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  • Clash of ambitions” 25.000 homes or a new Sydney airport

    Clash of ambitions: 25,000 homes or a new Sydney airport

    Matthew Moore

    April 13, 2012

    Second airport ... a report commissioned by the federal Transport Minister, Anthony Albanese, identified Wilton as a preferred location.

    Second airport … a report commissioned by the federal Transport Minister, Anthony Albanese, identified Wilton as a preferred location.

    MORE than 25,000 housing blocks are being considered for the Wilton area, potentially torpedoing it as the location for a second Sydney airport and ratcheting up tension between the state and federal governments.

    Confirmation of state government plans for rezoning 2000 hectares for housing came a day after the Herald revealed Canberra had begun the process of establishing a second airport south-west of Sydney.

    The Premier, Barry O’Farrell, opposes a second airport in Sydney, preferring a second facility in Canberra with a high-speed rail link to Sydney.

    A report commissioned by the federal Transport Minister, Anthony Albanese, identified Wilton as a preferred location and the federal Transport Department has written to Sydney Airport Corporation asking for talks to initiate the process of approval for a second airport.

    In and around the Wilton site the federal government has proposed are five sites the state is considering for housing.

    The deputy general manager of Wollondilly Shire Council, which includes Wilton, Luke Johnson, said the areas would be adversely affected by an airport although the precise impact would be known only when flight paths were revealed.

    ”In general terms, there’s proposals for housing where the airport is proposed,” he said.

    ”The ones we are talking about are for 6000 sites in west Wilton, 10,000 in total in Wilton, and 10,000 in the area between Appin and Wilton, so the bulk of the dwellings would be in that area.”

    The NSW Planning Minister, Brad Hazzard, said the nine Wollondilly sites were on a list of 31 developer-nominated parcels a departmental group was considering for rezoning.

    The group is seeking sites for quick rezoning and development to stimulate the housing industry.

    Mr Hazzard said he hoped to put recommendations to cabinet by June so the land could be rezoned and development begin.

    New housing around Badgerys Creek caused both political parties to abandon that site but Mr Hazzard refused to say whether rezoning so much land at Wilton would have the same effect. ”I am not going to comment in individual sites,” he said.

    Late last year 43 developers responded to a government invitation to nominate sites for new housing developments. Mr Hazzard said 12 of those had been eliminated because they did not ”cut the mustard”.

    Major sites near a possible Wilton airport include two owned by Walker Corp, one at Appin and one at Wilton south, one owned by Lend Lease at Bingara Gorge and another at south Appin owned by the Mir Group.

    While Wollondilly Council has supported some of the proposed rezonings, it is concerned about who will provide the infrastructure for such a rapid expansion, which the council first heard about in January.

    ”The proposals put to us … are contemplating housing estates where they have a range of lot sizes from 450 to 600 square metres,” Mr Johnson said. ”We did a calculation if they all went forward and we came up with a figure of 25,000 houses. That’s 60 or 75 thousand people.”

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/travel/travel-news/clash-of-ambitions-25000-homes-or-a-new-sydney-airport-20120412-1wwoc.html#ixzz1ru8BqUI1

  • Wilton gets the willies over second airport study

    Wilton gets the willies over second airport study

    0
    Wilton

    Not exactly bustling … the township of Wilton / Pic: Jeff Herbert Source: The Daily Telegraph

    RESIDENTS of towns near the site of a potential second Sydney airport at Wilton are furious after the federal government yesterday moved closer to conducting a specific study of the area southwest of Campbelltown.

    As federal Transport Minister Anthony Albanese declared the Wilton option needed to be “further examined”, councils in the area said an airport would destroy economic growth, risk environmental pollution of nearby dams and would have little public transport options.

    While a possible flight path has not yet been considered, areas such as Wollongong, Picton, Douglas Park, Appin and Pheasants Nest may be in the firing line of aircraft noise.

    The recent airport taskforce review found Wilton was the second option after Badgerys Creek but was the best in terms of noise pollution, producing 19,800 noise events annually compared to 200,700 at Badgerys Creek.

    Macarthur Regional Organisation of Councils president Benn Banasik yesterday said a new airport at Wilton would be too far from Sydney and risked impacting 9000 homes.

    “There is a lot of green space at the moment but there is a lot of potential for growth and that would be destroyed,” he said. “And what sort of dimwit is going to get on a flight from Melbourne for an hour and then sit in a car for an hour?”

    Throsby Labor MP Stephen Jones has acknowledged the environmental concerns but has also pointed to economic benefits. With the state and federal governments both against the Badgerys Creek site, Mr Albanese yesterday threw his weight behind exploring Wilton beyond the taskforce review results.

    “We believe that Wilton should be further examined as the site for the second Sydney airport,” he said.

    But Wollondilly Shire Mayor Col Mitchell said the state owned the vast water catchments in the area, which would be at risk from pollution.

    “Environmentally it would be a disaster as it is very sensitive part of the world with all the dams,” he said.

     

    26 comments on this story

  • Lynas issue: Not learning from bitter experience — Richard Pendragon

    News 7 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    The Deadly Folly of Nuclear Power Overhead
    Huffington Post (blog)
    The use of nuclear power on US drones was “favorably assessed by scientists at Sandia National Laboratories and the Northrop Grumman Corp.,” revealed Steven Aftergood of the Project on Government Secrecy of the Federation of American Scientists last
    See all stories on this topic »
    Iran Nuclear Talks: Top Official Vows ‘New Initiatives’ With West
    Huffington Post
    By NASSER KARIMI 04/12/12 09:47 AM ET Iran’s top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili delivers a speech in front of the former US Embassy, during an annual state-backed rally, on Friday, Nov. 4, 2011. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) ISTANBUL — Iran’s top nuclear
    See all stories on this topic »
    More wear found on tubes at ailing Cal nuke plant
    Fox News
    LOS ANGELES – The operator of an idled nuclear plant on the California coast announced Thursday that more unusual wear has been found on tubing that carries radioactive water, the latest disclosure in an ongoing mystery involving the plant’s steam
    See all stories on this topic »
    Sri Lanka-India resolution row goes nuclear
    Asia Times Online
    By Sudha Ramachandran BANGALORE – Sri Lanka’s Minister of Power and Energy Patali Champika Ranawaka’s recent announcement that Colombo was considering raising the issue of the safety of India’s nuclear power plants with the International Atomic Energy
    See all stories on this topic »
    California’s Nuclear Freeze May Lead to Brownouts During Summer Heat
    energybiz
    The leaks are not a danger to the public, say NRC officials, who are still saying that they won’t authorize the re-opening of the units until the agency and the utility can pinpoint the cause. The reactors in question have operated safely for 25 years,
    See all stories on this topic »
    For peace in the Middle East and the world apply pressure and sanctions on
    Today’s Zaman
    For 45 years Israel has been making nuclear weapons with plutonium, which is acquired by reprocessing the fuel rods used in the nuclear power plants. Israel created its first nuclear weapon shortly before the 1967 war, with plutonium acquired from the
    See all stories on this topic »

    Today’s Zaman
    Lynas issue: Not learning from bitter experience — Richard Pendragon
    The Malaysian Insider
    Malaysia is now planning to build the world’s largest rare earth plant. This is truly madness of the highest order. We must remember the Chernobyl meltdown which was not supposed to have happened and similarly too the Fukushima nuclear plant meltdown
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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  • Miners launch new anti-tax ad campaign

    Miners launch new anti-tax ad campaign

    Posted April 13, 2012 09:01:54

    The mining industry has launched new advertisements warning the Federal Government not to hit it with further tax increases.

    The industry spent more than $20 million on an advertising campaign targeting the Rudd government’s original mining tax.

    It pulled the ads after Julia Gillard took power and negotiated a new mining tax with the industry.

    Now the Minerals Council of Australia has taken out new full-page newspaper ads warning against any further potential tax hikes for the resource sector.

    There is speculation mining companies will be stripped of diesel fuel rebates and other tax concessions in the next budget.

    The council’s Mitch Hooke says that would discourage investment.

    “It’s not in anyone’s interest to weight down your frontrunners,” he said.

    But Mr Hooke would not say if the industry will ramp up the campaign if the Government pushes ahead.

    Topics:mining-industry, business-economics-and-finance, government-and-politics, federal—state-issues, federal-government, australia

  • Attacks on climate science by former NASA staff shouldn’t be taken seriously

    Attacks on climate science by former NASA staff shouldn’t be taken seriously

    A letter from former administrators, astronauts, and engineers at NASA expressing climate change scepticism does not deserve parity with the agency’s peer-reviewed climate scientists

    • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 12 April 2012 11.21 BST
    • Article history
    • Prof James Hansen

      Attacks on climate science by former NASA staff should not be considered equal to the work of NASA climate scientists such as James Hansen, pictured. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

      Almost exactly two years ago, John Cook wrote about the 5 characteristics of science denialism. The second point on the list involved fake experts.

      “These are individuals purporting to be experts but whose views are inconsistent with established knowledge. Fake experts have been used extensively by the tobacco industry who developed a strategy to recruit scientists who would counteract the growing evidence on the harmful effects of second-hand smoke.”

      We have seen many examples of climate denialists producing long lists of fake experts, for example the Oregon Petition and the Wall Street Journal 16. Now we have yet another of these lists of fake experts. 49 former National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) employees (led by Harrison Schmitt, who was also one of the Wall Street Journal 16) have registered their objection to mainstream climate science through the most popular medium of expressing climate contrarianism – a letter. As is usually the case in these climate contrarian letters, this one has no scientific content, and is written by individuals with not an ounce of climate science expertise, but who nevertheless have the audacity to tell climate scientists what they should think about climate science.

      It’s worth noting that when the signatories Meet The Denominator, as is also always the case, their numbers are revealed as quite unimpressive. For example, over 18,000 people currently work for NASA. Without even considering the pool of retired NASA employees (all signatories of this list are former NASA employees), just as with the Oregon Petition, the list accounts for a fraction of a percent of the available pool of people.

      This letter, as these letters always do, has gone viral in the climate denial blogosphere, and even in the climate denial mainstream media (Fox News). But why exactly is this letter being treated as major news? That is something of a mystery. Or it would be, if the behavior of the climate denial community weren’t so predictable.

      The Signatories

      Obviously this letter first gained attention because the signatories are former NASA employees. They are being touted as “top astronauts, scientists, and engineers” and “NASA experts, with more than 1000 years of combined professional experience.” Okay, but in what fields does their expertise lie?

      Based on the job titles listed in the letter signatures, by my count they include 23 administrators, 8 astronauts, 7 engineers, 5 technicians, and 4 scientists/mathematicians of one sort or another (none of those sorts having the slightest relation to climate science). Amongst the signatories and their 1,000 years of combined professional experience, that appears to include a grand total of zero hours of climate research experience, and zero peer-reviewed climate science papers. You can review the signatories for yourself here.

      Contrarians for Censoring Climate Science

      These 49 former NASA employees wrote this letter to the current NASA administrator requesting that he effectively muzzle the climate scientists at NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS).

      “We, the undersigned, respectfully request that NASA and the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) refrain from including unproven remarks in public releases and websites.”

      Since nothing in science is ever proven, apparently these individuals simply don’t want NASA GISS to discuss science in their public releases or websites anymore. What specifically do they object to?

      “We believe the claims by NASA and GISS, that man-made carbon dioxide is having a catastrophic impact on global climate change are not substantiated, especially when considering thousands of years of empirical data. With hundreds of well-known climate scientists and tens of thousands of other scientists publicly declaring their disbelief in the catastrophic forecasts, coming particularly from the GISS leadership, it is clear that the science is NOT settled.”

      Ah yes, the ever-more-popular goalpost shift of “catastrophic climate change”. The letter of course provides no examples of NASA GISS public releases or websites claiming that CO2 is having a catastrophic impact on climate change, and of course provides zero examples of these mysterious “hundreds of well-known climate scientists and tens of thousands of other scientists” who disbelieve these unspecified catastrophic claims. As is always the case with these types of letters, it is all rhetoric and no substance.

      “As former NASA employees, we feel that NASA’s advocacy of an extreme position, prior to a thorough study of the possible overwhelming impact of natural climate drivers is inappropriate.

      As Skeptical Science readers are undoubtely well aware, the impact of natural climate drivers has been very thoroughly studied, and they simply cannot account for the observed global warming or climate change, especially over the past 50-65 years (Figure 1).

      HvA 50 years

      Figure 1: Net human and natural percent contributions to the observed global surface warming over the past 50-65 years according to Tett et al. 2000 (T00, dark blue), Meehl et al. 2004 (M04, red), Stone et al. 2007 (S07, green), Lean and Rind 2008 (LR08, purple), Huber and Knutti 2011 (HK11, light blue), and Gillett et al. 2012 (G12, orange).

      The contrarians continue:

      “We request that NASA refrain from including unproven and unsupported remarks in its future releases and websites on this subject. At risk is damage to the exemplary reputation of NASA, NASA’s current or former scientists and employees, and even the reputation of science itself.”

      If NASA administrators were to censor the organization’s climate scientists at the behest of a few of its former employees who have less climate science experience and expertise combined than the summer interns at NASA GISS, that would really damage NASA’s exemplary reputation.

      Expertise Matters

      Let’s be explicit about our choice here.

      • On the one hand we have a bunch of former administrators, astronauts, and engineers who between them have zero climate expertise and zero climate science publications.

      • On the other hand we have the climate scientists at NASA GISS who between them have decades, perhaps even centuries of combined professional climate research experience, and hundreds, perhaps even thousands of peer-reviewed climate science publications.

      Amongst those individuals at NASA GISS are some of the world’s foremost climate scientists. They include James Hansen, who created one of the earliest global climate models in the 1980s, which has turned out to be remarkably accurate (Figure 2).

      Hansen Actual Prediction

      Figure 2: Observed temperature change (GISTEMP, blue) and with solar, volcanic and El Niño Southern Oscillation effects removed by Foster and Rahmstorf (green) vs. Hansen Scenario B trend adjusted downward 16% to reflect the observed changes in radiative forcings since 1988, using a 1986 to 1990 baseline.

      This is not a difficult choice for NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, Jr. We would not be surprised if he gave the ‘skeptic’ letter one look and tossed it in the recycle bin.

      Climate contrarians clearly disagree, but in the real world, expertise matters. The fact that these 49 individuals used to work at NASA does not make them experts in everything NASA does. If the issue at hand were another moon landing, then by all means, the opinions of many of these individuals would be well worth considering. But we’re not talking about space shuttle launches or moon landings here, we’re talking about climate science. This is a subject which, to be blunt, these 49 individuals clearly don’t know the first thing about.

      To those who are making so much noise about this letter – the next time you are at a medical center in need of major surgery, will you go see a pediatrician? Or as a more relevant analogy, will you visit your neighbor, the retired dentist, and ask him to perform the surgery for you?

      Somehow we suspect you will insist that the surgery be performed by a surgeon with relevant expertise. The reason is of course that expertise matters. Perhaps you would be wise to consider that fact the next time a group of climate contrarians with little to no expertise publish another of these letters.

      As we suggested to William Happer, if climate contrarians want their opinions to be taken seriously, they should engage in real science within the peer-review system that works for every scientific field. That is how science advances – not through letters filled with empty rhetoric, regardless of how many inexpert retirees sign them.

      Note that NASA Chief Scientist Waleed Abdalati has issued a response with very similar points and suggestions as our post:

      “NASA sponsors research into many areas of cutting-edge scientific inquiry, including the relationship between carbon dioxide and climate. As an agency, NASA does not draw conclusions and issue ‘claims’ about research findings. We support open scientific inquiry and discussion.

      “Our Earth science programs provide many unique space-based observations and research capabilities to the scientific community to inform investigations into climate change, and many NASA scientists are actively involved in these investigations, bringing their expertise to bear on the interpretation of this information. We encourage our scientists to subject these results and interpretations to scrutiny by the scientific community through the peer-review process. After these studies have met the appropriate standards of scientific peer-review, we strongly encourage scientists to communicate these results to the public.

      “If the authors of this letter disagree with specific scientific conclusions made public by NASA scientists, we encourage them to join the debate in the scientific literature or public forums rather than restrict any discourse.”

  • Unions NSW votes to dump former HSU boss

    Unions NSW votes to dump former HSU boss

    April 12, 2012 – 7:44PM

    Unions NSW has voted to dump former Health Services Union (HSU) boss Michael Williamson as its vice president and has also moved to suspend the troubled union from its organisation.

    Alleged corruption and financial mismanagement in the HSU – which represents 77,000 aged care and health sector workers – is the subject of police investigations in NSW and Victoria, an internal inquiry headed by Ian Temby QC and a Fair Work Australia investigation.

    Mr Williamson was asked to resign last week from his $350,000-a-year role at HSU.

    He has also resigned as a Union’s NSW representative on the board of First State Super.

    On Thursday night, Unions NSW announced that it had accepted his resignation and said it would also suspend the HSU’s affiliation “until governance issues can be resolved”.

    Unions NSW Secretary Mark Lennon said the suspension of the HSU East branch sent a message about appropriate behaviour and governance for the NSW trade union movement.

    “Six hundred thousand working people across NSW rely on a strong and vibrant trade union movement to represent their interests in the workplace and tonight’s decision allows us to get on with the job of representing working people,” Mr Lennon said in a statement on Thursday evening.

    “This was not an action taken lightly, but it is in the interests of all working people across the state.

    “Unions NSW will continue to assist the members of the Health Services Union in whatever way we practically can.”

    “In due course, Unions NSW hopes to restore the HSU to full affiliation, but only once we are satisfied that all governance issues have been rectified.”

    Earlier on Thursday, HSU acting president Chris Brown said he was concerned by talk of the federal government or Fair Work Australia deregistering his union.

    “But I think it’s a fair way off,” Mr Brown told ABC Radio.

    The HSU east branch, the union’s “problem child”, would still be able to operate because it was registered under NSW laws.

    “Penalising those other branches for doing absolutely nothing wrong … would be a tragedy,” Mr Brown said.

    Asked if the HSU was so damaged it should transfer some of its members to other unions with clean records of honesty he said: “That’s certainly something in the back of my mind.

    “I don’t think we’re at that stage yet, but we could get there if these accusations continue and the union continues to be damaged.”

    Last week, ACTU suspended the HSU, to reinforce its “zero tolerance” stance on corruption.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/unions-nsw-votes-to-dump-former-hsu-boss-20120412-1wwe4.html#ixzz1rpRdR5p9