Author: admin

  • Abandoned: paperwork bungle puts out passengers and stops weekend trackwork

    Abandoned: paperwork bungle puts out passengers and stops weekend trackwork

    Jacob Saulwick

    May 16 2012‘You’ve got to get people on trains’After the announcement of 750 RailCorp job cuts, Malcolm Brown sought the Sydney commuter’s perspective..

    • THE NSW government has revealed RailCorp regularly mismanages trackwork, forcing thousands onto buses on weekends when little work is done.The Transport Minister, Gladys Berejiklian, yesterday announced the first stage of an overhaul of the rail system, including hundreds of job cuts, the break-up of RailCorp, and a new division for cleaning. RailCorp will be split into NSW Trains and Sydney Trains.The former will operate CountryLink services and those from Newcastle, the central coast, the Illawarra, Blue Mountains and southern highlands. Sydney Trains will operate the rest.“For too long we’ve been asking taxpayers and customers to put up with services that aren’t as good as they should be” … Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian acknowledged that there is room for improvement. Photo: Edwina Pickles‘For too long we’ve been asking taxpayers and customers to put up with services that aren’t as good as they should be,” Ms Berejiklian said.”There’s no doubt that RailCorp is the most overly bureaucratised and top-heavy organisation in the NSW public service.”Material distributed at the news conference went further. One ”case study” revealed that on a weekend in November, RailCorp shut the Newcastle, central coast and northern lines for $8.5 million worth of trackwork but it was not done because of a paperwork bungle.”There was confusion between RailCorp and its plant hire contractors over the use of certain heavy equipment,” a media release said. ”Contractors were frustrated and withdrew their plant from RailCorp worksites.”Asked how the changes would improve trackwork practices, Ms Berejiklian said: ”This multi-layered bureaucracy stifles innovation, slows decision making and makes it more difficult for employees to do their jobs.”The minister said there would be 750 voluntary redundancies in middle management. Frontline services would not be affected but she would not detail the types of jobs to go, nor how much the cuts would save.The rationale for splitting RailCorp is that passengers travelling long distances have different needs to those on shorter trips across Sydney.”For too long RailCorp has tried to be all things to all people,” Ms Berejiklian saidThe minister said passengers travelling from Newcastle, for instance, should have more comfortable seating. Inner-city passengers needed more frequent services.A government-owned subsidiary will be created to take charge of cleaning but with commercial performance benchmarks.Rail unions did not rule out industrial action and were upset they had not been informed of the cuts.The NSW secretary of the Rail, Tram and Bus Union, Alex Claassens, said: ”Nobody can deny that we need improvements … But what we do want is sensible reform and proper consultation with all the stakeholders.”The NSW branch secretary of the Australian Services Union, Sally McManus, said: ”You can’t say you are going to lose jobs, and service quality is going to go up; it’s illogical.”Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/abandoned-paperwork-bungle-puts-out-passengers-and-stops-weekend-trackwork-20120515-1yp4r.html#ixzz1uzBirhOI
  • Canberra ‘must pick strategic godfather’

    Canberra ‘must pick strategic godfather’

    Philip Wen

    May 16, 2012

    Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang (R) shakes hands with Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr during a meeting at the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing, May 15, 2012. REUTERS/China Daily (CHINA - Tags: POLITICS) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA

    Dependancy … Bob Carr with Li Keqiang in Beijing. Photo: Reuters

    AUSTRALIA must find a ”godfather” to protect it and cannot juggle its relationships with the US and China indefinitely, according to a prominent Chinese defence strategist.

    The warning by Song Xiaojun, a former People’s Liberation Army senior officer, comes after the Foreign Affairs Minister, Bob Carr, was told by his opposite number that Australia’s close military alliance with the US was an outdated throwback to the Cold War era – an issue raised in two other meetings with senior Chinese officials.

    Senator Carr yesterday met with the man expected to become China’s next premier, Li Keqiang, in the closely-guarded Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing. Discussions centred on more conciliatory matters, including furthering trade and investment and discussions to move along a long-mooted free-trade agreement in the 40th year of diplomatic relations between the two nations.

    But the question of Australia’s allies in the Asia-Pacific region remains an issue.

    ”Australia has to find a godfather sooner or later,” Mr Song told the Herald yesterday. ”Australia always has to depend on somebody else, whether it is to be the ‘son’ of the US or ‘son’ of China.

    ”[It] depends on who is more powerful and based on the strategic environment.”

    Mr Song said Australia was dependant on exporting iron ore to China ”to feed itself” but that it had not done enough to engage with the middle kingdom.

    ”Frankly, it has not done well politically,” Mr Song said.

    With heightened sensitivity in the Asia-Pacific region over the strategic impact of Australia’s decision to allow the US to have a permanent troop presence in Darwin, Senator Carr has been keen to emphasise that it has a strong record of military co-operation with China as well.

    Speaking to reporters on Monday, he said Australia was just one of two countries that had a strategic defence dialogue with China, which occurred at the chief of defence force level. The next dialogue will be held in Beijing later this year.

    Senator Carr said Australia was the first Western nation to co-operate with China on a joint humanitarian aid and disaster relief exercise in Chengdu last year and the first to hold a joint live fire exercise with the Chinese navy in 2010.

    HMAS Ballarat will moor in Shanghai tomorrow to mark the 40th anniversary of diplomatic relations and to further symbolise close military co-operation between the countries.

    Speaking at yesterday’s meeting, Mr Li and Senator Carr were keen to highlight the positive diplomatic relationships between their two nations.

    Senator Carr told Mr Li he was ”very conscious that this is the 40th anniversary of our diplomatic relations” and it was ”an opportunity to renew and refresh and recommit to the relationship”.

    ”My meeting today with Vice-Premier Li was an excellent opportunity to discuss ways to advance the Australia-China relationship, which has gone from strength to strength in recent decades,” Senator Carr said in a statement.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/canberra-must-pick-strategic-godfather-20120515-1yp43.html#ixzz1uzAnMpDu

  • Why US Energy Policy cannot Rely on Natural Gas alone

    Oil Price Daily News Update


    Why US Energy Policy cannot Rely on Natural Gas alone

    Posted: 15 May 2012 09:31 AM PDT

    With natural gas prices at such low levels many people are attracted to focussing on natural gas to supply the majority of US energy, believing that the domestically produced product will protect them from global oil price fluctuations, and ensure energy security in the future. However focussing on one source of energy unbalances the US energy sector and puts the economy at risk in the long term.Energy policies must take a long term view and promote fuel diversity rather than choose a favourite energy technology to support. An energy strategy that…

    Read more…

    The IMF are Warned that Oil Prices Could Double by 2022

    Posted: 15 May 2012 08:43 AM PDT

    Despite crude oil already trading on the world markets at a historically high level of $113 a barrel, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been warned by its internal research team that in the next decade oil prices could climb to a permanent level double that which we are experiencing at the moment.The increase could have a dramatic effect on global trade of all kinds, as the report, entitled The Future of Oil: Geology v Technology, warns that the prices will be “uncharted territory for the world economy, which has never experienced…

    Read more…

    Using Viruses to Create Electricity

    Posted: 15 May 2012 08:40 AM PDT

    Objects with piezoelectric properties can convert mechanical energy into electrical energy, meaning that electricity can be cleanly produced just by thought movement. Scientists have been trying to find a way to use this phenomenon to create large amounts of electricity for decades, but most materials that can be used to create piezoelectric devices are highly toxic, somewhat limiting their widespread use.Scientists at the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have developed a method to create electricity via a piezoelectric…

    Read more…

    Mexico has the Fastest Growing Wind Power Sector

    Posted: 15 May 2012 08:39 AM PDT

    Mexico produces a large volume of greenhouse gases, and suffers from severe air pollution in its large cities, some of which, such as Mexico City,  have the worst air particle pollution in North America.In an effort to reduce the countries carbon emissions Mexico is looking to invest more to develop its renewable energy sector. At the beginning of 2012 President Calderón signed the Mexican Global Climate Change Program. The progam pledged $70 million over five years as part of an agreement to cooperate with the US on stimulating the…

    Read more…

    As Saudi Oil Giant Expands, Can it Meet Mounting Security Concerns?

    Posted: 14 May 2012 08:49 PM PDT

    Already the largest oil exporter in the world, state-owned Saudi Aramco plans to significantly expand refining capacity and for the first time ever to venture into oil trading, which could render it the world’s largest integrated energy company; but mounting security threats pose a serious challenge to these ambitious goals. Aramco Trading, which opened in January, plans to move 1.5 million barrels per day in physical oil and gas, paper, futures and derivatives trading. The move coincides with Aramco’s goal of doubling its refining…

    Read more…

    U.S., China Compete for Canadian Energy Assets

    Posted: 14 May 2012 08:43 PM PDT

    To hear Carlos Pascual, the U.S. State Department’s special envoy on international energy tell it, “The United States values Canada as its most important energy partner. There has never been a doubt about that. It is true now and it will continue to be true in the future.” A year ago at the Gas & Oil Expo and Conference North America 2011 the U.S. Ambassador to Canada, David Jacobson, told his audience, “The United States and Canada have the closest energy relationship in the world. And the U.S. sees Canada as a…

    Read more…

    Libya: A Real World Syriana

    Posted: 14 May 2012 08:38 PM PDT

    A curtain is slowly getting drawn back on the death of Shokri Ghanem, the former head of the Libyan oil industry found floating in the Danube River last month. Rumors have surfaced that Ghanem was perhaps speaking with former rebels curious about what he might’ve known about deals with foreign entities that made the Gadhafi family rich from the country’s oil reserves. While nothing is certain, talks of a global energy mafia and investigations into the various dealings of energy companies working in Libya certainly make, at the very least, a compelling…

    Read more…

    You are subscribed to email updates from OilPrice.com Daily News Update
    To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
    Email delivery powered by Google
    Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610
    Reply
    Forward
    Click here to Reply or Forward
  • New Footprint and Biocapacity Data Released from Space: Trends Reveal a ‘Global Auction’ Astronaut Launches Living Planet Report 2012

     

    New Footprint and Biocapacity Data Released from Space: Trends Reveal a ‘Global Auction’

    Astronaut Launches Living Planet Report 2012

    Humanity is now using nature’s services 52 percent faster than what Earth can renew, according to Global Footprint Network’s latest data, published in the 2012 edition of the Living Planet Report. The biennial report, produced by WWF in collaboration with Global Footprint Network and the Zoological Society of London, was launched today by ESA astronaut André Kuipers from the International Space Station.

    Click here to see the video of the launch

    Released just weeks before world leaders come together in Rio de Janeiro for the UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20), the report shows rising competition among countries for resources and land use.

    “We’ve entered the era of the global auction,” said Global Footprint Network President Mathis Wackernagel, Ph.D., “where nations are now forced to compete fiercely for more expensive and less abundant resources. It’s in their own self-interest to preserve and restore the natural assets they have within their borders and avoid ecological deficit spending. In a resource constrained world, such spending will become an ever more challenging economic burden.”

    image

    Figure 1: Using more than Earth can renew is only possible temporarily – while there are sufficient assets to be liquidated and waste sinks to be filled up. Eventually, overshoot will be eliminated – the question is whether it is eliminated by design or by disaster.

    The new figures released for humanity’s Ecological Footprint and biocapacity (Earth’s capacity to regenerate resources) show that now, more than ever, countries must manage natural capital as part of their strategy to secure ecological, economic and social success. This holds also true when deploying development strategies that aim at producing lasting progress, for instance for efforts to eliminate hunger and alleviate poverty.

    As population and consumption increases, the pressure on the planet continues to grow. Global Footprint Network calculations show that in the past five decades, humanity’s Ecological Footprint has more than doubled. In 2008, the most recent year for which data are available, humanity used the equivalent of slightly more than 1.5 planets to support its activities. In other words, nearly 40 years after Earth went into ecological overshoot, it now takes more than a year and six months for Earth to absorb the CO2 emissions and regenerate the renewable resources that people use in one year.

    While humanity’s cropland and fishing Footprints have increased, carbon continues to be the largest driver behind humanity’s ecological overshoot. Carbon now accounts for more than half the global Ecological Footprint, at 54 percent. Land used for food production is another major factor in humanity’s increasing Footprint.

    While carbon is a major challenge, it must not be addressed in isolation. Moving from fossil fuel due to climate concerns to alternative sources will reduce the carbon portion of the Footprint, but may also significantly increase pressure on other ecosystems. The lack of biocapacity to accommodate the carbon Footprint also indicates that there may not be sufficient biomass available to substitute the current level of fossil fuel use, should that become necessary.

    Though the numbers are stark, countries can still reverse trends. Using a Global Footprint Network Scenario Calculator, the 2012 edition of the Living Planet Report offers potential outcomes based on different choices related to resource consumption, demographic trends, land use and productivity.

    Comparing the Ecological Footprint of Countries

    Examining the Ecological Footprint at the per-person level shows that people living in different countries vary greatly in their demand on Earth’s ecosystems. For example, if everyone in the world lived like the average resident of Qatar, which presently has the world’s highest per capita Footprint, we would need the equivalent of 6.5 planets to regenerate our resources and absorb the CO2 emissions. If everyone lived like a resident of the United States, we would need the resources of 4 planets.

    A few countries are now on the verge of turning from ecological creditors to ecological debtors, including Indonesia, Senegal and Ecuador.

    Countries that maintain high levels of resource dependence are putting their own economies at risk,” Wackernagel said. “These countries will expose themselves dangerously to the global auction. But those countries that are able to work within both their financial and their ecological budget will not only serve the global interest, they will have the most resilient economies in a resource-constrained world. If our goal is to make progress last and secure well-being for all, then we can no longer afford to ignore biocapacity deficits in the new era of resource constraints.”

    You can download the latest results here, or check out your country’s trend on our website, as in the case for Switzerland (Click here to see your country’s Ecological Footprint.)

    The top 10 countries with the largest Ecological Footprint per person are Qatar, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Denmark, the United States, Belgium, Australia, Canada, Netherlands, Kuwait and Ireland. Countries on the other end of the spectrum such as Afghanistan and Bangladesh have per capita Footprints that, in many cases, are too small to provide for basic needs. These countries may well need to increase their access to resources if they are to bring large segments of the population out of poverty.

    Who has the greatest natural capital?

    Analysis of biocapacity also reveals vast differences between countries. More than 60 percent of the world’s biocapacity is found within the borders of just 10 countries: Brazil, China, the United States, Russia, India, Canada, Australia, Indonesia, Argentina and Congo. Biocapacity per person, calculated by dividing national biocapacity by a country’s population, is also not equivalent around the world. In 2008, the country with the highest biocapacity per person in this report was Gabon, followed in decreasing order by Bolivia, Mongolia, Canada and Australia. With pressure on ecological resources escalating, access to biocapacity will be increasingly important to countries’ competitiveness and to their ability to provide a good quality of life for their citizens.

    “For lasting competitiveness, countries need a break with the past,” said Wackernagel. “The good news is that addressing resource risks can open up economic opportunities and advance social equity. The solutions lay in better understanding the choices before us. For this, governments need the knowledge and tools to manage their ecological assets as well as their resource demand.”

    How to Participate

    As Global Footprint Network approaches its 10th anniversary, we remain committed to reversing these trends by working with governments and maintaining and improving our National Footprint Accounts, the gold standard for measuring key aspects of a country’s ecological wealth and vulnerabilities. You can be part of this global effort by promoting our work, becoming a partner or giving a donation.

     

     

     

  • Bore water worries for Hendon residents

    Bore water worries for Hendon residents

    Updated May 15, 2012 13:47:07

    Thousands of Hendon residents in Adelaide are being warned about groundwater contamination which was detected 20 years ago.

    The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) says a review of old files has found two reports on a property at Philips Crescent at Hendon.

    They were prepared by environmental consultants in 1992.

    The EPA has held talks with the current property owner, Port Adelaide Enfield Mayor Gary Johanson, and found a third report was prepared that year and showed there were significant chemical levels in groundwater off-site.

    Peter Dolan of the EPA says the current land use is not the cause of the contamination.

    “This site has previously been used for ammunition works, electrical component manufacturing, circuit board manufacturing and possibly electroplating, so potentially there are both on- and off-site sources for the contamination,” he said.

    The Authority has written to 2,900 residents of the area warning them not to use bore water until more testing has been done.

    The affected zone also takes in parts of Seaton, Royal Park and Albert Park.

     

    Topics:environmental-health, water-pollution, pollution, environment, water-supply, water, water-management, states-and-territories, hendon-5014, adelaide-5000, sa

    First posted May 15, 2012 12:01:01

  • RailCorp job cuts first of many: unions

    Get ready for a rocky ride. I have seen this happen before, back in the 1970’s when the train drivers staged a 17 day strike.

     

    RailCorp job cuts first of many: unions

    May 15, 2012 – 2:56PM

    • Comments
    • ‘You’ve got to get people on trains
    • After the announcement of 750 RailCorp job cuts, Malcolm Brown sought the Sydney commuter’s perspectivE
    • The hundreds of RailCorp job cuts announced today by the state government will be the first of many, rail unions say.Unions are also not ruling out industrial action over the overhaul that the Transport Minister, Gladys Berejiklian, is calling the state’s biggest rail shake-up in a generation.At a press conference at Central Station this morning, Ms Berejiklian announced three inititiatives
    End of the line ... 750 jobs have been lost.

    End of the line … 750 jobs have been lost.

    Voluntary redundancies will be offered to 750 middle-management positions, about one in five at that level.

    Ms Berejiklian said the cuts would not affect front-line services, but offered little information on who would be eligible for redundancy.

    The second initiative is to split RailCorp into two, establishing NSW Trains to operate regional services, and Sydney Trains to service city passengers.

    The third will create a specialist division responsible for train cleaning.

    Ms Berejiklian would not say how much money the government expected to save as a result of the changes.

    “We need to fix the trains,” she said.

    “They need to be cleaner, they need to be more reliable.”

    Under Ms Berejiklian’s changes, Newcastle, Central Coast, Blue Mountains, Illawarra and Southern Highlands services will be run by NSW Trains.

    RailCorp will cease to exist, and Sydney Trains will run services through the rest of the network.

    It remains unclear how splitting RailCorp into two will change the type and frequency of services offered to NSW and Sydney rail users.

    “We need to cut the back office, we need to reduce the bureaucracy, we need more services, we need cleaner services,” the minister said.

    Asked how cutting 750 jobs could lead to better services, Ms Berejiklian said: “Why is it that RailCorp has 20 times the number of senior managers the Department of Education has? Why is it that RailCorp has nearly four times the number of back office staff that the former RTA had? There is no reason that an organisation of that size should not put more resources into front-line services.”

    The cleaning division, meanwhile, will operate with “new commercial benchmarks”. But it will continue to be government run, and all staff will remain government employees.

    Following the announcement, rail unions slammed the government’s lack of detail about how the overhaul would lead to service changes, who would get redundancy and whether there were more cuts to come.

    The NSW secretary of the Rail, Tram and Bus Union, Alex Claassens, said he would not rule out industrial action.

    “I think at some point they will continue to come out and make suggestions about more people going; there’s no doubt about that,” Mr Claassens said. “And I think today’s announcement is the first of many.

    “Nobody can deny that we need to make some improvements … but what we do want is sensible reform and proper consultation with all the stakeholders,” he said.

    The NSW branch secretary of the Australian Services Union, Sally McManus, said: “You can’t say you are going to lose jobs, and service quality is going to go up; it’s illogical.”

    The NSW Secretary of the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union, Tim Ayres, said: “This has been a very disrespectful way for the NSW government to announce job cuts to the thousands of people who work in the NSW rail system.”

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/railcorp-job-cuts-first-of-many-unions-20120515-1yo93.html#ixzz1uwTLcURs