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  • Darn!! Sea Level Disaster Ahead! In 200-900 Years. When?? HANSEN

    Darn!! Sea Level Disaster Ahead! In 200-900 Years. When??

    by | July 27, 2015
    Category: Blog

    Darn!! Sea Level Disaster Ahead! In 200-900 Years. When??

    It’s Time to Stop Waffling So Much and Say that the Evidence is Pretty Strong…Multi-meter Sea Level Rise is an Issue for Today’s Public, not Next Millennium’s

    27 July 2015

    James Hansen

    In 2005 I argued that ice sheets may be more vulnerable than IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) estimated, mainly because of effects of a warming ocean in speeding ice melt1. In 2007 I wrote “Scientific Reticence and Sea Level Rise”, describing and documenting a phenomenon that pressures scientists to minimize the danger of imminent sea level rise2.

    About then I became acquainted with remarkable studies of geologist Paul Hearty. Hearty found strong evidence for sea level rise late in the Eemian to +6-9 m (20-30 feet) relative to today. The Eemian is the prior interglacial period (~120,000 years ago), which was slightly warmer than the present interglacial period (the Holocene) in which civilization developed. Hearty also found evidence for powerful storms in the North Atlantic near the end of the Eemian period.

    It seemed that an understanding of the late Eemian climate events might be helpful in assessing the climate effects of human-made global warming, as Earth is now approaching the warmth that existed then. Thus several colleagues and I initiated global climate simulations aimed at trying to understand what happened at the end of the Eemian and its relevance to climate change today.

    More than eight years later, we are publishing a paper describing these studies3. We are publishing the paper in an open-access “Discussion” journal, which allows the paper to become public while undergoing peer-review (a pdf of the paper with figures imbedded in the text for easier reading is available (here). I will get to the reasons for that in a moment, but first let me mention some curious numerology to get you thinking about scientific reticence.

    Did you read any of the recent papers that concluded ice sheets may be disintegrating and might cause large sea level rise in 200-900 years? The time needed for ice sheets to respond to climate change is uncertain, and there are proponents for time scales covering a huge range. However, 200-900 years should cause a scientist to scratch his head. If it is uncertain by an order of magnitude or more, why not 100-1000? Where does the 200-900 precision come from?

    Why the peculiar 900 years instead of the logical 1000? Probably because nobody cares about matters 1000 years in the future (they may not care about 900, but 200-900 does not seem like infinity). A scientist knowing that sea level is a problem does not want the reader to dismiss it.

    Why 200 years? For one thing, 100 years would require taking on the formidable IPCC4, which estimates that even the huge climate forcing for a hypothetical 936 ppm CO2 in 2100 would yield less than one meter sea level rise. For another thing, incentives for scientists strongly favor conservative statements and militate against any “alarmist” conclusion; this is the “reticence”

    Stratification and precipitation amplifying feedbacks

     

    phenomenon that infects the sea level rise issue2. “Scientific Reticence and Sea Level Rise” will be the subject of a session at the American Geophysical Union meeting this year4.

    IPCC conclusions about sea level rise rely substantially on models. Ice sheet models are very sluggish in response to forcings. It is important to recognize a great difference in the status of (atmosphere-ocean) climate models and ice sheet models. Climate models are based on general circulation models that have a long pedigree. The fundamental equations they solve do a good job of simulating atmosphere and ocean circulations. Uncertainties remain in climate models, such as how well they handle the effect of clouds on climate sensitivity. However, the climate models are extensively tested, and paleoclimate changes confirm their approximate sensitivities.

    In contrast, we show in a prior paper5 and our new paper3 that ice sheet models are far too sluggish compared with the magnitude and speed of sea level changes in the paleoclimate record. This is not surprising, given the primitive state of ice sheet modeling. For example, a recent ice sheet model sensitivity study6 finds that incorporating the physical processes of hydrofracturing of ice and ice cliff failure increases their calculated sea level rise from 2 meters to 17 meters and reduces the potential time for West Antarctic collapse to decadal time scales. Other researchers7,8 show that part of the East Antarctic ice sheet sits on bedrock well below sea level. Thus West Antarctica is not the only potential source of rapid change; part of the East Antarctic ice sheet is also susceptible to rapid retreat because of its direct contact with the ocean and because the bed beneath the ice slopes landward (Fig. 1), which makes it less stable.

    Our simulations were aimed to test my suspicion that ice sheet disintegration is a very nonlinear phenomena and that the IPCC studies were largely omitting what may be the most important forcing of the ocean: the effect of cold freshwater from melting ice. Rather than use an ice sheet model to estimate rates of freshwater release, we use observations for the present ice melt rate and specify several alternative rates of increase of ice melt. Our atmosphere-ocean model shows that the freshwater spurs amplifying feedbacks that would accelerate ice shelf and ice sheet mass loss, thus providing support for our assumption of a nonlinear ice sheet response.

    Our analysis, however, is based on much more than the climate simulations, as it relies on a huge body of research by the relevant scientific communities, as indicated by the 300 references. Our analysis is based on about equal parts of information gleaned from paleoclimate studies, climate modeling, and modern observations of ongoing climate changes.

    We submitted our paper3 to an open-access “Discussion” journal (ACPD) in hopes of engaging the scientific and policy-making communities in an important conversation about the urgency of reducing fossil fuel emissions and the adequacy of current and proposed policies. We conclude, for example, that 2°C global warming, rather than being a safe “guardrail”, is highly dangerous.

    Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussion is an open-access peer-reviewed journal in which the reviews and our response are published and freely available to the public. We hope this publication procedure will reduce the chance of the paper turning out to be unhelpful, which might be the case if criticisms were misinterpreted by the public. I think there is an analogy of this paper to my congressional testimony in 1988-89. Then as now, conclusions are drawn from a combination of information from paleoclimate, modeling, ongoing observations, and theory.

    Stakes in climate change are high, so conclusions about climate change are sure to draw fire. That’s as it should be; skepticism is the lifeblood of science, essential to success of an analysis. So criticisms of my testimony, as described well by Richard Kerr 9, were inevitable and useful.

    Kerr’s article is instructive about scientific reticence, which can deprive policymakers of the gut feeling of experts. This is all important for sea level rise because of lags in the system (policies → emissions →climate change →sea level rise). Information is needed as soon as possible.

    The most perceptive comments in Kerr’s interviews may have been, as was often the case, from our good old friend Steve Schneider: “All that objective stuff rests on assumptions. The future is not based on statistics, it’s based on physics.” By “objective stuff” Steve referred to the arbitrary choices made to define probabilities of an outcome. The media accepts resulting probabilities as meaningful, yet entirely different results would be obtained from alternative initial choices.

    Steve’s “objective stuff” defines IPCC’s sea level analysis precisely. They choose certain ‘process-based models’ as first choice to define future sea level. This gives sea level rise in 2100 (relative to 1986-2005 mean sea level) of 0.74 m with likely range 0.52-0.98 m for business-as-usual greenhouse gases (RCP8.5 scenario), where ‘likely’ is defined as >66% probability. Ugh.

    Surface air temperature change relative to 1880-1920 in 2055-2060 based on climate simulations assuming ice melt increases with a 10-year doubling time

    A policymaker will take this as meaning that sea level rise is probably going to be less than a meter even if CO2 increases to 936 ppm, in other words, policymakers will take this “objective stuff” as serious, reliable estimates of what to expect. Yikes!   What if someone decided to include processes such as hydrofracturing and ice cliff failure in these objective models?

    Steve Schneider modestly described his preferred approach as one based on “physical intuition”. In other words, his best judgment based on all of the information at his disposal. “All of the information” surely includes knowledge gained from paleoclimate, modeling, observations of ongoing climate change, understanding of physical processes, etc. Of course with this approach there is no way to specify an exact number for the sea level rise corresponding to >66% chance. Nevertheless, alternatives to the “objective stuff”, at least in this case, are superior, in my opinion, but the result does depend on the scientific ability of the practitioner.

    Dick Kerr is one of the best science writers; his article contains information relevant to the scientific method in general and how we reach conclusions, not just scientific reticence. He allows readers to think and read between the lines, and draw their own conclusions.

    We can always say that more research is needed. Yet as the evidence accumulates at some point a scientist must say it is time to stop waffling so much and say that the evidence is pretty strong … in my opinion we have reached that point on the sea level issue.

    My conclusion, based on the total information available, is that continued high emissions would result in multi-meter sea level rise this century and lock in continued ice sheet disintegration such that building cities or rebuilding cities on coast lines would become foolish.

    That brings me to the other reason for publishing in an open-access “discussion” journal, in addition to wanting to give the sea level rise issue more prominence prior to Paris meetings. There is a danger that the public – not too familiar with the scientific method — may misinterpret criticisms, which are natural and healthy for science. I’m hoping that this publication process will make that process clearer and thus also make the reality of the climate situation clearer.

    A startling conclusion of our paper is that effects of freshwater release onto the Southern Ocean and North Atlantic are already underway and 1-2 decades sooner in the real world than in the model (Fig. 2). Observed effects include sea surface cooling and sea ice increase in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica and cooling in the North Atlantic. We suggest that the sluggishness (delayed response) of the climate models may be a result of a common excessive small scale mixing in many ocean models, including ours, as discussed previously10. One of our objectives is to draw attention to this – I also hope to get support for our group to do climate modeling to investigate the issue, because we recognize several ways that we could improve the model.

    Here I expand on our conclusion that the science indicates 2°C is not a safe target. Indeed, 2°C is not only a wrong target, temperature is a flawed metric due to meltwater effect on temperature. Sea level, a critical metric for humanity, is at least on the same plane. Earth’s energy imbalance is a critical metric, because energy balance must be restored to stabilize climate, which thus informs us about the required limit on greenhouse gases (GHGs). The Framework Convention on Climate Change, agreed upon at Rio in 1992, defines GHGs as the critical metric, saying that GHGs must be stabilized at a level that avoids “dangerous anthropogenic interference” with climate. Why have policymakers turned away from GHG amount to temperature as the metric with a value (2°C) seemingly pulled from a hat? Could it be because 2°C allows politicians to set emission targets to be achieved in the future when they will be out of office? If we stick to the Framework Convention’s GHG metric, we find that the CO2 stabilization level is not 450 ppm or 400 ppm, it is 350 ppm and possibly lower 11 with immediate implications for policy.

    The bottom line message scientists should deliver to policymakers is that we have a global crisis, an emergency that calls for global cooperation to reduce emissions as rapidly as practical. We conclude elsewhere 12 and reaffirm in our present paper that the crisis calls for an across-the-board rising carbon fee and international technical cooperation in carbon-free technologies.

    Despite the increased threat of sea level rise, I believe that it is still possible to keep impacts of human-made climate change moderate. However, that optimism13 is based on the assumption that we are close to the point when it is widely recognized that a policy with an across-the-board rising carbon fee that rapidly phases down carbon emissions also makes good economic sense14.

     

    References:

    [1] Hansen, J.E.: A slippery slope: How much global warming constitutes “dangerous anthropogenic interference”? An editorial essay. Climatic Change, 68, 269-279, doi:10.1007/s10584-005-4135-0, 2005.

    [2] Hansen, J.E.: Scientific reticence and sea level rise. Environ. Res. Lett., 2, 024002, doi:10.1088/1748-9326/2/2/024002, 2007.

    [3] Hansen, J., M. Sato, P. Hearty, R. Ruedy, M. Kelley, V. Masson-Delmotte, G. Russell, G. Tselioudis, J. Cao, E. Rignot, I. Velicogna, E. Kandiano, K. von Schuckmann, P. Kharecha, A. Legrande, M. Bauer, and K. Lo, Ice melt, sea level rise and superstorms: evidence that 2°C global warming is highly dangerous, Atmos. Chem. Phys. Disc., 23 July 2015.

    [4] IPCC deserves enormous credit and commendation (indeed, it has appropriately received the Nobel Prize). In research for our current paper I was impressed by IPCC’s authoritative, comprehensive scientific reviews.

    [5] Hansen, J., M. Sato, G. Russell, and P. Kharecha: Climate sensitivity, sea level, and atmospheric carbon dioxide. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A, 371, 20120294, doi:10.1098/rsta.2012.0294. 2013.

    [6] Pollard, D., R.M. DeConto, and R.B. Alley: Potential Antarctic ice sheet retreat driven by hydrofracturing and ice cliff failure, Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 412, 112-121, 2015.

    [7] Greenbaum, J.S., Blankenship, D.D., Young, D.A., Richter, T.G., Roberts, J.L., Aitken, A.R.A., Legresy, B., Schroeder, D.M., Warner, R.C., van Ommen, T.D., and Siegert, M.J.: Ocean access to a cavity beneath Totten Glacier in East Antarctica, Nature Geosci., publ. online 16 March doi:10.1038/NGEO2388, 2015.

    [8] Goldberg, D., Holland, D.M., and Schoof, C.: Grounding line movement and ice shelf buttressing in marine ice sheets, J.Geophys. Res., 114, F04026, 2009.

    [9] Kerr, R.A.: Hansen vs. the world on the greenhouse threat, Science, 244, 1041-1043, 1989.

    [10] Hansen, J., M. Sato, P. Kharecha, and K. von Schuckmann: Earth’s energy imbalance and implications. Atmos. Chem. Phys., 11, 13421-13449, 2011, doi:10.5194/acp-11-13421-2011.

    [11] Hansen, J., M. Sato, P. Kharecha, D. Beerling, R. Berner, V. Masson-Delmotte, M. Pagani, M. Raymo, D.L. Royer, and J.C. Zachos: Target atmospheric CO2: Where should humanity aim? Open Atmos. Sci. J., 2, 217-231, 2008. .doi:10.2174/1874282300802010217.

    [12] Hansen, J., P. Kharecha, M. Sato, V. Masson-Delmotte, F. Ackerman, D. Beerling, P.J. Hearty, O. Hoegh-Guldberg, S.-L. Hsu, C. Parmesan, J. Rockstrom, E.J. Rohling, J. Sachs, P. Smith, K. Steffen, L. Van Susteren, K. von Schuckmann, and J.C. Zachos, 2013: Assessing “dangerous climate change”: Required reduction of carbon emissions to protect young people, future generations and nature. PLOS ONE, 8, e81648, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0081648.

    [13] Please recognize the distinction between optimism I describe and the new-found optimism of politicians and environmentalists who are euphoric about the small inroads that renewable energies have made into fossil fuel dominance and promises that countries are making to try to reduce emissions at future dates. Although such progress may be great news for people with investments in renewable energies, it is not basically different than the Kyoto Protocol approach and is far from recognition of the need for a fundamentally more effective approach.

    [14] A rising carbon fee stimulates the economy, if 100% of the money is given to the public. It the money is given equally to all legal residents it is moderately progressive, with most wealthy people paying more in increased prices than they receive in the dividend. Note that cap-and-trade schemes do not constitute the required simple, honest across-the-board carbon fee. Beware the politician who uses the phrase “carbon price”! He may be planning to foist on you a cap-and-trade scheme that inevitably brings big banks into the matter and an uncountable number of lobbyists who will help define the details of the scheme.

  • Have a sneak peek CFMEU

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    Michael O’Connor

    4:41 PM (8 minutes ago)

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    Dear Inga,
    As you are all aware the China Free Trade Agreement is a real threat to Australian jobs and to local communities.

    The CFMEU is determined to do everything it possibly can to STOP the China FTA.

    Tonight we will continue to take this campaign to the Australian people with a new TV Ad going to air during the Masterchef Finale on TEN. But as a member and supporter of our union we wanted to give you a sneak peek before anyone else sees it.

    Tony Abbott didn't choose you

    In another big win for the CFMEU the ALP National conference voted on the weekend to fight the China FTA side by side with the union movement.

    There are three ways you can support the campaign against the China FTA:

    1. Watch and share our ad that shows Tony Abbott have stuffed it up
    2. Attend one of the rallies in cities around the country protesting the free trade agreement
    3. Write to your MP and tell them why you think the free trade agreement will be bad for jobs and bad for Australia.

    Together we can Stand up, Speak out and FIGHT BACK against the China FTA!

    Michael O’Connor
    CFMEU National Secretary

    P.S. This free trade agreement is historic for all the wrong reasons. Make sure you watch and share our ad so that every Australian knows it.

  • Labor conference wrap-up, Tony Abbott’s tax con, and more

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    Labor conference wrap-up, Tony Abbott’s tax con, and more

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    Today today@themonthly.com.au via mail87.us4.mcsv.net Unsubscribe

    4:32 PM (14 minutes ago)

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    When the main event is a non-event

    Sean KellyI’ve written before about the inevitable divisions between commentators in the immediate aftermath of events: that those divisions tend to indicate only the generic impossibility of judging the significance of large events right after they have occurred.

    Some months, or perhaps years, after an event, it usually becomes clear that one or several opinionistas were correct. At other times, a significant divergence in opinion points to something quite different: that nobody was correct because the event wasn’t really that important.

    Commentators today are divided on what the ALP National Conference meant for the various players (complete summary in the links section): some believe it strengthened Shorten, some believe it weakened him, some argue it strengthened or weakened either Anthony Albanese or Tanya Plibersek as leadership contenders. In this case, I think the mathematical average of these opinions points to the reality: the status quo was not really disturbed. The conference didn’t really make a huge difference to anybody’s fortunes.

    That is still a win for Shorten. Most events in politics are awash with downside. There might be holes in your shiny new policy announcement. You might not be on form on a day you really need to be. You might break a cardinal rule of politics, or you might break a rule that has only just been invented, today, especially for you.

    Labor national conferences are a prime example. Bill Shorten went into this past weekend like a man with cuts all over his body: from the polls, from the Trade Union Royal Commission, from The Killing Season. The weekend could have added some cuts to that tally, inching him closer to bleeding out. It could have felled him in one decisive swing of the axe. At best, he might have come out looking very slightly stronger. That was about the limit to the potential upside. It was never going to turn him into a hero. Heroism comes from winning battles against the other side: not from fighting for complex compromises with your own.

    Shorten got through his opening speech without mishap – he even performed quite decently. He didn’t wow anyone during the rest of the conference, but nor did he embarrass himself. He needed two results to be delivered – for boat turnbacks to be an option open to a future Labor government, and for the party not to be forced to bind on same-sex marriage in the near future – and he got these. They were not huge victories, and they were largely expected, but the important thing for Shorten is that they were not losses. A loss on either would have been devastating.

    And that is the main result from the weekend: Shorten is still standing as leader. It’s not a dream result for him, but it’s probably the best he could have hoped for.

    A few brief observations on the rest of the weekend.

    The fact that so much of the commentary today has focused on the conference’s import for Albanese and Plibersek is interesting. The ALP leadership has mostly been free from speculation thanks to Kevin Rudd’s rule changes making the leader almost untouchable. But it’s clear now that many, both in the ALP and in the Canberra press gallery, have been closely watching the undeclared race to be next in line.

    Second, despite lots of chest-beating about reform by Shorten and other party leaders over the past 12 months, not a lot actually happened at the conference. You don’t have to delve into the arcana of rules to figure this out. Reform worth its name would change the structure of the party and challenge the way power is distributed. The second that happens there will be an almighty battle. You’ll hear about it. You didn’t, and that’s all you need to know: nothing much happened.

    Third, I believe it is a good thing we get to watch these debates play out in public. There are some suggestions today that Labor will suffer because the divisions among its senior frontbenchers on various policies – particularly boat turnbacks – are now clear. They were clear already. And I would go further: voters know that frontbenchers in all parties disagree on various matters. The fact they do is a matter of the bleeding obvious. The point of a party is that the members put their differences aside, in most cases, to campaign for agreed policy. That is true of the Liberal party as well. The fact that voters can watch serious policy debates play out in real time, that they get an insight into how a major party’s democracy – however limited that democracy – plays out seems like an indubitably positive fact.

    Finally, it was not a brilliant conference for Labor’s left. There are a few examples you could list, but one should suffice: the left faction claimed as its major victory an agreement that same-sex marriage would be subject to a conscience vote in this term of parliament, and in the next, but subject to a binding vote in favour after that. In other words: the left has managed to get the party to agree to force its MPs to vote, in four years’ time, in favour of a change that will, without doubt, already be legislated by then.

    The policies that were announced at the conference (but that would have been announced with or without a conference) are important: Labor’s commitment to a 50% renewable energy target, alongside an emissions trading scheme, and Labor’s support for boat turnbacks. Both will be important in Shorten’s efforts to triumph over Tony Abbott at the election. He passed the test of getting through the conference. Convincing the electorate of the wisdom of those policies, and of his sincerity in pursuing them, is the much bigger test. It begins now.

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    Leaders in retreat

    Mungo MacCallum

    “Abbott appears to want the states to agree to a rise in GST, only to hand it back to the Commonwealth to allow cuts for Abbott’s benefit. But this is to destroy the whole point of the exercise: the states are worried about the ever-growing cost of health. This is what they want from any negotiations – if they are to wear the odium of collecting more tax, they at least want to be able to boast that it will provide relief to their own constituents. The Abbott formula is just a con.”

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    from the archives

    Why Australia hates asylum seekers

    Christos Tsiolkas

    “The rise of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party from 1997 was ultimately evidence of the Australian public’s resentment and fear of globalisation. The media focused on that party’s incendiary rhetoric on race and immigration, but lost in the noise was that One Nation also articulated people’s legitimate concerns about the pace of economic change.” (September 2013)

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  • Together, we’ve just scored a great win. Australian Unions Team

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    A big win on trade

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    Australian Unions Team <info@actu.org.au>

    4:10 PM (23 minutes ago)

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    Dear Inga,

    Together, we’ve just scored a great win.

    Over the weekend, the Labor Party agreed to oppose the parts of the China trade deal that shut out locals from jobs. If Abbott doesn’t go back to the negotiating table, then Labor will block the legislation needed to make this deal happen.

    For everyone who has taken action against this deal, you are making a difference.

    Help us stay on the front foot. We still need more parliamentarians to listen, and we need to hold Labor to its promise.

    Send the China FTA inquiry a strong message. And come to one of the actions nearest to you.

    In unity,
    Ged and Dave

    p.s. Check out the TV ad on the China Free Trade Agreement that is premiering tonight during the MasterChef grand finale.

    Australian Unions Team
    http://www.australianunions.org.au/

  • This really changes things ACF

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    Paul Sinclair, ACF Unsubscribe

    4:19 PM (11 minutes ago)

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    Hi INGA

    Big news. After years of political paralysis, yesterday the Australian Labor Party announced commitments to:

    Power Australia with 50% clean and renewable energy by 2030 by cutting pollution, driving new investment in renewables and creating jobs. They also said no to domestic nuclear power and storing the world’s radioactive waste.

    Strengthen the laws that protect life by refusing to hand over approval powers for environmentally damaging projects to under-resourced and conflicted state governments.

    Restore life to our threatened wildlife by implementing threatened species recovery plans and limiting habitat loss – one of the greatest threats to our unique wildlife.

    These are big steps and we commend the ALP. But if life is to thrive for generations to come, far greater commitments are needed, not just from the ALP but from all political parties.
    The ALP’s announcement shows – if enough of us speak out, politicians do listen. They’re paying attention to the thousands of letters and emails you write, your meetings with local MPs, the rallies you join, and your countless conversations about the future you want.
    Together, let’s keep breathing life into our democracy. 
    Thanks for all your heart and for never giving up.
    Paul
    Paul Sinclair
    Director of Campaigns
    Australian Conservation Foundation
    PS – ACF is non-partisan. We hold all political parties to account for their duty of care for our environment. We’ll call it when policies are going to damage the environment and we give credit where credit is due.
  • Have your say BILL SHORTEN

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    Bill Shorten Unsubscribe

    2:04 PM (2 hours ago)

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    The latest politics update from the Australian Labor Party | Unsubscribe
    .
    Inga —

    At the 47th  National Conference, Labor has delivered progress to a more united, more democratic party.

    This has been remarkable conference characterised by passion and respect, but defined above all by our common purpose.

    We worked our way through all of the critical issues and set out Labor’s vision for a modern, prosperous Australia, including:

    • A growing, productive, job-creating economy.
    • A plan to tackle climate change – a bold new goal for renewable energy.
    • An unwavering commitment to decent jobs with fair pay and conditions.
    • A new Labor approach to delivering equal opportunity for women.
    • A fair pension and universal superannuation.
    • Quality early childhood education, great schools, public TAFE and university places earned through hard work and good marks, not your parents’ wealth.
    • A health system for all because Labor believes keeping Australians healthy keeps our nation productive – and the health of any one of us, affects all of us.
    • An unflinching commitment to the National Disability Insurance Scheme.
    • Eliminating, forever, the scourge of domestic violence from our national life.
    • Recognising our first Australians – in our Constitution.
    • And bringing our Constitution home by giving Australia an Australian head of state within a decade.
    • A compassionate and humane approach to the regional and global challenge of displaced people.
    • And a determination to end people smuggling and deaths at sea.

    I am proud that as a party we came together, worked together through complex issues and developed a stronger Labor vision for Australia’s future.

    Screen_Shot_2015-07-27_at_11.24.44_am.png

    Thanks for listening,

    Bill

    PS If you want to have your voice heard via the Labor Herald you can submit an article (in The Lab) here.