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  • Oakeshott’s call for wood-powered electricity means more logging

    This clearly displays how out of touch with the environment Oakeshott is.

    Neville

    15 February 2012, 2.23pm AEST

    Oakeshott’s call for wood-powered electricity means more logging

    We are poised at a pivotal moment for native forests, the wood products industry and climate change. Australia is moving away from a damaging native forestry industry – and a damaging conflict over its future – to a plantation industry with broad-based support. Rob Oakeshott’s push this week to promote…

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    Ym83nk6h-1329262961 There are dark days ahead for Australian forests if renewable energy plan gets the nod. jwbenwell/Flickr We are poised at a pivotal moment for native forests, the wood products industry and climate change. Australia is moving away from a damaging native forestry industry – and a damaging conflict over its future – to a plantation industry with broad-based support. Rob Oakeshott’s push this week to promote burning native-forest wood for electricity production could kick off more logging, and more conflict.
    Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor, together with all other members of the Multi-Party Climate Change Committee, agreed in July 2011 to exclude native forest wood from being subsidised as a renewable energy resource. This decision put in place a crucial backstop to see the end of Australia’s forest wars. But now Oakeshott has changed his position.
    The Multi-Party Climate Change Committee, chaired by PM Gillard and including the Greens and Independents Tony Windsor and Rob Oakeshott, agreed to amend the Renewable Energy Target regulations. Native forest biomass would no longer be regarded as “renewable” when burnt to generate electricity.
    Forestry policy making has rarely been so thorough: the exclusion included products, by-products, and waste associated with or produced from, clearing or harvesting of native forests, subject to appropriate transitional arrangements for existing accredited power stations. The Committee’s decision was an environmentally sensible policy correction for a forestry industry that is exiting native forest wood resourcing.
    Oakeshott’s change of heart betrays a misunderstanding of Australia’s forest industry. AAP The removal meant that native forest electricity producers could still produce electricity but they would not receive Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs). The government created the RECs market to achieve its Renewable Energy Target: wholesale electricity retailers and some generators must source at least 20% of their electricity from renewable sources backed by RECs.
    For native-forest-based energy projects, the RECs could constitute up to 50% of the project’s income.
    Having signed the multi-party agreement in July, in late October 2011 Rob Oakeshott had second thoughts. With the exposure draft of the Renewable Energy Target regulations in hand and what appears to be some local business lobbying, Oakeshott asked “local residents to have their say on new rules which ban the use of native forest waste as an accredited RET energy source.”
    A month later, Oakeshott appears to have turned from seeking comments to becoming a native forestry lobbyist. He said that “[b]usinesses with potential investment projects using wood waste for biomass energy should use this time [before moving his disallowance motion] to make detailed representations to the federal government and MPs who represent electorates with viable commercial forestry contracts and processing mills.”
    Oakeshott’s hope from this lobbying was that “all MPs seek best policy”. From his statement, “best policy” refers to the local abattoir wanting to use some local sawmill offcuts for power. There is nothing in the regulations stopping the abattoir from using the offcuts for power. What the regulations aim to do is prevent the revenue from the RECs market opening a new and very large market for native forest wood around Australia.
    Hardwood chip exports – Australia’s opportunity to end the conflict Judith Ajani/ABARES statistics

    Click to enlarge

    This is not a local or peripheral issue. It is nationally important. On Friday 10 February, Oakeshott wrote to Members of Parliament explaining his move to disallow the regulations. He stated that with all aspects of the Agreement having been introduced, he has honoured the Multi-Party Climate Change Committee Agreement and is now free to vote against the agreement as expressed in a bill or regulation.
    Oakeshott’s letter conveys no understanding of the Australian forestry industry situation and outlook. He states that sawn timber and paper (including woodchip exports) drives native forest logging, with energy being a sensible use of “waste”.
    Missing from his account is Australia’s plantation competition: sawn timber stopped driving Australia’s native forest logging in the 1980s and woodchip exports are no longer driving native forest logging. And so evaporates the “waste”. Opening native forest wood to the energy market will turn the economically and environmentally desirable trend decline in native forest logging into increasing logging levels.
    Australia’s plantation industry is about to completely displace native forest wood from the major commodity markets of sawn timber, paper and woodchip exports. Today, between 85 and 90% of Australia’s production of sawn timber and wood panels is plantation based.
    As the native forest sector lost these markets to the softwood plantation competition, it became more dependent on export markets for woodchips. Now, Australia’s hardwood plantations are displacing, with ferocious speed, native forest chip exports (see figure above). In the very near future we can expect very little commodity-based logging of Australia’s native forests, as long as governments resist engineering new commercial opportunities for native forest wood.
    As members of the House of Representatives decide whether to support Oakeshott’s disallowance motion they should reflect on 40 years of conflict over native forest woodchipping. If native forests are opened to burning for “renewable energy”, Australia’s forest wars will rage for many more decades.

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    December 22, 2011 Is using native forests for energy really carbon-neutral?

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  • Obama revives green agenda with push to end oil industry tax breaks

    Cynical of me, but an election is coming up!!!!

    Obama revives green agenda with push to end oil industry tax breaks

    President plans to spend big on green cars and biofuels as Steven Chu says US wants to lead in clean energy technology

    Lake Michigan

    The Environmental Protection Agency said it was flatlining the plan to restore some bays of the Great Lakes. Photograph: Jeffrey Phelps/AP

    Barack Obama knew a budget proposal to end $40bn in tax breaks for the oil and gas industry would get him into an election-year fight with Republicans over his energy agenda.

    It’s at least the fourth time the president has called for rolling back the subsidies.

    And, predictably, Republicans and the oil industry were spoiling for a fight. The main industry lobby, the American Petroleum Institute, attacked the proposal as “punitive and unfair”.

    Like Obama’s earlier proposals to cut subsidies to the fossil fuel industry, this one is highly unlikely to pass through Congress.

    What the revival of the proposal demonstrates, however, is that Obama, despite his earlier half-hearted support for action on climate change and other environmental measures, is willing to put up a fight now.

    He has just chosen to redefine the battle lines, using the budget to highlight clean energy while trimming support for environmental regulation.

    The energy budget proposes a 3.2% increase over the current year to $27.2bn in spending including a big bump in research funds, 21% or $2.3bn, for energy efficiency, advanced vehicles, and biofuels.

    In a conference call with reporters, the US energy secretary, Steven Chu, said the adminstration would be redirecting funds from some previous favourites such as electric car batteries – because the projects were now approaching commercial viability – to emerging areas such as offshore wind power.

    Some research funds were also being pulled from projects that did not work, Chu admitted. He said 35 projects “did not reach research milestones”. However, the overall strategy remained. “We want to lead in clean energy technology,” he said.

    The budget would also set aside $12m for research into risks associated with hydraulic fracturing, the controversial process used in the booming natural gas industry.

    However, there was no repeat of last year’s request of $36bn in loans for the nuclear industry – which Congress turned down.

    Even so, clean energy came out ahead. Not so for the Environmental Protection Agency, a favourite target of Republicans who argue environmental regulations are destroying jobs.

    The EPA sufered its third straight budget cut this year, down 1.2% on existing spending.

    The budget proposal barely mentions the agency’s work in reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change.

    In her conference call with reporters, the head of the EPA, Lisa Jackson, admitted some of the administration’s most touted environmental projects – such as restoring some areas of the Great Lakes – had also been flatlined.

    “It was one of the most difficult choices we have had to make in this budget,” she said.

  • Research on Volcanoes

    Exploring Eruptions: Research on Volcanoes Could One Day Help Save Lives
    Michigan Tech News
    By Dana Yates John Lyons near a microseismicity station located below Antisana volcano, in Ecuador. Cara Shonsey photo Geology takes the long view. It is a field, after all, in which the pace of change spans billions of years.
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    Michigan Tech News
    Mount Hood eruption ‘style’ studied
    UPI.com
    Studies show the volcano has never experienced an explosive eruption exhibited by other volcanoes in Oregon, Washington and across the Pacific “ring of fire” despite having similar chemical magma composition and gas content, a university release said
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    Dr. Shanaka de Silva Answers Your Questions About Supervolcanoes, Uturuncu and
    Wired News
    Are so called ‘supervolcanoes’ regular strato/shield volcanoes before their first major eruption? Dr. de Silva: These are great questions that deal with something very close to my heart which is the critical importance of heat delivery to a volcanic
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    Weatherman Sean Batty finds out more about the Icelandic climate
    stv.tv
    The STV weatherman travelled to Iceland to find out how Icelandic volcanoes affect the climate and weather. Scotland is well known for being a cold, wet and windy country, with an unpredictable climate that can go from being sunny one minute to pouring
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    stv.tv
    Unknown volcanes caused the Little Ice Age
    Canada Free Press
    Now, a new computer “study” announced that volcanoes caused the Little Ice Age! A research team led by Gifford Miller of the University of Colorado says eruptions of four volcanoes just before AD 1300 spewed huge amounts of sulphates into the air,
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    Hawaii’s volcanic gases spur renewed disaster declaration for the agriculture
    Live Insurance News
    The state is well known for its many volcanoes, which have become an attraction for tourists around the world. While the volcanoes are famously beautiful and awe inspiring, they are also the source of dangerous emissions that can kill plant life and
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    Live Insurance News
    Exploring the myths of the Yellowstone supervolcano
    High Country News (blog)
    Nor did the earthquake swarm indicate a potential volcano eruption. In fact, earthquake swarms are common in the park. They have occurred as recently as January 2010, when the northwestern edge of the Yellowstone Caldera started to experience what
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  • Bulgaria becomes second state to impose ban on shale gas-exploration

    Bulgaria becomes second state to impose ban on shale-gas exploration

    Government in Sofia makes a U-turn after nationwide protests

    • Guardian Weekly, Tuesday 14 February 2012 14.09 GMT
    • Article history
    • bulgaria lavender

      Thought worth protecting … workers harvest lavender flowers on a farm in Bulgaria. Photograph: NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV/AFP

      Shukri Hussein was only 23 when he first bought some land, with a friend, to start a farm at Praventsi, a village close to Novi Pazar, in north-east Bulgaria. Ten years later the biology graduate heads a 110-hectare organic farm with a workforce of 35.

      He was pleased with what he had achieved and had no intention of letting anyone spoil his dream. At the beginning of January he joined thousands of others to protest against plans to explore the huge shale-gas reserves in his region. Their efforts were crowned with success. In June last year the Bulgarian government had granted a permit to the US firm Chevron to prospect across 4,400 sq km around Novi Pazar.

      But in January parliament withdraw the permit issued to Chevron, and also decided to ban exploration of shale-gas reserves using the controversial hydraulic-fracturing (fracking) technique.

      MPs cited as a precedent a French ban enacted last July, as Bulgaria became only the second state to ban the procedure.

      The government had hoped that the new energy source would reduce the nation’s almost complete dependence on imported Russian gas, supplied by Gazprom. Bulgarian shale-gas reserves are estimated to amount to at least 300bn cubic metres, according to the economy and energy ministry.

      “To begin with everyone was really enthusiastic,” says Hussein. “We thought we’d get rich overnight. But when I realised the hazards this technology entails I was very concerned. I’ve worked hard for the past 10 years to build up the farm. If they start drilling for shale gas I’ll lose everything.”

      Bulgaria’s reserves are several thousands of metres deep. Injecting water, sand and chemicals under high pressure to fracture the bedrock and release the gas involves a serious risk of groundwater contamination.

      The risk is particularly serious in the Novi Pazar area, due to its particular geology. But looking further afield, fracking could affect the whole of the north-eastern Dobrudja region. “We were promised lots of jobs and other miracles,” says Vessko Dimov, a dental surgeon from Novi Pazar who launched the anti-fracking protest movement. “But when we woke up to the hazards involved we decided to oppose the project.”A petition collected 15,000 signatures in a month and, much to the protesters’ surprise, several councils in the area decided to oppose fracking.

      The campaign spread to Veliki Preslaz, a small town about 40km southeast of Novi Pazar. This historic stronghold is a tourist attraction and feared that trade might suffer.

      From 893 to 972 the town was the Bulgarian empire’s second capital and the ruins of the old citadel are testimony to its past splendour. “The travel trade is vital for our town,” says the leader of the local council Aleksandar Gorchev, elected three months ago. “Shale-gas exploitation is a real danger for us. Everyone would be OK if this technology did not pose any problems, but that’s not the case.”

      In mid-January the anti-fracking demonstrations spread to the capital Sofia and a dozen other towns across Bulgaria. “I have to admit that at first, I didn’t believe we could do it,” says Hussein. “It’s a big victory for us. In Dubai, they spend a fortune to make the desert inhabitable, whereas here in Europe we have everything we need. We don’t want to turn it into a desert.”

      This article originally appeared in Le Monde.

  • Nuclear Issues.

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    Critic: Proposed MidAmerican nuclear plant is “socialism”
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    Michigan Nuclear Plant Downgraded Over Safety
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    AP The Nuclear Regulatory Commission assigns the more than 100 nuclear reactors in the US to one of five categories based on their safety performance. Most are in the top-performing group. Palisades was bumped to the No. 2 category last month and now
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    Hokkaido Electric seeks dismissal of demand for decommissioning of Tomari reactors
    Mainichi Daily News
    1 Nuclear Power Plant — Hokkaido Electric said, “It is impossible to seek absolute safety in the use of advanced science and technology.” According to the plaintiffs, there has been no case in past lawsuits on nuclear power plants of an electric power
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    Mainichi Daily News
    Scientists warn of seismic fault in Fukushima
    ABC Online
    By North Asia correspondent Mark Willacy Scientists are urging the operators of the Fukushima nuclear plant to improve safety measures, warning that a dangerous seismic fault has been re-activated near the site. In the seven months after last year’s
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    Spot Uranium Grinds To A Halt
    Ninemsn
    For the first time since 1978, when the Three Mile Island reactor accident brought the nuclear danger to the point of reality and prompted Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon to film The China Syndrome, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved the
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    Closing No. 2 N-plant would add to woes
    The Daily Yomiuri
    With the additional assistance from the state-backed Nuclear Damage Liabilities Facilitation Fund, TEPCO can be free, for now at least, from the danger of reaching negative net worth, or liabilities exceeding assets. Uncertainties, however
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    Tubes shut down at San Onofre nuclear plant
    San Francisco Chronicle
    The San Onofre nuclear power plant in Southern California is shutting down some of the tubes in a reactor because of premature wear. Southern California Edison spokesman Gil Alexander announced Monday that an undisclosed number of tubes will be taken
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    Activists target Asheville power plant
    Asheville Citizen-Times
    The law requires no formal security requirements at coal-fired power plants, said James McLawhorn, head of the electricity division of the NC Utilities Commission. Nuclear power plants are required to have tight security because of the threat radiation
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    US naval battle group crosses Strait of Hormuz
    CBS News
    The US and allies fear Iran’s uranium enrichment program could eventually lead to the production of weapons-grade nuclear material. Iran claims it only seeks reactors for energy and medical research. “I wouldn’t characterize … us going through the
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  • Oil Price Daily News Update

    Oil Price Daily News Update


    New Power Source Discovered for Nanotechnology

    Posted: 14 Feb 2012 08:39 AM PST

    On a recent sabbatical, Associate Professor Dr. Kourosh Kalantar-zadeh, from the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at RMIT University in Melbourne, travelled to Cambridge in order to work with MIT Associate Professor Michael Strano’s nanotechnology research team. Whilst measuring the acceleration of a chemical reaction along a carbon nanotube, they made a remarkable discovery. The reaction they were monitoring actually generated power. Dr. Kalantar-zadeh, “By coating a nanotube in nitrocellulose fuel and igniting one end, we set…

    Read more…

    Approval Granted for First U.S. Nuclear Power Plant Since 1978

    Posted: 14 Feb 2012 08:38 AM PST

    On Thursday the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the first nuclear power plant in the US since the Three Mile Island accident in Pennsylvania back in 1979. The Southern Co. based in Atlanta already operates two reactors at its Vogtle site near Augusta, and has just been granted permission to build another two reactors. The Southern Co. President and CEO Thomas Fanning said that the approval was “a monumental accomplishment”, not only the company, but also the nuclear industry as a whole. “We are committed to bringing these units online to…

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    Why Large Banks Shouldn’t be Broken Up

    Posted: 14 Feb 2012 07:35 AM PST

    The logic of cutting down huge institutions could mean splitting the largest ones into several pieces. Yet banks do not always come in easily divisible parts. Such a move could amount to eradicating the largest banks rather than splitting them up — and eradication is both politically unlikely and potentially disastrous for the economy. In short, if the resulting parts of a divided bank cannot turn a profit, the split-up may prompt the very bailout it was trying to avoid. Another fear is that American money market operations would move to…

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    French Nuclear Anxieties Soar After Fukushima

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 04:01 PM PST

    France began developing a massive nuclear energy program with minimal public debate after the first oil crisis in 1974 and continued to support nuclear power even after the 1986 Soviet Chernobyl disaster. French nuclear energy giant Areva SA, majority owned by the French state, operates the country’s 59 nuclear reactors, which generate 78.8 percent of France’s electricity, the highest percentage in the world. Until Fukushima the French public felt largely secure in the safety of their country’s nuclear facilities. No…

    Read more…

    Taking the High Road to Utica Shale

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 03:59 PM PST

    Ohio’s governor, during his recent State of the State address, said major energy companies working in the state have certain responsibilities to Ohio. The Midwest state hosts vast natural gas reserves in its Utica shale deposit and energy company’s like Houston-based Chesapeake are eager to get at those resources. The governor said all the proverbial ducks needs to be in a row in order to tap into those shale reserves but, in a rare display of U.S. political pragmatism, stressed that fear shouldn’t get in the way of energy potential. Ohio…

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    Wind Industry Starts to Panic as Tax Credits Come to an End

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 03:56 PM PST

    If you haven’t heard from the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), you probably will. Ominous, scary ads are running nationwide warning of the crushing blow to American jobs if Congress fails to extend the Production Tax Credit (‘PTC’), the 20-year ‘temporary’ subsidy most credited for market growth in the wind sector. The PTC is due to expire at the end of this year. Most of the ads target particular House members who, so far, have resisted the industry’s demands for their PTC earmark. The pressure is particularly…

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    Turkey Gets More EU Roadblocks Towards Accession, Now Energy Chapters

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 03:49 PM PST

    Turkey’s seemingly interminable effort to join the European Union has hit a new snag. Energy. On 9 February European Union Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighborhood Policy Stefan Fule and the EU’s Commissioner for Energy Gunther Oettinger met with Turkish Minister for EU Affairs and Chief Negotiator Egemen Bag?s and Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz in the ancient Ottoman imperial capital Istanbul to discuss intensified EU-Turkish cooperation in the energy sector. The upside? Oettinger told reporters after his meetings,…

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    Gazprom’s Future Dependent on Arctic Energy Riches?

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 03:47 PM PST

    The continued existence of Russia as a transcontinental power depends on its ability to leverage vast energy wealth into political stability and power. Without energy wealth, Russia begins to disintegrate. A giant new gas field north of the Arctic Circle provides some hope for Russia’s future. Gazprom’s mammoth tax payments bolster the Russian economy, allowing the Kremlin to dole out subsidies and keep a lid on popular discontent. At the same time, Gazprom faces challenges that threaten not just its dominance of the world’s natural…

    Read more…

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