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  • Government climate change report call for new institutions to curb global warming

    Government climate change report calls for new institutions to curb global warming.

    A report commissioned by the British government will call today for an overhaul of global institutions to combat climate change.

    The report, to be published by the Centre on International Co-operation at New York University, recommends the creation of powerful surveillance and enforcement mechanisms similar to those of the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency. The new institutions would ensure countries honour their commitments to cut carbon emissions.

    “This implies a significant pooling of sovereignty, greater coercive powers at international level, and significant investment in surveillance and research,” the authors, Alex Evans and David Steven, write. They say that for any new climate deal to be effective, countries that do not join the international effort to curb global warming should face pariah status.

    “It seems inevitable that a long-term climate deal will ultimately require an ‘all or nothing’ approach to international participation. Either countries play a full part in the system, or they sit outside the international system and are effectively barred from all forms of international co-operation,” they say. “Carbon default, in other words, would become as weighty an issue as sovereign default, or failure to comply with a security council resolution. That this should currently seem inconceivable indicates the extent of the shift in understanding that is still needed.”

    The Kyoto accord on global climate change has weak enforcement ­mechanisms and involved very little institutional change. Kyoto is due to expire in 2012, and summit negotiations on a successor treaty take place in Copenhagen in December.

    The report, An Institutional Architecture for Climate Change, was commissioned by the Department for International Development. It does not necessarily represent the department’s views, a Dfid spokesman said, but was a starting point for a necessary debate at the Copenhagen conference. “This report highlights many of the issues that will be on the table for discussion at the Copenhagen summit in December,” the spokesman said.

    “Copenhagen represents a once-in-a-generation opportunity to set climate goals that avoid dangerous temperature rises and it is vital that we ensure ­effective reform of global institutions as part of this.”

    The report warns that a long-term solution to global warming could be delayed if a deal in Copenhagen falls foul of wholesale cheating, exploitation by corrupt officials and rigging of carbon markets – tainting the climate change effort.

    Bickering over burden-sharing, overseen by toothless institutions would waste effort and distract attention from the looming threat of catastrophic change.

    The report suggests that a transparent formula, or algorithm, would have to be agreed which would distribute the burden of restructuring economies. A new body would be created, the International Climate Control Committee, with a robust surveillance mandate to report on, among other things, national performance in reducing emissions.

    There would also have to be a new institution with an enforcement role and the capacity to make intrusive inspections, measuring emissions, in the same way that inspectors from the IAEA now oversee nuclear facilities.

    The role of the World Trade Organisation would also have to be rethought, the report says, to take account of the carbon implications of international trade.

    Such reform of international institutions is likely to be hugely controversial and bitterly fought out, but the authors say there is very little time left to get it right.

    They estimate the world has less than a decade to limit global warming to less than two degrees, and “less time than that to design the institutions of the post-carbon age.”

  • Gunns’ approval for mill ‘invalid

    Gunns’ approval for mill ‘invalid

    Matthew Denholm | May 11, 2009

    Article from:  The Australian

    STATE approval for Gunns Tasmanian pulp mill is invalid and wide open to legal challenge, according to an analysis to be published by a leading administrative law expert.

    Michael Stokes, University of Tasmania senior law lecturer, told The Australian his detailed analysis revealed an apparent fatal flaw in the mill assessment process. 

    The flaw was a “time bomb” for the $2 billion bleached eucalypt mill, proposed for the Tamar Valley north of Launceston, providing solid grounds for a legal challenge.

    Mr Stokes’s analysis concludes that the assessment of the project by consultants under former premier Paul Lennon’s fast-track process failed to comply with Mr Lennon’s own fast-track legislation.

    “These are not just minor, little things; these are big things – it’s quite clear that the assessment done was not mandated by parliament,” Mr Stokes told The Australian.

    The Pulp Mill Assessment Act – introduced by the Lennon government to fast-track the mill outside the independent planning process – allows approval for the project if consultants recommend it can proceed.

    Under Section 4 of the act, this can only occur after the consultants “undertake an assessment of the project … against the (pulp mill) guidelines”.

    However, the consultant hired by the Government – Scandinavian firm Sweco Pic – conceded in their assessment report of June 2007 that they did not assess the project against 15 of the mill guidelines.

    Sweco Pic said these guidelines related to “permit conditions, monitoring and the operation of the pulp mill”.

    “At this stage of the project development, it is not practical to undertake an assessment of these latter requirements,” their report said.

    However, Mr Stokes said it was not open to Sweco Pic to restrict the assessment in this way. “These deficiencies are so major that we don’t have an assessment required by the act,” Mr Stokes said.

    “Therefore, there was no power (held by Sweco Pic) to recommend the mill go ahead and therefore the permit is not a valid one.”

    Without a valid permit, construction of the mill could not begin and Mr Stokes said the problem could not be easily overcome.

    A Gunns spokesman rejected Mr Stokes’s legal analysis as “ridiculous” and insisted the company was confident in the legality of the state approval and permit. However, he would not say whether this view was based on a legal opinion. “We’re not going to make any comment (about that),” he said.

    It is understood anti-mill groups are aware of the nature of Mr Stokes’s analysis and that it could be used in a new legal challenge to the project.

    Section 11 of the act limits the rights of appeal against any approval or assessment “under this act”, but Mr Stokes said this would not prevent court action if the assessment was invalid.

    He also believed that as the permit was in part issued under the State Land Use Planning Approvals Act, it might expire two years after issue – late August this year – unless the mill was “substantially commenced” by that time.

    There is speculation this is why Gunns may have recently moved equipment to Tasmania.

    Gunns does not yet have federal approval to operate the mill, but has been given federal clearance to begin construction. It is yet to announce a joint venture partner or financier.

  • A more considered approach to Biochar

    Geoff Moxham (aka Terrania Geoff) has been working with alternative energy sources and low impact living patterns for many years. His range of pyrolisis equipment is legendary (and visible at Bodgers Hovel)
     
    Geoff joined the Generator to demonstrate the results of his pyrolisis using home made equipment that completely burns all the fuel in biomass without oxygen, leaving the carbon dioxide behind.
     
    This video simply shows the results of pyrolisis with a short discussion about the value of charcoal for the soil.
  • The Impact of bottled water

    In 2004 the people of the world consume 26 billion litres of water in 28 billion drink bottles. That consumes 17 million barrels of oil and of 2.5 billion litres of water, producing 2.5million tonnes of carbon dioxide just to make the bottles. Water bottlers waste up to on third of the water they consume. Consumers spent 100 billion dollars on bottled water.

    The total volume of packaged drinks was a staggering 490billion litres. Making bottled drinks consumes about 3.5 litres of water per litre of drink. The bottles for all these packaged drinks consume around 350million barrels of oil and 50 billion litres of water to make and produce more than 100 million tonnes of carbon dioxide.

    Just in case you thought this was somebody else’s problem, each year australians throw away about 100,000 tonnes of drink bottles. That is 50 kilograms of plastic for every human being in Australia. The water used in the manufacturing of those bottles is almost 2 gigalitres, enough to save the Murray Darling. That also represents 2 million barrels of oil.

    You can check these statistics under Saving the planet or download Rosy’s power point here.

     

  • 22 – Reject packaged drinks

    Packaged drinks are a perfect example of how cheap energy has warped us into consuming resources for no good reason other than it makes money for someone else. We pay over 1,000 times the price of tap water to drink essentially the same water from a plastic bottle.

    It has been revealed with monotonous regularity that the perceived health benefits of bottled water are illusory and some soft drink companies simply bottle tap water and sell it. Drink bottles are a huge waste problem. Only about one third of the bottles sold are recycled – high by world standards – and the rest end up in landfill or the oceans. Because they are hollow, they take up a lot of space in landfill (around 30%) and kill animals that crawl inside them.

    It is marginally more convenient to buy a drink in a disposable container than in a re-usable one, but it is environmentally expensive.

    Reality check

    498 billion litres of packaged drinks were sold world wide in 2005. That is about 77 litres of bottled drink per person on the planet. This amount is growing at around seven per cent every year, with the largest growth being for bottled water.

    The resources associated with those numbers are enormous.

    • Each kilogram of PET plastic consumes 17.5 litres of water and around three litres of oil to make.

    • Drink factories use up to 3.5 litres of water for every litre of drink they sell.

    • All told, every 600ml bottle of water consumes around 1.5 Megajoules of energy.

    • Globally, bottled drinks are responsible for around 100 million tonnes of carbon dioxide released annually into the atmosphere.

    In 2006 Prime Minister John Howard protested that the dental health of the nation is being harmed by the growth in drinking bottled water. Most bottled water does not contain flouride.

    While many people would see this as an good reason to drink bottled water, it illustrates the point that many people only drink fluids delivered to them in cans or bottles.

    What I do

    I keep all the plastic bottles that come into the house and fill them about 90 per cent full of water. I keep about ten of them in the freezer, for picnics or school lunches and another half a dozen of them in the fridge.

    Once a week I nearly fill a saucepan with white sugar, and cover the sugar with filtered tap water. I boil that until clear and then bottle the syrup in glass bottles. During the week we make cordials using that syrup with citrus juice, or whatever juicy fruits are in season. It has all the dental and other negatives associated with sugar, but it is my alternative to packaged drinks.

    I make all my tea in a teapot. I empty the teapot into a jug during the day, then put syrup, lemon juice, ice-cubes and water into the jug, and let it ‘brew’ until the evening. Uncle Joe’s iced tea is legendary. Chinese home-stay students have taken the recipe back to China.

    Hidden traps

    You’re in the car and you’re hot. You’re filling up with petrol. The fridge beckons.

    What can I say?

    Get into the habit of taking home-bottled water with you.

    Search terms

    oil bottled water calculate

    PET plastic water

    Contamination bottled water

    Hard Facts

    Over 25,000 tonnes of PET bottles are used in Sydney every year wasting 475 megalitres of water. That is almost the volume of water that flows down the Darling River.

  • Oilves saved by last minute sale

    In an example of how the abstract world of finances can impact on the real supply of food, olive producer Boundary Bend stopped picking $26million worth of olives last week because of fears it would not be paid because the company that owned 20% of the crop, Timbercorp, is under administration. Timbercorp’s administrator successfully applied to the Federal Court for permission to sell the crop to Boundary Bend so that the picking and processing can continue.

    See the original story