Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • Our latest report making headlines CLIMATE COUNCIL

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    Our latest report making headlines

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    Tim Flannery – Climate Council via sendgrid.info 

    11:15 AM (6 minutes ago)

    to me

    Dear Inga

    Just a quick update on our latest report explaining breakthrough scientific research demonstrating the strong influence of climate change on individual extreme heat events.

    It seems every time there’s another record-breaking heatwave we first must endure the swelter; then the “debate” over whether it has anything to do with climate change (‘Australia! It’s always been hot!’)… and if climate change is influencing individual weather events, by how much?

    Well, new ground-breaking research is changing this conversation, to be more decisive and well-informed.

    Scientists can now pinpoint exactly how much climate change is contributing to individual extreme heat events, and it won’t surprise you to learn that, yes: hot days are happening more often while heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent thanks to greenhouse gas emissions.

    The research reveals that:

    • Our record hot year of 2013 in Australia was virtually impossible without climate change.
    • Climate change tripled the odds that the heat waves of the 2012/2013 Australian summer would occur as frequently as they did.
    • Climate change doubled the odds that the 2012/2013 heat waves would be as intense as they were.

    We were pleased with the media coverage the report received. Five TV channels ran the story on their national bulletin, while newspapers gave us colourful headlines like the Courier-Mail’s, “It’s hot…damn hot”, and it was picked up internationally in the US, Canada and the UK.

    We’ve been focused for the last year on getting out as much information as possible on the link between extreme weather and climate change. Extreme weather helps us explain that climate change is not just a future problem affecting polar bears, but a tangible issue affecting Australians today.  

    It’s working. Public opinion polling by Essential Media Communications in November showed that 76% of people thought that climate change and extreme weather were linked, compared to 52% in January 2014. Now journalists say to me, ‘of course Tim, don’t we already know this?’ Whereas 18 months ago it was a very different conversation.

    Reports like this are helping to keep climate change at the top of the national agenda. There is much more to do, but thank you for your support which makes it possible.

    You can read a copy of the report for yourself here[idea: Even better, email a copy to your MP with a polite but not altogether unalarmed note urging them to act.]

    Again, thank you for all that you do to share, support and make our work possible.

    Yours,

    Tim Flannery

  • Tassie forests again? They can’t be serious

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    Tassie forests again? They can’t be serious

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    Jess Abrahams, ACF Unsubscribe

    10:19 AM (23 minutes ago)

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    Hi NEVILLE

    Last year, I celebrated with hundreds of thousands of Australians like you, who helped stop the Abbott government’s attempt to strip some of Tassie’s magnificent forests of World Heritage status.
    It’s hard to believe that any government would try it again. But right now, the Tasmanian government has a disturbing new plan to allow logging and large-scale tourism in the heart of the Wilderness World Heritage area.
    This is disappointing news but there is hope.
    Our federal environment minister, Greg Hunt, vowed to “fully and completely” protect Tasmania’s Wilderness World Heritage Area in a strong response to the plans.

    I WILL!

    I first experienced Tassie’s Wilderness World Heritage Area as a teenager on a tough two-week bushwalk in the south-west. It was a brutal, yet beautiful induction. Tasmania’s wild places are full of contrasts, both rugged and subtle, physically intimidating and spiritually uplifting.
    I’ve ventured back many times since – as a ranger, a campaigner, and for personal adventure. I’ve wandered on and off track, camped out on sun-drenched beaches and freezing mountain tops, and swum flooded rivers and cold calm lakes.
    There is something deeply moving about being immersed in the last places on Earth untouched by industrialisation. It puts our lives into context and reminds us that we are part of nature – not its master.

    TELL HIM!

    Our natural heritage – the places we love – are not commodities. They are special places, of great natural and cultural significance, that deserve the highest level of protection.
    Don’t get me wrong – responsible tourism is vital for Tasmania. But commercial tourism in the heart of a World Heritage protected wilderness cannot respect the natural and cultural values of the area.
    Hundreds of thousands of us have come together before to protect Tassie forests – and won. It’s time to harness that energy again.
    Jess
    Jess Abrahams
    Healthy ecosystems campaigner
    Australian Conservation Foundation

    PS – You can can read Greg Hunt’s vow to protect Tassie’s World Heritage forests in The Australian.

  • [New post] NSW 2015 – where will the preferences flow?

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    [New post] NSW 2015 – where will the preferences flow?

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    The Tally Room <donotreply@wordpress.com>

    10:15 AM (24 minutes ago)

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    New post on The Tally Room

    NSW 2015 – where will the preferences flow?

    by Ben Raue

    One of the biggest stories of the recent Queensland state election was the huge shift in preference flows towards Labor, with a big drop in the exhaustion rate across the state.

    Opinion polling was quite accurate in predicting primary votes, but the method of distributing preferences according to the real flow of preferences at the previous election significantly overstated the two-party-preferred vote for the Liberal National Party.

    It shouldn’t have been as much of a surprise as it was – the largest proportion of minor party votes in Queensland in 2012 came from Katter’s Australian Party, who had since dropped in the polls and were only running in a small number of seats.

    I blogged about the preference issue shortly after the election, and Antony Green posted about the final vote figures on Tuesday.

    There are two major jurisdictions in Australia that use optional preferential voting in single-member electorates, and the other one will be voting in just over a month, in New South Wales.

    Like in Queensland, the last New South Wales election saw a big drop in the Labor vote and a majority of Labor’s seats being lost to the Coalition. We also saw a big decline in the number of seats where the Greens opted to preference Labor (as opposed to issuing a ‘just vote 1’ how-to-vote).

    So I was curious whether there had been a significant drop in preference flows to Labor in 2011, that could possibly revert to form in 2015.

    The following table shows the proportion of minor party preferences flowing to Labor, the Coalition or exhausting.

    Election ALP preferences LNP preferences Exhausted
    2003 26.92% 16.37% 56.70%
    2007 26.87% 18.57% 54.56%
    2011 24.13% 20.66% 55.21%

    Unlike Queensland, there was only a minor shift in preferences – LNP preferences increased by just over 2%, and Labor preferences dropped by just under 3%, with the remainder resulting in an increase in exhausted preferences.

    This isn’t surprising, considering that there was no party playing a similar role to KAP in the 2011 election.

    The above table brings together all preferences for all minor parties, but there is some analysis giving indications of how preferences flow for each minor party.

    Antony Green produced a report for the NSW Parliamentary Library after the 2007 election which re-examined ballot papers for minor parties to precisely identify how each minor party’s primary votes flowed as preferences. The normal distribution of preferences doesn’t allow for this process, as votes can flow from one minor party to another. This process of post-election study is conducted after every federal election by the AEC, but is not regularly performed for state elections. It doesn’t appear that a similar study was conducted in 2011.

    In the 2007 study (on page 59 of the PDF at the above link), Green breaks down preference flows based on each party, and how they preferenced in that seat. In the 73 seats studied, the Greens preferenced Labor in 43 seats and exhausted in the remaining thirty. There was a significant difference in preference flows in these two groups of seats – 46.2% of Greens votes flowed to Labor in seats where the Greens directed preferences, and only 33.2% flowed to Labor where they didn’t.

    In 2011, the Greens only preferenced Labor in five out of 93 seats. Presumably that number will increase in 2015, but the previous evidence suggests that the decline in Greens preferences to Labor only produced a small shift in actual preference flows in 2011.

  • Hope Among the Ruins – monbiot.com

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    Hope Among the Ruins – monbiot.com

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    George Monbiot <noreply+feedproxy@google.com>

    6:45 PM (57 minutes ago)

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    Hope Among the Ruins – monbiot.com


    Hope Among the Ruins

    Posted: 17 Feb 2015 12:44 PM PST

    An astonishing money creation scheme from the 1930s that could help to save the Greek economy.
    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 18th February 2015

    Compare the terms demanded of the Greek government to those offered to the banks. Eurozone ministers now insist upon unconditional surrender(1); a national abasement that makes a mockery of democracy. But when the banks were bailed out, governments magicked up the necessary money almost unconditionally. They shyly requested a few token reforms, then looked away when the bankers disregarded them.

    The German government, now crushing the life out of southern Europe, merely tickled its own banks. As the New York Times reported(2), though the corrupt German banking system “required a bailout bigger than the one American banks received”, “there is little appetite for change in Germany because the banking system is so deeply intertwined with its politics, serving as a rich source of patronage and financing for local projects.”

    When the Greeks complain that they have been reduced to colonial subjects, they are right, but the colonial masters are not the northern members of the eurozone. They are the private banks. The governments that seem determined to destroy a sovereign state for its impudence are merely the intermediaries of power.

    None of this is to deny the corruption and fiscal promiscuity of previous Greek administrations. But while the banks have got away with far worse, the bullies of the eurozone insist on extracting every last drop of blood from people who had no role in their governments’ deceptions.

    Greece is stuffed: or so almost everyone asserts. Perhaps. Or perhaps there are possibilities we have scarcely begun to examine.

    I should warn you that no one in their right mind would take financial advice from me. (Or, for that matter, from most financial advisers). I seek only to suggest that there may be some possibilities of hope among the ruins.

    One of these radical ideas was proposed a few months ago by Martin Wolf in the Financial Times(3). He suggests stripping private banks of their remarkable power to create money out of thin air. Simply by issuing credit, they spawn between 95 and 97% of the money supply. If the state were to assert a monopoly on money creation, governments could increase its supply without increasing debt. Seignorage (the difference between the cost of produing money and its value) would accrue to the state, adding billions of pounds to national coffers. The banks would be reduced to the servants, not the masters, of the economy.

    An entirely different approach is proposed by Ann Pettifor, in her fascinating but badly-written and chaotic book, Just Money(4). She argues that governments have failed to understand what money is. It should not be seen as a commodity, she says, but as a social relationship based on trust. Unusually for a radical critic of finance, she sees the creation of money by private banks as “a great civilizational advance”, freeing nations from the usurers who once monopolised and restricted wealth.

    The supply of money is, in effect, unlimited: as long as there is sufficient productive activity to absorb it there is no obvious restraint on the amount of money that can be issued(5). So when governments and central bankers tell you that the money has run out, Pettifor argues, they are either deceiving us or deceiving themselves. What holds back economic activity is an unnecessary and artificial restriction of the medium of exchange.

    Banking’s great civilisational advance has been all but destroyed through deregulation, whose result is a new system of usury, speculation and exploitation. Private banks borrow cheap and lend dear, forcing us to work ever longer hours and to inflict ever more damage on the natural world to service our debts. Pettifor suggests that governments should reassert control over interest rates at every level of lending.

    But perhaps the biggest transformation could happen at the local level. Greece already has some local currencies(6), that have kept money circulating several towns and cities, as it cannot be siphoned away. (There are similar systems in Britain, such as the Bristol and Totnes Pounds(7)). But strangely they do not make use of the thrilling, transformative system that almost saved Europe from fascism; the currency developed by the economist Silvio Gessell called stamp scrip. It is explained in Bernard Lietaer’s magnificent book The Future of Money(8).

    In its original form, stamp scrip was a piece of paper on which a number of boxes were printed. The note would lose its validity unless a stamp costing 1% of its value was stuck in one of the boxes every month. In other words, the currency lost value over time, so there was no incentive to hoard it. Stamp scrip projects took off across Germany and Austria after national currencies collapsed in the early 1930s. In 1932, for example, the Austrian town of Wörgl was almost broke, unable to finance public works or to support its destitute population, until the mayor heard of Gessell’s proposal.

    He put up the town’s tiny remaining fund as collateral against the same value of stamp scrip, and used it to pay for a building project. The workers then passed on the currency as quickly as they could. Like the magic pudding, this little pot of money kept circulating, enabling Wörgl to repave the streets, rebuild the water system, construct new houses, a bridge and even a ski jump. In the 13 months of the experiment, the 5,500 scrip schillings in circulation were spent 416 times, creating between 12 and 14 times as much employment as the standard currency would have done(9). Unemployment vanished, and the stamp fees paid for a soup kitchen feeding 220 families.

    The governments of Germany and Austria, profoundly threatened by the success of these projects, shut them down. Employment collapsed once more, and a twisted but charismatic Austrian painter found the opening he had been waiting for.

    When the great American economist Irving Fisher examined these experiments, he concluded that “the correct application of stamp scrip would solve the depression crisis in the US in three weeks!”(10). Roosevelt’s government, aware that such currencies could invoke a massive loss of federal power, promptly banned it.

    Could these ideas be useful to Greece? Could they be of relevance in other parts of Europe? Even perhaps in Scotland, where the currency issue was unimaginatively fudged before the referendum? I don’t know. But if Greece leaves the eurozone, it could open up a world of possibility to which other nations have closed their minds.

    www.monbiot.com

    References:

    1. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/16/brussels-blunt-bargaining-presents-austerity-as-greeces-only-option

    2. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/10/business/global/in-germany-little-appetite-to-change-troubled-banking-system.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

    3. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7f000b18-ca44-11e3-bb92-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz2zsutuZis

    4. http://www.primeeconomics.org/products/just-money-paperback

    5. http://www.primeeconomics.org/products/just-money-paperback

    6. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jan/02/euro-greece-barter-poverty-crisis

    7. http://bristolpound.org/

    8. http://www.lietaer.com/writings/books/the-future-of-money/

    9. http://www.lietaer.com/writings/books/the-future-of-money/

    10. Cited in http://www.lietaer.com/writings/books/the-future-of-money/

  • Bob Massie in Sydney this Friday 350 org Australia

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    Bob Massie in Sydney this Friday

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    Blair Palese – 350.org Australia <australia@350.org>

    6:04 PM (19 minutes ago)

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    Dear Neville,

    Internationally renowned new economy expert Bob Massie arrives in Australia tomorrow to kick off a national speaking tour on building a just transition beyond fossil fuels.

    This is not an opportunity to be missed. After a week of inspiring global divestment action, it’s the perfect moment to now turn our attention to the challenging but crucial question of how we practically move our economy beyond fossil fuels.

    It’s not too late to register – click here to reserve your place at Bob’s Sydney talk this Friday:

    • 18:00 – 19:30 THIS Friday the 20th February
    • Pitt Street Uniting Church, 264 Pitt Street, Sydney*
    • Click HERE to RSVP

    In exploring one of the most important questions of our time, Bob will be joined by a panel of Australian experts including:

    • Tim Ayres, NSW Secretary, Australian Manufacturing Workers Union
    • Amanda Tattersall, Founding Director, The Sydney Alliance
    • Nicky Ison, Co-Director, Community Power Agency
    • Professor Katherine Gibson, Institute for Culture & Society, University of Western Sydney

    We hope to see you on Friday!

    Yours for a fairer and fossil-free future,

    Blair

    *Note the change from the original venue — Bob’s talk in Sydney booked out in 24 hours of announcing it so we moved venues! A big thanks to Pitt Street Uniting Church for having us!


    350.org is building a global climate movement.You can connect with us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and become a sustaining donor to keep this movement strong and growing.

  • Enough is enough Great Barrier Reef DUMPING GROUND

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    Enough is enough

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    Louise Matthiesson, WWF-Australia noreply@act.wwf.org.au via server8839.e-activist.com 

    5:39 PM (41 minutes ago)

    to me
    Draw the Line

    Dear NEVILLE

    There have been moments in history when people decided: we can’t let a bad situation continue – we need to draw a line and say enough is enough.  

    For our Great Barrier Reef, this is one of those moments: Please click here, and then add your name to our global petition to world leaders asking them to protect our Reef.

    We’ve been watching what’s happening to the Great Barrier Reef for more than a decade, and now we’re at a tipping point. With plans to dump millions of cubic metres of dredge spoil on the Reef, it’s now critical that we work together and draw a line to protect it.

    Last week, we took the dramatic step of asking the WWF global network to share our calls for the protection of the Reef with the world. They did, and it’s working.  So far, nearly 100,000 people from Spain to China, and in four different languages, have joined together at wwf.org.au/reef and said: this is where we draw the line. Are you one of them?

    I DRAW THE LINE ►

     

    Signing this global petition will help show the Australian Government that all around the world, people are saying – “the value of the Reef is indisputable”.  That will get the government to rethink their strategy of denying the dire threat to the Great Barrier Reef, and instead, move to protect it.

    Once you’ve signed, can you help us by getting your friends and family to join the fight as well?  Think of the 3 people close to you who you think would want to see the Reef protected, and please, forward them this email and ask them to draw a line with you at wwf.org.au/reef

    Thank you for all that you’re doing to protect our Reef,

    Louise Matthiesson
    Great Barrier Reef Campaigner
    WWF-Australia

    P.S. You can also help just by sharing the link: wwf.org.au/reef