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  • Greens confirm preference deal

    Greens confirm preference deal

    Updated: 10:36, Monday July 19, 2010

    Greens confirm preference deal

    The Australian Greens have confirmed they have reached agreement with Labor over preferences for the August 21 federal election.

    Details of the deal will be announced later on Monday, just a day after Greens leader Bob Brown admitted he was ‘at odds’ with his own party over preference negotiations.

    Senator Brown on Sunday refused to say whether the Greens would direct preferences to Labor in lower house seats, just as the minor party did at the 2007 election.

    Under the deal, the Greens will direct preferences to Labor in lower house contests in return for receiving Labor in the upper house race, paving the way for the minor party to hold the balance of power in the Senate in its own right from July 1, 2011.

    ‘The Greens party will be putting out a media release about that in an hour or so,’ Senator Brown told ABC Radio on Monday, adding he did not know details of the deal .

    Despite the deal, Senator Brown is arguing that voters settle on their own preference rather than be dictated by an particular political party.

    Senator Brown dismissed as a negative approach suggestions the Greens should have sought concessions from Labor in return for preferences.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard says the deal is important for Labor.

    ‘Obviously people will choose to exercise their vote and where they want to put their preferences,’ she told ABC Radio.

  • Abbott ignorant on climate: India and China leaving Australia behind

    Abbott ignorant on climate: India and China leaving Australia behind

     

    Sunday 18 July 2010

     

    Greens’ response to Opposition Leader Tony Abbott’s comments at a press conference this afternoon, that China and India would not introduce a carbon price so Australia would not have to do so:

     

    Australian Greens Deputy Leader, Senator Christine Milne, said:

     

    “Tony Abbott, leader of the party of miners and deniers, clearly has no idea about what is going on with climate action around our region.

     

    “While both Labor and Liberals dig us deeper and deeper into coal, China and India are leaving us behind. Cornering the market in coal while the world powers ahead with renewables and efficiency is about as short-sighted as it gets.

     

    “India has already introduced a tax on coal – both domestic and imported – with the revenue to be invested in renewable energy developments. China is powering ahead of Australia in closing polluting industry and investing in renewables and efficiency.

     

    “As developing countries, neither China nor India should be expected to act before Australia does, and yet they are both leaving us far behind them.

     

    “If Tony Abbott and Julia Gillard continue saying Australia won’t act until developing countries act, they will ensure that Australia keeps undermining moves to a global treaty. That will do none of us any favours.”

     

    Consensus with deniers and polluters is ‘Waiting for Godot’

     

    “The Prime Minister’s insistence on ‘consensus’ is increasingly being seen as an excuse for delay and denial. She is ‘Waiting for Godot’ and she knows it if she wants consensus from the deniers and the big polluters.

     

    “Julia Gillard should sideline the deniers in the Coalition and polluting industry and move to consensus with those who want action. The Greens stand ready to act with a carbon tax on the biggest polluters which can start as soon as next year.”

     

    For more on India’s coal tax: http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-07-01/india-to-raise-535-million-from-carbon-tax-on-coal.html

     
    Tim Hollo
    Media Adviser
    Senator Christine Milne
    0437 587 562
    _______________________________________________
    GreensMPs Media mailing list
    Media@greensmps.org.au
    To unsubscribe, change your details or change delivery options for this email, visit: http://lists.greensmps.org.au/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/media

  • Gillard pledges housing boost for regional cities

     

    “I say to regional Australia, let us use common sense and hard work as our compass and partnership as our way ahead,” she said.

    “I want to work very closely with you. I want to help you achieve your goals so that together we can build a sustainable Australia.”

    Ms Gillard says the program is aimed at providing more homes in regional centres as Australia’s major cities become more crowded.

    However only certain cities have will be invited to apply and out of those applications it is expected that 15 cities will receive around $15 million each.

    Councils would use the money to fund infrastructure projects such as roads, drains and community facilities that would be needed for new housing projects.

    “One of the greatest pressures on sustainability is housing affordability,” Ms Gillard said.

    “Our cities are under stress and so are many families.”

    She has also used her speech to target anxiety among those living in outer-metropolitan seats in Brisbane who are dealing with traffic congestion and infrastructure problems.

    In a swipe at the Coalition Ms Gillard says will always put Australians quality of life first.

    “This is a time for choosing between cuts or services, fear and optimism, going backwards or going forwards,” she said.

    “What I am saying is that growth should make life better for Australian families – not make things harder.

    “Growth should not mean greater congestion, longer queues and more intense competition for scarce resources like housing and water.”

    In her first official event of the campaign, Ms Gillard this morning joined her deputy Wayne Swan at the annual meet the babies family day he holds in his electorate of Lilley.

    In amongst the stalls and jumping castles, the Prime Minister mingled with parents and had time for the obligatory campaign photographs with several babies.

    Ms Gillard told those gathered she believes every child deserves access to a good education and decent health services.

    As Ms Gillard seeks to connect with voters in Brisbane, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott is today visiting western Sydney.

    Mr Abbott has accused the Government of rushing into a quick fix on a population policy after it abandoned former leader Kevin Rudd’s support of a “big Australia”.

    Tags: community-and-society, government-and-politics, elections, federal-government, regional, gillard-julia, federal-elections, australia

     

  • Greens call on Gillard to guarantee public service lobs

    Greens call on Gillard to guarantee public service jobs

    “Tony Abbott should explain his plans to cut public spending.”

    With both the big parties pledging cutbacks, Australian Greens Leader
    Bob Brown today called on Prime Minister Gillard to guarantee public
    service jobs for Australians.

    “The Prime Minister should make clear what the impact of the cutbacks
    she has announced will be,” said Senator Brown. Ms Gillard has said she
    will implement “unpopular cutbacks.”

    “Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says he will cut 12,000 jobs out of the
    public service,” Senator Brown said.

    “Job cutbacks will lead to a decrease in the quality of services for the
    public – in health, general welfare and for the environment.”

    Australian Greens ACT Senate candidate Lin Hatfield-Dodds said: “I value
    public servants and the work they do. The demand for well-informed
    public policy doesn’t reduce if jobs are cut – it increases the workload
    for existing public servants.”

    “The $7.5 billion lost from the budget forward estimates by Julia
    Gillard’s backdown over the mineral resources tax directly threatens the
    ability of the government to finance the public service in the years
    ahead,” Senator Brown added.

    Media contact: Erin Farley 0438 376 082
    www.greensmps.org.au

    _______________________________________________
    GreensMPs Media mailing list

  • Re-using bike parts to power water pumps, corn crushers and more

     

    A revolutionary machine

    The NGO itself is the product of a collaboration that took place in 1997 between a group of Canadians from the organisation Pedal and local mechanic Carlos Marroquín. Jointly, they created what would be Maya Pedal’s first and arguably most revolutionary machine: the bicidesgranadora de maíz, a device that removes the kernels from up to 15 corn husks per minute, allowing farmers to bag up to two dozen 43-kilo sacks per day.

    Marroquín explains: ‘It was necessary to find a path and an alternative that would meet the needs of the locals and we researched and invested all that we could to do so.’ The Canadian group was headed by Richard Andrews, a bicycle repair shop owner from Vancouver that had begun donating shipping containers full of used bikes and spare parts to rural communities in Guatemala and Mexico.

    Andrews led his crew to San Andrés Itzapa as part of a widespread initiative to rebuild the cities and countryside following years of civil war. They did not have any specific contraptions in mind, but rather the desire to identify what these people lacked most and then find solutions that would have the greatest impact.

    Marroquín, who narrowly escaped death during the height of Guatemala’s civil strife, immediately took interest in the initiative and within days was working beside them repairing bicycles and assessing his community’s challenges. The 41-year-old Mayan first began working with machines as a young man when, after his home and belongings were destroyed by a group of guerrilleros, he spent several months fixing his family’s appliances.

    After rebuilding the television set with borrowed tools, the reception through his improvised antenna was so clear that he accidentally began to intercept the army’s secret communications signal. Since then, he has poured all his energy into engineering and invention, which is now materialised through the products of Asociación Maya Pedal, officially incorporated in 2001.

    From broken bicycle to working machine

    Today, the organisation repairs and sells bicycles to help finance the creation and assembly of machines, since the original devices themselves do not generate enough revenue for self-sufficiency. While some are custom-ordered and rented or sold, many have been donated to the community.

    Like most NGOs, Maya Pedal is almost entirely dependent on external support. Cash donations and bicycle-repair tools are their greatest needs. The staff consists solely of Marroquín and his 16-year-old son, Carlos Jr., who constantly seek and welcome international volunteers for days or weeks at a time to learn, collaborate and assist with their mission at the tiny, colourful workshop located near the western edge of town.

  • In the frozen waters of Everest, I learned the value of humility

     

    When I emerged 1km later from the icy water, I’ll never forget looking down at my fingers. They had swollen to the size of sausages. The majority of the human body is water and when water freezes, it expands. The cells in my fingers had frozen, swollen and burst. I had never felt anything so excruciating. My nerve cells were so badly damaged it was four months before I could feel my hands again. I resolved never to do another cold water swim.

    Then last year I learned about the melting of the glaciers in the Himalayas and Hindu Kush mountains. As nearly 2 billion people – approximately one in three people on the planet – rely on drinking or irrigation water from these glaciers, I decided it was time to emerge from retirement for another symbolic swim – this time in a glacial lake under the summit of Mount Everest. Considering the potential for instability in regions facing rapidly increasing populations twinned with decreasing natural resources, I returned to training.

    What made this swim particularly difficult is that this year, of all years, local authorities mounted a large operation to remove the bodies of climbers who lost their lives on the mountain. So there I was – at 5.3km above sea level, attempting something no one has ever tried before while suffering a vicious case of altitude sickness – and frozen bodies are coming past me as I slowly shuffle higher and higher. To say the least, it is unsettling being reminded of your mortality.

    In late May, I reached Lake Pumori, adjacent to the Khumbu Glacier on Everest, and began to prepare mentally to launch myself into a swim. I cranked up P Diddy, glared across the water, fixed my mind on the opposite side of the lake and dived in. At 2C (36F), the water was slightly warmer than at the North Pole but, up in the heavens at the icy tip of the world, breathing is very difficult. Within seconds, I was in trouble – gasping, choking, then vomiting. Then I momentarily went under. The first time I managed to recover easily by pushing myself off the bottom of the shallow lake, but when it happened again I was exhausted and overcome with panic. Some people say that drowning is the most peaceful death. Bollocks.

    After it happened a third time, I flapped myself to the edge of the lake. My team mercifully lifted me out, moving my chilled body as quickly down the mountain as they could. That evening, we gathered for a debriefing on what had gone awry and how we could try and fix it. My team gave it to me straight, with team leader Maj-Gen Tim Toyne Sewell deciding on a radical tactical shift.

    They talk about SAS standing for speed, aggression and surprise. When I left the regiment, I took that philosophy with me, and it was crucial in my swims in Antarctica, down the Thames, across the Maldives, and across the North Pole.

    But my team told me to completely forget the past. Every single thing I had learned in 23 years of swimming I had to forget, he told me, and everything I had learned about speed and aggression as a reservist in the Special Air Service I should ignore. Instead of swimming fast, I had to swim as slowly as possible; instead of the crawl, I had to swim breaststroke; and instead of adopting an aggressive attitude, I needed humility. “You can’t bully Mount Everest,” the Major-General said.

    Two days later, on 22 May, we climbed up the mountain as slowly as possible and gathered at the lake, where I lay down on a rock and looked up at the summit of Everest. Humbled, I focused on the glaciers and tried to calm myself in the face of my fear. If I went too slowly, I’d die of cold; too quickly and I’d hyperventilate and drown. I then stood, stepped quietly into the water and swam a measured breaststroke across the expanse towards the spot on the other shore where my team awaited, 1km away. Twenty-three minutes later, I arrived.

    I learned two basic lessons on Everest. First, just because something has worked in the past does not mean it will worktoday. Second, different challenges require different mindsets. Now, before I do anything, I ask myself what type of mindset I require to successfully complete the task.

    Climate change is the Everest of all problems, the thorniest challenge facing humankind. Just because we have lived in a certain way for so long, and we have consumed the way we have for so long, and populated the earth the way we have for so long, doesn’t mean the decisions we’ve made in the past will work today. All the warning signs are there. When I was born, the world’s population was 3.5 billion. There are now 6.8 billion people on the planet. By 2050, that’s expected to rise to 9.4 billion. What’s more, the Earth’s resources aren’t growing; they’re decreasing – and rapidly.

    Last week, I spoke in Oxford at Ted, the “Ideas Worth Spreading” conference, and challenged the audience to consider what radical tactical shift they will take. This may look different for each of us – as world leaders, corporate decision-makers, parents, students or otherwise – as we consider the way we engage with our environment. How do we ensure a healthy, sustainable and peaceful world – a world in which our children have a future?

    Moving forward, we must discover our own radical tactical shifts, whether they be in our homes, in our workplaces, in our communities, our countries or our world. Dispense with the assumptions and arrogance of yesterday. Take that step, I said, and commit 100% to doing it. I hope, in some small way, that my swim at the top of the world, which changed me, demonstrates that nothing is impossible. With care and collaboration, it is possible to engage in a discourse of humility and to move beyond dialogue to action.