Heat Stress and Farmworkers

 The climate crisis is endangering farmworkers around the US who work outside in excessive heat throughout the year without any federal protections from heat exposure in the workplace. The state of Washington recently announced emergency rules to provide heat protection for farmworkers and other outdoor workers, shortly after Oregon issued emergency rules in the wake of a farmworker who died from heat exposure during record high temperatures in the region. California and Minnesota are the only two other states in the US with heat protections for workers, though Colorado has some limited protections.

According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 53 workers died in the US due to temperature extremes in 2019, and the climate crisis is creating more hazardous conditions for workers, as temperature extremes become more common. Heat stress can cause kidney issues and worsen pre-existing conditions such as asthma and heart disease, as well as cause sudden death on the job. According to CDC data, farmworkers are 20 times more likely to die from heat-related causes than other workers.

Said Tere Cruz, a farm worker for 15 years in Immokalee, Florida, “The first thing in the morning, you don’t feel it as much but then after 11am your body really starts to feel the heat. You feel like all the energy has been sucked out of you and it’s really hard to keep going.’’ Cruz explained workers often will get too hot and vomit from drinking too much water too fast, but they face immense pressure to continue working through heat stress.

An analysis conducted by researchers at the University of Washington in March 2020 found US farmworkers will experience an increase from about 21 days of working in unsafe temperatures per season to an average of 62 days by the end of the century – nearly three times as many. Heatwaves have also become more common and intense over the past several decades, as the US west coast has experienced record-breaking heatwaves this year. 

“It’s extremely hot out there and it’s getting worse every year,” said Nezahualcoyotl Xiuhtecutli, general coordinator of the Farmworker Association of Florida. “One of the biggest problems is the way that farmworkers are paid. When they’re paid by the piece rate, that encourages workers to exert themselves even more. When they’re part of a crew, the person who slows down because he has to take a water break or use the restroom, then they become the guy who slows down the crew.”

Reyna Lopez, executive director of Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN), said the organization had been demanding Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Osha) issue heat protection rules ahead of the latest heatwaves in the region. Workers had been expressing concerns about the lack of shade or water while working through blueberry and cherry harvesting.

“There’s a lot of sacrifice that happens from immigrant workers for us to have food on our table,” said Lopez. “We believe fully that any kind of death on the job is absolutely avoidable. This is the first recorded death in Oregon’s Osha fatalities report that’s specific to farm labor and heat.”

Farmworkers and several organizations have been advocating for Osha to enact federal heat safety standards to guarantee basic protections for workers, including adequate shade, water and rest breaks. Advocacy efforts have also pressured states to enact standards and bills have been introduced to Congress to grant workers federal heat protections.

‘We’re not animals, we’re human beings’: US farm workers labor in deadly heat with few protections | Environment | The Guardian

America’s Hidden Food Costs

 Americans’ grocery bills reflect only a third of a true cost of food, according to a new report, which evaluated factors including healthcare costs, spending associated with biodiversity loss, and the direct environmental impacts of farming and ranching to determine that the U.S. spends at least $3.2 trillion on food each year.

Officially the cost is believed to be $1.1 trillion, but as the Rockefeller Foundation explains in its report, True Cost of Food: Measuring What Matters to Transform the U.S. Food System, (pdf) “our food system rings up immense ‘hidden costs’ from its impact on human health, the environment, and social and economic inequity.” It continues, “We’re actually getting squeezed. Society pays that balance not out of our pockets but through other means like rising healthcare costs, effects of climate change, and food workers who are often underpaid and undervalued.”

The report identifies human health impacts as the biggest hidden cost in the food system, amounting to $1.1 trillion per year, including $604 billion that’s “attributable to healthcare costs related to diet-related diseases such hypertension, cancer, and diabetes.”
 
“The additional costs are impacts from healthcare costs from workplace injuries, food insecurity and pollution, and additional costs attributable to obesity,” reads the report.

The report reads “And, if we don’t change our food system, future generations will pay those high costs, too.”

“Clinicians should be demanding a transformation of our food system,” tweeted Dr Gaurab Basu, co-director of the Center for Health Equity Education and Advocacy.

Including Environmental and Health Costs, True Price of Food Is 3 Times What Americans Pay, Report Finds | Common Dreams News

We don’t need this war



 Note. Members of the Socialist Party of Great Britain, our companion party in the UK, have recently been engaged in discussions with members of the Russian group Left Socialist Action (LSA), whose Russian-language website Is levsd.ru. This is a translation of one of the articles on that website, by Ivan Levchenko, a member of the Petersburg branch of LSA. It was posted on May 1, 2021, at a time when open hostilities between Russia and Ukraine appeared to be imminent. The original is here. –SS

As military equipment is moved closer to the border [with Ukraine–SS], the constant noise of propaganda assaults us from all sides. Pro-government experts and journalists, politicians and TV commentators promise gullible people that the start of a new war will inaugurate a long-awaited new era. Yet again they will present this war as “the will of the people.” As an experiment, however, try asking your friends and acquaintances or simply passersby whether they want it, and I am sure that the overwhelming majority will say no. Yes, there are also quite a few people who still believe in the policy of “ingathering the lands” and “we can do it again” but are convinced that if hostilities begin they will be unaffected and, as Zhirinovsky said, “the whole of your America will end up underwater.” However, the further we get from the tragic turning point of 2014 the less there remains of such enthusiasm. Endless sanctions, a destructive crisis, an isolation that seems everlasting.

But this is not even the most terrible thing. The grimmest and bloodiest images of the past are being romanticized. Parallels, sometimes terrible and sometimes absurd, are drawn between current and past eras. In this way, they try to persuade us that there is no development and no change, no future, no progress, no peace, no democracy, no human beings as independent personalities. There is nothing except eternal state power and eternal war. But when we encounter cruel reality without the mask of sacred mystique, we see that the almost deified “tsar” and “leader” is really no more than a highly placed corrupt bureaucrat. Instead of the materialization of some sort of metaphysical “struggle of good against evil” we find cynical political moves to improve their own ratings. There is absolutely nothing to which they will not resort In order to preserve this illusion. They will imprison scholars and activists; they will corral us into the confines of their senseless laws while themselves violating them; they will impose their obscurantism on absolutely everyone, even school students; they will pervert everything within their reach; but in the final analysis they will deceive themselves. And this will be the cause of their downfall.

Today we not only observe but also sense this agony of the imperial project, which has reached the point of self-negation and inner dissolution. This could have been halted had Putin and his supporters at the top found the strength to withdraw in time and sacrifice their power for the sake of the country’s future. But they have decided to go in the opposite direction and sacrifice the future to the past, the lives, freedom, and happiness of the people to their own ambitions. Of course, eventually this will all end. But least of all do we wish that people – including young people, who will have to build a new country – should again be sacrificed in geopolitical games. 

What then can we say to our generation, as well as to those older or younger than us? Value Life and defend it against those who will try by means of force or deceit to turn you into their tools for use in their intrigues. There are people who will always treat you as equals, share woe and joy with you, and love you as you are. And there are also those whom you have never seen — and are hardly likely ever to see — in the flesh, although they tell you that you must sacrifice your own happiness for the sake of theirs. Neither they nor their sons nor their grandsons will be with you in the same dugout. They will not even remember you. They will betray you, just as their predecessors betrayed the soldiers in Chechnya, because the true essence of this state power, alas, remains the same. And as the Lumen band sing: “Those who send you into the final battle will not die together with you.”

We don’t need this war | World Socialist Party of the US (wspus.org)

Less meat to meet climate targets

 Avoiding meat and dairy products is the single biggest way to reduce your environmental impact on the planet, according to some researchers. The rapidly growing impacts of global heating being seen around the world suggest not, meaning political action will be needed.

An investigation commissioned by the government, explains the damage the current food and farming system inflicts upon the environment, as well as our health. It is the biggest destroyer of nature and a major source of climate warming, it says. The Climate Change Committee report recommends that meat consumption is cut by 30% within a decade. The suggested 30% target can be met by “nudges” to behaviour and replacement of meat by plant-based alternatives. It ruled out a meat tax. Food is deeply embedded in culture, and lecturing people on their diets is the wrong approach

 “Our current appetite for meat is unsustainable,” it says. “85% of farmland is used to feed livestock and we need some of that land back.”

85% of land provides only 32% of the calories we eat, it says: “By contrast, the 15% of farmland that is used to grow plant crops for human consumption provides 68% of our calories.” 

The report also tackles the myth that grass-fed livestock is greener, saying: “The more intensively you rear some animals, the more carbon-efficient they tend to be.”

Many other scientific studies have concluded much higher cuts in rich, western nations are needed if the climate crisis is to be halted.

One major analysis concluded Europeans and North Americans need to cut meat eating by 80% for their diet to be both climate-friendly and healthy.

 Another said a 90% cut in beef eating was required to beat global heating. 

Marco Springmann, at the University of Oxford, said: “The report shies away from recommending decisive policies that would help citizens reduce their meat consumption by highlighting the public opposition to meat taxes. However, its own polling indicated that 75% of respondents either supported or were not opposed to taxes on some meats.” He pointed out that Behavioural science suggests targeted dietary changes are unlikely to be achievable without comprehensive measures, including fiscal incentives and mandates,” he said, alongside clear recognition from policymakers of the damage that meat causes.

Change is happening anyway, with most people already accepting they should eat less meat, be that for environmental, health or animal welfare reasons. Public sector caterers serving billions of meals a year in schools, universities, hospitals and care homes pledged in April 2020 ​​to cut the amount of meat they serve by 20%.

Food strategy for England calls for big cut in meat consumption | Meat industry | The Guardian

Climate Change has Arrived

 Armin Laschet, the premier of the North Rhine-Westphalia state in Germany, blamed the extreme weather on global warming during a visit to a hard-hit area. 

“We will be faced with such events over and over, and that means we need to speed up climate protection measures…because climate change isn’t confined to one state,” he said.

At least 80 people have died and many unaccounted for in Germany after some of the worst flooding in decades as record rainfall in western Europe caused rivers to burst their banks, devastating the region. Belgium reported at least 11 dead after the extreme weather.  



 The Netherlands are also badly affected by flooding as was France,  Luxembourg and Switzerland. Residents of Liège, Belgium’s third-largest urban area after Brussels and Antwerp, were ordered to evacuate. In the Dutch city of Maastricht, 10,000 people were ordered to evacuate.



Unusually heavy rains from a slow-moving low-pressure system have inundated the countries. The full extent of the damage across the region remains unclear. The deluge in central Europe has raised fears that climate change is making extreme weather even worse than predicted. Climate scientists have long indicated that human emissions would cause more floods, heatwaves, droughts, storms.



“With climate change, we do expect all hydro-meteorological extremes to become more extreme. What we have seen in Germany is broadly consistent with this trend,” said Carlo Buontempo, the director of the Copernicus Climate Change Service at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts.



Dieter Gerten, professor of global change climatology and hydrology at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, explained, “We scientists in recent years have been surprised by some events that occurred earlier and were more frequent and more intense than expected.”



Mojib Latif, a German climatologist based at the Geomar Helmholtz-Center said industrialized society’s ability to adapt to weather fluctuations was nearing a breakdown. Historically human beings were used to relatively stable climatic conditions, but weather events were now happening at a speed “that has never occurred before” Latif told the media.



Canada is Arming Itself

 



Canada amidst ecological damaging heatwaves and an economic destroying pandemic is planning to spend tens of billions of dollars on fighter jets.

The Canadian government wishes to buy 88 warplanes at an initial cost of about $19 billion but the full life cycle cost of the planes is said to be closer to $77 billion. 

 Canada has bombed Libya, Iraq, Serbia, and Syria. Many innocent people were killed directly or as a result of the destruction of civilian infrastructure and those operations prolonged conflicts and contributed to refugee crises.

Opinion | 100 Public Figures Oppose Trudeau’s $77 Billion Fighter Jet Purchase | Canadian Foreign Policy Institute (commondreams.org)

Will COP26 keep its promises?

 More than 100 developing countries have set out their key negotiating demands ahead of the COP26 climate meeting in Glasgow. These include funding for poorer nations to fight and adapt to climate change and compensation for the impacts they will be subjected to. Without progress on these points, they say that COP26 will be worthless and will end in failure.

This new position paper is a warning shot from more than half of the world’s countries, which are dismayed by the lack of progress they’ve seen so far – particularly at the G7 meeting in the UK in June.



“Highly vulnerable countries like Somalia are already suffering disproportionally from the impacts of climate change,” said Mahdi M Gulaid, deputy prime minister of Somalia, one of the countries behind the plan. “COP 26 must be a key moment of delivery and there can be no more excuses for unfulfilled promises, particularly climate finance.”

They’ve set out five key issues which they say are critical for them in the negotiations:

Cutting emissions: Despite some progress, the sum total of climate policies in place will not keep global warming within the limits that governments agreed in Paris in 2015. An acceleration of net-zero targets is urgently needed, led by those with the biggest responsibility and capacity.Finance: At the failed Copenhagen COP in 2009, richer countries promised $100bn a year in climate finance by 2020, with increased annual sums from 2025. That target has not been met, say the developing countries – and it needs fixing if they are to trust the richer countries to keep to what they negotiate. This fund is intended to help those lower-income countries adapt to and fight climate change.Adaptation: The developing countries are calling for at least 50% of climate finance to be used to help the most vulnerable to adapt to the effects of global warming.Loss and damage: The historical failure of richer countries to cut their emissions adequately means that the most vulnerable are already experiencing permanent losses and damage. Responsibilities have to be acknowledged, say the poorer countries and promised measures delivered.Implementation: Since Paris, rich and poor have haggled over issues like carbon trading and transparency. The developing countries want to see these questions finally resolved and want all countries to agree on five-year common timeframes for their national climate plans.



“Despite Covid understandably taking the headlines, climate change has been getting worse over the past year as emissions continue to rise and the lives and livelihoods on the front line suffer,” said Sonam P Wangdi of Bhutan, who will chair the Least Developed Countries Group at COP26. “COP26 needs to be a summit where we see action, not words. We have enough plans: what we need is for major economies to start delivering on their promises. Our economies are suffering in the face of increased climate impacts and budgetary strains: either we invest our way out of this mess or we face a brutal decade of loss and damage.”


Socialist Sonnet No. 42

 Freedom Days



Stadia are filling, crowds are crowding back.

The mask slips, though international vaccine lags,

Pubs are pulling pints again; who needs track

And trace? Meanwhile, the infection count drags

The graph line sharper, as work discipline

Is being restored and inflation rises.

The world is still there for workers to win

Away from the grasp of capitals’ misers.

‘Nothing’ll be the same again!’ it was said

When the NHS was being applauded,

But now, the leaders are telling the led

Even vague promises can’t be afforded.

Unless the wealthy are relieved of our wealth

Of course, to secure everyone’s future health.

D. A. 

Cheating the NHS

 The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) found that the drug’s makers Auden Mckenzie and Actavis UK, now known as Accord-UK, used their position as the sole providers of hydrocortisone to inflate the price of the drug. Tens of thousands of people in the UK depend on hydrocortisone tablets to treat adrenal insufficiency, which includes life-threatening conditions such as Addison’s disease.

The UK’s competition watchdog has imposed fines totalling more than £260m on pharmaceutical companies after an investigation found that they overcharged the NHS.

The companies were able to inflate the price of hydrocortisone tablets by more than 10,000% compared with the original branded version on sale in 2008. This meant the amount the NHS had to pay for a single pack of 10mg tablets rose from 70p in April 2008 to £88 by March 2016. Before April 2008, the NHS spent about £500,000 a year on hydrocortisone tablets but this had risen to more than £80m by 2016.  companies also paid would-be rivals to stay out of the market.

Andrea Coscelli, the chief executive of the CMA. explained, “The actions of these firms cost the NHS – and therefore taxpayers – hundreds of millions of pounds.”

UK drug companies fined £260m for inflating prices for NHS | Pharmaceuticals industry | The Guardian