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

  • The John James Newsletter No. 26

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    The John James Newsletter 26

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    The John James Newsletter 26

    6 November 2014. 

    Hope is the companion of power, and the mother of success; for whosoever hopes has within him the gift of miracles. – Samuel Smiles

     

    UN panel warns opportunity to stop climate change fading fast

    This requires “substantial” cuts to greenhouse gas emissions over the next few decades, and “near zero” emissions by the end of the century.Two degrees warming is considered a threshold beyond which the impacts of climate change become much worse. On current emission trends, the world would warm by 4 degrees by 2100 – and keep getting warmer thereafter.

    http://www.smh.com.au/environment/climate-change/un-panel-warns-opportunity-to-stop-climate-change-fading-fast-20141102-11fmmq.html

    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy 

    This bill of rights for corporations will blow up the sovereignty of parliaments. The TTIP treaty would allow corporations to sue governments before an arbitration panel composed of corporate lawyers, at which other people have no representation, and which is not subject to judicial review. So outrageous is this arrangement that even the Economist, usually the champion of corporate power and trade treaties, has now come out against it as “a way to let multinational companies get rich at the expense of ordinary people”.

    http://www.monbiot.com/2014/11/04/a-gunpowder-plot-against-democracy/

    AND WHAT ABOUT THE PACIFIC VERSION?

    Climate Depression Is For Real. Just Ask A Scientist

    It’s only natural then that many climate scientists and activists often feel an extreme pressure to keep their emotions in check. Part of being on the front line means being outspoken and passionate about the cause, the personal toll of the work goes largely undiscussed. “You don’t just start talking about unbelievably fast sea-level rise at a cocktail party at a friend’s house. So having to deny the emotional need to talk about what’s on your mind is a burden. Nobody talks about how it makes them feel personally.”

    http://www.countercurrents.org/thomas041114.htm

    Gaza isn’t just a physical wreck: the psychological damage is worse.

    Gaza feels like the Day of Judgement. Houses are as squashed and scattered as paper cups. A water tower is torn up close to the ground like a stalk of corn. Mosques, schools and factories are blasted, useless shells. Olive trees that were almost ready to yield their fruit are reduced to kindling. It goes on, block after block. Altogether 20,000 homes are destroyed and uninhabitable, 39,000 people are still living in UN shelters, and perhaps 100,000 more are homeless, crowded in with relatives. Building materials promised by the UN and international donors are stalled or unavailable.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/11/03/gaza-isnt-just-a-physical-wreck-the-psychological-damage-is-even-worse/

    Gaza cut off: Israel closes border crossings indefinitely

    Israel has said it’s shutting the only two operating Gaza border crossings indefinitely. This comes a day after a projectile hit Israel from the strip, with no damage. Border closures have now isolated Gaza completely.

    http://rt.com/news/201579-israel-gaza-border-crossing/

    CEFC in discussions on 30 new projects worth $3bn

    The Clean Energy Finance Corporation shows no sign of packing its bags as the Abbott government would wish. The Corporation reports “active discussions” with developers of more than 30 new projects with a total value of more than $3 billion. This is on top of the $931 million it has already invested in projects worth a total of $3.2 billion.

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2014/cefc-says-discussions-30-new-projects-3-bln-77144

    Opioid wars

    The US consumes more than 80 percent of the global supply of opioids, and overdoses from prescription opioid drugs kill nearly 17,000 Americans every year, which is one overdose death every 30 minutes.

    http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/faultlines/2014/10/opioid-wars-20141027122237180634.html

    Entire villages disappeared: Ebola deaths in Sierra Leone ‘underreported’ 

    Ebola’s toll on Sierra Leone is much greater than previously thought, with entire villages killed off by the virus. This means up to 20,000 people could have succumbed to the disease by now.

    http://rt.com/news/201567-ebola-sierra-leone-toll-underreported/

    Fracking Wells Abandoned in Boom/Bust Cycle. Who Will Pay to Cap Them?

    The companies that once operated the wells have all but vanished into the prairie, many seeking bankruptcy protection and unable to pay the cost of reclaiming the land they leased.

    http://climatecrocks.com/2014/01/04/fracking-wells-abandoned-in-boombust-cycle-who-will-pay-to-cap-them/

    Renewable Energy Can Cost 70% Less Than Diesel Power At Mining Sites

    Electricity from solar and wind power can cost up to 70% less than when it is generated by diesel power at mining sites, especially for sites that are located remotely.

    http://cleantechnica.com/2014/11/01/renewable-energy-can-cost-70-less-diesel-power-mining-sites/

    Government-controlled Syria defiant amid war 

    Rebels hold some suburbs in the countryside around Damascus and parts of the northwest. The extremist Islamic State group has imposed its rule over territory encompassing a third of both Syria and neighbouring Iraq.

    http://www.cp24.com/world/government-controlled-syria-defiant-amid-war-1.2083213

  • Arctic Warming : Scientists identify new Driver

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    Arctic warming: Scientists identify new driver

    Date:
    November 3, 2014
    Source:
    DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    Summary:
    A mechanism that could turn out to be a big contributor to warming in the Arctic region and melting sea ice has been identified by scientists. They found that open oceans are much less efficient than sea ice when it comes to emitting in the far-infrared region of the spectrum, a previously unknown phenomenon that is likely contributing to the warming of the polar climate.

    This simulation, from the Community Earth System Model, shows decadally averaged radiative surface temperature changes during the 2030s after far-infrared surface emissivity properties are taken into account. The right color bar depicts temperature change in Kelvin.
    Credit: Berkeley Lab

    Scientists have identified a mechanism that could turn out to be a big contributor to warming in the Arctic region and melting sea ice.

    The research was led by scientists from the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). They studied a long-wavelength region of the electromagnetic spectrum called far infrared. It’s invisible to our eyes but accounts for about half the energy emitted by Earth’s surface. This process balances out incoming solar energy.

    Despite its importance in the planet’s energy budget, it’s difficult to measure a surface’s effectiveness in emitting far-infrared energy. In addition, its influence on the planet’s climate is not well represented in climate models. The models assume that all surfaces are 100 percent efficient in emitting far-infrared energy.

    That’s not the case. The scientists found that open oceans are much less efficient than sea ice when it comes to emitting in the far-infrared region of the spectrum. This means that the Arctic Ocean traps much of the energy in far-infrared radiation, a previously unknown phenomenon that is likely contributing to the warming of the polar climate.

    Their research appears in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    “Far-infrared surface emissivity is an unexplored topic, but it deserves more attention. Our research found that non-frozen surfaces are poor emitters compared to frozen surfaces. And this discrepancy has a much bigger impact on the polar climate than today’s models indicate,” says Daniel Feldman, a scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Earth Sciences Division and lead author of the paper.

    “Based on our findings, we recommend that more efforts be made to measure far-infrared surface emissivity. These measurements will help climate models better simulate the effects of this phenomenon on Earth’s climate,” Feldman says.

    He conducted the research with Bill Collins, who is head of Earth Sciences Division’s Climate Sciences Department. Scientists from the University of Colorado, Boulder and the University of Michigan also contributed to the research.

    The far-infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum spans wavelengths that are between 15 and 100 microns (a micron is one-millionth of a meter). It’s a subset of infrared radiation, which spans wavelengths between 5 and 100 microns. In comparison, visible light, which is another form of electromagnetic radiation, has a much shorter wavelength of between 390 and 700 nanometers (a nanometer is one billionth of a meter).

    Many of today’s spectrometers cannot detect far-infrared wavelengths, which explains the dearth of field measurements. Because of this, scientists have extrapolated the effects of far-infrared surface emissions based on what’s known at the wavelengths measured by today’s spectrometers.

    Feldman and colleagues suspected this approach is overly simplistic, so they refined the numbers by reviewing published studies of far-infrared surface properties. They used this information to develop calculations that were run on a global atmosphere climate model called the Community Earth System Model, which is closely tied to the Department of Energy’s Accelerated Climate Model for Energy (ACME).

    The simulations revealed that far-infrared surface emissions have the biggest impact on the climates of arid high-latitude and high-altitude regions.

    In the Arctic, the simulations found that open oceans hold more far-infrared energy than sea ice, resulting in warmer oceans, melting sea ice, and a 2-degree Celsius increase in the polar climate after only a 25-year run.

    This could help explain why polar warming is most pronounced during the three-month winter when there is no sun. It also complements a process in which darker oceans absorb more solar energy than sea ice.

    “Earth continues to emit energy in the far infrared during the polar winter,” Feldman says. “And because ocean surfaces trap this energy, the system is warmer throughout the year as opposed to only when the sun is out.”

    The simulations revealed a similar warming affect on the Tibetan plateau, where there was five percent less snowpack after a 25-year run. This means more non-frozen surface area to trap far-infrared energy, which further contributes to warming in the region.

    “We found that in very arid areas, the extent to which the surface emits far-infrared energy really matters. It controls the thermal energy budget for the entire region, so we need to measure and model it better,” says Feldman.


    Story Source:

    The above story is based on materials provided by DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Daniel R. Feldman, William D. Collinsa, Robert Pincus, Xianglei Huang, And Xiuhong Chen. Far-infrared surface emissivity and climate. PNAS, November 2014 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1413640111
  • Climate Change, the Jet Stream and Wacky Weather

  • Renew Economy Daily Updates

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    Daily update: Germany looks to fast-track exit from coal, as well as nuclear

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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail19.atl111.rsgsv.net 

    3:47 PM (3 hours ago)

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    Germany looks to fast-track exit from coal, as well as nuclear; Martin Green says solar costs to halve by 2025; SunPower to build 160MW solar panel factory in South Africa; NEM mapping tool to boost renewables deployment; The word Abbott government dare no speak; Germany to reach more than 30% renewables power by 2015; 6 potential US grid-scale energy storage projects; Australia on way to carbon pariah; Implications of mid-term election for climate change policy; and Solar power costs hit new lows in Brazil.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    Germany is looking to achieve exactly what Australia says is not possible – and wean one of the world’s largest manufacturing economies off coal – as well as shutting down nuclear.
    World leading researcher Martin Green says cost of solar technology will halve again in next decade, meaning solar – not coal – will become dominant energy source.
    As power blackouts rock South Africa, SunPower reveals plans to build a solar panel factory in Cape Town capable of producing 160MW of PV modules a year.
    ‘Network opportunity maps’ to highlight areas where demand management and renewables can address electricity constraint, rather than more poles and wires.
    Australia has a new ambassador to direct negotiations on a climate treaty in Paris. But the words climate change have been dropped from his job title.
    For the Australian Government, the IPCC report could not have come at a more inopportune time — or at least, that’s what you would have assumed.
    Germany is headed for 31-32% renewable share of gross domestic electricity demand in 2015, a doubling of non-hydro renewables since 2010.
    It’s true more homeowners are getting solar panels, but large, cheap home energy systems don’t exist yet. It does appear that they will be coming, however.
    The US mid-term elections will be crucial for climate policy at a national level, and for solar and wind in some key states.
    Solar power costs hit new lows in Brazil Bloomberg New Energy Finance
    Brazil’s solar auction attracts some of the lowest ever prices recorded for solar energy, with investors’ returns likely to be squeezed to single-digits.
  • A Gunpowder Plot against Democracy

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    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy – monbiot.com

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    6:31 PM (12 minutes ago)

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    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy – monbiot.com


    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy

    Posted: 04 Nov 2014 03:42 PM PST

    This bill of rights for corporations will blow up the sovereignty of parliaments
    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 5th November 2014

    On this day a year ago, I was in despair. A dark cloud was rising over the Atlantic, threatening to blot out some of the freedoms our ancestors lost their lives to secure. The ability of parliaments on both sides of the ocean to legislate on behalf of their people was at risk from an astonishing treaty, that would grant corporations special powers to sue governments. I could not see a way of stopping it.

    Almost no one had heard of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US, except those who were quietly negotiating it. And I suspected that almost no one ever would. Even the name seemed perfectly designed to repel public interest. I wrote about it(1) for one reason: to be able to tell my children that I had not done nothing.

    To my amazement, the article went viral. As a result of the massive public reaction and the ivolvement of some remarkable campaigners, the European Commission(2) and the British government(3) were forced to respond. The Stop TTIP petition now carries 780,000 signatures(4); the 38 Degrees petition has 910,000(5). Last month there were 450 protest actions across 24 member states(6). The European Commission was forced to hold a public consultation about the most controversial aspect(7), and 150,000 people responded(8). Never let it be said that people cannot engage with complex issues.

    Nothing has yet been won. Corporations and governments – led by the UK – are mobilising to thwart this uprising. But their position slips a little every month. When the British minister responsible at the time, Kenneth Clarke, responded to my first articles(9), he insisted that “nothing could be more foolish” than making the European negotiating position public, as I’d proposed(10). But last month the European Commission was obliged to do just this(11). It’s beginning to look as if the fight against TTIP could become an historic victory for people against corporate power.

    The central problem is what the negotiators call investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS). The treaty would allow corporations to sue governments before an arbitration panel composed of corporate lawyers, at which other people have no representation, and which is not subject to judicial review(12).

    Already, thanks to the insertion of ISDS into much smaller trade treaties, big business is engaged in an orgy of litigation, whose purpose is to strike down any law that might impinge on its anticipated future profits. The tobacco firm Philip Morris is suing both Uruguay and Australia for trying to discourage people from smoking(13). The oil firm Occidental was awarded $2.3bn in compensation from Ecuador, which terminated the company’s drilling concession in the Amazon when it discovered that Occidental had broken Ecuadorean law(14). The Swedish company Vattenfall is suing the German government for shutting down nuclear power(15). An Australian firm is suing El Salvador for $300m for refusing permission for a gold mine that would poison the drinking water(16).

    The same mechanism, under TTIP, could be used to prevent governments in the UK from reversing the privatisation of the railways and the National Health Service, or from defending public health and the natural world against corporate greed. Its overall effect is to chill the formation of any policy that puts people ahead of money.

    The corporate lawyers who sit on these panels are beholden only to the companies whose cases they adjudicate, who at other times are their employers(17). As one of these people commented(18), “When I wake up at night and think about arbitration, it never ceases to amaze me that sovereign states have agreed to investment arbitration at all … Three private individuals are entrusted with the power to review, without any restriction or appeal procedure, all actions of the government, all decisions of the courts, and all laws and regulations emanating from parliament.”

    So outrageous is this arrangement that even the Economist, usually the champion of corporate power and trade treaties, has now come out against it(19). It calls investor-state dispute settlement “a way to let multinational companies get rich at the expense of ordinary people”.

    When David Cameron and the corporate press launched their campaign against the candidacy of Jean-Claude Juncker for president of the European Commission, they claimed that he threatened British sovereignty. It was a perfect inversion of reality. Juncker, seeing the way the public debate was going, promised in his manifesto that “I will not sacrifice Europe’s safety, health, social and data  protection standards … on the altar of free trade … Nor will I accept that the jurisdiction of courts in the EU Member States is limited by special regimes for investor disputes.”(20) Juncker’s crime was that he had pledged not to give away as much of our sovereignty to corporate lawyers as Cameron and the media barons demanded.

    Juncker is now coming under extreme pressure. Last month 14 states wrote to him(21), privately and without consulting their parliaments, demanding the inclusion of investor-state dispute settlement (the letter was leaked a few days ago). And who is leading this campaign? The British government. It’s hard to get your head around the duplicity involved. While claiming to be so exercised about our sovereignty that it is prepared to leave the EU, our government is secretly insisting that the European Commission slaughters our sovereignty on behalf of corporate profits. David Cameron is leading a gunpowder plot against democracy.

    He and his ministers have failed to answer the howlingly obvious question: what’s wrong with the courts? If corporations want to sue governments, they already have a right to do so, through the courts, like anyone else. It’s not as if, with their vast budgets, they are disadvantaged in this arena. Why should they be allowed to use a separate legal system, to which the rest of us have no access? What happened to the principle of equality before the law? If our courts are fit to deprive citizens of their liberty, why are they unfit to deprive corporations of anticipated future profits? Let’s not hear another word from the defenders of TTIP until they have answered this question.

    It cannot be ducked for much longer. Unlike previous treaties, this one is being dragged by campaigners into the open, where its justifications shrivel upon exposure to the light. There’s a tough struggle to come, and the outcome is by no means certain, but my sense is that we will win.

    www.monbiot.com

    References:

    1. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/04/us-trade-deal-full-frontal-assault-on-democracy

    2. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/dec/18/wrong-george-monbiot-nothing-secret-eu-trade-deal

    3. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/11/eu-us-trade-deal-transatlantic-trade-and-investment-partnership-democracy

    4. https://stop-ttip.org/

    5. https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/page/s/eu-ttip-petition#petition

    6. http://ttip2014.eu/blog-detail/blog/Highlights%20Oct%2011.html

    7. http://trade.ec.europa.eu/consultations/index.cfm?consul_id=179

    8. http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2014/july/tradoc_152693.pdf

    9. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/mar/13/eu-us-trade-deal-no-threat-democracy-monbiot-transatlantic-partnership

    10. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/mar/10/eu-us-trade-deal-give-corporations-take

    11. http://bit.ly/1xYr3L6

    12. http://blog.oup.com/2014/01/van-harten-q-a-investor-state-arbitration/

    13. http://www.wdm.org.uk/multinational-corporations/cameron%E2%80%99s-trade-deal-would-%E2%80%98open-floodgates%E2%80%99-philip-morris-style-cases

    14. http://kluwerarbitrationblog.com/blog/2012/12/19/icsids-largest-award-in-history-an-overview-of-occidental-petroleum-corporation-v-the-republic-of-ecuador/

    15. http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21623756-governments-are-souring-treaties-protect-foreign-investors-arbitration

    16. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/03/australian-mining-is-poisoning-el-salvador-it-could-soon-send-it-broke-too

    17. http://blog.oup.com/2014/01/van-harten-q-a-investor-state-arbitration/

    18. http://corporateeurope.org/trade/2012/11/chapter-4-who-guards-guardians-conflicting-interests-investment-arbitrators

    19. http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21623756-governments-are-souring-treaties-protect-foreign-investors-arbitration

    20. http://t.co/fQkoZWsZJX

    21. blogs.ft.com/brusselsblog/files/2014/10/ISDSLetter.pdf

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    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy – monbiot.com

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    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy – monbiot.com


    A Gunpowder Plot Against Democracy

    Posted: 04 Nov 2014 03:42 PM PST

    This bill of rights for corporations will blow up the sovereignty of parliaments
    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 5th November 2014

    On this day a year ago, I was in despair. A dark cloud was rising over the Atlantic, threatening to blot out some of the freedoms our ancestors lost their lives to secure. The ability of parliaments on both sides of the ocean to legislate on behalf of their people was at risk from an astonishing treaty, that would grant corporations special powers to sue governments. I could not see a way of stopping it.

    Almost no one had heard of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US, except those who were quietly negotiating it. And I suspected that almost no one ever would. Even the name seemed perfectly designed to repel public interest. I wrote about it(1) for one reason: to be able to tell my children that I had not done nothing.

    To my amazement, the article went viral. As a result of the massive public reaction and the ivolvement of some remarkable campaigners, the European Commission(2) and the British government(3) were forced to respond. The Stop TTIP petition now carries 780,000 signatures(4); the 38 Degrees petition has 910,000(5). Last month there were 450 protest actions across 24 member states(6). The European Commission was forced to hold a public consultation about the most controversial aspect(7), and 150,000 people responded(8). Never let it be said that people cannot engage with complex issues.

    Nothing has yet been won. Corporations and governments – led by the UK – are mobilising to thwart this uprising. But their position slips a little every month. When the British minister responsible at the time, Kenneth Clarke, responded to my first articles(9), he insisted that “nothing could be more foolish” than making the European negotiating position public, as I’d proposed(10). But last month the European Commission was obliged to do just this(11). It’s beginning to look as if the fight against TTIP could become an historic victory for people against corporate power.

    The central problem is what the negotiators call investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS). The treaty would allow corporations to sue governments before an arbitration panel composed of corporate lawyers, at which other people have no representation, and which is not subject to judicial review(12).

    Already, thanks to the insertion of ISDS into much smaller trade treaties, big business is engaged in an orgy of litigation, whose purpose is to strike down any law that might impinge on its anticipated future profits. The tobacco firm Philip Morris is suing both Uruguay and Australia for trying to discourage people from smoking(13). The oil firm Occidental was awarded $2.3bn in compensation from Ecuador, which terminated the company’s drilling concession in the Amazon when it discovered that Occidental had broken Ecuadorean law(14). The Swedish company Vattenfall is suing the German government for shutting down nuclear power(15). An Australian firm is suing El Salvador for $300m for refusing permission for a gold mine that would poison the drinking water(16).

    The same mechanism, under TTIP, could be used to prevent governments in the UK from reversing the privatisation of the railways and the National Health Service, or from defending public health and the natural world against corporate greed. Its overall effect is to chill the formation of any policy that puts people ahead of money.

    The corporate lawyers who sit on these panels are beholden only to the companies whose cases they adjudicate, who at other times are their employers(17). As one of these people commented(18), “When I wake up at night and think about arbitration, it never ceases to amaze me that sovereign states have agreed to investment arbitration at all … Three private individuals are entrusted with the power to review, without any restriction or appeal procedure, all actions of the government, all decisions of the courts, and all laws and regulations emanating from parliament.”

    So outrageous is this arrangement that even the Economist, usually the champion of corporate power and trade treaties, has now come out against it(19). It calls investor-state dispute settlement “a way to let multinational companies get rich at the expense of ordinary people”.

    When David Cameron and the corporate press launched their campaign against the candidacy of Jean-Claude Juncker for president of the European Commission, they claimed that he threatened British sovereignty. It was a perfect inversion of reality. Juncker, seeing the way the public debate was going, promised in his manifesto that “I will not sacrifice Europe’s safety, health, social and data  protection standards … on the altar of free trade … Nor will I accept that the jurisdiction of courts in the EU Member States is limited by special regimes for investor disputes.”(20) Juncker’s crime was that he had pledged not to give away as much of our sovereignty to corporate lawyers as Cameron and the media barons demanded.

    Juncker is now coming under extreme pressure. Last month 14 states wrote to him(21), privately and without consulting their parliaments, demanding the inclusion of investor-state dispute settlement (the letter was leaked a few days ago). And who is leading this campaign? The British government. It’s hard to get your head around the duplicity involved. While claiming to be so exercised about our sovereignty that it is prepared to leave the EU, our government is secretly insisting that the European Commission slaughters our sovereignty on behalf of corporate profits. David Cameron is leading a gunpowder plot against democracy.

    He and his ministers have failed to answer the howlingly obvious question: what’s wrong with the courts? If corporations want to sue governments, they already have a right to do so, through the courts, like anyone else. It’s not as if, with their vast budgets, they are disadvantaged in this arena. Why should they be allowed to use a separate legal system, to which the rest of us have no access? What happened to the principle of equality before the law? If our courts are fit to deprive citizens of their liberty, why are they unfit to deprive corporations of anticipated future profits? Let’s not hear another word from the defenders of TTIP until they have answered this question.

    It cannot be ducked for much longer. Unlike previous treaties, this one is being dragged by campaigners into the open, where its justifications shrivel upon exposure to the light. There’s a tough struggle to come, and the outcome is by no means certain, but my sense is that we will win.

    www.monbiot.com

    References:

    1. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/04/us-trade-deal-full-frontal-assault-on-democracy

    2. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/dec/18/wrong-george-monbiot-nothing-secret-eu-trade-deal

    3. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/11/eu-us-trade-deal-transatlantic-trade-and-investment-partnership-democracy

    4. https://stop-ttip.org/

    5. https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/page/s/eu-ttip-petition#petition

    6. http://ttip2014.eu/blog-detail/blog/Highlights%20Oct%2011.html

    7. http://trade.ec.europa.eu/consultations/index.cfm?consul_id=179

    8. http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2014/july/tradoc_152693.pdf

    9. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/mar/13/eu-us-trade-deal-no-threat-democracy-monbiot-transatlantic-partnership

    10. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/mar/10/eu-us-trade-deal-give-corporations-take

    11. http://bit.ly/1xYr3L6

    12. http://blog.oup.com/2014/01/van-harten-q-a-investor-state-arbitration/

    13. http://www.wdm.org.uk/multinational-corporations/cameron%E2%80%99s-trade-deal-would-%E2%80%98open-floodgates%E2%80%99-philip-morris-style-cases

    14. http://kluwerarbitrationblog.com/blog/2012/12/19/icsids-largest-award-in-history-an-overview-of-occidental-petroleum-corporation-v-the-republic-of-ecuador/

    15. http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21623756-governments-are-souring-treaties-protect-foreign-investors-arbitration

    16. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/03/australian-mining-is-poisoning-el-salvador-it-could-soon-send-it-broke-too

    17. http://blog.oup.com/2014/01/van-harten-q-a-investor-state-arbitration/

    18. http://corporateeurope.org/trade/2012/11/chapter-4-who-guards-guardians-conflicting-interests-investment-arbitrators

    19. http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21623756-governments-are-souring-treaties-protect-foreign-investors-arbitration

    20. http://t.co/fQkoZWsZJX

    21. blogs.ft.com/brusselsblog/files/2014/10/ISDSLetter.pdf