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  • What amazing few weeks GET-UP

    From: GetUp! <info@getup.org.au>
    Date: Sat, Nov 3, 2012 at 9:26 AM
    Subject: What an incredible few weeks
    To: nevilleg729@gmail.com

    — Update: In the past weeks GetUp members have thwarted an attempt to scrap Australia’s renewable energy target, prevented factory farming of chickens being labeled “free-range”, helped get the Tassie forest negotiations back on track, and ramped up the pressure on Woolies to stop pushing pokies on problem gamblers.

    Dear NEVILLE,

    It’s been one of those months where everything seems to be happening at once. All over Australia, GetUp members have been working hard – and their efforts have paid off in some important breakthroughs on long-running campaigns. Here’s a quick snapshot of what’s been going on:

    Animal Welfare
    Turn on images to viewRemember back in August, when the big chicken producers lodged an outrageous fake free-range application to the ACCC? If approved, their proposal would have allowed farms to cram over 140,000 birds into one hectare and label it ‘free-range’. Over 17,000 GetUp members swung into action, writing submissions to the ACCC and sharing our campaign infographic on social media. And it worked: the ACCC informed us that the Australian Poultry Industries Association has withdrawn their application for the free-range trademark. For now, we have stopped a significant step backwards for animal rights.
    Climate Change
    Turn on images to viewGetUp members got in the way of another vested interests campaign – this time a concerted push by coal-fired power stations and their allies to weaken or scrap Australia’s renewable energy target of 20% by 2020. 7,813 GetUp members wrote passionate submissions to the official review instigated by the Climate Change Authority, standing up to support renewable energy. Their efforts paid off: a week ago we learnt that the Authority had refused to cave in to pressure to weaken or scrap the target. We also discovered that 90% of submissions to the review came from GetUp members!

    CLICK TO DONATE

    Forest Negotiations
    Turn on images to viewLast weekend we heard that negotiations between industry, unions and environmentalists to protect Tasmania’s ancient forests had stalled at the very last moment. 29,703 GetUp members sprung into action. We called on two crucial players: hardware giant Bunnings and retailer Harvey Norman to declare their support for the agreement. Within days we heard from Bunnings that they did exactly that. Congratulations Bunnings, and to everyone who took action!
    Pokies
    Turn on images to viewOver the past few weeks thousands of brave GetUp members have downloaded letters to hand-deliver to their local Woolworths store protesting against the supermarket giant’s involvement in the pokies industry. Like Brett (pictured), Victorian GetUp member Barbara took part in the campaign and wrote to us describing her experience: “Handed it to check-out woman after paying for shopping: she was surprised (not used to old ladies handing her mail) and said she would see it got to [the] Manager… She was pleasant and polite, and I wasn’t anxious to cause a stir – timid old me! – and that was that. Really quite enjoyed it.” Pressure on Woolworths continues to mount in the weeks before their Extraordinary General Meeting on pokies reform, prompted by 257 plucky GetUp members who own shares in Woolies.

    There’s still a long way to go before we’ve moved Australia to 100% renewable energy, overhauled animal welfare standards, and convinced Woolies to cease making profits from problem gambling. But the past fortnight has reminded us of our movement’s strength – and its diversity.

    GetUp members from all walks of life do their bit week after week, in all sorts of ways. From visiting a local supermarket, sharing an image on Facebook, or writing to submissions to Government, together we truly are bigger than the sum of our parts. So thank you for all that you do, and keep up the great work. We’re in it for the long term.

    Have a great weekend,
    The GetUp team

    PS – All of this is possible because of the kind contributions of GetUp members. Together, our small change adds up to social change on a national scale. If you’d like to be part of that, chip in here.


    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.

     

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  • HANSEN Butterfly Report + Jeremiah, the Frog

    Butterfly Report + Jeremiah, the Frog

    Inbox
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    James Hansen jimehansen@gmail.com via mail25.us2.mcsv.net
    7:21 AM (2 hours ago)

    to me
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    Butterfly Report + Jeremiah, the Frog
    “Butterfly Report + Jeremiah, the Frog” is available on my web site or directly here.

    ~Jim
    2 November 2012

  • Weather on Steroids Is Global Warming, Stupid: Paul Barrett

    Hurricane Sandy and the preponderance of other severe weather events press
    Herald Scotland
    Hurricane Sandy and the preponderance of other severe weather events press the case for climate change study. WITHIN the massive media coverage of hurricane Sandy as it battered the east coast of the United States of America, which must make the poor
    See all stories on this topic »
    Weather on Steroids Is Global Warming, Stupid: Paul Barrett
    Bloomberg
    On Oct. 17 the giant German reinsurance company Munich Re issued a prescient report titled Severe Weather in North America. Globally, the rate of extreme weather events is rising, and “nowhere in the world is the rising number of natural catastrophes
    See all stories on this topic »
    Hurricane Sandy
    TucsonSentinel.com
    Unfortunately, Sandy is only the latest in a line of recent extreme weather events that have severely afflicted Americans in the past two years. Other disasters include the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history, record-breaking temperatures
    See all stories on this topic »
    Warmer weather, extreme storms predicted for Toronto in the 2040s
    Global Toronto
    Extreme weather events, superstorm Sandy included, have become more frequent over the last decade and can have a severe economic impact on the city. In August 2005, a one-hour rainstorm cost the city of Toronto approximately $47 million in repairs
    See all stories on this topic »

    Global Toronto


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    Herald Scotland
    Hurricane Sandy and the preponderance of other severe weather events press the case for climate change study. WITHIN the massive media coverage of hurricane Sandy as it battered the east coast of the United States of America, which must make the poor
    See all stories on this topic »

    Weather on Steroids Is Global Warming, Stupid: Paul Barrett
    Bloomberg
    On Oct. 17 the giant German reinsurance company Munich Re issued a prescient report titled Severe Weather in North America. Globally, the rate of extreme weather events is rising, and “nowhere in the world is the rising number of natural catastrophes
    See all stories on this topic »
    Hurricane Sandy
    TucsonSentinel.com
    Unfortunately, Sandy is only the latest in a line of recent extreme weather events that have severely afflicted Americans in the past two years. Other disasters include the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history, record-breaking temperatures
    See all stories on this topic »
    Warmer weather, extreme storms predicted for Toronto in the 2040s
    Global Toronto
    Extreme weather events, superstorm Sandy included, have become more frequent over the last decade and can have a severe economic impact on the city. In August 2005, a one-hour rainstorm cost the city of Toronto approximately $47 million in repairs
    See all stories on this topic »

    Global Toronto

     


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  • What Were You Thinking? MONBIOT COM

    Monbiot.com


    What Were You Thinking?

    Posted: 29 Oct 2012 02:44 AM PDT

    An open letter to the former ministers who appear to have let a devastating tree disease into the UK.

     

    To Hilary Benn MP, Secretary of State for the Environment from 2007 to May 2010

    and

    Caroline Spelman MP, Secretary of State for the Environment from May 2010 to September 2012.

    Sent to them by email on 28th October 2012 and published on the Guardian’s website, 29th October 2012.

    Dear Hilary and Caroline,

    I am writing to ask why you failed to ban imports of ash seedlings and saplings from continental Europe into the United Kingdom, when it has been clear for several years that the species was widely infected on the Continent with ash die-back (Chalara fraxinea).

    You are both said – by people who worked with you and others who know you well – to have taken your brief as secretaries of state for the environment seriously. Yet it now emerges that there were repeated warnings from experts about the spread and gravity of the disease, and that European ecologists – as well as British foresters and conservationists – were begging the UK government to take all necessary measures to prevent the fungus from arriving here, so that there would at least be one uninfected redoubt.

    Am I wrong in thinking that you ignored their warnings? If so, could you show me what action you took to prevent the disease from arriving here?

    At the moment Owen Paterson, the current secretary of state, is being held responsible for the problem. But by the time he took charge of Defra, it was too late. All he could do was to shut the stable door after the horse had bolted. I believe that politicians will not take the long-term consequences of their decisions seriously unless they are held to account for them. Political short-termism is one of the natural world’s greatest threats.

    So, though neither of you are now in government, I think you both have some explaining to do: quite a lot of explaining, in fact. If ash die-back is now spreading across Britain as a result of your combined inaction, you carry responsibility for causing one of the greatest environmental crises ever to have struck this country: a profound loss that will be felt by everyone who loves the natural world.

    I would be grateful if you could tell me what happened – or what didn’t. Why did you fail to ban imports of live ash trees and to take other measures necessary to prevent the arrival of the disease? Was it an obsession with free trade at any cost? Was it a desire not to be seen to be “anti-business” by regulating corporate activity, however strong the case for so doing? Was it the lack of political incentives, as very few people outside government were aware of the danger, which meant that the political cost of inaction was low?

    Why did you fail to alert parliament and the public to the danger? I have checked the parliamentary record, and found that not a word has been said there, in any forum, about the disease before 11th October 2012. There is a single mention of the pathogen before October 2012 on the Defra website. A progress report on plant biosecurity published in July 2012 notes that, at an unspecified date, but presumably during the previous winter,

    “Fera made a significant interception of Chalara faxinea [sic] on ash plants imported from the Netherlands and followed this up with FC [Forestry Commission] providing assistance in the form of disease recognition.”

    In other words, Caroline, your department was aware that infected seedlings were arriving in this country and that officials did not possess the expertise required to spot them. Yet you still allowed imports to continue. What were you thinking? Where were the urgent warnings, the urgent action required to defend this country from a pressing threat?

    Those of us who are now dreading the likely outcome of the disease, and wondering how, in the information age, we could have been kept in the dark about it by the department you ran, would dearly like some answers. I undertake to publish them as soon as they are received.

    Thank you.

    Yours Sincerely,

    George Monbiot

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  • Ausrralia ‘unprepared’ for major disasters

    Australia ‘unprepared’ for major disasters

    ABCUpdated November 2, 2012, 9:05 am
    Peter Dunn led the ACT Emergency Services Agency from 2003 until 2006.

    ABC © Enlarge photo

    A former ACT Emergency Services Agency (ESA) chief has labelled Australia’s preparedness for dealing with disasters as poor.

    Peter Dunn led the ESA from 2003 until 2006 and has co-authored a private study looking at disaster responses in Australia over the past decade.

    The study, titled Senior Leadership in Times of Crisis, found that those in senior leadership roles were inadequately trained, often to the detriment of the whole effort.

    Mr Dunn says emergency leaders should not have to learn it all on the job.

    “Senior leaders often don’t recognise what is an evolving event until it becomes out of scale,” he said.

    “[They] often don’t understand the personal characteristics and behaviours they need to exhibit to make sure that they give confidence to their teams, and their teams are prepared to bring them bad news early.”

    Mr Dunn says themes emerged of poor communication and a lack of leadership.

    “The people on the ground are really well trained,” he said.

    “But we don’t spend the same time training those people to take on the very senior roles where they’ve got to bring all parts of government together.

    “That’s the secret of success.”

  • Superstorm Sandy spurs talk of global warming

    Superstorm Sandy spurs talk of global warming
    The Seattle Times
    Scientists agree rising sea levels caused primarily by global warming could worsen the effects of storms such as Hurricane Sandy, particularly the surge of water in low-lying areas, a cause for concern in coastal communities. By Erika Bolstad
    See all stories on this topic »
    The Future According to Sandy
    Scientific American (blog)
    The remark is in the spirit of what climate scientists have been saying about the rise in “extreme weather events,” sea level rise and the vulnerability of New York and other coastal cities to flooding. The arrival of Sandy has, at least temporarily
    See all stories on this topic »

    Scientific American (blog)
    Flood barriers bid to save New York’s fragile shores
    Brisbane Times
    David Chen, Mireya Navarro. As water levels continue to rise, officials will be forced to find money for better protection. Tweet · Pin It · Email article · Print · Reprints & permissions. A fire fighter surveys the smoldering ruins of a house in the
    See all stories on this topic »
    N.Y.’s Cuomo links storm, climate change
    San Francisco Chronicle
    “We don’t have a fingerprint showing that this storm would not have occurred if there wasn’t climate change, but we know that hurricanes are moving farther north and sea level is rising,” said Chris Field, director of the Carnegie Institution for
    See all stories on this topic »

    San Francisco Chronicle
    Fox: Hurricane Sandy Has “Nothing To Do With Global Warming”
    Media Matters for America
    Post’s Wonkblog: Hurricane Sandy Highlights A “Major Reason To Worry About Climate Change: Rising Sea Levels.” An October 29 post on The Washington Post’s Wonkblog titled, “Yes, Hurricane Sandy is a good reason to worry about climate change,” Brad
    See all stories on this topic »

    Media Matters for America
    Cato Institute Halloween trick: issues report masquerading as an “Addendum” to
    Climate Science Watch
    In 2009, a scientific assessment of Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States sponsored by the U.S. Global Change Research Program warned in its key findings that “coastal areas are at increasing risk from sealevel rise and storm surge.” Now
    See all stories on this topic »
    Experts warn of superstorm era
    WJXT Jacksonville
    The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicted in 2007 that the global average sea level would rise between 7 and 23 inches by the end of this century. More recent projections suggest that the melting of Arctic sea ice could mean a rise in
    See all stories on this topic »
    Superstorm Sandy Topples Traditional Notions of National Security
    National Defense Magazine (blog)
    The Pentagon for years has worried about rising sea levels, severe droughts and other potentially devastating natural disasters that could strain the U.S. military’s ability to deliver humanitarian assistance and disaster relief in faraway lands
    See all stories on this topic »

    National Defense Magazine (blog)
    How Global Warming Made Hurricane Sandy Worse
    Climate Central
    There are three different ways climate change might have influenced Sandy: through the effects of sea level rise; through abnormally warm sea surface temperatures; and possibly through an unusual weather pattern that some scientists think bore the
    See all stories on this topic »

     

    Blogs 1 new result for SEA LEVEL RISE
    Roger Pielke Jr.’s Blog: How Much Sea Level Rise Would be
    By Roger Pielke, Jr.
    One of the more reasonable discussion points to emerge from efforts to link Hurricane Sandy to the need to reduce carbon dioxide emissions focuses on the role that future sea level rise will have on making storm impacts worse. Logically
    Roger Pielke Jr.’s Blog

     

    Web 4 new results for SEA LEVEL RISE
    A/Prof Kevin Walsh, ‘Losing higher ground: hurricanes and sea level
    The impact of Hurricane Sandy has been great. The bad news is that in the future , the impact of a similar storm would be even greater, due to the projected sea
    www.sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/…/aprof-kevin-walsh-losing-…
    Sea level rise will make Hurricane Sandy’s NYC typical by the year
    With climate change, a 9-foot water level rise isn’t that far off.
    arstechnica.com/…/sea-level-rise-will-make-hurricane-sandys-…
    Hurricane Sandy: Neither weather nor tide nor sea level can be
    Climate Central provides a fascinating GIS tool called Surging Seas allowing users to explore effects of combined storm surge, tide and sea level rise on
    www.skepticalscience.com/print.php?n=1686
    Mayor Bloomberg and Governor Cuomo Admit to Relationship
    With the impending rising sea levels, it is being predicted that in 100 years, New York’s waters will be at the level we today call “storm surge,” so unless a system
    inhabitat.com/…/mayor-bloomberg-and-governor-cuomo-adm…