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  • Food prices to surge under emissions trading scheme


    Food prices to surge under emissions trading scheme








     




    Blair Speedy and Glenn Milne | August 17, 2009


    Article from:  The Australian


    SHOPPERS face a jump in grocery prices of up to 7 per cent under Labor’s scheme to reduce carbon emissions, prompting calls for the Rudd government to come up with a compensation package to help low- and middle-income families.


    Big retailers have warned the government that the proposed emissions trading scheme would add between 4 and 7 per cent to shopping bills in what would be a de facto tax on food.


    Although the government has revealed plans to compensate households for increased energy prices when the ETS is expected to be introduced in 2011, it has yet to announce how it will cover the rise in grocery prices.


    Reserve Bank assistant governor Philip Lowe last week told the House of Representatives economics committee that the ETS would add 0.4 percentage points to the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation in its first year of operation.


    However, the Food and Grocery Council believes the increase in grocery prices would be much higher, about 5 per cent.



     


    As food and grocery shopping is estimated to take up to 20 per cent of the weekly household budget, the council’s chief executive, Kate Carnell, says the price rise will amount to a GST on food – the area the Howard government exempted from the tax after a prolonged campaign by Labor and the Australian Democrats.


    Large retailers are understood to have also done modelling showing similar results, including a rise in food prices of as much as 7 per cent should Australia adopt the 25 per cent target on emissions reductions by 2020.


    Large retailers, while privately concerned, are believed to be hesitant to voice their objections to the ETS for fear of tarnishing their reputation among environmentally conscious consumers.


    Australian Retailers Association executive director Russell Zimmerman said the ETS would lead to a sharp increase in grocery shelf prices as costs increased at every stage of the production and distribution process.


    “It’s going to be a high cost to the consumer – the food manufacturer gets an ETS charge, then there’s delivery, and the retailers use refrigeration and lighting, and the cost of that is all going to be handed on,” Mr Zimmerman said. “Retail is a very competitive business. There’s not a lot of margin in grocery retailing, so these costs can’t be absorbed.”


    The ARA has set out its concerns in a submission to the government’s green paper on carbon reduction but Mr Zimmerman said he had little hope the government would shield consumers from higher costs.


    “The government has said it will cost consumers $1 a day, but that fails to accurately calculate the retail price impact on consumers, and there’s no real handle on what it’s going to cost consumers in the end,” he said.


    Retailers’ anxiety is matched in the US, amid growing fears about the impact of carbon trading plans. US agriculture companies including grain giant Cargill, meat processor Tyson Foods and food-maker General Mills, have expressed concern they will bear an unfair proportion of the costs resulting from carbon-reduction legislation and warned this would lead to higher food prices.


    Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce has warned that the ETS, once in place, would raise the retail price of a leg of lamb to almost $100.


    The revelations on food prices come as a split emerges in the business community over the ETS. The peak group, the Business Council of Australia, is divided over its position on the plan to reduce carbon emissions.


    The BCA is torn, with finance sector elements backing the ETS and the mining industry vehemently opposed. The split has led to the circulation of an anti-ETS paper from within the BCA that concludes 67 of its 109 members will not have a carbon permit liability under the government’s proposed Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.


    The overwhelming majority of the 67 are in the finance, legal or legal services sector, which the analysis says are expected to make huge profits out of the ETS.


    The paper’s author, who does not wish to be named, concludes: “While the BCA is held up as the voice of industry on the carbon scheme, the vast bulk of its members have no skin in the game. That is, they won’t have to buy permits. In fact, the bankers and finance consultants like KPMG stand to make a fortune out of it.”


    The paper’s author also names at least 12 senior Labor figures – seven of them frontbenchers, including three cabinet ministers – who they say have expressed doubts about the government’s ETS privately to either BCA member companies or their industry group representatives.




    Story Tools

  • Scientists create new super vegetables

    Scientists create new super vegetables


    Posted 1 hour 25 minutes ago



     The broccoli will be wrapped in plastic in shops to retain the anti-oxidants.

    The broccoli will be wrapped in plastic in shops to retain the anti-oxidants. (supplied)



    Victorian scientists have developed a new range of vegetables that have 40 per cent more anti-oxidants.


    Anti-oxidants have been proven to reduce the risk of a range of diseases such as heart disease and some types of cancer.



     


    The so-called “booster broccoli” is the first in a group of vegetables being developed by scientists at Victoria’s Department of Primary Industries (DPI).


    DPI leading scientist Dr Rod Jones says the new broccoli is not the result of genetic engineering.


    “All we’ve done is gone back and minded nature’s natural diversity,” he said.


    He said they formed partnerships with large companies and tested all of their varieties of broccoli and selected the one out of 400 tested with the highest anti-oxidant content.


    Now they have started to breed that variety.


    “It’s a premium branded product so the returns to growers should be higher,” he said.


    “It’s also about improving the health of our population in general by getting people to eat vegetables that we know are very good for them.”


    So far more than $20-million has been invested in the project.


    There are another 15 products in commercial testing including tomatoes, capsicum and lettuce.


    “So once those lines come through, plus all the other ones we’re looking at, cauliflower, onion, carrot, I don’t think it will take too long for the investment to be recouped,” he said.


    Dr Jones says the booster broccoli actually tastes good too.


    “It tastes sweeter than most other broccoli varieties because it’s high in sugar.”


    He said Australian conditions are perfect for growing the new varieties because when the plants are stressed by a lack of water, the anti-oxidant level goes up.


    He is confident they can eventually create a range of vegetables that have an even higher anti-oxidant content.


    Tags: rural, agricultural-crops, vegetables, australia, vic, melbourne-3000

  • Wind farm projects fees to be waived

    Wind farm project fees to be waived


    ABC August 17, 2009, 8:27 am

     





    The New South Wales Government has announced that it will waive all project fees for investors wanting to build wind farms.


    The Premier Nathan Rees says New South Wales is ready for the clean energy revolution.


    He has announced a number of measures designed to boost investment in clean energy generation.


    The Premier says wind farms that are at least 30 megawatts will be treated as critical infrastructure and planning decision will be made within four months.



     


    The Government will also waive project fees until the middle of 2011.


    New South Wales Climate Change Minister, Carmel Tebbutt, says the measures will help to attract clean energy projects to the state.


    “We know that with the Federal Government introducing the renewable energy target scheme that we’re going to see some sisgnificant investment in this area,” she said.


    “We’re making sure that NSW is ready to take a chunk of that investment.”


    The New South Wales Greens M-P John Kaye, says the measures need to be extended further to make any difference.


    “A 22 month holiday from development applications for wind farms is not long enough,” he said.


    “It’ll just take us through to the next election. NSW is so far behind the ball on wind generation that we need much more than 22 months”


    The Government’s announcement comes after the ABC revealed on Friday that project application fees for wind farms are about five time greater than for gas-fired power stations – based on their Megawatt capacity.




  • Snowfalls down by 40 per cent over 50 years

    Snowfalls down by 40 per cent over 50 years








     




    August 17, 2009


    Article from:  Australian Associated Press


    AUSTRALIAN skiers may have to look overseas in search of suitable snowfalls, thanks to global warming.


    The average snow cover at Australia’s highest altitude snow course, Spencer’s Creek in the Snowy Mountains, has declined by 30 per cent to 40 per cent in the last 50 years, a conference in Brisbane will be told today.


    The cost of man-made snow is also likely to increase as more water and electricity are required.


    Unlike skiers, specialised plants that have learnt to survive in the Australian highlands don’t have the option of seeking out higher ground and may face extinction, Associate Professor Catherine Pickering of Griffith University said.



     


    “Some of these plants are found only on the lee side of mountain ridges, where snow lies late into the summer months, long after snow in the surrounding landscape has melted,” Prof Pickering said.


    “We are about to lose two of our rarest plant communities, right before our eyes.”


    “We need to co-ordinate the ad hoc research that is happening on our limited snow country.”


    Prof Pickering will attend the The 10th International Congress of Ecology, INTECOL conference in Brisbane this week.


    INTECOL is hosted by the Ecological Society of Australia and the New Zealand Ecological Society.


    This is the first time the congress is being held in the southern hemisphere.




     

  • UN’s climate chief warns of real risk of failure at climate change talks

    UN’s climate chief warns of real risk of failure at climate change talks
    Yvo de Boer says process too slow to reach deal at close of meeting in Bonn aimed at trimming 200-page draft treaty
    Buzz up!
    Digg it
    David Adam, environment correspondent


    guardian.co.uk, Friday 14 August 2009 18.16 BST
    Article history
     
    Cooling towers at Eggborough power station, near Selby. Photograph: John Giles/PA
    A new global treaty on climate change is unlikely unless negotiations accelerate, the UN’s top climate change official warned today. Speaking at the close of another meeting intended to lay the ground for a new deal, Yvo de Boer, head of the UN climate secretariat said there was a real risk of failure.
    According to Reuters, he said: “If we continue at this rate we’re not going to make it.” De Boer said the week-long meeting in Bonn had made only “selective progress” towards trimming a huge 200-page draft treaty text.




    He warned that just 15 days of negotiations remain before key UN talks begin in December in Copenhagen at meetings in Bangkok in September and October and Barcelona in November.
    The Bonn talks were not expected to make a significant breakthrough. Observers said there was little movement on the key issues of new curbs on greenhouse gas pollution and funds to help poorer nations cope with global warming.
    “It is clear that there is quite a significant uphill battle if we are going to get there,” said Jonathan Pershing, head of the US delegation, according to Reuters. But he said there were some signs of movement. “You absolutely can get there,” he said.
    “Delegates spent too much time arguing over procedures and technicalities. This is not the way to overcome mistrust between rich and poor nations,” said Kim Carstensen, head of WWF Global Climate Initiative. “Delegates are kept back by political gridlock. The political leaders must now unblock the process.”
    Mike Childs, head of climate change at Friends of the Earth, said: “Rich countries are once again pushing the con of carbon offsetting at UN climate change talks, which means avoiding real action through dodgy accounting and putting pitifully inadequate targets on the table. Not only does this do nothing to protect people from the threat of runaway climate change, it means the UK will miss out on the new green jobs and industries that would be created by moving to a safe, clean, low-carbon future.”
    The talks closed as India said the new global climate change agreement should ban trade barriers erected by rich countries against those that refuse to accept limits on their carbon emissions.
    India suggested a clause to bar any country from taking action against another country’s goods and services based on its climate policy. The clause is largely directed against efforts by US Congress to impose trade penalties on countries that do not commit to specific action against greenhouse gases. India’s chief delegate Shyam Saran said such measures looked like “protectionism under a green label,” and were complicating the latest round of climate negotiations in Bonn.
    Trade issues are “extraneous to what we are trying to construct here, which is a collaborative response to an extraordinary global challenge,” Saran told the Associated Press.

  • ETS Deal Welcome but community will pay so pollutors can benefit

    Government and Opposition renewables deal welcome: But community will
    pay so polluters can benefit

    Sunday 16 August 2009

    The Greens today welcomed news that community pressure has ensured that
    the increased renewable energy target legislation will be implemented
    swiftly.

    However Greens Deputy Leader, Senator Christine Milne, expressed concern
    that Penny Wong has picked up the phone to the Coalition to ensure that
    the community will pay to install renewable energy so that polluters can
    benefit from the cheap energy they produce.




    “It is an ominous sign that Minister Wong has chosen to brown down the
    renewable energy target with the coalition and the polluters,” Senator
    Milne said.

    “The Greens have proposed amendments to the bill that are supported by
    renewable energy industry, while the Coalition and the Government are
    doing the bidding of the big polluters.

    “While this is a disappointing move, the critical point is that we bring
    on the renewable energy target legislation as swiftly as possible, to
    unleash the tremendous potential of renewable energy to re-energise
    Australia and create tens of thousands of jobs.

    “Modelling has shown clearly that the renewable energy target will
    reduce the pool price of electricity because it will smooth the most
    expensive peaks. Under this deal between the big old parties, the
    polluters will get windfall gains from cheaper electricity without
    having to pay to install the renewable energy in the first place. How is
    that fair or reasonable?

    “Both the big old parties have been using Australia’s clever and clean
    renewable energy industry as a political football. Both old parties bend
    over backwards to sandbag the old polluters, but neither is willing to
    give priority to the renewable energy powerhouse that the Australian
    community wants.”

    Senator Milne wrote to Ministers Wong and Combet on Friday setting out
    the Greens’ proposed amendments to the RET. The Greens’ amendments
    would:
    * Lift the target to 30% by 2020, expressed as a percentage of
    total energy demand, and introduce a two-yearly review of the adequacy
    of the target;
    * Decouple the bill from the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme by
    simply removing the exemptions for polluting industry (since there is
    compelling evidence that the pool price for electricity will drop due to
    the RET, an exemption would give a windfall gain to polluters);
    * Fix the problem of ‘phantom renewable energy credits’ created by
    the solar multiplier and lift the size limit on solar installations;
    * Replace the ill-thought-out solar multiplier with a gross
    national feed-in tariff for all forms of renewable energy; and
    * Strengthen the definition of renewable energy by removing native
    forest bioenergy, solar water heating and heat pumps.

    “Having provided the amendments to her last week, I will be getting in
    touch with Minister Wong again to encourage her to green up the
    renewable energy bill with us, rather than brown it down with the
    Coalition, and get it signed into law as swiftly as possible.”


    Tim Hollo
    Media Adviser
    Senator Christine Milne | Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Climate
    Change Spokesperson
    Suite SG-112 Parliament House, Canberra ACT | P: 02 6277 3588 | M: 0437
    587 562
    http://www.christinemilne.org.au/| www.GreensMPs.org.au
    <http://www.greensmps.org.au/>




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