Author: admin

  • Matters of the Hearth

    Is it more eco-friendly to use a fireplace or a gas-powered central
    heater? Or, um, just keep freezing? And, speaking of fireplaces, what’s
    up with those prepackaged logs? Advice maven Umbra Fisk warms up to the
    topic.

     See Online columnist Umbra

  • Energy usage in Victoria surges 45 per cent above normal weekend levels

    Normal peak now 8700 MW: Peak power demand is spiralling so much
    that regulators now rate the state’s highest energy demand, 8570 MW in
    2003, as less than the peak level in a normal summer. The normal peak
    is pegged at 8700 MW, the peak in a one-in-two-year heatwave is 9200 MW
    and for a one-in-10-year occurrence is, 10,100 MW.

    The Age, 23/1/2006, p. 5

    Source: Erisk – www.erisk.net 

  • Siberian style front grips Europe as another five people freeze to death in Moscow

    Scandinavia, Poland and Estonia at the mercy of extreme cold: In
    Scandinavia, temperatures reached as low as -42.6C. In Poland weather
    forecasters predicted temperatures would reach -25C. In Estonia, where
    the mercury sat at -33C, the deaths of four people were linked to the
    extreme cold.

    The Daily Telegraph, 23/1/2006, p. 15

    Source: Erisk – www.erisk.net 

  • US hounds eco-terrorists


    Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, with FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III behind him, announces the indictment of 11 animal rights and environmental activists on arson and other charges.

    Attorney
    General Alberto R. Gonzales, with FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III
    behind him, announces the indictment of 11 animal rights and
    environmental activists on arson and other charges. (By Joshua Roberts — Getty Images)

    After its members allegedly set fire to
    the office of the Boise Cascade wood products company in Monmouth,
    Ore., on Christmas Day in 1999, the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) sent
    out a communique saying, “Early Christmas morning elves left coal in
    Boise Cascade’s stocking.”

    In Washington, the Justice Department
    called the indictments a breakthrough in what prosecutors said has been
    a long and difficult investigation of the animal rights group and the
    environmental organization, which organize themselves in small,
    Maoist-style cells and advocate “direct action” against those who abuse
    animals or Earth.

    “Today’s indictment proves that we will not
    tolerate any group that terrorizes the American people, no matter its
    intentions or objectives,” Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales said at
    a news conference.

    Joining Gonzales, FBI Director Robert S.
    Mueller III said: “Investigating and preventing animal rights and
    environmental extremism is one of the FBI’s highest domestic
    priorities.”

    There are 188 open investigations of crimes claimed
    by the two groups, dating to 1987, according to Carl J. Truscott,
    director of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
    Explosives. He said 25 to 30 of those cases are being actively being
    pursued — about half of them in the Pacific Northwest, California and
    Utah.

    In Oregon, where a federal grand jury handed up the
    indictments, U.S. Attorney Karin J. Immergut said that it took a long
    time for federal, state and local authorities to gain investigative
    traction in the arson cases because the 11 alleged conspirators, who
    referred to themselves as the “family,” had taken an oath to protect
    each other. A key break occurred, she said, when informants were found.

    “Getting inside information was one of the critical components of being able to crack the case,” she said.

    Investigators
    said that most of the 11 people indicted have lived in and around the
    university town of Eugene, Ore. Eight of them have been arrested — six
    in December in locations across the nation and two this week in Eugene.
    Three are at-large and believed to be outside the country.

    Immergut predicted that the indictments “will put a significant dent in the movement.”

    This
    week, though, the ELF claimed another arson — a mansion under
    construction on an island in Puget Sound was destroyed by a fire. The
    ELF has claimed responsibility for burning down a number of big houses
    being built in Washington state in the past two years, and no arrests
    have been made. In California in recent years, the ELF has also claimed
    responsibility for arsons in housing developments and attacks on SUV
    sales lots.

    “Our law enforcement has a lousy record of catching
    these people,” said Gary R. Perlstein, a professor of criminology and
    criminal justice at Portland State University in Oregon.
    “Unfortunately, I think the message you can take away from these
    indictments is that you can get away with these kind of crimes for a
    long time.”

    The ALF was created in the mid-1970s in Britain as a
    radical outgrowth of the animal rights movement. The group became
    active in the United States in the late 1980s. Its Web site says that
    one of its primary goals is “to inflict economic damage to those who
    profit from the misery and exploitation of animals.”

    The ELF
    emerged in Britain in the mid-1990s, and its organization and tactics
    are modeled after those of the ALF. Members of the two organizations
    often work together, Perlstein said.

    “These people have the
    ability to hide and stay away from law enforcement in a way that
    traditional criminals are not able to do,” Perlstein said. Among those
    arrested in connection with the 17 attacks are college students from
    Virginia and Arizona, a firefighter from Oregon, and a woman who works
    in a group home for the developmentally disabled.

    The defendants
    were listed as Joseph Dibee, Chelsea Dawn Gerlach, Sarah Kendall
    Harvey, Daniel McGowan, Stanislas Meyerhoff, Josephine Overaker,
    Jonathan Christopher Mark Paul, Rebecca Rubin, Suzanne Nicole “India”
    Savoie, Darren Todd Thurston and Kevin Tubbs. Dibee, Overaker and Rubin
    have not been arrested.

    An unindicted co-conspirator in the case
    — William C. Rodgers, 40, who was arrested in December in Arizona on
    related arson charges — killed himself shortly after his arrest.

    Staff writer Dan Eggen in Washington contributed to this report.

    By Blaine Harden

    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Saturday, January 21, 2006; Page A03

    Read the full story in the Washington Post 

     

  • Warming Warning from Fortune Magazine

    (FORTUNE Magazine) – A disturbing consensus is emerging among the
    scientists who study global warming: Climate change may bring more
    violent swings than they ever thought, and it may set in sooner. Lately
    John Browne, the CEO of BP, has been jolting audiences with a list of
    proposed solutions that hint at the vastness of the challenge. It aims
    at stabilizing the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere at
    about double the pre-industrial level while continuing economic growth.
    To do that, carbon emissions would have to be reduced ultimately by
    seven gigatons a year. A gigaton, or a billion tons, is even bigger
    than it sounds. Eliminating just one, argues Browne, would mean
    building 700 nuclear stations to replace fossil-fuel-burning power
    plants, or increasing the use of solar power by a factor of 700, or
    stopping all deforestation and doubling present efforts at
    reforestation. Achieve all three of these, and pull off four more
    equally large-scale reallocations of capital and infrastructure, and
    the world would probably stabilize its carbon emissions.


    There’s just one catch: Even change on this vast scale might not stop global warming

    Full story at Fortune Magazine  

  • Murry-Darling Basin Agreement stalled again due to weak leadership

    Less than half of target accounted for: There was good news for
    the Murray this week when Victoria announced a $93 million plan to
    conserve 145 billion litres for return to the river. But this was the
    first such project to receive Commonwealth approval. Victoria has
    identified another similar sized water saving, but NSW – again – is yet
    to do its bit. This means little more than half the 500 billion litres
    supposed to be returned to the Murray has been identified.

    Next month’s council holds the key: The National Water
    Commission was set up to circumvent this and has the lever of
    withholding national competition payments but cannot actually knock
    state heads together to get agreement. In the end, the Council of
    Australian Governments, due to meet next month, holds the key to the
    success or failure of water reform. The premiers – in particular,
    Morris lemma in NSW – and Prime Minister John Howard need to show
    leadership to match their rhetoric.

    The Australian Financial Review, 20/1/2006, p. 86

    Source: Erisk – www.erisk.net