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Environment and ResourcesSubmitted by Margo Kingston on October 18, 2007 - 11:09am.
A decade ago The Greens had a very simple slogan - “No environment no economy”. Today that is even truer. "Ten years ago it was a warning. Now, in 2007; it is a description of
our reality. And the farmers, the fishers, the tourism industry
workers, the city dwellers on water restrictions – Australians
everywhere – know this is true. Without the environment, there is no
economy." Bob Brown
Submitted by Susie Russell on October 15, 2007 - 4:35pm.
In northern NSW local communities are getting increasingly anxious
about the effects of logging on their catchments. Recently a court
refused to convict several people who had taken direct action to
protect their catchment. Now the residents of another valley are
preparing for action.
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Submitted by Margo Kingston on October 14, 2007 - 1:11pm.
Until recently the peak oil debate in Australia has been largely confined to internet forums such as Webdiary. That situation has changed dramatically in recent weeks with the release of the Queensland Government’s long-awaited Oil Vulnerability Taskforce Report. World oil production is peaking – it’s official, at least here in Queensland.
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Submitted by Margo Kingston on October 12, 2007 - 1:18pm.
Webdiary has been banging on about the dangers of peak oil for years now, largely due to the efforts of Ian McPherson, who went on to found Sydneypeakoil. The problem of quickly diminishing
oil supply has been known about for decades, and was one of the reasons
Dick Cheney wanted to invade Iraq. But Australian governments have
buried their heads in the sand, to the medium and short term detriment
of their citizens. Yesterday, the Queensland Government issued a report on peak oil, after lots of good work behind the scenes by activists.
Submitted by Jenny Hume on September 27, 2007 - 10:19am.
With the drought ever deepening I know that many families are facing ruin this summer and will be forced off the land. Many have been there for generations but many of their sons and daughters have already left to seek a more certain future. It is never easy leaving the land and the ultimate pain is the clearing sale when the place itself has gone. I know that pain but one has to try and look on the light side.
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Submitted by Trevor Kerr on September 23, 2007 - 11:31am.
On the signals so far, water is promising to be a major issue for the election campaign. Water will be a conversation around many barbecues, as we confront problems affecting our daily lives. We will have to decide whether we want the confrontational methods of Howard and Costello to come up with solutions, or to trust a federal Labor government to work in harmony with the States.
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Submitted by Kerryn Higgs on September 4, 2007 - 11:32am.
Anybody who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist (Kenneth Boulding).
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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 1, 2007 - 11:45am.
Hello, and welcome to Spring! I'm finishing off my project this weekend before getting back to
Webdiary, but just couldn't resist posting this transcript - an
interview between Charles Wooley and the PM on the pulp mill. How
tricky is this for our tricky PM?
Submitted by Kerryn Higgs on August 29, 2007 - 8:33am.
Environmental change on earth is as old as the planet itself, about 4 billion years. Our genus, Homo, has altered earthly environments throughout our career, about 4 million years. But there has never been anything like the twentieth century. (J.R. McNeill)
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Submitted by Guest Contributor on August 23, 2007 - 6:42pm.
The Government's priority is to tackle climate change without damaging Australian jobs and living standards. Nuclear power could make a significant contribution to this challenge.
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Submitted by Kerryn Higgs on August 22, 2007 - 10:26am.
All questions of the limits, boundaries and scale of the human economic enterprise hinge on whether or not the economic system can be understood independently of its physical context. Can human economies grow forever? If not, what determines their boundaries? If so, what happens to the natural world?
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Submitted by David Roffey on August 21, 2007 - 4:05pm.
"Australians should be proud of what we are achieving at home to meet the climate change challenge" Alexander Downer in the Age this morning. Is he right? UPDATE: CSIRO and BoM report on the future for Australia
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Submitted by Guest Contributor on August 15, 2007 - 3:51pm.
[F]ederal Labor in Australia, following Nicholas Stern, has unofficially adopted the three-degree target in a climate change policy devoid of specifics and a world away from what Australia would need to do if we are to pull our weight in a global effort to avoid climate calamity. How should climate activists respond?
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Submitted by Margo Kingston on August 14, 2007 - 8:01pm.
Susan Kiefel's appointment as a High Court judge is great for Australia, and one decision of Ruddock I not only applaud, but do so with gusto. Maybe after all his terrible deeds over the last decade he wants to leave something special in place as his career nears its end. I'm reminded of Paul Keating's appointment of Michael Kirby to the High Court just before he lost office. I met Justice Kiefel in the early 1980's in Brisbane, when she was a junior barrister and I was an articled clerk briefing her on a case. She told me then that Tony Fitzgerald had personally mentored her when she worked as a secretary in his chambers, convincing her that she talented enough to finish year 12 and take the bar exam.
Submitted by Margo Kingston on August 9, 2007 - 5:08pm.
Just seen the Network Ten news here in Queensland. I believe that Peter
Beattie is single handedly destroying Labor's chances of winning office
at the federal election.
Submitted by Margo Kingston on August 2, 2007 - 11:25am.
Webdiary has done a bit of work on bad and allegedly corruptly procured
development over the years. This is an issue that brings people
together now matter who they vote for.
Submitted by Margo Kingston on July 25, 2007 - 7:56pm.
"Old forests usually have deeper more complex root systems. They capture
rain and transport it deep into the soil and store it, they are not
putting on a huge amount of bulk, they have done most of their growing,
so they store more water than they use. The soil in such a forest is
less compacted there is an increase in humic acid and as a result the
soil holds more water. In dryer times when there is less rain, the old
tree root systems are able to move the water up through the soil. But
what is truly remarkable is that this water actually makes its way into
creeks and streams and flows on down the rivers. So one of the main
functions of an old forest is that it maintains water supply in dry
times. It amazes me that the Government agencies still haven’t
worked out that there is a connection between the groundwater and the
surface water." Susie Russell
Submitted by Roger Fedyk on July 24, 2007 - 11:07am.
It is tempting
to lay the blame on Howard and his government for what has been done in
our name but, at the end of the day, it is the Australian public with
whom much of the fault lies. We have been gullible and self-absorbed.
As a nation, we do not really take the threat of global warming
seriously. The disengagement by the public at large has allowed our
politicians of both major political persuasions to give our big
polluters a free ride.
Submitted by David Roffey on July 21, 2007 - 3:55am.
On Webdiary we've gone round the the Peak Oil loop more than a few times over the last few years (eg here). A new point of interest has arisen over this week: for the first time in the last few years the oil futures price has come out of its persistent state of contango as it rose back over USD75. What does this mean? Well, the short answer is, for the first time in a long while, oil futures dealers are not on balance convinced that the next
move in the oil price is necessarily up.
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Submitted by Margo Kingston on July 12, 2007 - 1:05pm.
Hello. I've been off line for five days traveling with a friend from
the South visiting her friends and mine and chilling out. Thank you,
thank you to Fiona, Richard and David for keeping
comments ticking along. I hope everyone is content at how Webdiary is
traveling but if not, let me know in the comments box.
Submitted by David Roffey on May 17, 2007 - 9:03am.
No one strategy can do all that we need to stop dangerous climate change. We need to follow several strategies simultaneously - but which ones? And are there solutions without nuclear power?
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Submitted by David Roffey on May 8, 2007 - 7:48am.
Mark Lynas' "Six Degrees: our future on a hotter planet" works systematically through the impact of warming the planet one degree at a time through the range of predictions for the next century. Key sentence: "none of the continent of Australia - except perhaps the extreme north
and Tasmania - will be able to support significant crop production in
the four-degree world because of heatwaves and declining rainfall."
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Submitted by David Roffey on May 4, 2007 - 4:52pm.
IPCC WG III Summary for Policymakers available for download here [Word Doc]: "The literature identifies many options for achieving reductions of global GHG emissions at the international level through cooperation."
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Submitted by David Roffey on April 21, 2007 - 2:06pm.
Download a copy here. Still infested with ideas that are based on the hope that the rains will come back one day (despite the predictions in the IPCC WGII report that the long-term rainfall trend is down for (at least) the rest of this century).
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Submitted by Guest Contributor on April 11, 2007 - 2:17pm.
A meeting with the World Bank International Advisory Group on the Nam Theun 2 Dam in Laos
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Submitted by David Roffey on April 6, 2007 - 8:43am.
The extensively-leaked IPCC WGII report on impacts was released on Good Friday.The draft full report (including the 61-pages of the full Australia/NZ chapter) was briefly available on the WGII website, but has now gone again: the Summary for Policymakers is now available here.
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Submitted by Melody Kemp on March 21, 2007 - 5:27pm.
The fight to save Lao's environment is being quietly lost and the
disappearance of a significant local environmental advocate may have
just drawn the line in the forest.
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Submitted by Jeffrey Sachs on February 21, 2007 - 8:31am.
For politicians in persistent denial about the need to act, including
US President George W. Bush, Australian Prime Minister John Howard, and
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, there is no longer any place to
hide.
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Submitted by Joseph Stiglitz on February 12, 2007 - 1:38am.
What is at stake is not protecting domestic producers, but protecting our planet. The changing climate on climate change provides political leaders in Europe and other potential members of this “coalition of the willing” an unprecedented opportunity to move beyond mere rhetoric. The time to act is now.
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Submitted by Margo Kingston on February 10, 2007 - 11:44pm.
I reckon what Brown's tried to do is put a cat among the pigeons. He's trying to put a bomb under the unspoken underlying issues here, the collective delusion that's seeing us destroy the planet's capacity to sustain us as a species. No one mainstream is game. Brown has thrown up a real radical one, in the hope that we might finally get to some of those issues.
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