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  • Basin residents rally for showdown

    Basin residents rally for showdown

    0

    RIVERINA towns will close down today in protest against drastic cuts to water allocation in the Murray Darling Basin.

    In the final showdown, thousands of Basin residents will rally in the streets of Griffith hoping their defiant message will be heard by State and Federal Water Ministers who will meet in Canberra on Friday to discuss the issue.

    The Murray Darling Basin Authority – an independent body charged with restoring balance in the basin – has proposed slashing 2750 gigalitres from irrigators’ water allotments to be returned to the environment.

    Join Samantha Townsend’s live Regional Round-up blog at 1pm today on our Facebook page

    But residents believe the cuts will cripple those living in the basin, a region that produces 40 per cent of the nation’s food.

    NSW Irrigators Council CEO Andrew Gregson said the rally would tell politicians that people, regional economics and vibrant communities matter.

    “Tens of thousands of people are inextricably tied to the basin, their jobs, their communities, their businesses and their way of life depend on it,” Mr Gregson said.

    “Some call those voices vested interests, we call them people.”

    Mr Gregson said the NSW government had been a strong supporter of regional towns and people in this debate.

    He hoped the crowd would show NSW Water Minister Katrina Hodgkinson, who plans to attend the rally, that they were worth standing up for.

    Mr Gregson said if there was an agreement between the Ministers at the meeting this Friday then a decision should be finalised despite a final response from State Water Minister due on July 5.

    There are reports the rally is going to be bigger than two previous protests in the town in which the community held a mock funeral, angry irrigators burned the guide and one farmer even threw a fake horses head at then-boss of the Authority, borrowing from the film The Godfather.

  • Devil Ark update…

    Extinction is not an option

    Inbox
    x

    Monique Ryan info@devilark.com.au via icontact.com
    2:53 PM (7 hours ago)

    to me

    Devilish Encounters

    Extinction is not an option!

    The latest figures from Tasmania report that around 90% of Tasmanian devils are extinct in the wild, and some scientists are predicting that our Australian icon will be extinct within ten years.

     

    But here at Devil Ark, we say that EXTINCTION IS NOT AN OPTION. We are working hard to breed genetically diverse Tasmanian devils in a naturalistic environment that maintain their natural behaviour. Devil Ark enclosures are large (at least two hectares) and naturalistic with multiple dens. Each enclosure houses small groups of devils that socialise as they would in the wild. It is very different to a zoo where small enclosures mean loss of natural behaviour.

     

    Minimising the devils’ exposure to humans (especially handling) maintains their independence and wild traits.

     

    This is important for devils that will eventually be returned to the Tasmanian bush.

    Our approach is extremely devil-friendly and cost effective too. It costs less than $2,000 a year to raise a devil at Devil Ark; compare this with the $7,000+ that some zoos are saying it costs.

    Watch our tv advertisement and share it with your family and friends.

     

     

    Devil Ark update…

    It’s now more eighteen months since the first Tasmanian devils were released at Devil Ark – and the second breeding season has been bearing fruits at the hideaway in the picturesque Barrington Tops.

     

    Watch the update on one of Australia’s most important conservation projects...

     

    Health checks are revealing a very special find

     

    All devils at Devil Ark receive quarterly health checks, but the winter health check is our favourite! This is the opportunity for our keepers to have a ‘sneak peak’ into the pouches of the female devils to see how many young they have.

     

    They still have about half the females to check, but already the count is up to 20! We are looking forward to another very successful breeding season.

    Keepers Andrew and Adrian very carefully checking the pouch of a female devil and were delighted to see three joeys half the size of a man’s thumb.

     

    Winter wonderland

     

    Winter has well and truly arrived at Devil Ark, with average day-time temperature reaching 7 degrees and night temperatures now around -2. Barrington Tops was selected as the location of Devil Ark because the high altitude and wet and snowy conditions resemble that of their native homeland.

     

    Since our long term goal is to breed and maintain a healthy population of devils whose descendants will eventually repopulate the Tasmanian eco system; not only do we need devils with wild behaviour, but also animals that can cope with the harsh, cold weather conditions.

     

    Why your donations
    are critical

     

    It might seem like we keep asking for your help to build free-range enclosures at Devil Ark, and that is because we must!

     

    Without the support of a significant benefactor and therefore the ability to build free range enclosures that will provide capacity for many years, we are currently building on an as-needs basis.

     

    With the dramatic decline of devils in the wild, it is critical to have capacity for disease-free stock from areas decimated by disease. We must act urgently to secure genetically important stock before they are all lost to DFTD.

     

    It costs $72 to build a metre of Devil Ark free range enclosure (we need to build 6500m).

     

    Please help us; your donation

    will build the future for our disappearing devil.

     

    Raising awareness of the plight of the devil

     

    Please tell your family and friends about the risk we face of losing the Tasmanian devil.

     

    Education is critical to saving the species.

     

     

     

    early morning fog at the Ark

     

    Devil Ark

    Tel 1300 553 565 PO Box 737 Gosford NSW 2250

    www.devilark.com.au info@devilark.com.au

     

    This message was sent to nevilleg729@gmail.com from:

    Australian Reptile Park | Tomalla | Barrington Tops , NSW 2337, Australia

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  • Forget peak oil, we may have reached ‘peak GDP’

    Forget peak oil, we may have reached ‘peak GDP’
    PublicServiceEurope.com
    We will find out in this century whether we are living in the era of peak everything: peak food, peak water, peak biodiversity, peak energy, peak population and
    See all stories on this topic »

  • We have missed the chance of preventing two degrees of global warming – Forever.

    We have missed the chance of preventing two degrees of global warming – Forever.

    It is, perhaps, the greatest failure of collective leadership since the first world war. The Earth’s living systems are collapsing, and the leaders of some of the most powerful nations – the US, the UK, Germany, Russia – could not even be bothered to turn up and discuss it. Those who did attend the Earth summit last week solemnly agreed to keep stoking the destructive fires: sixteen times in their text they pledged to pursue “sustained growth”, the primary cause of the biosphere’s losses(1).

    This is by George Monbiot of The Guardian.

    The efforts of governments are concentrated not on defending the living Earth from destruction, but on defending the machine that is destroying it. Whenever consumer capitalism becomes snarled up by its own contradictions, governments scramble to mend the machine, to ensure – though it consumes the conditions that sustain our lives – that it runs faster than ever before.

    The thought that it might be the wrong machine, pursuing the wrong task, cannot even be voiced in mainstream politics. The machine greatly enriches the economic elite, while insulating the political elite from the mass movements it might otherwise confront. We have our bread; now we are wandering, in spellbound reverie, among the circuses.

    We have used our unprecedented freedoms, secured at such cost by our forebears, not to agitate for justice, for redistribution, for the defence of our common interests, but to pursue the dopamine hits triggered by the purchase of products we do not need. The world’s most inventive minds are deployed not to improve the lot of humankind but to devise ever more effective means of stimulation, to counteract the diminishing satisfactions of consumption. The mutual dependencies of consumer capitalism ensure that we all unwittingly conspire in the trashing of what may be the only living planet. The failure at Rio de Janeiro belongs to us all.

    It marks, more or less, the end of the multilateral effort to protect the biosphere. The only successful global instrument – the Montreal Protocol on substances that deplete the ozone layer – was agreed and implemented years before the first Earth Summit in 1992(2). It was one of the last fruits of a different political era, in which intervention in the market for the sake of the greater good was not considered anathema, even by the Thatcher and Reagan governments. Everything of value discussed since then has led to weak, unenforceable agreements, or to no agreements at all.

    This is not to suggest that the global system and its increasingly pointless annual meetings will disappear or even change. The governments which allowed the Earth Summit and all such meetings to fail evince no sense of responsibility for this outcome, and appear untroubled by the thought that if a system hasn’t worked for 20 years there’s something wrong with the system. They walk away, aware that there are no political penalties; that the media is as absorbed in consumerist trivia as the rest of us; that, when future generations have to struggle with the mess they have left behind, their contribution will have been forgotton. (And then they lecture the rest of us on responsibility).

    Nor is it to suggest that multilateralism should be abandoned. Agreements on biodiversity, the oceans and the trade in endangered species may achieve some marginal mitigation of the full-spectrum assault on the biosphere that the consumption machine has unleashed. But that’s about it.

    The action – if action there is – will mostly be elsewhere. Those governments which retain an interest in planet Earth will have to work alone, or in agreement with likeminded nations. There will be no means of restraining free riders, no means of persuading voters that their actions will be matched by those of other countries.

    That we have missed the chance of preventing two degrees of global warming now seems obvious. That most of the other planetary boundaries will be crossed, equally so. So what do we do now?

    Some people will respond by giving up, or at least withdrawing from political action. Why, they will ask, should we bother, if the inevitable destination is the loss of so much of what we hold dear: the forests, the brooks, the wetlands, the coral reefs, the sea ice, the glaciers, the birdsong and the night chorus, the soft and steady climate which has treated us kindly for so long? It seems to me that there are at least three reasons.

    The first is to draw out the losses over as long a period as possible, in order to allow our children and grandchildren to experience something of the wonder and delight in the natural world and of the peaceful, unharried lives with which we have been blessed. Is that not a worthy aim, even if there were no other?

    The second is to preserve what we can in the hope that conditions might change. I do not believe that the planet-eating machine, maintained by an army of mechanics, oiled by constant injections of public money, will collapse before the living systems on which it feeds. But I might be wrong. Would it not be a terrible waste to allow the tiger, the rhinoceros, the bluefin tuna, the queen’s executioner beetle and the scabious cuckoo bee, the hotlips fungus and the fountain anenome(3) to disappear without a fight if this period of intense exploitation turns out to be a brief one?

    The third is that, while we may possess no influence over decisions made elsewhere, there is plenty that can be done within our own borders. Rewilding – the mass restoration of ecosystems – offers the best hope we have of creating refuges for the natural world, which is why I’ve decided to spend much of the next few years promoting it here and abroad.

    Giving up on global agreements or, more accurately, on the prospect that they will substantially alter our relationship with the natural world, is almost a relief. It means walking away from decades of anger and frustration. It means turning away from a place in which we have no agency to one in which we have, at least, a chance of being heard. But it also invokes a great sadness, as it means giving up on so much else.

    Was it too much to have asked of the world’s governments, which performed such miracles in developing stealth bombers and drone warfare, global markets and trillion dollar bail-outs, that they might spend a tenth of the energy and resources they devoted to these projects on defending our living planet? It seems, sadly, that it was.

    www.monbiot.com

    References:

    1. http://www.slideshare.net/uncsd2012/the-future-we-want-rio20-outcome-document

    2. http://ozone.unep.org/pdfs/Montreal-Protocol2000.pdf

    3. http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/series/name-a-species

  • Geoflow: Space station experiments shed light on conditions deep inside Earth

    Geoflow: Space station experiments shed light on conditions deep inside Earth

    Posted: 25 Jun 2012 04:25 PM PDT

    ESA astronaut André Kuipers is running experiments on the International Space Station that are shedding light on conditions deep inside Earth. Orbiting some 400 km above us, Geoflow is offering insights into the inner workings of our planet.

  • Greenland ice may exaggerate magnitude of 13,000-year-old deep freeze

    ScienceDaily: Oceanography News


    Greenland ice may exaggerate magnitude of 13,000-year-old deep freeze

    Posted: 25 Jun 2012 01:29 PM PDT

    Ice samples pulled from nearly a mile below the surface of Greenland glaciers have long served as a historical thermometer, adding temperature data to studies of the local conditions up to the Northern Hemisphere’s climate. But the method — comparing the ratio of oxygen isotopes buried as snow fell over millennia — may not be such a straightforward indicator of air temperature.