a threat to the rural community of Crown King. The 24.5-square-mile (63.5-square-kilometer) lightning-caused fire in Yavapai County was 29% contained. Recent rains allowed five national forests and state land managers to lift public-access closures.

In Idaho, Gov. Brad Little declared a wildfire emergency Friday and mobilized the state’s National Guard to help fight fires sparked after lightning storms swept across the drought-stricken region.

Fire crews in north-central Idaho were facing extreme conditions and gusts as they fought two wildfires covering a combined 19.5 square miles (50.5 square kilometers). The blazes threatened homes and forced evacuations in the tiny, remote community of Dixie about 40 miles (64 kilometers) southeast of Grangeville.

Read original article here

Covid-19 Is Surging in India, but Vaccinations Are Slow

MUMBAI — India is racing to contain a second wave of the coronavirus, but its vaccination campaign is running into doubters like Akbar Mohamed Patel.

A resident of Mumbai’s densely populated slum area of Dharavi, Mr. Patel survived a severe bout of the coronavirus in May. The first wave prompted Mumbai officials to seal off his housing complex, confining thousands of people for nearly two months.

Still, the current campaign has been marred by a slow initial government rollout, as well as skepticism and apathy from people like Mr. Patel and his neighbors. “On social media we come to know this is all a big game to make money,” Mr. Patel said. Of the vaccine, he said, “many things have been hidden.”

The coronavirus, once seemingly in retreat, is again rippling across India. Confirmed infections have risen to about 31,600 daily from a low of about 9,800 in February. In a recent two-week period, deaths shot up 82 percent.

The outbreak is centered on the state of Maharashtra, home to Mumbai, the country’s financial hub. Entire districts of the state have gone back into lockdown. Scientists are investigating whether a new strain found there is more virulent, like variants found in Britain, South Africa and Brazil.

Officials are under pressure from Prime Minister Narendra Modi to aggressively ramp up testing and vaccination, especially in Mumbai, to avoid disruptions like last year’s dramatic nationwide lockdown and resulting economic recession.

“I am very categorical that we should stop it, contain it, just here,” said Dr. Rahul Pandit, a critical care physician at a private hospital in Mumbai and a member of the Maharashtra Covid-19 task force.

India’s vaccination campaign could have global consequences.

Last week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that an expected drop in Britain’s Covid-19 vaccine supplies stemmed from a nearly monthlong delay in delivery of five million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine being manufactured in India. The reasons for the delay are not clear, but the manufacturer, Serum Institute of India, has said shipments will depend in part on domestic Indian needs.

India is a crucial link in the vaccination supply chain. Amid hoarding by the United States and other wealthy countries, India has given away or sold tens of millions of doses to other countries, even as it struggles to vaccinate its own people. Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, the foreign minister, has said that the availability of vaccines in India will determine how many doses go overseas.

While vaccinations were initially available only in public hospitals, India is now giving jabs in private clinics and enormous makeshift vaccination centers, and it is considering making them available in pharmacies, too. Vaccination hours have been extended, and those eligible can register in person and receive a shot the same day, bypassing an online scheduling system.

The Indian government is playing catch-up. Since it launched a nationwide vaccination drive two months ago, uptake has been disappointing. Less than 3 percent of the population has received a jab, including about half of health care workers. At the current rate, it will take India about a decade to vaccinate 70 percent of its people, according to one estimate. By comparison, roughly a quarter of the population of the United States has had at least one jab.

Not everybody in India has the internet access needed to register for a shot online. But the campaign has also been plagued by public skepticism. The government approved a domestically developed vaccine, called Covaxin, before its safety and efficacy trials were even over, though preliminary findings since then have suggested it works.

The other jab available in India is the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, which was suspended in some countries after a number of patients reported blood clots and strokes, though scientists haven’t found a link between the shots and the afflictions.

Some of the tepid response may come down to apathy. A nationwide study released in February found that one in five Indian people were likely to have already had Covid-19. Surveys in cities show even higher prevalence rates. The disease is just one among many that people in India worry about, joining tuberculosis, dengue fever and avian flu. Many people are struggling to recover from the huge financial hit of India’s lockdown last year and can’t afford to take time off work to stand in line for a shot.

“These are hand-to-mouth people. Bread, butter depends on their daily work. They can’t sit back and relax and wait for the wave to go,” said Kiran Dighavkar, the assistant commissioner of the Mumbai ward that includes Dharavi. “They can’t afford quarantine, so the only option is to vaccinate these people as early as possible.”

Health experts are prodding Mr. Modi to do more, including making the vaccine available to more people. Older adults, health-care and frontline workers and some people with medical conditions are currently eligible for shots.

“I would try to put the injection in the arm of every Indian that is 18 years and above, and I would do it now,” said Dr. N.K. Ganguly, the president of a medical research institute in New Delhi.

Persuading the 800,000 residents of Dharavi, Asia’s largest slum, to get vaccinated is seen as critical. Residents travel for work to every corner of the city of 20 million. Officials are reintroducing what earlier in the pandemic they called the Dharavi model: If the disease can be contained there, transmission can be curbed citywide and even further afield.

It won’t be easy, even though just three miles away, a jumbo vaccination center is administering about 15,000 shots a day, free of charge.

Day and night, Dharavi is teeming with life. People overflow from thin, corrugated metal houses, stacked on top of each other like matchboxes, onto crowded, mostly unpaved lanes strung with loose electrical wire. Animals skitter between parked motorcycles and piles of debris. Shops, tanneries and factories are squeezed next to houses of worship and community toilets.

“We have been OK all this while,” Abdul Razad Rakim, a 61-year-old diabetic, said from a foldout chair in front of the tiny apartment he shares with his wife, Shamim. “Why do we have to go?”

A short walk away, Janabai Shinde, a former janitor for the city health department, was squatting on her front step, rising every few minutes to spit red tobacco juice into a drain.

“I take walks in this lane. I sit here for fresh air. I have not stepped out much since the lockdown,” Ms. Shinde said. Her son, who works for the city, has already registered her for a turn at a vaccination center. She said she hoped her neighbors would join her.

“It’s for our good,” she said.

The Mumbai government has enlisted aid groups to set up help desks in Dharavi, where residents can ask questions and complete online registration to make an appointment for a free shot.

Plans are underway to set up a vaccination center within the confines of the slum, and to reopen an institutional quarantine center with thousands of beds, according to Mr. Dighavkar, the assistant commissioner.

Last week, as Maharashtra recorded its highest new case numbers since September, the chief executive of a disaster relief group delivered a pep talk at Gold Filled Heights, an apartment complex largely occupied by members of the Jain religious group, who run many of the jewelry businesses in Dharavi.

“We can’t let the virus spread again,” said the chief executive, Shantilal Muttha. “If it spreads in Dharavi, it becomes a threat for the entire Mumbai and Maharashtra.”

Jyoti Shelar contributed reporting.

Read original article here