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  • PM says surplus an economic imperative

     

    PM says surplus an economic imperative

    Updated: 13:05, Sunday April 1, 2012

    Julia Gillard has rejected suggestions returning the budget to surplus could lead to recession.

    Ms Gillard on Sunday said returning the budget to surplus was an economic imperative.

    ‘The best way we can lock in confidence about the future and send a message to the world about the Australian economy is to deliver a budget surplus,’ she told Network Ten.

    Ms Gillard said there was no risk the necessary spending cuts could send Australia into recession.

    ‘No, there’s not,’ she said.

    ‘To be talking in that language is to completely misunderstand what’s happening in the Australian economy today.’

    But Ms Gillard refused to talk about the details of any particular budget measures.

    ‘I know it’s budget speculation season – it’s kind of started early this year – and I’m not going to engage in speculation about individual items,’ she said.

    ‘As we return the budget to surplus – which is the right economic decision now, to lock in confidence for the future – we’ll be taking our Labor values with us.’

    Asked also about Opposition Leader Tony Abbott’s proposal to subsidise the cost of hiring a nanny, Ms Gillard said it was clear the coalition was not serious.

    ‘This is all a fig-leaf to start a debate about childcare, to pretend that they’re interested in it, presumably to try and distract from their track record in government,’ she said.

  • Prepare for gas bills to explode

    Prepare for gas bills to explode in NSW

    0
    Gas heater

    Gas prices are set to soar, according to a new report. Source: The Daily Telegraph

    NSW energy consumers – already stung by soaring power costs – face the prospect of gas prices trebling in the next five years as the state’s supplies run out.

    An independent report to the state government has warned that, unless controversial coal seam gas deposits in Camden, Gunnedah and the Clarence-Moreton basins were developed, there would not be enough supply to meet demand by the end of 2014.

    Suppliers would be forced to source gas supply from interstate, which would significantly drive up the prices from the start of 2015.

    The report prepared by independent research firm, Wood Mackenzie, found that NSW was “highly exposed” to gas shortages. “Without more CSG supply, it will need to secure gas from other states, and this is far from guaranteed,” the report states.

    It said opposition to CSG operations was strongest in NSW and was becoming increasingly politicised, with the Greens and opposition groups calling for a ban.

    CSG mining involves tapping underground coal seams, which often occur close to properties, national parks and next to water supply.

    Energy Minister Chris Hartcher said the state’s 1 million gas consumers could see bills triple if more reserves of the gas were not exploited.

    “A responsible government must take the necessary action to maintain and increase our state’s energy security, which includes the responsible development of a domestic gas industry,” he said.

    Mr Hartcher said Green groups had refused to join a rational debate on the state’s future energy needs.

    The average gas bill in NSW is already about $716 a year and experts believe gas prices will be the next strain on household budgets.

    Electricity bills have already risen 37 per cent in the past five years, with consumers facing a rise of up to 10 per cent from July 1, with the federal carbon tax feared to cost 10 per cent on top of that.

    Andrew Reeves, chairman of the consumer watchdog Australian Energy Regulator, said the wholesale price of gas would at least double in the next five years, adding more than 33 per cent to the average household bill. “Gas prices are only heading up,” he said. “While with electricity it’s the cost of networks, with gas it’s about supply, and NSW will start to suffer soon.”

     

    2 comments on this story

  • (Dr James Hansen) Case for young people and nature

    Dear President,
    Slovenian National Assembly

    At the suggestion of Slovenian colleagues, I wrote a letter to Dr. Gregor Virant, President, National Assembly of the Republic of Slovenia.  The letter and its attachment (“Case for Young People and Nature”) are available on my website.

    ~Jim

  • CSIRO alarmism more dangerous than Co2

    CSIRO alarmism more dangerous than Co2


    Lobbecke

    Illustration by Eric Lobbecke. Source: The Australian

    THE Weekend Australian reported on March 24 that Port Macquarie Hastings Council was recommending the enforcement of a “planned retreat” because of an alleged danger from sea-level rise in the (distant) future.

    The controversy has two main aspects: is the alarming rise in sea level projected by CSIRO reliable? And is moving people from near-shore sites the correct response?

    The CSIRO projection is extreme, but before explaining why, I would note that the world’s main source of alarmism is the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. This is not really a scientific body but one that adjusts data and subjects it to mathematical modelling before passing its “projections” on to politicians.

    The CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology, then further adjust data and produce models with even more extreme scenarios.

    In The Weekend Australian on November 7, 2009, the director of the National Tidal Centre of the BOM, Bill Mitchell, reported an Australian average sea-level rise of 1.7mm a year. This is a reasonable level accepted by most sea-level watchers outside the IPCC and CSIRO and gives a sea-level rise of about 15cm by 2100. He said the “upper end was 3mm a year”, which gives a 27cm rise by 2100.


    At 8.30am on November 18, 2009, ABC Radio National had a program on sea-level changes. National Sea Change Taskforce executive director Alan Stokes said: “The IPCC estimate of rise to 2100 was up to 80cm.” No new data was provided to explain the leap and, in fact, the worst estimate by IPCC in its last report was 59cm.

    Note that the IPCC estimates have been falling with each report. In its second assessment report the high-end projection of sea-level rise to 2100 was 92cm, in the third assessment report 88cm, and the fourth 59cm. It is good for the reader to look at sea-level measurements. You can see the sea-level data for the US and a few other countries at http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends.shtml. Most stations show a rise of sea level of about 2mm a year, but note the considerable variations even within a single state, though these are no cause for alarm.

    The CSIRO uses figures far in excess of even the IPCC, which until now were the greatest alarmists. In its 2012 report, State of the Climate, the CSIRO says that since 1993 sea levels have risen up to 10mm a year in the north and west. That means that somewhere has had a 19cm-rise in sea level since 1993. Where is this place? The European satellite says that sea levels have been constant for the past eight years.

    How does the CSIRO arrive at its figures? Not from new data but by modelling. Models depend on what is put into them. For example a 2009 report, The Effect of Climate Change on Extreme Sea Levels in Port Phillip Bay, by the CSIRO for the Victorian government’s Future Coasts Program, based its model on temperature projections to 2100 of up to 6.4C. That compares with the most extreme, fuel-intensive scenario of the IPCC and implies unbelievable CO2 concentration levels in 2100 of about 1550 parts per million.

    Using all known fossil fuel reserves would achieve only half this and continuing the current rate of increase in concentration levels would result in only 550ppm by 2100. The result is a CSIRO prediction of sea-level rise for Port Phillip Bay by 2100 of 82cm and, with the help of the BOM, a further increase due to wind to 98m. That is well above even the top level projected by the latest IPCC report. This example is from Victoria but sea levels must have roughly the same rises and falls all over the world. So the whole world should be alarmed. Indeed, the IPCC and CSIRO try to alarm the world with stories of the drowning of low islands, such as Tuvalu. But detailed mapping has shown that Tuvalu, and many other coral islands, have actually grown during the past 20 years.

    The Netherlands is particularly vulnerable to any large rise of sea levels. It is also a leader in coastal science and engineering, and the Dutch are not alarmed. In the December 11, 2008, issue of NRC/Handelsblad (Rotterdam’s counterpart to The Australian) Wilco Hazeleger, a senior scientist in the global climate research group at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, wrote: “In the past century the sea level has risen 20cm. There is no evidence for accelerated sea-level rise. It is my opinion that there is no need for drastic measures. Fortunately, the time rate of climate change is slow compared to the lifespan of the defence structures along our coast. There is enough time for adaptation.”

    This brings us to the second part of the debate. We should adapt to changes in the shoreline, as do the Dutch. We should reject draconian rules to save folk from a remote and dubious peril. If Tim Flannery is allowed to take his chance living on his Hawkesbury property near sea level, Port Macquarie’s retirees should be permitted to do so too. They should not be evicted to “save” them from a dire fate they will never see.

    Cliff Ollier is a geologist, geomorphologist, emeritus professor at the University of Western Australia.

  • Nuclear sites, sea-level rises and tsunamis

    Letters

    Nuclear sites, sea-level rise and tsunamis

    • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 11 March 2012 21.00 GMT
    • Article history
    • It seems clear that nuclear facilities will be vulnerable to the effects of global warming (Nuclear power sites face flood and erosion risks, 8 March). As the Institution of Mechanical Engineers stated in a 2009 report: “Nuclear sites, such as Sizewell, based on the coastline, may need considerable investment to protect them against rising sea levels, or even abandonment/relocation in the long term.” So, given that proposed new UK reactors, together with their radioactive waste stores including spent fuel, will be located on coasts – predicted sea-level rise, shoreline erosion, coastal storms, floods, tidal surges and the evolution of “nuclear islands” stand out as primary concerns. This means that adapting nuclear power to climate change will entail increased expense for construction, operation, waste storage and decommissioning, and the incurring of significant costs to the environment, public health and welfare.
      Dr Paul Dorfman
      Co-ordinator, Nuclear Consulting Group

      • Although the risk of floods to nuclear power stations must not be ignored, a much more dangerous threat is that of a tsunami. Oldbury, Berkeley and Hinkley Point are all in the area of England’s only known tsunami. This is reported to have occurred on 20 January in 1607. Plaques on local churches indicate the depth of the water may have been 7 to 8 metres, and it is said to have reached Glastonbury Tor, some 22km inland. Flood and erosion problems can be solved by building sea walls around the plants as we approach 2080. Why is no one worried about an unexpected tsunami on top of rising sea levels?
      Robert Griffiths
      Somerton, Somerset

  • Extreme weather of last decade Part of Larger Pattern linked to Global Warming

    Extreme Weather of Last Decade Part of Larger Pattern Linked to Global Warming

    ScienceDaily (Mar. 25, 2012) — The past decade has been one of unprecedented weather extremes. Scientists of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) in Germany argue that the high incidence of extremes is not merely accidental. From the many single events a pattern emerges. At least for extreme rainfall and heat waves the link with human-caused global warming is clear, the scientists show in a new analysis of scientific evidence in the journal Nature Climate Change. Less clear is the link between warming and storms, despite the observed increase in the intensity of hurricanes.



    In 2011 alone, the US was hit by 14 extreme weather events which caused damages exceeding one billion dollars each — in several states the months of January to October were the wettest ever recorded. Japan also registered record rainfalls, while the Yangtze river basin in China suffered a record drought. Similar record-breaking events occurred also in previous years. In 2010, Western Russia experienced the hottest summer in centuries, while in Pakistan and Australia record-breaking amounts of rain fell. 2003 saw Europe´s hottest summer in at least half a millennium. And in 2002, the weather station of Zinnwald-Georgenfeld measured more rain in one day than ever before recorded anywhere in Germany — what followed was the worst flooding of the Elbe river for centuries.

    A question of probabilities

    “The question is whether these weather extremes are coincidental or a result of climate change,” says Dim Coumou, lead author of the article. “Global warming can generally not be proven to cause individual extreme events — but in the sum of events the link to climate change becomes clear.” This is what his analysis of data and published studies shows. “It is not a question of yes or no, but a question of probabilities,” Coumou explains. The recent high incidence of weather records is no longer normal, he says.

    “It´s like a game with loaded dice,” says Coumou. “A six can appear every now and then, and you never know when it happens. But now it appears much more often, because we have changed the dice.” The past week illustrates this: between March 13th and 19th alone, historical heat records were exceeded in more than a thousand places in North America.

    Three pillars: basic physics, statistical analysis and computer simulations

    The scientists base their analysis on three pillars: basic physics, statistical analysis and computer simulations. Elementary physical principles already suggest that a warming of the atmosphere leads to more extremes. For example, warm air can hold more moisture until it rains out. Secondly, clear statistical trends can be found in temperature and precipitation data, the scientists explain. And thirdly, detailed computer simulations also confirm the relation between warming and records in both temperature and precipitation.

    With warmer ocean temperatures, tropical storms — called typhoons or hurricanes, depending on the region — should increase in intensity but not in number, according to the current state of knowledge. In the past decade, several record-breaking storms occurred, for example hurricane Wilma in 2004. But the dependencies are complex and not yet fully understood. The observed strong increase in the intensity of tropical storms in the North Atlantic between 1980 and 2005, for example, could be caused not just by surface warming but by a cooling of the upper atmosphere. Furthermore, there are questions about the precision and reliability of historic storm data.

    Overall, cold extremes decrease with global warming, the scientists found. But this does not compensate for the increase in heat extremes.

    Climatic warming can turn an extreme event into a record-breaking event

    “Single weather extremes are often related to regional processes, like a blocking high pressure system or natural phenomena like El Niño,” says Stefan Rahmstorf, co-author of the article and chair of the Earth System Analysis department at PIK. “These are complex processes that we are investigating further. But now these processes unfold against the background of climatic warming. That can turn an extreme event into a record-breaking event.”