Author: admin

  • Barry O Farrell’s coup on transport praised

    Barry O’Farrell’s coup on transport praised

    0

    Police crack down on cyclists

    A blitz against bike riders running red lights and not wearing helmets was enforced during peak hour in Pyrmont.

    Barry O'Farrell

    No Moore … Premier Barry O’Farrell / Pic: Kristi Miller Source: The Daily Telegraph

    BUSINESS groups have praised Premier Barry O’Farrell for taking the reins away from City of Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore.

    The Daily Telegraph revealed yesterday Mr O’Farrell had shifted planning control to Macquarie St by establishing a joint state government-City of Sydney committee to manage transport issues.

    The state government will have four seats at the seven-seat committee, giving it ultimate say over Sydney‘s transport future. The Premier said the CBD was too important to be “held hostage” to Ms Moore’s constituents.

    Patricia Forsythe of the Sydney Business Chamber called this a “sensible approach”.

    “Unless we get traffic flow right, there are many flow-on effects,” she said.

    Ms Forsythe said she would not lobby the government to get rid of bike lanes because many business owners were not opposed to them.

    Urban Taskforce Australia CEO Chris Johnson said people travelling to the CBD for work should not be disregarded by planners.

    “The prosperity of the state cannot be delegated to local governments who are focused mainly on their local voters,” Mr Johnson said. “There needs to be balance between all the transport networks.”

    Infrastructure Partnerships Australia also supported the decision with CEO Brendan Lyon saying it was positive that ideology was being taken out of the equation.

    “With congestion pressures costing Sydney and NSW billions of dollars each year, we need a joined up strategy that needs to be driven by better traffic and transport outcomes, not ideology,” Mr Lyon said.

    Ms Moore asked Mr O’Farrell to explain how it differed from current arrangements, and argued it was business as usual. But with the government commanding the casting vote on the committee, the balance of power has shifted.

     

    1 comment on this story

  • Reef threat, Satellite eye pictures and Michael Mann book extract

    Reef threat, Satellite eye pictures and Michael Mann book extract

    The week’s top environment news stories and green events

    If you’re not already receiving this roundup, sign up here to get the briefing delivered to your inbox

    Environment news

    Australia’s mining boom placing Great Barrier Reef at risk, UN warns
    Climate change could make Canada’s traditional ice hockey extinct
    BP settles Gulf of Mexico oil spill lawsuit
    Cheetah struggling to reproduce due to climate change, scientists warn
    Goldfinches wooed from farmland to British gardens
    Exxon in spotlight after Papua New Guinea landslide

    On the blogs

    Forests sell-off plans  : Forest of Dean

    Is the government planning a further U-turn on selling our forests?
    Julia Roberts: how clean cookstoves can transform lives
    Sun, sewage and algae: a recipe for success?
    Lord Lawson’s links to Europe’s colossal coal polluter

    Multimedia

    Satellite Eye on Earth : Ice covers the surface of northwestern Lake Sakakawea

    Satellite eye on Earth: January 2012 – in pictures
    Wadebridge, the UK’s first solar-powered town – video
    The week in wildlife – in pictures
    BP agrees $7.8bn payout over Gulf of Mexico oil spill – video

    Features

    Michael Mann

    Michael Mann on climate wars: ‘the hockey stick did not suddenly appear out of left field’
    Wrexham leads Europe’s solar charge
    Here comes trouble: the return of the wild boar to Britain
    Is Antarctica getting warmer and gaining ice?

    Best of the web

    ChinaDialogue: Panda breeding success ignores their disappearing habitat
    BusinessGreen: Controversial green energy report ‘very, very poor’, says government economist
    Carbon Commentary: Eden Project installs UK’s first employee-owned solar plant
    For more of the best environment comment and news from around the web, visit the Guardian Environment Network.

    … And finally

    Queen’s jubilee tree challenge reaches 1 million mark
    Woodland Trust’s target of planting 6 million trees in Queen’s diamond jubilee year is on track

  • The Syrian people’s gift to us (AVAAZ)

    The Syrian people’s gift to us

    Inbox
    x

    Ricken Patel – Avaaz.org avaaz@avaaz.org
    4:52 AM (3 hours ago)

    to me

    Dear friends,

    Syria protest:

    Powered by millions of online actions and donations from 75,000 of us, our community is playing a central role in supporting the Syrian people as they persist in peaceful protest against all odds. Together, we’re empowering citizen journalism, smuggling in medical supplies and western journalists, and much more. We’re making a difference, but the staggering bravery of the Syrian people is their gift to the rest of us. Read this email for the full story, or look at this recent media coverage of Avaaz’s work on Syria: BBC, CNN, El Pais, TIME, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, AFP.

    This morning, 4 western journalists are home safe with their families, the echoes of the horror and heroism of Baba Amr still ringing in their ears. Over 50 Syrian activists, supported by Avaaz, volunteered to rescue them and scores of wounded civilians from the Syrian army’s killzone. Many of those incredible activists have not survived the week.

    Abu Hanin is one of the heroes. He’s 26, a poet, and when his community needed him, he took the lead in organizing the citizen journalists that Avaaz has supported to help the voices of Syrians reach the world. The last contact with Abu Hanin was on Thursday, as regime troops closed in on his location. He read his last will and testament to the Avaaz team in Beirut, and told us where he had buried the bodies of the two western journalists killed in the shelling. Since then, his neighborhood of Baba Amr has been a black hole, and we still don’t know his fate.

    It’s easy to despair when seeing Syria today, but to honour the dead, we must carry forward the hope they died with. As Baba Amr went dark and fears of massacre spread, Syrians took to the streets — yet again — across the country, in a peaceful protest that showed staggering bravery.

    Their bravery is our lesson, the gift of the Syrian people to the rest of us. Because in their spirit, in their courage to face the worst darkness our world has to offer, a new world is being born.

    And in that new world, the Syrian people are not alone. Millions of us from every nation have stood with them time and time again, right from the beginning of their struggle. Nearly 75,000 of us have donated almost $3 million to fund people-powered movements and deliver high-tech communications equipment to help them tell their story, and enable the Avaaz team to help smuggle in over $2 million worth of medical supplies. We’ve taken millions of online actions to push for action from the Security Council and the Arab League and for sanctions from many countries, and delivered those online campaigns in dozens of stunts, media campaigns and high-level advocacy meetings with top world leaders. Together we’ve helped win many of these battles, including for unprecedented action by the Arab League, and oil sanctions from Europe.

    Our team in Beirut has also provided a valuable communications hub for brave and skilled activists to coordinate complex smuggling operations and the rescue of the wounded and the journalists. Avaaz does not direct these activities, but we facilitate, support and advise. We have also established safe houses for activists, and supported the outreach and diplomatic engagement of the Syrian National Council — the opposition movement’s fledgling political representative body. Much of the world’s major media have covered Avaaz’s work to help the Syrian people, including features on BBC, CNN, El Pais, TIME, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, AFP and many more, citing our “central role” in the Syrian peaceful protest movement.

    Today, a dozen more nightmares like that visited on the city of Homs are unfolding across Syria. The situation will get worse before it gets better. It will be bloody, and complicated, and as some protesters take up arms to defend themselves, the line between right and wrong will blur. But President Assad’s brutal regime will fall, and there will be peace, and elections, and accountability. The Syrian people simply will not stop until that happens — and it may happen sooner than we all think.

    Every expert told us at the beginning that an uprising in Syria was unthinkable. But we sent in satellite communications equipment anyway. Because our community knows something that the experts and cynics don’t — that people power and a new spirit of citizenship are sweeping our world today, and they are fearless, and unstoppable, and will bring hope to the darkest places. Marie Colvin, an American journalist covering the violence in Homs, told Avaaz before she died, “I’m not leaving these people.” And neither will we.

    With hope, and admiration for the Syrian people and courageous citizens everywhere,

    Ricken, Wissam, Stephanie, Alice, David, Antonia, Will, Sam, Emma, Wen-Hua, Veronique and the whole Avaaz team

    P.S. If you want to do more, click here to help keep our lifeline of hope into Syria open:
    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/smuggle_hope_into_syria_rb//?vl



    Avaaz.org is a 13-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 13 countries on 4 continents and operates in 14 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz’s biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

  • It’s a good thing it’s just a theory

    It’s a good thing it’s just a theory!

    topic posted Wed, May 16, 2007 – 1:16 PM by  Unsubscribed

    Share/Save/Bookmark

    top 10 effects of global warming…

    10 Aggravated Allergies
    Have those sneeze attacks and itchy eyes that plague you every spring been worsening in recent years? If so, global warming may be partly to blame. Over the past few decades, more and more Americans have started suffering from seasonal allergies and asthma. Though lifestyle changes and pollution ultimately leave people more vulnerable to the airborne allergens they breathe in, research has shown that the higher carbon dioxide levels and warmer temperatures associated with global warming are also playing a role by prodding plants to bloom earlier and produce more pollen . With more allergens produced earlier, allergy season can last longer. Get those tissues ready.

    9 Heading for the Hills
    Starting in the early 1900s, we’ve all had to look to slightly higher ground to spot our favorite chipmunks, mice and squirrels. Researchers found that many of these animals have moved to greater elevations , possibly due to changes in their habitat caused by global warming. Similar changes to habitats are also threatening Arctic species like polar bears , as the sea ice they dwell on gradually melts away .

    8 Arctic in Bloom
    While melting in the Arctic might cause problems for plants and animals at lower latitudes, it’s creating a downright sunny situation for Arctic biota . Arctic plants usually remain trapped in ice for most of the year. Nowadays, when the ice melts earlier in the spring, the plants seem to be eager to start growing. Research has found higher levels of the form of the photosynthesis product chlorophyll in modern soils than in ancient soils, showing a biological boom in the Arctic in recent decades.

    7 Pulling the Plug
    A whopping 125 lakes in the Arctic have disappeared in the past few decades, backing up the idea that global warming is working fiendishly fast nearest Earth’s poles . Research into the whereabouts of the missing water points to the probability that permafrost underneath the lakes thawed out. When this normally permanently frozen ground thaws, the water in the lakes can seep through the soil , draining the lake–one researcher likened it to pulling the plug out of the bathtub. When the lakes disappear, the ecosystems they support also lose their home.

    6 The Big Thaw
    Not only is the planet’s rising temperature melting massive glaciers, but it also seems to be thawing out the layer of permanently frozen soil below the ground’s surface. This thawing causes the ground to shrink and occurs unevenly, so it could lead to sink holes and damage to structures such as railroad tracks, highways and houses. The destabilizing effects of melting permafrost at high altitudes, for example on mountains, could even cause rockslides and mudslides.

    5 Survival of the Fittest
    As global warming brings an earlier start to spring, the early bird might not just get the worm. It might also get its genes passed on to the next generation. Because plants bloom earlier in the year, animals that wait until their usual time to migrate might miss out on all the food. Those who can reset their internal clocks and set out earlier stand a better chance at having offspring that survive and thus pass on their genetic information, thereby ultimately changing the genetic profile of their entire population.

    4 Speedier Satellites
    A primary cause of a warmer planet– carbon dioxide emissions –is having effects that reach into space with a bizarre twist . Air in the atmosphere’s outermost layer is very thin, but air molecules still create drag that slows down satellites, requiring engineers to periodically boost them back into their proper orbits. But the amount of carbon dioxide up there is increasing. And while carbon dioxide molecules in the lower atmosphere release energy as heat when they collide, thereby warming the air, the sparser molecules in the upper atmosphere collide less frequently and tend to radiate their energy away, cooling the air around them. With more carbon dioxide up there, more cooling occurs, causing the air to settle. So the atmosphere is less dense and creates less drag.

    3 Rebounding Mountains
    Though the average hiker wouldn’t notice, the Alps and other mountain ranges have experienced a gradual growth spurt over the past century or so thanks to the melting of the glaciers atop them. For thousands of years, the weight of these glaciers has pushed against the Earth’s surface, causing it to depress. As the glaciers melt, this weight is lifting, and the surface slowly is springing back. Because global warming speeds up the melting of these glaciers, the mountains are rebounding faster .

    2 Ruined Ruins
    All over the globe, temples, ancient settlements and other artifacts stand as monuments to civilizations past that until now have withstood the tests of time. But the immediate effects of global warming may finally do them in . Rising seas and more extreme weather have the potential to damage irreplaceable sites. Floods attributed to global warming have already damaged a 600-year-old site, Sukhothai, which was once the capital of a Thai kingdom.

    1 Forest Fire Frenzy
    While it’s melting glaciers and creating more intense hurricanes , global warming also seems to be heating up forest fires in the United States. In western states over the past few decades, more wildfires have blazed across the countryside, burning more area for longer periods of time. Scientists have correlated the rampant blazes with warmer temperatures and earlier snowmelt. When spring arrives early and triggers an earlier snowmelt, forest areas become drier and stay so for longer, increasing the chance that they might ignite.

    posted by:

    Unsubscribed
  • Peak Oil Alerts

    Google Alert – PEAK-OIL

    Inbox
    x

    Google Alerts googlealerts-noreply@google.com
    10:37 PM (19 minutes ago)

    to me
    News 4 new results for PEAK-OIL
    The Peak Oil Crisis: East Coast Refineries Redux
    Falls Church News Press
    By Tom Whipple It has been six weeks since we last discussed the problems that could be in store for the US’s East Coast due to closing of refineries in the Philadelphia area. Last week, the US Department of Energy issued a second, more detailed report
    See all stories on this topic »
    CERAWEEK: Total’s Upstream Chief Says Peak Oil Is Around The Corner
    Forbes
    Even if they might agree with Total, oil execs are loathe to admit peak oil concerns publicly for fear that the countries that still hold large untapped resources (like Venezuela, Iran, and Russia — all places where Total has played) will extract
    See all stories on this topic »
    MARKET TALK ROUNDUP: Updates From IHS CERA Energy Conference
    Wall Street Journal
    5:45 pm ET (Dow Jones) These are happy times for the oil industry, which has shed talk of peak oil for the thrill of new discoveries. “We are reinventing ourselves again in our view,” says Statoil’s (STO) head for North America Bill Maloney,
    See all stories on this topic »
    Permaculture Noosa meeting, Guest speaker, Phil Woods
    My Sunshine Coast (press release)
    Phil has managed Council’s Energy Transition Project for the past four years and has been the lead author of Council’s ‘Peak Oil Background Study’ (which supported Council’s ‘Climate Change and Peak Oil Strategy’) and the ‘Energy Transition Plan’ which
    See all stories on this topic »


    Tip: Use site restrict in your query to search within a site (site:nytimes.com or site:.edu). Learn more.

    Delete this alert.
    Create another alert.
    Manage your alerts.

  • Running hot and cold in the deep sea: Scientists explore rare environment

    Running hot and cold in the deep sea: Scientists explore rare environment

    Posted: 06 Mar 2012 04:57 PM PST

    It’s extremely rare to find hot hydrothermal vents and cold methane seeps intersecting in one place, but that’s what researchers found and explored during an expedition in 2010. A description of the scientists’ findings, including a large number of mysterious, undescribed species, has just been published.

    Listening to the 9. 0-magnitude Japanese earthquake: Seismic waves converted to audio to study quake’s traits

    Posted: 06 Mar 2012 11:25 AM PST

    A professor has converted the seismic waves from last year’s historic Japanese earthquake into audio files. The results allow experts and general audiences to “hear” what the quake sounded like as it moved through the earth and around the globe.
    You are subscribed to email updates from ScienceDaily: Earth Science News
    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