Author: admin

  • Biggest ice island for 48 years breaks off Greenland glacier

     

    Andreas Muenchow, professor of ocean science and engineering at the University of Delaware, said satellite images have revealed that the glacier has lost about a quarter of its 43-mile-long floating ice shelf.

    The last time such a large ice island formed was in 1962 when the Canadian Ward Hunt Ice Shelf calved an island. Smaller pieces of that chunk became lodged between real islands inside the Nares Strait.

    Muenchow said he had expected an ice chunk to break off from Petermann, one of the two largest remaining glaciers in Greenland, because it had been growing in size for seven or eight years. But he said he did not expect it to be so large.

    “The freshwater stored in this ice island could keep the Delaware or Hudson Rivers flowing for more than two years,” said Muenchow, whose research in the area is supported by the National Science Foundation.

    “It could also keep all US public tap water flowing for 120 days.”

    He said it was hard to judge whether the event occurred due to global warming because records on the sea water around the glacier have only been kept since 2003.

    “Nobody can claim this was caused by global warming. On the other hand nobody can claim that it wasn’t,” Muenchow said, adding that the flow of sea water below the glaciers is one of the main causes of ice calvings off Greenland.

    Regine Hock, a glacial geophysicist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, told the National Geographic that the breakup of ice shelves is “a normal process that happens all the time”.

    But she said that such a “huge, huge piece of ice … is very unusual”.

    Scientists have said the first six months of 2010 were the hottest globally on record. The El Niño weather pattern has contributed to higher temperatures, but many scientists say elevated levels of man-made greenhouse gases are pushing temperatures higher.

    The initial discovery of the breakaway island was made by Trudy Wohlleben of the Canadian Ice Service.

    Experts believe the island could fuse to land, break up into smaller pieces, or slowly move south where it could block shipping.

    Petermann Glacier spawned smaller ice islands in 2001 (34 square miles) and 2008 (10 square miles).

  • Up to 100.000 disenfranchised Australians may now vote on August 21

     

    Before the changes were made, voters had seven days after an election was called to enrol. Under current law, the rolls shut at 8pm on the day election writs are issued for all new enrolments and three days later for those who need to update their addresses.

    Chief Justice Robert French ruled yesterday the amendments being challenged were “invalid”.

    The court did not publish reasons for its decision but it ordered the commonwealth to pay the plaintiffs’ costs.

    The Electoral Commissioner was the defendant in the hearing, which stretched over two days.

    The Australian Electoral Commission and the commonwealth were supported by the Attorney-General for Western Australia.

    GetUp! national director Simon Sheikh said the ruling could have a significant impact on polling day.

    “Clearly 100,000 Australians who can now exercise their right to vote is an extraordinarily large number,” Mr Sheikh said.

    “With marginal seats across the country and an extremely tight election, (this) could have a massive impact on the election.”

    Yesterday’s decision was expedited because of the election, after a request to the court by the Electoral Commission.

    Ms Rowe and Mr Thompson brought their challenge after they missed out on being correctly enrolled when writs were issued on July 19. About 20 lawyers, led by Ron Merkel QC, worked around the clock on the case on a pro-bono basis.

    Mr Thompson told The Weekend Australian yesterday he was proud to be part of a significant change to the Australian democratic landscape. “I think it’s a great thing; it’s much bigger than Shannen and I,” the 23-year-old Sydney student said.

    AEC spokesman Phil Diak said voters affected by the decision would have to cast a declaration vote and provide an accepted form of evidence of identity on polling day.

    Wayne Errington, a lecturer in politics at Adelaide University, said he believed the Coalition would be the biggest loser from the court’s ruling.

    “If most of those 100,000 are younger voters, well, it’s certainly the likelihood that the Coalition would get very little of those votes,” Mr Errington said. About 1.4 million Australians — or about 6 per cent of the population — are not enrolled to vote, with 70 per cent aged between 18 and 39.

    Patrick Keyzer, professor of constitutional law at Bond University, said the decision was “surprising” but believed it would have major future legal ramifications.

    “It’s a significant development in electoral law, it advances the notion of a right to vote in constitutional law,” Professor Keyzer said. “I think that any future parliament would be reading this case carefully before it disenfranchised voters in the future.”

    Greens leader Bob Brown welcomed the decision, saying the amendments should never have been passed.

    Special Minister of State Joe Ludwig also welcomed the ruling.

    But Liberal senator Michael Ronaldson said he was concerned it would open the door for electoral fraud.

  • Climate talks losing ground, say negotiators.

     

    “Unfortunately, what we have seen over and over this week is that some countries are walking back from the progress made in Copenhagen,” he told journalists, referring to the 11th-hour accord hammered out at the climate summit in December.

    That agreement enshrined the goal of capping the increase of global temperatures at 2.0 degrees, but did not muster the commitments needed to attain it.

    It also pledged long-term financing to help poor countries green their economies and cope with consequences of climate change, without specifying where the money would come from.

    Dessima Williams of Grenada, speaking for the 43-nation Association of Small Island States, said she was “greatly concerned” by the slow pace of the talks.

    “The situation on the ground for all our countries is worsening,” she said at a press conference.

    AFP

    Tags: climate-change, germany

  • Government defends pulp mill pipeline decision

    Government defends pulp mill pipeline decision

    ABC August 6, 2010, 7:26 pm

     

    The Tasmanian Government has defended allowing a pulp mill pipeline to be built in the state’s north, on land acquired for a road bypass.

    The Government acquired the land in question for the Dilston bypass; it has now admitted part of the land will be used for a pipeline to supply Gunns’ proposed Bell Bay pulp mill with water.

    Gunns says the bypass route is the most logical path for its pipe system to follow.

    Conservationists have reacted angrily, saying the Government knew the land would be needed for the pipeline, when it was acquired.

    The Government has denied the claim, and says in the past other companies such as Aurora and Telstra have used road reserves for pipe systems.

    The Department of Infrastructure says Gunns will be responsible for any additional costs associated with the pipeline.

     

  • Xenophon wants penalties for misleading campaigning

    Xenophon wants penalties for misleading campaigning

    Posted 2 hours 21 minutes ago

    Independent Senator Nick Xenophon says he will introduce a private member’s bill to remedy misleading political advertising.

    Federal Sport Minister Kate Ellis wrongly stated in an election flyer that pensioners would get a significant increase in their fortnightly payments under Labor.

    Ms Ellis says she will send out a correction notice in her seat of Adelaide.

    Senator Xenophon says laws are needed to ensure voters are not misled.

    “I accept what Kate Ellis has said that this was unintentional,” he said.

    “The fact is we need to have laws in place to require corrective advertising and for their to be real penalties in place so that where it’s been done deliberately you can actually prosecute those responsible.”

    Tags: government-and-politics, elections, federal-elections, australia

  • Court by surprise. the High Court upholds voting rights

     

    Early roll closure did not even have the support of electoral bureaucrats. In the past, the Australian Electoral Commission, or AEC, has handled hundreds of thousands of roll changes in the first week of the campaign, and uncovered no systemic attempts at fraudulent enrolment. But an attempt by Labor to reverse the 2006 legislation was blocked by the Senate and this month’s election kicked off under the Howard-era rules.

    Barely a fortnight ago, the progressive lobby group Get Up! launched a challenge to this law. The case is named after the test-case plaintiff, Shannen Rowe. As if to show the other branches of government that leisurely approaches are inapt when fundamental rights are involved, the High Court rushed the case on for hearing. And within a day it brought down its verdict.

    The majority ruling in Rowe’s case has struck down early closing of the roll. Shrewdly, the head of Get Up!’s pro bono legal team, Ron Merkel QC, did not ask the Court to take a step into the unknown, so the Court has not ruled that enrolment cut-off days are entirely unnecessary, as in Canada. Nor has it ruled that in a 24/7 society paper-based enrolment is unreasonable. Instead the law has simply jackpotted back to the pre-Howard rule, dating back to 1983, that electors have seven days’ grace to organise their enrolment.

    The immediate effect is that approximately 100,000 enrolments will be processed that otherwise would have lain in abeyance. Some of these are not new enrolments: just a matter of getting people into their correct electorates. The figure could have been much higher: we will never know how many people were deterred from trying to enrol because they thought they were too late.

    The longer-term effects of the decision are hard to assess. The Court rushed down its orders, but will take some weeks to craft its reasons. It is not yet clear whether the majority was a clear or paper-thin one. Unless four judges agree not just on the outcome but also on the basis for it, the case may be confined to roll closure rather than influencing future disputes over voting rights.

    By judicial standards, the Court is full of relatively new members. As in some other key cases, one suspects a plurality opinion, if not a single majority opinion, will be crafted around the Court’s older, centrist judges, Justices Gummow and Hayne.

    Regardless, the outcome is surprising. The High Court can be hard to predict, but in recent years it has generally been conservative in methodology and outlook. Until four years ago, it was not even clear that the Constitution protected the universal franchise at all, let alone the machinery that gives it life.

    It took another piece of Howard government overreach – the disenfranchisement of all prisoners – to stir the sleeping giants on the bench. In a case involving an Indigenous prisoner, Vicky Roach, a majority finally agreed with old and long-gone Labor judges, such as Lionel Murphy and Edward McTiernan, that the rule that federal parliament be “chosen by the people” means that parliament may only limit the franchise in ways that are reasonable or proportionate to representative democracy. The result of Roach’s case was not radical. Only “short term: prisoners benefited from that ruling.

    But Roach’s case, along with the political broadcasting or ACTV case of 1992, gives the Court a backstop role. It has no place micro-managing electoral law, but it has reserved to itself a power of veto over unnecessary restrictions implicating voting rights or political communication. To what extent do such rulings empower the judicial branch over others? Discussion from the bench in Rowe’s case suggests that at least one judge is interested in the very American idea of applying “strict scrutiny” to legislation that affects fundamental political rights at least where parliament may be motivated by self-interest.

    None of this means the Court is boot-strapping a Bill of Rights, however, let alone turning itself into a vanguard of the civil-rights movement, like the Warren Court in the United States. The Australian judicial tradition of deferring to parliamentary expertise or discretion remains immanent in many other decisions. The majority opinions in Rowe’s case will probably be narrowly crafted.

    They will highlight the fact that early roll closure was not evidence-based legislation: the Howard government merely asserted a risk of fraud, without giving reasons or evidence to support itself. The opinions will also rely on the fact that Australia does not have fixed parliamentary terms.

    Some judges will point to compulsory enrolment and voting as a reason to ensure that enrolment procedures are not too burdensome. Contrarily, it is likely that judges in the minority will take the conservative view that compulsion should work the other way – that it is the individual’s responsibility to maintain their enrolment, and giving them thirty-five out of thirty-six months in an electoral cycle is plenty of time.

    Curiously, the Commonwealth did not argue the case by analogy with United States law. There, despite a much stronger judicial interest in voting rights, the Supreme Court has accepted registration cut-offs of between thirty and even fifty days. Perhaps the Commonwealth thought that appealing to American practice in electoral legislation would not smack of best practice. Perhaps their lawyers reasoned that the United States has fixed terms and primaries, so electors have year-round notice of when elections are due. Or perhaps in the hurried hearing, they simply overlooked comparative law.

    What does the case mean politically and institutionally? Julia Gillard rushed to an election, which she announced back on Saturday 19 July. She could have delayed the writs – and hence roll closure. Indeed for a long time that was the practice in Australia. Prime ministers of old would delay issuing the writs from anywhere between five and sixty-three days. Gillard did not. She wanted the writs out urgently to give the opposition the shortest possible campaign (thirty-three days), a decision she may now be regretting.

    Nonetheless, in enrolment terms the Labor government has now had its cake and eaten it too. It got the short campaign it thought it wanted, and yet is getting back some of the first-timers who would have missed out on a ballot but for the High Court. The AEC has even said it will phone or contact every lucky enrollee affected by the decision.

    There has been speculation that the commission and the government, as official defendants to the case, deliberately ran dead. While neither will be unhappy with the result, that speculation lacks credence. As an independent agency, the commission never takes a stand on the validity of the law it works under. And since the case was launched whilst the government was in caretaker mode, the solicitor-general would not have received riding instructions from any minister.

    For civil society there is another lesson from this case. Australia does not have a strong history of civic associations using the law to run test cases or to keep law reform on the front-burner. Get Up!’s success may be changing this. It is also mounting a Federal Court case to argue that electronic submission of enrolment forms is permitted under legislation enabling “e-signatures.”

    Institutionally, the ball is back in the parliamentary court. If Labor wins the election, it is likely to push on with its preference – backed by an AEC concerned about the bigger issue of the million or so people “missing” from the roll – to implement automatic enrolment. New South Wales has moved in that direction for state elections, and Victoria also, at least for school-leavers. Unless those state trials tank, there will be pressure on the Coalition to stop just saying “no” to electoral modernisation. Victoria is going so far as to trial a form of election-day enrolment, by allowing unenrolled people to claim a provisional vote at the polling station. (“Provisional” on their entitlement to vote being checked.)

    The numbers of electors who will benefit from the High Court’s decision is not insignificant. Yet spread across 150 electorates, they are unlikely to affect the outcome in any but the most ultra-marginal seat. The poll analyst Possum Comitatus, who blogs for Crikey, assessed early roll closing as costing Labor less than 0.1 per cent of the two-party vote. If so, its undoing will at most be worth a bit of extra funding for the parties (votes being worth $2.30 each), and especially the Greens.

    But political effect is not the point. In principle every vote is sacred and the whole purpose of the roll is accuracy and comprehensiveness, not to be a hurdle to the ballot. The High Court has struck a modest blow for those principles. •

    Graeme Orr is an Associate Professor in Law at the University of Queensland and author of
    The Law of Politics: Elections, Parties and Money in Australia (The Federation Press, 2010, forthcoming).
    (Disclosure: Graeme assisted the Get Up! legal team with research on US registrati