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

  • IPCC report is “roadmap” to Paris climate deal – Pachauri

    RTCC Respond Magazine 2014

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    IPCC report is “roadmap” to Paris climate deal – Pachauri

    IPCC report is “roadmap” to Paris climate deal – Pachauri
    27 October
    Why you should bother to read the IPCC synthesis report

    Why you should bother to read the IPCC synthesis report
    29 October
    Ikea launches solar panels in the Netherlands

    Ikea launches solar panels in the Netherlands
    27 October
    US and UK call on UN science panel to stress climate risks

    US and UK call on UN science panel to stress climate risks
    26 October
    Antarctic sea ice reaches record high, as Arctic hits 2014 minimum

    Antarctic sea ice reaches record high, as Arctic hits 2014 minimum
    22 September
    Inconclusive Bonn climate talks leave a heavy Lima workload

    Inconclusive Bonn climate talks leave a heavy Lima workload
    24 October
    Climate change could create more Boko Haram extremists – study

    Climate change could create more Boko Haram extremists – study
    29 October
    Poland “won” EU 2030 deal – does the climate lose?

    Poland “won” EU 2030 deal – does the climate lose?
    29 October
    Naomi Klein: New York showed glimpse of climate justice movement

    Naomi Klein: New York showed glimpse of climate justice movement
    27 October
    Ambitious or weak? Reaction to the EU’s 2030 climate package

    Ambitious or weak? Reaction to the EU’s 2030 climate package
    24 October
    China, India set pace in global clean energy growth

    China, India set pace in global clean energy growth
    28 October
    Fracking may release cancer-causing air pollution – study

    Fracking may release cancer-causing air pollution – study
    30 October
    IPCC will abolish doubt in climate politics – Danish minister

    IPCC will abolish doubt in climate politics – Danish minister
    30 October
    Climate marathon: IPCC nears finish line for seminal report

    Climate marathon: IPCC nears finish line for seminal report
    29 October
    EU set to overachieve 2020 carbon emissions goal

    EU set to overachieve 2020 carbon emissions goal
    28 October
    Climate marathon: IPCC nears finish line for seminal report

    Last updated on 29 October 2014, 4:39 pm

    Scientists will need to sift through over 200 comments, ranging from grammatical errors to strategic concerns
    IPCC chair Rajendra Pachauri and IPCC WG-1 Co-Chair Thomas Stocker confer in Copenhagen (Photo by IISD/ENB)

    IPCC chair Rajendra Pachauri and IPCC WG-1 Co-Chair Thomas Stocker confer in Copenhagen (Photo by IISD/ENB)

    By Ed King

    An exquisite form of torture is taking place this week in Copenhagen.

    Over 500 delegates from 120 countries are working through a complex 100-page document that outlines the latest scientific understanding on climate change.

    Officials are checking each page, line by line, and discussing whether the findings make sense.

    Changes must be approved by consensus between government representatives and participating scientists. This is where politics and science collide.

    The result of these endeavours will be the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Synthesis Report, the final part of a mammoth six-year project.

    It is likely to be one of the most carefully analysed documents this year and could determine economic and energy planning for next 20 years.

    A final draft seen by RTCC says there is “unequivocal” evidence of change around the world, with potentially “irreversible” impacts if greenhouse emissions continue to rise.

    But with three days of debate to go, the draft may yet change. A deluge of government reviews seen by RTCC offers a sense of priorities in capitals around the world.

    Below is a taste of the variety of views from 181 pages of comments, which the IPCC is expected to address before Sunday. The comments have been copied directly, typos and all.

    They reveal fears the dangers of climate change are not clear enough, that politicians will find the report too hard to read and a reassuring consensus that grammar is still important.

    General feedback

    The text has improved much from the earlier draft. However, the SPM still falls short of an actual synthesis and it does not provide a very good integration of the assessments of the three IPCC Working Groups. Rather, it still gives the impression of largely a copy-paste composite. [Government of Sweden]

    The authors should take extra care to avoid complex and long sentences. In particular run-on sentences should be avoided. Preferably, long sentences should be broken up into shorter ones. [Government of Sweden]

    This document should be prepared so as to be effective for the people who will only read the gray boxes. This report is a story, of what happens if we don’t act, and what can happen if we do… it should be an effective story. [Government of United States of America]

    Clarity

    This number tells very little. Is 0.1 much or little? [Government of Finland]

    Does “unequivocal” mean “virtually certain”? If appropriate, defined uncertainty terminology should be used. [Government of United States of America]

    SPM 1.3 This sentence is too generic and sounds obvious. Needs to be more explicit [Government of India]

    What is the logical connection between the two sentences? [European Union] Headline 2.1

    THE WHOLE SECTION IS MISLEADING. [WGIII 1.3, 5.3] [Government of Bolivia]

    “unprecedented in at least 800,000 years”: Really? How certain? [Government of United States of America] Headline 1.2 SPM

    This would be good to write out in terms of what the information means, in less scientific language. [Government of Sweden]

    How long is “ever”? [Government of United States of America]

    Does “clear” mean “virtually certain”? [Government of United States of America]

    How is “unequivocal” defined? Is it “virtually certain”? [Government of United States of America]

    What is meant by “consequential impacts”? [Government of United States of America]

    What does “fractions of the global population” mean? Suggest considering whether there is a more clear way to state this. [Government of Canada]

    Misestimate is not a real word. Underestimate or mistake would be more accurate in this context. [Government of Ireland] SPM 3.1

    UK demands

    [SPM 3.4] This is a key section with information very relevant to policy makers. Clear information on:

    • The expected global temperature in 2100 without additional mitigation
    • What emissions need to do to have a likely chance of reaching 2C and how this compared to current
    • The scale of the challenge
    • The risks of delay and the likely co-benefits

    Should be provided and not hidden in supporting text and diagrams. The section is currently quite long and would better be split into two sections; the first on where we need to be to reach 2C and the second on where we currently are. The headline statements below could then reflect this new split [Government of United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland]

    SPM 4.5

    One of the important co-benefits of climate change mitigation action, e.g. on emissions from the transport sector, is improved air quality. I would suggest making this explicit: “Co-benefits arise when investments in adaptation or mitigation can be managed to yield increased welfare from improved economic growth, public health, air quality or infrastructure.” [Government of United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland]

    Saudi concerns

    Change ‘past 15 years’ to ‘past 17 years (1998-2014) [Government of Saudi Arabia] (RE warming pause)

    Add from WGI SPM). It is very likely that the annual mean Antarctic sea ice extent increased at a rate in the range of 1.2 to 1.8% per decade (range of 0.13 to 0.20 million km2 per decade) between 1979 and 2012 [Government of Saudi Arabia]

    There is low confidence in the scientific understanding of the small observed increase in Antarctic sea ice extent due to the incomplete and competing scientific explanations for the causes of change and low confidence in estimates of natural internal variability in that region. From WG1 SPM page 19 [Government of Saudi Arabia]

    This figure is for the period 1951 to 2010. Warming was lower during the more recent period 1998 – 2010. This should be clearly indicated in this graph. [Government of Saudi Arabia]

    Imponderables

    “Plants cannot move”: this may seem odd unless there is a qualifier such as “naturally” or “by themselves”? Please check whether such an addition would be appropriate. [Government of Belgium] PM 2.3

    SPM 2.3

    We suggest the phrase “climate change is expected to lead to … greater likelihood of death …” needs to be reworded to more clearly explain what is meant. Everybody dies somtime, ie the unqualified likelhood of death is always 1.0. Perhaps what is meant is “climate change is expected to lead to … greater likelihood of EARLY death …? [Government of New Zealand]

    Duplication

    Editorial correction: The phrase “take account of” should occur only once in this sentence. [Government of New Zealand]

    “take account of” is twice [Government of Finland]

    “take account of” is repeated [Government of Italy]

    Eliminate one of the two “take account of”. [Government of Switzerland]

    typo: delete “take account of” as it is written twice. [Government of Ireland]

    Referring to “of take account”: to delete. [European Union]

    Delete repetition “take account of”. [Government of Russian Federation]

    Editorial: delete “take account of” because these words have been repeated. [Government of Austria]

    “take account of” is dublicated, one of them should be removed. [Government of Turkey]

    Presentation

    I have zoomed 150% in the pdf and have a huge monitor. The figure has a low resolution which makes it hard to read on paper. The sea level has rised so there is an erosion impact on western Europe soft coast which is not shown [Government of Denmark]

    Table SPM.2: Please reconsider the use of colours in this table. [Government of Norway]
    Read more on: IPCC
    – See more at: http://www.rtcc.org/2014/10/29/climate-marathon-ipcc-nears-finish-line-for-seminal-report/#sthash.Z1X3nZRI.dpuf

  • Which Budget Measures will make it through the Senate

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    Which budget measures will make it through the Senate?

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    Mark – GetUp!

    1:29 PM (2 hours ago)

    to me
    Dear NEVILLE,

    A whole budget agenda stalled — how’d that happen?

    After a frantic fortnight of action by GetUp members, the Abbott Government remains unable to muster the numbers in the Senate to make headway on their key budget priorities. Legislation on university deregulation, Medicare, Newstart and Family Tax Benefits is effectively stuck in parliamentary limbo.

    But sudden, surprise deals with the crossbench (like last week on the Government’s ‘Direct Action’ climate plan) show the absolute necessity of keeping up the pressure — especially with just one voting session left this year.

    To get fired up for the last big push, take a few minutes to check out where key budget measures stand, what we’ve done together to stop them, and the threats that remain.

    UNIVERSITY FEES

    A key Senate report released Tuesday bore the mark of 2,801 GetUp submissions and dozens of members making their presence felt at public Senate hearings. The Government’s own senators called on Education Minister Christopher Pyne to rethink his much-despised plan to charge students interest on HECS debt.

    But despite noting considerable community concern about the impact on student fees, the report stopped short of ditching deregulation altogether. So with the legislation slated for debate, GetUp members drove in 6,843 emails and calls to the Senate crossbench. The outcome? This week, Clive Palmer reiterated PUP’s promise to vote against deregulation, telling ABC radio he considers himself the “last sentry to the gate to ensure [students] have a good future“.1

    With intel that Senators Muir and Wang are the weakest links on this issue, we’re looking at ways for GetUp members to speak with them directly in the lead up to the November sitting period. In addition, our new TV ad funded by over 2,300 GetUp members will start airing this Monday to key demographics, including Senator Muir’s Victoria and Senator Wang’s WA.

    If you’re yet to sign the petition to keep our universities affordable, add your name now: https://www.getup.org.au/higher-education.

    FAMILY TAX BENEFITS

    700,000 Australian families under threat of losing $3,000 per year? Undecided politicians? A critical vote scheduled just days away? It was a moment built for the magic that GetUp members bring to politics.

    The Abbott Government was trying to ram legislation through the Senate this week that would cut off family tax benefits for low- and middle-income families when their youngest turns 6. 10,304 GetUp members leapt into action, calling and writing their crossbench senator to highlight the impacts of this hidden budget nasty.

    Denied the crossbench votes they needed, the Abbott government (you guessed it) put off the vote. But with GetUp members reporting back that 6 of the 8 crossbench senators are undecided, we’ve got a big lift ahead to keep Australian families safe from this unfair new tax burden.

    If you’re yet to contact your senator to let them know that the job of a parent doesn’t stop at 6, you can do so here: https://www.getup.org.au/family-tax.

    NEWSTART

    We’re close. The finish line is in sight, the final sprint before us.

    In September, the Abbott Government exposed the weakness of their hand on social safety net cuts by splitting up the legislation based on what they could agree on with the ALP. That ‘struggling’ bit includes the drastic changes to Newstart — including a 6 month waiting period for young jobseekers — that GetUp members have been fighting tooth and nail.

    But we’re not counting our chickens before they hatch. As we head to the end of the year, GetUp members will continue to lift up the promises of the Palmer United Party, and hold them to their word to defend young jobseekers.

    If you haven’t already, add your name to the petition protect young job seekers: https://www.getup.org.au/newstart.

    MEDICARE

    The GP copayment, publically discredited and politically toxic, has no current path through the Senate — but continues to lurk in the shadows of the Coalition party room. In fact, suggestions emerged this week that the Abbott Government could try to sidestep the Senate and force the GP fee through as regulation.2

    What’s more, the Government’s furthered plans to Americanise our health system by opening up its new ‘Private Health Networks’ to be run by private insurance companies.3 That could mean insurance companies telling your GP what and who they can and can’t treat. We’re talking to peak health bodies right now about what this could mean and what can be done. Watch this space!

    SO, WHAT’S NEXT?

    As the budget continues to expose the Abbott Government as unfair and out of touch, GetUp members have been keeping energised and vigilant against sneaky horsetrading, and watching the crossbench’s every move. We’ve just one month left to drive our campaigns home and bolster the budget blockade before Parliament breaks for the year.

    But despite months of success by GetUp members holding pollies to account on this budget, this week’s surprise agreement on the Government’s climate package proved that lightening strike deals with the Senate crossbench can happen at any moment.

    Heading off bad deals before they happen means having the resources always on hand, which is made possible by the regular donations of GetUp’s core members.

    Click here to become a core member today, by making a weekly donation to support all the work GetUp members are doing to stop this brutal budget.

    BECOME A CORE MEMBER
    Thanks for being a part of it,
    Nat, Mark, Lily and Georgina, for the GetUp team

    References
    [1] ‘9 Things We Learnt From Clive Palmer’, Triple J, 28 October 2014.
    [2] ‘Government could sidestep parliament to introduce GP fee’, news[.]com, 30 October 2014.
    [3] ‘Private health insurers set to manage patients’ GP care’, news[.]com, 21 August 2014.

  • Australians Model Population Growth

    Australians Model Population Growth

    Australian ecologist Corey Bradshaw and environmental scientist Barry Brook of the Environment Institute of The University of Adelaide, Australia have modeled projected population growths for the world.

    Prompted by concerns wildlife, human-made climate change and human overcrowding, both scientists worked together on models of population growth to see if this could be changed.  They set up nine models.  Currently, it is thought that there are 7.2 billion people alive today and that is expected to rise to 10.9 billion in the year 2100.

    Three of the models approached the issue using non-catastrophic methods.  The first is that of female empowerment and wide spread use of contraception and the other two were both ‘forced’ one-child policies.  While the first policy may be desirable, the latter two raise awkward ethical questions.

    Earth
    The other six models were catastrophic envisioning mass destruction of people by the effects of climate change, conflicts, and pandemic disease.  One of these was the World War III scenario, which would have reduced population by 5% and used fatality figures of both combatants and civilians in both World Wars and also included the fatalities from 1919’s Spanish Flu pandemic, which killed more people than the previous four years of combat.  One scenario drastically reduced the population to just over a billion people.  Presumably, a nuclear war scenario was not used, but food shortages caused by human-made climate change were.  The food shortages reduced the population by increasing childhood mortality.

    In the end the scientists found that only the most extreme measures (draconian one child policy implemented immediately, irresistible pandemic, global conflict and the like) stopped the projected growth in population, let alone reversed it.  It appears that, like the weather, population growth is a brute fact that cannot be easily avoided and humanity will have to prepare for its effects and alleviate those.

  • New research reveals what’s causing sea level to rise

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    Climate Consensus – the 97%

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    New research reveals what’s causing sea level to rise

    Sea level rise is half due to melting ice and half due to ocean warming, including 13% from the deepest oceans, a new paper has found

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    A fjord behind the town of Ilulissat in Greenland. Melting land ice accounts for about half the current rate of sea level rise, according to the latest research. Photograph: Reuters. A fjord behind the town of Ilulissat in Greenland. Melting land ice accounts for about half the current rate of sea level rise, according to the latest research. Photograph: Reuters.

    There have been a number of studies recently on ocean warming and sea-level rise. Collectively, they are helping scientists unite around an emerging understanding of climate change and its impact on the Earth.

    Most recently, a study by scientists Sarah Purkey, Gregory Johnson, and Don Chambers was published. This team was responsible for a 2010 paper that was groundbreaking in that it quantified very deep (abyssal) sea warming. This latest paper is, in some respects, a continuation of that work.

    The researchers recognised that changes to sea levels are mainly caused by thermal expansion of ocean waters as they heat, changes to the saltiness of water, and an increase in ocean waters as ice melts and flows into the sea. The total annual sea level rise is about 3mm per year – the question is, how much of that is from expansion and how much is from melting?
    Greg Johnson Greg Johnson

    The researchers used a few tools to answer this question. One tool was ocean bottom pressure measurements. If you can measure changes to ocean pressure, you can deduce how much water is in the ocean. Another tool is through an inventory approach. This inventory method quantifies how much glaciers retreat, polar ice melts, and changes to water storage on land. The paper reports that both methods agree with each other. They conclude that increased water in the oceans is causing between 1.5–1.8 mm per year of sea level rise, depending, in part, on which years are under consideration.

    The authors don’t just consider the ocean as a whole. They break the ocean regions into seven different sections because the change to ocean levels is not uniform. In some regions, waters are rising quickly, in others, the rise is much slower or zero. One reason for regional variability is that the Earth’s gravity is changing.

    For instance, there is so much ice in Greenland and Antarctica that is melting and flowing into the ocean, the mass of these two regions is being reduced; therefore, the pull of gravity toward Greenland and Antarctica is changing. As a result, we expect water levels near Greenland and Antarctica may actually fall as those ice sheets melt.

    But, ocean levels elsewhere, particularly UScoastlines, will rise more than average because of this same effect. I have a paper in press with Ted Scambos on this very topic that should be published in a few weeks.

    Another reason sea level rise isn’t uniform is that there are local changes to heat and salt which can increase or decrease water density in certain regions, causing local changes to sea level. A third reason is that changes to wind patterns can slosh water around, causing it to build up in one area, fall in another.

    In each of the seven ocean regions, the researchers collected temperature and salt measurements at carefully distributed sections. These measurements allowed them to calculate how much of the ocean rise is due to heat/salt effects. They compared the expected sea level rise to actual satellite measurements. The difference between expansion sea level rise and actual sea level rise is the contribution by melt water which flowed into the ocean. This method they call the residual measurement.

    Then, they collected measurements from special satellites (GRACE) which measure local fluctuations in ocean mass. They compared the GRACE results with the residual measurement. It turns out they were in near perfect agreement; 1.5 mm per year of sea level rise is from added mass to the oceans. The rest is from expansion. Not only did the two methods agree, but they agreed region by region. They showed, for instance, that the South Atlantic and the South Indian/Atlantic Oceans are rising very rapidly. The North Pacific, South Pacific, and Indian Oceans are rising modestly. The southern Pacific is falling modestly and the North Atlantic is basically constant.

    Next, they calculated the relative sea level rise for waters from the surface down to different depths (300, 1,000, 2,000, 3,000, 4,000, and 6,000 m) to determine which layers make the largest contributions to sea level rise. The authors report that the deeper we go into the ocean, the less heating has occurred (this is expected and well known). Interestingly, they find that every water layer, even the deepest waters, have contributed some to sea level rise. They also report that the sea level rise contribution from the layers 300-2,000 meters is much more than previously reported.

    Dr Johnson summarised their results,

    We find a small but measurable contribution from deep-sea warming to the global sea level budget (and hence global energy budget) from 1996–2006. The ocean warming is estimated directly from highly accurate, full-depth, oceanographic temperature data. The magnitude of the deep warming contribution to sea level below 2,000 m is about 13% of the total contribution of the mass trend below 2,000 m for that same time period.

    I asked how this paper agrees or disagrees with a recent paper that reportedly showed the deepest ocean waters are not heating. He replied that the two studies actually agree with each other. They both show that the deepest ocean waters are likely contributing only a small fraction to the overall ocean energy/water rise. On the other hand, the uncertainty is largely because the deepest waters just don’t have a history of sufficient measurements to close the uncertainty range. He also stressed the importance of a proposed fleet of deep-water measuring devices (Deep Argo).

    It is sometimes said that “global warming” is really “ocean warming”. Given the importance the oceans have on our past and future climate, you can be sure scientists around the world are working to better understand how much heat is going into the oceans, where the heat is going, and what will happen in the future. The recent publications are helping us close the uncertainty range and improve our knowledge. This is what progress looks like.

  • Darth Vader is coming

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    Darth Vader is coming

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    Tony Burke via sendgrid.info 

    11:03 AM (6 hours ago)

    to me
    .Neville —

    The speeches remembering Gough Whitlam continued this week – there are some great stories. Importantly these speeches help explain how Labor Governments change lives – you can watch them all here. BEST:

    1. This week, Bill Shorten launched Labor’s campaign against Tony Abbott’s plans to saddle students with a debt sentence. You would have seen the ads on TV and online. Here’s Bill in the Parliament standing up for students – check out the website where you can see how bad these plans are for students.
    2. It wasn’t only Bill speaking up, across the entire Caucus people stood up to speak out against $100,000 degrees – watch here.
    3. These aren’t the droids policies you’re looking for.” We’ve gone from the dark arts to the dark side this week, with Shadow Environment Minister Mark Butler suggesting Greg Hunt used Jedi mind tricks on Clive Palmer. It’s the only logical explanation as to why they’ve done a deal that pays $2.55 billion to big polluters without any penalties for increasing emissions. Move over Voldemort, Darth Vader is coming.
    4. Childcare matters. It’s Children’s Week and United Voice members, the union representing early childhood educators, were in Canberra talking about the importance of quality in our early childhood sector. The first five years in a person’s life are the most important for development. There were huge reforms to early childhood when we were in Government and Kate Ellis was the minister. It’s another legacy we need to fight to defend.
    5. It not even midday and Toney Abert already told I swear about a hundred lies.” This is one of more than 5000 tweets from the @Rudd2000 parody Twitter account, which this week launched a book. Tim Watts gave a speech about it.

    WORST:

    1. Bowser bandit. He campaigned against petrol prices before the election – now he’s going through the backdoor and putting them up. So when the PM stood up we held up copies of the Herald Sun Bowser Bandit headline. Tony Abbott looked very unhappy and then Bronwyn Bishop was unhappy too and demanded the attendants collect every sign. I’m starting to think she doesn’t like us.
    2. There will not be deals done with independents and minor parties under any political movement that I lead.” That’s what Tony Abbott said before the election. After the election he did a deal with the Greens to make debt unlimited and now he’s done a deal with Clive Palmer to bring in his fraudulent “Direct Action”, which will pay $2.55 billion to big polluters without any penalties for increasing emissions. The PM refused to say whether any of Clive Palmer’s companies would benefit.
    3. When the Government cuts the wages of truck drivers, it’s not just an issue for the trucking industry, it’s a safety issue for everyone on the roads. Labor Members made sure that road users were represented in standing against these unfair changes and supporting safe rates – watch here.
    4. The worst thing about the Government’s second so called “Red Tape Repeal Day” is not its content, but its hype. About the most interesting thing that happened this time around was the Government claiming $420,000 in regulatory savings by updating grammar in old legislation. That’s no exaggeration. $420,000 was claimed as the saving by removing commas, deleting hyphens and correcting a spelling mistake made in 1995. Ed Husic described it as “spring cleaning with a cotton bud,” I’m hopeful it will lead to a punctuation-led recovery.
    5. This was extraordinary, last week I wrote about Barnaby Joyce misleading the Parliament. When the official Parliamentary record, Hansard, was checked, it turned out it had been doctored to make it look like no errors had been made. As you’d expect from this Government, Barnaby claimed it was all someone else’s fault and blamed his staff.

    I’ll admit from the start this wasn’t the biggest event of the week. The Chamber often gets called a ‘bear pit’ a ‘boxing ring’ or even a ‘children’s sandpit,’ but the Liberal Member for Corangamite came up with a new idea this week when she tried to turn it into a café. She wandered into a division with an “extra strong, extra hot” skim-milk coffee, and when the Speaker told her to dispose of it, came up with the cunning plan of hiding it behind Christopher Pyne’s boots. Just odd.

    Parliament will be back in three weeks.

    Tony.

    PS: This week’s song of the week is dedicated to Barnaby Joyce’s approach to the Parliamentary Hansard – here’s David Bowie with Changes.

  • THE JOHN JAMES NEWSLETTER NO 35

    The John James Newsletter 23

    31 October 2014. 

    Ebola Is Now ‘Aerostable’ And Can Remain On Surfaces For 50 Days

    The information was contained in a 33-page report released Oct. 24 by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency. It states “preliminary studies indicate that Ebola is aerostable in an enclosed controlled system in the dark and can survive for long periods in different liquid media and can also be recovered from plastic and glass surfaces at low temperatures for over 3 weeks.”

    http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/the-story-changes-ebola-is-now-aerostable-and-can-remain-on-surfaces-for-50-days?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-story-changes-ebola-is-now-aerostable-and-can-remain-on-surfaces-for-50-days

    and

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40096.htm

    If Ebola batters US, we are not ready 

    To assess America’s ability to deal with a major outbreak, the AP examined readiness in training, manpower, funding, emergency room shortcomings, supplies, infection control and protection for health care workers. The results were worrisome. Supplies, training and funds are all limited. And there are concerns that health care workers may refuse to treat Ebola victims.

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_EBOLA_US_HEALTH_CARE_PREPAREDNESS?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-10-29-12-25-52

    CIA Mouthpiece Lets Slip On Russian ‘Aggression’

    Since the beginning of its observer mission at the end of July, the CIA has not recorded any movement of military equipment or units from Russia into Ukrainian territory.

    http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2014/10/29/cia-mouthpiece-lets-slip-on-russian-aggression.html

    15 Signs That We Live During A Time Of Rampant Government Paranoia

    The US has become the nation of the “permanent emergency”.  There has been at least one “state of emergency” in effect in this country since 1979. Almost everyone is considered to be a criminal.  Nearly one out of every three Americans has a file in the FBI’s master criminal database.

    http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/15-signs-that-we-live-during-a-time-of-rampant-government-paranoia

    Another record year for big solar – but where is Australia?

    Figures released on Tuesday, along show that at the end of September the US was leading the big solar stakes with 407 utility-scale plants, amounting to a total installed capacity of 7.08GW. China comes in a close second with 245 plants, totalling 6.5GW; followed by Germany, with 281 plants and 3.46GW total installed utility-scale capacity.

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2014/graph-day-another-record-year-big-solar-australia-66409

    Economic Collapse? How Will The Stock Market React To The End Of Quantitative Easing?

    This market binge has been solely fueled by reckless money printing by the Federal Reserve.  It is not backed up by economic fundamentals in any way, shape or form. And now that quantitative easing is ending, many are wondering if the party is over.

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/economic-collapse-how-will-the-stock-market-react-to-the-end-of-quantitative-easing/5410316?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=economic-collapse-how-will-the-stock-market-react-to-the-end-of-quantitative-easing

    Nearly 25 million food insecure in Sahel

    The dramatic rise in insecurity over the last year has forced a tremendous number of people to seek fed, housing and health care. There’s a big difference between negative coping mechanisms that would include taking out a loan that must be repaid from profits from the following year’s harvest, eating seeds that should be saved for next year’s planting, and reducing the number of daily meals from three down to two, or even one. “It becomes a very slippery slide very quickly”.

    http://worldpress.org/link.cfm?http://www.IRINnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=100769

    Resolving Key Nuclear Issue Turns on Iran-Russia Deal

    The key to the new approach is Iran’s willingness to send both its existing stockpile of low enriched uranium (LEU) as well as newly enriched uranium to Russia for conversion into fuel for power plants for an agreed period of years.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40083.htm

    The Stark Facts of Global Greed, a Disease as Challenging as Climate Change

    A stunning 95 percent of the world’s population lost a share of its wealth over the past three years. Almost all of the gain went to the world’s richest 1%. The gains seem almost incomprehensible. The world’s wealth grew from $224 trillion to $263 trillion in three years. The world’s richest 1%, who owned a little under $100 trillion in 2011, now own almost $127 trillion. For every four dollars they possessed just three years ago, they now have five. From New York to Kenya and Indonesia, the rich are pushing people out of the way to acquire land and build luxury homes. The “winner-take-all” attitude is breaking down society everywhere.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40084.htm

    Bogotá: Improving Civic Behavior 

    A unique and surprising story of two mayors, Antanas Mockus and Enrique Peñalosa, who have changed behaviour patterns in the Colombian capital, bringing Bogotá out of a negative spiral of violence and chaos and remaking it as something of a visionary role model for other megacities.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lOkLNIT3gI

    French clash with Islamists in Mali

    France’s intervention in Mali was designed to retake control of northern towns that had been overrun by separatists and rebels linked to al Qaeda in 2012 after a coup in the capital Bamako. It has since evolved into a 3,000-strong counter-terrorism mission stretching from Mauritania to southern Libya.

    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/french-soldier-killed-with-20-islamists-in-fierce-clash-in-mali-30703877.html