Category: Archive

Archived material from historical editions of The Generator

Orange-bellied parrot funding for wind farm

admin /21 September, 2006

Developer Wind Power was offering to contribute $750,000 to help save the orange-bellied parrot in its latest bid to build a 52-turbine wind farm in Gippsland, reported The Age (20/9/2006, p. 3).

Campbell to consider new proposal: Environment Minister Ian Campbell said on 19 September he would consider a new proposal for the $220 million wind farm at Bald Hills. He banned the project in April, citing evidence that one orange-bellied parrot a year could be killed if 23 wind farms went ahead in Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania.

$1,375,000 for parrots and whatever: Wind Power director Andrew Newbold said the company had offered to contribute $750,000 to the orange-bellied parrot conservation and recovery activities and $625,000 to a fund to be used for any project considered important by locals.

Bald Hills looks likely: Newbold said the submission argued that Campbell had considered the cumulative effect on the parrot of 23 wind farms – 14 of which had not even been built – when he was legally obliged to consider only the impact of the Bald Hills proposal.

The Age, 20/9/2006, p.3

Source: Erisk Net  

Opps! Gunns grossly underestimates pollution figures

admin /21 September, 2006

Tasmanian lumber giant Gunns has enraged conservationists by revealing at the last minute that key pollution figures concerning dioxin levels for its proposed $1.4 billion pulp mill were grossly understated, reported The Australian Financial Review (20 September 2006 p7).

Big correction: Gunns had to correct a toxicology report from consultants Toxikos, increasing the amount of dioxin by 45 times to 3.376 picograms of dioxins per litre of effluent from its initial estimate of 0.074 picograms.

Request for submissions deadline extension: Submissions on the draft environmental impact statement for the mill are expected to close in the next six days but yesterday’s development has led to calls for the Tasmanian Resource Planning and Development Commission (RPDC) to extend the deadline.

Recalculation of human health impacts: "Gunns and the government have attempted to bulldoze this project across the line in the face of growing public alarm and now six days from the close of submissions we find out dioxin levels are going to be 45 times higher and the entire calculations of the impact on human health are at risk," Tasmanian Greens spokesperson Kim Booth said. "This makes the assessment process a farce."

Two weeks to get correction published to website: The error was included in Gunns’s 7500-page draft integrated impact statement. Gunns included a correction to the dioxin figure on its website last Friday, although a covering letter from Toxikos director Roger Drew apparently states that his consulting firm alerted Gunns to the error two weeks earlier on August 29.

Transcription error: Parties are allowed to raise the issue of the misstated Toxikos report at a directions hearing the RPDC intends to hold in late October. Toxikos has blamed a "transcription mistake" for the dioxin error.

But would they? But Gunns chairman John Gay said the correction did not affect Toxikos’s findings that the water immediately around the effluent discharge point would be "safe enough to swim in".

The Australian Financial Review, 20/9/2006, p.7

Source: Erisk Net  

Aussies to turn used vehicle tyres into diesel fuel

admin /20 September, 2006

Australia’s first recycling plant to turn used car and truck tyres into diesel fuel could be set up in Adelaide’s northern suburbs by the end of this year, predicted The Australian (9 September 2006 p33).

Regulatory standards satisfied: International tests completed yesterday showed the recycling process met all Australian standards for fuel quality and emissions, said local businessman John MacVicar.

Better than ‘wine-from-water’ trick? The plant would be able to produce 300 litres of diesel from every tonne of car and truck tyres, Mr MacVicar said.

The Australian, 9/9/2006, p. 33

Source: Erisk Net  

Cimate change leading to mass extinction of plants

admin /20 September, 2006

Time is running out if we are going to prevent climate change leading to a mass extinction of plants, an international group of botanists warned this week, reported New Scientist (16 September 2006 p8).

Flora at threat from rapid environment change: The Gran Canaria Group, whose members include major biodiversity conservation organisations and botanical gardens, says 1 in 4 of Earth’s 40,000 plant species are already on the brink. Environments are changing faster than plants can migrate, and this could cause half of Europe’s plant species to be lost in the next 80 years.

UN strategy initiated in 2002 … A worldwide action plan is urgently needed to avert an "impending crisis", the group says. A Global Strategy for Plant Conservation was adopted in 2002 by the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, following recommendations of the Gran Canaria Group in 2000.

… already out of date: Yet despite being just four years old, the UN declaration is already out of date because climate models have leapt ahead, says Suzanne Sharrock of the UK-based campaigning group Botanic Gardens Conservation International in Richmond, Surrey. "We can now make predictions that we couldn’t just a few years ago," she says.

Strategy MarkII to audit threatened species: The proposed new strategy announced this week under the title Gran Canaria Declaration II calls for comprehensive audits to identify key threatened species, along with the development of more detailed models to help identify the species most likely to be threatened as the world warms.

Loss of viable land predicted: One recent model predicted that a quarter of all potato, peanut and cowpea species could become extinct by 2055, as half of the land suitable for their cultivation disappears. The impact of this on humans could be huge, says Annie Lane of the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute in Rome, Italy.

Alpine species cannot climb any higher: Also at risk are mountain species, Sharrock says, as they "haven’t got anywhere to go". As temperatures rise, plants such as the giant lobelia (Lobelia bambuseti) which is found only on Mount Kenya, are forced ever higher until they reach the summit and the ground runs out.

Alternative vegetation uses in conservation: The declaration also highlights the importance of employing natural vegetation in conservation efforts such as water management and carbon offsetting, and for coastal management.

Seed banks essential to species preservation: Paul Smith of the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew in London says the declaration is also a call to arms for the botanical gardens of the world, which play an important role in banking seeds as an insurance policy, and in education.

New Scientist, 16/9/2006, p.8

Source: Erisk Net  

Talk About Terrorism

admin /19 September, 2006

Lebanese villagers must risk death in fields ‘flooded’ with more than a million Israeli cluster bombs – or leave crops to rot. Read Patrick Cockburn’s article Deadly harvest: The Lebanese fields sown with cluster bombs

US global warming sceptic funded by major oil firms

admin /19 September, 2006

Pat Michaels, one of the leading global warming sceptics quoted in the United States media, claimed to be a climatologist with the University of Virginia but was a research fellow with the Cato Institute, Holly Lahd wrote in the Minnesota Daily issue of 14 September.

A lobbyist in climatologist’s clothing: Lahd wrote that the state of Virginia had publicly asked Michaels to stop using this reference. She said Cato Institute was a free-market organisation that had a long history of pushing social policies, such as abolishing the Department of Education.

Numerous appearances on radio and TV networks: Michaels had appeared on numerous major TV and radio networks, from the commercial networks ABC and CNN to National Public Radio (NPR).

Contributions from ExxonMobil: Lahd said her research found the Cato Institute did not reveal its funding sources. However, ExxonMobil’s yearly reports recorded contributions of over $90,000 to Cato since 1998. She said the Cato Institute was also purported to be funded by companies like Chevron, Shell Oil Company and Tenneco Gas, the American Petroleum Institute and the Amoco Foundation.

Seeks "uncertainties in climate science": The work of Michaels and other climate sceptics was propped up by the fossil fuel industry that thrived on government inaction. An excerpt from a memo of the American Petroleum Institute illustrated this stance: "Victory will be achieved when … average citizens (recognise) uncertainties in climate science."

Many elected officials remain ignorant: Lahd said the result was a public that still believed there was some doubt about the science behind global warming. What was worse, there were still national elected officials who questioned the science, even during official hearings. When elected officials did not understand the real debate was over, there was a serious problem.

Look for the motive behind questions: Lahd’s advice was to be especially vigilant about the information received on global warming. Anytime an "official source" doubted global warming or its causes, ask if the source had a motive.

Check out the funding sources: “You can try my favorite tool (Googling), but most importantly, check out their funding sources (try http://www.guidestar.org),” Lahd wrote. “Until the media finally removes the mouthpiece of these paid sceptics, let us all remove them from our ears by digging deeper into their motives, their organisations, and their funding.”

Reference: Digest of latest news reported on website of Climate Change Secretariat of United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). 14 September, 2006. Address: PO Box 260 124, D-53153 Bonn. Germany. Phone: : (49-228) 815-1005, Fax: (49-228) 815-1999. Email: press@unfccc.int
http://www.unfccc.int

Erisk Net, 18/9/2006