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  • The one thing that could save the Rio Earth Summit. 350org

    The one thing that could save the Rio Earth Summit. 350org

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    Paula Collet – 350.org organizers@350.org
    2:36 AM (7 hours ago)

    to me

    Time is running out at the Rio Earth Summit.

    With just two days left, the “landmark conference” could end with just a set of empty promises  — and no meaningful progress on climate. But Brazil’s President Dilma could help save the talks by putting the global demand to End Fossil Fuel Subsidies front and center. Let’s make our message impossible to ignore.

    Sign On Todaywww.350.org/dilma

    Dear friends,

    We know we’ve been asking a lot of you lately, but a proposal to end fossil fuel subsidies is hanging in the balance here at the Rio Earth Summit — and your voice could make a big impact in the next 48 hours.

    Together, with our massive “Twitterstorm” and the more than a million petition signatures, we’ve built massive public support for ending fossil fuel subsidies. It’s a no-brainer policy that could shift $1 trillion in fossil fuel subsidies towards climate solutions. But world leaders have failed to deliver — the Rio declaration now only contains vague and empty language on subsidies, not the clear commitment we need.

    As the host of the summit, Brazil’s President Dilma Rouseff has the power to reopen discussions and demand concrete steps to end fossil fuel subsidies. Dilma is currently on the fence, but that with enough public pressure she could emerge as a climate champion.

    Please add your voice to the petition urging Dilma to save the Rio Earth Summit — our team at 350.org will do a dramatic petition delivery here in Rio: www.350.org/dilma

    Make no mistake: momentum to end fossil fuel subsidies is building. People everywhere are rallying around the simple idea that it’s time for our public money to help the people, not the polluters — the $1 trillion that governments spend on polluter handouts can be better spent on clean energy and sustainable development.

    A commitment here in Rio would be an important step forward for this movement — and right now, it’s up to Dilma to get it done. Let’s help show her she has the support of people everywhere: www.350.org/dilma

    Many thanks,

    Paula, Juliana, Juan, Jamie and the 350.org Brazil Team

    P.S. Monday’s TwitterStorm to #EndFossilFuelSubsidies was incredible — and it really made a difference here at the Rio Earth Summit. Click here to check out the storm’s highlights: www.endfossilfuelsubsidies.org/twitterstorm/story


    350.org is building a global movement to solve the climate crisis. Connect with us on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for email alerts. You can help power our work by getting involved locally, sharing your story, and donating here.

  • Moody’s Cuts Credit Ratings of 15 Big Banks

    Breaking News: Moody’s Cuts Credit Ratings of 15 Big Banks

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    NYTimes.com News Alert nytdirect@nytimes.com
    8:12 AM (1 hour ago)

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    Breaking News Alert
    The New York Times
    Thursday, June 21, 2012 — 5:47 PM EDT
    —–

    Moody’s Cuts Credit Ratings of 15 Big Banks

    Moody’s Investors Service has lowered the ratings of some of the world’s largest banks, including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs.

    The ratings agency said late Thursday that the banks were downgraded because their long-term prospects for profitability and growth are shrinking.

    Read More:
    http://www.nytimes.com/?emc=na

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  • Melting sea ice threatens emperor penguins

    Turning down the dial: Ocean energy development with less sound

    Posted: 20 Jun 2012 06:30 PM PDT

    A new laboratory test can help limit the injuries fish receive from loud, underwater booms created during pile driving, the practice of pounding long, hollow steel piles into the ocean floor to erect structures such as tidal energy turbines.

    Melting sea ice threatens emperor penguins

    Posted: 20 Jun 2012 08:33 AM PDT

    At nearly four feet tall, the Emperor penguin is Antarctica’s largest sea bird — and thanks to films like “March of the Penguins” and “Happy Feet,” it’s also one of the continent’s most iconic. If global temperatures continue to rise, however, the Emperor penguins in Terre Adélie, in East Antarctica may eventually disappear, according to a new study.
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  • STOP RINEHART (GET-UP)

    GetUp! info@getup.org.au
    5:35 PM (35 minutes ago)

    to me
    SMH masthead

    Dear NEVILLE,

    Everyone is talking about Gina Rinehart’s campaign to take over Fairfax Media.

    In the last week she has bought huge stakes in the company. Journalists are reporting that the mining magnate is seeking three seats on the board, but has refused the company’s requests to sign the Fairfax Charter of Editorial Independence. In short: editorial independence is under threat at Australia’s oldest newspapers.

    We’re not rich enough to take over Fairfax, but together we can take over Fairfax’s webpages, with a complete buy-out of the ads on the SMH and The Age online homepages all Saturday.

    It would make our message seen 4 million times, inviting customers, shareholders and staff of Fairfax to have their say on Rinehart’s takeover bid. Our best chance of stopping Rinehart is to show that it’s not in Fairfax’s financial interest to allow her on the board; that her influence will undermine the main asset of the papers: our trust.

    You don’t need Rinehart’s deep pockets to make a difference. A $29.64 donation can make this ad seen 3,000 times on the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age homepages. Can you help?

    www.getup.org.au/fairfax-takeover

    Credit where it’s due: we should thank Andrew Bolt for this idea.

    Bolt launched an attack on GetUp members today – taunting that if we want to protect Fairfax’s independence, we should simply buy a bigger share in the company than Rinehart.

    “GetUp boasts of 605,000 members… GetUp can raise twice what Rinehart has spent, and snatch absolute control of Fairfax, which, free of editorial interference, can ban me from its papers.”1

    We don’t have hundreds of millions of dollars, and we don’t want to own Fairfax. Our aim is simply to support Fairfax and their journalists to be what makes a democracy great: an independent media. No Fairfax investor should have editorial control of the company’s crucial newspaper mastheads, nor its national network of radio stations.

    On one point though, Bolt is right on: by pooling our resources, our movement can beat Gina Rinehart’s attempts to undermine the independence of Fairfax. By each making a small donation, together we can launch a massive advertising campaign to show that Fairfax customers the nation over will revolt against any move to curb editorial independence.

    www.getup.org.au/fairfax-takeover

    Thanks Andrew Bolt, and thanks everyone who is standing up for independent press,
    The GetUp team.

    1 ‘RUN! IT’S THE BOLTBOLTBOLT’, Andrew Bolt. The Daily Telegraph, 19 June, 2012.


    GetUp is an independent, not-for-profit community campaigning group. We use new technology to empower Australians to have their say on important national issues. We receive no political party or government funding, and every campaign we run is entirely supported by voluntary donations. If you’d like to contribute to help fund GetUp’s work, please donate now! If you have trouble with any links in this email, please go directly to www.getup.org.au. To unsubscribe from GetUp, please click here. Authorised by Simon Sheikh, Level 2, 104 Commonwealth Street, Surry Hills NSW 2010

  • Sydney home burns as NSW firies strike

    This should put pressure on the Govt. What if the lady and baby had died in the fire?

    Sydney home burns as NSW firies strike

    By Toby Mann, AAPUpdated June 21, 2012, 4:44 pm

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    A man says he is disgusted that his Sydney house burned while firefighters were striking over changes to the workers compensation scheme.

    Kym Loutfy’s wife and grandson were rescued from the burning house by a passer-by on Thursday, while firefighters were turning their hoses on Parliament House during a protest.

    Firefighters in Sydney, Newcastle and the Central Coast went on strike for five hours at 1pm (AEST) on Thursday, to protest reforms to workers compensation they say treat them poorly compared to exempt colleagues in the Rural Fire Service (RFS) and police force.

    Firefighters are demanding they also be protected from the WorkCover changes, which cap benefits and medical expenses, with hundreds marching on state parliament in their first major strike in NSW since 1956.

    “If the fire brigade weren’t on strike they could come more quicker and there would be less cost and less damage,” Mr Loutfy told AAP outside his Sans Souci house, which had been extensively damaged in the fire.

    “We have nothing to do with the strike … Anyone can go on strike but there’s supposed to be a back-up for emergency.

    “I’m very, very disgusted.”

    Radio caller Andrew said he was driving along Campbell St in Sans Souci just after 1pm (AEST) when he noticed flames coming from the front window of the house.

    He said firefighters arrived half an hour after he dialled triple 0.

    “We went into the house downstairs to check that no one was there. We got a lady and her baby out of there,” he said.

    NSW Fire and Rescue said in a statement that crews arrived at the scene within seven minutes of receiving a call from police.

    It said local crews on their way to the protest responded to the call and carried out search and rescue operations.

    However, they went on to join the protest after the arrival of the Airports Rescue and Firefighting Service.

    Ben Shepherd from the NSW Rural Fire Service said the local RFS sent two trucks and air support as well as firefighters in breathing apparatus.

    “With that initial house fire there was probably a longer response time from our trucks,” he told Fairfax radio network.

  • In Rising Use of Air-Conditioning, Hard Choices

    Alert Name: CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS
    June 21, 2012 Compiled: 1:12 AM

    By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL and ANDREW W. LEHREN (NYT)

    Gases that damage the ozone layer are mostly out of use in air-conditioning, but replacements used in developing countries are potent agents of global warming.

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