Saturday, April 5, 2003
Bolivar to move Hecla equipment to Choco 10 property
<a href=new.stockwatch.com>Stockwatch
2003-04-03 09:45 ET - News Release
Mr. Robert Doyle reports
BOLIVAR GOLD CORP. ANNOUNCES ACQUISITION OF MILL
Bolivar Gold has acquired the processing facilities of Hecla Mining Company that are currently located at the Hecla Grouse Creek site in Idaho, USA. The crushing, grinding, gravity concentration, carbon adsorption and Merrill-Crowe precipitation facilities were designed to process 5,400 tonnes of gold ore per day.
Bolivar intends to relocate the equipment to its Choco 10 property, which is located in Bolivar state, Venezuela, where the company plans to develop a surface oxide gold resource currently consisting of 700,000 ounces indicated and 300,000 ounces in the inferred category. At the same time, the company will aggressively explore the sulphide potential immediately beneath the planned open pit. The Choco 10 property is the subject of a technical report prepared for Bolivar Gold by Stanley Bartlett, PGeo, of Micon International Limited, dated Nov. 26, 2002, and revised on Jan. 23, 2003, and which is available on SEDAR.
The company recently raised net proceeds of $14.4-million through the sale of 20.7 million special warrants at 75 cents each. The proceeds of this financing will be used to finance obligations related to the acquisition of the company's Venezuelan properties, the acquisition of the Grouse Creek mill as well as other costs related to the exploration and development of the Choco 10 property.
The acquisition of the Grouse Creek equipment is expected to enhance the overall economics of the Choco project as a result of the lower than planned cost and greater capacity. The original development plan envisioned a 4,000-tonne-per-day operation. As part of the detailed engineering the company will review alternatives in order to take advantage of this additional capacity.
Fish populations may be suffocating and other stories
Environmental News Network
03 April 2003
Adapted by Cameron Walker and Victoria Schlesinger, edited by Kathleen M. Wong, California Academy of Sciences
Fish Populations May Be Suffocating
Low oxygen conditions could be cramping the reproductive capabilities of fish. A report in the Journal of Environmental Science and Technology suggests that oxygen deficiency, or hypoxia, may be as harmful to watery creatures as pesticides or toxic metals.
Rudolf Wu of the City University of Hong Kong and colleagues raised carp under hypoxic conditions; the oxygen-starved fish developed smaller sexual organs and lower hormone levels than carp raised with normal oxygen levels. In addition, only 5 percent of the larvae from the low-oxygen carp survived, compared to 90 percent of normal fish larvae.
Low oxygen conditions can be a problem when nutrient levels rise, boosting algae growth and further sapping available dissolved oxygen. Wu says that hypoxic "dead zones" in the world's waterways, such as the one off Louisiana and Texas in the Gulf of Mexico, could severely threaten populations of fish and possibly other aquatic species.
Drought Dried Out the Mayans
Studies of soils may have unearthed another clue to the Mayans' mysterious demise. The prosperous Central American society collapsed suddenly between the years 800 and 910. Theories about the cause of their downfall have ranged from overpopulation to climate change.
Now the most detailed sediment analysis ever conducted near the Mayans' main population centers indicate a long dry spell and three severe droughts may have brought the civilization to its knees.
Gerald H. Haug, now at Potsdam's Geoscience Center, and colleagues sampled sediments from the Cariaco Basin off the coast of northern Venezuela. The researchers tallied levels of titanium, an element which fluctuates with rainfall levels, to uncover three periods of low rainfall on the Yucatan peninsula. They report in the journal Science that these droughts match up with archeological records, suggesting that the population suffered three waves of collapse during the same time frame.
First Footprints Fled Disaster
The oldest known human footprints have been found preserved in ash on the side of a volcano in southern Italy. Paolo Mietto of Italy's University of Padua and colleagues say the 56 footprints were left by people fleeing a volcanic eruption 325,000 years ago.
The prints head away from the volcano's center and indicate those who made them were in a tearing hurry. Three humans around five feet tall slid, side-stepped, and rushed down the steep, 80-degree pitch of the mountain.
The scientists, who published their findings in the journal Nature, say it's impossible to determine whether the tracks were left by people of the Homo erectus or Homo heidelbergensis persuasion. One thing they are certain of, however, is that the trails were left by hominids who walked on two legs. While these may be the earliest known human footprints, fossilized hominid prints discovered in the 1970s date back more than 3 million years.
The Battle of the Birds
The bird world's most adept freeloader, the cuckoo, has been outmaneuvered by one of its hosts. Cuckoos lay their eggs in the nests of other birds, leaving host birds with the draining task of raising the parasitic chick. To make matters worse, cuckoo chicks often eject any nestlings from their rightful home.
Many birds have evolved to recognize cuckoo eggs. But once hatched, the impostors are usually home free. Now Rebecca Kilner of Cambridge University in England and others report in the journal Nature that they have for the first time found a host who can recognize parasitic cuckoo chicks.
The superb fairy-wrens of New South Wales, Australia, can discern the begging calls of Horsfield's bronze-cuckoo chicks 40 percent of the time — and let them starve. Yet the wren cannot recognize the cuckoo's eggs, which are almost identical to its own. Kilner says the lengthy breeding season in Australia may account for the wren's unique recognition ability. Once an alien chick is spotted, the wrens, unlike many other birds, have a chance to lay again.
In a case of evolution caught in action, cuckoo chicks are now learning to better mimic the calls of fairy wren chicks.
Ancient Speakers Clicking Along
The language of the San hunter gatherers of Southern Africa is replete with unusual clicking sounds. A new study has pointed out the ancient roots of these so-called click languages, suggesting that the sounds may have been part of the earliest forms of human language.
There are about 30 modern click languages, each with a set of four or five click sounds; most are spoken by people in southern Africa. One of these click-speaking peoples, the Ju|'hoansis', are known to have extremely ancient origins.
Geneticists Alec Knight and Joanna Mountain from Stanford University traced the genetic lineages of one of the few click language groups in East Africa and have concluded that the split between the east African group and the Ju|'hoansis' might be the oldest known division in the human population. Because both groups speak a click language, these unique sounds were likely present in the language of their common ancestor. While geneticists still debate the exact timing of this split as well as why the click languages have remained in use, it's clear that clicks might clue modern listeners in to the sounds of the ancients.
Risky Radiation Levels Discovered on Mars
Any future settlers on Mars will need to stay under cover. New information collected by the unmanned spacecraft Odyssey suggest that radiation levels on Mars are high enough to harm anyone living on the planet's surface.
High levels of radiation are present throughout the galaxy, but Earth's thick atmosphere and strong magnetosphere block most of the cancer-causing energy from reaching our planet's surface. By contrast, astronauts on a mission to Mars would surpass their radiation exposure limits in only three years. Some scientists conclude that radiation levels on Mars are so high that even extraterrestrial organisms would need to hunker down underground.
Other immediate dangers on the planet's surface would include periodic bursts of intense sun radiation not deflected by Mars' thin atmosphere. Each of these storms would require astronauts and their vehicles to take shelter for more than a week.
On the road to militarization
Friday, April 4, 2003
<a href=www.lapress.org>LATIN AMERICA
Andrés Gaudin. Apr 3, 2003
US increases military exercises in region in war against terrorism.
Under the pretext of combating terrorism, the United States plans to escalate its military build-up in Latin America. Until at least June of this year, US soldiers and military instructors are to be sent to countries across the region with the objective of carrying out bilateral or multilateral air, river and land exercises. With long-term operations already being conducted in several countries, analysts have stated that this new military build-up could lead the way to the militarization of Latin America.
Since the September 11 terrorist attacks, President George Bush has asserted that Latin America could become the next operative base of Islamic groups such as Al Qaeda, Hezbollah and Hamas.
In the first half of this year, new operations are to be implemented in Paraguay, the Dominican Republic and Argentina, where Exercise Eagle III will involve air forces from the US and six other Southern Cone countries.
There is already a strong US military presence in the Andean region, the Amazon Basin and Central America, and plans are being developed to set up a customs and migration control program that would be supervised by the US. “One could say that Latin America is on its way to becoming a militarized region dedicated to the warmongering strategies of the White House,” said Dominican congressman Pelegrín Castillo.
Operation New Horizons, which began last January and was due to run until May 31, aimed to bring some 400 US troops to the Dominican Republic every month. On March 17, however, Maj Gen. Carlos Diaz Morfa, head of the Dominican Army announced the suspension of any further joint military exercises due to the impending war in Iraq. Nonetheless, it is estimated that over one hundred US soldiers remain on Dominican soil, carrying out social programs such as the building of schools and rural clinics.
A further phase of Operation New Horizons is scheduled in Paraguay between April and June. Southern Command Special Operation forces will be sent to train Paraguayan forces in anti-terrorism strategies.
However, the most significant military exercises are planned for next June in Argentina, involving forces from the US, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, Bolivia and Argentina. “Eagle III will have the added attraction of including the participation of the US Air Force, which will provide F-16s and a team of instructors highly experienced in real conflict situations,” said Commodore Jorge Reta, head of information for the Argentine Air Force.
The Argentine minister of defense, Eduardo Jaunarena, has said that the US will bankroll a large part of Eagle III expenses. He admitted, however, that Congress has yet to formally authorize the entry of foreign troops into the country.
Last December, the foreign ministries of Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay agreed to a US proposal to carry out the joint patrolling of the Iguazú and Paraná rivers. It is still unknown when this operation will begin but the Pentagon has said that it will provide personnel, speedboats and radar equipment.
Both rivers run across the so-called Triple Frontier, the shared border area of Paraguay, Argentina and Brazil. The population of the zone is estimated at 200,000 people, including 30,000 of Arab descent (LP, Nov. 5, 2001).
From the mid-90s, both the CIA and the FBI have considered the zone a haven for active and “sleeper” cells of Al Qaeda, Hezbollah and Hamas. However, the Argentine vice-chancellor, Martin Redrado, retorted late last year that “no terrorist activities, whether current or in their formative stages, have been detected. The same applies to the existence of sleeper cells.”
The US also intends to increase its presence in Latin America by creating a naval cordon to shield the Atlantic and Pacific coasts “from the entry of terrorist groups.” The idea was presented by the US defense secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, at the Summit of Ministers of Defense of the Americas in Chile last December. According to Jaunarena, the plan — outlined in the document “New Threats to Regional Security” — will be debated in a future meeting of ministers of defense.
A US global customs system has also been formulated via a resolution passed by the Treasury Oct. 31, 2002. “The resolution decrees that US Customs will have their own personnel at our ports,” said lawyer Arturo Ravina. “This cannot be justified as a part of the fight against terrorism. Moreover, it is the first step towards establishing a control over our countries’ immigration,” he said.
The US has already cited the war on terrorism as justification for stationing forces and intelligence personnel at bases in Ecuador, Cuba, Venezuela, Panama, Honduras, El Salvador, Uruguay and the Triple Frontier countries.
In May, US marines will cease their long-term military maneuvers on Vieques Island in Puerto Rico. Ever since marine jets accidentally killed a civilian in 1999, hundreds of protestors have regularly disrupted exercises at the bombing range (LP, March 6, 2000 and Sept. 10, 2001).
Meanwhile, the US has stepped up its military involvement in the conflict in Colombia, which many critics say will only serve to escalate the situation (LP, March 12, 2002). In 2000, US$1.3 billion of military aid was granted under Plan Colombia. (LP, April 10, 2000). The Pentagon has described the plan as being of an intermediate operational level, turning it over to two private armies, Military Professional Resources Incorporated and DynCorp. Argentine analyst Gabriel Tokatlian has warned of “the dangerous possibility of privatizing armed conflicts. The commercialization of the region’s security matters could be the threshold of a new form of internationalized private war,” he said.
_¿Cambiará en algo la situación una sentencia en contra del control de cambio por el TSJ?
Venamcham
José Gregorio Pineda, Economista Jefe.
José Gabriel Angarita, Economista.
En noviembre 21 de 2001, una sentencia de la Sala Constitucional del máximo tribunal, especificó que limitar las operaciones con moneda estadounidense era una decisión que escapaba de las manos del Gobierno y que cualquier medida, como el actual control de cambio, debía estar amparada por una ley que se aprobase en la Asamblea o por suspensión de las garantías económicas de Venezuela.
Actualmente existe una revisión de la legalidad del control de cambio implementado por el Ejecutivo el pasado 21 de enero, que podría implicar una reapertura del mercado cambiario en condiciones no previstas inicialmente, que de no considerar las previsiones correspondientes podría ser tan perjudicial como el mismo control.
Después de 70 días de la medida, la dinámica del mercado nacional está afectada por una demanda de dólares represada que, en caso de que se reactive el mercado sin ejecutar ninguna acción de política cambiaria, ejercerá presiones sobre el tipo de cambio depreciando aún más al bolívar. Por esto muchos sectores se han pronunciado a favor de un sistema dual, con un tipo de cambio de 1.600 bolívares por dólar para la adquisición de bienes prioritarios y otro libre para el resto de las transacciones.
Es evidente que el control de cambio ha representado para la economía venezolana un duro golpe cuyos efectos no podrán ser revertidos en el corto plazo, inclusive si el TSJ lo declara inconstitucional.
Existe entonces la posibilidad de que el TSJ se pronuncie en contra del control de cambio. ¿Pero será posible qué dicha medida cambie en algo los efectos devastadores que la actual cesación de cambio tiene sobre la economía? La historia y el discurso oficialista nos hacen pensar lo contrario, "el control de cambio llegó para quedarse". Es lógico esperar que una sentencia desfavorable del TSJ, si la hubiera, no represente mayores cambios a la situación actual, ya que simplemente el mercado seguiría suspendido (al igual que lo está ahora) mientras se aprueba el control de cambio en la Asamblea Nacional.
Las perspectivas en torno al suministro de divisas no son alentadoras. No se observa una voluntad por parte de las autoridades en acelerar el proceso y últimamente vemos como comienzan las acusaciones entre los diversos entes involucrados sobre la responsabilidad de la inoperatividad del sistema.
La mejor alternativa es ejercer presión para que ocurra una flexibilización del sistema, mediante un sistema dual y acelerar el otorgamiento de las divisas, aprovechando las mejoras en la facturación de PDVSA y los aumentos de las reservas internacionales.
De no producirse dicha flexibilización podríamos estar en la irónica situación donde las reservas internacionales podrían estar en los niveles previos al paro (15.788 millones de dólares, solamente unos 725 millones de dólares más que el nivel al 28 de marzo de 2003) y el mercado continué sin suministros de divisas con las devastadoras consecuencias sobre el sector productivo.
VenAmCham economists ask: Can a salary agreement be reached?
<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Thursday, April 03, 2003
By: VenAmCham
VenAmCham's Jose Gregorio Pineda (chief economist) and Jose Gabriel Angarita (economist) write: Officers of the Venezuelan Federation of Workers (CTV) have demanded that the government urgently raise the minimum wage to counteract the economic destabilization's effects on workers' real salaries.
The arguments in favor of such a measure put forward by the union leaders are, first, the 3 million barrels of oil per day the government claims to have achieved, which permits no evasion of the union demand by the national government, and second, the claim that higher salaries would stimulate aggregate demand and produce a tonic effect on economic activity.
- The CTV calls for a minimum wage hike of at least 30%, just to achieve a partial compensation for the real salary's loss of purchasing power due to last year's inflation, but without any compensation for the 9.4% inflation rate in the first quarter of this year.
The CTV's demand was to be expected, since the government has repeatedly expressed its intention to create a parallel labor organization. The CTV's logical reaction to that threat to its primacy was to take anticipatory action demonstrating the strength of its defense of workers' interests. This move makes all the more sense considering that the members of that pro-government parallel union organization have announced similar demands. It should come as no surprise, then, that the CTV is doing the same, because it is under pressure from competition in the labor movement.
The private sector has reacted negatively, which was also to be expected.
Businessmen say this would be highly irresponsible under current economic conditions, when about 15% of all companies shut down for good in the first quarter of 2003, no foreign exchange is available, and a large number of workers have lost their jobs.
The private sector made it clear that it is much wiser to maintain employment and avoid hurting the workers who still have steady jobs. Workers need a salary adjustment sooner rather than later, in view of the drastic reduction of real incomes to a point where many of them cannot even acquire the complete basic consumption basket. But the business sector's ability to absorb the necessary wage increases under prevailing economic conditions is in serious doubt.
Hence, if the minimum wage is raised, unemployment could become even worse in the short term.
The presumed umpire, the national government, finds itself in the strange position of being an employer on the one hand (so a salary hike would inflate its expenses) and having bad relations with the country's business and labor organizations, on the other.
Workers and businessmen, each group playing their own roles, have posed a debate that had to take place sooner or later. We should not view as surprising an annual controversy to which we had accustomed ourselves, especially because it is now easier than ever to resolve it amicably.
Time will tell.
Full Article in Spanish.
¿Será posible llegar a un acuerdo en materia salarial?
José Gregorio Pineda, Economista Jefe.
José Gabriel Angarita, Economista.
Dirigentes de la Confederación de Trabajadores de Venezuela (CTV) exigen al Gobierno que aumente el salario mínimo con carácter de urgencia para contrarrestar los efectos que la desestabilización económica tiene en el salario real de los trabajadores.
Los argumentos que manejan los dirigentes sindicales para estimular la medida son en primer lugar, la producción petrolera de 3 millones de barriles diarios que dice el gobierno tener, con lo que no se justifica la evasión de la solicitud por parte del Ejecutivo Nacional; y en segundo lugar, mayores salarios estimularían la demanda agregada interna con su efecto en la producción de la economía.
Se plantea incrementar por lo menos en un 30% el salario mínimo, para simplemente recuperar, aunque sea parcialmente, el salario real ajustándolo a la inflación del año pasado, sin contar con el 9.4% de inflación acumulada en el primer trimestre de este año 2003.
La petición por parte de la CTV era de esperarse, ya que insistentemente se han dado anuncios por parte del gobierno de crear una central obrera paralela. Ante tal posibilidad la reacción lógica de la CTV era anticiparse a este movimiento y mostrar públicamente su defensa de los intereses de los trabajadores. Esto tiene mucho más sentido si se toma en cuenta el hecho que los propios miembros de esa posible central obrera paralela anunciaron peticiones similares, por lo tanto no debe sorprendernos la petición de la CTV dadas las presiones a que está sujeta por la competencia en el espacio sindical.
Las reacciones en el sector privado han sido adversas, lo que también era de esperarse. Los empresarios expresan que la medida sería un acto de total irresponsabilidad bajo la coyuntura actual del sector, donde en el primer trimestre del año 2003 se han cerrado aproximadamente 15% de las empresas, existe una paralización en la asignación de divisas y se han generado un gran número de desempleados. El sector dejó claro que es mucho más sensato mantener el empleo y evitar perjudicar a aquellos que aún disponen de un empleo permanente.
Los trabajadores necesitan un ajuste en sus salarios más temprano que tarde, dada la profunda disminución del ingreso real que en muchos casos les impide acceder a los bienes de la cesta básica. Pero está en duda la capacidad del sector empresarial de absorber este aumento en la situación económica actual, que de concretarse, llevaría a un desempleo aún mayor en el corto plazo.
Aquí el supuesto gran arbitro, el Gobierno Nacional, se encuentra en la extraña posición de ser patrono por un lado (afectado en sus gastos por el incremento salarial) y por el otro no tener buenas relaciones con las máximas agrupaciones tanto del sector empresarial como laboral.
Trabajadores y empresarios, cada uno cumpliendo con su rol, han puesto en el tapete una discusión que tenía que llegar tarde o temprano. No debemos ver como algo insólito esta controversia que antes nos había resultado normal, sobre todo porque hoy más que nunca puede ser resuelta amistosamente. El tiempo dirá.