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  • Asbestos at Barangaroo kept secret from construction workers

    Asbestos at Barangaroo kept secret from construction workers

    0

    Asbestos fears at Barangaroo

    Workers at a major construction site in Sydney are meeting this morning after they walked off the job over fears of asbestos exposure.

    Barangaroo

    Artists’ impressions of Barangaroo. Source: Supplied

    CONSTRUCTION workers say they have been kept in the dark about the latest discovery of asbestos at Barangaroo.

    The Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union shut down work on the harbour foreshore site at 9am yesterday after another portion of the deadly fibre was dug up.

    State secretary Brian Parker said it was the 13th asbestos find since work began at the planned entertainment complex.

    He said workers did not believe there was any more of the dangerous toxin at the site until they uncovered it themselves.

    “Not one bit of training has been provided to anyone on site about the dangers of dealing with asbestos, despite the fact that management knew it had been found,” he said.

    “There wasn’t even a safety committee established on the job

    “The union is of course deeply concerned about the dangers posed to workers, but the broader community has the right to be asking questions as well.

    “On a high-wind day like today there is a real chance that dust from the site could blow all the way up to King Street Wharf.”

    Mr Parker said all 150 workers attached to the site would now have to undergo x-rays and lung function tests.

    He anticipates the site would remain closed for “some time” but said workers would meet early this morning to determine their next course of action.

    Lend Lease yesterday denied any asbestos had been found at the site this time around.

    In a statement the company’s group head of development David Hutton said: “Currently we have static monitoring devices around the site, as well as personal monitoring devices, checking air quality for asbestos.”

    “No traces of asbestos have been found in the air nor have we found any evidence of exposure risk to workers or the community.”

    “Safety is Lend Lease’s highest priority and, in regards to any contamination at Barangaroo South, the company has procedures in place to ensure the safety of the workforce, surrounding community and environment.”

    1 comment on this story

  • Carbon Tax to sting charities

    Australia’s leading charities are bracing for an avalanche of useless household goods to be dumped outside their stores by people unwilling to pay higher rubbish tip fees as a result of carbon tax

    The Salvation Army has told the Herald Sun that the tax will add $3.5 million to annual landfill costs for charitable groups.

    It warns the new tax will encourage struggling families to use the charity shops as a dumping ground for their unsaleable furniture and clothing rather than pay the cost of rubbish tips.

    The Salvos say this could impact on the services they provide to about 300,000 people a year which includes emergency accommodation and drug and alcohol counselling.

    The paper says that about 25 per cent of goods collected by the Salvos, St Vincent de Paul and other charity groups are dumped.

    The Salvos estimate they will pay an extra $687,000 to $1.25 million in landfill fees after July 1 when the tax is introduced.

  • Avaaz increases it’s campaigners to 40.000

    Exciting news — 40,000 Avaaz campaigners?!

    Inbox
    x

    Ricken Patel – Avaaz.org avaaz@avaaz.org
    7:18 AM (1 hour ago)

    to me
    Dear friends,

    Think of an issue you care about — something in your local community, bad behaviour by a corporation, or a global cause. Then take a few minutes to write a petition so other Avaaz members like you can raise their voices and generate momentum toward a win for all of us!

    Start a campaign</a>” width=”200″ /></a></div>
<p></span></td>
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<p><strong>Today is a big day for Avaaz. If you join in, Avaaz might just move  from having a small team of 40 campaigners to having 40,000!! </strong></p>
<p> When I started Avaaz, it was just a crazy idea. But I loved the idea,  and shared it, and now it’s an idea that 13,000,000 people share! I’ve  been blown away by the passion, creativity, smarts and commitment of  everyone in this community. <strong>Every day Avaaz members send in brilliant and important ideas for new campaigns </strong>to create the world we all want — more than our small staff could ever carry out alone. </p>
<p> So, to unlock all the incredible potential of our community to change the world, <strong>we’ve developed our website tools and website to allow any Avaazer to instantly start their *own* online petitions,</strong> tell friends, and win campaigns.  </p>
<p> The site just went live — will you give it a try? <strong>Think of a petition you’d like to start on any issue</strong> — something impacting your local community, some bad behaviour by a  distant corporation, or a global cause that you think other Avaaz  members would care about. If your petition takes off, it may become an  Avaaz campaign — either to members in your area, or even to the whole  world! Click here to get started — <strong>it takes just a few minutes to create your own campaign!</strong> </p>
<p> <a href=www.avaaz.org/en/petition/start_a_petition/?vl

    I’m so excited about this. In just five years, Avaaz has run an incredible number of hard-hitting campaigns and grown to be the largest-ever global movement for change, all with just a tiny staff — imagine what’s possible with all of us starting and winning amazing campaigns! I can’t wait.

    With much respect and hope,

    Ricken

    P.S. Avaaz member Sarah Bentley recently started a petition to save the world’s smallest dolphin, and it already has over 15,000 signers! Add your voice http://www.avaaz.org/en/petition/Save_The_Maui_Dolphin/

    Or take a moment to start your own petition to give other avaaz members the chance to support something you feel strongly about: www.avaaz.org/en/petition/start_a_petition/?vl



    Avaaz.org is a 13-million-person global campaign network
    that works to ensure that the views and values of the world’s people shape global decision-making. (“Avaaz” means “voice” or “song” in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 19 countries on 6 continents and operates in 14 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz’s biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

    This message was sent to nevilleg729@gmail.com. To change your email address, language, or other information, contact us via this form. To unsubscribe, send an email to unsubscribe@avaaz.org or click here.

    To contact Avaaz, please do not reply to this email. Instead, write to us at www.avaaz.org/en/contact or call us at +1-888-922-8229 (US).

  • NASA scientist : climate change is a moral issue on a par with slavery (HANSEN)

    Nasa scientist: climate change is a moral issue on a par with slavery

    Prof Jim Hansen to use lecture at Edinburgh International Science Festival to call for worldwide tax on all carbon emissions

    • guardian.co.uk, Friday 6 April 2012 11.00 BST
    • Article history
    • Prof Jim Hansen

      Prof Jim Hansen: ‘We’re handing future generations a climate system which is potentially out of their control’. Photograph: Melanie Patterson/AP

      Averting the worst consequences of human-induced climate change is a “great moral issue” on a par with slavery, according to the leading Nasa climate scientist Prof Jim Hansen.

      He argues that storing up expensive and destructive consequences for society in future is an “injustice of one generation to others”.

      Hansen, who will next Tuesday be awarded the prestigious Edinburgh Medal for his contribution to science, will also in his acceptance speech call for a worldwide tax on all carbon emissions.

      In his lecture, Hansen will argue that the challenge facing future generations from climate change is so urgent that a flat-rate global tax is needed to force immediate cuts in fossil fuel use. Ahead of receiving the award – which has previously been given to Sir David Attenborough, the ecologist James Lovelock, and the economist Amartya Sen – Hansen told the Guardian that the latest climate models had shown the planet was on the brink of an emergency. He said humanity faces repeated natural disasters from extreme weather events which would affect large areas of the planet.

      “The situation we’re creating for young people and future generations is that we’re handing them a climate system which is potentially out of their control,” he said. “We’re in an emergency: you can see what’s on the horizon over the next few decades with the effects it will have on ecosystems, sea level and species extinction.”

      Now 70, Hansen is regarded as one of the most influential figures in climate science; the creator of one of the first global climate models, his pioneering role in warning about global warming is frequently cited by climate campaigners such as former US vice president Al Gore and in earlier science prizes, including the $1m Dan David prize. He has been arrested more than once for his role in protests against coal energy.

      Hansen will argue in his lecture that current generations have an over-riding moral duty to their children and grandchildren to take immediate action. Describing this as an issue of inter-generational justice on a par with ending slavery, Hansen said: “Our parents didn’t know that they were causing a problem for future generations but we can only pretend we don’t know because the science is now crystal clear.

      “We understand the carbon cycle: the CO2 we put in the air will stay in surface reservoirs and won’t go back into the solid earth for millennia. What the Earth’s history tells us is that there’s a limit on how much we can put in the air without guaranteeing disastrous consequences for future generations. We cannot pretend that we did not know.”

      Hansen said his proposal for a global carbon tax was based on the latest analysis of CO2 levels in the atmosphere and their impact on global temperatures and weather patterns. He has co-authored a scientific paper with 17 other experts, including climate scientists, biologists and economists, which calls for an immediate 6% annual cut in CO2 emissions, and a substantial growth in global forest cover, to avoid catastrophic climate change by the end of the century.

      The paper, which has passed peer review and is in the final stages of publication by the US journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, argues that a global levy on fossil fuels is the strongest tool for forcing energy firms and consumers to switch quickly to zero carbon and green energy sources. In larger countries, that would include nuclear power.

      Under this proposal, the carbon levy would increase year on year, with the tax income paid directly back to the public as a dividend, shared equally, rather than put into government coffers. Because the tax would greatly increase the cost of fossil fuel energy, consumers relying on green or low carbon sources of power would benefit the most as this dividend would come on top of cheaper fuel bills. It would promote a dramatic increase in the investment and development of low-carbon energy sources and technologies.

      The very rich and most profligate energy users, people with several homes, or private jets and fuel-hungry cars, would also be forced into dramatically changing their energy use. In the new paper, Hansen, director of Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and his colleagues warn that failing to cut CO2 emissions by 6% now will mean that by 2022, the annual cuts would need to reach a more drastic level of 15% a year.

      Had similar action been taken in 2005, when the Kyoto protocol on climate change came into force, the CO2 emission reductions would have been at a more manageable 3% a year. The target was to return CO2 levels in the atmosphere to 350 parts per million, down from its current level of 392ppm. The paper, the “Scientific case for avoiding dangerous climate change to protect young people and nature”, also argues that the challenge is growing because of the accelerating rush to find new, harder–to-reach sources of oil, gas and coal in the deep ocean, the Arctic and from shale gas reserves.

      Hansen said current attempts to limit carbon emissions, particularly the European Union’s emissions trading mechanism introduced under the Kyoto protocol which restricts how much CO2 an industry can emit before it has to pay a fee for higher emissions, were “completely ineffectual”. Under the global carbon tax proposal, the mechanisms for controlling fossil fuel use would be taken out of the hands of individual states influenced by energy companies, and politicians anxious about winning elections.

      “It can’t be fixed by individual specific changes; it has to be an across-the-board rising fee on carbon emissions,” said Hansen. “We can’t simply say that there’s a climate problem, and leave it to the politicians. They’re so clearly under the influence of the fossil fuel industry that they’re coming up with cockamamie solutions which aren’t solutions. That is the bottom line.”

  • Volcano Alerts

    Space Station photo outlines ice, snow patterns on Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula
    NOLA.com
    On March 15, snow covered much of the area, including three stratovolcanoes, volcanoes made up of layers of lava, pumice and volcanic ash. To the north is Kliuchevskoi Volcano, the highest in Kamchatka at 15863 feet. It’s most recent eruption was in
    See all stories on this topic »

    NOLA.com
    Mars Express – Pit chains on the Tharsis volcanic bulge
    Space Daily
    These chains frequently occur on the flanks of shallow shield volcanoes, the bases of which have a very large diameter. When a lava flow cools and solidifies on its surface, its interior remains liquid and continues to flow as if inside a pipe,
    See all stories on this topic »
    A Landscape in a Hand Sample: “Of Fire”
    Scientific American (blog)
    She’s one of the feistier of our Pacific Northwest volcanoes, and we’ll be getting to know her quite well soon. I’m doing you up a series for her 32nd anniversary. For now, we’ll just use her as our first example as to why hand samples are a gateway to
    See all stories on this topic »
  • NASA views our perpetual ocean

    ScienceDaily: Earth Science News


    NASA views our perpetual ocean

    Posted: 09 Apr 2012 05:44 PM PDT

    The swirling flows of tens of thousands of ocean currents were captured in a scientific visualization created by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.
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