Author: admin

  • Radioactive waste to be stored at Lucas Heights

    Radioactive waste to be stored at Lucas Heights

    Updated May 01, 2012 10:33:45

    The Federal Government’s nuclear agency has revealed plans to build a new radioactive waste storage facility next to its reactor at Sydney’s Lucas Heights.

    The waste was generated at the Sydney facility but was sent to France several years ago to be reprocessed to remove plutonium and residual uranium.

    The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) is applying for a licence to store the waste back at Lucas Heights when it returns to the country in 2015.

    ANSTO’s chief doctor, Adi Paterson, say the application has been lodged because a national radioactive waste facility has still not been built.

    “The storage will be on an interim basis while the national waste repository and store is finalised and established, so it is not a permanent storage solution at Lucas Heights,” he said.

    “These casks are designed to be incredibly safe and there’s no plausible accident that can happen in relation to this waste.

    “Many ANSTO staff, about 1,200 of our staff, live in the area. I live in Grays Point, which is just down the road.

    “I think we’re integrated into our community and the discussion we’ve had with our ourselves and our community is to assure ourselves of the safety.”

    ANSTO says the material will only need to be stored at Lucas Heights until 2020.

    But Jim Green from Friends of the Earth is not convinced by the plan.

    “There’s been an ongoing scandal over the years with accidents at Lucas Heights and the failure to learn from those accidents,” Dr Green said.

    “They’ve said that their spent fuel container at Lucas Heights was water-tight, and then they found that it had been infiltrated with considerable amounts of water.

    “Then they’re moving the spent fuel containers and had a number of accidents during that movement, including accidents which irradiated workers, so things don’t always go to plan.”

    Dr Green, however, acknowledges there is no other viable site to store the material.

    Topics: nuclear-issues, environment, lucas-heights-2234

    First posted May 01, 2012 10:04:38

  • Global warming: New research blames economic growth


    Global warming: New research blames economic growth

    Posted: 01 May 2012 10:43 AM PDT

    It’s a message no one wants to hear: to slow down global warming, we’ll either have to put the brakes on economic growth or transform the way the world’s economies work. That’s the implication of an innovative study examining the evolution of atmospheric CO2, the most likely cause of climate change.

     

  • Back to the future as police take control of Sydney transport security

    Here we go again, this has been tried before. With rampant violence in our streets, there will be less police available.

    Back to the future as police take control of Sydney transport security

    May 2, 2012 – 12:25PM

    A new era, or a return to an old era, starts this week on Sydney’s public transport system as police begin taking responsibility for security on the city’s trains, buses and ferries.

    The transport minister, Gladys Berejiklian, and the police minister, Mike Gallagher, joined senior officers this morning in announcing a new NSW Police Transport Command had started operation.

    It is not the first time police have been put in charge of Sydney’s transport security. They were responsible for transport security before 1998, when the then minister, Carl Scully, hired Chubb security guards to patrol trains.

    The Chubb guards were in turn replaced by RailCorp’s transit officer division in 2002. That division will now be shrunk from 600 staff to 150 over the next two years, and officers spread across buses and ferries, as well as trains.

    On the numbers, the O’Farrell government’s changes mean a thinning in the ranks of “revenue protection” officers to check passenger’s tickets.

    Ms Berejiklian said the Police Command, which will have an eventual strength of 600, “had a specific role in relation to safety and security”.

    “They are there to take charge and make the system as safe as possible,” Ms Berejiklian said.

    “The police presence will not only deter criminals but make sure any anti-social behaviour is clamped down upon,” she said.

    The creation of the Police Command was announced in February, but is this week taking effect.

    At the moment it is staffed by 300 officers transferred from the Commuter Crime unit. Over the next two years they will be joined by another 300 officers as more recruits make their way through the police academy.

    The Police Commissioner, Andrew Scipione, said transport command officers would be based in three main hubs in central, south-west and north-west Sydney and seven satellite hubs, including the Hunter, Central Coast and Illawarra regions.

    They will work across the train system as well as buses and ferries.

    Ms Berejiklian said the restructure would be “cost-neutral” by about 2014.

    She said current transit officers would have four options over the next two years: they could try to become police officers; remain as part of the 150-strong transit officer division; take up voluntary redundancy; or apply for other transport jobs.

    Jacob Saulwick is the Herald’s Transport Reporter.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/back-to-the-future-as-police-take-control-of-sydney-transport-security-20120502-1xyd5.html#ixzz1tgNMOBoc

  • Dental care ‘disgrace’ back under the spotlight

    Dental care ‘disgrace’ back under the spotlight

    Updated May 02, 2012 07:01:34

    Sorry, this video cannot be played. You may need to install the latest version of Adobe Flash

    Video: More than a toothache… waiting lists have been described as “horrifying” (photo: AAP)(ABC News)

    A visit to the dentist is an unaffordable luxury for millions of Australians, and there are now a growing number of voices joining the call for the Federal Government to do something about it.

    According to the Consumers Health Forum, the waiting list for publically-funded dental care has 650,000 people on it, and many of those people are waiting for more than two years to receive care.

    Ahead of the release of the 2012-2013 federal budget next Tuesday, the forum is launching a campaign to highlight what it says is a national crisis.

    Australian dental care at a glance:

    • In 1994, the Labor Keating government introduced state funding for services targeting those on low incomes. The Howard government abolished that program, but introduced the chronic disease dental scheme (CDDS) to cap Medicare benefits for those patients with chronic conditions.
    • Rudd’s Labor government introduced a means-tested plan funding annual check-ups for teenagers, as well as promising an expanded range of public dental services.
    • These schemes are still in existence, but the Greens are calling for a universal dental care scheme focusing on vulnerable Australians and the Opposition is indicating it will introduce an extended CDDS.
    • In February, Julia Gillard refused to commit to further funding of dental services, despite it being part of a deal Labor reached with the Greens to secure support for a minority government.
    • One-third of all Australians cannot afford dental care, and some people have been on waiting lists for treatment for up to five years.
    • Just over half of all Australians have some level of private dental health cover.

    Sources: AIHW; Dental Reform: an overview of universal dental schemes

     

    Its chairman, Stephen Murby, told ABC News24 that current waiting list figures are “horrifying”.

    The campaign also comes on the same day as a senate committee inquiry into the chronic disease dental program, with dentists providing feedback on a scheme which has seen many in the profession being audited over millions of dollars worth of Medicare payments.

    Earlier this year, Prime Minister Julia Gillard stopped short of honouring a pledge for a large injection of cash into dental services – part of the deal Labor used to secure support from the Greens for a minority government.

    Additional funding was deferred last year because of budget constraints.

    The Greens, who are still optimistic Ms Gillard will honour her promise, say nothing short of $1 billion this year is acceptable.

    Although there are indications dental care funding will feature in the budget, the forum is concerned there will be nowhere near enough money to address the problem.

    ‘National disgrace’

    Consumers Health Forum CEO Carol Bennett says for someone who does not have private health insurance, the situation in Australia is a “national disgrace”.

    She says many people are forced to see their GPs for pain treatment while they wait, but many others end up in hospital emergency departments because they have reached a point where the infection is out of control.

    “You wait a minimum of 18 months – often up to two years – and in some parts of Australia people are waiting for up to five years for access to basic dental services,” she told Radio National’s Breakfast program.

    When you’ve got this kind of national crisis on your hands with so many people, it’s a false economy to think the surplus is more important.

    Consumer Health Forum CEO Carol Bennett

     

    “That five-year period is an incredible time to wait, and for many people they end up in emergency departments in hospital because they have a whole range of other health complications.”

    Ms Bennett says the situation is “untenable” and infection from dental problems is leading to cancer, heart disease and stroke.

    The fact that dental care has never been properly included in the public health system is a “historic problem”, she says, adding that it has resulted in 90 per cent of dentists operating within the private system.

    “This puts the cost of treatment way out of reach of many people,” she said.

    “The waiting lists are just growing and growing, and I think those waiting lists are very conservative because a lot of people will just simply give up when they have to wait that length of time.”

    Chasing a budget surplus

    Under the chronic disease dental scheme, patients with chronic health conditions can be referred to a dentist by their GP and be reimbursed, but Ms Bennett says it fails to target those who can least afford treatment.

    The forum is calling for the Government to ensure there are services for the most needy people in the community as an “urgent matter of priority”.

    “That needs money, and I know we’re aiming to get a budget surplus, but when you’ve got this kind of national crisis on your hands with so many people, it’s a false economy to think the surplus is more important,” she said.

    How does Australia compare?

    • Although there is confusion over what constitutes universal dental health care from one country to another, recent reports have highlighted some countries they see as administering universal care.
    • Austria, Mexico, Poland, Spain and Turkey were seen to provide 100 per cent cover for the cost of dental services, according to a recent OECD publication.
    • Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy and the UK were seen to have universal schemes, according to the Council of European Dentists.
    • Australia ranks among the bottom third of OECD countries for rates of dental decay among adults, according to the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association.

     

    Rather than calling for a universal dental scheme, as the Greens are proposing, Ms Bennett is calling for the Government to invest at least half a billion dollars per year to kick-start the initiative.

    But she says setting up a workforce to tackle the problem is also a big issue and complicates the issue further.

    “The kinds of measures that the dental advisory committee recommended are things like increasing the scope of practice that dental hygienists and therapists have, so that they can do some of the more simple procedures that dentists currently carry out – and at a more cost-effective price,” she said.

    She says the Government should also look at bringing in more overseas-trained dentists, as well as investing more in the public hospital system to attract more private sector dentists.

    “I don’t know of any countries that have reached that point where you’ve got 90 per cent of your work force working in the private sector,” she said.

    For someone with serious dental problems, Ms Bennett says the situation in Australia is “absolutely terrible”.

    “They have pain, they can’t eat properly, that leads to a range of other health problems – infections and the like,” she said.

    “It’s very much linked to self-esteem and people’s sense of feeling good about themselves, and not being able to work for many people.”

    Topics:dental, health, australia

    First posted May 01, 2012 13:06:45

  • Victory over coal seam gas for frustrated farmers

    Victory over coal seam gas for frustrated farmers

    0
    CSG protest

    Anti Coal Seam Gas rally outside NSW Parliament / Pic: Alan Pryke Source: The Daily Telegraph

    FARMERS who marched on state parliament to protest against miners encroaching on their land were given an immediate reward for their efforts – a frank admission from the state government that it could do better.

    Almost drowned out by the boos of 4000 protesters, Deputy Premier Andrew Stoner yesterday admitted the government’s draft policy on coal seam gas mining could be “improved”.

    It was enough to give the farmers some hope in their bitter fight with a mining industry that currently has near-unfettered access to their agricultural land, if they hold an exploration permit.

    While his delivery left some protesters bewildered, Mr Stoner told the farmers the government was listening and would protect agricultural land from mining, despite telling one farmer to shut up.

    “It’s a draft policy we know can be improved, it will be – if you’ll just shut your mouth for a minute, mate – it will be,” Mr Stoner said.

    Under the draft policy, an independent panel would decide if it is safe for a company to mine on, or within 2km of, prime agricultural land.

    But if the government decides a project is of “exceptional value to the state”, they can approve it without it going through the review process.A potential change of heart was also aired by Planning Minister Brad Hazzard, who said such a clause could be changed if people didn’t have faith in governments to make the right decision.

    “My inclination is that if people don’t have faith in government … well perhaps it’s not worth the agony,” Mr Hazzard said.

    Meanwhile, a parliamentary report into coal seam gas, ordered by the upper house, also gave farmers cause for celebration yesterday.

    As revealed in The Daily Telegraph yesterday, the report called for a ban on the controversial CSG mining method known as fracking and a freeze on new production licences until governments had regulatory measures in place.

    The Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association said if the recommendations were acted upon, it would ruin the industry and be a huge expense to the community.

     

     

    2 comments on this story

  • Miners fear scrapping of diesel rebate

    Miners fear scrapping of diesel rebate

    Peter Ker

    May 2, 2012

    RIO TINTO and BHP Billiton have expressed fears the federal government will scrap a rebate on diesel fuel in next week’s budget.

    During meetings with big investors yesterday, Rio Tinto’s chief executive, Tom Albanese, and BHP’s group executive, Alberto Calderon, both delivered messages that – apart from the iron ore sector – were generally bearish.

    They warned that capital costs on new projects were uncomfortably high, and any additional burdens would not help the investment case for greenfield projects.

    Mr Albanese’s comments came just hours after he met the Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, in Sydney yesterday, leaving big investors to speculate the meeting did little to calm his concerns.

    Mining companies use diesel for trucks and power generation in remote locations, and have been offered a rebate to diesel taxes because they drive on private roads.

    Speculation has mounted that the government will axe the subsidy in a bid to keep the budget in surplus.

    The Mount Pleasant coal project near Muswellbrook was highlighted during Mr Albanese’s conversation with investors as an example of sharply rising costs.

    He also expressed concerns about environmental opposition to a bauxite expansion at the South of Embley project near Weipa, which will now likely be delayed by a year.

    The diesel rebate could also affect BHP’s approach to the Olympic Dam expansion, which is scheduled for a final board decision soon.

    Despite the cautious mood on those matters, Mr Calderon and Mr Albanese both left investors confident that their iron ore expansions in the Pilbara continued to have strong prospects of winning approval later this year.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/miners-fear-scrapping-of-diesel-rebate-20120501-1xx79.html#ixzz1tf7ETa5r