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  • Methane measurements at low level flight: Detection of the greenhouse gas methane in the Arctic

    ScienceDaily: Earth Science News


    Climate change linked to ozone loss: May result in more skin cancer

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 11:22 AM PDT

    Scientists are warning that a newly-discovered connection between climate change and depletion of the ozone layer over the US could allow more damaging ultraviolet (UV) radiation to reach Earth’s surface, leading to increased incidence of skin cancer.

    Students discover methane seep ecosystem

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 10:51 AM PDT

    During a recent oceanographic expedition off San Diego, graduate student researchers discovered convincing evidence of a deep-sea site where methane is likely seeping out of the seafloor, the first such finding off San Diego County.

    Methane measurements at low level flight: Detection of the greenhouse gas methane in the Arctic

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 08:30 AM PDT

    First time measurements of large-scale methane emissions have been taken from the extensive Arctic permafrost landscapes.
    You are subscribed to email updates fromScienceDaily: Earth Science News
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  • Students discover methane seep ecosystem

    ScienceDaily: Oceanography News


    Students discover methane seep ecosystem

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 10:51 AM PDT

    During a recent oceanographic expedition off San Diego, graduate student researchers discovered convincing evidence of a deep-sea site where methane is likely seeping out of the seafloor, the first such finding off San Diego County.

    The fin whale, under more threat in the Mediterranean than thought

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 07:17 AM PDT

    Until now it was thought that fin whales in the Strait of Gibraltar and the Alboran Sea made up part of the distribution of this species of whale in the Mediterranean. However, scientists have just discovered that their population has been overestimated by including specimens from the Atlantic that visit at certain times the western Mediterranean, where the noise generated by human activity affects their survival.
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  • How extreme weather contributes to greenhouse gas emissions

    ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News


    Climate change linked to ozone loss: May result in more skin cancer

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 11:22 AM PDT

    Scientists are warning that a newly-discovered connection between climate change and depletion of the ozone layer over the US could allow more damaging ultraviolet (UV) radiation to reach Earth’s surface, leading to increased incidence of skin cancer.

    How extreme weather contributes to greenhouse gas emissions

    Posted: 26 Jul 2012 06:45 AM PDT

    While experts debate whether extreme weather conditions such as this summer’s record rainfall in the UK can be explained by climate change, geographers are investigating whether the opposite is true – does extreme weather impact on climate change?
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  • States, Gillard accused of putting politics before disability support scheme

    NO TAX ON NDIS SCHEME . HAVEN’T WE HEARD THIS SOMEWHERE BEFORE?

    States, Gillard accused of putting politics before disability support scheme

    0

    NDIS deal closer amid political pressure

    The PM is stepping up political pressure on the premiers to get a deal to trial the NDIS in NSW and Vic.

    coag

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard says there will not be a new income tax or levy to pay for the national disability insurance scheme. Picture: Show More Source: The Daily Telegraph

    Tony Abbott

    Tony Abbott says an NDIS should be funded by Canberra, not the states. Source: No Source

    < Prev

    1 of 2

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    JULIA Gillard says there will not be a new income tax or levy to pay for the national disability insurance scheme.

    The Prime Minister blasted the idea as a callous distraction by the Liberal states to cover up for their failure to sign up to trials for the long-awaited disability scheme.

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbottalso said he did not support a Medicare-style levy being promoted by Queensland Premier Campbell Newman.

    On a visit to a restaurant in Geelong run by disabled people, Ms Gillard again slammed Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu saying he had raised expectations but was now refusing to spend an extra $40 million over four years to have a trial for 5000 disabled people in the Barwon region.

    The PM accused Mr Baillieu and NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell of “not being sincere”.

    “Why should Premier Baillieu say to the people here that they’re not worth any new investment from him? This is fundamentally a question of values,” the PM said. “He’s being asked for $40 million over four years … that’s all it is.”

    NSW is holding back on $70 million.

    Ms Gillard has offered Victoria $100 million extra and NSW $300 million extra. She had been prepared to give them even more during Wednesday’s meeting in Canberra if they signed up on the day, but they did not.

    The PM said Victoria’s protest that the delay was to get the system right and Canberra had moved the goal posts was “spin, spin and spin from Premier Baillieu”.

    Mr Newman floated the idea of a levy on taxpayers to fund the scheme during a dinner at the Lodge with Prime Minister Julia Gillard and other state leaders.

    Ms Gillard said Mr Newman was “completely insincere”. She said he did not bother putting in a proper bid for a NDIS trial, had not offered one new cent and was making disability cutbacks.

    “We will make the appropriate arrangements out of the Commonwealth’s Budget without a new income tax to fund the national disability insurance scheme,” she said.

    Mr Abbott also distanced himself from that levy.

    “We think that the Productivity Commission has given us a fine blueprint and the Productivity Commission blueprint says it should be funded out of general revenue,” Mr Abbott said.

    “Now, if we had a prudent, frugal government that respected taxpayers money it ought to be be possible to fund this important reform out of general revenue.”

    “The reason why the current government is struggling is because they are addicted to wasteful and unnecessary spending.”

    Ms Gillard called on Mr Abbott to persuade Mr Baillieu and Mr O’Farrell to put the extra money in.

    But the Opposition Leader suggested an Abbott government would fund the whole scheme and not ask the states to put in more money.

    “It has to be led by the national government, it has to be funded by the national government,” he said.

    “Obviously the states have to do their bit but they’re already doing their bit. Disability services already are overwhelmingly funded by the states and I think that should be respected by the Prime Minister.”

    Mr Abbott said he strongly supported the NDIS to give seriously disabled people “the fair go they deserve”.

    He called on Ms Gillard to accept his offer to have a bipartisan parliamentary committee on disability insurance to take the politics out of the issue to “make sure it happens in a methodical, careful, painstaking way which is necessary if we are to get the biggest reform in a generation right”,

    He has refused a similar offer from the PM to have a bipartisan committee on asylum seekers.

    Mr Abbott’s comments come as the states have been warned to stop “chopping and changing” their positions as Ms Gillard faces allegations of rejecting a unanimously supported scheme for fear of a “great big tax” attack.

    NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell says not a single minute of this week’s Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting was devoted to funding the full rollout of the scheme.

    “A trial is a first stage,” Mr O’Farrell told Fairfax Radio. “We have to go beyond that (to) a full rollout across the country.

    “My concern was that on Wednesday of this week not a single minute of the COAG meeting was devoted to the funding of what everyone wants, which is the scheme, not the pilot.”

    – with AAP

  • Save the Arctic – Save the Planet AVAAZ

    An epic struggle for survival is unfolding in the pristine Arctic – but instead of finding a plan to save it, the US is allowing Shell to go in and drill for oil. Click below to urge US Environmental Protection Agency chief Lisa Jackson to stop Shell and save the Arctic!

    Send a message

    The biggest company in the world is days away from drilling for oil in the Arctic, a breeding ground for whales and polar bears. The US Environmental Protection Agency can stop them, but it’s up to us to demand they do and save the Arctic now. 

    Head of the Environmental Protection Agency Lisa Jackson, can right now withdraw Shell’s Arctic permit because the company is unable to meet air pollution controls for their ships, violating the terms of the permit. Environmental activists are raising the alarm, but unless we make it a huge global scandal, Shell will use its muscle and the Arctic will be open for the oil business.

    Lisa Jackson has stood up to the energy industry before, but Shell is a Goliath that won’t be easily knocked back. We are running out of time — let’s make this decision the line in the sand that protects this great wilderness from becoming an oil field. Click below to send Lisa Jackson a message and share this with everyone — let’s flood her with global encouragement to save the Arctic: 


    http://www.avaaz.org/en/save_the_arctic/?bBYMjdb&v=16632

    The Arctic is melting faster than even most scientists predicted. Climate change is driving dangerous temperature rises — just last week, a chunk of a glacier nearly 40 kilometres long broke off Greenland. Some estimates predict that in just 4 years, the arctic will be completely free of ice in the summer months, soaring temperatures even higher and leading to the melting the Greenland ice sheet which would raise sea levels by 6 metres. 
 

    Yet for some this planetary disaster is the 21st century gold rush. Companies and countries who hope to make billions are lining up to frantically grab their share of oil, gas, and minerals. To them the Arctic is not a home to whales and polar bears, it is a new frontier, and it’s one of the reasons why nations like the USA, Canada and Russia have spent years blocking global climate treaties.

    This is a simple decision: the people and planet’s future or increasing Big Oil’s profits with a 40% possibility of a catastrophic oil spill. If Lisa Jackson gives Shell the permit now then Exxon, Chevron and the rest of Big Oil will cover these beautiful icy landscapes with dirty rigs, pumps and pipes. Let’s now urge Lisa Jackson to stop Shell before it’s too late. Click now to send a message and share this with everyone:

    http://www.avaaz.org/en/save_the_arctic/?bBYMjdb&v=16632

    Arctic drilling has already been condemned by the British government, Insurance companies, the US Coast Guard, and in the last week, Greenpeace and others have been taking to the streets. But to stop this madness we all need to join together to target the one person that can stop it. Let’s ensure that the Arctic is saved from the danger of drilling and instead protected as a global treasure.
 

    With hope,
 

    Iain, Alice, Sam, David, Aldine, Diego, Ricken and the rest of the Avaaz team


    More information and sources: 

    Rolling Stone: “Global Warming’s Terrifying New Math”
    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/global-warmings-terrifying-new-math-20120719

    The Guardian: “Arctic wilderness faces pollution threats as oil and gas giants target its riches”
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jul/22/arctic-ice-melting-oil-drilling

    Dutch News: “Shell is ‘world’s biggest company’”
    http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2012/07/shell_heads_global_500_list.php

    New York Times: “Shell Seeks to Weaken Air Rules for Arctic Drilling”
    http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/07/13/shell-seeks-to-weaken-air-rules-for-arctic-drilling/

    LA Times — “What if an oil spill happened at an Arctic well?”
    http://articles.latimes.com/2010/may/06/nation/la-na-oil-arctic-20100506

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  • Caltex closure threat for Brisbane

    THIS IS HAVING A DOMINO EFFECT. WHERE ARE OUR RENEWABLES, ELECTRIC CARS , TRAINS, LIGHT RAIL ETC.

    Caltex closure threat for Brisbane

    Updated: 21:18, Thursday July 26, 2012

    Caltex closure threat for Brisbane

    Caltex Australia has refused to guarantee the long-term future of 660 workers at its Brisbane oil refinery after committing to shutting its Sydney plant.

    A combination of cheap labour costs and newer, larger and more efficient refineries in Asia have left Caltex’s refineries bleeding money.

    Caltex will close its Kurnell refinery in Sydney in the second half of 2014 and convert it into a fuel import terminal, following a year-long review.

    More than 330 employees’ jobs will go, along with an unknown number of its 300 contractors.

    Caltex Australia chief executive Julian Segal said there were no plans for short-term job cuts at Brisbane’s Lytton refinery.

    But nor did he guarantee it for the long term, saying tens of millions of dollars would be spent improving its competitiveness.

    “That goes for any part of the Caltex business, any part of any well-managed business,” he told reporters.

    Some analysts believe Caltex has already decided to close both refineries, with the value of those assets written down earlier this year to $340 million, from $1.8 billion.

    One analyst said Caltex seemed to be staggering the closures to see how the supply chain worked with one refinery.

    “If it is going very well and making more money they will probably have a close look at Lytton and see wether it’s still worthwhile to have that running,” the analyst told AAP.

    When Shell closes a NSW refinery next year, there will be six left in Australia – all with uncertain futures.

    The massive writedown and operating losses of more than $200 million led Caltex to post a full year net loss of $852 million in February.

    It insists the decision to close the Kurnell refinery was necessary to secure Caltex’s future.

    “The refinery has been generating major financial losses in recent years,” Mr Segal said.

    The high $680 million cost of shutting the refinery and converting it has raised eyebrows among analysts, who warned it might rise more.

    Shareholders will wear reduced dividend pay-outs until 2015 before the cost benefits start to flow through.

    Chief financial officer Simon Hepworth flagged issuing hybrid securities to deal with it, with Caltex saying it intended to maintain its BBB+ rating from Standard and Poor’s.

    The costs include redundancy payouts, equipment removal and cleaning up the environment.

    However Caltex sees the release of working capital and cashflow benefits as worth it.

    Mr Segal denied there was pressure to restructure from its 50 per cent shareholder, global energy giant Chevron.

    Spokesmen for the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union and Australian Workers Union accused Caltex of acting duplicitously and not meeting with them first before announcing job losses.

    Mr Segal said he was committed to doing all he could to help the workers and their families “cope with this transition”.

    The announcement has raised concerns about Australia’s energy security.

    Resources Minister Martin Ferguson said that security would not be jeopardised, although some analysts said that view might change when more refineries close.

    Caltex’s shares gained 20 cents to $14.26.