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  • Fleeing Babylon ( Oil Price News)


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    Fleeing Babylon

    Posted: 11 Apr 2012 02:27 PM PDT

    FEMA camps, increasing earthquakes, government intrusion, warrantless searches, global economic collapse, mandated healthcare, RFID tagging, climate change, solar kill shots, terrorist threats, violent social unrest, court-driven legislation, unprecedented Presidential control, spy cams galore, staggering debt, Congressional circumvention, racial clashes, increased drug-resistant diseases, unbelievable climate extremes, unbridled government coercion, unfair taxation, class disparity, ramped up Earth changes. WhewPeople cry out for direction……

    Read more…

    NYMEX Energy Snapshot for April 10 2012

    Posted: 11 Apr 2012 07:07 AM PDT

    Tuesday proved to be a day of marginal gains and in some cases, considerable losses on the NYMEX commodity market.The NYMEX Crude future saw a miniscule gain, increasing by $0.39 per barrel or 0.39% to finish at $101.41 per barrel. The Brent price saw even smaller gains, only increasing by $0.32 per barrel or 0.26% to finish at $120.29 per barrel. The WTI price ultimately suffered some losses, decreasing by $1.44 per barrel or 1.41% to ultimately finish at $101.02 per barrel.Oil by the gallon also saw marginal gains and losses, with the NYMEX Heating…
  • Irrigators urge Murray barrages upgrade

    Irrigators urge Murray barrages upgrade

    Updated April 12, 2012 09:28:05

    Irrigators are calling on the South Australian Government and the Murray-Darling Basin Authority to upgrade barrages at the lower lakes, near the Murray mouth.

    The barrages were built stop salt water from the Southern Ocean spilling into the Murray.

    Recent stormy weather has pushed salt water into Lake Alexandrina, because the barrages were not closed in time.

    Colin Grundy, the last irrigator on the Murray at Mundoo Island, wants all the gates on the barrages automated.

    “[I want] to stop the sea coming back in and putting salt water back into the lakes, which is lifting the EC (electrical conductivity) level of the lakes,” he said.

    “They (gates) need to be automated because if you could just push a button they’ll shut, or if they do it automatically with salinity meters and level meters, they can do it automatically by themselves, which would even be better.”

     

    Topics:salinity, murray-darling-basin, rivers, environment, water-supply, water, water-management, irrigation, rural, goolwa-5214, renmark-5341, adelaide-5000, sa

    First posted April 12, 2012 09:20:46

  • World Nuclear News

    11 April 2012

    REGULATION & SAFETY: FPL fined for violations at Turkey Point
    The US nuclear regulator has issued a fine to Florida Power & Light (FPL) for failing to report that the ventilation system for the emergency response facility at its Turkey Point nuclear power plant had been taken out of service on two occasions.

    CORPORATE: US nuclear performance figures
    American nuclear operators posted good performances last year with fewer unplanned shutdowns than any year since 2005 and strong capacity factors across the fleet.

    Copyright © 2012 World Nuclear Association, All rights reserved.
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  • Vicious words mark the war between pro and anti-nuclear environmentalists

    Vicious words mark the war between pro and anti-nuclear environmentalists

    The dispute is getting personal and much closer to the political bone with the fallout potentially damaging the whole idea of ‘environmentalism’

    Read the email exchange between George Monbiot and Theo Simon

    Damian blog : security fence at Heysham Nuclear Power Station

    Heysham nuclear power station. The nuclear debate that has rumbled on for a few years has so far been largely technocratic and conducted with political and personal respect. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

    The war of words between the pro- and anti-nuclear environmentalists shows no sign of ending, with those writers in favour – George Monbiot, Mark Lynas, Fred Pearce and Stephen Tindale – now slugging it out with those campaigning against – Jonathon Porritt, Tom Burke, Tony Juniper and Charles Secrett. Everyone is pretending to be quite grown-up, polite and cool, but actually it’s getting vicious.

    Apart from a few gratuitous insults on either side, the dispute that has rumbled on for a few years has so far been largely technocratic and conducted with political and personal respect. In the latest skirmishes, the four former heads of Friends of the Earth (FoE) politely wrote to the prime minister advising him to drop nuclear power on cost and other grounds; whereupon the hacks also wrote to No 10 saying this advice undermined government climate change policy. Over the next month Porritt, Burke & co will issue four or five more intellectual blasts, and will convene a press conference, and we can expect the hacks to respond.

    Until now it has been a classic “fundi” and “realo” split with the pros’ (the realos) desperation to address climate change set against the antis’ (the fundis) conviction that nuclear takes too long, is too expensive and won’t actually work.

    But now, the dispute is getting personal and much closer to the political bone with the fallout potentially damaging the whole idea of “environmentalism”. First we have Lynas suggesting that nuclear protesters are not really environmentalists at all, then Monbiot doubted Burke’s commitment to the environment – despite his 40 years’ active service. Now, in an extraordinary exchange of emails between Monbiot and Theo Simon – who is one half of the renowned radical protest band Seize the Day – all opponents of nuclear power are said to have made their arguments “with levels of bullshit and junk science”.

    Here’s part of Monbiot’s letter, sent to Simon even as he was occupying a farmhouse in protest against the way that EDF were going about the works at Hinkley:

    The uncomfortable fact is that the opponents of nuclear power (among whom I numbered until recently) have justified their position with levels of bullshit and junk science very similar to those used by the climate change deniers, and Stop Hinkley is no exception. When I wrote to Katy Attwater [a Stop Hinkley spokeswoman], expressing my concerns about the quality of the scientific evidence on their site, she told me ‘I have no faith in the scientific peer review process as it currently works.’ Just like James Delingpole, David Bellamy etc when it comes to climate science.

    Monbiot then begs Simon to give up his protest, which he says is both “wrong” and dangerous:

    We need you too much for the battles that need to be fought. God knows there are enough of them. But the inevitable result of this one, if it succeeds, will be to raise our greenhouse gas emissions, help threaten life on earth and compromise the life chances both of future generations and of people living now in countries poorer than our own. That is not what you or any of us began campaigning for. But as the results of both the German and Japanese experiments demonstrate, it’s now clear that this will be the legacy of anti-nuclear campaigning. Please think again before you counteract all the good work you’ve done on other issues.

    You can imagine how this appeal from the heart went down with Simon, who last month was given a conditional discharge of six months for the Hinkley protest and has been putting himself on the physical frontline for years. Describing Monbiot’s email as “patronising”, he waited a few days and then wrote back with a series of points that the pro-nukers have not so far addressed – like the assertion that the technology demands a stable and continuous technocratic society to exist for centuries, and entrenches power in the hands of a state-protected, unaccountable and ruthless elite.

    Here’s some of his letter:

    We need more than ever to champion a vision of the kind of creativity which a democratic revolution would rapidly liberate. Nuclear … can give no ultimate assurance of it’s safety or its costs. Neither can it demonstrate the kind of long-term resilience which may prove necessary if runaway climate change does, in spite of our efforts, develop. Resilience is to my mind something which we should be designing into our energy production plans now, as the future is so uncertain for our children. Nuclear requires a stable and continuous technocratic society to exist for centuries.

    He goes on:

    [Monbiot and other writers’] public promotions of nuclear have disorientated and disheartened the green movement and the left, while finding a willing audience among the broader middle-class who welcome a chance to salve their guilt about energy-intensive lifestyles with the reassuring news that ‘apparently nuclear’s OK now, and it’s the only way to solve climate change’. You can’t really be surprised – or even dismayed – that so many people respond emotively to your propagandising for nuclear. From their point of view you seem to have become a one-man pro-bono PR company! In the letter you just co-authored to Cameron you suggest that nuclear would be a lot cheaper and better by now if Porritt and FoE etc hadn’t ‘devoted decades’ to fighting it. Well they did. Lots of people did. Personally I’m proud of it, even if I regret that our political naivety, coupled with the defeat of working-class representation in that decade, meant that capitalism and it’s appetites continued unabated. If we had moved in a more rational direction back then, renewables and other energy options could also have been a lot further developed by now, and the fabled ‘energy gap’, which you say we need nuclear to fill, might look a lot smaller.

    Monbiot, who is offline until April 16 after becoming a new father, has yet to reply.

    We are starting to get to the heart of what it means to be green today. One vision can justify a corrupt and odious state if it can make an odious technology work to overcome a terrible danger. The other argues that there are far better ways to achieve the same end without the resulting damage to society and the long-term dangers that the technology entails. The questions raised are profoundly difficult and need to be debated, but personal attacks are inflammatory and really help no one.

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  • Gov under fire over exploration leases near reefs

    Gov under fire over exploration leases near reefs

    ABCUpdated April 11, 2012, 10:19 am

    The Federal Government is under fire for offering up areas close to the Rowley Shoals, a world-class diving spot off the W-A coast, to oil and gas exploration.

    Expressions of interest in the proposed lease areas, just three nautical miles from the coral reefs, close tomorrow.

    The shoals, 260 kilometres west of Broome, are said to rival the Great Barrier Reef for their spectacular marine life.

    Paul Gamblin of the World Wildlife Fund says any development so close to the reef would be devastating.

    “It’s a place where wildlife including whales and dolphins, turtles, sharks, tuna, fish in their abundance, hundreds of species of coral are found,” Mr Gamblin said.

    “An oil spill, even a small spill, within a few kilometres of a place like this which is so healthy, so pristine, could be devastating.”

    The Federal Minister for Resources Martin Ferguson says part of the potential lease area is being considered for a marine reserve.

    He says any successful bidder will have to have an environmental plan assessed by regulators, before undertaking any seismic or drilling activity.

    The State Opposition’s Environment spokeswoman, Sally Talbot, has criticised the move by her Federal Labor colleagues.

    She says it is also up to the State Government to oppose the leases.

    “The whole of the Kimberley at the moment is gripped by uncertainty about the environmental future of the Kimberley under the Barnett Government,” Dr Talbot said.

    “I would expect the Barnett Government to be out there fighting ferociously to protect this precious area and all we’re hearing at the moment is a deafening silence.”

    The State Environment Minister, Bill Marmion, has been contacted for comment.