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  • Dr James Hansen’s letter to PM. Rudd and reply 2008

    Letter sent by Dr. James Hansen to PM Rudd and reply in mid 2008. The views expressed in these letters is very enlightening. Click below for both letters.

    Apr. 1: Dear Prime Minister Rudd: A Letter to the Australian Prime Minister, and his June 5 reply

  • ‘Study Coastal Areas Vulnerability to Sea Rise’

    ‘Study Coastal Areas Vulnerability to Sea Rise
    AllAfrica.com
    It is imperative to map the vulnerability of sea level rise on coastal areas, Director of the Climate Change Adaptation Unit of the Federal Ministry of Environment, Dr. Samuel Adejuwon has said. He stated this at the Climate Change and Coastal States
    See all stories on this topic »

    Web 1 new result for SEA LEVEL RISE
    Saddle collapse behind rapid sea level rise – Headlines – Research
    Researchers from the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom have uncovered the mystery behind the rapid sea level rise in the past by using climate and ice
    ec.europa.eu/research/headlines/…/article_12_09_19_en.html

     


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  • Stratosphere targets deep sea to shape climate: North Atlantic ‘Achilles heel’ lets upper atmosphere affect the abyss

    Stratosphere targets deep sea to shape climate: North Atlantic ‘Achilles heel’ lets upper atmosphere affect the abyss

    Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:12 AM PDT

    A new study suggests something amazing: Periodic changes in winds high in the stratosphere influence the seas by striking a vulnerable “Achilles heel” in the North Atlantic and changing mile-deep ocean circulation patterns, which in turn affect Earth’s climate.
    You are subscribed to email updates from ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News
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  • ‘Planetary emergency due to Arctic melt’

    Report: Methane Reaching Dangerous Levels Near Planned Bronx Golf Course
    CBS Local
    NEW YORK(CBSNewYork) — Bronx residents are outraged over the discovery of high levels of methane gas next to Bronx homes near a Ferry Point dump where a golf course is being built for Donald Trump. The course will cost $97-million dollars and as
    See all stories on this topic »

    CBS Local
    Under the Covers
    waste360
    The process of methane oxidation reduces the emissions of methane and other volatile hydrocarbons from the surface of landfills. Quantifying methane oxidation is one of the major uncertainties in estimating national or global methane emissions from
    See all stories on this topic »
    ‘Planetary emergency due to Arctic melt’
    Business Recorder (blog)
    Experts warned on September 19 of a “planetary emergency” due to the unforeseen global consequences of Arctic ice melt, including methane gas released from permafrost regions currently under ice. Columbia University and the environmental activist
    See all stories on this topic »
    Liquefied natural gas: Cold facts about a hot commodity
    Alaska Dispatch
    Methane is chilled to about minus 260 degrees — a temperature that transforms it from a vapor to a liquid, compressing its volume 600 times to make it more economical to store for later use or to ship long distances from countries endowed with natural
    See all stories on this topic »

    Alaska Dispatch
    Groundbreaking set for Gas-to-Energy project [The Mount Airy News, NC]
    Equities.com
    Unless methane is collected and converted to energy, it is released into the air, where it not only smells bad, but contributes to local air pollution and poses a safety hazard, according to Dennis Bledsoe, interim public works director and a key
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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  • Malcom Turnbull Broadband Survey

    Dear Neville.

    ( NB ) I am far from happy with the NBN rollout, fill in

    the survey and we will see what the coalition devises)

    Today I launched a nationwide survey to find out what areas of Australia have the worst broadband – so that we can prioritise those areas for upgrades when we are in Government.

    The survey is available at www.fasterbroadband.com.au

    Many suburbs and towns are inadequately served by existing fixed line and mobile broadband.  The lastest ABS data shows that 473,000 households are still on dial-up and more than a million households can access speeds of no better than 1.5mbps.

    But Labor’s NBN is not the answer.  It reduces competition, will increase the monthly cost of broadband and will take at least a decade to deliver.

    That’s a decade of being left behind in a global economy that is increasingly moving towards online platforms.

    We want every Australian to have faster broadband sooner and more affordably.

    Our commitment is to fast-track upgrades in these areas and roll out the NBN according to need rather than politics.

    You can help us by completing the survey at www.fasterbroadband.com.au.

    Facebook Like Button Twitter Tweet Button

    Yours sincerely,

    Malcolm Turnbull

    This email was sent by Malcolm Turnbull, 287-289 New South head Road, Edgecliff, Australia 2027 to nevilleg729@gmail.com


  • Tory ‘Tea Party tendency’ putting green energy jobs at risk, warns Ed Davey

    Tory ‘Tea Party tendency’ putting green energy jobs at risk, warns Ed Davey

    Liberal Democrat energy secretary fears rightwingers are putting billions of pounds of investment in jeopardy by creating uncertainty about government policy

    Ed Davey Liberal Democrat energy secretary

    Ed Davey fears that the influence of an anti-green faction is sweeping the Tory party. Photograph: Richard Saker For The Observer/Richard Saker

    Tens of billions of pounds of investment in low-carbon, job-creating energy infrastructure projects that are “ready to go” could be lost to Britain because of an anti-green movement that is sweeping through the Tory party, the Liberal Democrat energy secretary warns today.
    In an interview with the Observer, Ed Davey describes a “Tea Party tendency” among Conservative MPs who question climate change and green investment as “perverse”, and says it is creating deep uncertainty for an industry that could do much to help lift the country out of the economic doldrums.
    Davey is careful not to take aim at George Osborne, who is increasingly sceptical about the green agenda, but makes it clear that the “noise” created by some of the chancellor’s “friends” on the anti-green Tory right risks putting off investors for good. “Noises off at the margins are undermining investors’ confidence and that is undermining green growth, and that is undermining the central purpose of the government, which is deficit reduction,” Davey says.
    He says he has confidence in Osborne to continue backing the green agenda, even if some of those around him are urging him to take a different course: “Of course some of these people are his [Osborne’s] friends – some of these people on the margins – but he is going to be judged by growth. The Conservative party is going to be judged by growth. The Liberal Democrats are going to be judged by growth.”
    Over recent months the Tory party, including David Cameron and Osborne, has appeared to dilute its enthusiasm for green policies that defined its supposed “modernisation” drive in the runup to the 2010 general election. Osborne is said to have formed the view that green policies such as investment in windfarms and solar power are too costly at a time of recession. He is understood to have been swayed by arguments put forward by the former Tory chancellor Lord Lawson, a climate change sceptic.
    Davey says, however, that there are huge opportunities for the British economy from investment in low-carbon energy infrastructure projects, including wind and solar energy, carbon capture storage and new nuclear power, all of which make up a large part of projected spending of £118bn in the sector over the next decade. Last year alone £12.7bn was invested in this country by the renewable energy industry, creating 20,000 jobs.
    Davey says he fears these opportunities will be lost if the pre-election consensus on climate change and green policies continues to be questioned. “If there is not seen to be that consensus investors are going to balk. When you hear all that noise on the right of politics that worries investors. They think, ‘Well if I am going to put all this money in – it is a 30-year investment – I need to know that if the government changes we are not going to have some rightwing Tea Party tendency taking over.’ “
    Last week the head of the Swedish firm Vattenfall, which opened its third British offshore windfarm on Wednesday, said the UK would fail to tempt wind turbine manufacturers to set up in the country because of the uncertainties about future government policy. “If you look at the UK, not one supplier has established itself yet because of uncertainty in the future,” said Oystein Loseth.
    Describing the arguments of the Tory right as perverse, Davey said he could not believe so many Conservatives failed to see the economic benefits of investment in green infrastructure, much of which would be from the private sector and so off the government’s books. “Energy infrastructure is going to drive growth and what is even more significant is that a lot of the energy projects are shovel-ready – they are ready go tomorrow.”
    He went on: “We have to win this argument for the future: it is almost like we have to re-win it. I am confident that if I was the chancellor I would want growth.”
    As the Lib Dem conference opened in Brighton, Tory hostility to the green agenda was top of the agenda. Among those taking on Osborne will be his deputy Danny Alexander, chief secretary to the Treasury, who has proposed a motion condemning “the refusal of the Conservatives to acknowledge that investing in carbon-reducing technologies has the potential to make an important contribution to long-term growth”.
    Davey also made it clear that he was in favour of introducing a legal goal to decarbonise the power sector by 2030 – something also opposed by Osborne – although he said he believed this could be done through secondary legislation and with less stringent conditions than were being proposed by many of the green groups.
    He described the former Tory energy minister Charles Hendry, who was enthusiastic about renewable energy but sacked in the recent reshuffle, as a “brilliant minister” and said he had no idea why he had been dismissed from the post. “I genuinely don’t know [why he was sacked] because I have not had a conversation with the prime minister. I do know that Charles Hendry was a brilliant minister,” said Davey.
    While Osborne is known to be enthusiastic about a new “dash for gas” – which he sees as crucial to the country’s future energy needs – Davey was sceptical about over-reliance on gas. In particular he questioned whether exploration of shale gas in the UK would change the need for a balanced energy policy. “As far as the British shale gas story is concerned I don’t think it is a game changer at all, as we would still be dependent on imports.”