Angolan president wishes prosperity to Angolan families

Luanda – Angolan head of State João Lourenço Thursday expressed wishes of prosperity to Angolan families and national companies in the year 2023.

Speaking at the beginning of the dinner that followed the end-of-year greetings at the Presidential Palace, the Head of State extended his best wishes to foreigners and international companies operating in Angola.

Earlier this Thursday evening, President João Lourenço received end-of-year greetings, in a ceremony in the Main Hall of the Presidential Palace.

Accompanied by the First Lady, Ana Dias Lourenço, the President of the Republic began by receiving courtesy greetings from the Vice President of the Republic, Esperança da Costa.

This was followed by the Speaker of the National Assembly, Carolina Cerqueira, judges, presidents of the courts, prosecutors, MPs, government officials, as well as those in charge of Defence and Security bodies.

The Year-end greetings were also presented to President João Lourenço by religious entities and civil society, leaders of political parties and other individuals.

After the customary toast, the presidential couple exchanged impressions with some personalities, from relatives, friends, direct collaborators, deputies and politicians.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

US Lawsuit Claims Pharma Distributor Worsened Opioid Epidemic

The U.S. Justice Department is suing one of the largest U.S. drug distributors for failing to report suspicious orders of prescription opioids, saying the company’s “years of repeated violations” contributed to the deadly U.S. opioid epidemic.

In a civil lawsuit filed Thursday, the department alleges that AmerisourceBergen and two subsidiaries violated the Controlled Substances Act by failing to report “at least hundreds of thousands” of suspicious orders for prescription painkillers to the Drug Enforcement Administration.

The department is seeking potentially billions of dollars in penalties.

“For years, AmerisourceBergen prioritized profits over its legal obligations and over Americans’ well-being,” Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said during a press call.

Under the Controlled Substances Act, distributors of controlled drugs are required to monitor and report suspicious orders to the drug agency.

The lawsuit alleges that AmerisourceBergen failed to report “numerous orders from pharmacies that AmerisourceBergen knew were likely facilitating diversion of prescription opioids.”

The complaint cites five such pharmacies.

A Florida pharmacy and a West Virginia pharmacy received opioids from AmerisourceBergen that the company allegedly knew “were likely being sold in parking lots for cash,” according to the complaint.

In Colorado, AmerisourceBergen distributed prescription painkillers to a pharmacy it allegedly knew was its largest purchaser of oxycodone 30mg tablets in the state.

AmerisourceBergen identified 11 patients at the pharmacy as potential “drug addicts.” Two of those patients later died of overdoses, according to the lawsuit.

In New Jersey, an online pharmacy that received opioids from AmerisourceBergen has pleaded guilty to illegally selling controlled substances, while the chief pharmacist at another pharmacy has been indicted for drug diversion.

“These incidents were part of the systematic failure by AmerisourceBergen, including dramatically understaffing and underfunding its compliance programs,” Philip Sellinger, U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey, said during the press call. “In one year, AmerisourceBergen spent more on taxicabs and office supplies than on the Controlled Substances Act compliance budget.”

In a statement, AmerisourceBergen said the lawsuit represented an attempt to “shift the onus of interpreting and enforcing the law from the Department of Justice and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to an industry they are tasked with regulating and policing.”

The five pharmacies were “cherrypicked” by the DOJ out of thousands the company serves, the statement said.

AmerisourceBergen is one of three major U.S. pharmaceutical distributors. The other two are McKesson and Cardinal Health.

In February the companies, along with pharmaceutical manufacturer Johnson & Johnson, agreed to pay $26 billion to settle thousands of civil lawsuits brought by state and local governments. Most of the money will go toward treatment and prevention.

The U.S. drug epidemic has killed more than 1 million people since 1999, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Opioids are the main driver of U.S. drug overdose deaths. Of an estimated 108,000 drug overdose deaths reported in the country last year, 81,000 involved opioids such as fentanyl, according to the CDC.

Source: Voice of America

Scientists Study Link Between Winter Storms and Global Warming

The world is getting warmer, winters included. The United States, however, has experienced severe winter storms in recent years, and experts are taking a closer look at the link between these extreme cold events and climate change.

While the link between global warming and heat waves is very direct, the behavior of winter storms is governed by complex atmospheric dynamics that are more difficult to study.

Even so, “there are certain aspects of winter storms … where the climate change linkages are fairly strong and robust,” Michael Mann, a climatologist at the University of Pennsylvania, told AFP.

For example, the warming of bodies of water — lakes or oceans — influences the amount of snowfall.

In the United States, a mechanism called “lake-effect snow” occurs around the Great Lakes region on the Canadian border. The city of Buffalo, which sits on the shores of one of the Great Lakes, was hit hard by a lethal snowstorm over Christmas weekend.

The collision between cold air from the north with the warmer water of these lakes causes convection, which leads to snowfall.

“The warmer those lake temperatures, the more moisture (is) in the air, and the greater potential for lake-effect snows,” Michael Mann wrote in a 2018 paper.

“Not surprisingly, we see a long-term increase in lake effect snowfalls as temperatures have warmed during the last century.”

Polar vortex

There is, however, no consensus on other mechanisms, such as the effect of climate change on the polar vortex and jet stream air currents.

The polar vortex is an air mass above the North Pole, located high in the stratosphere. Humans dwell in the troposphere, and the stratosphere is located just above it.

It is surrounded by a band of rotating air, which acts as a barrier between the cold air in the north and the warmer air in the south. As the polar vortex weakens, this band of air begins to undulate and take on a more oval shape, bringing more cold air southward.

According to a 2021 study, this type of disturbance is occurring more often and is reflected during the following two weeks, lower in the atmosphere, where the jet stream is located.

This air current, which blows from west to east, again following the border between cold and warm air, then meanders in such a way that it allows cold air from the north to intrude at lower latitudes, particularly over the eastern United States.

“Everybody agrees that when the polar vortex becomes perturbed or disrupted, there is an increase in the probability of severe winter weather,” Judah Cohen, lead author of the study and climatologist for Atmospheric and Environmental Research (AER), told AFP.

And this “stretched” polar vortex is exactly what was observed just before the storm that hit the United States this December, he pointed out.

The same phenomenon was seen in February 2021, when a bitter cold snap hit Texas, causing massive power outages.

‘Active debate’

But the heart of the debate lies elsewhere: What is causing these increased disturbances in the polar vortex?

According to Cohen, they are linked to changes in the Arctic, accelerated by climate change. On the one hand, the rapid melting of sea ice, and on the other, an increase in snow cover in Siberia.

“This is a topic that I have been studying for over 15 years, and I am more confident today in the link than I have ever been in the past,” he told AFP.

This last point, however, remains “an active debate within the scientific community,” Mann said.

“Climate models are not yet capturing all of the underlying physics that may be relevant to how climate change is impacting the behavior of the jet stream.”

Future studies will still be needed in the coming years to unravel the mystery of these complex chain reactions.

Source: Voice of America

Guarantee fund issues over 740 guarantees in 10 years

Luanda – The Credit Guarantee Fund (FGC) in 10 years issued approximately 740 guarantees of 312 billion kwanzas, to small and medium-sized companies, said the chairman of the board of directors, Luzayadio Simba.

These guarantees have allowed commercial banks to grant loans to micro, small and medium-sized domestic companies, at an estimated cost of 514 billion kwanzas.

According to the CEO of the Credit Guarantee Fund, Luzayadio Simba, when taking stock of operations of the FGC, the granted guarantees provided the creation of 20,397 direct and indirect jobs countrywide, thus ensuring the livelihood of several Angolan families.

The Credit Guarantee Fund which was created in May 2012, by Presidential Decree, has been developing work to strengthen the economy which, via credit guarantees, has served to diversify the economy, poverty fight and social exclusion.

Luzayadio Simba said that the fund was in line with the National Development Plan (PND), where the productive sectors such as agriculture, cattle breeding and fisheries, as well as other initiatives linked to the development sectors of the national economy, are among the fund´s priorities.

In this regard, the manager said, the FGC has strengthened its commitment to promoting the value of national production, by ensuring access to bank credit for micro, small and medium enterprises and individual entrepreneurs.

The FGC chairman clarified that the Credit Guarantee Fund, besides guaranteeing funding, ensuring payment to the financing banks in the event of default by economic agents, is also responsible for promoting, defending and developing the National Guarantee System.

Its organic structure has a line of analysis and issue of pre-guarantees, which allow the applicant (businessperson) to submit their project directly, increasing the possibilities of acquiring funding from commercial banks, with coverage of up to 75% of the amount financed.

According to the manager, so far, medium-sized companies are the biggest beneficiaries of this guarantee, with an amount of 282 billion, out of a total of 439 guarantees issued, with banks disbursing around 318 billion kwanzas.

Luzayadio Simba said that the FGC also has guarantees issued in the macro-sectors of manufacturing industry, geology and mining, support services for the manufacturing sector and construction materials.

In the same way, the fund provides guarantees to investors that propose to produce food oil, salt, hygiene articles, packaging, soap, detergents, wood and its derivatives, glass, fertilisers and soil correction materials.

The Credit Guarantee Fund is a non-banking financial institution, which was created in 2012 by the State and it is responsible for promoting, defending and developing the National Guarantee System, acting as a counter-guarantor in the operations of banking institutions.

Source: Angola Press News Agency