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

  • Drought Tech: How Solar Desalination Could Help Parched Farms

    Drought Tech: How Solar Desalination Could Help Parched Farms

    | May 9, 2014 | 4 Comments

    By Alice Daniel

    Farmers on the western side of the San Joaquin Valley can count on two things: sunshine and water that’s polluted and salty where minerals have built up in the soil. Now a Northern California entrepreneur is using one to clean up the other in the Panoche Water and Drainage District near the little town of Firebaugh, about 50 miles northwest of Fresno.

    This solar desalination plant uses curved mirrors to capture the sun's energy and separate the salt from the water. (Alice Daniel/KQED)

    It’s called a “drainage district” because farms around here have to get rid of excess salty irrigation water, explains ranch manager Wayne Western (yes, that’s his name). An elaborate system of underground drains and pumps collects the runoff. The district then recycles that water on 6,000 acres of more salt-tolerant crops.

    “These are pistachios right here, they’re 13 years old,” he says, walking through an orchard that’s getting some of the reclaimed water.

    “The district is doing this for its growers because if they didn’t, at some point you’d have to retain your own runoff water,” says Western. “If you’ve got nowhere to go with it, after awhile, you’re not going to be growing anything in that ground.”

    ‘Not in our wildest dreams did we ever think we could have revenue generated from this wastewater.’

    The residual water is laden with salts and other contaminants such as selenium, which is toxic in high concentrations. The district reuses this water not only on pistachios, he says, but also on another salt-tolerant crop, Jose tall wheatgrass.“Our whole goal here was to get rid of the wastewater,” says Dennis Falaschi, who runs the district. “Not in our wildest dreams did we ever think we could have revenue generated from this wastewater.”

    The revenue comes from selling the wheatgrass, which is used for cattle feed, and the pistachios. As it turns out, cattle need a certain amount of selenium. But there’s still the problem of the brackish runoff from these salt-tolerant crops. By 2016, environmental regulations will put a stop to dumping it into the San Joaquin River. Falaschi says finding another solution is paramount, if tricky.

    “Over the course of the last 15 years, we must have tried out 20-to-25 different treatment processes and you know, you end up spending a lot of time and a lot of hours on something that just doesn’t work,” he says.But now there’s one idea that’s starting to look a little brighter. Falaschi points to a row of curved mirrors that stretch out near a field of wheatgrass.

    “The equipment that we’re looking at here — with the exception of the solar panels — is pretty much shelf-item stuff,” he says. “I mean, you know, you’re looking at a boiler, and then you have a plumbing system that actually runs through.”

    ‘If we can treat this water, we’ve managed our drainage problem, but we’ve also created supplemental water.’

    It’s an experimental solar desalination plant, funded by the district with a million-dollar state grant. The project looks a bit like a spaceship on this vast expanse of land.“If we can treat this water, we’ve managed our drainage problem, but we’ve also created supplemental water,” says Falaschi. “That’s why we’re excited.”

    “It’s actually a lot like back when you were a kid and you would play with a magnifying glass on the sidewalk to burn things,” explains Aaron Mandell, the founder of WaterFX, which designed the solar plant. “We don’t actually burn things but it’s the same concept; you concentrate solar energy and you can generate very high temperatures.”

    An absorption pump that Mandell and his team designed reduces by half the energy it takes to evaporate water. The project also uses a reflective mirror-like film to focus the sun on long tubes containing mineral oil. The heat from the oil is piped into evaporators to generate steam.

    “So the heat that we generate from the sun basically separates water and salt,” he says. The process produces potable water which the company can then sell, along with some of the minerals distilled out, like selenium and even boron. The project is timely with California three years into a drought, but Mandell says, that wasn’t his motivation.

    ‘Even if the drought were to end right now, we would still need desalination as a more reliable source of water going forward.’

    “Even if the drought were to end right now, we would still need desalination as a more reliable source of water going forward,” he says. “Because the real problem is that the water supply in California and many of the Western states is actually no longer reliable.”WaterFX will soon build a much larger plant, this one funded by investors. It’s slated to treat about 2 million gallons a day. Mandell says it will cost about $450 to produce an acre-foot of water. That’s more than farmers here pay for surface water but about half the total operating costs of a conventional desalination plant that uses reverse osmosis.

    Dennis Falaschi says his water district will provide the 75-acre site and probably be the main customer. Farmers this year received no water from the federal Central Valley Project, so the onus, he says, is on Water FX.

    “You showed us the baby steps you can perform. Now go out and do the big steps,” says Falaschi. “And if you perform? That’s why the world goes around. I get water, you get money.”

  • No quick fix for overpopulation — let’s focus on climate

    Australia
    7 November 2014, 6.26am AEDT

    No quick fix for overpopulation — let’s focus on climate

    The rise in population since 1900 has been so rapid that up to 14% of all humans that have ever lived are still alive today, according to recent research. Other research shows that slowing population growth…

    By 2100 there could be 11 billion people on Earth, but there’s no quick way to slow growth. James Cridland/Flickr, CC BY

    The rise in population since 1900 has been so rapid that up to 14% of all humans that have ever lived are still alive today, according to recent research.

    Other research shows that slowing population growth could provide between 16% and 29% of emissions reductions necessary by 2050 to avoid the effects of dangerous climate change, concluding “reduced population growth could make a significant contribution to global emissions reductions”.

    In a previous article, we argued that a decision to have children or not could be a vital part of climate policy, perhaps through a market-based mechanism similar to emissions trading.

    But a new paper casts doubt on our ability to make any meaningful dent in population growth.

    Corey Bradshaw and Barry Brook at the University of Adelaide argue in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that the even a global one-child policy, or the catastrophic death of billions of people, would not slow population growth enough to reduce carbon emissions and resource use.

    So, is it time to put market-based population control to bed?

    More kids, more carbon

    The UN forecasts that by 2100 there may be 10.9 billion people on Earth. If families, on average, have half a child more than the UN projects, population could reach 16 billion by 2100.

    If you have two children, your carbon legacy could be forty times higher than any savings you make.

    Market-based mechanisms — emissions trading schemes — are ubiquitous around the world at the national, state or region and local levels to address the climate change problem, to mitigate the effects of climate change.

    So it’s no surprise that some experts have drawn on them to solve the population problem.

    Emissions trading the policy of choice

    When it comes to mitigating the effects of climate change, the question is whether to rely on quantity-based or price-based instruments.

    A quantity-based instrument is an ETS, the most common example of which is a cap-and-trade scheme — what the former Australian Carbon Pricing Mechanism would have become this year, for instance. A price-based instrument is a carbon tax.

    An ETS is the instrument of choice around the world — for developed and developing states — to address the climate change problem. It is a market-based instrument under which limits are placed on the quantity of carbon that can be emitted.

    There are two broad, alternative types of emissions trading schemes, “cap and trade” and “baseline and credit”. The latter model is not widely used.

    Under the cap and trade model, the scheme sets a maximum quantity of emissions for a compliance period (a year, for example), across the whole sector to which the scheme applies.

    Permits are issued by the scheme administrator totalling that cap. An emitter must obtain and surrender to the scheme administrator at the end of the compliance period a permit for each unit of its emissions during the compliance period. The initial issue of permits may be allocated free of charge or auctioned.

    Cap and trade schemes exist, in one form or another, and in various stages in the European Union, India, China, Kazakhstan, South Korea (next year), New Zealand, California, Quebec (which links with the California ETS) nine US northeastern and mid-Atlantic states (the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative), and Tokyo.

    An emissions trading scheme is the global climate change policy of choice.

    Procreation permits?

    There’s not much these days that money can’t buy. We live in a time when almost everything can be bought and sold.

    As Michael Sandel, a professor of politics at Harvard University, notes: “the logic of buying and selling no longer applies to material goods alone. It increasingly governs the whole of life”.

    You could argue that we live in a society where everything is up for sale.

    Recently, New York Times reporter Andrew Revkin asked if it is far fetched for individuals to be compensated for having fewer or no children.

    At a Wilson Center discussion in 2009, Revkin wondered whether the next step, in a world enamoured with carbon markets, would be carbon credits for avoided children:

    Should you get credit — if we’re going to become carbon-centric — for having a one-child family when you could have had two or three? And obviously it’s just a thought experiment, but…

    A thought experiment

    Market-based population control is a thought experiment with its origins with the economist Kenneth Boulding in 1964.

    Boulding proposed a system of marketable procreation licenses as a way of dealing with overpopulation:

    I think … that a system of marketable licenses to have children is the only one which will combine the minimum of social control necessary to the solution to this problem with a maximum of individual liberty and ethical choice. Each girl on approaching maturity would be presented with a certificate which will entitle its owner to have a certain number of children.

    Boulding suggested that a market would then be set up in these units “in which the rich … would purchase them from the poor, the mums, the maiden aunts, and so on”. Others assessed Boulding’s proposal and proposed amendments.

    The Boulding proposal was revived by two Belgian academics in 2006. They pointed out that, since the rich would likely buy procreation licenses from the poor, their scheme would have the further advantage of reducing inequality by giving the poor a new source of income.

    And in 2007, Perth-based medical academic Barry Walters proposed a “baby levy” in the form of a carbon tax in line with the “polluter pays” principle. Every family choosing to have more than a defined number of children should be charged a carbon tax that would fund the planting of enough trees to offset the carbon cost generated by a new human being.

    Sandel argued, however, in light of such proposals, that notwithstanding an argument that a market in children (or in the right to have them) might be efficient, “trafficking in the right to procreate promotes a mercenary attitude toward children that corrupts parenthood”.

    Is population control the solution?

    But all of this may be irrelevant in light of the important research conducted by Bradshaw and Brook. Their research shows that:

    No matter what levers you pull, we have such a huge demographic momentum, there’s no way we can rein in the human population fast enough to address sustainability issues in the next century.

    Population growth trends for the rest of the 21st Century are “virtually locked-in” unless there are “extreme and rapid reductions in female fertility”.

    Even a global one-child policy and the catastrophic death of several billion people, they argued, would not materially affect CO2 emissions and resource use; the result would still be 5 to 10 billion people by 2100.

    The authors of the research ultimately conclude that “there are no easy ways to change the broad trends of human population size this century”.

    So, while market-based population control might encourage people to have fewer children, when it comes to addressing the twin problems of climate change and overpopulation it may be better to simply concentrate our trading schemes on climate change.

  • 210.000 Victorians out of work

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    210,000 Victorians out of work

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    Luke Hilakari via sendgrid.info 

    6:08 PM (7 minutes ago)

    to me
    Dear NevilleToday, the ABS released new statistics showing that 210,000 Victorians are unemployed. We haven’t seen that many people unable to find a job since 1996.

    This is Billy Hassan. He has a good job at Bluescope steel – but because of the Napthine Government’s decisions, hundreds of steelmakers are losing their jobs.

    billy_vid.png

    Can you share Billy’s story?

    210,000 Victorians are now without a job. Let’s make Premier Napthine number 210,001.

    See more stories to share

    In unity,

    Luke Hilakari

    http://www.weareunion.org.au/

    Victorian Unions · 54 Victoria St, Carlton, VIC 3053, Australia
    This email was sent to nevilleg729@gmail.com To unsubscribe, click here. http://www.weareunion.org.au/
  • Renew Economy Daily Update

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    AdSolar Panels Newcastlewww.electroysolar.com.au/newcastle – Electroy Solar are in your area! Free assesment and solar quote

    Daily update: Big Coal takes control of the US Congress

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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail141.us4.mcsv.net Unsubscribe

    3:33 PM (1 hour ago)

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    Big coal takes control of US Congress; Moree Solar construction begins; More evidence energy storage is a big deal; Community renewables in spotlight in UK with new govt initiative; Farmer send solar message to G20; Blackouts dent big coal’s sales pitch in South Africa; World’s largest merchant solar project goes online; 4 Trends shaping the US solar-storage market; The tiny house movement is here; and Scotland’s renewable sector generated over 100% of residential needs in Oct.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    On Tuesday night in the US, Republicans – and particularly those who reject climate science and despite renewable energy, won big in the US Congressional elections.
    Ground broken at northern NSW site of the 70MW Moree Solar PV tracking plant, as construction of one of Australia’s biggest solar projects begins.
    Stem to provide 85MW energy storage for LA households, Hanwha QCELLS-Samsung SDI deal helps German households self-consume, US CSP project revisits storage.
    New govt initiative requires renewables developers to offer project stake to local community groups. Another allows locals to buy shares in new wind, solar, hydro projects for just £5.
    Queensland farmer uses ploughs giant solar message for G20 into landscape, as Ricky Muir pledges continued support for 41,000GWh renewable target.
    The collapse of a coal storage silo at a major power station in South Africa last Saturday has crippled the credibility of the government-owned utility Eskom. And the case for coal.
    Recent Al Qaeda threat to disrupt Australian fuel supplies is fuel for thoughtful action on an issue of national importance. EVs may be the answer.
    Project Salvador is largest solar PV plant to rely only on spot market for electricity, underlining solar’s ability to compete without subsidies in certain markets.
    Energy storage is expensive but offers a host of opportunities, both in revenue generation and cost reduction. Paired with solar, storage is even more attractive.
    Australian houses are also among the largest in the OECD, but is bigger really better?
    The Scottish renewable energy sector is one of the world’s best performing.
  • Billboard banned- you won’t believe why ACF

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    Billboard banned – you won’t believe why!

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    Victoria McKenzie-McHarg, ACF Unsubscribe

    10:08 AM (2 hours ago)

    to me

    hi Neville

    Farmer David Bruer was set to feature on an airport billboard, visible to G20 world leaders arriving in Brisbane.
    After grapes worth $25,000 cooked in 46 degree heat at his South Australian vineyard, he knows what’s at stake from extreme weather.
    But Brisbane Airport banned the billboard. They say it’s “too political.”
    Here are the offensive text and image:
    Enable images to see what farmer Bruer said.

    Can you believe it? The billboard is part of a joint campaign with our friends at WWF and other organisations, calling on leaders to put climate change on the G20 agenda. The words “climate change” were deemed too controversial. So now it’s up to us to spread the word.

    There are three ways you can get involved in this campaign.

    1. Host Your own g20 GatherinG 

    3. Join the social MEDIA storm

    Victoria
    Victoria McKenzie-McHarg
    Climate Change Campaign Manager
    Australian Conservation Foundation
    PS. Brisbane Airport had no problem with ads by oil company Chevron. People power is the only thing left to win the change we need.

     


    Australian Conservation Foundation

  • Four ways for you to defend our valley this November

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    Four ways for you to defend our valley this November

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    Coal Terminal Action Group via sendgrid.info 

    10:45 AM (6 minutes ago)

    to me

    Coal Terminal Action Group

    Dear Nevile,
    In the next month, the campaign to protect community health and the environment from coal is ramping up to a fever pitch. There is so much happening – here’s just a snapshot of ways that you can be involved. If you can lend a hand, please don’t hesitate to let us know!

    The Cover the Wagons Petition

    We are looking forward to breaking some very exciting news about our Cover the Wagons petition later this week. Let’s just say that the enormous efforts of people right across the state going door to door, standing on stalls, walking around markets and engaging friends and neighbours is paying off, and setting the stage for a statewide debate. Stay tuned.

    Parliamentary Inquiry into the EPA (November 10th)

    On Monday November 10th, John, James and Nick from the Coal Terminal Action Group will give testimony to a public hearing in Newcastle on the EPA’s coal dust cover-up. This inquiry is a small, but long overdue, victory for the CTAG campaign and for the Hunter community. We are hopeful that this inquiry will reverse the EPA’s denial about our poor air quality, and finally force them to protect community and environmental health.

    If you can make it to the Public Hearing on Monday afternoon, we would love to see you there. Details about the public hearing are here.

    Join the Protectors Camp at Gloucester (November 14th – 16th)

    You may have heard that despite years of sustained community opposition, AGL started fracking in the residential zone of Gloucester a week ago. Their plan is to frack four wells in the next five weeks. After that, AGL will decide whether to push ahead with up to 330 wells in the town. It is a critical time for the future of this region.

    The community is standing up. Already, a dozen people have been arrested taking peaceful action to hold up the project. Many more people are preparing to step up. But there is only a small window of opportunity to show AGL the extent of community opposition to fracking, and the Gloucestor Protectors need more people on the ground.

    They need you. Can you spare a weekend or two in the next five weeks?

    There will be scheduled activities every weekend for the next month. For info and updates, check out the new Gloucester Protection Camp site.

    If you can only make one weekend, make sure you come along for the big gathering scheduled from Friday afternoon 14th to Sunday 16th. This is our chance to send a decisive message that we won’t stand for our land, water and health being compromised by fracking.

    The Battle for Jobs in the Hunter (November 11th – 13th)

    A few weeks ago, in the ABC 730 studios, the chief spin doctor for the NSW Minerals Council, Stephen Galilee, challenged the Executive Director of the Australia Institute Richard Denniss to a series of debates in the coal mining towns of the Hunter region. Richard accepted the challenge, and hundreds of people chipped in money to stage a series of debates in Newcastle and the Hunter Valley.

    Local economies need local jobs to thrive. But can coal and gas, horse breeding, viticulture and tourism co-exist? What do people in the Hunter Valley region think about the fact that their tax dollars are subsidising mining companies during a mining boom? That’s the debate we need. “The battle for jobs in the Hunter” tour will be a turning point in the coal debate for New South Wales – make sure you get along to at least one of these events:

    Muswellbrook, Tuesday 11 November, 6-7pm, Uniting Church Hall, Bridge Street

    Gloucester, Wednesday 12 November, 6-7pm, Senior Citizens Centre, 30 Hume Street

    Newcastle, Thursday 13 November, 6-7pm, Newcastle City Hall, Hunter Room

    It’s not yet confirmed whether Stephen Galilee from the Minerals Council will front up at these three events.  But with or without the Minerals Council, the Australia Institute will be there to present the facts.

    For more information, click here. RSVP via Facebook here.

    We hope to see you at these upcoming events – thanks for your ongoing support,

    Annika Dean, Hunter Community Environment Centre
    On behalf of Coal Terminal Action Group

    Coal Terminal Action Group
    http://coalterminalactiongroup.nationbuilder.com/