Saturday, September 10, 2011

CITGO- Venezuela Energy Efficient Lighting Program

“CITGO Grant to help low-income households”
2011-09-10 [http://milwaukeecourieronline.com/index.php/2011/09/10/citgo-grant-to-help-low-income-households/]:
A grant by an energy firm will help light low-income homes in Milwaukee County.
The CITGO- Venezuela Energy Efficient Lighting Program has provided a donation of up to 30,000 compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) to the Social Development Commission (SDC). The CFL bulbs which use much less electricity than traditional light bulbs and have a longer life can provide a significant energy savings to homes using them.
The CFL bulbs donated by the CITGO- Venezuela Energy Efficient Lighting Program will be distributed by SDC to families and individuals participating in the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). The low energy using bulbs will be accompanied by educational materials on how to increase home energy efficiency. The distribution will be included in SDC’s LIHEAP program that already includes Energy Conservation and Financial Literacy workshops for program participants.
To learn more about the SDC Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, visit the agency website at www.cr-sdc.org, click on the “Programs” page and then on the link for “Energy Assistance”. CITGO, based in Houston, is a refiner, transporter and marketer of transportation fuels, lubricants, petrochemicals and other industrial products. The company is owned by PDV America, Inc., an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of PetrĂ³leos de Venezuela, S.A., the national oil company of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. For more information, visit www.citgo.com.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

"Venezuela Reduced Poverty by 50%, Affirms Eclac"

2011-08-28 from "Correo del Orinoco International", re-posted at [http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/6451]:
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez provided information this week on his country’s social and economic achievements, especially the nation’s reduction of poverty, citing statistics from the Economic Commission for Latin America andthe Caribbean (ECLAC).
“In ten years, we have been able to reduce poverty in half”, proclaimed the Venezuelan President. “The Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLAC) pointed out that from 1990 to 2010 poverty in some countries of Latin America and the Caribbean increased.
Nevertheless, poverty dropped on average overall between 25 and 30 percent. The Venezuelan case has to be deeply analyzed because the South American nation reduced poverty by more than 50 percent through 2009”, explained President Chavez.
“Poverty in Venezuela was above 60% when I won office in 1998”, recalled Chavez. The ECLAC report, entitled Social Panorama of Latin American and the Caribbean, states on page 13 that in 2002 poverty in Venezuela reached 48.6 percent, while in 2008 it dropped to 27.6 percent, which represents a 43 percent decrease.
Extreme poverty was reduced from 25% to 7% during the past decade, a dramatic change. The reduction in poverty is a result of a number of strategies implemented by the Venezuelan government to fight against social exclusion by boosting social programs known as “missions”, promoting the organization of community councils and nationalizing companies that pave the way for employment opportunities.
“It’s not time to die, it’s time to live and to keep fighting, because Venezuela reduced poverty by 50%, affirms Eclac we are on the path to the dignification of the liberation of our people”, emphasized Chavez in light of the major social advances the country has made.

Social Investment -
The most effective social programs in Venezuela have been in the areas of education, healthcare, job training and food subsidies that have aided the reduction in poverty. Medical attention is free and universal throughout Venezuela, with hundreds of new and advanced clinics built by the state during the past decade. Quality education is guaranteed at all levels, free even during university and post-graduate studies.
Thousands of new schools have been built by the Chavez administration along with hundreds of new accessible universities. Job and skills training programs have enabled thousands of Venezuelans not just to enter the work force but also to build their own cooperatives and small businesses, many receiving low-interest loans from the government. Subsidized supermarkets, known as Mercal, PDVAL and the Bicentennial Markets, have ensured access to affordable foods for all.
The Venezuelan government invests 60% of its annual budget in social programs to guarantee the well being and prosperity of its people. According to ECLAC, the
investment is paying off.