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

  • HANSEN On Climate Change

    Climate scientist James Hansen met with the Des Moines Register editorial board on Oct. 15, 2014. Kelsey Kremer/The Register

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    James Hansen’s pitch for reducing the greenhouse gases that cause climate change is boiled down to some basic numbers:

    A fee of $10 per ton of carbon dioxide, increasing $10 each year, would reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 33 percent in a decade.

    While such a carbon tax remains a third-rail issue politically, Hansen, an Iowa native and former director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, says it’s the best way to slow rising sea levels, superstorms and other catastrophes caused by climate change.

    “In reality, we’re headed down a path that is certain disaster if we stay on that path,” he told Register editors and writers Wednesday.

    Hansen said a carbon tax could be an economic development tool. Under the plan he advocates, every dollar raised would be distributed equally to legal U.S. residents. Hansen said it would raise the price of a gallon of gas by about $1, but would return about $2,000 annually to every resident.

    He said the U.S. should lead on the issue. The first country to adopt a carbon tax will reap the benefits of owning new green technologies born out of incentives for reducing emissions, he said.

    “It’s a tragedy if we don’t do it, because the solution is not that painful,” he said.

    Hansen is speaking on climate change this afternoon at the Heartland Global Health Consortium at Drake University and at 7 p.m. in the main lounge of the Iowa Memorial Union in Iowa City.

    An early messenger, Hansen has been sounding alarm bells about the dangers of climate change since the 1980s, when he first testified before Congress. Today, he directs the climate science program at Columbia University’s Earth Institute, where he is working on a paper called “Ice melt, sea level rise and superstorms.”

    Hansen said increasing temperatures will speed the melting of the planet’s ice caps, raising sea levels and making coastal cities uninhabitable. But it’s not just the coasts. Studies show a rise in global temperature of 3 degrees Celsius, which he said would happen by 2050 on the current trajectory, would reduce harvests in the U.S. corn belt by 46 percent, he said.

    “We’re already pushing beyond the safe level,” he said. “We need to reduce carbon emissions as rapidly as is practical, and that’s what putting an honest price on carbon will do.”

    What is practical, though, is a matter of debate. Opponents of a carbon tax say it would hamstring the economy, increasing the price of goods via higher fuel costs. Others say it would be fruitless for the United States to impose a carbon tax if the developing world continues to burn fossil fuels at an increasing rate.

  • Daily update: Regulator warns consumers could flee the grid

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    AER says Australia facing ‘prosumer’ energy revolution; step changes to a distributed energy future; SunEdison enters Oz market through EnergyMatters purchase; NSW flags wind farm planning changes; super fast-charge battery breakthrough; Joe Hockey joins coal spin conga line; US residential solar demand headed for 1GW a year; and the true cost of energy – and subsidies – in Europe.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    Australian Energy Regulator says network models need to be changed to allow great access for customers to participate in the market. It warns that if barriers remain, then prosumers – those generating and storing their own energy – will “walk away” from the grid.
    Inventor of floor tiles that generate energy says distributed energy with storage and smart grids are the future.
    US solar giant SunEdison has confirmed its purchase of Energy Matters, continuing the growing incursion of US solar companies into Australian market.
    NSW Planning Minister says new rules coming as she laments wind farms turning countryside into “industrial” zones.
    Scientists from a Singapore university have developed a new battery that can be recharged up to 70% in only 2 minutes, and with a 20-year lifespan.
    Treasurer barely misses a beat when challenged to justify Australia’s fossil fuel industry and bottom-dwelling record for greenhouse gas emissions.
    Residential demand in US is increasing as PV systems become increasingly attractive across more states and falling prices drive demand growth.
    A new EU attempt to assess the costs of fossil fuels, renewables and nuclear power on a level playing field raises as many questions as answers.
    Carbon capture and storage has been on the radar since 1995. 20 years later, is it any more likely to become a commercial emissions reduction reality?

     

  • Anthropocene’ Term Gains Traction As Human Impacts On Planet Become Clearer

    October 15, 2014 Huffpost Green
    Edition: U.S.

    ‘Anthropocene’ Term Gains Traction As Human Impacts On Planet Become Clearer

    Posted: 10/14/2014 3:18 am EDT Updated: 10/14/2014 12:56 pm EDT
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    WASHINGTON (AP) — People are changing Earth so much, warming and polluting it, that many scientists are turning to a new way to describe the time we live in. They’re calling it the Anthropocene — the age of humans.

    Though most non-experts don’t realize it, science calls the past 12,000 years the Holocene, Greek for “entirely recent.” But the way humans and their industries are altering the planet, especially its climate, has caused an increasing number of scientists to use the word Anthropocene to better describe when and where we are.

    “We’re changing the Earth. There is no question about that, I’ve seen it from space,” said eight-time spacewalking astronaut John Grunsfeld, now associate administrator for science at NASA. He said that when he looked down from orbit, there was no place he could see on the planet that didn’t have the mark of man. So he uses the term Anthropocene, he said, “because we’re intelligent enough to recognize it.”

    Grunsfeld was in the audience of a “Living in the Anthropocene” symposium put on last week by the Smithsonian. Meanwhile, the American Association for the Advancement of Science is displaying an art exhibit, “Fossils of the Anthropocene.” More than 500 scientific studies have been published this year referring to the current time period as the Anthropocene.

    And on Friday the Anthropocene Working Group ramps up its efforts to change the era’s name with a meeting at a Berlin museum. The movement was jump-started and the name coined by Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen in 2000, according to Australian National University scientist Will Steffen.

    Geologists often mark new scientific time periods with what they call a golden spike — really more of a bronze disk in the rock layer somewhere that physically points out where one scientific time period ends and another begins, said Harvard University’s Andrew Knoll, who supports the idea because “humans have become a geologic force on the planet. The age we are living now in is really distinct.”

    But instead of a golden spike in rock, “it’s going to be a layer of plastic that covers the planet, if not a layer of (heat-trapping) carbon,” said W. John Kress, acting undersecretary of science for the Smithsonian. Kress said the Smithsonian is embracing the term because “for us it kind of combines the scientific and the cultural in one word.”

    It’s an ugly word, one many people don’t understand, and it’s even hard to pronounce, Kress admitted. (It’s AN’-thruh-poh-seen.) That’s why when he opened the Smithsonian’s symposium, he said, “We are living in the Anthropocene,” then quickly added, “the age of humans.”

    “Never in its 4.6 billion-year-old history has the Earth been so affected by one species as it is being affected now by humans,” Kress said.

    Steffen, one of the main leaders of the Anthropocene movement, said in an email that the age of humans is more than just climate change. It includes ozone loss, disruption of nitrogen and phosphorous cycles that are causing dead zones, changes in water, acidification of the ocean, endocrine disruptors and deforestation.

    Steffen said there’s no scientific consensus for the term Anthropocene yet, but he sees support growing. To become official it has to be approved by the International Union of Geological Sciences’ Commission on Stratigraphy.

    That process is detailed and slow, said Harvard’s Kroll, who spearheaded the last successful effort to add a new time period — the little known Ediacaran period, about 600 million years ago. It took him 15 years.

    The head of that deciding committee, Stan Finney at California State University at Long Beach, said in an interview that he is often called “the biggest critic” of the Anthropocene term. He said while there’s no doubt humans are dramatically changing the planet, creating a new geologic time period requires detailed scientific records, mostly based on what is in rocks.

    Supporters also don’t agree on when the Anthropocene starts. Suggestions include the start of farming, industrialization and the use of the atomic bomb.

    The Geological Society of America hasn’t taken up the term yet, but may soon start paying attention to the concept, said society president Hap McSween of the University of Tennessee.

    “I actually think it’s a great idea,” McSween said. “Humans are profoundly affecting the environment, probably as much as natural events have in the past. And when effects become profound enough, we draw a new boundary and make it a period. … It’s a good way to point out the environmental havoc that humans are causing.”

    ___

    Online:

    Geologic time scale: http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/help/timeform.php

    Anthropocene Working Group: http://quaternary.stratigraphy.org/workinggroups/anthropocene/

    Smithsonian Living in the Anthropocene symposium: http://www.si.edu/consortia/anthropocene2014

    ___

    Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

  • Falling Apart MONBIOT

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    Falling Apart – monbiot.com


    Falling Apart

    Posted: 14 Oct 2014 12:20 PM PDT

    Competition and individualism are forcing us into a devastating Age of Loneliness

    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 15th October 2014

    What do we call this time? It’s not the information age: the collapse of popular education movements left a void now filled by marketing and conspiracy theories(1). Like the stone age, iron age and space age, the digital age says plenty about our artefacts but little about society. The anthropocene, in which humans exert a major impact on the biosphere, fails to distinguish this century from the previous twenty. What clear social change marks out our time from those that precede it? To me it’s obvious. This is the Age of Loneliness.

    When Thomas Hobbes claimed that in the state of nature, before authority arose to keep us in check, we were engaged in a war “of every man against every man”(2), he could not have been more wrong. We were social creatures from the start, mammalian bees, who depended entirely on each other. The hominims of East Africa could not have survived one night alone. We are shaped, to a greater extent than almost any other species, by contact with others. The age we are entering, in which we exist apart, is unlike any that has gone before.

    Three months ago we read that loneliness has become an epidemic among young adults(3). Now we learn that it is just as great an affliction of older people. A study by Independent Age shows that severe loneliness in England blights the lives of 700,000 men and 1.1m women over 50(4), and is rising with astonishing speed.

    Ebola is unlikely ever to kill as many people as this disease strikes down. Social isolation is as potent a cause of early death as smoking 15 cigarettes a day(5); loneliness, research suggests, is twice as deadly as obesity(6). Dementia, high blood pressure, alcoholism and accidents – all these, like depression, paranoia, anxiety and suicide, become more prevalent when connections are cut(7,8). We cannot cope alone.

    Yes, factories have closed, people travel by car instead of buses, use YouTube rather than the cinema. But these shifts alone fail to explain the speed of our social collapse. These structural changes have been accompanied by a life-denying ideology, which enforces and celebrates our social isolation. The war of every man against every man – competition and individualism in other words – is the religion of our time, justified by a mythology of lone rangers, sole traders, self-starters, self-made men and women, going it alone. For the most social of creatures, who cannot prosper without love, there is now no such thing as society, only heroic individualism. What counts is to win. The rest is collateral damage.

    British children no longer aspire to be train drivers or nurses, more than a fifth now say they “just want to be rich”: wealth and fame are the sole ambitions of 40% of those surveyed(9). A government study in June revealed that Britain is the loneliness capital of Europe(10). We are less likely than other Europeans to have close friends or to know our neighbours. Who can be surprised, when everywhere we are urged to fight like stray dogs over a dustbin?

    We have changed our language to reflect this shift. Our most cutting insult is loser. We no longer talk about people. Now we call them individuals. So pervasive has this alienating, atomising term become that even the charities fighting loneliness use it to describe the bipedal entities formerly known as human beings(11). We can scarcely complete a sentence without getting personal. Personally speaking (to distinguish myself from a ventriloquist’s dummy), I prefer personal friends to the impersonal variety and personal belongings to the kind that don’t belong to me. Though that’s just my personal preference, otherwise known as my preference.

    One of the tragic outcomes of loneliness is that people turn to their televisions for consolation: two-fifths of older people now report that the one-eyed god is their principal company(12). This self-medication enhances the disease. Research by economists at the University of Milan suggests that television helps to drive competitive aspiration(13). It strongly reinforces the income-happiness paradox: the fact that, as national incomes rise, happiness does not rise with them.

    Aspiration, which increases with income, ensures that the point of arrival, of sustained satisfaction, retreats before us. The researchers found that those who watch a lot of television derive less satisfaction from a given level of income than those who watch only a little. Television speeds up the hedonic treadmill, forcing us to strive even harder to sustain the same level of satisfaction. You have only to think of the wall-to-wall auctions on daytime TV, Dragon’s Den, the Apprentice and the myriad forms of career-making competition the medium celebrates, the generalised obsession with fame and wealth, the pervasive sense, in watching it, that life is somewhere other than where you are, to see why this might be.

    So what’s the point? What do we gain from this war of all against all? Competition drives growth, but growth no longer makes us wealthier. Figures published this week show that while the income of company directors has risen by more than a fifth, wages for the workforce as a whole have fallen in real terms over the past year (14). The bosses now earn – sorry, I mean take – 120 times more than the average full-time worker. (In 2000, it was 47 times). And even if competition did make us richer, it would make us no happier, as the satisfaction derived from a rise in income would be undermined by the aspirational impacts of competition.

    The top 1% now own 48% of global wealth(15), but even they aren’t happy. A survey by Boston College of people with an average net worth of $78m found that they too are assailed by anxiety, dissatisfaction and loneliness(16). Many of them reported feeling financially insecure: to reach safe ground, they believed, they would need, on average, about 25% more money. (And if they got it? They’d doubtless need another 25%). One respondent said he wouldn’t get there until he had $1 billion in the bank.

    For this we have ripped the natural world apart, degraded our conditions of life, surrendered our freedoms and prospects of contentment to a compulsive, atomising, joyless hedonism, in which, having consumed all else, we start to prey upon ourselves. For this we have destroyed the essence of humanity: our connectedness.

    Yes, there are palliatives, clever and delightful schemes like Men in Sheds and Walking Football developed by charities for isolated older people(17). But if we are to break this cycle and come together once more, we must confront the world-eating, flesh-eating system into which we have been forced.

    Hobbes’s pre-social condition was a myth. But we are now entering a post-social condition our ancestors would have believed impossible. Our lives are becoming nasty, brutish and long.

    www.monbiot.com

    References:

    1. http://www.autodidactproject.org/other/hj1.html

    2. http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl302/texts/hobbes/leviathan-contents.html

    3. http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/jul/20/loneliness-britains-silent-plague-hurts-young-people-most

    4. http://www.independentage.org/isolation-a-growing-issue-among-older-men/

    5. http://www.campaigntoendloneliness.org/threat-to-health/

    6. http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/feb/16/loneliness-twice-as-unhealthy-as-obesity-older-people

    7. http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/jul/20/loneliness-britains-silent-plague-hurts-young-people-most

    8. http://www.campaigntoendloneliness.org/threat-to-health/

    9. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/11014591/One-in-five-children-just-want-to-be-rich-when-they-grow-up.html

    10. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/10909524/Britain-the-loneliness-capital-of-Europe.html

    11. http://www.campaigntoendloneliness.org/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2014/05/FINAL-Age-UK-PR-response-02.05.14.pdf

    12. http://www.campaigntoendloneliness.org/loneliness-research/

    13. http://boa.unimib.it/bitstream/10281/23044/2/Income_Aspirations_Television_and_Happiness.pdf

    14. http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/article4234843.ece

    15. http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/oct/14/richest-1percent-half-global-wealth-credit-suisse-report

    16. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/04/secret-fears-of-the-super-rich/308419/

    17. http://www.independentage.org/isolation-a-growing-issue-among-older-men/

  • Daily update: The guerilla tactics allowing solar to beat utilities

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    The Guerrilla tactics allowing solar to beat utilities; Ergon looks to take some customers off grid; Another abbreviated newsletter caused by our “technical difficulties”. We hope to resume normal service tomorrow.
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    Attempts by some utilities to erect barriers around their business models is inspiration some innovative work-arounds from the solar and battery storage industry. Welcome to the “guerrilla” war between solar and the old energy models.
    Ergon Energy looks to take remote customers off-grid rather than paying for grid upgrades. It wants “visibility” on costs to encourage alternative technologies.
    Survey finds 90% of Australian households considering installing rooftop solar to address one of life’s major stressors – unaffordable power bills.