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  1. #201
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Just one early news event. Couldn’t wait.




    Former prime minister Tony Abbott has claimed some warnings of human-induced climate change are “ahistorical and utterly implausible”, criticising what he called “the climate cult” in a speech in London.

    The former Liberal leader – who earlier this year was nominated to join the board of Fox Corporation by Lachlan Murdoch – decried what he claimed was an “emissions obsession”, pointing to historical examples of warmer and cooler periods which had “nothing to do with mankind’s emissions.”

    “I think it is worth stating that the anthropogenic global warming thesis, at least in its more extreme forms, is both ahistorical and utterly implausible,” Abbott said at the launch of a report on energy by the Institute of Public Affairs on Tuesday.

    “And I think that needs to be repeated. Ladies and gentlemen, the climate cult will eventually be discredited.”

    Then Australian prime minister Tony Abbott in 2015. Lachlan Murdoch has nominated him to Fox Corporation’s board of directors.

    Abbott’s remarks come a week after scientists warned Earth’s “vital signs” are worse than at any time in human history, with 20 of the 35 planetary vital signs at record extremes, including July being probably the hottest the planet has been in 100,000 years.

    Abbott, the Australian prime minister from 2013-15, lost his seat of Warringah at the 2019 election to independent Zali Steggall, who campaigned heavily on stronger climate action. Abbott infamously described the “so-called settled science of climate change” as “absolute crap” in 2009; in 2017 he suggested climate change is “probably doing good” in a speech in London in which he likened policies to combat it to “primitive people once killing goats to appease the volcano gods”.

    In London this week, Abbott spoke at the launch of a new paper on energy security from the IPA, a rightwing Australian think tank. According to a transcript of his remarks shared by his office, Abbott claimed that while he was in office he had a “mantra” of saying climate change was real, that mankind made a difference and that reasonable steps should be taken to reduce emissions.

    “Then I would invariably add this rider but not at the expense of jobs, at the expense of ordinary people’s cost of living, and with the effect of driving important industries offshore to countries that don’t take emissions as seriously as we do,” he said.

    “Sometimes, when I was feeling particularly bold, I would add things like this: you know, 10,000 years or so back we had an ice age. That was rather dramatic climate change, but presumably that had nothing to do with mankind’s carbon dioxide emissions.”

    According to Nasa, “the vast majority of actively publishing climate scientists – 97% – agree that humans are causing global warming and climate change”. Research from Cornell University in 2021 found the scientific consensus that humans are altering the climate had passed 99.9%.

    Three studies in 2019 used extensive historical data to show there has never been a period in the last 2,000 years when temperature changes have been as fast and extensive as in recent decades. The studies found that periods dubbed the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Climate Anomaly, which were referred to in Abbott’s speech, did not take place in more than half the globe at any one time.

    In recent weeks climate scientists have warned of inevitable accelerated ice melt in Antarctica, that Earth’s “vital signs” are worse than at any time in human history, and that the Earth is moving dangerously close to irreversible tipping points that would drastically damage our ability to cope with disasters.

    Abbott said he believed voters would continue prioritising cost of living and energy price issues over emissions reduction.

    “I’m pleased to be chosen for this task tonight because I suppose I’m one of the very few national leaders who has been elected to office promising to end the emissions obsession which has dominated energy policy for the last two decades,” he said.

    “I have to say that on every occasion in Australia where energy policy and climate policy has been a big election focus, it’s the people who have been on the sceptical end of the spectrum who have done well. On every occasion when the Australian public have been asked to choose between reducing emissions and protecting their cost of living, they’ve put their cost of living first.”

    Australia’s current Labor government was elected in 2022 on the promise of a 43% emissions reduction target by 2030 based on 2005 emissions levels, compared with the then-Coalition government’s 26-28% target which was agreed under Abbott’s administration. Labor also set an ambitious target of 82% of Australia’s energy coming from renewables by 2030.

    nominated to join the board of Fox Corporation by Lachlan Murdoch
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  2. #202
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    I'm not sure what your banging on about and I'm certainly not going to read your long winded cut n pastes just to waste time. Yes Australia has a Labor govt now and yes promises were made re climate change etc. Weather that can be achieved who fucking knows.

  3. #203
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    ^ you might learn something, if you read it

  4. #204
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    I live here. I'm experiencing it. The fuckwittery that goes on is staggering. I don't need to read your cut n paste horseshit. Doubt you've read it

  5. #205
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    I read and why I posted it today. Most must be happy with the new government.

  6. #206
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    Plus you are quoting Tony Abbott an absolute plonker that has been trying unsuccessfully to walk back his comments . Please don't start quoting johnny Howard on scomo as well because it's more of the same shit. If you wanna get all het up stick to the orange monkey

  7. #207
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    I read and why I posted it today. Most must be happy the new government.
    I certainly am and I will be a lot happier when the Murdoch media stops filling people's heads full.of shit

  8. #208
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    ^^Covered. "Legal Charges Against Trump"

  9. #209
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    The media is pretty powerful and has been allowed to get away with a lot of shit. Social media has changed How we roll.. I think the media needs to be called out for fake news. You probably remember Walter cronkite? A guy that just read the news. Nothing else. He didn't offer an opinion he just read the fucking news. Now every news reader on the planet can sport a big pair of tits Read the news , Then give you there take on it. I'm over it .

  10. #210
    Thailand Expat helge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BLD View Post
    I think the media needs to be called out for fake news.
    They should
    Quote Originally Posted by BLD View Post
    You probably remember Walter cronkite?
    How old are you, man ?

    Quote Originally Posted by BLD View Post
    A guy that just read the news. Nothing else. He didn't offer an opinion he just read the fucking news.
    Hmm

    You might be mistaken

    On February 27, 1968, Cronkite closed "Report from Vietnam: Who, What, When, Where, Why?" with that editorial report:
    We have been too often disappointed by the optimism of the American leaders, both in Vietnam and Washington, to have faith any longer in the silver linings they find in the darkest clouds.

    They may be right, that Hanoi's winter-spring offensive has been forced by the Communist realization that they could not win the longer war of attrition, and that the Communists hope that any success in the offensive will improve their position for eventual negotiations.

    It would improve their position, and it would also require our realization, that we should have had all along, that any negotiations must be that – negotiations, not the dictation of peace terms.

    For it seems now more certain than ever that the bloody experience of Vietnam is to end in a stalemate.
    This summer's almost certain standoff will either end in real give-and-take negotiations or terrible escalation; and for every means we have to escalate, the enemy can match us, and that applies to invasion of the North, the use of nuclear weapons, or the mere commitment of one hundred, or two hundred, or three hundred thousand more American troops to the battle.
    And with each escalation, the world comes closer to the brink of cosmic disaster.

    To say that we are closer to victory today is to believe, in the face of the evidence, the optimists who have been wrong in the past.

    To suggest we are on the edge of defeat is to yield to unreasonable pessimism.

    To say that we are mired in stalemate seems the only realistic, yet unsatisfactory, conclusion.
    On the off chance that military and political analysts are right, in the next few months we must test the enemy's intentions, in case this is indeed his last big gasp before negotiations.

    But it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then will be to negotiate, not as victors, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy, and did the best they could.
    Cronkite reporting on location during the Vietnam War in 1968Following Cronkite's editorial report,

    President
    Lyndon B. Johnson is claimed by some to have said, "If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost Middle America.
    Did you know that his father was a dentist ?


  11. #211
    last farang standing
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    Just one early news event. Couldn’t wait.




    Australia’s current Labor government was elected in 2022 on the promise of a 43% emissions reduction target by 2030 based on 2005 emissions levels, compared with the then-Coalition government’s 26-28% target which was agreed under Abbott’s administration. Labor also set an ambitious target of 82% of Australia’s energy coming from renewables by 2030.

    Still damne
    Quote Originally Posted by BLD View Post
    I'm not sure what your banging on about and I'm certainly not going to read your long winded cut n pastes just to waste time. Yes Australia has a Labor govt now and yes promises were made re climate change etc. Weather that can be achieved who fucking knows.
    Not sure how you can equate the size of the vote due to the difference in climate policy on the last federal election and how a decrease in Labor votes means acceptance of a more radical climate policy. Still, damned lies and statistics.

    LNP Coalition

    5,233,334

    35.70%
    -5.74%

    Australian Labor Party

    4,776,030

    32.58%
    -0.76%

    Last edited by Hugh Cow; 03-11-2023 at 04:51 AM.

  12. #212
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    Some questions regarding Australia's ME involvements.

    A price paid in blood: Australia secretly deploys to another Middle East war


    By Cameron Leckie

    Oct 31, 2023

    "Will Australia involve itself in another war in the Middle East? One that promises to be far more destructive and damaging to Australia than our previous misadventures.

    It is really rather difficult to comprehend the epic chasm between the real challenge of addressing the many pressing domestic concerns facing Australia and the grave and immediate risk that our Government has placed us in. A grave and immediate risk which the Albanese Government has unnecessarily taken, either through gross ignorance or more likely because of our alliance with the United States. A decision that entails enormous risks; yet has been taken for unclear purposes without any debate or media attention and for which the entire nation appears to be blissfully ignorant but also entirely unprepared.

    Australia could once again, find itself at war in the Middle East in coming days or weeks. A regional war that could see the primarily Islamic nations of the region pitted against Israel and its allies. A regional war that could see the United States and its allies in direct conflict with Russia. A regional war that could see much of the oil trade through the Middle East cease. A regional war that could see NATO’s largest Army (Turkiye) on the opposite side to other NATO countries. A regional war with the potential to become a global war.

    Australia could once again, find itself at war in the Middle East in coming days or weeks. A regional war that could see the primarily Islamic nations of the region pitted against Israel and its allies. A regional war that could see the United States and its allies in direct conflict with Russia. A regional war that could see much of the oil trade through the Middle East cease. A regional war that could see NATO’s largest Army (Turkiye) on the opposite side to other NATO countries. A regional war with the potential to become a global war.


    Into this incredibly unstable situation resulting from Israel’s 16 year blockade and occupation of Gaza and Hamas’ subsequent deadly terrorist attacks on Israel, the Australian Government has made the decision to deploy a ‘significant’ but unspecified number of Australian troops and three RAAF aircraft to an unspecified location in the Middle East, ostensibly for the purposes of the evacuation of Australian citizens. As is so often the case in the Orwellian world we live in, it appears that a humanitarian veneer may have been applied to mask the underlying reason for this decision.

    ......

    It is time for our elected representatives, the media and the public to start asking hard questions of the Government as to what Australia is potentially getting itself involved in.

    Here is a short list:

    Where are these forces deployed? Could they not be deployed to lower risk areas such as southern Europe?


    What forces elements are being deployed to the Middle East? Are there any forces over and above that required to conduct evacuation operations? If so, why? What is their purpose?
    Where are these forces deployed? Could they not be deployed to lower risk areas such as southern Europe?


    Is the withholding of information on ADF deployments a new norm to condition Australians to be kept in the dark in the future?


    What is the command-and-control relationship between Australia’s deployed forces and those of other countries, particularly the US, NATO and Israel? Are the Australian forces operating independently, or have they been subsumed into an allied command and control structure?
    If the conflict becomes regional, how will Australia respond? Will Australia send further forces? Or will we withdraw? Who will we be fighting against? What is the strategy? What are the objectives? What are the risks?


    What happens if ADF personnel become casualties as a result of this deployment? Will that be used as an excuse to increase Australia’s involvement?


    Why are Australia’s diplomatic efforts to reduce tensions and end the conflict so, to put it bluntly, pathetic and hypocritical? The claim from the Foreign Minister that it is difficult to ‘judge from afar’ Israel’s actions in Gaza is not credible in light of the evidence nor in the ready judgement she casts on Russia in Ukraine. Australia’s abstaining on the vote at the UN General Assembly on a resolution for an immediate truce highlights once again that our alliances are more important than the principles enshrined in the UN Charter.


    How does the rest of the world, outside of the collective West, view Australia? How does our region view Australia? What impact would Australian involvement in another Middle Eastern war have on our relationships in the region?


    What role does US domestic politics play in this unfolding crisis? With US elections next year, the catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan, the colossal failure of the Ukrainian counter-offensive (and Ukraine all but disappearing from the news cycle), the Biden administration cannot afford another defeat or disaster, yet the present crisis may present an opportunity to target Iran and Syria (again), a long time ambition of the neoconservatives whose original plan was to take out ‘Seven countries in five years.’

    Why do we focus on proximate issues rather than root causes, whether that be Hamas’ attacks on Israel rather than the failure to implement a two-state solution, or the Russian invasion of Ukraine rather than NATO expansion? After all it is the root causes that need to be addressed if we actually want to solve conflicts.


    Is Australia prepared for oil prices to soar, or even worse an inability to import sufficient oil if a regional war sees the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, or the OPEC nations implement embargoes against countries perceived to be anti-Muslim via their support to Israel? The economic pain from any such disruption could make the ‘cost of living’ crisis facing Australia exponentially worse.


    And finally, when will the Parliament get a say as to whether Australia involves itself in another overseas armed conflict?"

    A price paid in blood: Australia secretly deploys to another Middle East war - Pearls and Irritations
    A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.

  13. #213
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hugh Cow View Post
    Not sure how you can equate the size of the vote due to the difference in climate policy on the last federal election and how a decrease in Labor votes means acceptance of a more radical climate policy. Still, damned lies and statistics.

    LNP Coalition

    5,233,334

    35.70%
    -5.74%

    Australian Labor Party

    4,776,030

    32.58%
    -0.76%

    Helge.
    How old are you man?
    I'm 95 , slightly younger than you. At the moment I'm.trying to figure out if your engaging with my posts or stalking me . It's a bit confusing.

  14. #214
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    What , you don't remember Walter cronkite?

  15. #215
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    A Tiwi Traditional Owner has won his bid for an urgent injunction to prevent Santos beginning work to lay an export pipeline for its Barossa Gas Project

    Jikilaruwu man Simon Munkara lodged civil enforcement proceedings on Monday against Santos over its Barossa gas export pipeline.

    Mr Munkara asked the court for an urgent injunction to prevent Santos from beginning work to install the pipeline in the short term, as well as a wider injunction which prevents the work going ahead until Santos revises its Environmental Plan, so that the pipeline’s impact and risk to underwater cultural heritage are properly assessed. That Environment Plan would then need to be accepted by NOPSEMA.

    Tiwi Traditional Owners have commissioned reports from independent experts, who confirmed that, if installed in the current proposed location, the pipeline would damage Sea Country, dreaming tracks, songlines and areas of cultural significance.

    Mr Munkara argues commencing the pipeline work under these circumstances breaches environmental regulations because there is a significant new environmental impact or risk that has not been assessed and accounted for in the Environment Plan.

    Today, Justice Charlesworth found that the court had jurisdiction to hear the case and that Mr Munkara had standing to bring the proceedings he brought.

    Her honour said she had to weigh the balance of convenience between the “significant financial loss” Santos would suffer as a result of the delay with the “irreparable damage” Mr Munkara could face if the pipeline work began.

    The court heard that Santos’ ship had left Darwin Harbour last night and was hours away from beginning work on the pipeline.

    Her honour ordered that work on the pipeline cease until 5pm on the 13th November when the matter will return to court.

    _________

    The Greens back the call from Pacific Elders: https://twitter.com/AdamBandt/status...70197388575156




    Former Pacific leaders have called on the Australian government to stop “contradicting” itself on climate action.

    The Australian government is hoping to host COP 29 in 2024, but former Kiribati president Anote Tong said it would be “wrong”, considering the current continued support for new oil and gas projects.

    Mr Tong and his fellow Pacific Elders Voice colleague Thomas Remengesau Jr – the former president of Palau – have spent time in Canberra this week meeting with government, opposition, and crossbench MPs and senators.

    It follows the official legislation of a 43 per cent minimum emissions reduction by 2030, and net zero by 2050.

    The pair have welcomed the call for Australia, on behalf of the Pacific region, to host the international climate conference, but called for them to do better in order to prevent island countries like their own from “completely disappearing” by 2060.

    “We are very conscious of the fact that the current government is willing to take a more proactive stance on climate change and wants to be more proactive with respect to the Pacific,” Mr Tong said.

    “(But) it would appear to be a contradiction (that Australia wants to host COP 29 while still approving new fossil fuel projects.

    “It just doesn’t make sense.

    “We support Australia hosting because it would be in our part of the world and we want to be part of it, but to be part of something that’s not doing the right thing is wrong.”

    Mr Tong said COP was a forum that “really should be addressing” the progress.

    “We cannot morally feel right to ask people to come when we’re not doing enough,” he said.

    Mr Tong – who in 2015 lead the call for a moratorium on new fossil fuel projects – said he was still asking world leaders for the same commitment.

    “Because according to the UN Secretary General, in order to survive as a species, we need to leave what’s in the ground underground,” he said.

    “Climate change is the primary stability issue.”

    Independent Senator David Pocock said the ongoing burning of oil and gas was causing significant harm to the Pacific Islands.

    “We’re at a point in our history where we have to have a look at our actions going forward,” he said.

    “(The Pacific elders) have shown leadership that we’ve been missing here in Australia.”

    Australia climate change: Pacific Islands leaders make demand to Albanese

    ________



    A key plank of the Murray-Darling Basin plan is based on “dodgy” science, South Australia’s River Murray commissioner, Richard Beasley, said.

    Speaking at an inquiry into the federal government’s proposed changes to the plan, Beasley said a “truly independent scientific review” was needed of projects intended to keep 605 gigalitres a year in the system.

    “Because it looks - I’ll use a layperson’s term - dodgy, the science, if I can call it science, it’s not actually science,” he said.

    Beasley said that, as well, 450GL of the plan was still in doubt, while another 70GL reduction after a review of the northern basin meant that the plan was now about a 2080GL plan instead of a 3200GL plan.

    “What I’m just pointing out as a matter of sheer obviousness is that we have a 2080GL basin plan at the moment with no possibility of progressing an extra 450, with a dodgy 605,” he said, in an at times heated hearing.

    Professor Jamie Pittock, from the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists, was also critical of the projects and said they needed to be audited. The targets in the plan “were not based on sound science to begin with”, he said, and that since they were set out in 2012, there was less water in the system because of climate change.

    Irrigators blamed the states. NSW Irrigators’ Council chief, Claire Miller, said the states were “dragging their heels” on the projects.

    The hearing was on the same day the Productivity Commission released a report calling for the federal government to expand voluntary buybacks.

    Miller described buybacks as a “blunt sledgehammer” that would hit communities hard.

    South Australian Greens senator and water spokesperson, Sarah Hanson-Young, said the Greens would not “rubber stamp” the amendments as they are,

    “The bill must include a guarantee that the water promised for the environment and SA will be delivered on time and not delayed again,” she said.

    The inquiry had heard from witnesses “that the bogus and costly irrigation infrastructure projects which have failed to deliver water should be scrapped, and money should instead be used for buybacks”, Hanson-Young said.

    In its submission to the inquiry, the National Farmers Federation said buybacks were not needed and would impact on regions and communities:

    Less water available for consumptive use means less agricultural production. Less production increases pressure on food and fibre prices. Less production impacts on and off farm jobs. Less production erodes economic activity in regional towns and undermines the socio-economic resilience of communities.

    _________




    The federal government should step up efforts to recover water in the Murray-Darling Basin, including expanding voluntary buybacks and doing more to hold state governments to account, the Productivity Commission has said in a major report.

    Originally agreed in 2012, the plan aimed to recover 2,750 gigalitres a year with an additional 450 GL/y from efficiency measures. But it won’t “be implemented on time or on budget”, with delays inflating costs even as the climate crisis adds to challenges, the commission’s interim review of the plan’s implementation has found.

    The review was also critical of previous Coalition governments. The decision to switch from open tenders to “limited” ones was “a slower way to recover large volumes of water”, with “weak transparency” for amounts paid between 2016 and 2019.

    “This report confirms what we already knew, that after a decade of sabotage under the Liberals and Nationals, the Murray-Darling basin plan is off track,” said the water minister, Tanya Plibersek. “More than 80% of the water recovered under the plan so far has been under federal Labor governments.”

    Plibersek’s office separately released the results of a buyback scheme to recover 44.3 GL across six catchments in New South Wales and Queensland. The tender attracted about 250 responses to sell about twice as much water as offered.

    “This is a fantastic signal to governments and communities that voluntary water purchase is a necessary and feasible tool to help meet the targets of the Murray-Darling basin plan,” Plibersek said.

    In September the Albanese government introduced legislation to postpone the full implementation of the plan from June 2024 to the end of 2026. The move had the support of the NSW, Queensland, South Australia and the Australian Capital Territory but not Victoria.

    The urgency of diverting water use to ensure the environmental health of the basin’s rivers, lakes and wetlands will probably intensify as drought conditions spread across the food bowl region.

    ______




    Scientists say Australia’s soil carbon targets are flawed and farmers could face a big bill, with the nation’s emissions reductions being overestimated.

    Under the offset scheme, producers receive credits for storing carbon in the soil that companies or the federal government can then buy from them.

    But there is a growing chorus of discontent among experts over how credits are awarded and the research behind the idea.

    In a paper published in the October edition of the Journal of Environmental Management, 18 scientists examined the impact of grazing management on soil carbon across 30 projects.

    The group, from the NSW Department of Primary Industries and several Australian universities, concluded changing practices can bring benefits but more science is needed to prove carbon capture.

    “There is a lack of evidence in Australia that grazing management directly increases soil carbon,” they found.

    While technology may improve the outcomes for storing carbon in the soil, it’s “unlikely to be a cornerstone strategy for the Australian Livestock Industry to mitigate livestock emissions”.

    Paper co-author David Rowlings from the centre for agriculture at Queensland University of Technology goes further.

    “My biggest fear is that these farmers will get down the track and have to pay it back,” he says.

    “Carbon developers are focused on the short term and there is a big risk that over the 25 years, the results will go backwards and leave the farmer with a bill.

    “It’s meaningless trying to project over five years.”

    Based on results from an independent project in Southern Queensland, Professor Rowlings says some soil carbon projects are overblown by as much as 10 times, which risks the accuracy of Australia’s greenhouse gas inventory.

    “A lot of major fossil fuel developments are only going to proceed on the assumption of offsets being provided,” he argues.

    “If the project lost carbon after 25 years, even if the farmer pays the money back, the project will have still not offset any of the emissions.”

    Professor Rowlings told AAP the current system is unable to work out what carbon is captured as a result of seasonal variation verses what is management driven, and lacks independent scrutiny of the data.

    “The methodology is an accounting methodology,” he says.

    “It’s not a methodology that actually understands how, from a scientific point of view, we build and store carbon for the long term.”

    He’s among a number of leading soil scientists who have raised “serious concerns” about the scheme, which is run by the Clean Energy Regulator.

    More in the link

    __________




    There's no sign yet that Australia's new environment laws will account for the threat climate change poses to nature, a conservation group says.

    The federal government has starting consulting stakeholders on its once-in-a-generation rewrite of laws to protect the environment.

    The work is supposed to fix fatal flaws in the existing Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act after a scathing review found it was incapable of producing good outcomes.

    The first round of consultations - limited to about 30 stakeholder groups - began in Canberra on Monday.

    The Australian Conservation Foundation was among those presented with an outline of the assessment and approval system for new projects.

    The group has offered a mixed view of what's on the table so far, particularly in relation to climate change.

    National biodiversity policy adviser Brendan Sydes says the government has accepted the Samuel review's recommendations that project applicants disclose their scope one and two emissions.

    But so far there's nothing to suggest anything will be done with that information.

    "The assumption is ... fairly safely, that there's no intention to take that information into account ... That is a serious shortcoming," Mr Sydes said.

    "We need to be thinking about how the current silence of the EPBC Act, when it comes to climate impacts, is actually addressed."

    He said the new laws would for the first time define unacceptable impacts for the environment.

    The new, independent environment protection authority won't be able to approve those projects, but the minister still can.

    "Unhelpfully ... though, we've got a phenomenon where the minister will still have this call-in power and potentially quite broad discretion available to her in terms of what she approves, including being able to permit what would otherwise be unacceptable impacts."

    AAP contacted other stakeholder groups for comment. The Business Council of Australia and Minerals Council of Australia declined to share any early views.

    The government is planning a staged approach to consultation on the new laws.

    Stakeholder groups will get a series of opportunities to comment on the reforms, which will be released in tranches. But they are not being given copies.

    The government says the material is not ready for broad release, and the groups invited to view material in person are providing "early soundings".

    The general public won't get to see the proposed laws until they are tabled in parliament early next year.
    Last edited by S Landreth; 05-11-2023 at 07:04 AM.

  16. #216
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Part 1 of 2




    Australia is facing fresh pressure to rein in fossil fuel subsidies, with new figures showing just a fraction of that spending could fully fund the shift to clean energy in eight Pacific island countries.

    The climate crisis is one of the biggest issues on the agenda at the Pacific Islands Forum’s top political gathering this week, with Vanuatu demanding “radical” action to end the world’s fossil fuel addiction.

    The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, arrived in the Cook Islands on Tuesday local time (Wednesday Australian time) and acknowledged the climate crisis was “certainly felt most acutely in island states”.

    In a report published to coincide with the talks, campaigners highlight how Pacific island countries are on the frontline of the climate crisis despite being responsible for just 0.23% of annual global emissions.

    By contrast, the world’s 15 largest-emitting nations – led by China, the US and India with Australia in 15th place – are collectively responsible for 71.88% of annual emissions.

    The report was commissioned by the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative, a group that is campaigning to end new development of fossil fuels and phase out existing production.

    Island countries are still heavily dependent on imports of diesel fuel for use in generators, says the report titled Ki Mua: Towards a Just Transition for the Pacific.

    It suggests that a mix of utility-scale and decentralised renewables, dominated by solar PV and wind installations, would provide the region with “significant opportunities”.

    These gains would include reducing pollution and improving public health while ending reliance on fossil fuel imports. It suggests developed countries like Australia have a responsibility to help.

    “In the past year, Australia has handed out $US7bn ($AU11 bn) to the fossil fuel industry,” said Auimatagi Joe Moeono-Kolio, an adviser to the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative.

    “That’s seven times the amount of money it would take to fund a renewable energy transition for eight Pacific countries.”

    The report estimates that across eight Pacific island countries analysed, the upfront cost of replacing all existing fossil fuel electricity generation “ranges from $US691m to just over $US1bn, depending on the specific technology mix”.

    _________




    Prime minister signs historic climate change deal allowing citizens of Tuvalu to move to Australia

    All citizens of the Pacific nation of Tuvalu will be able to apply for a new visa to move to Australia and flee the catastrophic impacts of climate change under a historic deal signed by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese today.

    Tuvalu, an atoll home to slightly more than 11,000 people, is one of the lowest-lying countries on the planet, and as such one of the nations at most risk from rising sea levels due to climate change.

    The country's prime minister Kausea Natano said the deal would allow Tuvaluans to "work, study and live" in Australia.

    "The government of Tuvalu initiated and submitted a request to the government of Australia for a more elevated bilateral partnership," he said.

    "This means that we would enter a treaty that guides us to respect each other's sovereignty, commit us to safeguard and support each other as we face the existence or threat of climate change and geostrategic challenges, to commit Australia to establish a special visa arrangement to allow people from Tuvalu to work, study and live in Australia."

    Under the agreement, a new special visa category will be set up for Tuvaluans, with up to 280 issued each year.




    _________




    The next federal budget will back green energy winners to help the renewable energy transition, Jim Chalmers has flagged.

    The treasurer told ABC’s Insiders on Sunday that Australia’s energy transformation is “absolutely central” to the Albanese government’s goals and will be a focus of the 2024-25 federal budget.

    So far, the federal government has committed $40bn in its efforts to achieve its promised national emissions reduction target of 43% by 2030 with an 82% share of renewables in the energy grid.

    But Chalmers acknowledged in a speech on Thursday that Australia was behind on its pathway to its Paris agreement target of net zero emissions by 2050.

    On Sunday the treasurer identified four key industries – critical minerals, battery manufacturing, renewable hydrogen and ammonia, and green metals – as key factors in getting the country back on track.

    “What we need to do is not just to attract and commit more private and more public capital, but we need to be able to absorb and deploy that investment in the most efficient and effective way,” Chalmers said.

    “And so some of the things that we need to consider as we work towards the next budget, is to make sure we get the skills base, the technological base, the relationship with the states right as well.”

    The commitment to further boost Australia’s green energy revolution follows US president, Joe Biden’s introduction of the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022.

    The $US369bn is expected to significantly ramp up the take-up of zero-carbon technologies in the US, and drive up competition in the global race to become renewable superpowers.

    Chalmers on Thursday said he was not seeking to introduce an Inflation Reduction Act-“lite”, but something “uniquely Australian”.

    “We need a set of prescriptions right for this transformation and right for this country,” he said.

    “We will complement, not copy, the priorities and plans of other nations, not just do exactly the same kind of investment with the exact same subsidies.”

    The treasurer’s appearance on Sunday comes ahead of Tuesday’s interest rates decision from the Reserve Bank.

    _______




    In a significant development ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference COP28, Jennifer Morgan, Germany’s special envoy for International Climate Action, has stressed the necessity for Australia to join Germany and the European Union in the drive to phase out fossil fuels. This call to action underscores the urgency of aggressive emissions reduction, with the ambitious but crucial goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius still in our crosshairs.

    Morgan Calls for Australia’s Active Participation

    Morgan emphasized that as one of the world’s leading exporters of coal and liquefied natural gas, Australia carries a hefty responsibility to take more assertive action on phasing out fossil fuels. This is particularly pertinent in light of Australia’s aspirations to host COP31 in 2026. In her interview with @FergusonNews, she underscored Australia’s abundant solar energy resources and the critical minerals necessary for the energy transition, urging the country to capitalize on these opportunities.

    Arguments Against LNG and Nuclear Power

    Countering arguments from Australian LNG exports that more gas is required to aid Asia’s transition away from coal, Morgan firmly stated that gas is not a bridge fuel. She advocated for countries with significant fossil fuel exports to diversify their economies. In terms of emissions reduction in the electricity sector, she advised Australia to concentrate its efforts on renewable energy sources, suggesting safe, affordable, and deployable technologies over nuclear power.

    Germany’s Commitment and Australia’s Potential Role

    Morgan highlighted Germany’s pledge to produce exclusively carbon-free cars post-2035 and encouraged Australia to incorporate similar plans within its domestic agenda. She articulated doubts regarding the significant contribution of carbon capture and storage to emissions reductions by 2030. Wrapping up her interview, Morgan underscored the necessity for accelerated action to tackle the climate crisis and underscored Australia’s potential leadership role in climate finance.
    Last edited by S Landreth; 11-11-2023 at 02:43 PM.

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    Thousands more electric vehicle chargers could be rolled out across Western Australia as part of a $12.5 million project to encourage their use in the workplace.

    Western Australia Energy Minister Bill Johnston announced the latest round of Charge Up Workplace Grants after awarding $2.4 million to install 403 electric car chargers earlier this year.

    The announcement comes after the state opened another three charging stations in its 7000km EV Network and after Western Australian motorists purchased a record number of electric cars in the year to October.

    Mr Johnston said the latest round of electric vehicle infrastructure funding would be open to not-for-profit organisations, small and medium businesses, as well as local councils.

    Successful applicants would receive up to half the cost of installing an electric car charger at their workplace, with the cash to support AC or faster DC charging.

    "The program encourages daytime charging, enabling EV owners to utilise abundant solar energy during sunny hours, which also assists in stabilising our electricity grid," Mr Johnston said.

    The first round of grants helped fund 403 chargers in 221 locations around Perth, and from Karratha in the Pilbara region to Albany in the south.

    Mr Johnston said many of the chargers would support local tourism, small businesses and community service organisations in regional areas.

    Applications are open until May 3 next year.

    The Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries welcomed the funding, with charging projects "critical to a low-emissions technology future".

    The latest funding also comes after the public vehicle charging network in WA grew, with the state government launching its first charging station at Esperance last Thursday, in addition to new chargers opened by Synergy at Merredin and Southern Cross.

    Charging stations have so far opened in 18 locations along the planned EV Network, designed to feature 98 charging stations in 49 locations, covering a 7000km stretch of road.

    The network is expected to be complete in 2024.

    Sales figures from the FCAI last week revealed electric vehicles accounted for 6.4 per cent of new vehicle sales in Western Australia so far this year, with demand more than tripling from 1845 vehicles in 2022 to 6590 in 2023.

    Across the nation, motorists have purchased 71,800 electric vehicles this year compared to 23,869 last year.

    ________




    Bell Bay, Tasmania has been named as SunCable’s preferred site to build an advanced high-voltage subsea cable manufacturing facility. Should it proceed in Tasmania, it would also be a critical enabler of SunCable’s flagship AAPowerLink project.

    The construction of a purpose-built facility will help solve global supply constraints of HVDC subsea cable. Currently, all advanced HVDC subsea cable facilities are located in the Northern Hemisphere.

    The proposed facility will support a globally significant renewable energy supply chain ecosystem in Australia and drive domestic demand for critical minerals and processing industries.

    The potential site, at Bell Bay, has been identified due to its unique advantages including its size and proximity to one of the country’s few natural deep-water ports, rail infrastructure and renewable energy infrastructure.

    The proposed facility will include:


    • large integrated workshop buildings for the cable manufacture, storage, testing and supporting offices;
    • customised port facilities for the transport of finished product loaded on specialised cable laying vessels; and
    • a tower for the critical vertical manufacturing processes required to ensure the production of the highest quality advanced subsea cables.


    The future-facing facility would include a state-of-the-art advanced cable manufacturing process and require many current trades and skills as well as new capabilities unique to the advanced high-voltage cable-making industry. The facility will typically use around 25-40MW of renewable energy to enable the cable making.

    SunCable Chief Projects Officer, Chris Tyrrell, said the use of high voltage subsea cables over long distances has a critical role to play in the global energy transition and solving for the transmission of green electrons within and between countries.

    “Australia has an abundance of sunshine and wind. HVDC cable enables the export of this natural resource to the world, establishing Australia as a renewable energy superpower as well as an advanced manufacturing hub for critical supply chains,” Mr Tyrrell said.

    “SunCable will soon commence consultation with local communities and stakeholders. We welcome further input and feedback before proceeding with a final decision and subsequent development applications.”

    Premier of Tasmania, Jeremy Rockliff, welcomed the news that Tasmania was the preferred site for the new SunCable Manufacturing facility.

    “The proposed facility has the potential to significantly boost the region’s economic prospects. A project of this size could create over 800 construction jobs, and over 400 long-term advanced manufacturing roles across a diverse range of trades, skills and capabilities.

    “This is an extraordinary opportunity for the northern region and confirms that Tasmania has what the world wants.

    “Our Government’s long-term plan supports major developments and investments in Tasmania as we continue to create jobs, boost the economy and make Tasmania the best place to work, live and raise a family.

    Deputy Premier and local Member for Bass, Michael Ferguson, said the positive economic impact of the project would be felt in the region for generations to come.

    “SunCable’s manufacturing facility would inject billions into the Tasmanian economy and I’m sure numerous Tasmanian businesses will see the flow on benefits of having such a project in our State.

    “This project would provide exciting careers for Tasmanian generations to come, particularly in the Tamar region.

    “It is a huge vote of confidence in the Tasmanian economy, and our Government welcomes the role the private sector plays in Tasmania.”

    SunCable will work in partnership with the Tasmanian Government to identify and develop the required workforce, as well as training and development programs that will enable the renewable energy transition.

    SunCable will also work with George Town, West Tamar and Launceston Local Government Areas to progress plans for the site.

    If SunCable proceeds with the Bell Bay site, construction is scheduled to commence in 2025 and first manufactured cable in 2029.

    ________




    Almost one in three businesses have yet to add an electric vehicle to their fleet and more than half say they will not replace all vehicles with the low-emission technology until after 2030, according to a new study.

    But regulatory changes could speed up electric vehicle adoption in Australia, according to Accenture, as could encouraging businesses to take a "wider view" of cost savings unlocked by the technology.

    The findings come after sales of new electric vehicles dipped in Australia during October but also during a year of significant growth for the industry.

    The consulting firm released its Lead the Charge report after surveying 450 senior fleet managers and decision-makers about electric vehicle adoption.

    Accenture Australia client group lead Glenn Heppell said despite skyrocketing sales worldwide, many companies were still taking a cautious approach to electric vehicles.

    "This transition is really complex and most organisations are still in the early stages of electrification," he said.

    "Our analysis shows there's still a lot of senior management who don't see this as a number one priority."

    The report found 30 per cent of companies had yet to add an electric vehicle to their operations, 54 per cent did not expect to transition to a fully electric fleet until after 2030, and 21 per cent expected to make transition after 2035.

    In the Asia Pacific, just 35 per cent of decision-makers expected to adopt a fully electric fleet before 2030 and fewer businesses had started the journey.

    Mr Heppell said meeting government regulations was still the biggest motivation for businesses to adopt electric vehicles, followed by gaining a competitive advantage, and cutting carbon emissions.

    The report found companies could benefit from taking "a wider view of costs and benefits" related to electric vehicles, including savings that could be made in power, maintenance and overall costs.

    Mr Heppell said the findings indicated more ambitious regulatory targets like those in Europe and the US could also have a significant impact on vehicle adoption and emission cuts.

    "It's that classic early adopter challenge around high upfront business costs and an unclear business case," he said.

    "In a challenging economic environment, the return on investment becomes even more important."

    Concerns around private and public vehicle-charging infrastructure were also identified as hurdles in the Accenture report, in addition to managing electric and petrol vehicles simultaneously.

    Despite speed bumps to their adoption in fleets, electric cars have set sales records in Australia during 2023, with more than 71,000 new vehicles sold - an increase of more than 200 per cent.

    Electric car sales fell in October to represent 5.7 per cent of all new vehicle sales, however, down from a high of eight per cent in April.

    ___________


    • Sea dumping legislation won't pass Senate this week


    It's been put up four times, three times today, and the Senate has made its view very well known – it's a no.

    https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo...7140%2F0048%22

    ________



    ACT Independent Senator David Pocock is calling on the Albanese Government to abandon legislation enabling the sequestration of carbon dioxide in the seabed that has been universally condemned by scientific experts and environmental advocates.

    The Environment Protection (Sea Dumping) Amendment (Using New Technologies to Fight Climate Change) Bill 2023 is currently scheduled to come before the Senate on Monday.

    Senator Pocock said he was concerned the government would seek to push the bill through the upper house with the support of the Coalition.

    “Australians sent a strong message at the last election that they want to see the Australian Government do a lot better when it comes to climate action and protecting Nature,” Senator Pocock said.

    “Sadly it seems that message wasn’t heard and the Albanese Government is continuing some of the approaches that failed us so badly over the past decade.

    “It is an absolute indictment on Labor if - faced with a Senate crossbench that is urging them to do better on climate and environment - they choose instead to rely on the Coalition to get their environmental legislation through.

    “It also raises serious concerns about how they plan to pursue critical reforms of our national environmental laws.

    “The upper and lower house crossbenchers and the Australian Greens have all put their concerns on the record.

    “This bill is nothing more than greenwashing for gas companies with potentially catastrophic impacts on our marine environment, sealife and climate.

    “It will enable the expansion of oil and gas projects that the IPCC and every credible expert says we can’t afford.

    “I urge Labor to have the courage to do the right thing by current and future generations and not put through legislation that will hurt our collective future.”
    Last edited by S Landreth; 12-11-2023 at 07:22 AM.

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    Landmark Indo-Pacific Framework Agreements | Prime Minister of Australia


    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese today met with Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) Leaders in San Francisco to endorse a comprehensive package of IPEF agreements.

    IPEF Leaders also announced a Critical Minerals Dialogue to strengthen collaboration in critical minerals supply chains and to boost regional competitiveness.

    For Australia, this will mean using our critical minerals to assist the region in transitioning to clean energy and in turn will create diverse, resilient and sustainable supply chains, building Australia’s capacity and standing as a renewable energy superpower.

    These announcements build on the investments the Government has previously made including $25 million to support IPEF developing economy members with technical assistance and capacity building initiatives.


    _________




    Tens of thousands of students have taken to the streets nationwide to air their frustrations at the lack of government action to tackle climate change.

    Rallies were held on Friday with students encouraged to use a 'climate doctor's certificate' and take a sick day from school citing global-warming concerns.

    Several thousand people descended on Melbourne's Flagstaff Gardens before marching through the city centre.




    Liam Cranley said he took his children Dario, eight, and Olive, 11, out of school to attend the March because they asked him if they could go.

    Mr Cranley said their school had no qualms about his children missing class and he believed it was important to take a stand as governments at all levels needed to accelerate action on climate change.

    'We're not going to be able to live here much longer if the heat keeps going up,' daughter Olive told AAP.

    A group of students from Melbourne Girls' College attended after hearing about the rally from a teacher.

    'I believe it's worth missing half a day of school just to make sure that the next generation will actually get to live and have an education here on our planet,' year 7 student Erin said.

    Groups of protesters in Melbourne blocked traffic as they staged sit-ins at several major intersections, holding up trams and vehicles.

    __________




    The Howard-era Coalition frontbencher Robert Hill and prominent Labor figure Peter Garrett are among several former environment ministers who have signed on to a campaign to ban native forest logging across Australia.

    The push is being led by the independent MP for Mackellar, Sophie Scamps, and calls on federal and state governments to work together on a transition away from industrial-scale native forestry.

    Former ministers backing the pledge include Hill, who served under John Howard between 1996 and 2001, Garrett, who served between 2007 and 2010, the former New South Wales Labor environment minister Bob Debus, and Rod Welford and Desley Boyle, two former Queensland environment ministers.

    “Too much of Australia’s rich and often unique biodiversity has been lost,” Hill said. “What remains must be conserved and ending clearing and logging of Australia’s native forests would significantly help.

    “Those who suffer loss as a result of such a decision should be supported. It’s time to say enough is enough.”

    Geoff Gallop, the former Western Australian Labor premier, is also supporting the pledge, as are all federal teal independents, senator David Pocock, key independent MPs in the NSW parliament, most state and federal Greens politicians and more than 30 environment and civil society groups.

    The campaign urges state and federal governments to move towards greater use of plantations and develop support options for any affected forestry workers.

    Debus said “the best thing we can do to protect our threatened wildlife and to take greenhouse gas out of the atmosphere is to quickly and fairly bring this failing industry to an end”.

    __________

    @[email protected] - Solar PV continues to clock up about 250MW of new capacity each month. Year-to-date, that's 2.5GW, and counting. (Source: Green Energy Markets): https://twitter.com/p_hannam/status/1725373640861204626


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    Part 2 of 2

    Highlights




    The government bill passed with support from Coalition senators on Monday night after a fiery debate. The Greens senators and the independent senator David Pocock accused the government of doing the bidding of fossil fuel companies to allow new and expanded polluting projects. They said the government basically acknowledged this in the debate.

    What are the sea-dumping laws?

    The bill amends Australia’s sea-dumping laws – known as the Environment Protection (Sea Dumping) Act 1981 – to bring them into line with two amendments made in 2009 and 2013 to the London Protocol, a global treaty on marine pollution.

    Australia is a signatory to that treaty and the amendments would allow governments to regulate two activities: the export of CO2 from one country to another for sequestration under the seabed and the placement of waste or other matter into the ocean for “marine geoengineering” for scientific research, such as adding nutrients to the ocean to try to increase CO2 absorption from the atmosphere.

    What does the government say?

    Ratification of these amendments would allow the government to issue permits for these types of projects after what it has promised would be a rigorous assessment process.

    Plibersek has argued it was already legal to import CO2 to be buried in CCS projects and without amendments to Australia’s laws there was a risk it could occur in an unregulated fashion. She said the legislation would increase protection of oceans and “ensure best practice is adopted”.

    The export of CO2 is not legal unless a country has ratified the 2009 London protocol amendment.

    What do the Greens and crossbench say?

    The Greens, teal independents and Pocock accused the government of introducing the legislation to allow new and expanded fossil fuel projects.

    More specifically, they said passage of the bill is meant to help fossil fuel projects that have included offshore CCS – storing CO2 under the seabed in international waters – as a key part of their design. The most prominent of those is Santos’ troubled Barossa gas project, which includes a proposed CCS facility in the depleted Bayu-Undan gas reservoir in waters off Timor-Leste.

    What does it mean for our oceans?

    The Australian Marine Conservation Society raised serious concerns that the bill, and similar legislation in other countries, would ultimately enable the “industrialisation of our oceans”.

    The organisation’s offshore oil and gas campaigner, Louise Morris, said it would allow the global trade of CO2 “at a scale never seen before that would require infrastructure, pipelines, shipping routes for an entire new industry”.

    “CCS has been around for 40 years, it’s unsafe, unviable,” Morris said. “The leaking of carbon capture and storage projects internationally has shown it to be dangerous for marine life because leaking CO2 acidifies the ocean.

    “Acidifying oceans dissolve shells of shellfish, for example crayfish, which radically alters the marine ecosystem.”

    The organisation has called on the government to explain how it plans to regulate the trade of CO2.

    ________




    Some pictures show a whale lifeless on a beach. In others, the whale is on fire, jumping from the ocean, as wind turbines loom behind it. The pictures are shocking – intentionally so. Recently they’ve appeared on posters and placards and in social media posts in New South Wales’ Hunter and Illawarra regions, as part of a growing campaign against an Albanese government plan to open offshore windfarms zones off the coast.

    For weeks, an image of a beached whale with turbines in the background has appeared on a roadside billboard in Port Stephens, north of Newcastle, under the words “Stop Port Stephens Offshore Wind Farms”. After questions from Guardian Australia this week, the advertising company oOh!media added a note to the billboard saying it had been authorised by Troy Radford, the president of the Newcastle and Port Stephens Game Fish Club.

    Asked about the ad, Radford said it had been paid for by members of the fishing community and acknowledged “we had someone design it for us”. “It needed to be high impact and visual, and that sums up the information that we’ve got at the time on the potential whale deaths,” he said.

    But scientists are clear: the suggestion wind turbines kill whales is not backed by credible evidence.

    Quentin Hanich, the editor-in-chief of the academic journal Marine Policy and professorial fellow at the University of Wollongong, spent this week debunking a fake article shared on social media that purported to be from his publication which claimed offshore wind projects in the Illawarra and Hunter would kill 400 whales a year.

    The Facebook group took that post down but he worries about the nonexistent study’s broader impact.

    “There’s been a whole bunch of continuing dialogue that suggests that windfarms kill whales without any actual evidence to demonstrate that that’s the case,” Hanich said.

    This is part of the backdrop to the campaign opposing offshore windfarms in NSW, which has developed momentum in recent weeks, backed by locals, fishers, tourism operators, surfers and MPs from outside the region opposed to renewable energy development.

    It has risen despite support from industry, unions, local MPs and councillors, the university and environment groups. Greenpeace and the Australian Conservation Foundation have stepped in seeking to counter concerns about whales.

    Observers say it can be seen as part of the broader challenge to developments meant to move Australia from relying mostly on coal power to running nearly entirely on renewable energy. It is not what the government expected when the climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, last year outlined proposals for six offshore wind zones across the country, arguing Australia had “world-class offshore wind energy potential” and that “just one rotation of one offshore wind turbine provides as much energy as an average rooftop solar installation generates in one day”.

    Arthur Rorris, the secretary of the South Coast Labour Council and a supporter of offshore wind developments, said there were grounds for people who support a rapid transition to clean energy to be concerned. “The Illawarra has been a sounding board for how to divide and turn communities against windfarms in Australia, and it has shown these strategies have worked.

    “We will soon see this playing out across the country,” he said.

    Much, much more to the article in the link above.

    ___________




    The New South Wales emergency services levy will be cut from home insurance premiums as part of a reform plan announced by the premier, Chris Minns, to fix the “unsustainable” scheme.

    The change would lower the cost of insurance premiums which the government hopes would encourage more people to insure their homes in the face of greater fire and flood threats.

    Under the current system, emergency services are funded through the tax placed on home insurance premiums, meaning only those with insurance pay.

    Minns said reform was not easy but the “right thing to do”.

    “For too long this has been in the too-hard basket for NSW,” he said on Thursday. “But as we face the threat of more natural disasters we have a significant opportunity to make the system fairer [and] more sustainable for the future.”

    More than 17% of households across the state do not have home and contents insurance.

    Under the plan, a state-wide contribution would be introduced to fund emergency services, recognising that natural disasters affected everyone in NSW. There were no more details provided on Thursday morning.

    The state treasurer, Daniel Mookey, said reforming the levy would help ease the burden on household budgets but it would not be rushed.

    “Far too many homeowners run the risk of leaving their biggest asset uninsured because of soaring costs,” he said. “The NSW government will begin consultation across industry and the wider community. It’s not a reform that can be rushed – it’s too important.”

    The government has described thfunding of fire and emergency services agencies as “complex, inefficient and unsustainable”.

    As it stands, policyholders pay almost three-quarters of the levy, local councils pay 11.7% and the state government contributes 14.6%.

    According to government modelling, the levy is estimated to increase the cost of household insurance by 18% on average.

    The former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian tried to reform the levy more than five years ago but the plan was dumped in 2019 amid fierce backlash from councils. Local councils at the time warned increasing the levy would force them to cut services and facilities.

    The Insurance Council of Australia chief executive, Andrew Hall, described the former government’s attempt as a “spectacular failure of policy” but was hopeful the new plan could work.

    _________




    The plan for new windfarms proposed by the New South Wales government has raised “serious concerns” within the renewable energy sector, with developers warning it will make it even harder to proceed with projects in the state.

    The Minns government this week released its draft wind energy guideline to provide the community, industry and regulators with the “key planning considerations” for onshore windfarms. These include visual, noise and biodiversity impacts.

    Renewable energy developers were surprised by the extent of the state that was identified as “less suitable” for wind energy. This description extends over most of two of NSW’s five special renewable energy zones, located in New England and the state’s south-west.

    Considerations included proximity to major roads and sensitive public viewpoints, native vegetation and location near significant migratory bird flight routes.

    “Site selection factors often compete, and due to the large scale of wind energy development, it is challenging to find sites that do not have significant conflicts,” the guideline said. “Projects must also be designed in a cost-effective manner to provide benefits to energy consumers and reduced electricity costs.”

    The Clean Energy Investor Group chief executive, Simon Corbell, said members had raised “serious concerns about the impact of the new guidelines on clean energy development in NSW”.

    “At a time when we need to accelerate regulatory timeframes, these new proposals send the wrong messages to industry and will make new project development more difficult,” Corbell said.

    Nicholas Aberle, a policy director at the Clean Energy Council, said the mapping indicated windfarms would not be built in the state’s far west, meaning most would have to be located in the east and south.

    __________



    The NSW Planning Department has performed a backflip on the map accompanying its new draft wind energy guidelines, now declaring that just about everywhere in the state is regarded as “suitable” for wind farms, in contrast to the map that was released earlier this week.

    The planning department issued an advisory on Friday saying that the original map – which had horrified the industry because it declared almost the entire state as “less suitable”, and very few areas to be “desirable” – had now been changed.

    What has been changed is the map legend. Instead of three descriptors of “desirable”, “suitable” and “less suitable”, there are now only two descriptors – “highly suitable” and “suitable.” (See map just below).

    That means that all the areas mapped – within and near the five new renewable energy zones and along the transmission lines that link them – are now deemed as “suitable”. Some small pockets are deemed to be “highly suitable.”

    The industry welcomed the changes, but said it highlighted lingering concerns about disfunction and miscommunications within the state planning department. And it is still worried about some of the draft proposals.

    The original map – which was described as “farcical” by many in the industry – led to accusations that the NSW Labor government is torn between competing motives in the energy department and the planning department, and it raised concerns about its ability to navigate the switch from coal to renewables.

    Energy minister Penny Sharpe has been consistent in her message of wanting to accelerate the rollout of transmission lines, wind, solar and storage to enable the state to retire what is the biggest coal fleet in the country, possibly within a decade.

    But delays in transmission, connections, and in planning (only two wind farms approved in the last four years) has raised concerns about the state’s ability to replace coal capacity before it has retired.

    The NSW government has been urged by an independent review to negotiate a possible extension to the Eraring coal generator, the nation’s biggest which is currently scheduled to close in August, 2025, possibly extending the life of two units by another couple of summers.

    “We have updated the ‘Suitable areas for wind energy development’ map in the draft Wind Energy Guideline to clarify that all of the mapped areas are suitable for wind energy development,” the department wrote on Friday.

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    It felt more party than protest as hundreds of people paddled into the Port of Newcastle on kayaks, surfboards and pontoons in what organisers hope will be the biggest civil disobedience action in Australia’s history.




    On shore people stood shoulder to shoulder on Saturday, waving at the protesters, who will occupy the channel for 30 hours to stop coal exports from leaving Newcastle.

    Some were dancing along to a band and waving Extinction Rebellion flags. Others gave the protest a comical air, such as Helen Child, who dressed up as Clive Palmer with a sign that said “Let Them Eat Coal”.

    But for all its frivolity, the message the organisers Rising Tide hope to send to the government is serious.

    “We are doing it to call on the government to tax fossil fuel export profits at 75% and also demand our government stop opening new coal projects,” says Zack Schofield, who helped organise the event.

    Among the paddlers are Australians from across the country who have felt the personal toll of the climate crisis.

    “We’re here to protect country and to protect our culture,” Willard Kurikuta says.

    Nick Hopkins, who lost his home in Bateman’s Bay in the black summer bushfires, says people must “stand up and push our government”.

    “The good life among the gum trees is lost.”

    Grant Howard, a coalminer who travelled down from Mackay in Queensland to take part in the protest, wants to be a role model for other miners who wish to take a stand for the climate.

    “I see the need for change and I want to be part of it,” he says.

    The Greens leader Adam Bandt took part on a kayak, as did the New South Wales Greens MP Cate Faehrmann, who appeared to take a while to find her sea legs as she headed out on her team’s makeshift green pontoon.

    “People are fed up,” Bandt said as he surveyed the water awaiting his turn to paddle out. “People voted for climate action and instead we’ve got the government backing more coal and gas.

    Bob Brown, who will take to the water on Saturday afternoon, gave a rousing speech before the paddlers headed out, comparing the action with the Franklin River campaign.

    “I can say it’s going to be bigger. It’s going to be strong. It’s going to have the same outcome,” he told hundreds gathered on the shore.

    On Friday the park behind Horseshoe Beach was a hive of activity. Large white marquees were erected and in one tent a large group of protesters stood in pairs learning strategies for non-violent direct action. Outside a group had kayak training.

    Between the marquees and the beach, the protesters, who plan to take the 30-hour blockade in shifts until it ends at 4pm on Sunday, have set up tents and swags for sleeping.

    Alex Goodsir, 17, says students from as far as Perth and Adelaide were travelling to Newcastle to take part in the blockade.

    “It’s really important we have young people take part in this,” she says. “It’s our future.”

    As a Newcastle local, Goodsir says she also feels a deeper duty.

    “I’ve lived in Newcastle my whole life and at first I never thought much about the coal ships I was used to seeing every day on the horizon,” she says. “As a member of this community I need to be lending my voice to the movement to stop this.”

    Newcastle’s port, which last year vowed to be powered entirely by renewable energy by 2040, exports 165Mt of coal a year on average.

    Health Pros Join Coal Port Blockade
    _________




    The Albanese government’s plan to turbo-charge the development of renewable energy has been described as a “landmark” policy for the nation’s transition away from fossil fuels and has been broadly welcomed by industry and state governments.

    The energy minister, Chris Bowen, revealed a capacity investment scheme originally aimed to support 6GW of batteries and other storage would be expanded to 32GW. Of that total, 23GW would be for new wind and solar farms, with 9GW for storage.

    The scheme’s cost is uncertain. Tenders held every six months over four years will set strike prices. Should market prices exceed a ceiling, the commonwealth could make money, and if they fall below a floor, taxpayers would have to make up the difference.

    Simon Corbell, who as a former energy minister introduced a similar scheme in the ACT, said the plan would “unlock significant new investment in new renewable energy generation and storage projects across Australia”.

    Corbell, now chair of the Clean Energy Investor group that boasts 11GW of installed renewable capacity, said the scheme would give greater revenue predictability and bring more projects to financial close.

    EnergyAustralia’s managing director, Mark Collette, said his company had $3bn-$5bn of potential investments in the works and the scheme’s expansion was “a step forward”.

    “The details appear to provide broad policy support to accelerate the investments needed in dispatchable and renewable energy while ensuring reliability concerns are met with a strategic reserve,” Collette said.

    Financial approvals for new wind and solar farms have all but stalled in recent quarters, putting at risk the decarbonisation of the power grid. The government’s aim to cut greenhouse emissions from the electricity sector by 82% by 2030 compared with 2005 levels is widely seen as out of reach without a rapid build-out of new clean energy projects.

    Renewable energy advocates such as Tim Buckley, director of thinktank Climate Energy Finance, hailed the scheme’s expansion as “exactly the kind of bold, landmark federal policy and investment ambition we need to rapidly transform Australia’s energy market whilst ensuring grid reliability and energy affordability”.

    “It will help facilitate the mothballing of polluting coal clunkers such as Origin Energy’s Eraring power station in New South Wales, Australia’s biggest, scheduled for 2025, while enabling stand-by capacity to ensure supply,” he said.

    Origin, in the midst of a potential takeover, said the expanded scheme “represents a potential source of significant new generation supply into, and a meaningful intervention in, the national electricity market”.

    The Australian Energy Council issued a word of caution, though, stating the new policy was “not without risk”. Planning bottlenecks were among the issues that will need to be resolved before many projects proceed.

    “At 32GW this is a significant injection of new generation capacity into a grid with unresolved system constraints,” the council’s chief executive, Sarah McNamara, said. “These include delays in transmission deployment, social licence issues, supply-chain bottlenecks and the challenge of maintaining essential system services as more renewables come online.”

    “New generation should be delivered where it will be of most benefit to consumers, and where constraints have been addressed to ensure it delivers the best value for government and taxpayers,” McNamara said.

    The Clean Energy Council, which had been supporting an extension of the renewable energy target (RET) as the means of supporting the sector, backed the government’s plans.

    “Investment in renewable energy has been in gradual decline since the RET– a policy that delivered substantial new investment – was met in 2020,” council CEO Kane Thornton said.

    “It’s crucial that any new policy provides increased certainty to investors and the enormous private sector capital and capability that will be essential to Australia becoming a clean energy superpower,” Thornton said.

    Ted O’Brien, opposition energy spokesperson, said Labor was writing “a blank cheque on behalf of Australian taxpayers”, providing “a glaring admission that its climate and energy policies have failed”.

    “Instead of learning lessons from its failure, Labor is doubling down and it will be everyday Australians that have to pay the bill,” O’Brien said, adding that a “renewables only” policy had “lost all credibility”.

    The expanded scheme is expected to dominate discussion at a gathering of energy ministers on Friday in Perth.

    Victoria’s energy minister Lily D’Ambrosio, said her state looked forward “to having productive discussions with a commonwealth government that actually cares about climate change at the upcoming energy and climate ministers meeting”.

    “Victoria has led the way with our targets of 95% renewables by 2035 and net zero emissions by 2045, and the commonwealth support through the expanded capacity investment scheme will build upon what we have already achieved.”

    Her New South Wales counterpart, Penny Sharpe, said her state welcomed “all efforts by the federal government to get more renewable energy into the system”.

    Bowen: “We’ve had some very good progress, but we need more progress”

    _______




    The expected glow at Friday’s final gathering of energy ministers for 2023 in Perth won’t just be from a record heatwave set to broil the city on six 35C-plus days in a row.

    Sharing the spotlight will be Chris Bowen’s surprise expansion of a federal scheme, lifting six gigawatts of storage to 32GW of batteries, wind and solar farms.

    Bowen certainly got an ovation from most of the energy sector and rightly so. The plan was a shot in the arm for a sector that’s been big on promise but lately lagging in delivery, particularly with 2030 emission targets just a tad more than six years away.

    Myriad challenges remain, though. A lot has to go right if the nation’s main power grid is to get through periods of peak demand – such as this summer – without blackouts.

    As Bowen has noted previously, the pipeline of potential projects has been running in the many gigawatt-levels for years. The Clean Energy Council will soon announce another meagre quarter of ventures reaching final investment decision, adding to recent poor outcomes.

    Developers single out New South Wales as the state with the most pressing need for new capacity – and hence, some of the best returns – but also the hardest in which to get anything approved. The last windfarm to get the nod was almost three years ago.

    That’s despite the previous Coalition government developing a clean energy roadmap with near unanimous parliamentary support and a Labor energy minister, Penny Sharpe, who is an outspoken supporter of climate action and renewables.

    The planning department, industry insiders say, could hardly be less helpful, with officials frustratingly hard to meet.

    Last week planning released a draft wind energy guideline that declared much of the state, including two designated renewable energy zones, to be “less suitable” for windfarms. After howls from the sector, the map was summarily tweaked and “less” was dropped, so those areas were suddenly “suitable”.

    Even though the guideline was a “draft”, some of the new rules were apparently being enforced, with the department rejecting developers’ visual impact assessments citing updated standards.

    Landholders, meanwhile, merely have to lodge an application for a structure near a boundary to force a developer to alter the location or numbers of wind towers. Victoria, for instance, won’t accept such “hypothetical houses”.

    And that’s before the issue of getting thousands of kilometres of new transmission built. As one investor noted, without electricity to store, new batteries aren’t much good. Another wondered, are developers supposed to build wind and solar farms where they think power lines might go in?

    As far as Bowen’s scheme itself goes, many features of its design have merits if the ACT experience is any guide. The so-called “contracts for difference” do expose taxpayers if wholesale prices fall too low but they also offer windfall gains if they go too high.

    The ACT’s auctions secured bids in the low $80s per megawatt-hour and later down to the mid $50s per megawatt-hour as technology improved. The scheme cost the budget in the early years and has lately turned over a surplus.

    Auctions held in NSW this year have put solar farm bids at $35/MWh and sub-$50/MWh for wind, the Reneweconomy website has reported.

    Bruce Mountain, head of the Victoria Energy Policy Institute, said Bowen’s scheme would be hard for a Coalition government to unwind – unlike, say, an extension of the renewable energy target as some had advocated. “It’ll be hard to rip up signed contracts but they could stop writing [new ones],” he said.

    Another issue, though, will be the role of state-owned entities. Bowen’s office has confirmed organisations such as the revived SEC Victoria would be able to make bids, a provision that is not surprising since Queensland and Tasmania’s electricity suppliers have remained mostly in state hands.

    The commonwealth-owned Snowy Hydro, too, could be among the bidders, potentially creating a conflict of interest, said Dylan McConnell, an energy expert at the University of NSW.

    The intervention of the federal government was the latest step away from a markets-based solution, he said. It was also proof the market wasn’t delivering decarbonisation of the grid at the pace needed.

    On the other hand, the commonwealth was in a position to dangle carrots for states doing better and exclude them for laggards, he said.

    Something for those ministers meeting in Perth to wrangle over.

    _________




    The Santos Ltd (ASX: STO) share price is down 0.77% to $7.07 on Thursday, and management says the stock is going cheap amid a difficult regulatory environment that is leading to project delays.

    According to the Australian Financial Review (AFR), Santos CEO Kevin Gallagher commented at yesterday's Investor Day that unless the Federal Government takes action, the current regulatory environment in Australia threatens to dissuade future investment in offshore oil and gas projects.

    "Nothing will drive investment away from Australia faster than this environment," said Gallagher.

    He said the industry needed a "a regulatory regime that we can rely on".

    By contrast, he discussed the strong backing of regulators and indigenous communities in Alaska for the Pikka Phase I project.

    What about the Santos share price?

    As for the Santos share price, Gallagher did not mince words, stating:

    The share price is very frustrating. It's cheap.

    It's stalled. And we need to un-stall it.

    We're looking at every avenue to unlock shareholder value.

  21. #221
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Part 2 of 2

    Climate blockade of Newcastle port continues




    __________



    Fortescue will proceed with its first three projects under the iron ore group’s ambitious plans to become a major force in hydrogen and renewable energy, giving a green light to $US750 million ($1.14 billion) in investments.

    The board was dealt a first strike on executive pay at its annual meeting in Perth on Tuesday.

    The company, chaired by billionaire businessman Andrew Forrest, unveiled the final investment decisions ahead of the meeting. The highest expenditure, $US550 million, is on the Phoenix Hydrogen Hub in the United States where Fortescue has plans for an 80 megawatt electrolyser and liquefaction plant with production capacity of up to 11,000 tonnes per annum of liquid green hydrogen.

    Andrew Forrest, the chairman of Fortescue, has big plans to turn the company into an energy giant. Bloomberg

    Fortescue also ticked off on a $US150 million, 50 megawatt green hydrogen project utilising Fortescue’s own electrolyser technology at Gladstone in Queensland, and developing a green iron trial plant at its Christmas Creek iron ore mine in Western Australia with a price tag of $US50 million.

    The company said other projects in the pipeline were in Brazil, Kenya and Norway. But it has set aside $US750 million to spend on the three board-sanctioned projects, announced on Tuesday, over the next three years.

    The future of the Gibson Island green hydrogen and ammonia project in Queensland that was heavily touted by Fortescue remains unclear. Fortescue said Gibson Island required more work “as Australia struggles to shed its petro-state status and still suffers structurally high green electricity costs”.

    The first stage of the Gladstone project comprises installation of a 30 megawatt electrolyser plant, with the remaining 20 megawatt capacity to be installed and commissioned in 2028 depending on the availability of water.

    Fortescue said the 50 megawatt Gladstone project would have capacity of up to 22 tonnes per day or 8000 of green hydrogen and be developed using the company’s own proton exchange membrane technology. The plant will be built next to Fortescue’s existing Gladstone electrolyser manufacturing facility with construction expected to start in 2024.

    Fortescue said renewable energy supplied from Australia’s National Energy Market would feed the Gladstone plant via a transmission line newly installed by Powerlink Queensland. “It is anticipated that power will initially be purchased from the spot market, and flexible operations will be employed to manage pricing,” the company told investors.

    Fortescue is hoping to produce 1500 tonnes a year at the green iron pilot plant at Christmas Creek in the Pilbara, where it already has some green hydrogen infrastructure.

    _________



    Six batteries which could supply power to 430,000 households will be in operation by the end of 2025, as NSW battles warnings of energy shortfalls in its transition away from coal-fired power.

    On Wednesday, the state and federal governments announced six batteries which will be able to store 1.075GW of renewable energy, or around eight per cent of the total amount needed during NSW’s peak demand periods in summer.

    The $1.8bn project will be funded through the Commonwealth’s Capacity Investment Scheme, and is estimated to create about 400 jobs.

    Contracts have been awarded to Akaysha Energy’s Orana Renewable Energy Zone battery in NSW’s central west, AGL Energy’s Liddell battery in Muswellbrook, Iberdrola Australia’s Smithfield Sydney battery, and three virtual power plants through Enel X Australia.

    NSW Energy Minister Penny Sharpe said although the government would have to contend with a “reliability gap,” having the six projects in operation would help reduce the potential shortfalls as coal-fired power plants were retired from the grid.

    “This program helps us with the most important challenges in the transition and that’s dealing with reliability as coal-fired power exits the system,” she said.

    “Getting more renewables in batteries gives us the storage that allows us when we’re in peak demand to be able to get more energy into the grid.

    “They also help us that when the wind isn’t blowing and the sun isn’t shining, they are able to keep that level amount of energy going to households.”

    _______




    Australia’s push towards hydrogen-powered buses could lead to governments repeating costly and energy-intensive trials that have failed around the globe, an expert has warned.

    The Victorian government last week announced two Australian-made hydrogen buses will be rolled out in Melbourne’s west as part of a transition to a more sustainable transport fleet.

    They will be part of a trial of 52 zero-emission buses, of which 50 are electric. The Victorian announcement came as jurisdictions across Australia were trialling hydrogen-powered buses, amid a focus on electric vehicles, as they transition to emission-free transport.

    But Guardian Australia understands the buses will run on grey hydrogen, produced using natural gas.

    Currently about 96% of the world’s hydrogen is produced using coal (brown hydrogen) and gas (grey). The production of grey and brown hydrogen releases carbon dioxide and unburnt fugitive methane into the atmosphere.

    David Cebon, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Cambridge, said hydrogen buses were expensive, inefficient to run compared to electric vehicles and not a “true zero-emissions solution”.

    “It’s destructive from the point of view of emissions. It’s destructive from the point of view of the energy transition,” he said. “It’s destructive in terms of finances and the economy because you have to subsidise them in order to make them financially viable.”

    Cebon, a member of the hydrogen science coalition, said hydrogen was inefficient because of the energy-intensive process.

    “It’s very, very inefficient. And that means that you use a lot more energy in that process than if you just took electricity and you put it in a battery and then just ran a battery electric bus,” Cebon said.

    Victoria’s hydrogen buses will service routes across Footscray, Williamstown, Moonee Ponds and Sunshine in Melbourne’s west. The government said the trial, involving six operators, would provide information on how no-emission buses perform, including energy usage.

    The government said the hydrogen fuel cell buses were estimated to save about 90 tonnes of emissions annually, as they only emitted water vapour at their tailpipe.

    Prof Scott Hamilton, from Monash university’s department of chemical and biological engineering, said buses should use green hydrogen, which needs to be independently certified.

    “If it’s not, the emissions profile can end up worse than if you were using petrol or other fuels because of the use of fossil fuels and electricity,” he said.

    _______




    The number of listed threatened species in Australia’s world heritage northern rainforests has increased by 25% since 2020, as ecologists say they are now clearly observing the long-predicted impacts of global heating.

    The management and conservation authority for the Unesco-listed Queensland wet tropics this week handed its latest environmental report to the state government, containing “sombre but pragmatic” warnings about the declining health of some species, including the ringtail possum, that were believed robust when the area was given international protection in 1988.

    “The insidious and damaging threat posed by invasive species and diseases, and the impacts of climate change, present real danger to the continuing integrity of the area’s biodiversity,” the report says.

    It found a number of additional species – including endemic rainforest frogs, ringtail possums, high-altitude birds and myrtle plants – that were considered secure at the time of world heritage listing, “now face significant challenges from accumulated and compounding threats”.

    Stephen Williams, a rainforest ecologist and a director of the Wet Tropics Management Authority, says his analysis showed there had been a 25% increase to the number of listed threatened vertebrate species in the area in the past three years.

    Williams said previously predicted declines in some species were now being observed first-hand.

    “It’s primarily climate … it’s almost entirely climate,” Williams said.

    _________

    Extra



    • Ove Hoegh-Guldberg was just 10 years old when he first saw the Great Barrier Reef. That year, 1969, most young kids around the world were getting their inspiration from Nasa’s mission to put an astronaut on the moon. But for Hoegh-Guldberg, the fine grey dust of the lunar surface had nothing on the other world below the gentle Queensland waves.


    He remembers the copperband butterfly fish and its fringing iridescent colours whose beauty “defied logic”, as well as the “incredible” epaulette shark that uses its fins to walk on the sea bed.

    These days, however, diving on reefs comes with the burden of knowledge that Hoegh-Guldberg’s 10-year-old self didn’t have.




    “Maybe my depression is because ... I’m feeling a sense of failure,” he tells Guardian Australia in his home city of Brisbane.

    The pioneering coral scientist is looking at 2023’s record-breaking temperatures in the ocean around the globe and is taking it personally.

    In what is becoming an all-too-regular event, coral reefs like those he has spent a lifetime researching are turning white in the northern hemisphere. He’s nervous about what the coming summer might bring for the Great Barrier Reef.

    “It’s 40 years of trying to get the science in place to solve the problems,” he says. “And with sea temperatures literally going off the rails, it really starts to look like we haven’t done it.”

    For any objective onlooker, Hoegh-Guldberg’s career has been anything but a failure.

    A pioneer of the scientific understanding of coral bleaching, the University of Queensland professor has written more than 400 scientific papers. His work has helped shape the world’s understanding of the risks the ocean’s richest ecosystems – home to a quarter of all marine species – face from global heating.

    Hoegh-Guldberg was starting his PhD in California in the early 1980s when reports were starting to emerge of coral reefs turning white across wide areas.

    Was it a disease? Was it pollution? Was it caused by excess sunlight? Were corals reacting to a change in the saltiness of water? “Everyone was sort of speculating, but no one had done the experiment,” he says.

    In a series of what he calls “cooking experiments”, Hoegh-Guldberg took coral fragments and subjected them to different conditions in the lab.

    Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup
    What he and his colleagues found was that corals had a temperature threshold. Once those temperatures are breached, the corals start to expel the tiny algae that live inside them and give corals their colour and much of their nutrients.


    He first saw a major bleaching event for himself in 1994 in Tahiti. The reef was so bright, he could see the bleaching from the boat before he got in the water. Hoegh-Guldberg says locals told him they had no term in Polynesia to describe what was happening.

    Branded an alarmist

    More in the link: https://www.theguardian.com/australi...eating-warming
    Last edited by S Landreth; 26-11-2023 at 11:37 AM.

  22. #222
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Part 1 of 3 parts




    The New South Wales government’s greenhouse gas emission reduction targets have been passed into law after the Greens and Coalition joined forces to strengthen the legislation to include interim targets.

    The state’s target of cutting emissions 70% compared with 2005 levels by 2035, and reaching net zero emissions by 2050, are now enshrined in law, and an independent advisory panel to monitor progress will be established.

    Following a raft of amendments, the targets will be able to be reviewed and increased over time, and the Net Zero Commission will be able to provide independent advice on projects and policies, including approvals of any new coal and gas projects.

    The state environment minister, Penny Sharpe, said Labor was taking “serious action on climate change” and governments would be held accountable for delivering on emissions targets into the future.

    “This bill provides the framework for NSW to embark on the essential journey to net zero emissions and resilience to climate change,” she said.

    “It shows business and industry they are not alone in responding to this challenge.”

    Sharpe said she welcomed the cross-party support to get the bill passed before the parliament rises for the year.

    “[I] look forward to accelerating the transition to renewable energy that will deliver cleaner and more affordable energy to households and businesses,” she said.
    The legislation was a centrepiece of Labor’s election campaign. The former Coalition government had committed to the ambitious interim target – although insisted it didn’t need laws to achieve the goal.

    The Minns government was roundly criticised by environmental groups for initially excluding the 2035 target from its bill. Australia’s former chief scientist Prof Penny Sackett last month urged the government to include it.

    The chief executive ot the Nature Conservation Council of New South Wales, Jacqui Mumford, described it as a milestone in the shift to energy “powered by the wind and sun”, and thanked the opposition and crossbench for strengthening the legislation.

    “The establishment of the independent Net Zero Commission will be critical to ensuring NSW is guided by the science and continues to increase ambition,” she said.

    “Rarely do we see governments able to secure such broad support for reforms. The NSW parliament should be celebrated for this show of multi-partisanship for our collective future.”

    Earlier in the year government confirmed it would negotiate with Origin Energy, the owner of the 2,880-megawatt coal-fired Eraring power plant near Newcastle, for a “temporary” extension of its operating life past its 2025 closure date.

    The chief executive of Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action, Serena Joyner, said it was relieving to see the Coalition and government work together on the bill.

    “While more needs to be done to protect our communities and environment from worsening climate change-driven events like the 2019-20 Black Summer bushfires, these sorts of commitments, that have support from all parties, are important,” she said.

    “Now, as we head into another potentially devastating summer and fires already destroying homes and lives, it is vital that we see greater climate action.”

  23. #223
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    part 2 of 3





    Victorian electric vehicle drivers will be repaid millions of dollars collected under an unconstitutional tax but it could take months for the cash to flow.

    The high court last month found the Victorian government’s electric vehicle impost to be constitutionally invalid, as states do not have the power to impose excise taxes on consumption.

    The state treasurer, Tim Pallas, confirmed he had received advice the government was obliged to repay the money collected.

    “We’re now going through a process of identifying who it is that we need to rebate,” he said on Wednesday.

    The law charged electric and hydrogen vehicle owners 2.8c for each kilometre they travelled during the year, while plug-in hybrid vehicle owners were charged 2.3c.

    About $7m was raised by the tax since it came into effect in mid-2021.

    Pallas said it could take several months to identify who was owed money and for the repayments to be paid into their bank accounts.

    “We’ve even decided to be sufficiently generous – albeit that there isn’t an obligation to pay interest – to pay the interest on the retention of those funds,” the treasurer said.

    “It’s a relatively small amount. What is not a relatively small amount is a reimagining of the constitution by the high court … and it’s going to cause very substantial problems for every state.”

    But the shadow treasurer, Brad Rowswell, said the money should be returned to Victorians’ pockets before Christmas.

    “For goodness sake, they’ve known since October that this tax was collected illegally,” he said.

    “They didn’t need to wait for advice, the government should have done the right thing at that time and got in place a system to return this money to Victorians who need it now more than ever.”

    __________




    Young people in Australia are most concerned about the environment, discrimination, the economy and cost of living, and the effect mental ill-health has on the lives of many, according to the country’s largest youth survey. 

    Mission Australia’s new Youth Survey Report 2023 provides invaluable insights into young people’s thoughts, experiences, concerns and solutions.

    Responses from more than 19,500 young people aged 15 to 19 found the environment (44%), equity and discrimination (31%), the economy and financial matters (31%) and mental health (30%) topped the issues they considered most important in Australia.

    Mission Australia CEO Sharon Callister said the research showed young people were engaged with major environmental, political and societal issues facing the country.

    “Responses were given amidst Australia’s severe weather disasters as well as public discussion and advocacy on climate change, mental health, the Voice Referendum and racism, the rising cost of living and the housing and homelessness crisis,” she said.

    There were greater levels of concern among young people about issues relating to housing and homelessness this year (19%, up from 12% in 2022).

  24. #224
    Thailand Expat David48atTD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    Part 2 of 2

    Climate blockade of Newcastle port continues
    Climate protest: More than 100 arrested at world's largest coal port

    Thank fuck for that.

    Climate protest: More than 100 arrested at world'''s largest coal port - BBC News

  25. #225
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    part 2 of 3





    Victorian electric vehicle drivers will be repaid millions of dollars collected under an unconstitutional tax but it could take months for the cash to flow.

    The high court last month found the Victorian government’s electric vehicle impost to be constitutionally invalid, as states do not have the power to impose excise taxes on consumption.

    The state treasurer, Tim Pallas, confirmed he had received advice the government was obliged to repay the money collected.

    “We’re now going through a process of identifying who it is that we need to rebate,” he said on Wednesday.

    The law charged electric and hydrogen vehicle owners 2.8c for each kilometre they travelled during the year, while plug-in hybrid vehicle owners were charged 2.3c.

    About $7m was raised by the tax since it came into effect in mid-2021.

    Pallas said it could take several months to identify who was owed money and for the repayments to be paid into their bank accounts.

    “We’ve even decided to be sufficiently generous – albeit that there isn’t an obligation to pay interest – to pay the interest on the retention of those funds,” the treasurer said.

    “It’s a relatively small amount. What is not a relatively small amount is a reimagining of the constitution by the high court … and it’s going to cause very substantial problems for every state.”

    But the shadow treasurer, Brad Rowswell, said the money should be returned to Victorians’ pockets before Christmas.

    “For goodness sake, they’ve known since October that this tax was collected illegally,” he said.

    “They didn’t need to wait for advice, the government should have done the right thing at that time and got in place a system to return this money to Victorians who need it now more than ever.”

    __________




    Young people in Australia are most concerned about the environment, discrimination, the economy and cost of living, and the effect mental ill-health has on the lives of many, according to the country’s largest youth survey. 

    Mission Australia’s new Youth Survey Report 2023 provides invaluable insights into young people’s thoughts, experiences, concerns and solutions.

    Responses from more than 19,500 young people aged 15 to 19 found the environment (44%), equity and discrimination (31%), the economy and financial matters (31%) and mental health (30%) topped the issues they considered most important in Australia.

    Mission Australia CEO Sharon Callister said the research showed young people were engaged with major environmental, political and societal issues facing the country.

    “Responses were given amidst Australia’s severe weather disasters as well as public discussion and advocacy on climate change, mental health, the Voice Referendum and racism, the rising cost of living and the housing and homelessness crisis,” she said.

    There were greater levels of concern among young people about issues relating to housing and homelessness this year (19%, up from 12% in 2022).
    Why don't you just fuck off with your self appointed speakers corner newsboy shit. It's all cut n paste anyway. Yes Australia has problems,many countries do given the world situation after covid and now a couple of wars going on . The point is. None of your shits relevant. Your just posting up.shit for the sake of it. Stop it.

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