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

  • Presenting SDSN’s interactive website on “Indicators and a Monitoring Framework for the Sustainable Development Goals”

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    Presenting SDSN’s interactive website on “Indicators and a Monitoring Framework for the Sustainable Development Goals”

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    Sustainable Development Solutions Network info@unsdsn.org via mail12.suw11.mcdlv.net 

    10:31 PM (4 minutes ago)

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    New interactive website for “Indicators and a Monitoring Framework for the Sustainable Development Goals”
    Dear friends,

    On Sunday August 2nd, UN Member States agreed upon the Post-2015 outcome document, to be adopted by Heads of State and Government in September 2015. “Transforming Our World” sets out 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and a range of associated targets. Now the substance of the agenda has been agreed, attention is turning to implementation. Of particular importance are the indicators and the associated monitoring framework, which will be finalized in early 2016.

    The SDSN is excited to present an interactive website for its report Indicators and a Monitoring Framework for Sustainable Development Goals: Launching a data revolution for the SDGs. Through this site, you can easily view our proposed list of 100 Global Monitoring Indicators (GMI) and map them to the 17 goals and 169 targets. The platform also helps to illustrate interlinkages, demonstrating how individual indicators can cut across multiple goals and targets.

    Explore the Indicators
    The Indicators report is the result of over 18 months of consultations led by the SDSN with the contributions of nearly 500 organizations and thousands of individuals – previous versions of the report have so far been downloaded over 100,000 times. The full report is available at unsdsn.org/indicators.

    The list of Global Monitoring Indicators may be periodically updated as experts agree on metrics or new ones are developed to fill the identified gaps, and these updates will be reflected on the Indicators website.

    With best regards,
    Guido Schmidt-Traub
    Executive Director
  • Don’t miss the debate tomorrow Kate — Land Water Future

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    Don’t miss the debate tomorrow

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    Kate — Land Water Future <kate@landwaterfuture.org.au>

    5:23 PM (10 minutes ago)

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    The coal seam gas debate: You can watch online from 10am.

    Neville,

    Tomorrow morning in the NSW Parliament, members of the Upper House will have the chance to vote to protect our land and water from coal seam gas.

    It’s an unprecedented opportunity.

    Over the past week thousands of us have told our MPs it’s time to do the right thing — to stop coal seam gas threatening our farms, forests, water catchments, and communities, once and for all.

    We’ve had some great wins in recent months, with many coal seam gas licences being cancelled. But the threat still exists for large areas of our state, including the Gloucester valley, Northern Rivers, the south west suburbs of Sydney, and the Pilliga Forest in north west NSW.

    Tomorrow our Upper House MPs can act to protect these areas from being industrialised by sprawling gasfields.

    If you’d like to watch the debate unfold, it’s due to kick off around 10am tomorrow.

    You can watch it streaming online from the NSW Parliament website (look for the Legislative Council webcast). We’ll also post a link tomorrow morning on our Facebook page and on Twitter.

    The public gallery will be open too, so if you’re in Sydney you can come along to the Legislative Council at Parliament House on Macquarie Street from 10am tomorrow. The nearest train stations are Martin Place and St James.

    We’ll be sure to keep you posted on what happens,

    Kate and the Land Water Future team

    PS Make sure your friends know about the debate — forward this email and share on Facebook:

  • Plebiscite or Referendum – What’s the Difference ANTONY GREEN

    « 2016 Prospects for the Abbott Government in South Australia | Main

    August 12, 2015

  • The coal lobby is scared of you. GET UP

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    The coal lobby is scared of you.

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    Sam R – GetUp!

    3:43 PM (6 minutes ago)

    to me
    Dear NEVILLE,

    We just had another win, and you’ve got the coal lobby running scared.

    Yesterday another major bank, Standard Chartered, ruled out funding Adani’s Carmichael mine and coal port on the Reef coast! That’s a Federal Court case and two major investment banks in less than a week. Nobody saw this coming.

    Did you know the Minerals Council of Australia, funded by giants of the coal industry, is scared of you? Like a frightened cat backed into a corner, the lobby is lashing out wildly. We haven’t even won yet, but they’re already freaking out about what we do next.

    “It would certainly give pause to new investors if they think they are going to be subject to this rat-baggery… Inevitably the environmental groups will move onto the next coal seam gas projects and coal mine expansions,” chief executive Brendan Pearson warned the Australian Financial Review.1

    Some “rat-baggery” it’s been, too.

    For four years, and spanning three Environment Ministers, GetUp members like you have fought the monstrous Carmichael mine and Abbot Point coal terminal. You’ve fought to protect the Great Barrier Reef. You’ve fought to stop one of the biggest coal mines in the world. You’ve fought to protect the rights of the Traditional Owners of the land.

    We’re under attack because we’re winning. And we could be so close to tasting victory.

    Two years ago, we launched a Reef Fighting Fund to take on Adani. That fund has fuelled four court cases, and changed the landscape of the Australian environmental movement in the process. The Fighting Fund was extraordinary. What we need now is a Winning Fund.

    With one final push, we can win forever. We can pack Adani up and say goodbye. We can stop the burning of one of the biggest coal reserves on the planet. We can protect one of the most treasured places on Earth. We can be part of a win that defines a generation.

    But the coal lobby, the Murdoch press and our coal-hearted Prime Minister won’t go easily. In fact, they cling more desperately to the past than ever.

    Can you be a part of the Reef Winning Fund that can help stop the Carmichael mine forever?

    Whether it’s ensuring legal scrutiny or running strategic campaign tactics, we’re going to use the fund to do everything we can to get this over the line and have a once-in-a-generation victory. You, and everyone else who has fought so hard for so long, deserve it.

    If Adani happens to fall over and the fund is still going, we’ll do exactly what the Minerals Council is afraid of. We’ll use it to fight the next big, dirty project that threatens our environment, climate and health.

    Cashed-up coal lobbyists are scared of us for good reason. Carmichael and Abbot Point was a project that was destined to proceed. Fighting it seemed next to impossible. But you did fight it. You dug your heels in with thousands of other people. You became part of a movement that demonstrated a collective power the big polluters just weren’t prepared for.

    We’ve done so much. But if we can win this fight forever, it will change everything.

    Join us to be a part of the Reef Winning Fund. Together, we can win this thing for good: https://www.getup.org.au/reef-winning-fund

    Can you imagine the new clean future we’re already seeing glimpses of? Like the front page of the SMH which posed the question “Turning Point for Coal?”. Or huge economies like China shutting down coal-fired power stations en masse to protect its citizens. Or the unstoppable wind and solar energy exploding across the world.

    The sunlight is seeping through the cracks. It’s time for us to throw the door open.

    Sam R, for the GetUp team.

    [1] Anti-coal activists to turn from Adani to mine expansions. Australian Financial Review August 9, 2015.

  • Will you come to the People’s Climate March? acf

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    Will you come to the People’s Climate March?

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    Kelly O’Shanassy, ACF Unsubscribe

    7:00 PM (34 minutes ago)

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    Hi INGA

    This morning, after months of dragging its heels, our government finally announced how much it’s willing to cut pollution over the next few decades. It’s the same old story. The big polluters. The government doublespeak. The empty promises.

    Enough is enough.

    You know how they say ‘If you see something, say something’?

    Astronomer Carl Sagan urges, “If you see something about the planet that you’d like to change, do something. You’ve been given the gift of being right here, right now. Make the most of it. Carpe that diem, folks.”

    Friends, this is the moment. This is the time. Let’s seize the day. 

    In the last weekend of November, will you help create the biggest mobilisation the world has ever seen?  We’re taking to the streets, in Australian capital cities and across the world, to demand action.

    Pollution reduction targets exist because most of the world agrees, to keep global warming at below 2 degrees, all countries must massively cut pollution and grow clean energy.

    But right now, Australia is part of the problem, not the solution. 

    Our new pollution targets are woefully inadequate. While countries across the globe are leaping towards 100% clean energy, Australia is not even trying. We’re aiming to cut our pollution by just 26 to 28%. (The target’s actually 19%, but the government’s trying to make it look better with some figure fudging).

    Our government seems determined to keep our economy handcuffed to last century’s energy sources – coal and gas. Have they no faith in our ability to innovate, adapt and create a better future?

    See something you want to change?

    Millions of Australians want change. Polling just yesterday showed that seventy per cent of us want our country to transition from coal to clean energy, and the vast majority of us are deeply worried our government is underestimating the importance of global warming.

    We care deeply. But our government’s not listening.

    Let’s seize the day. Come to the People’s Climate March!

    We, the people, come from all walks of life. We will gather in capital cities across Australia to demand action. We will march alongside millions of people in hundreds of major cities around the world, at the same time as Australian politicians meet global leaders to negotiate how to really address global warming.

    When: 27-29 November

    Where: In capital cities across Australia

    Find out more: Sign up to our mailing list and we’ll be in touch soon.

    Will you help make our movement so big, diverse and beautiful, we cannot be ignored?

    We are marching because we know we can change the world when we work together.

    Will you come? www.action.org.au/Peoples-climate-march

    I hope to see you there,

    Kelly

    Kelly O’Shanassy
    CEO
    Australian Conservation Foundation

    PS. Read our full coverage of what the government’s targets announcement mean for Australia.

  • BREAKING: Tony Abbott’s emission reduction targets Mark Butler LABOR

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    BREAKING: Tony Abbott’s emission reduction targets

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    Mark Butler Unsubscribe

    10:48 AM (3 minutes ago)

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    The latest politics update from the Australian Labor Party | Unsubscribe
    .
    Neville —

    I wanted to let you know as soon as possible. Tony Abbott is going to announce Australia’s emission reduction targets today, and reports are that he intends to commit Australia to one of the weakest emission reduction targets in the developed world – just 26% by 2030.

    The Climate Institute has indicated Mr Abbott’s target is consistent with global temperatures rising three to four degrees – a catastrophic level of global warming. Emissions reduction targets should seek to limit warming to two degrees, consistent with the commitments from China, the US, the UK, Labor, and Tony Abbott himself!

    You can read my statement and some more information about it here.

    Please join me in telling Tony Abbott that this simply isn’t good enough by sharing my statement. We will keep you updated.

    Thanks for your support,

    Mark Butler
    Shadow Minister for Environment, Climate Change and Water