Category: News

Add your news
You can add news from your networks or groups through the website by becoming an author. Simply register as a member of the Generator, and then email Giovanni asking to become an author. He will then work with you to integrate your content into the site as effectively as possible.
Listen to the Generator News online

 
The Generator news service publishes articles on sustainable development, agriculture and energy as well as observations on current affairs. The news service is used on the weekly radio show, The Generator, as well as by a number of monthly and quarterly magazines. A podcast of the Generator news is also available.
As well as Giovanni’s articles it picks up the most pertinent articles from a range of other news services. You can publish the news feed on your website using RSS, free of charge.
 

  • Have your say on data retention GET UP

    enable desktop notifications for Gmail.   Learn more  Hide
    Web Clip
    CNN.com Recently Published/UpdatedChristie says family can’t veto 2016 decision1 hour ago

    Have your say on data retention

    Inbox
    x

    Alycia – GetUp!

    1:02 PM (1 hour ago)

    to me
    NEVILLE,

    Last year you signed a petition calling for the Federal Attorney-General George Brandis and the Government to drop its sweeping mandatory data retention scheme, which if passed, will put Australian citizens’ privacy at risk.

    Now we have an opportunity to table our opposition to the Government’s data retention scheme in Parliament. The parliamentary committee, which is currently reviewing the legislation that will introduce the scheme, is calling for submissions.

    Submissions must be made by 5pm (AEDT) next Monday 19 January. Will you take a few minutes to let the committee know why this invasive scheme needs to be dropped immediately?

    https://www.getup.org.au/dataretention

    Senator Brandis’ data retention scheme will require telecommunications companies and internet service providers (ISPs) to store information, or “metadata”, about every Australian citizens’ private phone calls and internet usage for at least two years.

    Mr Brandis has argued that his scheme is harmless, because it won’t capture the “content” of phone calls and internet usage, just metadata – but the truth is metadata can reveal a far more detailed picture than Mr Brandis would care to admit. The proposed data retention scheme would keep a record of who Australians have called, how long they spoke for, the order of the calls, and where they were when they made the call – all of which can be used to say more about someone than a single phone call ever will.

    Internet service providers will be required to store information that would disclose IP addresses, information that can be used to find out when, where and for how long someone accessed the Internet, and whether they accessed it on a computer, laptop or mobile.

    As the former General Counsel of the US’ National Security Agency explained it, “metadata absolutely tells you everything about somebody’s life”.

    So far the committee has received 14 submissions, the majority of them made by law enforcement and intelligence agencies (which, unsurprisingly, are in favour of the legislation). This is our chance to put public opposition to the legislation on the record.

    Make a submission letting the committee know why the passage of this legislation would be so reckless. Your submission needn’t be long and should only take you a few minutes. There’s even a helpful how-to guide for making submissions, as well as some talking points to get you started. Click here to make your submission: https://www.getup.org.au/dataretention

    There are so many arguments against this scheme that it’s hard to know where to start. The proposed data retention scheme would not only impede on Australian citizens’ personal privacy, but far more worryingly, it would threaten the very core of our democracy. If passed, the laws will give Federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies the ability to track down journalists and whistleblowers looking to expose corruption and misconduct within government agencies.

    Just the thought of being tracked will be enough to sow seeds in the minds of journalists and would-be whistleblowers, causing them to self-censor themselves for fear of being prosecuted. This is an underhanded attempt to suppress information that could potentially embarrass government agencies.

    Senator Brandis will be hoping to pass this one on the quiet, so let’s make some noise, shall we?

    Alycia, Erin and the GetUp team

    PS. We’ve joined forces on this campaign with our friends from Electronic Frontiers Australia (EFA), who have been fighting for the digital rights of Australians for 20 years. They’ve put together a helpful how-to guide and talking points for preparing a submission here: https://www.getup.org.au/dataretention

  • 20th century sea level rise started slower, then accelerated, study says

    Science Now
    Discoveries from the world of science and medicine
    Science Science Now
    Slower start, fast finish for sea level rise last century, study says
    Climate change
    A new study suggests sea level rise, in part from melting land glaciers, has been overestimated for much of the 20th century. Here, scientists at the Pastoruri glacier in Huaraz, Peru, measure ice thickness. (Rodrigo Abd / Associated Press)
    By Geoffrey Mohan contact the reporter

    Scientific Research
    Marine Science

    Tides turn on measuring sea level rise
    20th century sea level rise started slower, then accelerated, study says

    Sea level rise during the bulk of the 20th century has been overestimated, a new report suggests.
    lRelated NASA’s trippy video shows a year of C02 emissions in 3 minutes

    Science Now
    NASA’s trippy video shows a year of C02 emissions in 3 minutes

    See all related
    8

    The Harvard-led study, published online Wednesday in the journal Nature, knocks about half a millimeter off estimates of annual sea level rise that have been based on tide gauges. But it nonetheless confirms satellite data showing that the annual rate has sharply accelerated since the 1990s.
    Neither rain nor snow nor heat sways views on climate science
    Neither rain nor snow nor heat sways views on climate science

    Researchers hadn’t set out to challenge the tide gauge data. They were trying to see whether they could use the information to figure out how sea level changed in response to runoff from melting glaciers on land, from thermal expansion due to absorption of heat by the ocean, and from changes in water storage on land, said the study’s lead author, Carling Hay, a geophysicist at Harvard University.
    cComments

    Again we have the deniers clutching high school diplomas attempting to shout down scientists. It’s pathetic.
    revolting
    at 1:25 PM January 15, 2015

    Add a comment See all comments
    23

    “As we moved further along in the study, we started summing all of those contributions, and that’s when we got the lower rate,” said Hay. “It was as much a surprise to us as it was to everyone else.”

    Virtually everyone else, however, went back and reconsidered their tally of the inputs. After all, there were far more data on tides than on ice melt. Some tidal gauges go back to the 18th century.

    But tidal gauge data have some built-in problems. Gauges are widely spaced, have many time gaps and are subject to local influences, including man-made dikes, locks and dams. They also are mainly in mid-latitude Northern Hemisphere ports.
    Ice researchers capture catastrophic Greenland melt
    Ice researchers capture catastrophic Greenland melt

    Then there was the more recently recognized problem of Earth’s crust shifting, not just in response to tectonic plates grinding against one another, but from the loss of the crushing load of ice that melted after the last ice age.

    Different researchers have worked around those and other issues by eliminating statistical outliers, relying on regional averages, finessing data with modern satellite measurements and adjusting for shifts in Earth’s crust.

    They arrived at a consensus of 1.6-1.9 millimeters a year for all but the last decade of the 20th century. But that still left a gap between what they could tally from contributing sources and what the tides seemed to tell them about ocean volume.

    The new study, based on 622 tide gauges, suggests the historical rise was closer to 1.2 millimeters a year. That level in effect closes the accounting gap.

    From 1993 to 2010, however, the annual rate of sea level rise leaps to about 3 millimeters per year, the researchers found. That conclusion is confirmed by recent satellite measurements.
    Greenland ice loss more ‘local’ than thought, climate study says
    Greenland ice loss more ‘local’ than thought, climate study says

    “It’s a substantial increase that we should be concerned about,” Hay said.

    The new calculations will have to be corroborated, said oceanographer Reinhard Flick of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, who was not involved in the study. If so, Flick added, the revision makes the recent acceleration “significantly larger than previously supposed.”

    Does climate science float your boat? Follow me on Twitter: @LATsciguy

  • Your Medicare. Your Fight. Bill Shorten

    Web Clip
    CNN.com Recently Published/UpdatedOklahoma execution now up to Supreme Court4 hours ago

    Your Medicare. Your Fight.

    Inbox
    x

    Bill Shorten via sendgrid.info 

    6:22 PM (21 minutes ago)

    to me
    .
    Neville,
    Moments ago Tony Abbott’s Health Minister announced they are backing down on just one part of their new GP Tax package – a $20 cut in the Medicare rebate that was supposed to start on Monday.

    Sussan Ley said they were backing down because of a huge amount of community pressure. Community pressure that you helped build.

    But they are still going ahead with their GP Tax.

    Sussan Ley said they will never give up on increasing the cost of seeing a doctor.

    The only way to get rid of the GP Tax is to get rid of the Government.

    When Minister Ley made her announcement, she also said that “people often think you send the Health Minister an e-mail and she never reads it. In fact I’ve read an awful lot over the last fortnight…”

    If that’s the case, let’s give her something worth reading.

    Can you write the Health Minister an email and tell her to dump the GP Tax in full? We will pass your messages to her on your behalf.

    If she says she reads her email and listens to the community, let’s make sure she understands what the community really thinks about Tony Abbott’s GP Tax.

    Click here to write the Health Minister an email and tell her what you think.

    Labor built Medicare and together we can defend it.

    Thank you for standing with me on this,

    Bill

    Australian Labor Party
  • It’s never been clearer 350 org

    ble desktop notifications for Gmail.   Learn more  Hide
    More

    Web Clip
    Quote of the DaySammy Davis, Jr. – “You always have two choices: your commitment versus your fear.”

    It’s never been clearer

    Inbox
    x

    Charlie Wood – 350.org Australia <350@350.org>

    5:33 PM (9 minutes ago)

    to me

    Dear friend,

    Never before has the need to divest and keep fossil fuels in the ground been so clear!

    Just last week, a groundbreaking report in the prestigious journal Nature stated what we’ve known all along – the vast majority of oil, coal and gas must stay in the ground if we are to have any chance of a liveable future.[1]

    In Australia, this translates to at least 90% of our coal needing to stay in the ground. But as the science speaks louder than ever, our politicians are determined to bury their heads in the sand and let the fossil fuel industry dictate their decisions.

    And this is why, now more than ever, we need you to join us on February 13 – 14 to divest from fossil fuels as part of Global Divestment Day.

    Watch this animation to learn more..

    The fossil fuel industry’s plans fly in the face of logic and science. They know that their business-model has us committed to an unthinkable future yet they’re prepared to go right ahead and rip out as much fossil fuel as they can to turn a profit, before it’s too late.

    This December, world leaders will head to Paris for what may be their last real attempt at forging a global climate deal. What we do between now and then will set the stage for those negotiations and help reduce the power of the fossil fuel lobby to hijack our future.

    Now is the time to show our leaders that we expect them to rise to the occasion — and that the people are rising too.

    See you on the streets in February!

    Charlie

    [1] The Nature paper estimates that a third of the world’s oil reserves, half its gas reserves and 80% of its coal reserves must be left untouched to avert 2 degrees of warming – an extremely dangerous level of global warming. At present we are on course for around five degrees of warming by the end of the century.


    350.org is building a global climate movement.You can connect with us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and become a sustaining donor to keep this movement strong and growing.

  • Gender reporting under threat FAIR AGENDA

    1 of 34

    Gender reporting under threat

    Inbox
    x

    Renee, Fair Agenda <info@fairagenda.org>

    12:30 PM (16 minutes ago)

    to me
    Fair Agenda
    Neville,

    Australia still has a lot of work to do on workplace equality. The latest data shows that our gender pay gap has now blown out to 18.2% — but despite that, less than a quarter of Australia’s biggest employers have done analysis to check for gender pay gap issues.[1]

    How do we know? Workplace gender reporting requirements — requirements that Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick has called “absolutely critical as a piece of gender equality machinery in this country”.[2] But now they’re at risk.Yesterday the government said they’re considering allowing changes to these reporting requirements – and big business groups are already lobbying hard to have them watered down, if not abolished entirely.

    The media have already deemed this one of Prime Minister Abbott’s “first major tests as Minister for Women”.[3] Can you help show him that Australians won’t stand for attacks on workplace gender reporting provisions?

    The Government has tried to change these gender reporting provisions before. Early last year they announced a proposal to wind back the reporting requirements. Then, a massive public backlash forced them to step away from most of the proposed changes. This time, key business groups are out in the front of this lobbying and PR battle — which means showing the government this issue will cause voter backlash is critical. Can you help sign and share the petition on this issue now?

    Want to know more about gender reporting? Here’s a quick 101:

    • Right now, under the Workplace Gender Equality Act, any Australian employer with more than 100 staff is required to collect and report important data about gender in their workplace. This includes things like: women’s representation, gender pay gaps, and flexible working arrangements.
    • The most recent (and first) data from these reports showed that:
      • The gender pay gap in our largest organisations sits at 19.9% for ‘base remuneration’ and 24.7% for ‘total remuneration’ (once you incorporate things like bonuses).
      • The representation of women in our biggest businesses steadily declines when moving up the management levels, with women making up just 26.1% of ‘key management personnel’, and 17.3% of CEOs.
      • One-third of our biggest employers have *zero* women in ‘key management personnel’ positions.
      • Less than one in four of our biggest employers have even conducted a gender remuneration gap analysis.
    • The data collected through the workplace reporting has been described as a “game-changer” by the Workplace Gender Equality Agency.[4]

    Having good data on issues is critical to understanding, and addressing them. As senior business leader Jon Williams, from PwC has said: “If we are serious about addressing gender equality in Australia, we need data”.[5]
 The most recent data on workplace gender equality (or more accurately, the lack thereof) has shown just how far Australia still has to go on this issue, and if we’re to ensure progress, maintaining gender reporting will be critical.

    Can you join the call for Prime Minister Abbott – as the declared Prime Minister for Women – to ensure workplace reporting requirements don’t get watered down? Click here to sign your support now.

    Thanks for all you do,

    Renee for Fair Agenda

    References

    1. Women earn less than men as gender gap grows, News.com.au, 15 August 2014. Australia’s gender equality scorecard, Workplace Gender Equality Agency, November 2014.

    2. Pressure over gender reporting laws, Australian Financial Review, 6 February 2014.

    3. Gender reporting shaping up as a real test for Tony Abbott’s as the Minister for Women, Daily Telegraph, 14 January 2015.

    4. Australia’s gender equality scorecard, Workplace Gender Equality Agency, November 2014.

    5. PwC survey shows strong support for gender reporting, Workplace Gender Equality Agency, 2014.
    Fair Agenda
    http://www.fairagenda.org/

  • Chinese Green Revolution Tramples Australian Coal Exports

    Chinese Green Revolution Tramples Australian Coal Exports

    By MINING.com
    Posted on Tue, 13 January 2015 21:17 | 0

    ChineseAirPollution

    The ban is expected to encourage a more efficient use of coal, which has been blamed for China’s severe air pollution troubles. (Creative Commons image by: Francisco Anzola)

    Australian coal exporters are scrambling to clarify the fallout from China’s new coal import rules, which some fear could expose the industry to billions of dollars in lost sales as the Asian nation seeks to slash air pollution.

    According to Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ), the fact that China began this month banning coal with ash content of more than 16% and a sulphur level of more than 1%, has spawned a perceived greater risk of rejection at Chinese customs. This, reports The Australian, is creating uncertainty over whether the buyer or seller should shoulder the additional risk.

    Related: Natural Gas Overwhelmingly Replaces Coal

    “While ash content can be reduced through increased processing, higher costs of production and lower yields threaten the economics of these exports,” NZ head of industry economics and research Mark Pervan was quoted as saying:

    With as much as 70% of Chinese coal capacity loss-making at current prices, Pervan added the National Development and Reform Committee had forced cuts on imports and domestic production.

    “The success of these policy initiatives could see import and production restrictions continue in 2015,” he said.

    As much as a quarter of all coal shipped through Newcastle goes to China, the world’s biggest coal consumer, up from less than 10% a few years ago. Coal shipped through the port — the largest coal export port in the world — is currently running at about 170 million tons a year.

    Australia exports an estimated 49 million tons of thermal coal a year to China, and a large part of this could be at risk with the ban.

    Related: What If The World Can’t Cut Its Carbon Emissions?

    China’s dependence on coal is well known. Annual consumption exceeded 1 billion short tons per year in 1988 and has exploded since then, to about 4 billion tons last year. This means the Asian giant gets about 70% of its energy from the fossil fuel, a number the government hopes to reduce to 65% by 2017.

    In the past three years Australia’s coal industry has experienced challenging times with prices for thermal coal, which is consumed by power stations to generate electricity, dropping over 40%. More than 30,000 mining jobs were lost last year in Australia amid a slump in the price of key commodities like coal and iron ore.

    AustralianThermalCoalPrice

    Sources: IndexMundi | World Bank.

    By Cecilia Jamasmie

    Source – http://www.mining.com/

    More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:

    Join the discussion

    Special Reports

    8 Mega Trends

    8 Mega Trends

    By Oil & Energy Insider Analysts

    8 OIL & GAS INDUSTRY MEGA-TRENDS AND HOW TO PROFIT FROM THEM
    Here’s what our 400 global energy assets are telling us to be prepared for right now…

    LNG Technology

    LNG Technology

    By Oil & Energy Insider Analysts

    THE “FLOATING REFINERY” STOCK THAT COULD FUND YOUR RETIREMENT
    This company’s incredible tanker technology could eliminate many of the world’s offshore pipelines…

    Subsea Production

    Subsea Production

    By Oil & Energy Insider Analysts

    THE END OF OFFSHORE DRILLING?
    This disruptive market will grow 84% to 270% over the next five years: Discover the 6 equipment suppliers set to profit.

    Be the first to comment on this article.