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

  • Damage from global warming will soon be irreversible, says leaked UN report

    Damage from global warming will soon be irreversible, says leaked UN report

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    Alex Morales, Bloomberg News
    Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2014

    In this picture taken Thursday, April 3, 2014, giant machines dig for brown coal at the open-cast mining Garzweiler in front of a smoking power plant near the city of Grevenbroich in western Germany. After concluding that global warming is almost certainly man-made and poses a grave threat to humanity, the U.N.-sponsored expert panel on climate change is moving on to the next phase: what to do about it. Martin Meissner / Associated Press

    Humans risk causing irreversible and widespread damage to the planet unless there’s faster action to limit the fossil fuel emissions that cause climate change, according to a leaked draft United Nations report.

    Global warming already is impacting “all continents and across the oceans,” and further pollution from heat-trapping gases will raise the likelihood of “severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems,” according to the document obtained by Bloomberg.

    “Without additional mitigation, and even with adaptation, warming by the end of the 21st century will lead to high to very high risk of severe, widespread, and irreversible impacts globally,” the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said in the draft.

    The study is the most important document produced by the UN about global warming, summarizing hundreds of papers. It’s designed to present the best scientific and economic analysis to government leaders and policymakers worldwide. It feeds into the UN-led effort drawing in more than 190 nations for an agreement on limiting emissions.

    The report “will provide policymakers with a scientific foundation to tackle the challenge of climate change,” IPCC Chairman Rajendra Pachauri said in a statement from the panel’s office in Geneva. “It would help governments and other stakeholders work together at various levels, including a new international agreement to limit climate change” that countries intend to broker by the end of next year.

    The draft was obtained by Bloomberg from a person with official access to it who asked not to be further identified because it hasn’t been published yet. It’s subject to line-by- line revision by representatives of governments around the world, and a final report is scheduled to be published on Nov. 2 in Copenhagen.

    Jonathan Lynn, a spokesman for the IPCC, declined to comment on the contents of the report. The draft “is still a work in progress, which will certainly change — indeed that is the point of the review — and so it would be premature to discuss its contents at this stage,” Lynn said.

    Economic losses for a warming level of 2.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels may reach 2 percent of global income, according to the panel, which acknowledged existing estimates are “incomplete,” and the calculation has “limitations.”

    Temperatures have already warmed by 0.85 of a degree since 1880, it said. That’s quicker than the shift in the climate that brought the end of the last ice age ended about 10,000 years ago.

    The panel also acknowledged there are costs associated with keeping the temperature rise since industrialization below the 2-degree target. That’s the level endorsed by the nations negotiating on a climate deal. Doing so may lead to losses in global consumption of 1.7 percent in 2030, 3.4 percent in 2050 and 4.8 percent in 2100, according to the paper.

    “Risks from mitigation can be substantial, but they do not involve the same possibility of severe, widespread, and irreversible impacts as risks from climate change, increasing the benefits from near-term mitigation action,” the authors wrote.

    The 127-page document includes a 32-page summary and is filled with language highlighting the dangers from rising temperatures. Those include damage to crop production, rising sea levels, melting glaciers and more pervasive heatwaves. The report mentions the word “risk” more than 350 times; “vulnerable” or “vulnerability” are written 61 times; and “irreversible” comes up 48 times.

    Possible permanent changes include the melting of the ice sheet covering Greenland. That would boost sea levels by as much as 7 metres and threaten coastal cities from Miami to Bangkok along with island nations such as the Maldives, Kiribati and Tuvalu.

    The scientists said they have “medium confidence” that warming of less than 4 degrees Celsius would be enough to trigger such a melt, which would take at least a millennium.

    Other impacts include reduced food security such as crops such as production of wheat, rice and maize in the tropics are damaged, the melting of Arctic sea ice, and the acidification of the oceans.

    The report also shows the scale of the challenge in limiting global warming. To stand a two-thirds chance of meeting the temperature goal, cumulative emissions of carbon dioxide since 1870 must be limited to about 2,900 gigatons, according to the study. Two thirds of that carbon already has been released into the atmosphere, they said.

    The surface air temperature is projected to rise under all scenarios examined by the IPCC. It expects a gain of 0.3 degrees to 4.8 degrees for this century, depending on what policies governments pursue. That range would lead to a sea-level rise of 26 centimetres to 82 centimetres in addition to the 19 centimetres already recorded.

    “Many aspects of climate change and associated impacts will continue for centuries, even if anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases cease” the researchers said. “The risk of abrupt and irreversible change increases as the magnitude of the warming increases.”

    While the measures exist that may keep temperature gains below the 2-degree threshold, there are “substantial technological, economic, social, and institutional challenges,” according to the study.

    Delaying action will only increase the risks and costs, it said. Putting off work on the issue until 2030 may raise costs by 44 percent through 2050.

    Ruling out certain technological solutions would also raise the costs of fighting climate change, according to the paper. Without equipment to capture emissions from factories and power plants and store them underground, known as carbon capture and storage, the cost of the most stringent CO2 reductions could more than double, according to the paper. Eliminating nuclear power would raise costs by 7 percent and limiting wind and solar farms would do so by 6 percent.

    In a nod to skeptics who argue temperatures haven’t significantly warmed since 1998, the researchers said that climate models aren’t so good at explaining short-term fluctuations in the temperature and that “natural variability” may be part of what’s being observed.

    The risk of abrupt and irreversible change increases as the magnitude of the warming increases

    The pace of temperature increases slowed to about 0.05 of a degree per decade from 1998 through 2012 from 0.12 degrees per decade for the longer period spanning from 1951 to 2012. The IPCC said 111 out of 114 climate models predicted a greater warming trend than was observed from 1998 to 2012. And for the period from 1984 to 1998, most models showed less warming than was finally recorded, they said.

    Over longer periods, the climate models seem to be more accurate. From 1951 to 2012, “simulated surface warming trends are consistent with the observed trend,” the IPCC researchers said.

    The UN panel since September has published three separate reports into the physical science of global warming, its impacts, and ways to fight it. The study leaked today, called the “Synthesis Report” intends to pick out the most important findings and present them in a way that lawmakers can easily understand.

    In all, more than 800 scientists from around the world have helped write the four reports, an exercise the UN last completed in 2007. It also uses inputs from earlier studies by the IPCC into renewable energy and extreme events and disasters.

  • OpenAgent increases pressure in online real estate space

    Metro FN website
    Local agents, like Metro FN, will be rated in Open Agent

    OpenAgent, an angel-backed real estate startup that helps Aussie home owners find the best agent to sell their property.

    OpenAgent uses official sales data and reviews to rank Australian real estate agents, and then helps connect potential vendors with the best agents for any given home sale scenario.
    Founders Zoe Pointon and Marta Higuera, recently secured a million dollars to grow OpenAgent, and in the process, managed to attract some big name investors, including the founder of US real estate giant Trulia.

    Say you have an apartment to sell in Croydon or a semi-detached home in Kensington ready to be put on the market… with OpenAgent you can quickly enter the details and then the team will get in contact and connect you with the agent most likely to meet your needs… whether that’s achieving a top sale price, making a quick sale or just ensuring you get genuinely good service.

    The best part is… the ranking system helps to keep the industry honest and accountable, and makes sure agents are always competing to get the best for their clients. Getting a positive review or consistently achieving high sales prices for the area does wonders for lead generation.

    They’re a bit like the TripAdvisor of property sales in that the better your review as an agent, the more business you’ll generate. So the really good agents love OpenAgent. It’s great for them, great for Australians trying to sell their homes, and terrible for the dodgy shonksters that give real estate agents a bad name.

    As a business, OpenAgent has already experienced rapid growth; accelerating massively over the past year and doubling in size since the start of 2014. They’ve already connected 2000 people with the best agents and are in the process of assisting the sale of $1 billion worth of property.

    What it’s doing for property sellers:

    • It’s a free service to find an agent that is best able to meet their needs (whether speed, price or service specific)
    • Saves the time and hassle of ringing around or visiting real estate agents

    What it’s doing for real estate agents:

    • Provides a platform for agents to receive widespread reviews and recognition
    • Enhances the reputation of high selling and well rated agents, connecting them to a wider network of vendors
  • Rivercity Steel Band plays state school on Saturday 6th

    Carribean party posterA celebration of Independence Day to Trinidad and Tobago will be held on the evening of Saturday 6th September at the West End State School with headline act, the River City Steel Band.

    Kicking off at 6:00pm the evening will feature Conga lines, soca line dancing, a pan shoot out and limbo dancing. There will be lashings of Caribbean food, a cash bar featuring authentic Caribbean Rum Punch and a coffee cart.

    Children are free, adult entry is $10.

    The Rivercity Steel Band is a community steel band playing Caribbean style music. The origin of steel bands lies in Trinidad where the discovery that oil drums could be hammered and tuned to make musical instruments was made. The basic instrument is the steel pan, or drum, which is made in a range of different sizes to match the range of notes of the instruments of an orchestra. Formerly associated with poverty, the steel pan is now officially recognised as the National Instrument of Trinidad and Tobago and has millions of players and followers throughout the world.

    Steel pan music was introduced to Australia in the 1970s when Amral Khan’s Cavaliers Steel Bands toured the world and made several visits to Australia. A number of its members decided to stay, including Alvin Rostant, who later teamed up with Paul Santiago and formed the Australian Academy of Steel Drums. www.steeldrums.org The Rivercity Steel Band evolved from one of the Academy’s workshops and was formed in 2008. Alvin is the band leader and music director and brings a wealth of experience to the band. Alvin is an well known professional musician who performs solo, with his band, Jahbutu, and provides a range of workshops including the Banana Joe schools program. More info on www.caribbeanartscompany.com.au

  • Daily update: Abbott is blindsiding mainstream media on green energy

    AdDr Green – Solar Powerwww.drgreen.com.au/MonthlySpecial – 5kW System only $4490 + Free Meter or $48/wk. Hurry, ends 29th August!

    Daily update: Abbott is blindsiding mainstream media on green energy

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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail9.atl111.rsgsv.net

    2:54 PM (13 minutes ago)

    to me
    Abbott is blindsiding mainstream media on green energy; Renewables hits 2020 target in SA; RET cut will leave renewables ‘as good as dead’; Fossil fuel divestment a $5tn challenge; Oz top solar electorates also most conservative; China eyes $16bn EV charging fun; Water security another good reason to shift to renewables; Why tariff design is critical for utilities; Verizon to be largest solar producing communication company; Coal found guilty in case of energy generation vs birds; and Stopgap carbon policies not perfect but better than nothing.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    Fairfax’s media flagship has called on Tony Abbott to protect the Renewable Energy Target, and then recommended a raft of policies to do exactly the opposite. It’s another example of why the Abbott government’s destruction of a $20 billion industry is and will not be questioned in mainstream media.
    Solar now in nearly 1/4 homes in South Australia, as official data shows renewables hit state’s ambitious 2020 target, and emissions fall sharply.
    Pacific Hydro CEO Lane Crockett warns of ‘catastrophic consequences’ of Abbott government’s plans to dump or wind back the Renewable Energy Target.
    Bloomberg New Energy Finance report says global fossil fuel divestment challenge will mean finding a viable destination for $5trn worth of investor funds.
    Report finds 6 of top 10 solar electorates in Australia held by Coalition MPs, who were pushing to dump RET and make it harder for households to go solar.
    Reports emerge that the Chinese government is considering putting $US16bn towards electric-vehicle charging facilities, to spur demand for EVs.
    US report details the enormous water usage reduction that greater global reliance on renewable energy sources like solar  and wind would enable.
    There is a looming disconnect between the rapidly evolving new world of distributed energy technologies and the old world of electricity pricing.
    Verizon set to install 10.2 MW of new solar power systems across eight of the network facilities.
    U.S. News has investigated just how many birds are killed by different energy sources each year, and the figures do not look good for coal utilities.
    Stopgap carbon policies; far from perfect, but better than nothing Michael Rupert, Kenneth Baldwin & Michael Smith
    What might Australia’s climate policy end up looking like, and could Palmer’s ETS – even with a zero initial price on emissions – act as a stopgap?
  • The Largest Star In The Universe

    A red Hypergiant, one of the largest stars believed to exist in the Universe. Image credit: NASA
    A red Hypergiant, one of the largest stars believed to exist in the Universe. Image credit: NASA

    Astronomers have spotted what they believe is the largest known star in the Universe. It’s a red ‘Hypergiant’ located about 5,000 light years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus the swan. Astronomers recently calculated its upper size at more than 2,000 times the size of the Sun. That is around 1.2 billion kilometres wide!

    Placed in our Solar System, its surface would extend out to the orbit of Saturn. Light takes more than 4 hours just to cross its circumference!

    That’s the biggest star that we know of, but what’s the biggest probable star in the Universe? Obviously, it’s difficult for us to actually find it, the Universe is a big place, but some astronomers believe one day we’ll find a cool ‘Supergiant’ 2,600 times the size of the Sun. That, astronomers believe, is the largest possible star. Now that’s big!

    Talking about the Universe, it’s time to scan the skies again. Stars come up nicely through a telescope and as you know I always use binoculars because you see a wider field of view. The image is right side up and the larger field of view makes it easy to find what you point at. They’re so simple to use, the ideal starter instrument to go star spotting with.

    The Lord Of The Rings

    Saturn is nearby and shines in the western sky at nightfall and stays out until late evening in late August. Saturn is the planet with the WOW factor. There is no more dazzling sight in the solar system than that of the ringed planet, even city lights can’t diminish the beauty of this tiny but picturesque crowd pleaser!

    Stories abound about first timers who catch their first glimpse of Saturn through a telescope, only to check the front of the scope in disbelief to see if there isn’t a picture of the ringed planet dangling there.

    How could an object so far away in space appear so perfectly clear and sharp? Such is the utter coolness of Saturn. Every time I show people Saturn through a telescope they turn and say, “Wow, it really is there!” Such is the magic of the ‘Lord of the Rings.’ At the moment Saturn and Mars are close together in the constellation Libra low in the western evening sky.

    A Messy Place

    Hey, have a guess how much space junk is floating around up there? That’s right, too much to count and we put it all there, over the past 40 years by launching more than 10,000 satellites, the majority of which are still in orbit. We’re only now beginning to reap the bounty we’ve sown, so to speak.

    Rocket booster casings, dead satellites – you name it and it’s there posing a problem for astronauts and space tourists for the next 30 years. Scientists believe there are more than 300,000 pieces of debris in space, made up of everything from tiny screws and bolts to large parts of rockets, mostly moving in low orbits around Earth at tremendous speed.

    Are you starting to get reminders of what you saw depicted in the 2013 Hollywood movie Gravity and wondering…what if? Stunning movie though!

    David Reneke is one of Australia’s most well known and respected astronomers and lecturers with links to some of the world’s leading astronomical institutions. David is the editor for Australia’s Astro-Space News Magazine and a writer/publicist for Australasian Science magazine. www.davidreneke.com

  • Kurilpa Riverfront plan may kill the goose that lays the golden egg

    The New City Plan
    Two windows will have views of Mount Cootha.

    Greens candidate for South Brisbane, Jonathon Sri has expressed serious concerns about the drafting process of the new masterplan.

    “Inviting consultation after the draft has been finalised is patronising and tokenistic,” he said. “It goes without saying that local residents and small businesses should have been consulted before it was released.”
    He said that the plan contains some positive elements, “it’s nice that some of the existing public spaces will be made more accessible – but at the end of the day, the new plan seems to be a bit of a missed opportunity.
    “We’ll be cramming thousands of people into an area that may not have sufficient infrastructure to accommodate them.”
    He also expressed concern about the lack of  new schools and public health services to cater for the 11 000 new residents, and commented that “the new parks that the government’s been banging on about are quite small.”
    He said, “The best aspects of the project, like the new public ampitheatre, are described as aspirational ideas that require further investigation, whereas the worst aspects, like the fact that much of the ‘open space’ appears to be private gardens, are already locked in.
    “The proposed redesign of key arterial streets also fails to provide safe cycling routes through the peninsula. Narrow bike lanes will be wedged between car lanes and streetside parking, despite local and international research telling us that this is unsafe and suboptimal.
    “The redevelopment of Kurilpa Peninsula represents a great opportunity for Brissie, but if done poorly, it’ll simply replicate the mistakes of the past.”
    Mr Sri said that these issues reflect a “socially unsustainable approach to development throughout inner-city Brisbane.”
    “In trying to commodify and profit from urban culture, developers may well be killing it off altogether.”