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

  • Corporate Tax Dodgers- The battle is not over yet GET=UP

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    Corporate tax dodgers – the battle’s not over

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    Lily – GetUp!

    12:00 PM (25 minutes ago)

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    Dear NEVILLE,

    Now the G20’s done and dusted, we want to take a little time to celebrate clear progress on the crackdown on corporate tax dodging.

    After your concerted pressure on the government, from petitioning the Treasurer to contacting your MPs, writing letters to the editor and calling talkback radio, corporate tax was a big-ticket item during the G20! This is crucial, since increased international cooperation is a major part of what’s needed to effectively crack down on corporate tax dodging.

    Here’s what happened:

      • In their “communiqué”, G20 leaders promised they are now all “taking actions to ensure the fairness of the international tax system and to secure countries’ revenue bases.”1
      • They committed to making sure countries receive tax from profits made within them through improved reporting. That sounds obvious, but many top companies, like IKEA and Macquarie Group, are paying minimal tax on billions made here in Australia.
      • In a few years, G20 countries, including Australia, will have automatic access to other countries’ tax information. It’ll make identifying and clamping down on corporate tax dodgers that much easier.

    These are big breakthroughs! But the fact remains that our corporate tax watchdog, the Australian Taxation Office, has had its budget slashed and its staff pushed out the door. Its audit team has dwindled in size and internally people at the ATO are questioning how they can really ‘crack down’ to recover the billions lost from corporate tax avoidance while their organisation is being gutted.2

    And despite the good news at the G20, there are a lot of things the Treasurer could be doing right this minute in line with international action plans to crush corporate tax dodging. For example, there was a whole raft of corporate tax loopholes the Government kept open last year — costing Australia $1 billion dollars.3 And the Treasurer’s still not closing any of them.

    It’s easy for the Government to point at their fancy 3-page G20 document and claim they’ve done their job on corporate tax. That simply isn’t true, and we need to let the rest of the country know. Can you share our petition calling on our Treasurer to do more on corporate tax dodging? http://getup.org.au/corporate-tax-share

    Despite the fact that we’re losing billions in tax revenue from the top 200 ASX companies each year (over half of them have subsidiaries in offshore tax havens), the Government’s still refusing to support a Senate Inquiry into the extent of corporate tax avoidance in Australia.4

    Right now, 46,000 people have signed onto this petition — but if we can reach another 4000 people, we’ll have a whopping 50,000 signatures. And in the next year, we’ll need all the help we can get to make sure the Government’s undertakings at the G20 lead to genuine reform at home.

    The double standard is obvious. The least well off Australians are being asked to shoulder the biggest burden from our Budget, and are being humiliated in the process – as the Government tries to remove income support for unemployed people and hits the sick with a GP co-payment. This is happening as the wealthiest companies systemically avoid paying their fair share, while the Government does little to stop it.

    With the Senate Inquiry ramping up in the next few months, we need to grow this movement and get the message out that corporate tax dodging is costing our country billions of dollars, and companies are still getting off scot-free.

    Can you spread the word about this campaign and share this petition with your friends and family?

    Thanks for all that you do,
    Lily, Mark, Nat and Georgina, for the GetUp team

    P.S. If you want learn more about the Government’s gross double standard when it comes to corporate tax, have a read of this excellent article in The Monthly: www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2014/november/1414760400/richard-cooke/much-obliged

    References:
    [1] G20 Leaders’ Communiqué, Brisbane Summit, 15-16 November 2014.
    [2] ‘Audit team checking tax payments by multinational companies hard hit by department job cuts’, Sydney Morning Herald, 24 October 2014; ‘Why the ATO is losing the battle against the ‘transnationals”, Sydney Morning Herald, 2 September 2014.
    [3] ‘Australia’s stance on tax avoidance out of step, says Bill Shorten’, Sydney Morning Herald, 2 November 2014.
    [4] ‘Senate targets corporate tax avoidance’, The Australian, 3 October 2014.

  • What is India’s largest bank thinking?? 350org

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    What is India’s largest bank thinking??

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    Ayesha D’Souza – 350 India <ayesha@350.org>

    5:03 PM (1 hour ago)

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    Dear friend,

    India’s largest bank just agreed to finance Australia’s largest new coal mine. 

    On Monday, the State Bank of India (SBI) signed a Memorandum of Understanding to lend $1 billion to the Indian power giant Adani for its disastrous Carmichael Coal mine – the largest of 9 proposed mega coal mines in Queensland’s Galilee Basin.[1]

    Unlocking the Galilee Basin will cook the climate, wreck one of the world’s most treasured natural icons – the Great Barrier Reef – and lock India into decades of dirty expensive coal.

    But this deal is far from sealed. SBI’s agreement with Adani is not legally binding and, as we speak, the Indian Stock Exchange is questioning the Bank’s involvement.[2]

    Click here to urge SBI to join the growing movement of financiers saying no to new coal.

    Already eight major international banks have ruled out involvement in these projects. That’s why Adani is so desperate to secure the funds it needs to go ahead. Adani is trying everything it can to keep the Galilee project alive in the face of declining coal prices and mass public opposition to new coal in both Australia and India.

    If burned, the Basin’s coal would dwarf the total pollution from all but the six largest economies in the world. And the only way to get this coal to India is by shipping it, in thousands of coal tankers-worth a year, right through the precious Great Barrier Reef.

    Coal is not the future that India wants. Around the country, people in India are desperately fighting for real energy solutions, not more expensive, dirty coal imports that trash our climate and exacerbate energy poverty.

    And that’s why today Indians turned out at the State Bank of India’s headquarters in Mumbai to call on the Bank to reverse its dirty coal deal. They pointed to Australia, where thousands of customers are moving hundreds of millions of dollars out of the Australian banks in protest over their lending to new fossil fuels. If SBI goes ahead with this deal, they can expect similar outrage from their customers and Indians everywhere.

    Add your voice today – tell the State Bank of India not to finance mega Australian coal mines that will cook the climate, trash the Great Barrier Reef and perpetuate Indian energy poverty.

    Yours for a clean energy future,

    Ayesha and Chaitanya for 350 India and Charlie for 350 Australia

    PS: Click here to tweet the State Bank of India and their Regulator the Reserve Bank of India and click here to share on facebook.

    [1] Adani Group, State Bank of India and Adani Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to promote company’s long-term future with Queensland, 17 November.

    [2] Amanda Saunders, National Stock Exchange of India quizzes Adani on loan for Galilee Basin Coal Project,19 November.


    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.

  • RENEW ECONOMY DAILY UPDATE

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    Daily update: Abbott’s emissions bluff steering Australia into $100bn carbon hole

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    RenewEconomy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail138.us4.mcsv.net Unsubscribe

    3:40 PM (42 minutes ago)

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    Abbott steering Australia into $100bn carbon hole; Networks fret over threat of mass defections; Greens target Vic’s dirtiest coal plants; CEC gives concessions in hope of sealing RET deal by Xmas; Macquarie fund takes stake in China’s Jinko Solar; Carbon times are changing, are utilities keeping up?; New life for artificial leaf?; UNSW solar engineer marries under 7.5kw pergola; Netherlands wind farm to power new Google data centre; Purple wind turbines; and are Australian and US emissions targets the same?
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    UN takes aim at Australia for veering off carbon targets after dumping carbon price. Meanwhile, it releases updated global carbon budget, as more research suggests that Australia will head for $100 billion carbon hole if it is to use Direct Action to match international efforts.
    Networks push case for tariff changes, arguing that houses with rooftop solar getting generous “cross subsidies” from non solar users, and suggesting that cost of going off-grid is more than 5 times the cost of staying. But what if they are wrong?
    Victorian Greens pledge to shut down Victoria’s dirtiest coal power plants as soon as next year, if they win the balance of power in next week’s election.
    CEC cuts deal with aluminium industry in hope of policy certainty by Xmas. And Ross Garnaut says renewables – not coal – key to Australia’s prosperity.
    Macquarie Group infrastructure fund joins two others to take major stake in project development business of leading Chinese solar module maker JinkoSolar.
    How are Australia’s big electricity utilities’ reacting to an increasingly carbon constrained economy? Confusing picture or rational response?
    Research from around the world is bringing artificial photosynthesis – the conversion of sunlight into fuel rather than electricity – closer to reality.
    A UNSW graduate solar engineer has used her father’s 15 metre long PV installation as pergola in her country Victoria wedding.
    Google signs deal to power its Netherlands data centre with 100% renewables, including complete output of local wind farm currently under construction.
    Research finds coloured wind turbines, as opposed to white or grey, would prevent wildlife injuries and death. We can already hear the anti-wind cries…
    A true ‘apples to apples’ comparison of Australia’s emissions target and that just announced by the US doesn’t quite reflect the Coalition’s claims.
  • Renew Economy Daily Update

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    Daily update: How Australian utilities will cope with solar and storage

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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail138.us4.mcsv.net Unsubscribe

    3:42 PM (1 hour ago)

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    How Aussie utilities will cope with solar & storage; Melbourne tests renewables market with new investment model; How hot is too hot for BHP?; Why US fracking is biggest Red Herring in history of oil; Solar+wind as cheap as coal for Turkey; New prototype turns waste heat into electricity; The other Paris meeting; Media will never get Ivanpah right; SunEdison to become biggest renewables developer; Negative impacts of rooftop solar will fall on US utility investors; and NASA shows stark year in the life of co2.
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    It’s the big question facing energy utilities around the world: How quickly will rooftop solar and battery storage change the nature of the energy market, and how long can those that currently dominate the market hold on to the their incumbent business models?
    City of Melbourne gathers like-minded local govts and businesses to ‘challenge the market’ to supply the right renewables solutions at the right price.
    There is a simple question that BHP-Billiton doesn’t address in any of their voluminous reports to shareholders: how hot is too hot in a warming world?
    Leading funds manager Jeremy Grantham says US fracking boom hiding fact that oil industry in terminal decline and will be replaced by renewables.
    Having lost the battle on health, the anti-wind brigade wants another Senate Inquiry, this time into wind’s effect on emissions, power prices and fauna.
    BNEF study finds renewables mix heavy in solar PV and wind could meet Turkey’s growing energy needs between now and 2030 at same cost as coal.
    Picture a device that can produce electricity using nothing but the ambient heat around it.
     if the Montreal Protocol fails to reach agreement on the amendment proposals to clean up the HFC mess it helped to create, the massive climate benefit it has inadvertently achieved will be soon eroded.
    A new development in Ivanpah’s financing gave Fox another opportunity to pounce, BrightSource has responded with a missive to set the record straight.
    Acquisition to make SunEdison world’s largest renewable energy developer and give TerraForm Power 521 MW of additional operating wind and PV plants.
    PV has been increasing at a rate of 50% a year has led many US utilities to question the impact that continued expansion will have investors and ratepayers.
    This is what your atmosphere looks like on carbon dioxide. And it’s not a pretty sight.
  • Watch this video GET-UP

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    Watch this video

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    Belinda – GetUp!

    4:32 PM (1 minute ago)

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    You’ve got to see this. Right now GetUp members in Victoria are breaking new ground and building real, grassroots political power for action on climate change. Watch this video to see how you can support their campaign: https://www.getup.org.au/chip-in-victoria

    Dear NEVILLE,

    “From leaders to laggards” is how Victoria was described in a report released yesterday by the Climate Council. Not surprising when you consider Victoria is now responsible for almost a quarter of Australia’s emissions, and sources more than 90% of its energy from coal-fired power.1

    But with a state election only days away, change is in the air in Victoria.

    That’s because for the last ten weeks, Victorian GetUp members have organised together to pressure the major parties to step up. By this time next week GetUp members will have knocked on over 10,000 doors and received over 5,000 commitments from voters in marginal seats to put the environment first.

    No matter which party these 5000 voters traditionally support, this election they’re united by a shared belief to protect our environment and invest in renewable energy. And this message is actually getting through! Candidates standing in Frankston – one of the most marginal seats in the state – confirmed today that the environment had been identified as a key issue for voters. 2 Just a few months ago, the environment wasn’t even on the agenda.

    Even though the act of door-knocking is free, there are still heaps of things GetUp volunteers like Russell, Ange and Mik need to make sure they can get the job done. That includes everything from GetUp t-shirts for volunteers to wear, to the petrol it takes to drive teams of volunteers to door-knock locations, to printing out thousands of the all important pledge cards. All donations, big and small go towards making this campaign a success.

    Although you don’t live in Victoria, GetUp members all around Australia are being asked to watch the video and chip in to help Victorian GetUp volunteers carry out their first Vote Clean election yet!

    Play button VIC election

    This is the first time in GetUp’s nine-years of campaigning that members have taken to the streets to go door-to-door and speak to voters directly – and the reaction they’ve received has been pretty inspiring. Some voters needed a bit of convincing because they weren’t sure their vote could make a difference, but when a friendly, passionate GetUp member explained to them the power of one person’s vote in a marginal seat, it was a total game changer.

    This campaign is changing the way our movement tackles climate change, and so we hope to make the last weekend before the election our biggest event yet. Watch this video to see how you can join Victorians in their fight for cleaner energy.

    https://www.getup.org.au/chip-in-victoria

    Thanks for everything you do,
    Belinda, Jess, Sophie and the GetUp team

    PS – If you want to show your support in person and are happy to travel, there’s still time! You can sign up here to join fellow GetUp volunteers in Victoria on the last weekend of election action: https://www.getup.org.au/volunteer

    1The Australian Renewable Energy Race: Which States are Winning or Losing?, Climate Council, 18 November
    2 Frankston candidates say drugs, environment key issues for voters, The Frankston Standard Leader, 18 November

  • Growth: the destructive god that can never be appeased

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    Growth: the destructive god that can never be appeased
    The blind pursuit of economic exapansion stokes a cycle of financial crisis, and is wrecking our world. Time for an alternative

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    George Monbiot
    George Monbiot
    The Guardian, Wednesday 19 November 2014 06.41 AEST
    Jump to comments (498)

    A man walks past a television monitor showing a drop in Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index ‘Perhaps it’s inaccurate to describe this as another crash. Perhaps it’s a continuation of the last one, the latest phase in a permanent cycle of crisis.’ Photograph: Tyrone Siu/Reuters

    Another crash is coming. We all know it, now even David Cameron acknowledges it. The only questions are what the immediate catalyst will be, and when it begins.

    You can take your pick. The Financial Times reported yesterday that China now resembles the US in 2007. Domestic bank loans have risen 40% since 2008, while “the ability to repay that debt has deteriorated dramatically”. Property prices are falling and the companies that run China’s shadow banking system provide “virtually no disclosure” of their liabilities. Just two days ago the G20 leaders announced that growth in China “is robust and is becoming more sustainable”. You can judge the value of their assurances for yourself.

    Housing bubbles in several countries, including Britain, could pop any time. A report in September revealed that total world debt (public and private) is 212% of GDP. In 2008, when it helped cause the last crash, it stood at 174%. The Telegraph notes that this threatens to cause “renewed financial crisis … and eventual mass default”. Shadow banking has gone beserk, stocks appear to be wildly overvalued, the eurozone is bust again. Which will blow first?

    Or perhaps it’s inaccurate to describe this as another crash. Perhaps it’s a continuation of the last one, the latest phase in a permanent cycle of crisis exacerbated by the measures (credit bubbles, deregulation, the curtailment of state spending) that were supposed to deliver uninterrupted growth. The system the world’s governments have sought to stabilise is inherently unstable; built on debt, fuelled by speculation, run by sharks.

    If it goes down soon, as Cameron fears, in a world of empty coffers and hobbled public services it will precipitate an ideological crisis graver than the blow to Keynesianism in the 1970s. The problem that then arises – and which explains the longevity of the discredited ideology that caused the last crash – is that there is no alternative policy, accepted by mainstream political parties, with which to replace it. They will keep making the same mistakes, while expecting a different outcome.

    To try to stabilise this system, governments behave like soldiers billeted in an ancient manor, burning the furniture, the paintings and the stairs to keep themselves warm for a night. They are breaking up the postwar settlement, our public health services and social safety nets, above all the living world, to produce ephemeral spurts of growth. Magnificent habitats, the benign and fragile climate in which we have prospered, species that have lived on earth for millions of years – all are being stacked on to the fire, their protection characterised as an impediment to growth.

    Cameron boasted on Monday that he will revive the economy by “scrapping red tape”. This “red tape” consists in many cases of the safeguards defending both people and places from predatory corporations. The small business, enterprise and employment bill is now passing through the House of Commons – spinelessly supported, as ever, by Labour. The bill seeks to pull down our protective rules to “reduce costs for business”, even if that means increasing costs for everyone else, while threatening our health and happiness. But why? As the government boasted last week, the UK already has “the least restrictive product market regulation and the most supportive regulatory and institutional environment for business across the G20.” And it still doesn’t work. So let’s burn what remains.

    This bonfire of regulation is accompanied by a reckless abandonment of democratic principles. In the Commons on Monday, Cameron spoke for the first time about the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). If this treaty between the EU and the US goes ahead, it will grant corporations a separate legal system to which no one else has access, through which they can sue governments passing laws that might affect their profits. Cameron insisted that “it does not in any way have to affect our national health service”. (Note those words “have to”.) Pressed to explain this, he cited the former EU trade commissioner, who claimed that “public services are always exempted”.

    But I have read the EU’s negotiating mandate, and it contains no such exemption, just plenty of waffle and ambiguity on this issue. When the Scottish government asked Cameron’s officials for an “unequivocal assurance” that the NHS would not be exposed to such litigation, they refused to provide it. This treaty could rip our public services to shreds for the sake of a short and (studies suggest) insignificant fizzle of economic growth.

    Is it not time to think again? To stop sacrificing our working lives, our prospects, our surroundings to an insatiable God? To consider a different economic model, which does not demand endless pain while generating repeated crises?

    Amazingly, this consideration begins on Thursday. For the first time in 170 years, parliament will debate one aspect of the problem: the creation of money. Few people know that 97% of our money supply is created not by the government (or the central bank), but by commercial banks in the form of loans. At no point was a democratic decision made to allow them to do this. So why do we let it happen? This, as Martin Wolf has explained in the Financial Times, “is the source of much of the instability of our economies”. The debate won’t stop the practice, but it represents the raising of a long-neglected question.

    This, though, is just the beginning. Is it not also time for a government commission on post-growth economics? Drawing on the work of thinkers such as Herman Daly, Tim Jackson, Peter Victor, Kate Raworth, Rob Dietz and Dan O’Neill, it would look at the possibility of moving towards a steady state economy: one that seeks distribution rather than blind expansion; that does not demand infinite growth on a finite planet.

    It would ask the question that never gets asked: why? Why are we wrecking the natural world and public services to generate growth, when that growth is not delivering contentment, security or even, for most of us, greater prosperity? Why have we enthroned growth, regardless of its utility, above all other outcomes? Why, despite failures so great and so frequent, have we not changed the model? When the next crash comes, these questions will be inescapable.

    Twitter: @georgemonbiot

    A fully referenced version of this article can be found at Monbiot.com