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03/20/2023
11/11/2022

How airlines plan to create new generation of pilots at time of crisis

https://miamidailychronicle.com/how-airlines-plan-to-create-new-generation-of-pilots-at-time-of-crisis/

Andy Cross | Denver Post | Getty Images

Even before the coronavirus pandemic grounded U.S. airlines in March 2020, a shortage of qualified pilots was looming. Today, even though air travel has come back much stronger and earlier than expected — and major carriers are returning to profitability — the struggle to maintain enough cockpit crews has developed into an acute problem that many travelers are experiencing in the form of canceled flights.

To help fix it, carriers are aggressively competing for the available pilots. Focusing more long-term, though, airlines are boosting training programs to unprecedented levels and trying to attract a younger and more diverse next generation of aviators.

Last December, United Airlines opened its Aviate Academy in Goodyear, Arizona, the first major airline-owned flight school in the U.S. Other majors, including American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest, Hawaiian, JetBlue and Frontier, have set up branded training programs affiliated with dozens of independent flight schools across the country. That formula has been adopted by regional airlines, too, such as Mesa Air Group, Republic, Envoy, Cape Air and SkyWest. The pilot pipeline continues to rely on the military, if lately to a lesser degree, and universities that offer aviation programs.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were 135,300 airline and commercial pilots employed in 2021, a number expected to grow by 6% over the next decade, translating to more than 18,000 new hires annually. As of early July, airlines had hired more than 5,500 pilots this year, already more than in any full year since at least 1990, according to Future & Active Pilot Advisors, a career consulting firm for pilots.

Baby boomers, drones and cost hit pilot profession

Pre-Covid, the supply of pilots was meeting the flying public’s demand, yet storm clouds were gathering along several fronts. The baby boomer cohort of pilots was nearing the federally mandated retirement age of 65. The rapid growth of the airline industry globally was luring U.S. pilots with better pay and perks. The traditional pathway of military pilots transitioning to civilian carriers was slowing, due to fewer deployments and the rise of autonomous drones. Meanwhile, the escalating cost (around $100,000) and time required (minimum 1,500 hours) to obtain an airline transport pilot (ATP) certificate was deterring people from entering the profession.

Then the pandemic hit. Air travel demand fell by more than 90%, leading airlines to inadvertently exacerbate the pilot shortage. To offset nose-diving revenue and reduce payrolls, they sweetened retirement deals for thousands of senior pilots. Others were furloughed or just left the profession.

“Then, when air travel bounced back faster than people had planned, and airlines started raising capacity into the marketplace, the airlines struggled to get enough pilots to meet the demand,” said Jonathan Kletzel, airline and travel practice leader at PwC. “That’s why we are where we are.”

Where the airlines are, with regard to pilots, is uncharted territory.

According to an analysis issued in August by Oliver Wyman, a New York-based management consulting firm, the industry in North America faces a shortfall of 8,000 pilots this year, or about 11% of the total workforce. That gap is estimated to grow to more than 29,000 by the end of the decade.

In late October, the firm lowered its shortage forecast a bit, “a product of the fact that regional airlines have dramatically decreased their flying,” by 50% relative to pre-Covid capacity, said Geoff Murray, an aviation expert at Oliver Wyman and co-author of its August report. The regionals have always been an entry point for the mainline airlines’ pilots, providing them the requisite number of hours of flight time needed before advancing.

But as those regional carriers decline, the pilot pipeline suffers, too, as do airline customers. “The pilot shortage has abated to some extent,” Murray said, “but at the expense of lower frequencies and fewer connection opportunities for travelers.” Indeed, vexing flight delays and cancellations this past summer were often blamed on a scarcity of pilots and other aviation staff.

A big reason why the regionals are suffering is that mainline carriers are poaching their pilots, especially captains who can slide directly into the left-side seat of the cockpit. “We’ve rarely seen instances where a [major] airline will hire pilots from one of its non-affiliated regionals, and now that’s becoming mainstream,” Murray said. “It was more ruthless at the beginning of the year, but with the lower levels of regional flying now, it’s become a little more civil.”

Regional economies and small cities suffer

While airlines like United have long-term plans to increase service in smaller cities across the U.S. through advances in low-cost electric planes, a current consequence of the pilot shortage is that many small and medium-size communities serviced by the regionals are seeing their economies falter, said Helane Becker, an aviation industry analyst at Cowen. The regionals were flying 50-passenger jets into those areas, and now that their pilots are being lured away, they’ve had to cancel service. “That has huge implications for economic growth in those smaller communities,” Becker said. “In my view,” she said, speaking more generally, “in order to have a robust economy, you need a robust aviation industry.”

Although airline executives and industry observers concur that a pilot shortage exists, the Airline Pilots Association (ALPA), a McLean, Virginia-based union representing the majority of commercial aviators, maintains quite the opposite. ALPA has released a report, partly entitled “Debunking the Pilot Shortage Myth,” citing federal data to convey that the U.S. “has produced more than enough certificated pilots to meet airline hiring demands and compensate for retirements.”

The report goes on to state, “So, although we don’t have a pilot shortage, we do have a shortage of airline executives willing to stand by their business decisions to cut air service and be upfront about their intentions to skirt safety rules and hire inexperienced workers for less pay.”

ALPA declined CNBC’s requests for an interview or comments on the matter and instead provided links to the report and a press release containing updated data.

The Allied Pilots Association (APA), the union that represents only American Airlines pilots, is less vociferous regarding what APA spokesperson Captain Dennis Tajer referred to as a “forensic debate” over the shortage. “The numbers say there are enough licensed pilots,” he said, echoing ALPA. Tajer conceded, however, that “there are pilots with ATPs who choose not to fly” for the airlines, a common rebuttal to ALPA’s position.

Both unions are in contract negotiations with the mainline airlines to not just substantially increase pilot’s pay but also offer a wider array of quality-of-life benefits, especially more flexible schedules that allow them to be home at night. “Also, new to [mainline] industry, is overtime flying,” said Tajer. Younger pilots have been raised on flying for the regionals, “and they are interested in continuing to do that and raise their families. Work-life balance is the number-one issue for pilots, because pay will be commoditized.”

Other suggestions for filling the pilot gap include raising the retirement age to 67, as proposed in a bill introduced by South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham in July — and supported by the Regional Airlines Association, presumably to keep pilots at the mainline carriers longer and thus curtail the poaching dilemma. Another notion is to lower the 1,500-hour requirement for an APT, set by the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) in 2013 as a safety measure in the aftermath of the 2009 Colgan Air crash in Buffalo, New York, that killed 50 people and was attributed to an inexperienced flight crew. Most other countries, including those in the EU, require a minimum of just 250 flight hours, which was the previous standard in the U.S. Neither of those actions are expected to be approved.

Flight school business is booming

Experts agree, though, that recruiting and training a fresh cadre of pilots is a surefire solution. While independent flight schools have been a reliable feeder network for the airlines, many carriers are now establishing closer partnerships with the schools, offering aspiring aviators with no flying experience a direct pathway to a seat in their flight decks.

Since 2018, American has nurtured relationships with students at flight schools in Arizona, Florida and Texas, enticing them with financing options and mentoring. In March, Alaska Airlines and its regional affiliate, Horizon Air, launched Ascend, a similar program. Regional airline Republic has its own flight school, the Leadership in Flight Training Academy, in Indianapolis. Other such programs include Southwest’s Destination 225°, Delta’s Propel, Frontier’s Pilot Cadet and Spirit’s Direct. Allegiant runs two training facilities, in Las Vegas and Sanford, Florida.

Perhaps the biggest beneficiary of the influx of novice flyers is ATP Flight School, the nation’s largest. Headquartered in Jacksonville Beach, Florida, ATP currently operates 75 locations across the country and has 37 airline partners. “Enrollment decreased during the pandemic, but has since returned and surpassed pre-pandemic levels,” said Michael Arnold, director of marketing, in an email. “Since last year, ATP has opened three new training centers and increased enrollments by almost 50%, with a goal of training 20,000 airline pilots by 2030,” he said.

ATP has placed 1,219 graduates at airlines in the last 12 months, Arnold said. Students earn their pilot certification and graduate from its Airline Career Pilot Program in seven months, then work as flight instructors for about 18 months to gain experience and meet airline hiring minimums. “Recently, ATP introduced direct programs with Avelo, Breeze, Frontier, Spirit and Sun Country, which allow graduates to go straight to a first officer [co-pilot] position with these majors at 1,500 hours of flight time,” Arnold said.

More women and minority pilots are needed

The airlines, whose pilots have traditionally been older, white and male, recognize that to widen their pipeline they need to attract more women and minorities. Their training programs reflect that diverse outreach. “Breaking down barriers to entry is really the solution for us going forward,” said Nancy Hocking, director of pilot and AMT development programs for JetBlue’s Gateways program, which partners with CAE and other flight schools, as well as university aviation programs. Gateways offers several different pathways to the flight deck for both outside candidates, through its Select program, and its internal flight attendants, mechanics and other employees.

“It’s about casting a wider net,” Hocking said. “We have been incredibly successful in diversifying our candidate pool. Well over 50% of people in Select are from underrepresented groups and women.” In conjunction with the JetBlue Foundation, which is focused on STEM education for young people, the airline is promoting Gateways in high schools and middle schools, she said.

The first cohort of students in a classroom session at United Airlines’ Aviate flight school.

United Airlines

When United launched its proprietary Aviate flight school, it set a goal of training 5,000 new pilots by 2030, half of whom would be women or people of color. “In our current class of 220 students, over 70% are women or people of color,” said Aviate director Captain Michael Bonner. “And in our pool of more than 20,000 applicants, more than 80% are women or people of color.”

Lowering the high cost of pilot education is also considered paramount in achieving diversity. Many of the airlines provide tuition reimbursement, low-interest private loans and scholarships to assist flight school students. “Through JP Morgan Chase, we offer $2 million in scholarships and multiple loan programs,” Bonner said.

Murray suggested that sponsorships would be another option for defraying flight school costs. “What sponsorship means is, an entity — it could be a public institution, an airline, a pilots’ association — identifying candidates very early in their career, and getting them through school in exchange for a portion of their income” as a certified flight instructor, he said. “Europe and most every other part of the world has had these models in place for decades.”

Persistent inflation has led to higher airline fares, somewhat tempering the industry’s comeback, but the push to train more pilots remains high. The pipeline is already improving, said Murray, pointing to the surge in students at flight schools and university programs.

“It’s such a great job, it pays well and awareness around it is increasing,” he said. “The question is, will it be enough to address the shortage? The short answer is no, because there’s still so much demand for flying. We are predicting a pilot shortage that will continue for the next 10 years.”

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2022-11-11 15:33:33

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11/11/2022

Walgreens, Intel, US Bancorp and more

https://miamidailychronicle.com/walgreens-intel-us-bancorp-and-more/

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Walgreens (WBA) – The pharmacy chain operator’s stock added 1.5% in the premarket after Deutsche Bank upgraded the stock to buy from hold. Following a recent meeting with management, the firm said it is increasingly confident in Walgreens’ strategy to transition to a healthcare services company.

intel (INTC) – The chip maker’s stock was rated underweight in resumed coverage at JPMorgan Chase following a restriction period, compared with its most recent rating of overweight. JPMorgan said Intel will participate in an overall industry rebound, but at a slower pace due to competitive pressures. Intel fell 2% in premarket action.

U.S. Bancorp (USB) – Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has sold more than 91 million shares of US Bancorp since the start of the year, according to a regulatory filing. Berkshire now owns just over 53 million shares, a 3.6% stake.

Wynn Resorts (WYNN), Las Vegas Sands (LVS) – Shares of the casino operators rose after China eased Covid-19 restrictions. Wynn rose 3.4% in the premarket while Las Vegas Sands jumped 3.6%.

doximity (DOCS) – Doximity surged 21.1% in premarket trading after the online platform for medical professionals reported better-than-expected quarterly results and announced a new share repurchase program.

Duolingo (DUOL) – Duolingo shares fell 3.2% in the premarket after reporting revenue for its most recent quarter fell slightly short of analyst forecasts. The provider of online language classes also reported a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss and increased its full-year revenue outlook.

legal zoom (LZ) – LegalZoom rallied 15.4% in premarket action following better-than-expected quarterly results from the online provider of legal documents and advice. LegalZoom reported a quarterly loss that was smaller than analysts had anticipated and raised its full-year revenue forecast.

Beazer Homes (BZH) – Beazer rose 1.6% in premarket trading after its quarterly earnings and revenue came in above Wall Street consensus. Beazer benefited from gains in both home prices and profit margins.

CORRECTION: This article has been updated to correct JPMorgan Chase’s prior rating on Intel.

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2022-11-11 12:58:41

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11/11/2022

Ukrainian forces liberate villages near Kherson, wary of Russian trap

https://miamidailychronicle.com/ukrainian-forces-liberate-villages-near-kherson-wary-of-russian-trap/

Russia has announced they are withdrawing from the key southern city of kherson. But defense analysts have yet to see evidence of large-scale Russian retreat. CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay has more.

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11/11/2022

Abortion access proved to be a powerful force in 2022 midterm elections

https://miamidailychronicle.com/abortion-access-proved-to-be-a-powerful-force-in-2022-midterm-elections/

For much of the last half century, Republicans have effectively galvanized their voters around the issue of abortion in hopes of a Supreme Court reversal of the landmark Roe v. Wade. That happened in June and since then, it’s been Democrats who have been able to seize on the political opening that appeared when the high court ended the federal right to an abortion.

Abortion access ultimately proved to be a powerful force in the 2022 midterm elections, lifting Democrats in battleground states and helping to weaken the anticipated Republican wave into a ripple.

In the five states where the issue was directly on the ballot, every contest leaned in favor of protecting abortion rights — even in heavily Republican states like Kentucky and Montana.

In Pennsylvania and Michigan, voters ranked abortion access as their top concern, outpacing inflation. That dynamic helped propel Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman to victory, flipping a U.S. Senate seat from Republicans. And in Michigan, an amendment to protect abortion rights easily passed. Campaigning on the issue, Democrats kept the governorship and won control of the state legislature for the first time in nearly 30 years.

Voters in California and Vermont passed similar ballot initiatives. And voters in Kentucky and Montana rejected measures that would have further restricted abortion.

These outcomes help answer one of the central questions of the midterm campaign: whether fervor over the fall of Roe v. Wade in the summer could last through November.

“Despite the devastating loss of Roe this summer, there have been a lot of reasons for hope this year,” said Ashley All, a senior advisor for Families United for Freedom, who worked to help defeat the Kansas abortion ballot initiative in August and provided funding and resources in the Michigan, Kentucky and Montana efforts. The group approached the issue in a nonpartisan way and is already engaging with other states where fights over abortion rights are likely to play out moving forward.

In total, more than $428 million was spent on advertising on the issue in the midterms, with Democrats vastly outspending Republicans, according to tracking by AdImpact.

In Michigan, Democrats spent more than $38 million; Republicans spent just over $7.5 million. In Nevada, Democrats spent more than $36 million, Republicans $1.4 million. In Arizona, Democrats spent more than $30.7 million, Republicans spent $3.3 million. In Pennsylvania, Democrats spent more than $27 million; Republicans spent less than $65,000.

Anti-abortion groups acknowledged the potency of the Democrats’ strategy. “There’s no doubt that the Dobbs decision was a political earthquake, creating a unique opportunity for Democrats to motivate their depressed base and giving them the best opportunity they’ll ever have to use the issue politically,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America.

Dannenfelser said that in addition to the large disparity in spending on this issue, key GOP candidates demoralized their own base by taking the “ostrich strategy: burying their heads in the sand and running from the issue, allowing their opponents to define them.” She pointed to Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania, and criticized Senate Leader Mitch McConnell for being absent from the ballot efforts in his home state of Kentucky.

“There really is power in this issue,” said Jill Alper, the lead strategist on the Michigan ballot measure, known as Proposal 3. Alper noted the ballot’s success in areas of the state where Democrats typically don’t do well. “Proposal 3was winning in places it had no business winning,” she said.

Exit polling in Michigan found that 45% of voters ranked abortion as their top issue — leading inflation by double digits. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer made abortion access a central part of her campaign after preemptively suing to block a 1931 abortion ban from going into effect with the overturning of Roe v. Wade. Her opponent Tudor Dixon opposed abortion including in cases of r**e and in**st.

The issue also worked to Democrats’ advantage in states without direct ballot measures.

In Pennsylvania, exit polling showed abortion was the top issue for voters. Thirty-seven percent named it their top issue — beating inflation (28%) and crime (11%). Democrat Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania’s attorney general, won the governor’s race by double digits against state Senator Doug Mastriano, who was against abortion, including in cases of r**e and in**st. While abortion rights were not directly on the ballot in the state — Republicans controlled the legislature, and a Republican governor could have paved the way to further restrictions.

“It’s not freedom to tell women what they’re allowed to do with their bodies. That’s not freedom,” Shapiro said to a packed rally ahead of Election Day. Not only did Mastriano lose, but Democrats appear poised to take control of the state House for the first time since 2010.

Part of Fetterman’s campaign message focused in on abortion rights, attempting to tie Oz to Mastriano and anti-abortion rights efforts. During the lone debate, Oz said abortion decisions should be between women, doctors and “local political leaders.” Democrats quickly clipped the video and featured it in campaign ads.

It was a key issue for Democratic volunteers, too. Karen Moustafellos who organized with the grassroots organization Red, Wine and Blue, which targets women in the suburbs, said she discussed abortion as an economic issue as well as personal rights.

“Taking away rights, once we lose them, it’s really really going to take a lot longer to get them back,” Moustafellos said.

New Hampshire Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan, who was once considered one of the most vulnerable Democrats seeking reelection, was one of the first candidates to go up with ads focused on abortion in the wake of the Dobbs decision. She continued to air ads on the issue throughout the election season even though her opponent, Don Bolduc, was not determined until September, one of the last primaries.

As polls showed the race tightening, Hassan kept up that line of attack, seizing on Don Bolduc’s comments on the overturning of Roe v. Wade to “get over it.” Exit polling showed abortion was nearly on par with inflation as the most important issue, 35% to 36%. Hassan won women by nearly 20 percentage points. Democrats also held onto both House seats.

After the Dobbs decision in June, more women registered to vote in key battleground states than during the same time period in 2018 or 2020, Tom Bonier of TargetSmart found.

“When we look at the states that had the biggest Dobbs effect, they had the biggest surges in registration among women, especially younger women after Dobbs, you’re seeing Democrats frankly just performing better,” Bonier said, pointing to results in Michigan and Pennsylvania. “You certainly are seeing a very similar pattern to what we were seeing in the voter registration data.”

He noted that in Kansas where there was a surge in women registering to vote before the August primary when voters rejected a measure that could lead to further abortion restrictions, Democrats had success Tuesday as well. Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly won reelection and Congresswoman Sharice Davids won a third term despite redistricting that favored Republicans.

However, the Dobbs decision didn’t appear to have a similar effect on voter registrations in Florida, where Republicans won resoundingly in key statewide and congressional races on Tuesday.

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, who signed a 15-week abortion limit into law, won 53% of women. And GOP Sen. Marco Rubio, who also supported the measure, won 51% of women.

In addition to DeSantis, other Republican governors who signed abortion restrictions into state law also won reelection. Ohio’s Mike DeWine; Brian Kemp, of Georgia; and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott all won by significant margins.

“GOP pro-life candidates win in competitive races if they define their opponents as abortion extremists…and contrast that with a clearly defined pro-life position centered around consensus such as pain-capable or heartbeat limits,” said Dannenfelser. “This must be the key takeaway for the GOP as we head into the 2024 presidential cycle, especially those eyeing a run for the White House.

In:

Pennsylvania

Gretchen Whitmer

Vermont

Abortion

2022 Midterm Elections

Michigan

John Fetterman

Sarah Ewall-Wice

CBS News reporter covering economic policy.

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11/11/2022

Biden begins first leg of foreign trip with climate talks

https://miamidailychronicle.com/biden-begins-first-leg-of-foreign-trip-with-climate-talks/

President Biden is attending a global climate meeting in Egypt with a giant domestic investment in tow — and he’s likely to face questions about how far the U.S. will go to pull other large greenhouse gas emitters along.

His attendance Friday at the U.N. climate conference, known as COP27, in the resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, is the first stop on an around-the-world trip that will also take him to a meeting of Southeast Asian leaders in Cambodia and a Group of 20 summit meeting for leaders of the world’s largest economies in Bali, Indonesia.

As soon as he arrived in Egypt, Mr. Biden met with Egyptian president President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Through a translator, el-Sisi welcomed Mr. Biden and said that since the U.S. media was present, he wanted to talk about overall issues in the Middle East. At the “center of debate” is human rights, el-Sisi said, claiming Egyptians have taken a “comprehensive approach” to human rights with the establishment of a national academy for human rights.

Mr. Biden thanked the Egyptian president for his cooperation on climate change, and for hosting the summit. Mr. Biden also thanked el-Sisi for Egypt’s “strong” stance with the United Nations regarding the Russian war in Ukraine. Mr. Biden said the two leaders will discuss human rights.

The U.S. president arrived in Egypt buoyed by a stronger-than-expected showing by the Democratic Party in Tuesday’s midterm elections, congressional passage this year of the largest climate investment in U.S. history and Russian military setbacks on the Ukrainian battlefield.

At the climate conference, Mr. Biden will discuss a new supplemental rule coming Friday that cracks down on methane emissions, a measure that expands on a similar regulation his administration released last year.

The 2021 rule targeted emissions of methane — a potent greenhouse gas that contributes significantly to global warming — from existing oil and gas wells nationwide, rather than focusing only on new wells as previous Environmental Protection Agency regulations have done. But this year’s rule goes a step further and takes aim at all drilling sites, including smaller wells that emit less than 3 tons (2.7 metric tonnes) of methane per year.

He also will spotlight one of his key domestic successes — the Democrats’ massive health care and climate change bill known as the Inflation Reduction Act.

The U.S. commitment of some $375 billion over a decade to fight climate change gives Mr. Biden greater leverage to press other nations to make good on their pledges to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and transition the global economy toward cleaner energy sources.

The president will be in a far different position from last year’s gathering, which came about during a particularly unhappy stretch in the bill’s tortuous path to passage.

That summit resulted in additional global commitments to meet the temperature targets agreed to in the Paris Climate Accord, which Mr. Biden rejoined after his predecessor, Donald Trump, pulled the U.S. from the deal.

In his remarks, Mr. Biden will also make his case that “good climate policy is good economic policy,” while calling on all major emitting countries to “align their ambition” to the international goal of trying to limit future global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), according to the White House.

But even with these fresh efforts, America and the world have a long way to go to meet emissions targets that scientists hope will contain global warming. And the political will for more investment — as the global economy faces new headwinds — is shrinking.

Speaking at the COP27 summit Wednesday, former U.S. vice president and climate activist Al Gore called Biden a “climate hero in my book,” adding that “the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act represents the most significant pro-climate legislation ever passed by any nation in all of history.”

It remained to be seen whether Mr. Biden would address the item top of mind at the climate talks: loss and damage. That’s international negotiations language for asking rich countries like the United States, the top historic polluting nation, to pay what are essentially reparations for damages caused to poorer vulnerable nations that don’t emit much heat-trapping carbon dioxide.

In the past the United States has been against even talking about the issue, but it has now softened its stance, agreeing to the topic being discussed. Special Envoy John Kerry has even mentioned it in speeches. However, the U.S. doesn’t want liability to be part of any deal and when it comes to paying, Congress and the public have been reluctant to embrace many types of climate aid — and this is the most controversial type.

“I wish the U.S. would say something constructive about loss and damage” because it could get a vital issue moving, Princeton University climate and global affairs professor Michael Oppenheimer said.

Global eagerness for shifting away from fossil fuels has been tempered by the roiling of world energy markets after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. At home and abroad, Biden is pressing oil and gas producers to boost production to meet demand and bring down prices that have funded the Kremlin’s war effort.

Prospects for a significant breakthrough are further dampened as major emitters such as China and India are sending less-senior delegations. Biden administration officials have tried to lower expectations for results at the meeting and instead cast it as a return to U.S. leadership on the issue.

Biden leaves Washington with votes still being tallied in key races that will determine control of both chambers of Congress. Still, the president was feeling the wind at his back as Democrats performed stronger than expected. He was likely to learn the results of the races that will sharply impact his ability to get things done in Washington while he was overseas.

While in Egypt, Biden will hold a bilateral meeting with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, where they are to discuss the two nations’ strategic partnership, the Israel-Palestinian conflict and regional security issues.

Egypt’s foreign minister Sameh Shoukry told The Associated Press on Thursday that he understood Mr. Biden’s visit in Sharm el-Sheikh to be “an indication of the political will to move the process forward” on tackling global warming.

“We hope … it will resonate within the collective will of the negotiating groups that the United States is party to, but also in creating a momentum for the conference, for the parties to deliver what is expected,” he said.

U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Biden would also broach the issue of human rights when he meets with El-Sisi, whose government has taken an authoritarian turn, and with other leaders on the trip.

“He feels you’re not the American president — you’re not really doing your job as American president — if you’re not raising issues of human rights,” said Sullivan. “You can expect that he will raise human rights issues in that meeting, as he will with other leaders that he encounters at the G-20.”

Sullivan said Mr. Biden and other senior officials would also advocate for the release of imprisoned Egyptian pro-democracy activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah, whose family said they were told by prison officials he was undergoing an undefined medical intervention amid a hunger strike that escalated Sunday.

After his brief stop in Egypt, the president will continue on to Cambodia for a summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to reinforce the U.S. commitment to the region in the face of China’s increasing assertiveness.

And then, in Indonesia, the president is set to hold his first sitdown as president with a newly empowered Chinese President Xi Jinping, who was awarded a norm-breaking third, five-year term as the Chinese Communist Party leader during the party’s national congress last month amid increasingly strained U.S.-China relations.

The White House has been working with Chinese officials over the last several weeks to arrange the meeting. Biden on Wednesday told reporters that he intended to discuss with Xi growing tensions between Washington and Beijing over the self-ruled island of Taiwan, trade policies, Beijing’s relationship with Russia and more.

“What I want to do with him when we talk is lay out what each of our red lines are and understand what he believes to be in the critical national interests of China, what I know to be the critical interests of the United States,” Mr. Biden said. “And determine whether or not they conflict with one another.”

Mr. Biden will also aim to demonstrate global resolve to stand up to Russia over its invasion of Ukraine and meet with two critical new partners in the effort to support Ukraine’s defense: British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni. President Vladimir Putin announced Thursday that he was skipping the gatherings, averting a potentially awkward encounter. Sullivan said the president has no plans to interact with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who is attending in Putin’s stead.

In Cambodia, Mr. Biden will also discuss North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs in a trilateral meeting with leaders of South Korea and Japan.

___

Kim reported from Phnom Penh, Cambodia. AP writers Seth Borenstein in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, and Chris Megerian and Aamer Madhani in Washington contributed.

In:

Climate Change

Joe Biden

Ukraine

Russia

Environment

China

Vladimir Putin

Asia

Cambodia

Indonesia

Egypt

The post Biden begins first leg of foreign trip with climate talks appeared first on MIAMI DAILY CHRONICLE.

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