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  • Iran steps up pace and capacity of uranium enrichment, says IAEA report

    Iran steps up pace and capacity of uranium enrichment, says IAEA report

    Israel’s ‘red line’ could be hit in June, the point when Iranians have enough 20%-enriched uranium to produce a warhead

    Binyamin Netanyahu

    Iran’s uranium-enrichment programme is more the 70% of the way to producing a nuclear weapon, Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, tells the UN. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

    Iran has expanded its enrichment capacity and is enriching uranium at a pace that would bring it to what Israel has declared an unacceptable red line in just over seven months, according to a report by the UN nuclear watchdog.

    The International Atomic Energy Agency also found that Iranian technicians had removed the fuel rods from the country’s only functioning nuclear power station at Bushehr, suggesting the new reactor has serious problems. Iran did not tell IAEA inspectors what those problems were.

    The IAEA quarterly report on Iran’s nuclear programme was released just days before the expected launch of a new diplomatic initiative to resolve the international impasse over the issue.

    It also comes soon after Israeli official stated that the red line drawn by Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, during his UN appearance in September, represented 240kg of 20%-enriched uranium, enough to make a warhead if further enriched to weapons grade.

    The sensitivity of 20% uranium figure is that it can be turned into weapons grade relatively fast and easily.

    The last time the IAEA inspectors drew up a report, three months ago, Iran had made 189kg of 20% uranium but had used nearly 100kg for civilian purposes, leaving an outstanding 96kg.

    In the last three months, that stockpile has grown by 43kg and Iran has not diverted any more of it to civil uses. At the current steady rate of production, that would bring Iran to the Israeli red line by mid-June. But it also installed new centrifuges at its underground enrichment plant in Fordow, with which it could double its rate of production if it chose to do so.

    However, it could also decide to divert more uranium to civilian uses, or – as western diplomats hope – strike a deal, exchanging 20% uranium for sanctions relief, and thus defuse the crisis.

    Diplomats from six major powers are due to meet next week to discuss a common negotiating strategy as an expected prelude to restarting high-level talks with Iran at about the end of this month.

  • Solar panel subsidies scrapped early

    Solar panel subsidies scrapped early

    Updated Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:51pm AEDT

    The Federal Government is phasing out its subsidies for solar panels six months early.

    Climate Change Minister Greg Combet says the solar credits scheme will stop at the beginning of next year.

    Mr Combet says there is strong demand for solar power and that scrapping the subsidies will ease pressure on power prices and place the industry on a sustainable footing.

    He says the overall reduction in power bills is estimated to be up to $100 million next year.

    Opposition environment spokesman Greg Hunt says winding the scheme up early is an admission by the Government that it was adding to the pressure on power prices.

    “Well it’s clear that we’ve had a massive impact on power prices from phantom credits,” he said.

    “It’s also clear that most of the damage has been done, so it’s shutting the gate after the horse has bolted again, though they haven’t even worked it through with the industry.

    “Our understanding is that industry had 15 minutes’ notice of the announcement today.”

    Since 2007, more than 880,000 rooftop solar systems and more than 560,000 solar and heat pump water heaters have been subsidised under the Government’s Renewable Energy Target.

    Greens leader Christine Milne says the decision is particularly galling because the Government has simultaneously announced mines and landfills will not face higher costs for methane emissions until 2017.

    “They’ve brought forward an end to support for solar while at the same time delaying the full cost of methane emissions,” she said.

    “That tells you where Labor is coming from. They obviously think there are more votes in coal seam gas and mines and fugitive emissions than there are in actually supporting the new renewable energy technologies.”

    Topics:solar-energy, federal-government, programs-and-initiatives, alternative-energy, environment, australia, nt

    First posted Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:00pm AEDT

  • Taming the dirty oil giants

    Taming the dirty oil giants

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    Pascal V – Avaaz.org
    9:22 AM (44 minutes ago)

    to me

    Our call, delivered in Parliament and on TV, helped win this round! Send this email widely to build our numbers for the full vote just around the corner.

    Dear friends,

    In days, Nigeria’s Parliament could approve a $5 billion fine against giant oil polluter Shell and set in motion a law that would hold oil companies to account for the first time ever. The President endorses the penalty, but Big Oil are lobbying MPs like crazy to vote against reform. Our voices can drown them out to win justice for Nigeria’s people. Join the urgent call now!

    In days, Nigeria’s Parliament could approve a $5 billion fine against giant oil polluter Shell for a spill that devastated the lives of millions of people, and pass a law to hold all oil companies to account for polluting and plundering. This is a watershed moment, but unless we all speak out, oil giants will crush it.

    Finally, Big Oil is having to pay for the wasteland and violence that they’ve created. President Jonathan supports the Shell fine, and progressive Senators are pushing for strong regulations, but oil companies are slick, and without huge international support MPs could buckle under the pressure.

    Politicians are deciding their positions right now — sign the urgent petition for the Nigerian Parliament to fine Shell and support the bill, and then forward this to everyone — when we hit a million signers we’ll bring our unprecedented global call to the steps of Nigeria’s Parliament:

    http://www.avaaz.org/en/make_shell_pay_rb/?bhPqncb&v=19285

    Experts say that every year Big Oil spills as much crude into the Niger Delta as an Exxon Valdez, but as it is Africa, it gets little media play. After a leak occurred at Shell’s Bonga oil facility last December, millions of gallons poured into the ocean and washed up on the densely populated coast — resulting in one of the largest African oil spills ever. The fine and bill on the table are a once in a lifetime chance to stand up to Big Oil.

    Oil companies have made $600 billion in the last 50 years in Nigeria, but locals don’t see the benefits. Their land, drinking water and fishing grounds are ruined. And Shell has spent hundreds of millions of dollars a year on security forces, repressing protest against its harmful practices.

    The oil industry is crucial to the economy, but companies have never been held to account for the devastation of drilling. Now, the Nigerian President and a few brave MPs are speaking out and they could finally slam the oil giants with tough fines and give fair pay outs to the victims. If we show MPs that the world supports these crucial steps, we can literally change the lives of millions. Click below to sign the urgent petition:

    http://www.avaaz.org/en/make_shell_pay_rb/?bhPqncb&v=19285

    Avaazers have stood up to Big Oil all over the world, from Chevron in Ecuador, to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, to ending fossil fuel subsidies at the Rio Summit. Now let’s do it for Nigeria too. Make sure the politicians send a message to Big Oil: your days of impunity are over.

    With hope and determination,

    Pascal, Patricia, Alex, Ricken, David, Rewan, and the Avaaz team

    Shell Faces $5 Billion Nigeria Fine (Wall Street Journal)
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303933704577532723563488122.html

    Shell urged to pay Nigeria $5bn over Bonga oil spill (BBC)
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18875731

    Shell’s grip on Nigerian state revealed (The Guardian)
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/dec/08/wikileaks-cables-shell-nigeria-spying

    U.N. slams Shell as Nigeria needs biggest ever oil clean-up (Reuters)
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/04/us-nigeria-ogoniland-idUSTRE7734MQ20110804

    Nigeria: Oil spill investigations ‘a fiasco’ in the Niger Delta (Amnesty International)
    http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/nigeria-oil-spill-investigations-fiasco-niger-delta-2012-08-02

    Support the Avaaz Community!
    We’re entirely funded by donations and receive no money from governments or corporations. Our dedicated team ensures even the smallest contributions go a long way.



    Avaaz.org is a 16-million-person global campaign network
    that works to ensure that the views and values of the world’s people shape global decision-making. (“Avaaz” means “voice” or “song” in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 19 countries on 6 continents and operates in 14 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz’s biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

    You are getting this message because you signed “Save our dying planet!” on 2011-12-08 using the email address nevilleg729@gmail.com.
    To ensure that Avaaz messages reach your inbox, please add avaaz@avaaz.org to your address book. To change your email address, language settings, or other personal information, https://secure.avaaz.org/act/index.php?r=profile&user=6be3e9aa63582c9b1397464fcc49baa9&lang=en, or simply go here to unsubscribe.

    To contact Avaaz, please do not reply to this email. Instead, write to us at www.avaaz.org/en/contact or call us at +1-888-922-8229 (US).

  • NSW Government’s Coastal Management Reforms – Stage 1

    NSW Government’s Coastal Management Reforms – Stage 1
    As part of Stage 1 Reforms the 2009 NSW Sea Level Rise Policy, which required The State has adopted a position that sea level rise benchmarks are best
    www.hwlebsworth.com.au/…/783-nsw-governments-coastal-m…

  • The research that could shut down CSG in Australia

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    Dear Inga ,

    This is not supposed to be happening.

    “Vast amounts of methane appear to be leaking undetected from Australia’s biggest coal seam gas field, according to world-first research that undercuts claims by the gas industry.” 1

    That’s how The Sydney Morning Herald described research getting nationwide media attention — after two Australian researchers uncovered methane, carbon dioxide and other gases leaking up from the ground in a CSG field in southeast Queensland.

    Scientists found methane levels were more than three times higher inside the gas field than expected. It’s some of the highest concentrations of methane in the air found, anywhere, scientists told ABC’s 7:30 Report. Methane is a much more serious gas than carbon dioxide: 21 times more powerful for warming the planet. It thoroughly debunks the gas industry’s claims that CSG produces 70% less emissions than coal!

    This research makes it really clear: CSG is far more dangerous than governments have reckoned on. Currently, the gas industry is getting away with pollution that isn’t even accounted for. Let’s call on Federal Climate Change Minister Greg Combet to commission urgent research into the climate impacts of coal seam gas, and to make sure that CSG companies start accounting, and paying, for their pollution. Please write to him today.

    Right now our government isn’t independently measuring these so-called “fugitive emissions”, or making the industry properly pay for them under the carbon price. If they did, it would change everything.

    University of Melbourne’s Professor Peter Rayner estimates that leaking methane from just one area in this one gas field could incur a liability of $10 million a year or more. Multiply that by even a fraction of the tens of thousands of gas wells expanding across QLD and into NSW, and you’ve got a climate bill worth billions. Suddenly coal seam gas is looking less like a vital ‘transition fuel’ — and more like a dirty fossil fuel we can’t afford to keep.

    This research couldn’t be more important, or timely. A recent energy white paper has forecast a massive expansion of Australian coal seam gas drilling, and called for environmental objections to be removed to make large-scale gas extraction easier. 2

    We’ve seen the CSG industry shrug off bad news stories before, but this scandal threatens its very existence. It’s time the federal government did its due diligence on an industry that’s still expanding at a breakneck pace — posing a threat to our agriculture, our health and our climate. Send a vital message to Minister Combet today:

    http://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/coal-seam-gas/leaks/dirtier-than-coal

    Keep up the good work,
    the GetUp team

    PS: For years the CSG industry has been telling us that so-called ‘fugitive emissions’ from fracking are negligible. The tagline of a recent pro-CSG ad in Queensland reads, “It’s cleaner. It’s safer. It’s jobs. It’s the future.” Now the question is, will coal seam gas even make sense if we factor in the cost of its real emissions? It’s time to find out: http://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/coal-seam-gas/leaks/dirtier-than-coal

    [1] “Methane leaking from coal seam gas field, testing shows,” The Syney Morning Herald, Nov 14, 2012.
    [2] ibid


    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 Sam Mclean, Level 2, 104 Commonwealth Street, Surry Hills NSW 2010.

  • 700 jobs to go as RailCorp gets the axe

    700 jobs to go as RailCorp gets the axe

    0
    Train

    Unions say changes could force local train stations to close. Source: The Daily Telegraph

    RAILCORP will cease to exist on July 1 and will be replaced by Sydney trains and NSW trains.

    This will result in almost 700 job cuts.

    The changes were announced today by NSW Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian as part of the government’s Fixing the Trains reform program.

    Sydney trains will look after metropolitan lines, and long distance train trips will be managed by NSW trains.

    The minister said RailCorp staff will be able to see the new organisational structures for the first time today.

    She also made a commitment that no station staff would be cut and commuters will see more staff on platforms.

    The announcement comes after unions today warned more than 100 local train stations in Sydney could be threatened with closure due to Railcorp’s plan to cut station manager jobs.

    It follows an online job advertisement posted by the government this week looking to recruit a person to implement staff reviews at “116 stations in the Sydney Trains area”.

    The Australian Services Union (ASU) believes the advertisement is a clear sign that some Sydney stations are on the chopping block.

    ASU NSW assistant secretary Asren Pugh says any decision to cut jobs would result in the closure of some stations, and would drastically reduce the level of service and safety of those that survive.

    “At the moment we’re not sure where the jobs will be cut from, so every local station is in jeopardy,” Mr Pugh said in a statement.

    “Without staff to run these stations they will be forced to shut, potentially leaving thousands of commuters without access to local stations.

    “The stations that are lucky enough to survive will lose valuable staff.

    “Cutting these jobs will result in a notable decrease in customer service in our train stations.”

    Mr Pugh said the ASU had written to Railcorp requesting an explanation of its plans.

    “If commuters are going to lose their local train stations, they deserve to know about it,” he said.

    “If the government is planning to privatise rail, commuters deserve to know about that too.”

    With AAP