Thursday, February 28, 2019

Liposuction Lost Of Life in Costa Rica

A 28-year-old woman, Eileen Bravo Córdoba, lost her life shortly after undergoing liposuction at the Habibi Clinic in Escazú. She suffered a cardiac arrest but overcame it. It happened again and it was not possible to save her.

It seems she had an allergic reaction called anaphylaxis to the anesthesia. The College of Physicians needs a family member to come forward with a complaint in order to start an official investigation and sanction, if appropriate, the surgeon.

The owner of the clinic said that the establishment has all the necessary permits in order. The Prosecutor’s Office is investigating five complaints of malpractice in other aesthetic clinics. A similar case caused the death of another woman undergoing liposuction in November.

The Penal Code punishes culpable injuries with up to one year in prison as well as being disqualified from the profession for up to two years. Culpable homicide is punishable by up to eight years in prison and five years of disqualification.

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McDonald’s Costa Rica Expansion

McDonald’s is investing in Costa Rica. It’s in a three-year investment plan that started in 2017 and consists of $17 million. Three new locations will be opened this year. One will be in Concepción de La Unión, Cartago and the other locations have yet to be announced.

200 new recruits will be hired this year, joining the 2,100 current employees. McDonald’s gives a chance to young people without experience. The average age of a worker in the chain is 22-23.

The next three year period, 2020-2022, will have an even greater investment plan. There is room to grow in the central valley and beyond. Currently, there are 70 restaurants in the country plus 61 dessert stations and 13 McCafés.

Aside from opening new locations, many updates and remodels have been done. The company installed windows, high efficiency toilets and LED lights to be more sustainable. Menu additions have been made and charging stations have been added in some locations. The company also started working with delivery services.

The Road to Zurquí Costa Rica

The Ministry of Public Works and Transport has given up on its own feasibility study for updating the road through the Zurquí hill but that’s not the end of the story. It has been opened up to private companies to come up with ideas.

It’s a complicated situation as it should be extended to four lanes but it lines the protected national park and has unstable walls on the other side.

One idea is to extend the road using a tunnel parallel to Zurquí along with two or more viaducts and some stretches of road made into two levels. The idea also includes three kilometers of anti-landslide structures and 28 containment structures as well as false tunnels meant to protect vehicles and drivers from falling materials that plague the road. A platform would allow for circulation in case a lane is affected by landslides.

If approved, this plan could be completed in a shorter timeframe than expected. The estimated investment is $643 million that would be paid back by “socially acceptable” tolls.

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

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Measles Vaccines in Costa Rica After Frenchies Bring it on Their Vacation

Following the confirmation that a French family brought measles to Costa Rica, the CCSS and Ministry of Health have taken on the responsibility of tracking their route and alerting those they came in contact with.

So far, 104 people they were in contact with have been vaccinated. Of the 11 Ticos on the plane with them, 10 had already received the protective dose. The final one lives outside the country and his family was contacted and asked to alert him in case he needs the vaccine.

Those in the same hotels as the family were among the notified as well. The tracking will continue for 21 days. If by that time, March 9th, there have been no reported secondary cases then the case will be closed.

The affected family is recuperating well and is still in isolation. Europe had record levels of measles infections last year. 37 deaths were reported. The CCSS is offering vaccines to those aged 15 months to less than 10 years.

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Costa Rica Launches ‘Unprecedented’ Push for Zero Emissions by 2050

Remember when this was supposed to happen in 2021 in Costa Rica. Although I admire the thought and plan, I have my serious doubts this will happen in Costa Rica. But they put the deadline far enough away that they will not have to worry about meeting it for a while. (paragraph added by Dan Stevens)

Costa Rica’s president has launched an economy-wide plan to decarbonize the country by 2050, saying the Central American nation aims to show other nations what is possible to address climate change.

Costa Rica’s environment minister, Carlos Manuel Rodríguez, said that if the plan is achieved, his grandchildren in 2035 will have the same carbon footprint as his grandparents did in the 1940s – and by 2050 his grandchildren will have none at all.

“Not only are we going to reduce that footprint but we are going to bring many benefits with it”, Rodríguez said.

But Jairo Quirós, an electrical energy researcher at the University of Costa Rica, warned the plan would be challenging, and “should be viewed with some caution”.

Under the roadmap launched Sunday, Costa Rica by 2050 would achieve “zero net emissions”, meaning it would produce no more emissions than it can offset through things such as maintaining and expanding its extensive forests.

Such emission cuts – which many countries are expected to try to achieve in the second half of the century – are key to holding increases in global temperature to well under 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), the goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change.

The Costa Rica plan aims to allow the country to continue growing economically while cutting greenhouse gases. The country’s economy grew at 3 percent last year, according to World Bank data.

Christiana Figueres, the Costa Rican former U.N. climate chief, called the goal “unprecedented” in international politics.

Only the government of the tiny Marshall Islands also has laid out a detailed plan to achieve that goal, but “they still do not have the whole plan articulated sector by sector”, Figueres said in an interview with the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

President Carlos Alvarado noted that while Costa Rica represents only a tiny share of the world’s climate-changing emissions, the experiments tried in the plan could be a model for other nations.

“We can be that example… we have to inspire people,” he said at the plan’s launch, noting the country was “doing what’s right”.

But Quirós, of the University of Costa Rica, warned the plan will take hard work to achieve.

Some goals, he said, such as ensuring all buses and taxis run on electricity by 2050, may be difficult, not least because the changes will be expensive.

“Although one tends to see that (electric bus) prices are falling over time, there is a lot of uncertainty regarding that,” he said.

GREEN TRANSPORT

Transport today creates about 40 percent of Costa Rica’s climate-changing emissions, making it the main source of them, according to the National Meteorological Institute.

To cut transport emissions, the plan aims to modernize public transport, including through the creation of an electric train line.

The new line would connect 15 of the 31 neighborhoods in the San Jose metropolitan area and carry about 250,000 of the area’s 1 million people each day, according to the Costa Rican Institute of Railways.

Construction on the lines is expected to start in 2022, according to the institute.

“A modern and efficient public transport system has a much greater impact on achieving decarbonisation than just electrifying our vehicle fleet,” said Claudia Dobles, the president’s wife and coordinator of the transport chapter of the plan.

Dobles, an architect and urban planner, has been coordinating many of the country’s public transport efficiency initiatives, including the electric train project and a reorganization of bus routes.

Under Costa Rica’s decarbonization plan, the number of cars circulating in urban areas would be cut by half by 2040, the environment minister said.

By 2035, 70 percent of the country’s buses would be electric and 25 percent of its cars, Rodríguez added.

Juan Ignacio Del Valle, director of operations for hydrogen-powered transport company Ad Astra Rocket Company, said the plan still needs work on some issues, such as cargo transport.

Technological innovation will be needed to achieve some of the goals, he said.

Ad Astra has been testing hydrogen fuel cell buses in Costa Rica for about eight years – a fuel switch that is “vaguely” contemplated in the new plan, Del Valle said.

Hydrogen transport will need more research, but it could prove the most efficient option in areas where electric vehicles fall short, including carrying cargo and for other heavy transport, he said.

OIL REVENUE

For Costa Rica, the potential political battles around decarbonizing its economy are less than in many other countries because it does not have a fossil fuel extraction industry, Rodriguez said.

But dependence on oil revenue could still cause roadblocks for the switch. Fuel taxes, vehicle import taxes and driving taxes, for instance, account for about 12 percent of government revenue, the minister said.

To phase out fossil fuels without slashing government income, the government will need to push for “green tax reform” to find new revenue sources, he said – something that could take time, as it would need legislative approval.

Under the decarbonization plan, the country’s state-owned petroleum distributor would change course and begin research on alternative fuels, such as hydrogen and biofuels, and look at helping fossil fuel workers move to clean energy jobs.

The plan also calls for further expanding forests – though at the moment most of the money to pay for that comes from taxes on fossil fuels, Rodríguez admitted.

The country already has one of the region’s strongest reputations for forest protection.

“In the 1960s and 70s, Costa Rica had the highest per capita deforestation rate in the world. We have managed not only to stop deforestation but to double forest coverage” as the economy grew, Rodríguez said.

Forests that covered 25 percent of the country in the 1980s covered more than 50 percent of it by 2013, according to data from the State of the Nation report, assembled by the country’s public universities.

Over that period, the country’s GDP grew from $4 billion in 1983 to $57 billion in 2013.

Costa Rica has already carried out some of the needed decarbonization work, officials said.

Last year, 98 percent of the country’s electricity came from renewable sources, according to the Costa Rican Electricity Institute, the state-owned company in charge of electricity generation and distribution.

Quirós, the University of Costa Rica researcher, said the country’s plan, while “a little utopic” was clearly “a step in the right direction”.

“It’s good to be ambitious,” he said.

Figueres said she believed the country faced a “hard task” achieving its ambitious aims, but predicted it would “lead to a transformation like no other we’ve seen in decades”.

Reporting by Sebastian Rodriguez ; editing by Laurie Goering : Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit news.trust.org/climateOur Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Monday, February 25, 2019

Is Costa Rica’s Recope Operating Inefficiently?

During the strike against tax reform last year, Recope was down 60% of employees. Surprisingly, it still managed to distribute fuel. This led to the question of whether the entity could operate permanently with just 40% of its current staff.

The Government plans to modernize the institution. Part of this plan is evaluating the use of personnel.  The Minister of Environment and Energy, Carlos Manuel Rodríguez, believes Recope could easily operate with 40% of personnel. That would save the government a ton of money on the fixed cost to operate.

Of course, this brings to question what will happen to all those employees who are specifically trained for an industry that no longer needs them due to factors including the move toward alternative fuels. How will they make a living? The same happened in the past when logging stopped. Those same loggers later found work in the sustainable tourism industry brought about by the end of logging.

Illegal Transport of People to the USA from Costa Rica

Two residents of Pérez Zeledón face eight years of imprisonment. They planned illegal transport of persons. Victims were charged ¢4 million to get into the United States illegally.

The sentence was pronounced in the Criminal Court of Pérez Zeledón on Friday. They are in preventive detention for six months while the sentence becomes final. They were found guilty of two crimes of illicit trafficking of migrants. There are jail terms for those who “promote, plan, coordinate or execute the illegal traffic of national migrants.”

The plan was to take two Costa Ricans illegally to the United States. This occured in 2016. They visited the houses of victims to explain the trip, cost, and even offered to mortgage the house as a way of payment. They processed the travel documents and provided transportation and a hotel. The group was found by authorities in Cancún, Mexico and returned to Costa Rica.

The Migration Police work to prevent nationals from being exposed to this type of activity that puts their freedom, security and lives at risk.

Costa Rica Announces National Decarbonization Plan

Costa Rica announced a plan to decarbonise the country’s economy at a ceremony at the Costa Rican Museum of Art on Sunday.

‘The National Decarbonisation Plan 2018-2050’, was presented at the ceremony by president of Costa Rica Carlos Alvarado Quesada and minister of environment and energy Carlos Manuel Rodriguez Echandi among others.

It sets out ten specific short and long term goals, including a public transport system where 100% of buses and taxis will be zero emissions by 2050, Costa Rica’s electricity mix being entirely generated by renewables by 2030 and increasing the country’s forest coverage from 52% to 60% by 2030.

It will be used as the basis for initiatives like the National Plan for Development and Public Investments, which will look to modernise the Costa Rican economy and create jobs.

Summarising the plan, Quesada stated that climate change was a reality and said: “This is the reason why our generation faces the great challenge of moving towards a decarbonised world. Costa Rica is ready to lead this commitment to the planet.”

Executive secretary of United Nations (UN) climate change Patricia Espinosa tweeted: “Congrats to Costa Rica for its ambitious #Decarbonisation Plan to move away from #FossilEnergies towards #CleanDevelopment. The world is far from achieving its goals against #ClimateChange but with Costa Rica’s example, I’m optimistic that together we can do it. @PresidenciaCR.”

Former US vice president and climate activist Al Gore said: “Decarbonising the global economy to drastically reduce global warming is absolutely essential to ensure that our civilisation can survive and thrive, and that is one of the reasons why I am so excited to see that Costa Rica continues its role as world leader to help solve the climate crisis with the rapid deployment of the strategic plan to completely decarbonize its economy.

“Congratulations to Costa Rica, because you are showing the rest of the world that it is definitely possible to make the transition to a low carbon economy today. Keep going with this great work. Their efforts give me and many others a lot of hope that we not only can, but we will also be able to solve the climate crisis.”

By Jack Unwin, Power Technology

Sunday, February 24, 2019

The New Apeiron, Same As the Old Apeiron

CCSS Healthcare Scam in Costa Rica

A businessman is being charged of 100 crimes of fraud against the CCSS. He is accused of charging supplies for fake patients. The man worked as a manager of Synthes, a provider of Orthopedic devices.

The Caja claims the damage is $6 million. Charges were made for a patient who doesn’t exist and another who doesn’t have a file at the Calderon hospital, which was charged almost $700 for orthopedic screws and bolts for a surgery the patient didn’t have done. Another name used for fraudulent charges was that of a man who had died two years earlier. Additionally, orthopedic parts were charged for patients of other specialties, such as gynecology and urology, where they are not used.

The alleged crimes of ideological falsehood to the detriment of the CCSS were committed between 2009 and 2011. The transactions were signed for by a man of Cuban origin.

There is currently an international arrest warrant for his extradition. It is believed he is in the Dominican Republic.

The company Synthes rejects fault in the case and states “We are respectful of the Costa Rican institutions and have collaborated with the research process and will continue to do so.”

The Legacy of Karate in Costa Rica

The Costa Rican legacy of karate in Kata continues. Costa Rica took the gold medal in the senior general classification. The winning tico team in Karate-Do consisted of Juan Achío, Roy Lee Gatjens and Sergio Cambronero.

They won at their own National Gymnasium by defeating Nicaragua en the final round. This was the team’s fourth consecutive year winning the gold. Their previous wins were in El Salvador (2016), Costa Rica (2017), and Nicaragua (2018). The team is in first place since 2016 because they train incredibly hard, 7 times a week. They train for hours synchronizing their movements.

Costa Rica also took five silver and nine bronze medals in other modalities. The country improved in youth categories, such as 12-13 years, 14-15 years, 16-17 years and Sub 21. In the youth categories, the country took second place.

Saturday, February 23, 2019

French Family Brings the Measles to Costa Rica

A French family is now in isolation because they have measles. It’s a couple, aged 30 and 35, and their 5-year-old son. They traveled for almost 12 hours on a plane from France to Costa Rica with over 300 passengers.

The passengers, potentially exposed to the virus, are being notified. They should go to their nearest health center if they feel ill or to get vaccinated if they haven’t been. The affected flight was Air France AF 430.

The 11 Costa Ricans on that flight have been contacted and the foreigners were sent an email to contact the Ministry of Health. The Ministry of Health and the CCSS are intensely tracking all possible contacts. 24 people who stayed at the same hotel have been vaccinated.

There haven’t been any measles cases in the country since 2014. The case of this French family will not lead to an epidemic, authorities say. It can, however, cause small outbreaks of secondary cases.

Cinde’s Costa Rica Job Fair

3,400 people attended the Cinde job fair on the first day. This is a relatively high number since Fridays don’t usually have much attendance. Long lines formed and many more are coming. There is a pre-registration of 11,000 people.

The fair is attracting a mix of people. There is a booth set up for special attention to those over age 40. There are also many young people coming from technical colleges for their first experience with interviewing.

The company 506 Solutions is offering a free shuttle every 40 minutes from Plaza del Sol, San Pedro Park, Guadalupe, La Sabana and the Metropolitan Cathedral.

There is an online test available to find out one’s level in English or Portuguese. After taking it the candidate can receive a badge at the job fair to certify them in the language.

The job fair can be used as a way to get feedback on one’s resume, as the preferences and what companies look for have changed. Many go to the job fairs for such orientation.

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