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    A major new facility in Oregon could help transform the prospects of wave energy

    With snow-capped mountains, shimmering lakes and vast swathes of forest, Oregon, in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, does not lack for natural beauty.In waters off its coastline, one project is attempting to harness nature’s power by testing and analyzing wave energy converters, a technology which could have an important role to play in a transition to renewables.Known as PacWave, the project is based around two locations: PacWave North, “a test-site for small-scale, prototype, and maritime market technologies,” and PacWave South, which is under development and has received grants from the Department of Energy and the State of Oregon, among others.In March, PacWave South — which will be located 7 miles offshore in federal waters measuring 70 to 75 meters deep — took a significant step forward when it was announced that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission had granted Oregon State University (OSU) a license to “build and operate” a test facility at the site. According to OSU, PacWave South is “the first commercial-scale, utility grid-connected test site in the United States to obtain a FERC license and will be the first marine renewable energy research facility in federal waters off the Pacific Coast.”In a statement at the time, Burke Hales, who is the chief scientist for PacWave, described the news as a “huge moment for this project and for the industry as a whole.”Hales, who is also a professor at OSU’s College of Earth, Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, added that the license was “the first … of its type to be issued in the United States.”Once up and running, PacWave South will be made up of four berths. In total, the development will have the capacity to test as many as 20 utility-scale wave energy converters, or WECs.How though, do WECs work? According to Brussels-based trade association Ocean Energy Europe, these types of devices are able to “capture the physical movement of swells and waves and transform it into energy – usually electricity.” At PacWave South, subsea cables will carry electricity from the WECs to a land-based site which will in turn send it to the grid.According to the project’s website, the maximum power output of PacWave South will amount to 20 megawatts (MW). The site is “pre-permitted,” which in simple terms means WEC developers won’t need to apply for permits or permission to deploy their technology there.If all goes to plan, construction work could begin this summer with operations starting by 2023. Once built, PacWave South would bolster America’s marine energy testing infrastructure, which already includes the U.S. Navy Wave Energy Test Site in Hawaii.In a phone interview with CNBC last week, Hales sought to emphasize the importance of the U.S. having a test site such as PacWave South, as well as the task facing the sector.”I would say that wave energy is … a couple to a few decades behind wind energy,” he explained.”And the real bottleneck in the ketchup is that there is … really nowhere for these devices to test, basically, anywhere other than a couple of sites in Europe: there’s a site at Orkney, the EMEC site, (and) there’s a site in the Bay of Biscay called BiMep.””But really nothing, nothing like this, anywhere else in the world, and certainly nothing like this in the U.S.,” he added, going on to explain how it was “critically important” for developers to have a full-scale testing ground.Oceans of potential? The U.S. Department of Energy has described marine energy resources as having “the potential to contribute meaningfully to the U.S. and world energy supply.”Similarly, the International Energy Agency describes marine technologies as holding “great potential” but adds that extra policy support is required for research, design and development in order to “enable the cost reductions that come with the commissioning of larger commercial plants.”Looking to the future, marine-based sources of energy could have an important role to play in the U.S.  “As we move to increasing penetrations of wind + solar + batteries, we need renewable resources that are available when the wind isn’t blowing, at night-time, and during winter,” Bryson Robertson, associate professor and director of the Pacific Marine Energy Center at Oregon State University, told CNBC via email.”These are all attributes of marine energy,” Robertson said, adding that they complemented other renewable energy resources. “We need to diversify our renewables,” he explained, which would in turn ensure a robust, resilient, carbon free and distributed energy system.Laura Morton, who is the American Clean Power Association’s senior director of policy and regulatory affairs for offshore, echoed this viewpoint, telling CNBC via email that wave and tidal energy technologies “could help supplement wind, solar, and energy storage in transitioning America to a cleaner, safer, and more affordable energy system.”Tough targetsThe progress of the PacWave project comes as governments around the world lay out targets to cut emissions and attempt to ramp up renewable energy installations.The reality on the ground shows just how big a challenge this will be. In 2020, fossil fuels — in particular natural gas and coal — comfortably remained the biggest source of electricity generation in the U.S., according to the Energy Information Administration.  Globally, a U.N. report published in February showed that as of Dec. 31 last year, only 75 parties involved in the Paris Agreement had updated their NDCs, which are individual countries’ targets for cutting emissions and adapting to the effects of climate change.This represented just 40% of the total number involved, and together they account for only 30% of global greenhouse gas emissions.The interim report was described as a “red alert for our planet” by UN Secretary General António Guterres.”It shows governments are nowhere close to the level of ambition needed to limit climate change to 1.5 degrees and meet the goals of the Paris Agreement,” he added.Work to be doneWhile there is excitement regarding the role tidal and wave power could play in the planet’s energy mix, the current global footprint of these technologies is small.Recent figures from Ocean Energy Europe show that only 260 kilowatts (kW) of tidal stream capacity was added in Europe last year, while 200 kW of wave energy was installed.According to Ocean Energy Europe’s outlook for 2021, “up to 3.1 MW” of wave energy capacity could be deployed this year. For the rest of the world, OEE has forecast just 850 kW of installations.To put the above figures into context, industry body WindEurope has forecast 19.5 gigawatts of new wind installations for Europe in 2021. With the above in mind, what needs to be done to ensure tidal stream and wave energy technologies mature and become viable options in the U.S.?Gregory Wetstone, the president and CEO of the American Council on Renewable Energy, told CNBC via email that Oregon State University receiving a license from the FERC to build and operate PacWave South was “a great first step.””Wave and tidal technologies can provide clean, reliable electricity to help meet our growing energy demands,” he added, “but to bring them to an impactful scale, meaningful R&D investments are needed to truly catalyze the marine energy market.”For his part, Oregon State University’s Bryson Robertson made a number of points. “We need time and reliable long-term federal financial support to get more devices in the water,” he said.”The lack of ability for marine energy systems to quickly, repeatedly and cost effectively test is holding the industry back,” he added, noting that investments from the DOE in PacWave and other sites were “incredibly important.””We need to continue to invest in fundamental and foundation research in this arena,” he went on to add.”We need breakthroughs to significantly change the economics to see large scale deployments — universities need to be supported to develop the talent and workforce to create these innovations.” More

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    One dose of a Covid vaccine can almost halve transmission, study finds

    In this articlePEAKA nurse Cindy Mendez wearing a protective mask holds a syringe with a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, at NYC Health + Hospitals Harlem Hospital in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, February 25, 2021.Jeenah Moon | ReutersLONDON — A single dose of a coronavirus vaccine can reduce transmission within a household by up to half, a study by Public Health England has found.People who do become infected with the coronavirus three weeks after receiving a single dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or AstraZeneca-University of Oxford vaccine were between 38% and 49% less likely to pass the virus on to their household contacts than those who were unvaccinated, the PHE study found.Protection was seen from around 14 days after vaccination, with similar levels of protection regardless of age of cases or contacts.This protection is on top of the reduced risk of a vaccinated person developing symptomatic infection in the first place, which is around 60% to 65% – four weeks after one dose of either vaccine, PHE noted. Having both doses of a coronavirus vaccine (the delay between doses is up to 12 weeks in the U.K.) confers an even higher level of protection against Covid infection.The U.K.’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock hailed the study’s findings as “terrific news.” “We already know vaccines save lives and this study is the most comprehensive real-world data showing they also cut transmission of this deadly virus.””It further reinforces that vaccines are the best way out of this pandemic as they protect you and they may prevent you from unknowingly infecting someone in your household.””I urge everybody to get their vaccines as soon as they are eligible and make sure you get your second dose for the strongest possible protection,” he added.Both the Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca vaccines are being widely deployed in the U.K., with the Moderna vaccine also now added to the immunization program.The vaccine rollout has been a standout success in Britain, and one silver lining following the destruction of the pandemic, which has caused over 127,000 deaths so far in the country.The U.K has seen cases, hospitalizations and deaths fall dramatically since its rollout started in December, alongside strict lockdown measures. To date, almost 34 million U.K. adults have had a first dose of a vaccine and over 13 million have had two doses, government data shows.The PHE study noted that households are high-risk settings for transmission and provide early evidence on the impact of vaccines in preventing onward transmission. Similar results could be expected in other settings with similar transmission risks, such as shared accommodations and prisons, it noted.The study, which is a pre-print that has not yet been peer-reviewed, included over 57,000 contacts from 24,000 households in which there was a lab-confirmed coronavirus case that had received a vaccination, compared with nearly 1 million contacts of unvaccinated cases.By linking case and household contact data with vaccination status, the study compared the likelihood of transmission for a vaccinated case with an unvaccinated one.PHE is also undertaking separate studies on the effect of vaccination on transmission in the wider population. More

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    India reports record new cases and fatalities, official Covid death toll surpasses 200,000

    A patient wearing an oxygen mask is wheeled inside a COVID-19 hospital for treatment, amidst the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Ahmedabad, India, April 26, 2021.Amit Dave | ReutersIndia reported a record daily death toll on Wednesday as total Covid-19 fatalities crossed the 200,000 mark.Government data showed at least 3,293 people died over a 24-hour period. Overall cases also rose by a record 360,960 reported infections, marking India’s seventh consecutive day of over 300,000 new infections.The country’s total number of Covid cases is just below 18 million while the death toll stands at 201,187. Recent media reports, however, suggest the daily fatality number may be underreported.So far in April alone, the South Asian nation has reported more than 5.8 million new cases, sending the country’s health-care system to the brink.The international community responded with promises to send India desperately needed aid. The United States said it would send raw materials required for the South Asian country to manufacture AstraZeneca’s vaccine.India has so far administered more than 145 million vaccine doses, according to health ministry data. But, as of Tuesday, only around 23.9 million people have received their second doses.India’s Covid variant?Experts fear that a mutated variant of the coronavirus is responsible for the dramatic surge in cases during the second wave. Before the resurgence, India reported an average of around 10,000 new cases daily.Since last year, the virus has mutated multiple times. The World Health Organization classifies those variants as either “variant of interest” or “variant of concern.” Variant of concern typically refers to a variant that shows an increase in transmissibility and more severe disease, including greater rates of hospitalization or death.WHO classified the B1617 variant, with multiple sub-lineages that have slightly different characteristic mutations, as a variant of interest in its weekly epidemiological update on the pandemic. It was first detected in India last October but, as of Tuesday, was present in at least 17 countries including the United States, the U.K. and Singapore.India’s Covid crisisRead CNBC’s latest coverage of India’s battle with the coronavirus pandemic:India’s economy will likely contract this quarter as Covid cases soar, economists warnPhotos show the deadly toll of Covid in India as coronavirus cases top 17 millionU.S. to give India raw materials for vaccines, medical supplies to help fight Covid surgeThe international health body said in its report that the B1617 variant is circulating in India alongside other variants of concern as well as variant B1618, which was detected in some states. The WHO said these variants may be collectively playing a role in the current resurgence.RamificationsThe Indian government faces mounting criticism for letting large crowds gather, mostly without masks, for religious festivals and election rallies in various parts of the country.Last year’s better-than-expected handling of the first wave led to a sense of complacency within the political class and subsequent questionable decisions contributed to the surge, according to Akhil Bery, South Asia analyst at political risk consultancy Eurasia Group.Among those decisions, Bery noted the government allowed the weeks-long “Kumbh Mela” religious festival to take place, which reportedly saw hundreds of thousands of people take a dip in the Ganges river. That, he said, became a super spreader event as did election rallies held by various parties, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, in the eastern state of West Bengal.”There has been some questionable decision making here and this is a big, political challenge for Modi, at least in the short term,” Bery said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.””During last year’s surge, there was a general expectation that India’s health-care system would collapse. It ultimately didn’t,” he said, adding, “This led to a sense of complacency within the political class, within people … but, ultimately, that complacency fed into this mentality and now we’re seeing the end results of that.” More

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    Samsung family announces plans to pay off more than $10 billion of inheritance tax

    A Samsung flag (R) and South Korean national flag flutter at the company’s Seocho building in Seoul on April 28, 2021.JUNG YEON-JE | AFP via Getty ImagesSINGAPORE — The family of Samsung Electronics’ late chairman announced Wednesday they will be paying off a massive inheritance tax bill of more 12 trillion Korean won (about $10.78 billion).The inheritance tax payment is one of the largest in the history of South Korea and globally — “equivalent to three to four times the Korean government’s total estate tax revenue last year,” Lee Kun-hee’s family said in a statement.”As provided for under the law, the Family plans to pay the full amount of the inheritance tax over a period of five years, starting in April 2021,” the Lee family said.Lee passed away in October 2020 at the age of 78, after growing the Samsung Group into South Korea’s largest conglomerate. He took the helm in 1987 following the death of his father, Lee Byung-chul, who founded the conglomerate.Lee’s massive estateYonhap reported that the family is likely to fund the inheritance taxes with stock dividends but could also get bank loans.The family did not reveal how the members will split the patriarch’s stockholdings.Reuters reported in October that Lee was the wealthiest stock owner in South Korea.His estate was valued at about $23.4 billion dollars, according to Reuters which cited local media. Lee’s stock ownership includes 4.18% of Samsung Electronics common shares and 0.08% of preferred shares, 20.76% stake in Samsung Life Insurance, 2.88% stake in Samsung C&T and a 0.01% stake in Samsung SDS, reported Reuters.Shares of those firms declined after news of the tax announcement on Wednesday. Samsung Electronics fell 0.97% and Samsung C&T dropped 2.92%. Samsung SDS slipped 0.8% while Samsung Life Insurance was 0.24% lower.The family also said they will be donating 1 trillion won to health-care and medical causes.”The late Chairman Lee’s collection of antiques, Western paintings and works by Korean artists — approximately 23,000 pieces in total — will be donated to national organizations,” they said, in recognition of his passion for art collection and “his belief in the importance of passing on our cultural heritage to new generations.”South Korean chaebolsSamsung is South Korea’s largest chaebol — or large, family-run conglomerates that have historically played an important role in the country’s economic development.Such firms, which include the Hyundai Motor Group and SK Group, control vast networks of companies through a circular holding structure and their control typically exceeds cash-flow rights. That means families often wield undue influence over group companies in spite of their relatively small direct shareholdings.Still, many citizens have demanded reforms to curtail the power of the chaebols as concerns linger over crony capitalism.In January, Samsung heir Jay Y. Lee was sentenced to two and a half years in jail by a South Korean court. The younger Lee’s return to prison came following a retrial of a bribery case involving former President Park Geun-hye, according to Yonhap.— CNBC’s Chery Kang and Saheli Roy Choudhury contributed to this report. More

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    Starbucks faces more competition from local beverage brands in China, its biggest market outside the U.S.

    In this articleSBUXA man wearing a face mask walks past a deliveryman as he waits outside a Starbucks store as the country is hit by an outbreak of the new coronavirus, in Beijing, China February 7, 2020.Jason Lee | ReutersBEIJING — Investors in China are stepping up their bets that locals will buy more beverages that aren’t from Starbucks.The American coffee giant counts China as its fastest growing market and largest outside the U.S. While a quarterly earnings report Tuesday showed steady expansion, Starbucks said same-store sales growth of 91% in China — up from a contraction last year — missed expectations.The company attributed the miss to unexpected pandemic-related travel restrictions.But the market is heating up as investors have their eye on another trend: home-grown beverages.Less than four months into 2021, Beijing-based business data company Qimingpian counts 14 fundraising deals in China’s tea and coffee market. That’s the same number as the country saw for all of 2019 and just shy of last year’s total of 19, the data showed.These deals include investments in Hey Tea and Nayuki, tea-based beverage companies that have each reportedly reached valuations of about $2 billion or more in the last several months. Foreign brands illycaffe and Tim Hortons are also raising money for their local ventures.Precise investment figures for the industry were difficult to pin down given the private nature of many of the deals, but different data sources all pointed to significant growth.In December, Chinese business news site 36kr reported that Shanghai-based Manner Coffee received another round of investment that valued it at more than $1 billion. The boutique coffee brand focuses on selling drinks out of small, take-out venues in business districts.”Entry of new competitors to the specialty coffee market in China” was one of the business risks Starbucks listed in its annual report filed in November. The company has full ownership of its stores in China, giving it a greater share of the profits — and risks — from the massive market.Guangzhou and Shenzhen have each seen thousands of coffee shops pop up in the last five years, according to data from Meituan, which runs a food delivery business and operates Dianping, China’s version of Yelp.Shanghai remains the largest coffee market, with nearly 3 shops per 10,000 people versus a ratio of about 2 for Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Beijing, according to Meituan.Shanghai’s most dense coffee shop areaSource: Meituan, with design by Shanghai ObserverA greater market for tea in ChinaStarbucks retains the lead in China’s specialist coffee and tea shop market with 36.4% of the market, according to Euromonitor figures for 2020.But the market for tea drinks was twice as large as that of coffee in China and that gap is expected to expand this year, Meituan said citing industry data. The company said the number of milk tea and fruit juice storefronts is about four times that of coffee shops.Hey Tea is second to Starbucks in China’s specialist coffee and tea shop market, with an 8.8% share, according to Euromonitor. The Shenzhen-based company is best known for tea that comes with a cheese-like foamy layer of cream on top.Hey Tea is also climbing into the global market, with a 1.1% share of the category worldwide, according to Euromonitor. More

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    A 'tidal wave' of Chinese companies rush into the red-hot IPO market in the U.S.

    The Xpeng P7 electric vehicle displayed outside the New York Stock Exchange on Aug. 27, 2020 when the Chinese electric vehicle launched its initial public listing.Jeenah Moon | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesBEIJING — Chinese companies are rushing to go public in the red-hot IPO market in the U.S. — before it loses steam.The first three months of the year marked the busiest quarter for overall U.S. initial public offerings since 2000, according to consulting firm EY.Despite the coronavirus pandemic and tensions between the U.S. and China, half of 36 foreign public listings in the U.S. during that time came from companies based in Greater China, EY said.More are coming.About 60 Chinese companies plan to go public in the U.S. this year, Vera Yang, chief China representative for the New York Stock Exchange, said Tuesday.”From our interaction with companies, our sense is they would like to lose no time (in listing),” Yang said in a Mandarin-language interview, translated by CNBC. She pointed to uncertainties such as those brought by the pandemic, and a likely tightening of monetary policy in the longer term that would reduce the availability of capital.Money has steadily entered the market since the pandemic, allowing 30 China-based companies last year to raise the most capital in U.S. IPOs since 2014, according to Renaissance Capital.The S&P 500 climbed to fresh record highs this year, while U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell signaled that monetary policy will remain loose in the near term.For Chinese start-ups, investors and businesses are looking to cash in. They’re also looking past legislation passed under the Trump administration that would force U.S. exchanges to delist foreign companies that don’t comply with three years of U.S. audits.Our phone is ringing off the hook. We’re trying to hire more people. We haven’t seen anything like this since the Nasdaq bubble in ’99. Makes me worried.Gary Dvorchakmanaging director, BlueshirtDelisting concerns have calmed down since President Joe Biden took office in January, and market participants expect a compromise, said Blueshirt managing director Gary Dvorchak, who advises Chinese companies interested in listing in the U.S.”It’s a tidal wave,” he said of the Chinese IPO pipeline.”Our phone is ringing off the hook. We’re trying to hire more people. We haven’t seen anything like this since the Nasdaq bubble in ’99,” he said. “Makes me worried.”The rich get richerIn the late 1990s, a surge of speculation in new technology companies ranging from Pets.com to Cisco fed a U.S. stock market bubble that began to burst in 2000, in what came to be known as the “dotcom bubble.”This year, investor caution about viable business ventures caused capital to pile into just a few of the same companies, rather than spreading out their bets. The trend holds in China, home to many of the world’s so-called unicorns — or start-ups valued at $1 billion or more.Hongye Wang, China-based partner at venture capital firm Antler, said that anecdotally, more people are asking him for shares in unicorns than in earlier-stage start-ups.”A lot of companies cannot raise a lot of money, or their valuation(s) are decreasing. But if you look at the unicorns, especially the pre-IPO unicorns, their valuation is still crazy,” he said.Just take popular Chinese soda water company Genki Forest, which earlier this month reportedly secured another capital injection — of $500 million — bringing its valuation to $6 billion. In contrast, one of the biggest fundraising rounds in yuan that week was a much smaller 600 million yuan ($92.3 million) series B injection into Abogen Biosciences, according to Crunchbase.In a sign that some valuations may be too high, many Chinese stocks listed in the U.S. and Hong Kong have slumped after their initial public offerings this year.For example, in February Chinese short-video app Kuaishou soared 160% to $300 a share in the biggest internet company IPO since Uber, and the largest Hong Kong debut since the pandemic. But its stock has struggled to build on those gains, and closed at $274 a share on Tuesday.”The after-IPO pricing trend is not as good as last year,” said Ringo Choi, Asia-Pacific IPO leader at EY. He expects a slowdown in public offerings beginning in the third quarter of this year, especially if the macroeconomic environment takes a turn for the worse.For now, a few of China’s largest start-ups are still in the IPO pipeline, although the timing is unclear. Beijing-based ByteDance, owner of popular short-video app TikTok, is the biggest unicorn in the world, while Chinese ride-hailing company Didi Chuxing ranks fourth, according to CB Insights.Investors are “supportive, but more selective” of Chinese companies that might be able to sustain high valuations, Yang said, citing conversations with various investment funds.She said that among China-based businesses listing in the U.S. this year, the first area of interest is a category known as technology, media and telecommunications. That’s followed by consumer brands and business services, Yang said. More

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    Stock futures flat as Big Tech earnings roll in, Fed decision looms

    U.S. stock futures were flat in overnight trading on Tuesday as investors digested major technology earnings and geared up for the latest Federal Reserve policy announcement.S&P 500 futures gained 0.05% and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.1%. Dow futures fell about 60 points. Google parent Alphabet reported better-than-expected earnings after the bell on Tuesday, sending shares of the tech giant up more than 4% in after-hours trading. Alphabet saw its revenues grow 34% from a year ago.Meanwhile, Microsoft shares dipped about 3% in extended trading even after the company topped analyst earnings. Microsoft had its largest revenue growth since 2018, thanks in part to gains in PC sales resulting from coronavirus-driven shortages last year.Boosting sentiment about the economic recovery from the pandemic, Starbucks raised its full-year outlook as U.S. same-store sales growth returns to pre-pandemic levels.On Tuesday, the major averages traded around the flatline. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose just 3 points. The S&P 500 closed flat after notching an all-time high on Monday. The Nasdaq Composite was the relative underperformer, dipping 0.34% as Tesla fell 4.5%.”Although the overall stock market was flat today, the reopening trade was still working,” The Leuthold Group chief investment strategist Jim Paulsen told CNBC. “The S&P 500 was led by almost 1% gains in Energy, Financials and Industrial stocks. Likewise, the small cap Russell 2000 posted another day of modest outperformance.”Technology darlings Apple and Facebook both report earnings on Wednesday after the bell.”Many FAANGs are reporting this week and the stock market may wait until some of these key reports are out before deciding on its next major direction,” added Paulsen.The Fed wraps up its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday. The central bank is not expected to take any action, but economists expect it to defend its policy to let inflation run hot. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will hold a press conference at 2:30 p.m. ET, 30 minutes after the decision is announced.”Any clues offered in the board’s statement or in the subsequent press conference about potential QE tapering — when and how fast — would likely move both the stock and bond markets,” Paulsen said.Boeing, Ford, Qualcomm, eBay and MGM Resorts are among the other major corporate earnings on Wednesday.Enjoyed this article?For exclusive stock picks, investment ideas and CNBC global livestreamSign up for CNBC ProStart your free trial now More

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    Former HHS official applauds 'data-driven' easing of CDC mask guidance

    Former Health and Human Services official Dr. Mario Ramirez cheered President Joe Biden’s support of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s masking updates on Tuesday.”I think the president made the right point today, which is that guidance today is not about politics, it’s a data-driven recommendation that is based on how we see these vaccines behaving in the wild,” said Ramirez. The CDC said fully vaccinated people can exercise and attend small gatherings outdoors without wearing a face mask. Biden said the new recommendations underscore the progress that the U.S. has made in beating back Covid. Ramirez, a former HHS pandemic and emerging threats coordinator in the Office of Global Affairs, told CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” that while the U.S. is trending in the right direction when it comes to vaccinations, officials will have to engage in a “persistent messaging campaign” in order to convince skeptical Americans to get vaccinated. In the U.S., 232 million vaccine jabs have been put into arms, according to CDC data, with 43% of the total population having received at least one dose and nearly 20% of the country fully vaccinated. Dr. Peter Hotez told “The News with Shepard Smith” on Friday that summertime in the United States could return to a pre-Covid-19 normal if 75% to 80% of the U.S. population is vaccinated.Ramirez said that an improvement in vaccine convenience will be another helpful step to getting more Americans vaccinated. “One of the things we’re looking forward to in the fall is whether vaccine manufacturers can actually bundle a flu and a coronavirus vaccine together, if we can do that, it will go a long way to improving uptake of the vaccine,” said Ramirez.  More