Author: admin

  • Mungo’s slip reveals ALP’s Achilles heel

    Mungo’s defence of Garrett, as much as Garrett’s desertion of principle itself, proves that the Alternative Liberal Party is now a creature of the establishment. The ALP must, according to Mungo, compromise its principles to gain power. If that means selling workers down the drain, Uranium to warring states, or our hospitals, schools and water to international corporations, then so be it.

    When the Liberal Party self destructs after this election, Mungo and other apparatchiks of the establishment will find themselves facing a far more formidable opposition; a passionate and principled movement that is ready to govern on behalf of the people and the environment that supports us.

    The choice for the future is stark. We either vote for the establishment parties that will sacrifice us all on the altar of economic growth or for the emerging parties that recognise we must learn to live better to survive.

  • Largest windfarm proposed for Western NSW

    A company is seeking approval to build Australia’s largest wind farm, which would be able to power up to 400,000 homes, in the New South Wales outback.

    Epuron, a subsidiary of German renewable energy group Conergy AG, wants to place 500 turbines on up to five private properties at Silverton, near Broken Hill, in the state’s far west.

    Executive director Andrew Durran says the wind farm could produce more than half the renewable energy target proposed for the state.

    Mr Durran says it would satisfy almost 4.5 per cent of the state’s power demand.

    State legislation on renewable energy targets is due to be debated in the next session of Parliament but Mr Durran is concerned the Bill does not stipulate that projects must be state-based.

    "That’s why we’re announcing this today," he said. "It’s to prove that New South Wales has got more than enough capacity to deliver its targets.

    "NSW is the best state in Australia for wind farms – it has excellent wind resources, it has a very strong power-transmission network.

    "This one project can deliver more than half the renewable energy target proposed in NSW."

    The company says strong state legislation would give it the confidence to proceed.

  • Crazy John’s Resource Sale

    Welcome to Crazy John’s Resource Sale and Love-In. See George rub Middle-Eastern oil on John’s naked skin. Hear George say, “Like me, Johnny loves to come from behind.”
    Everybody loves Australia. We are the biggest mine on the planet and we’re having a sale! Everything must go! Steel, nickel, copper – out they go at bargain prices! Have we got a deal for you! Your company can make billions! (Poisoned water? Who cares!) But wait, there’s more… Not enough CO2 in your atmosphere? Climate too predictable for you? Try our coal. We got all types – brown coal, black coal, dirty coal, and new from our marketing gurus – clean coal! Yes folks, clean coal. And you thought there was no such thing… We got tonnes of the stuff. Solid carbon just waiting to be dug up and burned by countries around the globe. And we’re just warming up! Are you a weak, developing country? Well, get some carbon in ya, mate! (Renewables are for poofs.)
     
    But wait, there’s more! How about uranium? We got more uranium than you can handle! Radioactive for a quarter of a million years – now that’s value plus! More dangerous than coal; more polluting than a pulp mill – every unstable powermonger wants some and out the door it must go! Use it to generate inefficient power! Make radioactive bullets! Create cancers in the kiddies! Destroy ecosystems – not just temporarily, but forever! Bomb stuff! (And it stays bombed.) Everyone’s invited to Crazy John’s Auction Australia.
    Democracies, failing states, totalitarian regimes, thugs and mugs – all welcome! Make shareholders rich! Genetically alter populations you don’t like! Remember the Balkans? Buggered. Iraq? Buggered. Bugger them all! Three legs are better than two! Tumours are better than three! And what would the people of Australia expect to get from all this? Security? Prosperity? A better life for future generations? No! They get dirty air, radioactive water and bloody great holes in the ground!
     
    It’s spring madness here at Crazy John’s! Rich pigs will get richer! Power freaks can kill things! Does it get any better than that? Morality – out it goes! Planetary responsibility – gone! Concern for the people – don’t make us laugh! The future – what’s that?
     
    But wait, there’s even more! (How do we do it?) What about woodchip? We got forests enough to last for years! Old growth, regrowth, plantation – we got it all. And when the forests are gone… we can mine! It’s win-win in Australia’s Sale of the Century! Australia: If we got it, it’s yours. All we ask is that you don’t sell uranium to Iran. Promise? Really truly? Cross your heart?… Okay!! You can have as much Aussie uranium as your mafia can buy! Hooray! (Oops. Did I say mafia? I meant government. But who cares? It’s the same thing!!) But seriously folks. Ahem. Consider the environment. We’d like to know that you’re tending towards agreeing in principle to a non-binding, unstated, aspirational target. Okay? (No, we don’t know what it means either. Nothing, I guess. Just agree…) You do! Great! Have a free Driza-Bone. In case it rains. Ever again.
    (by S Sorrensen, taken from the Northern Rivers Echo – Oct 5)
  • Ben Quin quits the Libs over Gunn’s pulp mill

    Hobart, Saturday, 6 October 2007 - Australian Greens Senator Christine Milne today welcomed the decision by former Liberal candidate for Lyons, Ben Quin, to quit his party over the decision to give Gunns' pulp mill the go ahead.

    Senator Milne said "There are too few people in the old parties who are prepared to stand up for what they believe in. Mr Quin's actions today are in direct contrast to those of Peter Garrett and even Malcolm Turnbull.

    "Mr Turnbull lectured the rest of the world at APEC about the greenhouse gas ramifications of deforestation and was proudly touting the Sydney Declaration in Washington only a matter of days ago. Now he has given the go ahead, with Mr Garrett's blessing, to the logging of primary forests in Australia and a massive injection of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.

    "The pulp mill campaign will continue as momentum builds against the mill in the lead up to the federal poll, and a decision by Mr Quin to contest the election as an independent would only increase the pressure.

    "The increased pressure on financial institutions such as the ANZ, and the increased level of interest from the investment community, should shine a spotlight on the financial viability of the mill, and especially the wood supply agreement, which must be made public.

    "Even more Australians will be outraged when they learn that Gunns can access native forests to feed the pulp mill at bargain basement prices because the Lennon Government has tied royalties to the price of pulp. If the price of chemical pulp falls on the global market, the Government will reduce the royalties they charge accordingly. This shifts all the cost and risk to the Tasmanian community, the taxpayer, and the environment, while guaranteeing Gunns' profits.

    "Which other company in Australia has such a sweetheart deal with government that discounts the input price whenever the market price falls? Tasmanians will end up paying Gunns to take away their forests. It is a scandal.

    "Ben Quin has demonstrated that there is no place in the old parties for those willing to stand by their principles, and the Liberal and Labor parties will increasingly find it difficult to attract candidates. Perhaps they should consider the Greens' policy to give representatives a conscience vote on all issues, a decision which would improve the quality of our democracy tremendously."
  • Local forum brings farmers and environmentalists together

    The Sustainable Regions forum in Murwillumbah last Friday evening brought together local farmers with renewable energy pioneers and government agencies to outline practical solutions for farming in the face of water shortages, rising oil prices and the globalisation of agribusiness. Among messages emerging from the forum was the fact that most speakers, including the Nationals Sue Page, feel that the globalisation of the economy is damaging regional economies as well as the environment. Consumers have a key role in influencing this by seeking out local product. The home garden was identified as an important factor in a sustainable future, along with community gardens and farmers markets.

  • Growing Biofuels: The Sustainability Opportunity

    Searle noted the natural tendency of farmers is toward producing the largest crop they can with available land and equipment. Commodity support programs have reinforced this tendency. So sectors ranging from livestock to ethanol have been built on an assumption of grain supplies below the cost of production.

    Now changing markets are having ripple effects across sectors. Livestock operators in particular have seen their costs go up.

    Ethanol industry demand for corn is "no doubt" having an impact, Kleinschmidt said. However, inflation-adjusted prices are well below 1970s levels and "merely returning to levels that let farmers make a living." (Indeed, corn subsidies will decline 75 percent this fiscal year, reducing program costs by $6 billion.)

    Yet the impact of corn prices on overall food costs has been exaggerated, Searle said. He quoted American Farm Bureau Federation Senior Economist Terry Francl, ". . . there is little evidence that any food category has been affected by higher corn prices in any significant manner. Certainly it is true that some food product manufacturers have claimed higher corn prices are increasing their manufacturing cost, using this as a justification for raising their product prices."

    As evidence Searle noted that even at $4 per bushel,

    • a 10-ounce box of corn flakes contains less than a nickel’s worth or corn,
    • corn sweetener in a can of soda adds two cents to the cost,
    • corn feed represents $0.25 cents at retail for pork at $3 a pound.

    "It’s important to look at the big picture." Searle said. "A lot of these fuel-versus-feed arguments do not stack up."

    "Ethanol from corn is transitory," he added. "My concern is we don’t kill the good to try to achieve the perfect."

    The next stage of biofuels is a move from grain to cellulose feedstocks. This is one opportunity for the biofuels sector to promote overall agricultural sustainability. Kleinschmidt called for support for a greater diversity of crops, in particular perennial grasses that can feed cellulosic biofuels production.

    In addition, "Biofuels need to embrace the local." An emphasis on regional biofuels feedstocks will go hand in hand with an emphasis on local food production. In the U.S. this task may fall to the states, he noted.

    "The biofuels sector needs to promote all forms of renewable energy," Kleinschmidt added, including electricity for plug-in hybrids and renewables at biofuels plants.

    Representing the largest ethanol producer in the western U.S., Tim Raphael of Pacific Ethanol said, "Corn ethanol producers are leading a lot of the work on next generation cellulosic ethanol."

    That includes companies such as Poet [formerly Broin], planning to add cellulosic production to a standard corn plant, and his own. Pacific is seeking funding to use straw and wood waste at its Boardman, Oregon plant and plans to eventually use cellulose at all its plants.

    Use of cellulose will take pressure off food crops while reducing global warming emissions more than corn ethanol. But corn is needed for the transition, Raphael said.

    "We can’t get there from here without access to markets today. Corn ethanol producers are going to play a key role in bringing on the next generation."

    The impact of biofuels growth on developing nations’ food supplies has drawn some of the sharpest backlashing along the lines of "starving the poor to feed our cars."

    Speakers throughout the day focused on the larger context, another one of those ways the biofuels boom is amplifying the effects of poor policy choices. Kleinschmidt pointed to trade policies that promote dumping below-cost commodities to foreign markets, particularly in developing countries. He noted that corn exports to Mexico have increased 240 percent since the North American Free Trade Agreement went into effect in 1994. So when tortilla prices escalate, biofuels receive the blame.

    It should be remembered that when NAFTA went into effect, and the Zapatista army appeared in Chiapas, Mexico in protest, the coming invasion by subsidized corn was a major driver. Indigenous Mayans, probably the world’s original corn farmers, were worried they would be driven out of business. And their fears were well founded. Hundreds of thousands of poor Mexican farmers have been driven off the land, and pressure on U.S. borders has intensified as a result.

    Kleinschmidt called for an end to trade policies that dump commodities on developing nations. Instead, higher prices and positive policies can improve the lot of farmers in those nations.

    Raphael echoed that comment. U.S. food aid programs "should be investing in local agriculture, not relying on cheap U.S. commodities." He quoted a Wall Street Journal report that showed the U.S. in 2003 spent $500 million shipping commodities to Ethiopia while spending only $5 million on agricultural development there.

    Raphael also quoted Suzanne Hunt of Worldwatch Institute, "If rich countries were no longer dumping cheap food on the commodities market, farmers in developing nations would have a better chance of staying in business."

    Biofuels growth has placed new stresses and pressures on agriculture, underscoring the need for sustainability in production of all commodities whether they are food, feed, fiber or fuel. Biofuels represent an opportunity to put in place the policies that will achieve a more sustainable agricultural system overall in the U.S. and around the world.

    Patrick Mazza is research director for Climate Solutions.