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  • Could a Changing Climate Set Off Volcanoes and Quakes?

    Could a Changing Climate Set Off Volcanoes and Quakes?
    Yale Environment 360
    Well, actually no, says a British geologist Bill McGuire, in a troubling new book, Waking The Giant: How a Changing Climate Triggers Earthquakes, Tsunamis and Volcanoes. There is, McGuire argues, growing evidence to incriminate changing climate in the
    See all stories on this topic »

  • Driverless car registered

    Driverless car registered

    May 8, 2012 – 8:19AM

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    Driverless car road test

    A vision impaired man test drives Google’s autonomous car.

    Video will begin in 1 seconds.

    United States issues first driver’s licence to a car, rather than a driver.

    Drivers in the US state of Nevada could soon be sharing the road with vehicles that don’t need them.

    Department of Motor Vehicles officials say they’ve issued Google the nation’s first licence to test self-driving cars on public streets.

    Nevada officials say that demonstrations on the Las Vegas Strip and in Carson City helped show that the tech company was ready to move the autonomous autos into the next stage of development.

    Self-driving vehicle technology works like auto-pilot to guide a car – in this case a modified Prius – with little or no intervention from a human operator.

    Nevada’s regulations require two people in the test cars at all times.

    A DMV official says the cars will display red plates and an infinity symbol to represent their status as vehicles of the future.

    Google recently allowed a legally blind man to get behind the wheel of a driverless car for a short trip around his suburb.

    AP

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  • Ancient herbivores may give climate clues

    Ancient herbivores may give climate clues

    19:05 AEDT Thu May 3 2012
    4 days 16 hours 28 minutes ago
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    The bones of a 70-kilogram koala-like animal that lived in Australia’s trees around 15 million years ago could hold clues into the impact of future climate change, a scientist says.

    Dr Karen Black, a vertebrate palaeontologist from the University of NSW, has made a career out of studying the extinct diprotodontids – herbivores that roamed Australia up to 24 million years ago.

    The animals ranged from sheep-sized creatures to the monstrous two-tonne Diprotodon optatum – the largest marsupial that ever lived.

    Among them was the 70kg Nimbadon.

    “This one was quite unique because it was actually living in the trees and it is very similar to the modern koala in lots of aspects of its skeleton,” Dr Black told AAP, after presenting research in Canberra on Thursday.

    The preserved remains of the ancient animal have been found in a fossil cave in the Riversleigh World Heritage Area in northwestern Queensland.

    The fossils are remarkable because they they are well-preserved and map the animal’s life cycle from infancy to late adulthood, Dr Black said.

    She is hoping that by studying the Nimbadon’s fossils, as well as other animals’ remains in the cave, scientists could unlock information into the nature and rate of environmental change in Australia’s past.

    “They (the fossils) range in age from 24 million years up to about 40,000 years,” she said.

    “Most of Australia’s modern fauna is represented there.”

    In particular, it provides a window into a critical time in Australia’s climate history – when the country’s rainforests began drying out.

    While other larger diprotodontids were able to survive for longer by moving with the shrinking rainforests, the Nimbadon was “overspecialised”, Dr Black said.

    Dr Black said the fossils could give clues into which modern-day animals might fare like the Nimbadon and need conservation priority.

  • Diageo to end funding of Heartland Institute after climate change outburst

    Diageo to end funding of Heartland Institute after climate change outburst

    Firm has ‘no plans’ to work with thinktank following campaign comparing people concerned about climate to mass murderers

    • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 6 May 2012 17.15 BST
    • Article history
    • Ted Kaczynski

      Ted Kaczynski was shown on a billboard alongside the caption: “I still believe in global warming. Do you?” Photograph: Elaine Thompson/AP

      Diageo, one of the world’s largest drinks companies, has announced it will no longer fund the Heartland Institute, a rightwing US thinktank which briefly ran a billboard campaign this week comparing people concerned about climate change to mass murderers and terrorists such as Osama bin Laden, Charles Manson and Ted Kaczynski.

      On Thursday, a billboard appeared over the Eisenhower Expressway in Illinois showing a picture of Kaczynski, the Unabomber, who in 1996 was convicted of a 17-year mail bombing campaign that killed three people and injured dozens. The caption read: “I still believe in global warming. Do you?” A day later it was withdrawn.

      The London-based drinks giant, which owns brands such as Guinness, Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker and Moët & Chandon, said this year that it was “reviewing any further association with Heartland” following the release online of internal Heartland documents which revealed its corporate donors as well as a plan to promote an alternative climate change curriculum in US schools. Following the widespread outcry triggered by Heartland’s billboards, a Diageo spokeswoman told the Guardian: “Diageo vigorously opposes climate scepticism and our actions are proof of this. Diageo’s only association with the Heartland Institute was limited to a small contribution made two years ago specifically related to an excise tax issue. Diageo has no plans to work with the Heartland Institute in the future.”

      In February, a US scientist, Peter Gleick, admitted obtaining and publishing internal Heartland documents which showed that Diageo had given the thinktank $10,000 (£6,190) in 2010. The documents, one of which Heartland later claimed was a fake, said the thinktank was expecting another $10,000 from Diageo this year.

      On Friday, Heartland, which is trying to promote its annual conference for climate sceptics, to be held in Chicago this month, said it was withdrawing the billboard campaign. However, it refused to apologise, claiming the campaign was an “experiment”. Its website is still hosting the original press release, which includes the claim that the “most prominent advocates of global warming aren’t scientists. They are murderers, tyrants, and madmen.” Microsoft, which has a policy of supplying free software to all non-profit organisations in the US, posted a blog on its website on Saturday distancing itself from Heartland. The thinktank received software from Microsoft worth $59,908 in 2011. The blog said: “Microsoft believes climate change is a serious issue that demands immediate, worldwide attention and we are acting accordingly … The Heartland Institute does not speak for Microsoft on climate change. In fact, the Heartland Institute’s position on climate change is diametrically opposed to Microsoft’s position. And we completely disagree with the group’s inflammatory and distasteful advertising campaign.”

      In March, General Motors, the world’s largest carmaker, said it was ending its funding of Heartland after 20 years owing to the thinktank’s hardline climate scepticism.

  • Credit: Navy/NRL Tropical Cyclone 19S 19S Has Formed Northeast of Timor

    Hurricane Season 2012: Tropical Cyclone 19S (Southern Indian Ocean)
    05.07.12

    Tropical Cyclone 19S › View larger image
    Tropical Cyclone 19S
    Credit: Navy/NRL
    Tropical Cyclone 19S 19S Has Formed Northeast of Timor

    19S has formed northeast of Timor, and is expected to veer southwest, intensifying steadily to about 50 knots. After Thursday, atmospheric conditions will deteriorate, prompting a weakening trend as the storm veers west.

    It should be pointed out that BOM Australia and RSMC Jakarta project a course further north, closer to Timor, with maximum winds of 30 knots.

    Warning 01A from JTWC at 0900 GMT
    Position 6.9S 129.3E
    Location 345 miles NNW of Darwin, Australia
    Maximum sustained winds 35 knots gusting to 45 knots
    Movement 115° (ESE) at 11 knots
    Threatened landmasses Timor
    Maximum significant wave height 10 feet
    Next warning from JTWC at 2100 GMT
    Regional warnings (in Indonesian) from RSMC Jakarta

    Text Credit: http://tropicalcyclones.blogspot.com

  • Weekend work change put on the backburner (BANKS)

    Weekend work change put on the backburner (BANKS)

    Eric Johnston, Chris Zappone

    May 8, 2012

    BANKS have quietly shelved their bid to extend the definition of ordinary working hours to include Saturday afternoons and Sundays, in a sign they have a limited appetite for further workplace reforms while many are shedding jobs.

    Commonwealth Bank become the latest to detail job cuts yesterday. It announced it would axe 100 mortgage-related roles as it deals with the slowdown in demand for loans affecting all banks.

    ANZ, CBA and Westpac applied to Fair Work Australia in March to amend an award covering banks to allow weekend work to be considered part of the ordinary working week. They said it would improve the flexibility of staffing branches and call centres.

    But unions had feared it was part of a broader attempt by banks to abolish penalty rates for weekend work. Banks pay staff time and a half for Saturday afternoons and double time for Sundays.

    Michael Tamvakologos, a partner for the law firm Ashurt Australia, which represent the banks, told Fair Work Australia yesterday the banks ”do not wish to press” the application surrounding the extension of the working hours. A Fair Work Australia directions hearing had been scheduled for tomorrow, but may now be cancelled.

    While the more controversial aspects of the award have been scrapped, banks will still press ahead with changes to annual leave, including asking staff to draw down on excessive leave balances.

    A Westpac spokesman confirmed the application had been withdrawn. He said the award applied to a small proportion of the bank’s staff and there had been no plans to change penalty rates.

    In their initial application, the banks had argued they were ”no different” to most retailers and other service providers such as telecommunications companies or call centre operators where staff working Saturday afternoons and Sundays fall under the definition of ordinary hours.

    The national director of the Finance Sector Union, Wendy Streets, said there was never any justification for the banks to try to change workers’ entitlements.

    ”These banks should completely and utterly rule out any further attack on working hours and weekend penalty rates,” she said.

    An ANZ spokesman said it was not affected by the application because the workplace agreement with ANZ staff allowed for the extension of ordinary hours into weekend work.

    Meanwhile, CBA said yesterday said it would close its mortgages services processing site in Melbourne at the end of the year and shift some processing services to centres interstate.

    The CBA’s chief executive, Ian Narev, said recently his bank had no plans for wholesale job cuts and pledged not to send jobs offshore. A CBA spokesman yesterday reiterated the bank’s pledge not to send jobs overseas.

    While not directly touching on the topic of weekend work, the ANZ chief executive, Mike Smith, said last week labour flexibility was ”important for any economy”.

    ”I think the issue of competitiveness is an important one for Australia. It’s one we’ve really got to look at,” Mr Smith said.

    ”We have to be realistic that we’re part of the global economy and we have to therefore remain competitive.”

    The US finance company GE Money had initially been party to the action to extend working hours, but it withdrew shortly after the application

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/weekend-work-change-put-on-the-backburner-20120507-1y94q.html#ixzz1uEPdav3P