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  • Women’s safety gear important OHS consideration

    WorkIT women's workwear
    Until now, poorly fitted safety gear has endangered women in the workplace

    There are dangers to women in the workplace who do not have properly fitted work wear.

    The US Department of Labor (USDoL) reports that “Poor fit compromises the protection offered by the garment or equipment. The lack of appropriate PPC and PPE can cause serious safety and health risks for women, and men of smaller sizes, who rely on protective clothing and equipment to help them keep safe. Having inadequate or ill-fitting clothing, boots, gloves, or safety equipment presents a safety hazard for any worker.”

    Until recently, the scarcity of appropriate protective clothing was blamed on the relatively small numbers of women in workplaces requiring protective clothing.

    That is no longer an excuse. USDoL points out that “Personal protective equipment intended for use by women workers should be based upon female anthropometric (body measurement) data.”

    The good news is that an increased focus on OH&S generally, and better design means there are now specific ranges of protective clothing designed for women.

     

  • Domestic violence bystander – The Residents

    ‘Cripes.  Why’s that young fella gotta train so late?’ Edgar complained as he buried his grey head under the pillow.

    ‘His body clock’s stuffed from all that boxing,’ said Susan.  She pulled up the doona and snuggled into him.  Dull thumps punctuated Beethoven’s Ninth from the radio as they drifted off to sleep.

    The next morning Susan picked some lemons.  There was only one fruiting tree in the backyard of their block of flats perched on the edge of Highgate Hill but this year it had produced fruit enough for all the residents.

    Susan knocked three times on the door of number six.  Chantelle answered it, holding her grizzling daughter Nicky in her arms.  The collar of Chantelle’s dressing gown was jerked up around her neck.

    ‘Oh, it’s you Mrs Barnes.’

    ‘Please, call me Susan.  How are we this morning?’

    ‘So so.  Nicky’s been up all night.’  Chantelle winced as she moved Nicky to another spot on her hip.

    ‘Goodness gracious me.  What’s happened to her jaw?’

    ‘She fell over.’

    ‘But…’.  Chantelle’s gaze shot out like a dart from a nerf gun.  ‘Would you like some lemons?’

    ‘Oh no, Jason can’t stand them.  But thank you.’

    ‘Are you sure?’

    ‘Yes, quite sure.’  Nicky’s grizzling crescendoed like a banshee.  Chantelle wore only thongs and the chilly westerly stabbed between her toes.  ‘If you’ll excuse us, Mrs Barnes…’.

     *

    At dusk that night, Edgar rolled the wheelie bin to the kerb.  He waved as his neighbour Jason pulled into the garage.  Jason didn’t wave back.

     *

    Early the next morning Edgar filled the kettle and switched it on.  From number six came the sound of dull thumps.  Again.  Goose bumps ran up Edgar’s spine.

     *

    At breakfast, Edgar could only manage one piece of toast.  ‘Susan, we have a problem.’

    ‘What?’  Edgar hadn’t used this tone since their son had been busted using pot at the school formal.

    ‘Last night I saw Jason in the garage.  He hasn’t got a punching bag.’

    ‘Well, what’s he punching then?’  Susan poured herself a second cup of tea.

    ‘Oh no’.  Susan stood up and began to pace back and forth across the linoleum floor.  ‘We’ve got to do something.’  Edgar gently squeezed Susan’s hand.

    ‘We’ll have them over for a cup of tea.  You talk with her and I’ll have a yarn with him.’

    ‘That child is only two years old!’

    ‘And it’s no way to treat a woman.  If he does it one more time we’ll call the cops.’

    © Marissa Ker 2014

     

  • Domestic violence bystander – What I did then

    I sat on the small verandah of the Stones Corner library, next to the box for returning books.  I looked out over a large courtyard fringed with trees.

    I started on my Spanish homework.  A young couple were sitting on a park bench opposite me.  She was pregnant and things were heated between them.  The man spoke tersely to her, his face like a schoolyard bully.  She stared off into the distance, her gaze steely, fixed and defiant.

    I finished my Spanish homework.  They were still there.  This time they seemed to be engaging in real dialogue and I felt my heart relax.

    I checked my emails.  Uh-oh.  She was sitting in the same spot facing forward.  He had turned around 90 degrees on the bench to look at her in profile.  He was sneering and speaking unkindly to her.  I didn’t understand a word but facial expressions are universal.

    I stepped inside the library and approached one of the librarians, an older woman.  In a confidential tone, I asked ‘Can I ask you something as a woman?’  She gave me her attention.  ‘See that couple out there? They’re arguing.  She’s pregnant.  I feel bad in my conscience.’  The librarian looked over at them.  ‘I see.  Have they been at it for long?’

    ‘At least half an hour.  What shall we do? Have you got any flyers for a domestic violence support service?’

    ‘Why don’t you just go and sit there. I’ll watch them from here. ’

    So I made a big show of planting my bum on the seat, plonking down my bag and glancing in their direction.  I stayed for as long as I could before I met my friends at the café up the road.

    © Marissa Ker 2014

  • Sea water solar distiller

    Salt water well/Fresh water bucket (+2, -4)
    Saltwater + Desert (+2, -4)
    Saltwater main
    Saltwater Pipeline (+4, -1)
    Sea water solar distiller (+8)
    Seafood Pipeline (+8, -3)
    Supersimple reverse osmosis (+21, -4)(+21, -4)
    Water Vapor Pipeline (+10, -4)
    Whale matrix (+1, -7)(+1, -7)
    public:water: salt

    Sea water solar distiller

    Simple sea (or sewer lake) based water distillation

    (+8)
    (+8)
    [vote for,
    against]

     

    I propose a small “closed curcuit” unit, described below, which could be connected in a continuous pipe, to distill sea water in large quantities at low cost.Each unit, the size of a small row-boat, would be devided into two sections: the bioling section and the saved water section. A fresnel lens (or perhaps water filled bags to achieve the same) heat the dark-tinted water section, which is thermaly insulated from the rest of the sea water. The boiling steam is then passed into the clean “water storage”, where it condenses. The steam pipe is partially submerged in the sea, and so is the water storage, itself a long and thick pipe with an air snorkel, so that water can be extracted. The water storage has fins to let off the heat into the sea water. When water is being extracted from storage, the steam pipe automatically closes via a pneumatic-mechano contraption.

    This distilled water could be pumped up to mountains and entered into the underground water system, turning to drink water, in over-pumped areas. Or it could be used for irrigation and for showering (for drinking you need minerals in the water otherwise you get cretin [edit: corrected from Creton] disease, brain dammage or skin boils – as what happened to residents of the Jewish portion of Jerusalem during the 1947 siege, who drank only boiled cistern water).

    I got this halfdea after watching the funny GreenPowerScience.com movie on how simple and fast it is for the Ruhals to distill water from a mud-pond, using a large Fresnel lens to boil water in a bottle with solar energy, and just have it go into another bottle and condense.

    pashute, Jun 01 200
  • Why Waburton wants to set solar industry back a decade Giles Parkinson

    overseas is easywww.escapologist.com.au – Three English speaking countries where you can live well for less

    Daily update: Why Warburton wants to set solar industry back a decade

    Inbox
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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail21.atl111.rsgsv.net

    3:42 PM (7 minutes ago)

    to me
    Why Waburton wants to set solar industry back a decade; Wind turbines in Aus may stop spinning; Sectors respond to RET review; Hunt says slashing RET will not break election promise; Napthine government accused of 25 attacks on clean energy; Samoa inaugurates 1st wind farm as Pacific turns away from diesel; Abbott environmental agenda harsher than he promised; US city passes law making solar ‘default’ generation resource.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    The Warburton review may cause a brief boom in rooftop solar, but it will kill the prospect of large scale solar farms, and set the industry back a decade in Australia – the country that should be leading the world in solar energy.
    Wind farms in Australia may have to close under proposals put forward by RET Review panel, which is accused of ignoring financing issues.
    Doctors, solar and wind tower manufacturers, developers and voluntary markets associations warns of devastating impacts of RET review.
    Hunt says slashing renewables target to 25,000GWh would not break an election promise – because 41,000GWh was nothing but a “flaw in system”.
    Report highlights what it describes as the Victorian Coalition Government’s “systematic campaign” against renewable energy and climate policies.
    The Pacific island country of Samoa has announced its first wind farm, developed by an Abu Dhabi renewable energy company, Masdar.
    Environmental protection is being given a lower priority than it has by any federal government since the first environmental legislation was introduced some 40 years ago.
    Austin Energy’s recent 5-cent solar contract was a big deal. Now it makes solar “default” generation to hedge against rising fossil fuel costs.
  • Antarctic Riddle: How Much Will the South Pole Melt?

    Antarctic Riddle: How Much Will the South Pole Melt?

    • Published: August 25th, 2014
     1553  591  866  3

    One of the biggest question marks surrounding the fate of the planet’s coastlines is dangling from its underbelly.

    The melting of the Antarctic ice sheet has long been a relatively minor factor in the steady ascent of high-water marks, responsible for about an eighth of the 3 millimeters of annual sea-level rise. But when it comes to climate change, Antarctica is the elephantine ice sculpture in the boiler room. The ice sheet is so massive that its decline is, according to the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment, “the largest potential source” of future sea level rise. Accurately forecasting how much of it will be unleashed as seawater, and when that will happen, could help coastal communities plan for surging flood risks.

    Credit: Peter Doran/National Science Foundation

    A study published Aug. 14 in Earth System Dynamics — one that took more than 2 years and 50,000 computer simulations to complete, combining information from 26 atmospheric, oceanic, and ice sheet models from four polar regions — has helped scientists hone their forecasts for this century’s Antarctic thaw. And the results of the global research effort were more sobering than the findings of most of the more limited studies that came before it.

    The world’s seas could rise anywhere from less than half an inch up to more than a foot by the end of this century solely because of the effects of balmier waters fanning Antarctica’s underside, causing ice to melt, icebergs to calve, and ice and snowpack to slough into the sea, the scientists calculated. The upper limit of that projection is more than double earlier estimates, with scientists attributing the change to advances in models.

    “The largest uncertainty that we have with regards to Antarctica is, how much of the warming reaches the continent through the ocean, and how much melting does it cause?” said Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research’s Anders Levermann, who led the study. Levermann was also a lead author of the sea level rise chapter in the most recent IPCC assessment.

    Those figures do not include additional sea level rise caused by melting glaciers, by the melting of the Greenland ice sheet, by the expansion of warming water, or from the effects of groundwater pumping, which shifts water from aquifers to the seas. If the most recent IPCC projections for those sources of rising seas were combined with the new Antarctic figures, the U.N. group’s upper limit for overall sea level rise by century’s end would increase to 119 cm, or nearly 4 feet. That’s up by more than a fifth compared with the figure included in last year’s assessment.

    RELATED Melt of Key Antarctic Glaciers ‘Unstoppable,’ Studies Find
    Newfangled ‘Icepod’ Tracks Greenland’s Melting Ice Sheets
    Winds of Change: Why Antarctic Sea Ice Is Growing

    That’s a lot of water. For comparison, seas have risen about 8 inches since the turn of the 20th Century, as temperatures have risen by 1.5°F, due primarily to the burning of fossil fuels. That has increased rates of flooding across coastal U.S. and driven some Pacific Islanders to seek asylum in foreign lands. The hastening pace of sea level rise threatens to reshape the lives of more than a billion coastal dwellers and imperils potentially tens of trillions of dollars worth of infrastructure.

    Of course, upper limits are just that — they represent the highest levels of sea-level rise for which science currently says coastal planning departments should brace. “It’s this upper limit that’s important for coastal planners,” said Levermann.

    But rising upper limits come with rising median projections, which, by definition, have a 50 percent likelihood of being surpassed. Median projections produced through the new study suggest a rise of several inches is likely due to Antarctic melt alone.

    The vast range of lower and upper limits for sea level rise caused by Antarctic ice-sheet melting that were included in the new paper — more than a foot — were partly the result of uncertainty over how much greenhouse gas pollution the world will churn out during the coming decades. The upper limit assumes that annual greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase. But it also reflects the vast uncertainty in ice sheet and other models that were combined to simulate Antarctic melting.

    Credit: wikipedia

    “A reason for our higher SLR [sea level rise], and for the range in SLR, is that the present study also includes the uncertainty in the climate and ocean forcing driving the ice sheet models of Antarctica,” said Sophie Nowicki, a NASA Goddard scientist who coauthored the new paper. “In other words, more potential climatic futures are considered.”

    The melting of the other great ice sheet, which blankets Greenland, is driven largely by rising air temperatures. Those processes can be difficult to understand. But the processes that melt the Antarctic ice sheet are even more convoluted. Antarctica is further from the equator than is Greenland, which keeps the air frigid even in summer, shielding most surface ice from melting. Unlike in Greenland, much of the Antarctic ice sheet is submerged below sea level, causing it to melt from beneath and crumple into the sea as oceans absorb heat that’s accumulating the atmosphere.

    Antarctica’s ice sheet is more than a mile deep on average, holding enough water to raise sea levels 200 feet should it all melt. That means the southern ice sheet has more potential to flood the world than does its boreal counterpart — although the Antarctic melt is taking longer to kick into gear.

    The melting of the two ice sheets was responsible for a third of sea level rise from 2002 to 2011, according to numbers in the recent IPCC report. The Antarctic ice-sheet melt caused about 40 percent of that; Greenland’s ice-sheet caused 60 percent. The melting of the ice sheets are playing growing roles in coastal floods.

    It seems that the more we learn about the forces that cause ice sheets to melt, the more vulnerable we realize they are to wither. The IPCC cited “improved modeling” when it raised its forecasts for sea level rise in its recent report, compared with the projections it published in 2007.

    Natalya Gomez, a post-doctoral fellow at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Science at New York University who researches ice sheet and sea level interactions, says the numbers published in the new paper are “not the final answer.” Gomez says they will continue to be refined in the coming years as ice-sheet models and other models continue to improve. She warns that the sea level rise projections could increase even further as models evolve.

    The beauty of the new work, says Gomez, who was not involved in the research, lies in the fact that the scientists behind it have developed a tool that will propel a nascent and challenging field.

    “What they’re assessing — the range of possible responses of the Antarctic ice sheet to future warming — is really challenging,” Gomez said.

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    Soaring Temps in West Antarctica May Fuel Sea Level Rise