Two Climate Change Bills, COVID Vaccine Boosters. Sept 24, 2021, Part 1
Science Friday
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🗓️ 24 September 2021
⏱️ 47 minutes
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Summary
This week, NASA announced that it had selected a destination for a planned robotic lunar rover called VIPER, the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover. The mission is planned for launch in 2023, and will rove about the Moon’s south pole, mapping the location and concentration of water ice deposits. The plan is for a commercial spaceflight mission to deliver the rover to a spot near the western edge of the Nobile Crater at the Moon’s south pole.
Sophie Bushwick, technology editor at Scientific American, joins Ira to talk about the mission and other stories from the week in technology and science—including tiny airborne micro-machines, an upcoming voyage for the James Webb Space Telescope, and the discovery of ancient kids’ handprints that could be the world’s oldest-known art.
Congress Is Considering Two Climate Change Bills. What’s In Them?
President Biden has made many promises about slowing climate change. During his campaign, he pledged to bring the United States’ energy sector to zero carbon emissions by 2035. On Earth Day this year, he pledged to reduce total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030, and by 100% by 2050.
But the key policy changes that will help the country get there remain pending as the relevant bills continue to make their way through Congress. The first is an infrastructure bill that would pledge billions toward cleaner transit and resiliency projects in disaster-stricken communities. But that measure is tied intricately with the fate of a second, $3.5 trillion budget bill that would direct billions of dollars to incentivize coal and natural gas-burning utilities to switch over to renewable energy.
If both are to pass without substantial changes, they rely on consensus among the narrow majorities of Democrats in the Senate and the House—neither of which is guaranteed.
New York Times reporter Coral Davenport walks through what’s in the bills, and why so much is still up in the air even after a summer of climate-driven disasters.
Behind The Booster Battle
Update 9/24/2021: This week, CDC director Rochelle Walensky overruled the recommendations of an advisory panel and authorized a third dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for the elderly and certain “high risk” individuals, mirroring an earlier FDA decision. In late August, President Biden had said that COVID-19 vaccine booster shots might soon be on the horizon for many Americans.
In late August, President Biden said that COVID-19 vaccine booster shots might soon be on the horizon for many Americans. But last Friday, an FDA advisory committee voted to recommend booster doses only for people over age 65—and this Wednesday, the FDA authorized Pfizer boosters for use in the elderly and “high risk” individuals.
In the republished article (which you can read on sciencefriday.com) from September 16, written before the FDA review, Kaiser Health News’ Arthur Allen and Sarah Jane Tribble examine the backstory behind the debate over boosters, and how leaders from the NIH got out in front of FDA and CDC recommendations.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday, I'm Ira Plato. A bit later in the hour, Congress has two big bills that might |
| 0:06.7 | just might tackle climate change this year. And the debate over COVID vaccine boosters the |
| 0:12.6 | shifting landscape over who's ready for a booster shot. But first, this week a planned moon rover |
| 0:19.2 | got an official destination not to Mars but to the moon's south pole. Sophie Bushwick is here to |
| 0:26.9 | fill us in on that story and other science headlines from the week. She's technology editor for |
| 0:32.6 | Scientific American based in New York. Welcome back. Thank you. So NASA has announced that their |
| 0:40.8 | volatile investigating polar exploration rover or Viper is that when it goes to the moon, |
| 0:47.3 | it's going to be landing near the south pole by the noble crater. And it is not set to launch |
| 0:54.7 | until 2023. But when it does, it is going to be NASA's first ever robotic moon rover. So |
| 1:02.6 | there have been moon buggies on the moon before, which have wheels, but were true to by astronauts. |
| 1:08.3 | This is the NASA's first untrude moon rover. That is really cool. How's it going to get there? |
| 1:13.6 | What's the time frame? Give us all that. The idea is that in 2023, Viper is going to |
| 1:20.8 | launch with help from two commercial space companies. It has a lander, which is built by astrobotic |
| 1:27.3 | and the rocket that is going to take it to the moon is a SpaceX rocket. Wow, so this is going to |
| 1:32.3 | be a private venture. This is not any government doing this thing. Well, NASA is the one that's |
| 1:37.7 | in charge of the rover itself, but the way it's going to get to the moon is going to be a commercial |
| 1:42.0 | venture. That's right. How cool is that? And give us an itinerary. What's it supposed to do? How |
| 1:46.8 | long will it explore? There is evidence that there is water ice on the moon. The question is how |
| 1:52.8 | easy is it for us to extract it? Is there enough there to support a human presence on the moon? |
| 1:59.0 | So Viper's job is to look into that. So it's going to be roving around an area that's about 36 |
| 2:05.9 | square miles. And it's going to be drilling into the ground up to a meter down to look for samples |
| 2:13.1 | of water ice and how easy it is to extract. And it's even going to explore these areas that are |
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