New Streetlamp can Provide Mobile Phone Services, WiFi, Charge EV’s, and more
Posted: 25 May 2012 03:24 PM PDT
New Streetlamp can Provide Mobile Phone Services, WiFi, Charge EV’s, and more
Posted: 25 May 2012 03:24 PM PDT
May 29, 2012
Lifesaver … there’s talk that chef James Kidman might revive the Manly Pavilion site. Photo: Sahlan Hayes
Sydney hospitality heavyweights Doltone House and the Dockside Group are believed to be frontrunners to snare Manly Pavilion, which closed last week with debts of $590,000.
Its restaurant operation will be liquidated.
Manly Pavilion was a former best new restaurant award winner in The Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide.
Doltone House has been in talks with former Otto chef James Kidman, a potential signing that would no doubt help put the Manly venue back on the dining radar.
One supplier owed tens of thousands of dollars by Manly Pavilion tells Short Black he anticipates a heavy cull of restaurants over winter.
“It’s only May and I’ve already had a record number of bad debts for a year.”
Design and wage costs, plus an oversupply of restaurants, have seen various venues, including Bruno’s at the Hunky Dory Social Club, and Milsons in Kirribilli, close.
Suppliers expect more significant restaurants, some with well-known chefs, to shut before the end of the financial year.
Source: Good Living
Brazil has a proud record of protecting the environment, but a bill allowing deforestation would undermine the Rio+20 summit
Never before has the survival of so much rainforest depended on one person. But that is where President Rousseff of Brazil finds herself. The Brazilian congress just passed a forest code that puts the Amazon and other forests in jeopardy.
Dilma Rousseff’s imminent decision on whether to pass or veto the bill will have huge ramifications. If approved, it would give loggers and farmers free rein to chop down 190m acres of forest. A territory the size of France and Britain combined will be at risk. It would open forests and rivers up for grabs, putting 70% of Brazil’s river basins at risk. It would also give amnesty to anyone previously charged with illegal deforestation.
This bill would be a catastrophe not just for Brazil, but for the world and all our futures. Brazil is home to 40% of the world’s last remaining rainforest – a lung that provides the earth with one fifth of our oxygen. So why is the congress passing such a destructive bill? And why would Rousseff not just veto it right away? Simple: industrial farmers and loggers have a stranglehold on congress and this powerful lobby claims current legislation is freezing development in Brazil. Others say forest must be converted into farmland to tackle rising food prices in Brazil.
None of these arguments hold water. The incredible development of Brazilian agriculture in the past decade is due to investment in more efficient farming and has been fuelled by the rising price of food commodities over 10 years. It has nothing to do with needing more access to forests. In Brazil, 200 million cattle roam over 500m acres. More efficient farming will free more land without any need for deforestation.
Every threat to the Amazon is a threat to indigenous life. The forest code would allow deforestation in previously protected areas. The interests of those that have lived in the forests for generations are being put second to those of commercial land speculators. Environmentalists who have spoken out to protect the forest have been harassed, threatened and even killed by thugs.
But this is not just a dispute between businessmen and environmentalists. More than 79% of Brazilians reject the new bill. All former environment ministers , whatever their political leaning, have joined forces to express their strong opposition to this issue and recently, even some of the top businessmen in Brazil came out against the forest code. More than 2 million people have signed a global Avaaz campaign calling on Rousseff to use her veto. Tens of thousands have signed the petition and thousands have called Rousseff’s office and Brazilian embassies across the world. This bill is now as important to people living in the islands of São Tomé as it is for those in São Paulo.
The government has a proud record of protecting the environment: in the past few years Brazil vastly reduced deforestation rates, achieving a 78% decline between 2004 and 2011. Rousseff came to office promising to firmly oppose any amnesty to the destroyers of the forest. It is now up to her to stick to her promises and maintain the environmental records of her predecessor.
Brazil’s track record made it the natural host of next month’s critical Earth summit – the most important global environmental summit in 20 years. More than 50,000 people from all over the world will come to Rio and discuss the fate of the planet and how to accelerate the fight against environmental destruction, the collapse of biodiversity, and climate warming.
Rousseff will host the summit – a massive responsibility that requires legitimacy. But if she allows this bill to pass, Brazil will not be seen as a credible host of Rio+20.
A veto by Rousseff will be an act of global leadership, a gesture desperately needed to win the fight against climate change. An approval by her will cast a dark shadow over her presidency and Brazil’s authority in these global forums. Worse still, a victory for big business profits over the planet’s future will set a frightening precedent for the protection of the last remaining forests across our world. Brazil is seen by many countries as a model of 21st century development. This is a crucial moment to define what kind of model Brazil wants to be.
Millions of people will be watching Rousseff as she comes to a decision on this forest code. It is a decision that will have an impact on all our futures.
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ScienceDaily: Earth Science News
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It took Earth ten million years to recover from greatest mass extinction Posted: 27 May 2012 12:38 PM PDT It took some 10 million years for Earth to recover from the greatest mass extinction of all time, latest research has revealed.
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A crisis of political competence in Canberra is spawning a crisis of economic confidence throughout Australia.
The latest Roy Morgan Monthly Consumer Confidence Report showed confidence in the Australian economy had declined sharply. And this month’s Westpac Melbourne Institute of Consumer Sentiment found “disappointing” and “soft” results.
Dunn & Bradstreet Business Failures and Start-ups Analysis for the December 2011 quarter recorded small business failures rising by 57 per cent among firms of six to 19 employees. The survey also found the number of small business start-ups fell a staggering 95 per cent by comparison to the previous year.
At the big end of town, the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry savaged the Gillard government’s 2012-13 budget, claiming it “would not increase business confidence or help companies in the economic slow lane”. The Financial Services Council joined the business criticism, predicting that Treasurer Wayne Swan’s policies would “significantly undermine confidence” in our economy.
The simple fact is Australia is governed by a motley mob of Keystone Kops who can’t competently manage a trade union, much less an entire country. Everywhere you look, Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard have left in their wake a veritable trail of tears, bungles and blunders.
There’s the self-inflicted collapse in the Prime Minister’s personal credibility. People haven’t forgotten her solemn “no carbon tax” pledge given six days before the 2010 election.
And now they watch in disbelief as Gillard contorts herself into a political pretzel over the Craig Thomson affair. And all the while, the clouds of a new economic storm continue to gather on the horizon. We see Greece threatening to drag the rest of Europe over the brink. We observe America still grappling with massive deficit budgets that have driven its federal government debt to 100 per cent of GDP. And now there are indications the Chinese economy might be slowing.
We’re in for a very bumpy ride.
Yet in just over a month, Swan will dump Labor’s job-killing carbon tax upon the shoulders of families and business. And the government keeps digging us all into a growing black hole of debt by borrowing $100 million each and every day. It’s you and I – and our children – who’ll end up footing the bill.
The main reason why we’ve so far weathered the global economic storm relatively unscathed is because we entered it in such great shape. As the Howard government left office at the end of 2007, it bequeathed a federal budget in surplus and a cash nest egg of $45 billion to deal with future emergencies. And this meant we didn’t enter the GFC burdened by the same mountain of debt that has hobbled the economies of Europe and the US.
The most important benchmark of this government’s performance is how its policies have affected Australia’s ability to withstand the prospect of a second economic downturn. The real question is whether Swan’s tenure as treasurer has made Australia’s economy more or less robust.
The answer is clear, despite Swan’s campaign of obfuscation and obscuration. Rather than building up our budget defences in the face of future economic trouble, this government has left us treading water in a sea of red ink. And with this prime minister’s track record of doublespeak and double dealing, I’d like to sell the Harbour Bridge to anyone naive enough to believe her promises of a surplus. Australians are too smart for that. They see through the prime minister’s distractions and distortions. They can smell the rotting Labor brand.
If you’re an entrepreneur the antics of Gillard and Swan will make you keep your wallet in your pocket. In small business in the end it comes down to pure gut instinct. After all the numbers are crunched, all the calculations are complete, decisions about hiring and expansion come down to confidence in the business climate.
The only way to restore faith is through an election that will replace the current crop of Labor incompetents with the safe and secure hands of the Coalition.
Liberal Tony Smith is opposition spokesman on taxation reform