• La construction des prix à la SNCF, une socio-histoire de la tarification. De la #péréquation au yield management (1938-2012)

      Cet article analyse les conditions de production et de légitimation des systèmes de prix des billets de train en France, depuis la création de la SNCF en 1938. Initialement fondé sur le principe d’un tarif kilométrique uniforme, le système historique de péréquation est lentement abandonné au cours des décennies d’après-guerre, au profit d’une tarification indexée sur les coûts marginaux. Au tournant des années 1980-1990, ce paradigme est lui-même remplacé par un dispositif de tarification en temps réel – le yield management – visant à capter le maximum du surplus des consommateurs. Les transformations des modèles tarifaires à la SNCF, qui s’accompagnent d’une redéfinition de la notion éminemment polymorphe de service public ferroviaire, résultent du travail de quelques acteurs de premier plan. Ces « faiseurs de prix », qui mobilisent les instruments de la discipline économique et usent de leur capacité d’influence, agissent dans des contextes (politiques, sociaux, techniques et concurrentiels) particuliers, qui rendent possibles, nécessaires et légitimes les innovations qu’ils proposent.

      https://www.cairn.info/revue-francaise-de-sociologie-2014-1-page-5.htm

      #Jean_Finez

    • Noël : est-ce vraiment moins cher de réserver son train SNCF 3 mois à l’avance ?

      C’est un fait : les tarifs des trajets en train pour la période de Noël ont explosé entre octobre et fin décembre 2023. Nous avons suivi, semaine après semaine, leur évolution. Voici les résultats, parfois surprenants, de notre enquête.

      « Plus on réserve un train à l’avance, plus les prix sont bas. » La phrase de la SNCF semble logique. Mais est-elle vérifiée ? À l’approche des fêtes de Noël, nous avons décidé de nous lancer dans une petite enquête. Numerama a relevé les tarifs d’une vingtaine de trajets en train à travers la France, sur les douze dernières semaines, pour en mesurer l’évolution.

      Nous avions une question principale : est-ce vrai qu’il vaut mieux réserver son billet de train trois mois à l’avance, pour le payer moins cher ? Suivie d’une autre : comment les tarifs évoluent-ils à travers le temps, et à quel rythme les trains deviennent-ils complets ?

      Nous avons choisi arbitrairement dix allers-retours à travers la France. La date est toujours la même, pour simuler un voyage pour les fêtes de fin d’année : un aller le 22 décembre, un retour le 27 décembre. Nous avons choisi un train par jour et suivi l’évolution du tarif des billets chaque semaine, à compter du mercredi 4 octobre, soit la date de l’ouverture des ventes (qui avaient d’ailleurs mis en panne SNCF Connect).
      Prendre ses billets tôt pour Noël permet d’éviter le pire

      Après douze semaines de relevés et une agrégation des données, le premier constat est clair : les tarifs ont énormément augmenté sur cette période. Il est évident que, même s’il y a des exceptions, il reste très intéressant de prendre son billet le plus tôt possible. C’est d’ailleurs ce que la SNCF nous a confirmé, par mail : « Plus on réserve à l’avance, plus les prix sont bas. Le mieux est donc de réserver dès l’ouverture des ventes, ou alors dans les semaines qui suivent. »

      Sur ce graphique, nous avons matérialisé la hausse de tous les trajets confondus. À part une ou deux exceptions (en TER), tous les billets ont augmenté, parfois beaucoup. Certains trajets se sont retrouvés complets très vite — nous les avons matérialisés avec un petit rond barré sur le graphique ci-dessous.

      Les prix peuvent parfois varier du simple au double. Le trajet Nantes-Bordeaux, par exemple, est passé de 58 euros à 136 euros (dernières places en première classe), soit une augmentation de 164 %. Un Strasbourg-Paris a terminé à 153 euros, au lieu de 93 euros il y a trois mois.

      Des hausses de prix jusqu’à 150 %

      Au global, les TGV sont les trains qui subissent les plus grosses hausses à travers le temps, sauf quelques exceptions (Marseille-Nice n’a pas changé d’un iota au fil des 12 semaines, par exemple).

      Sur cette carte réalisée par l’équipe design de Numerama, Adèle Foehrenbacher et Claire Braikeh, on observe quels sont les trajets qui ont subi la plus forte hausse (en rouge foncé), par rapport à ceux qui n’ont pas beaucoup bougé sur 3 mois (en rose).

      Pour les retours de Noël sur la journée du 27 décembre, les trajets les plus onéreux sont les mêmes (Paris-Toulouse, Paris-Strasbourg, Nantes-Bordeaux).

      Certains billets sont moins chers quelques jours avant le départ

      Lorsque nous avons commencé cette enquête, nous nous sommes demandé s’il serait possible qu’un billet devienne moins cher à l’approche de la date du voyage, ce qui est plutôt contre-intuitif. Une occurrence est venue, sur la dernière semaine, être l’exception qui confirme la règle : le trajet Paris-La Rochelle (en jaune ci-dessous) est devenu, au dernier moment, moins cher à l’approche du voyage, par rapport au tarif d’il y a trois mois.

      Autre cas curieux : nous avons constaté au fil des semaines une variation à la baisse sur le trajet Nancy-Grenoble, avec une correspondance. « Ce phénomène est extrêmement rare », nous assure la SNCF. « Nancy-Grenoble n’est pas un train direct. Il se peut que l’un des deux trains se remplissent moins vite et que des petits prix aient été rajoutés à un moment donné », explique-t-on. Le voyage a fini par augmenter de nouveau, pour devenir complet deux semaines avant le départ.

      Le trajet n’est pourtant pas le seul exemple. Prenons le trajet en TER et Train NOMAD Caen-Le Havre. Le 4 octobre, le voyage revenait à 38,4 euros. Surprise ! Dès la semaine suivante, il est tombé à 18 euros, pour rester fixe pendant plusieurs mois. Jusqu’au 13 décembre, où le prix a re-grimpé jusqu’à 48 euros — l’horaire du train de départ ayant été modifié de quelques minutes. Ici, ce n’est pas la SNCF, mais les conseils régionaux qui valident les prix. Par mail, l’établissement régional des lignes normandes nous assure que « la baisse des prix 15 jours après l’ouverture des ventes est impossible ». C’est pourtant le constat que nous avons fait, dès une semaine après l’ouverture.

      Pourquoi de telles hausses ?

      Cela fait plusieurs années que la SNCF a commencé à modifier la manière dont elle décide des tarifs, selon le journaliste spécialisé Gilles Dansart. La compagnie aurait décidé de « faire payer beaucoup plus cher à mesure que l’on s’approche de la date de départ du train », alors qu’auparavant, elle se calquait sur la longueur des kilomètres parcourus pour étalonner ses prix, a-t-il analysé sur France Culture le 21 décembre.

      Contactée, la SNCF nous explique : « Les prix sont les mêmes que pour n’importe quelles dates. Il n’y a pas de prix spécifiques pour Noël. Ce qui fait évoluer les prix, c’est le taux de remplissage et la demande. À Noël les trains se remplissent plus vite et les paliers maximum peuvent être atteints plus rapidement. »

      Ces paliers sont un véritable enjeu, lorsque l’on voit que certains trajets se retrouvent complets très rapidement — le Paris-Toulouse du 22 décembre s’est en effet retrouvé complet, selon nos constats, en à peine une semaine, début octobre.

      En 10 ans, la SNCF a perdu 105 TGV, soit 30 000 sièges, a calculé récemment France 2 dans un reportage. « On n’arrivait plus à remplir les TGV, il y avait des taux d’occupation à moins de 60 % », a expliqué à leur micro Christophe Fanichet, directeur général de SNCF Voyageurs.

      Cette politique de financement de la SNCF ne va pas aller en s’arrangeant pour les voyageurs et voyageuses : l’entreprise a déjà entériné une augmentation du prix des TGV pour 2024, rappelle le Parisien.

      https://www.numerama.com/vroom/1593454-noel-est-ce-vraiment-moins-cher-de-reserver-son-train-3-mois-a-lav

    • Mais on sait que l’investissement sur l’infra était sous dimensionnée autour de 2005, donc voir monter les coûts de péages de l’infra n’a rien d’anormal.
      Nos voisins sont-ils sous le prix réel ? Alors il vont subir un effet boomerang plus tard (effet dette).

  • #Air_Partner: the Home Office’s little-known deportation fixer

    International travel megacorp #Carlson_Wagonlit_Travel (#CWT) holds a £5.7 million, seven-year contract with the Home Office for the “provision of travel services for immigration purposes”, as it has done for nearly two decades. However, a key part of its work – the chartering of aircraft and crew to carry out the deportations – has been subcontracted to a little-known aviation charter outfit called Air Partner.

    Summary

    Digging deeper into Air Partner, we found a company which has been quietly organising mass deportations for the Home Office for years. We also learnt that:

    It likely arranged for the airline #Privilege_Style to carry out the aborted flight to #Rwanda, and will seek another airline if the Rwanda scheme goes ahead.
    It has organised deportation logistics for the US and several European governments.
    It is currently one of four beneficiaries of a €15 million framework contract to arrange charter deportations for the European Coast Guard and Border Agency, #Frontex.
    The company grew off the back of military contracts, with profits soaring during the ‘War on Terror’, the Arab Spring, and the Covid-19 pandemic.
    Its regular clients include politicians, celebrities and sports teams, and it recently flew teams and fans to the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
    Air Partner was bought in spring 2022 by American charter airline, Wheels Up, but that company is in troubled financial waters.

    Air Partner: Home Office deportation broker

    In Carlson Wagonlit’s current contract award notice, published on the EU website Tenders Electronic Daily, the “management and provision of aircraft(s) charter services” is subcontracted to Air Partner – a detail which is redacted in documents on the UK government’s procurement site. In other words, when the Home Office wants to carry out a mass deportation flight, the task of finding the airline is delegated to Air Partner.

    The contract stipulates that for each charter flight, Air Partner must solicit bids from at least three potential airlines. Selection is on the basis of value for money. However, the contract also states that “the maximum possible flexibility “ is expected from the carrier in terms of dates and destinations. The winning bidder must also be morally comfortable with the work, although it is not clear at what point in the process a first-time deportation airline is fully informed of the nature of the task.

    The contract suggests that airlines like #Privilege_Style, #Titan_Airways, #Hi_Fly and #TUI, therefore, owe their entry into the UK deportation business to Air Partner, which effectively acts as gatekeeper to the sector. Meanwhile, #Carlson_Wagonlit books the tickets, oversees the overall operation, arranges deportations on scheduled flights, and liaises with the guards who physically enforce the expulsion (currently supplied by the company that runs Manston camp, Mitie, in a Home Office escorting contract that runs until 2028).

    The latest deal between the Home Office and Carlson Wagonlit was awarded in 2017 and runs until 31st October 2024. It is likely that Air Partner makes money through a commission on each deportation flight.

    Flying for Frontex

    Yet Air Partner isn’t just the UK government’s deportation dealer. Its Austrian branch is currently one of four companies which organise mass expulsions for the European Coast Guard and Border Agency, Frontex, in a €15 million framework contract that was renewed in August 2022. A framework contract is essentially a deal in which a few companies are chosen to form a pool of select suppliers of particular goods or services, and are then called upon when needed. The work was awarded without advertising, which Frontex can do when the tender is virtually identical as in the previous contract.

    Frontex organises deportation charter flights – either for multiple EU states at a time (where the plane stops to pick up deportees from several countries) – or for a single state. The Agency also arranges for individuals to be deported on regular commercial flights.

    Air Partner’s work for Frontex is very similar to its work for the Home Office. It sources willing aircraft and crew, obtains flight and landing permits, and organises hotels – presumably for personnel – “in case of delays”. The other beneficiaries of the framework contract are #Air_Charter_Service, #Professional_Aviation_Solutions, and #AS_Aircontact.

    Air Charter Service is a German company, sister of a Surrey-based business of the same name, and is owned by Knightsbridge private equity firm, #Alcuin_Capital_Partners. Professional Aviation Solutions is another German charter company, owned by #Skylink_Holding. Finally, Norwegian broker AS Aircontact is a subsidiary of travel firm #Aircontact_Group, ultimately owned by chairman #Johan_Stenersen. AS Aircontact has benefited from the Frontex deal for many years.

    The award was given to the four companies on the basis of lowest price, with each bidder having to state the price it was able to obtain for a range of specified flights. The companies then bid for specific deportations, with the winner being the one offering best value for money. Air Partner’s cut from the deal in 2021 was €2.7 million.

    The contract stipulates the need for total secrecy:

    [The contractor] Must apply the maximum discretion and confidentiality in relation to the activity… must not document or share information on the activity by any means such as photo, video, commenting or sharing in social media, or equivalent.

    The Frontex award effectively means that Air Partner and the other three firms can carry out work on behalf of all EU states. But the company’s involvement with deportations doesn’t stop there: Air Partner has also profited for years from similar contracts with a number of individual European governments.

    The company has done considerable work in Ireland, having been appointed as one of its official deportation brokers back in 2005. Ten years later, the Irish Department of Justice was recorded as having paid Air Partner to carry out a vaguely-described “air charter” job (on a web page that is no longer available), while in 2016 the same department paid Air Partner €240,000 for “returns air charter” – government-speak for deportation flights.

    Between August 2021 and February 2022, the Austrian government awarded the company six Frontex-funded deportation contracts, worth an estimated average of €33,796.

    The company also enjoys a deportation contract with the German government, in a deal reviewed annually. The current contract runs until February 2023.

    Finally, Air Partner has held deportation contracts with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and has been involved in deporting Mexican migrants to the US as far back as the early 2000s.1
    Relationship with the airlines

    In the first half of 2021, 22 of the EU’s 27 member states participated in Frontex flights, with Germany making far greater use of the ‘service’ than any other country. The geographic scale of Air Partner’s work gives an indication of the privileged access it has as gatekeeper to Europe’s lucrative ‘deportation market’, and ultimately, the golden land of government contracts more generally.

    For example, British carrier Titan Airways – which has long carried out deportations for the Home Office – only appears to have broken into this market in Germany and Austria in 2018 and 2019, respectively. As Corporate Watch has documented, other airlines such as Privilege Style, #AirTanker, #Wamos and #Iberojet (formerly, #Evelop) regularly run deportation flights for a number of governments, including the UK. We can assume that Air Partner’s relationships with the firms are key to these companies’ ability to secure such deals in new markets.

    Some of these relationships are clearly personal: #Alastair_Wilson, managing director of Titan Airways, worked as trading manager for Air Partner for seven years until he left that firm for Titan in 2014. By 2017, Titan was playing a major role in forcible expulsions from the UK.

    The business: from military money to deportation dealer

    Air Partner’s origins are in military work. Founded in 1961, the company started its life as a training centre which helped military pilots switch to the commercial sector. Known for much of its history as Air London, it has enjoyed extensive Ministry of Defence deals for troop rotations and the supply of military equipment. Up until 2010, military contracts represented over 60% of pre-tax profits. However, in recent years it has managed to wean itself off the MOD and develop a more diverse clientele; by 2018, the value of military contracts had dropped to less than 3% of profits.

    The company’s main business is in brokering aircraft for charter flights, and sourcing planes from its pool of partner airlines at the request of customers who want to hire them. It owns no aircraft itself. Besides governments and wealthy individuals, its current client base includes “corporates, sports and entertainment teams, industrial and manufacturing customers, and tour operators.”

    Its other source of cash is in training and consultancy to government, military and commercial customers through three subsidiaries: its risk management service Baines Simmons, the Redline Security project, and its disaster management sideline, Kenyon Emergency Services. Conveniently, while the group’s main business pumps out fossil fuels on needless private flights, Kenyon’s disaster management work involves among other things, preparing customers for climate change-induced natural disasters.

    Despite these other projects, charter work represents the company’s largest income stream by far, at 87% of the group’s profits. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the majority of this is from leasing large jets to customers such as governments, sports teams and tour operators. Its second most lucrative source of cash is leasing private jets to the rich, including celebrities. Finally, its freight shipments tend to be the least profitable division of its charter work.

    The company’s charter division continues to be “predominantly driven by government work”.2 It has been hired by dozens of governments and royal families worldwide, and almost half the profits from its charter work now derive from the US, although France has long been an important market too.

    Ferrying the mega-rich

    Meanwhile, Air Partner’s work shuttling politicians and other VIPs no doubt enables the company to build up its bank of useful contacts which help it secure such lucrative government deals. Truly this is a company of the mega-rich: a “last-minute, half-term holiday” with the family to Madeira costs a mere £36,500 just for the experience of a private jet. It was the first aircraft charter company to have held a Royal Warrant, and boasts of having flown US election candidates and supplying George W Bush’s press plane.3

    The “group charter” business works with bands and sports teams. The latter includes the Wales football team, Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea and Real Madrid, while the Grand Prix is “always a firm fixture in the charter calendar”.4 It also flew teams and fans to the controversial 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.5

    Crisis profiteer: the War on Terror, the Arab Spring & Covid-19

    Air Partner has cashed in on one crisis after the next. Not only that, it even contributes to one, and in so doing multiplies its financial opportunities. As military contractor to belligerent Western forces in the Middle East, the company is complicit in the creation of refugees – large numbers of whom Air Partner would later deport back to those war zones. It feeds war with invading armies, then feasts on its casualties.

    The company reportedly carried at least 4,000t of military supplies during the first Gulf War. The chairman at the time, Tony Mack, said:

    The Gulf War was a windfall for us. We’d hate to say ‘yippee, we’re going to war’, but I guess the net effect would be positive.6

    And in its financial records over the past twenty years, three events really stand out: 9/11 and the ‘War on Terror’, the Arab Spring, and the Covid-19 pandemic.

    9/11 and the subsequent War on Terror was a game changer for the company, marking a departure from reliance on corporate customers and a shift to more secure government work. First – as with the pandemic – there was a boom in private jet hire due to “the number of rich clients who are reluctant to travel on scheduled services”.7

    But more significant were the military contracts it was to obtain during the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. During the occupation of Afghanistan, it “did a lot of freighting for the military”,8 while later benefiting from emergency evacuation work when coalition foreign policy came to its inevitably grim conclusion in 2021.

    It enjoyed major military assignments with coalition forces in Iraq,9 with the UK’s eventual withdrawal resulting in a 19% drop in freight sales for the company. At one point, Air Partner lamented that its dip in profits was in part due to the temporary “cessation of official hostilities” and the non-renewal of its 2003 “Gulf contracts”.

    9/11 and the aggression that followed was a boon for Air Partner’s finances. From 2001-02, pre-tax profits increased to then record levels, jumping 85% from £2.2 million to £4 million. And it cemented the company’s fortunes longer-term; a 2006 company report gives insight into the scale of the government work that went Air Partner’s way:

    … over the last decade alone, many thousands of contracts worth over $500m have been successfully completed for the governments of a dozen Western Powers including six of the current G8 member states.

    Two years on, Air Partner’s then-CEO, #David_Savile, was more explicit about the impact of the War on Terror:

    Whereas a decade ago the team was largely servicing the Corporate sector, today it majors on global Government sector clients. Given the growing agenda of leading powers to pursue active foreign policies, work levels are high and in today’s climate such consistent business is an important source of income.

    Profits soared again in 2007, coinciding with the bloodiest year of the Iraq war – and one which saw the largest US troop deployment. Its chairman at the time said:

    The events of 9/11 were a watershed for the aviation industry…since then our sales have tripled and our profitability has quadrupled. We now expect a period of consolidation… which we believe will present longer term opportunities to develop new business and new markets.

    It seems likely that those “new markets” may have included deportation work, given that the first UK charter deportations were introduced by the New Labour government in 2001, the same year as the invasion of Afghanistan.

    Another financial highlight for the company was the 2011 Arab Spring, which contributed to a 93% increase in pre-tax profits. Air Partner had earlier won a four-year contract with the Department for International Development (DfID) to become its “sole provider of passenger and freight air charter services”, and had been hired to be a charter broker to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Crisis Centre.

    As people in Libya, Egypt, Bahrain and Tunisia took to the streets against their dictators, the company carried out emergency evacuations, including for “some of the largest oil companies”. A year later, it described a “new revenue stream from the oil & gas industry”, perhaps a bonus product of the evacuation work.

    Finally, its largest jump in profits was seen in 2021, as it reaped the benefits of converging crises: the pandemic, the evacuation of Afghanistan, and the supply chain crisis caused by Brexit and the severe congestion of global sea-shipping routes. The company was tasked with repatriation flights, PPE shipments, and “flying agricultural workers into the UK from elsewhere in Europe”, as well as responding to increased demand for “corporate shuttles” in the UK and US.10 Pre-tax profits soared 833% to £8.4 million. It made a gross profit of approximately £45 million in both 2021 and 2022. The company fared so well in fact from the pandemic that one paper summed it up with an article entitled “Air Partner takes off after virus grounds big airlines”.

    While there is scant reporting on the company’s involvement in deportations, The Times recently mentioned that Air Partner “helps in the deporting of individuals to Africa and the Caribbean, a business that hasn’t slowed down during the pandemic”. In a rare direct reference to deportation work, CEO Mark Briffa responded that it:

    …gives Wheels Up [Air Partner’s parent company] a great opportunity to expand beyond private jets…It was always going to be a challenge for a company our size to scale up and motor on beyond where we are.

    Yet Briffa’s justification based on the apparent need to diversify beyond VIP flights looks particularly hollow against the evidence of decades of lucrative government work his company has enjoyed.

    When asked for comment, a spokesperson from the company’s PR firm TB Cardew said:

    As a policy, we do not comment on who we fly or where we fly them. Customer privacy, safety and security are paramount for Air Partner in all of our operations. We do not confirm, deny or comment on any potential customer, destination or itinerary.

    The parent company: Wheels Up

    Air Partner was bought in spring 2022 for $108.2 million by Wheels Up Experience Inc, a US charter airline which was recently listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The company calls itself one of the world’s largest private aviation companies, with over 180 owned or long-term leased aircraft, 150 managed fleet (a sort of sharing arrangement with owners), and 1,200 aircraft which it can hire for customers when needed.

    In contrast to Air Partner, its new owner is in deep trouble. While Wheels Up’s revenues have increased considerably over the past few years (from $384 million in 2019 to $1.2 billion in 2022), these were far outweighed by its costs. It made a net loss in 2021 of $190 million, more than double that of the previous year. The company attributes this to the ongoing impact of Covid-19, with reduced crew availability and customer cancellations. And the situation shows no sign of abating, with a loss of $276.5 million in the first nine months of this year alone. Wheels Up is responding with “aggressive cost-cutting”, including some redundancies.

    #Wheels_Up is, in turn, 20% owned by #Delta_Airlines, one of the world’s oldest and largest airlines. Mammoth asset manager Fidelity holds an 8% share, while Wheels Up’s CEO #Kenneth_Dichter owns 5%. Meanwhile, the so-called ‘Big Three’ asset managers, BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street each hold smaller shareholdings.

    Among its clients, Wheels Up counts various celebrities – some of whom have entered into arrangements to promote the company as ‘brand ambassadors’. These apparently include Jennifer Lopez, American football players Tom Brady, Russell Wilson, J.J. Watt, Joey Logano, and Serena Williams.

    Given Wheel’s Up’s current financial situation, it can be safely assumed that government contracts will not be easily abandoned, particularly in a time of instability in the industry as a whole. At the same time, given the importance of Wheels Up as a brand and its VIP clientele, anything that poses a risk to its reputation would need to be handled delicately by the company.

    It also remains to be seen whether Wheels Up will use its own fleet to fulfil Air Partner’s contracting work, and potentially become a supplier of deportation planes in its own right.
    Top people

    Air Partner has been managed by CEO #Mark_Briffa since 2010. A former milkman and son of Maltese migrants, Briffa grew up in an East Sussex council house and left school with no O or A levels. He soon became a baggage handler at Gatwick airport, eventually making his way into sales and up the ladder to management roles. Briffa is also president of the parent company, Wheels Up.

    #Ed_Warner OBE is the company’s chair, which means he leads on its strategy and manages the board of directors. An Oxbridge-educated banker and former chair of UK Athletics, Warner no doubt helps Air Partner maintain its connections in the world of sport. He sits on the board of private equity fund manager HarbourVest, and has previously been chairman of BlackRock Energy and Resources Income Trust, which invests in mining and energy.

    #Kenny_Dichter is founder and CEO of Air Partner’s US parent company, Wheels Up. Dichter is an entrepreneur who has founded or provided early investment to a list of somewhat random companies, from a chain of ‘wellness’ stores, to a brand of Tequila.

    #Tony_Mack was chairman of the business founded by his parents for 23 years and a major shareholder, before retiring from Air Partner in 2014. Nowadays he prefers to spend his time on the water, where he indulges in yacht racing.

    Some of Air Partner’s previous directors are particularly well-connected. #Richard_Everitt, CBE held the company chairmanship from 2012 until 2017. A solicitor by training, prior to joining Air Partner Everitt was a director of the British Aviation Authority (BAA) and chief executive of National Air Traffic Services (Nats), and then CEO of the Port of London Authority (PLA). Since leaving the PLA, he has continued his career on the board of major transport authorities, having twice been appointed by the Department of Transport as chair of Dover Harbour Board, a two-day per week job with an annual salary of £79,500. He also served as a commissioner of Belfast Harbour.

    One figure with friends in high places was the Hon. #Rowland_John_Fromanteel_Cobbold, who was an Air Partner director from 1996 to 2004. Cobbold was the son of 1st Baron Cobbold, former Governor of the Bank of England and former Lord Chamberlain, an important officer of the royal household. He was also grandson of Victor Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Earl of Lytton and governor of Bengal, and younger brother of 2nd Baron Cobbold, who was a crossbench peer.

    #Lib_Dem peer #Lord_Lee of Trafford held significant shares in Air Partner from at least 2007 until the company was bought by Wheels Up in 2022. Lord Lee served as parliamentary undersecretary for MOD Procurement under Margaret Thatcher, as well as Minister for Tourism. In 2015 the value of his 113,500 shares totalled £446,000. His shares in the company were despite having been Lib Dem party spokesman on defence at the time. Seemingly, having large stakes in a business which benefits from major MOD contracts, whilst simultaneously advocating on defence policy was not deemed a serious conflict of interest. The former stockbroker is now a regular columnist for the Financial Times. Calling himself the “first ISA millionaire”, Lee published a book called “How to Make a Million – Slowly: Guiding Principles From a Lifetime Investing”.

    The company’s recent profits have been healthy enough to ensure that those at the top are thoroughly buffered from the current cost of living crisis, as all executive and non-executive directors received a hefty pay rise. Its 2022 Annual Report reveals that CEO Mark Briffa’s pay package totalled £808,000 (£164,000 more than he received in 2021) and outgoing Chief Financial Officer Joanne Estell received £438,000 (compared with £369,000 in 2021), not to mention that Briffa and Estell were awarded a package in spring 2021 of 100% and 75% of their salary in shares. Given the surge in Air Partner’s share price just before the buyout, it’s likely that the net worth of its directors – and investors like Lord Lee – has significantly increased too.

    Conclusion

    What really is the difference between the people smugglers vilified daily by right-wing rags, and deportation merchants like Air Partner? True, Air Partner helps cast humans away in the opposite direction, often to places of danger rather than potential safety. And true, smugglers’ journeys are generally more consensual, with migrants themselves often hiring their fixers. But for a huge fee, people smugglers and deportation profiteers alike ignore the risks and indignities involved, as human cargo is shunted around in the perverse market of immigration controls.

    In October 2022, deportation airline Privilege Style announced it would pull out of the Rwanda deal following strategic campaigning by groups including Freedom from Torture and SOAS Detainee Support. This is an important development and we can learn lessons from the direct action tactics used. Yet campaigns against airlines are continuously being undermined by Air Partner – who, as the Home Office’s deportation fixer, will simply seek others to step in.

    And under the flashing blue lights of a police state, news that an airline will merely be deporting refugees to their countries of origin – however dangerous – rather than to a distant African processing base, might be seen as wonderful news. It isn’t. Instead of becoming accustomed to a dystopian reality, let’s be spurred on by the campaign’s success to put an end to this cruel industry in its entirety.
    Appendix: Air Partner Offices

    Air Partner’s addresses, according to its most recent annual report, are as follows:

    - UK: 2 City Place, Beehive Ring Road, Gatwick, West Sussex RH6 0PA.
    - France: 89/91 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, 75008 Paris & 27 Boulevard Saint-Martin, 75003 Paris.
    - Germany: Im Mediapark 5b, 50670 Köln.
    - Italy: Via Valtellina 67, 20159 Milano.
    - Turkey: Halil Rıfatpaşa Mh Yüzer Havuz Sk No.1 Perpa Ticaret Merkezi ABlok Kat.12 No.1773, Istanbul.

    Footnotes

    1 Aldrick, Philip. “Worth teaming up with Air Partner”. The Daily Telegraph, October 07, 2004.

    2 “Air Partner makes progress in the face of some strong headwinds”. Proactive Investors UK, August 27, 2021.

    3 Aldrick, Philip. “Worth teaming up with Air Partner”. The Daily Telegraph, October 07, 2004.

    4 Lea, Robert. “Mark Briffa has a new partner in aircraft chartering and isn’t about to fly away”. The Times, April 29, 2022

    5 Ibid.

    6 “AirPartner predicts rise in demand if Gulf war begins”. Flight International, January 14 2003.

    7 “Celebrity status boosts Air Partner”. Yorkshire Post, October 10, 2002.

    8 Baker, Martin. “The coy royal pilot”. The Sunday Telegraph, April 11, 2004.

    9 Hancock, Ciaran. “Air Partner”. Sunday Times, April 10, 2005.

    10 Saker-Clark, Henry. “Repatriation and PPE flights boost Air Partner”. The Herald, May 6, 2020.

    https://corporatewatch.org/air-partner-the-home-offices-deportation-fixer
    #avions #compagnies_aériennes #Home_Office #UK #Angleterre #renvois #expulsions #business #complexe_militaro-industriel

    via @isskein

  • Laminé par les marées noires, le delta du Niger est menacé de famine | Mediapart
    https://www.mediapart.fr/studio/portfolios/lamine-par-les-marees-noires-le-delta-du-niger-est-menace-de-famine

    Laminé par les marées noires, le delta du Niger est menacé de famine
    20 photos

    Au Nigeria, dans la principale région pétrolifère d’Afrique, les fuites d’hydrocarbures se multiplient et ruinent des milliers de pêcheurs et d’agriculteurs. Le pétrole assure 10 % du PIB du pays, le plus peuplé d’Afrique avec 219 millions d’habitants. Sur place, certains ont assigné en justice des entreprises pétrolières, mais les indemnités et le nettoyage n’ont pas permis de retrouver la prospérité perdue. Au point que la famine menace.
    Sadak Souici (photos) et Théophile Simon (texte)

    2 novembre 2022

    © Sadak Souici
    Nigeria, janvier 2022. Vue aérienne de Bolo, un village de pêcheurs sur les bords d’un bras du delta du Niger, l’un des plus longs fleuves d’Afrique. Autrefois prospère, le village est aujourd’hui fantomatique, ruiné par la pollution. Le Nigeria est le principal pays producteur de pétrole en Afrique subsaharienne, et injecte chaque jour près de 2 millions de barils dans les veines de l’économie mondiale.


  • The Full Story Behind Sega Channel, Sega’s Precursor To Game Pass | Time Extension
    https://www.timeextension.com/features/the-full-story-behind-sega-channel-segas-precursor-to-game-pass

    The idea of video games on demand is something we’re all quite familiar with today thanks to subscription services like Xbox Game Pass and PlayStation Plus, but what you might not know - and might even struggle to believe - is that Sega attempted its own version of this business model back in the 1990s.

    #jeu_vidéo #jeux_vidéo #rétro #vintage #sega #sega_channel #time_warner #console_megadrive #console_genesis #xbox_game_pass #playstation_plus #rétrospective #tv #sega_of_america #nintendo #tom_kalinske #doug_glen #delta_box #atari_2600 #tom_kalinske #stan_thomas #hbo #andy_rifkin #gaas #konami #michael_shorrock #andy_rifkin #nick_fiore #ea #jeu_vidéo_triple_play_baseball_96 #jeu_vidéo_primal_rage #atari_games

  • The Full Story Behind Sega Channel, Sega’s Precursor To Game Pass | Time Extension
    https://www.timeextension.com/features/the-full-story-behind-sega-channel-segas-precursor-to-game-pass

    The idea of video games on demand is something we’re all quite familiar with today thanks to subscription services like Xbox Game Pass and PlayStation Plus, but what you might not know - and might even struggle to believe - is that Sega attempted its own version of this business model back in the 1990s.

    #jeu_vidéo #jeux_vidéo #rétro #vintage #sega #sega_channel #time_warner #console_megadrive #console_genesis #xbox_game_pass #playstation_plus #rétrospective #tv #sega_of_america #nintendo #tom_kalinske #doug_glen #delta_box #atari_2600 #tom_kalinske #stan_thomas #hbo #andy_rifkin #gaas #konami #michael_shorrock #

    • La guerre se fabrique près de chez nous

      L’Observatoire des armements publie un nouveau rapport sur l’impact des entreprises d’armement de la #Région_Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes sur les #conflits. Il documente notamment 11 sociétés qui alimentent les guerres et répressions actuelles : Palestine, Yémen, Égypte, République démocratique du Congo... À chacun·e de nous de se mobiliser et à nos décideurs d’agir pour éliminer l’empreinte de la région sur les violations de droits humains.

      Cette étude rédigée par Tony Fortin avec Patrice Bouveret est téléchargeable gratuitement ou disponible en version papier (www.obsarm.org/IMG/pdf/fabrique_de_la_guerre_aura_mai_2022_web.pdf).

      La guerre en Ukraine est venue raviver la crainte d’une guerre généralisée en Europe, une crainte sur laquelle capitalise le secteur de l’armement pour développer et vendre de nouveaux équipements. Déjà, la guerre au Yémen avait replacé au premier plan ces dernières années la responsabilité de la France par rapport à l’utilisation des armes qu’elle vend. Les multiples enquêtes d’ONG et de journalistes ont pointé le rôle des majors du secteur (Thales, Safran, Dassault…). Peu d’informations existent en revanche sur les myriades de petites et moyennes entreprises réparties sur l’ensemble du territoire. Or, à partir du moment où une entreprise « habite » un lieu, son rôle — si les conséquences de son activité posent de graves problèmes humains — ne doit-il pas être connu de tous et débattu par les habitants ? Où et à qui leurs armes sont-elles vendues ? Sont-elles si inodores et incolores sur le plan de la préservation de la paix et du respect des droits humains ?

      Notre nouveau rapport apporte une première pierre à ce projet en documentant le rôle d’un panel d’entreprises d’armement et de maintien de l’ordre établies dans la région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. Onze sociétés, parmi les plus significatives, ont ainsi été identifiées. La conclusion de cette étude l’établit sans fard : certaines entreprises du terroir local sont bel et bien associées aux guerres et répressions actuelles.

      Entre autres exemples :

      - des hélicoptères modernisés ont été cédés au Togo qui réprime sa propre population (#Ares basée dans la Drôme) :
      - des blindés fabriqués pour partie en région lyonnaise sont en guerre contre les mouvements sociaux au Chili, Liban, Sénégal, Égypte (#Arquus en région lyonnaise) ;
      – des drones ont été livrés à des compagnies minières décriées en Australie, Ghana, Afrique du Sud (#Delta_Drone en région lyonnaise) ;
      - des fusils de précision sont utilisés en Égypte et Israël (#PGM_Précision en Savoie) ;
      - des flash-ball stéphanois ont servi contre l’opposition sociale en République démocratique du Congo et en France (#Verney-Carron à Saint-Étienne), etc.

      Un tel impact doit interpeller nos décideurs locaux qui attribuent des aides publiques au secteur de l’armement : n’est-il pas temps de réajuster le plan de développement économique de nos collectivités à l’aune des droits humains ? Ou d’engager a minima un audit mesurant l’empreinte de nos entreprises régionales sur les conflits internationaux et les violations de droits humains ?

      Ce dossier contient également différentes pistes d’initiatives pour chacun·e d’entre nous, habitant·e·s, citoyen·ne·s, élu·e·s, journalistes, membres d’associations, etc., pour en faire un sujet politique. Pourquoi ne pas organiser une discussion publique ? Engager le débat sur les pistes de reconversion possible de ces entreprises vers d’autres secteurs socialement utiles ?

      http://www.obsarm.org/spip.php?article383

      #armes #armement #industrie_de_l'armement #France #rapport #Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes

      ping @karine4

  • Hank Williams, Jr. - « Georgia Women »
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GnTzjuQRUu0


    https://hankwilliamsjr.bandcamp.com

    Hank Williams,Jr. dit que le Springwater Supper Club and Lounge de Nashville — le plus ancien bar du Tennessee ouvert et opérationnel en continu, où la vidéo a été tournée — lui fait se souvenir d’un autre lieu légendaire.
    « Le bar où Dan Aykroyd et John Belushi ont joué dans The Blues Brothers ? Vous savez, celui avec le grillage autour de la scène pour que les membres du groupe ne soient pas touchés lorsque les [clients] lançaient des bouteilles sur la scène ? Oui. C’est tiré d’un endroit où moi et beaucoup d’autres jouions, appelé Rac’s Hut à Jackson Mills, dans le New Jersey ».

    https://eu.tennessean.com/story/entertainment/2022/04/27/hank-williams-jr-s-georgia-women-video-highlights-legends-charmed-nashville-life/9552454002
    https://store.easyeyesound.com
    #easyeyesound_rds #blues

  • Covid-19 in China: Shenzhen, Beijing and Tianjin in Omicron containment race ahead of Lunar New Year and Winter Olympics | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3163571/covid-19-china-beijing-and-tianjin-racing-contain-omicron

    Covid-19 in China: Shenzhen, Beijing and Tianjin in Omicron containment race ahead of Lunar New Year and Winter Olympics. The Chinese capital has recorded its first Omicron case, while the neighbouring city has recorded more positives
    The southern Chinese city of Shenzhen reported its first locally transmitted case of the Omicron variant of Covid-19 on Sunday, joining Tianjin and Beijing in battling to bring the strain under control before the Lunar New Year holiday and Winter Olympics. Shenzhen reported two new community cases on Sunday, bringing the city’s total to 17 in this outbreak. The city reported no cases for Saturday.State media reported that a woman from Longgang district handling frozen overseas chemical reagents was confirmed with the Omicron variant. The other case is a Delta infection.
    Across China, 119 cases were reported as of midnight Saturday, of which 65 were locally transmitted, the National Health Commission said on Sunday. Among these cases, 33 were in Tianjin, 29 in Henan province, one in Beijing, one in Guangdong and one in Shaanxi’s provincial capital Xian.
    On Saturday, Beijing reported its first case of Omicron, a woman from Haidian district who reported having a sore throat and fever in the past few days.The woman had not left the city in the previous two weeks and had not been in contact with confirmed cases. Two people living with her tested negative but some environmental samples in her home were positive.
    The local health authorities have tracked her movements over the past two weeks and alerted close contacts. People who have visited the same public places as her were told to get tested. Covid outbreaks loom over world’s biggest human migration as China braces for Lunar New Year rush
    Chen also said she has given up any hope of travelling home to the eastern province of Anhui, some 1,000km (600 miles) from the capital, for the holidays, especially with the Winter Olympics opening in a few weeks.
    A series of preventive measures have been put in place for the Games, which will be held inside an isolation bubble. On Saturday, Xu Hejian, a spokesman for the Beijing municipal government, said that all departments had to ensure the safety of the capital and the Olympics.Meanwhile, Vice-Premier Liu He warned of growing uncertainty surrounding the capital’s pandemic controls during the holidays and Winter Games, and called on officials to strengthen their contingency plans.Tianjin, a major port city to the east of the capital, is still battling to contain its outbreak but the NHC said the risk of it spreading to other cities was falling. Tianjin’s most recent cases have been detected in locked down parts of the city.
    On Saturday, Shenzhen reported zero new local cases, raising hopes that the outbreak will be over by Lunar New Year on February 1. But the newly reported cases on Sunday are expected to cast shadow over those holiday plans.The nearby cities of Zhuhai and Zhongshan are continuing mass screening and have imposed travel restrictions since Omicron was detected in both cities last month. The authorities in Macau have also tightened their border controls in response.The National Development and Reform Commission said on Sunday that local governments should refrain from “simplified” and “one-size-fits-all” Covid-control measures during the upcoming holiday to minimise the impact on people’s lives.The state planner urged governments to allow people in low-risk areas to make short trips and encourage measures to boost consumer spending.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#chine#sante#jeuxolympiques#deplacementinterne#omicron#delta#economie#zerocovid#confinement#tracking#frontiere#controle

  • Chinese vice-premier calls for tougher action in Henan’s Omicron and Delta coronavirus hotspots | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3163098/chinese-vice-premier-calls-tougher-action-henans-omicron-and

    Chinese vice-premier calls for tougher action in Henan’s Omicron and Delta coronavirus hotspots
    Strict prevention and control measures are needed in Henan as it battles the twin threats of the Omicron and Delta coronavirus variants, Chinese Vice-Premier Sun Chunlan said on Tuesday, capping a trip to the central province.Sun said the Omicron strain spread quickly and was highly infectious, putting containment measures in Anyang, now the centre of the province’s main outbreak, to the test, state news agency Xinhua reported.
    “It is necessary to further improve the efficiency of nucleic acid testing and investigations, adopt strict social control measures, block transmission routes as soon as possible, and strictly prevent the spread of the epidemic,” Sun was quoted as saying.Henan reported 118 new local symptomatic cases on Wednesday, up from 87 the day before, according to the National Health Commission.Of those reported on Wednesday, 65 were in Anyang, where the province’s first Omicron case was detected. Meanwhile Xuchang, previously the centre of the province’s outbreak, reported 41 new cases on Wednesday, down from 74 on Tuesday.With the Lunar New Year less than three weeks away, cities in Henan have taken a series of measures to prevent further spread of the disease, including limits on return trips home.
    Authorities in Anyang asked people from the city working in other centres not to return home “unless necessary” during the holiday. Anyang’s 5 million residents have been banned from leaving their homes except to get a Covid-19 test since the first Omicron case was diagnosed on Monday.
    The patient was a university student who arrived from Tianjin on December 28. Anyang’s health bureau said genome sequencing showed that two of the city’s cases involved the Omicron variant but it was not known how many others were related to the strain.And on Wednesday, Anyang-administered Hua county banned its residents from entering residential compounds other than where they lived.Eleven Anyang officials were punished for poor performance combating the outbreak, including at least two who have been suspended.Authorities in Changyuan, also in Henan, said that anyone returning to the city “without permission from relevant departments” would be put under centralised quarantine at their own expense and could be prosecuted.Provincial capital Zhengzhou reported 12 new cases on Wednesday, up from 11 the day before.
    Authorities said on Tuesday that with the exception of various closed and controlled areas, the city had reached “zero social transmission” in three rounds of citywide screening, meaning that all new confirmed cases had been isolated and linked to previously recorded cases.
    Chinese city Yuzhou of over 1 million forced into lockdown with just 3 coronavirus cases recorded
    In her comments on Tuesday, Sun said the situation in Zhengzhou had stabilised but the risk of community transmission had not been completely eliminated in Yuzhou – within Xuchang – where 1 million residents have been in lockdown for more than a week.She said authorities should ensure that residents in locked-down communities had access to supplies and basic medical care, and their demands were resolved in a timely way.
    It follows a flood of public complaints about food shortages and delays in medical treatment in the Shaanxi provincial capital Xian, where 13 million people have been confined to their homes.Chinese province takes on twin coronavirus fronts of Omicron and Delta

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#chine#sante#omicron#delta#zerocovid#deplacementinterne#confinement#depistage#resident#retour#restrictionsanitaire#controle

  • Stéphane Dedieu :
    https://twitter.com/dedieu_stephane/status/1474300901972189186

    1- On se laisse dépasser par la contamination car COMME D’HABITUDE l’exécutif n’a rien anticipé...et n’a rien fait pour protéger les enfants dans les écoles (merci #JeanMichelCovid et les 🤡 de la @sf_pediatrie).

    2- Donc les cas explosent (ce qui était prévu).

    3- Donc ...

    4- ... on va baisser les règles d’isolement...en oubliant pourquoi elles existent 🤦‍♂️... et que #Omicron est beaucoup plus transmissible que #Delta.

    5- ... on augmentera en conséquence les cas, les hospitalisations et la durée de cette vague.

    6- Pour justifier de cette incompétence de gestion, l’exécutif, bien appuyé par des médias perroquets 🦜, fait passer le message de la non-dangerosité de #Omicron 🤦‍♂️... et se calque sur la stratégie de « laisser diffuser le virus », chère à #Raoult, #Blablachier, #gkierzek, #BlanquerMent...

    ➡️ On ne dira jamais assez à quel point cette stratégie est « court-termiste », dangereuse, et un immense non-sens scientifique et médical

    ➡️ Pendant ce temps, toujours rien du côté du #teletravail, ni de l’amélioration de la qualité de l’air 💨🌬 ni de campagne sur le port CORRECT du masque 😷, ni sur les FFP2... on continue à ne rien contrôler, surtout pas les faux #PasseSanitaire, ni les restos qui laissent entrer sans vérification du pass, ni certains commerçants qui ne portent pas le masque depuis des mois...

    ... Mais tout cela valait bien le coup hein puisqu’il fallait sauver Noël 🤦‍♂️

    Donc... Joyeux Noël 🎅

  • CDC COVID Data Tracker
    https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker

    Via Eric Topol sur Twitter :

    “For the 1st time, the CDCgov is now posting national data on vaccination status for hospitalization and death, and by age 👍🙏

    Here are data for death during the #Delta wave

    Unvaccinated > 11-fold risk of dying” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1448826680043212802

    #vaccination #sars-cov2 #covid-19

  • Effectiveness of mRNA BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccine up to 6 months in a large integrated health system in the USA: a retrospective cohort study - The Lancet
    https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(21)02183-8/abstract

    Findings

    Between Dec 14, 2020, and Aug 8, 2021, of 4 920 549 individuals assessed for eligibility, we included 3 436 957 (median age 45 years [IQR 29–61]; 1 799 395 [52·4%] female and 1 637 394 [47·6%] male). For fully vaccinated individuals, effectiveness against #SARS-CoV-2 infections was 73% (95% CI 72–74) and against #COVID-19-related hospital admissions was 90% (89–92).

    Effectiveness against infections declined from 88% (95% CI 86–89) during the first month after full vaccination to 47% (43–51) after 5 months. Among sequenced infections, vaccine effectiveness against infections of the #delta variant was high during the first month after full vaccination (93% [95% CI 85–97]) but declined to 53% [39–65] after 4 months.

    Effectiveness against other (non-delta) #variants the first month after full vaccination was also high at 97% (95% CI 95–99), but waned to 67% (45–80) at 4–5 months.

    Vaccine effectiveness against hospital admissions for infections with the delta variant for all ages was high overall (93% [95% CI 84–96]) up to 6 months.

    Interpretation

    Our results provide support for high effectiveness of BNT162b2 against hospital admissions up until around 6 months after being fully vaccinated, even in the face of widespread dissemination of the delta variant. Reduction in vaccine effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 infections over time is probably primarily due to waning immunity with time rather than the delta variant escaping vaccine protection.

    Funding

    Pfizer.

  • Hospitalizations Associated with #COVID-19 Among Children and Adolescents — COVID-NET, 14 States, March 1, 2020–August 14, 2021 | MMWR
    https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7036e2.htm

    Comme chez l’adulte le #variant #delta est plus transmissible chez l’#enfant

    What is added by this report?

    Weekly COVID-19–associated hospitalization rates among children and adolescents rose nearly five-fold during late June–mid-August 2021, coinciding with increased circulation of the highly transmissible SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant. The proportions of hospitalized children and adolescents with severe disease were similar before and during the period of Delta predominance.

    Par ailleurs comme chez l’adulte les adolescents vaccinés sont beaucoup moins souvent hospitalisés que les non-vaccinés

    Hospitalization rates were 10 times higher among unvaccinated than among fully vaccinated adolescents.

  • Eric Topol sur Twitter : “Just published NEJM Breakthrough infections in health care workers before and during the #Delta wave mRNA Vaccine effectiveness vs symptomatic infections dropped from 94% to 66% [95% CI 49,77]” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1433172826819813376

    Remember the primary endpoint of the clinical trials for covid vaccines was reduction in symptomatic infections. That’s what this is about.

    It is NOT about protection from hospitalization or deaths, which is still well preserved by these vaccines at 6 months + Delta

    Source;

    Resurgence of #SARS-CoV-2 Infection in a Highly Vaccinated Health System Workforce | NEJM
    https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2112981

    #vaccination #vaccins

  • #COVID-19 : Comment il se transmet à la maison | santé log
    https://www.santelog.com/actualites/covid-19-comment-il-se-transmet-la-maison

    … le taux d’attaque secondaire parmi les membres du foyer est de 32%.

    […] les auteurs estiment qu’en réalité, ce taux d’attaque à domicile est très supérieur. […]
     
    32%, c’était avant …c’était avant l’émergence de la variante #Delta, plus infectieuse, ce qui suggère aujourd’hui un taux d’attaque secondaire actuel à domicile nettement plus élevé.

    […]
     
    32% c’est sans la #promiscuité ou concentration excessive de personnes vivant au domicile : l’étude confirme « l’évidence » soit la promiscuité de vie comme facteur déterminant de risque de propagation à d’autres membres du ménage. Ainsi, le taux d’attaque apparaît significativement plus élevé dans les foyers des #minorités.

    « Il est très difficile de suivre les #directives de #santé_publique dans certaines #conditions_de_vie », écrivent les auteurs, « dans certaines situations, il devient presque impossible de s’isoler ou même de respecter la distanciation physique ».

    Source :
    Household transmission of #SARS-CoV-2 in the United States : living density, viral load, and disproportionate impact on communities of color | Clinical Infectious Diseases | Oxford Academic
    https://academic.oup.com/cid/advance-article/doi/10.1093/cid/ciab701/6349288

  • #SARS-CoV-2 Infections and Hospitalizations Among Persons Aged ≥16 Years, by Vaccination Status — Los Angeles County, California, May 1–July 25, 2021 | MMWR
    https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7034e5.htm

    5 fois moins d’infection et 29 fois moins d’hospitalisation chez les vaccinés.

    Concerne essentiellement le #variant #delta

    Efforts to increase #COVID-19 #vaccination, in coordination with other prevention strategies, are critical to preventing COVID-19–related hospitalizations and deaths.

  • Muge Cevik sur Twitter :

    “There is a lot of concern/confusion about vaccine effectiveness against the #delta #variant. How effective are the vaccines against Delta & how to interpret real-world observational data? So much misinformation is being circulated, so this thread brings key data together. 🧵(1/n)” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/mugecevik/status/1430218372348878860

    Entre autres, les facteurs de confusion pouvant expliquer les résultats de l’étude israélienne

    Muge Cevik sur Twitter :

    “2- VE against symptomatic illness: This is also very similar across the board, demonstrating preserved effectiveness against symptomatic Delta w/the Israel data being an outlier, for which we have yet to see methods/details. Let’s take a look at these studies. (6/n)” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/mugecevik/status/1430218400756912129

    Muge Cevik sur Twitter :

    “Data published by the Israel MoH caused a lot of concern, suggesting that the Pfizer VE against symptomatic infection fell to 40%, lower than seen in other studies. While we have yet to see details of this analysis, there are likely several confounders to consider. (9/n)” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/mugecevik/status/1430218416561037320

    #vaccins #covid-19

  • See How Vaccines Can Make the Difference in #Delta Variant’s Impact - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/08/12/science/covid-delta-breakthrough.html

    Here’s how a Delta-driven outbreak might unfold in two hypothetical groups of people, all of whom are exposed to enough of the virus to infect a person:

    In either scenario, the infected group is just the start. The Delta variant is the most transmissible version of the virus yet. Those infected are likely to spread the virus to others at an even higher rate than older versions of the virus would have spread.

    With a higher number of people infected in the group with the low vaccination rate, many more people in their larger community are also likely to become infected with the virus, especially if the #vaccination rate is similarly low elsewhere in that community.

    This is true even among people who have been infected with #Covid-19 before: Those who have previously had the virus are more than twice as likely to become reinfected by the Delta variant if they are unvaccinated.

    Conversely, there is a lower risk in general of virus exposure in a highly vaccinated community. But experts say outbreaks that have occurred in heavily vaccinated groups, like the July 4 cluster in Provincetown, Mass., or those in two San Francisco hospitals, have shown the power of the vaccines: Remarkably few people faced severe illness, contrasted with how a similar outbreak may have played out in a community with a low vaccination rate.

    Of at least 965 positive cases that were traced to heavily vaccinated Provincetown, where around 60,000 people had gathered for the holiday weekend, not a single death was reported and just seven people were hospitalized.

    While a recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report suggested it’s possible that fully immunized people may also transmit the virus to others as easily, another recent study has shown that those who are fully vaccinated may carry the virus, and therefore be contagious, for fewer days than their unvaccinated counterparts. That suggests an even bigger overall difference in #transmission between places with high and low vaccination rates.

    #vaccins #sars-cov2 #infographie #interactif

  • Spiral : #REACT-1 round 13 final report : exponential growth, high prevalence of #SARS-CoV-2 and vaccine effectiveness associated with #Delta variant in England during May to July 2021
    https://spiral.imperial.ac.uk/handle/10044/1/90800

    Seulement 50% d’efficacité contre le #Covid-19 ? Ce que dit précisément la nouvelle étude britannique sur la #vaccination - Le Parisien
    https://www.leparisien.fr/societe/seulement-50-defficacite-contre-le-covid-19-ce-que-dit-precisement-la-nou

    D’après des travaux de l’Imperial College de Londres, le risque d’être infecté chez les personnes ayant reçu deux doses de #vaccin serait réduit d’environ 50%, et celui d’avoir des formes symptomatiques de près de 60%. Cette étude, menée sur près de 100 000 habitants, n’a pas distingué AstraZeneca et Pfizer.

    […]

    L’efficacité de 59 % contre les formes symptomatiques est inférieure à celle obtenue par la majorité des études déjà connues. Toujours en Angleterre, deux doses de vaccin seraient efficaces contre le #variant Delta à hauteur de 79 %, d’après des données des Public Health England. La différence s’explique par la méthode utilisée. Comme les travaux de l’Imperial College portent sur « un échantillon aléatoire de la population générale, [celui-ci] comprend les individus asymptomatiques », a indiqué le professeur Paul Elliott, directeur du programme React-1 et professeur d’épidémiologie et de médecine de santé publique à l’Imperial College de Londres. Or, ceux-ci peuvent assez nombreux chez les vaccinés. Et les études en population réelle comme celle de Public Health England se concentrent en grande majorité sur les cas symptomatiques.

    Par ailleurs, toujours selon les résultats de l’Imperial College, les personnes positives vaccinées avaient une #charge_virale bien inférieure à celles des cas positifs non-vaccinés. Ce qui est contradictoire avec les données des Centres pour le contrôle et la prévention des maladies (CDC) américains communiquées vendredi, suggérant à l’inverse que la charge virale serait équivalente que l’on soit vacciné ou non (sans que l’on puisse dire si cela implique une même #contagiosité).

    #react

  • Coronavirus infections three times lower in double vaccinated people - REACT | Imperial News | Imperial College London
    https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/227713/coronavirus-infections-three-times-lower-double

    For this latest round of the #REACT study, 98,233 people swabbed themselves at home and their samples were analysed by PCR testing. 527 of these were positive, giving an overall prevalence of 0.63%. 254 of these were successfully analysed in the lab to determine their origins, 100% of which were the #Delta #variant.

    #Covid-19 : les vaccinés ont trois fois moins de risques d’être positifs, selon une étude anglaise – Libération
    https://www.liberation.fr/societe/sante/covid-19-en-angleterre-les-vaccines-ont-trois-fois-moins-de-risques-detre

    Ces chiffres ne tiennent toutefois pas compte de la levée controversée de l’essentiel des restrictions entrée en vigueur le 19 juillet en Angleterre

    #vaccins #vaccination