"It is irresponsible and grossly inadequate to respond to dire crop
forecasts and the pain caused to rural communities by promising bandaid
cheques and platitudes about the drought eventually breaking," she said.
"Our agricultural sector is fast approaching crisis. We need to address
the issue of the future of agriculture urgently," said Senator Siewert.
"These poor seasons are no longer 'exceptional' circumstances. What we
are seeing is not just one of the worst droughts in history but a shift
in our climate. It is unfair to keep landholders hanging on without
putting real resources into helping them adapt."
Senator Siewert and Senator Milne have twice previously attempted to
establish similar inquiries.
"This is not so much a win for the Greens as a win for common sense,"
she said.
The motion to refer this issue to the Rural and Regional Affairs and
Transport Committee and the terms of reference for the inquiry are
attached overleaf.
The motion agreed to by the Senate reads,
That the Senate:
1. Notes the dire state of the latest ABARE Crop Report (No. 143,
released 18th September 2007).
2. Recognises the severe impact of a series of ongoing poor seasons of
the livelihoods of Australian farmers and the knock-on effect on the
well-being of associated rural communities.
3. Notes the need to ensure the security of Australian food production.
4. That the following matters be referred to the Rural and Regional
Affairs and Transport Committee for inquiry and report by 30 June 2008:
a. The scientific evidence available on the likely future climate of our
key agricultural production zones, and its implications for current farm
enterprises and possible future industries
b. The need for a national strategy to assist Australian agricultural
industries to adapt to climate change
c. The adequacy of existing drought assistance and exceptional
circumstances programs to cope with long-term climactic changes.
Author: admin
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Greens establish food and global warming inquiry
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SA subsidises solar photovoltaics
Definitions: The Minister said: "The following definitions are relevant to the operation of this Division:
• domestic customer means a customer—(a) who acquires electricity primarily for domestic use; and (b) who satisfies other criteria (if any) prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this definition;
• excluded network means a distribution network that supplies electricity to less than 10 000 domestic customers;
• qualifying generator means a small photovoltaic generator — (a) that is operated by a domestic customer; and (b) that complies with Australian Standard AS 4777 (as in force from time to time or as substituted from time to time); and (c) that is connected to a distribution network in a manner that allows electricity generated by the small photovoltaic generator to be fed into the network, other than where the distribution network is an excluded network; and
• small photovoltaic generator means a photovoltaic system with capacity up to 10kVA for a single phase connection and up to 30kVA for a three phase connection."
Reference: P.F. Conlon, Minister for Energy, House of Assembly, South Australia, 12 September 2007.
Erisk Net, 16/9/2007
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New lamp saves electricity
Scientists working for Ceravision, a company based in Milton Keynes, in Britain, have designed a new form of lamp that eliminates the need for electrodes, reported The Economist (8/9/2007, p.4). Their device uses microwaves to transform electricity into light. It consists of a relatively small lump of aluminium oxide into which a hole has been bored, with a gas-capsule, inside. The lot is bombarded with microwaves generated from the same sort of device that powers a microwave oven. As electrons accelerate in the electric field, they gain energy that they pass on to the atoms and molecules of the gas as they collide with them, creating a glowing plasma. The resulting light is bright, and the process is energy-efficient.
Energy efficiency greater than 50 per cent: Indeed, whereas traditional light bulbs emit just 5 per cent of their energy as light, and fluorescent tubes about 15 per cent, the Ceravision lamp has an energy efficiency greater than 50 per cent. The lamp’s small size makes them compatible to light-emitting diodes but the new lamp generates much brighter light than those semiconductor devices do.
Cheap, and does not need mercury: A single microwave generator can be used to power several lamps. Another environmental advantage of the new design is that it does not need mercury, a highly toxic metal found in most of the bulbs used today, including energy-saving fluorescent bulbs, fluorescent tubes and high-pressure bulbs used in projectors. And Ceravision also reckons it should be cheap to make. With lighting accounting for some 20 per cent of electricity use worldwide, switching to a more efficient system could both save energy and reduce emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gases.
The Economist, 8/9/2007, p. 4
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Murray River officially runs dry
The river bed of the River Murray was running dry just across the border in Victoria and water had been kept upstream of South Australia as part of the Murray-Darling Basin Commission’s management plan to ensure flow across the border in coming months, reported The Advertiser (10/9/2007, p. 8).
River impassable to larger craft: "Within weeks State Cabinet will consider plans for Adelaide’s first desalination plant to reduce reliance on the river," The Advertiser reported. "The river flow has been checked at Lock 7, between Renmark and Mildura, reducing it to barely a trickle over the past week. A small channel on one side of the river allows for the passage of small boats through the lock but houseboats are unable to navigate the shallow waters."
September dry unusual: Riverland photographer Glenn Milne said "a couple of garden hoses" would squirt more water past the lock. "There’s a huge sand bar that’s three-quarters the way across the river and the rest of it is only very shallow," he said. Lock masters said the river bed often dried out in June when river flows were reduced but it was unusual for the river still to be dry in September when irrigation water usually was released.
Less than 25pc of monthly average flow: Monthly inflows into the River Murray had been below average for the past 23 months. In August, 360 gigalitres flowed into the river, compared with the long-term monthly average of 1570 gigalitres. The release of water from Hume reservoir has been as low as possible in winter.
The Advertiser, 10/9/2007, p. 8
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The 100-Mile Diet
The Origins
The concept of the 100-mile diet started to spread in 2005 when pioneers James MacKinnon and Alisa Smith decided to eat foods produced within 100 miles of their Vancouver home, which is surrounded by mountains, a valley and water. “That was big enough to have the potential to feed us, but small enough to feel genuinely local,” says MacKinnon. They lived to tell about their experience in the book Plenty: One Man, One Woman, and a Raucous Year of Eating Locally, which hit shelves last May. Fiction writer Barbara Kingsolver’s testament to eating mostly homegrown food with her family, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, came out the same month.
Confining “local” to a certain radius is not a new idea. Gary Nabhan, author and founder of Native Seeds/SEARCH, a nonprofit organization that preserves heirloom seeds that connect Native Americans with the land, ate foods produced within 250 miles of his Arizona home for a year in 2000.
Although I was inspired by these conscientious consumers, just deciding what I would eat for breakfast made me nervous. I planned to make few exceptions—no coffee, tea or orange juice. I prepared menus and talked to people who had tried the diet themselves, but since my success depended on my locale, out-of-towners’ advice wasn’t very helpful. Still, I became more encouraged as I watched shoppers test for ripeness in the over-stocked stands.
Shopping Around
Leaving Union Square, lugging two bulging bags of produce, I mentally reviewed my purchases: five ears of corn and a cucumber from Migliorelli Farm, $2.50; a half pound of flounder from Long Island Sound, $2.25; and tomatoes, a chili pepper and an eggplant from Oak Grove Plantation, $8.80. Unfortunately, I still needed items like butter and milk—which would have melted or curdled, respectively, if I lugged them home from the market.
At the Union Square market, produce prices ran high, but a new study conducted at the University of Seattle shows that the prices at most farmers’ markets might actually be lower than at traditional grocery stores. Normally, I spend about $125 on food every week. When I totaled all my farmers’ market purchases and added the items I had left to buy, I saw that for me, the 100-mile diet cost about $160 a week—almost 30 percent more than usual.
For milk and butter, I walked to my neighborhood organic market. The cashier explained that they used to carry local dairy, but there was always at least one broken package in the delivery, so they stopped ordering it altogether. Finding local staples was proving more frustrating than I imagined. I tried my luck at Whole Foods. The store’s greeter told me that 80 percent of the food sold there is local and signs above the produce state the food’s price and origin. I even found dairy items that had eluded me at my neighborhood organic grocery, including butter from Ronnybrook Farm Dairy, almost exactly 100 miles away.
But few grocery stores make it easy to learn where their products come from. Raoul, the assistant manager at Steve’s C-Town, a grocery chain near my apartment, said the store buys its produce from many of the 50 merchants that distribute out of Hunt’s Point in the Bronx, the most profitable distribution site in the world.
Pineapples from the Philippines, bananas from Costa Rica and avocados from California travel to Hunt’s Point via truck, train, boat or plane, and then to supermarkets like C-Town. Mean-while, many foods grown nearby are not sold locally. “Most Americans would be surprised to hear that most of the garlic found in most of the supermarkets is from China,” says Brian Halweil, author of the book Eat Here: Reclaiming Homegrown Pleasures in a Global Supermarket.
Dining In
My kitchen table was barely visible beneath all the fruits and vegetables. My dinner plan included acorn squash with a pat of butter, brown sugar and cooking sherry. I debated using the brown sugar and sherry—neither are produced locally—and decided to use them anyway. After all, what good is any diet without a little wiggle room?
I’m a terrible cook, but when I smelled the baking acorn squash, I almost called the Food Network. When I tasted my masterpiece, I was in heaven. It was flavorful, filling, and especially comforting, knowing my community and the larger world all benefited from my food choices.
In the weeks that followed, I dined on red onion, cucumber and dill salad; red potatoes with sautéed eggplant, zucchini and rosemary; and tomato and basil with goat cheese, delighting in each fresh dish. Although I no longer eat 100-mile (or 200-mile) foods exclusively, I still incorporate them into my diet—and I always visit the Union Square or Prospect Park Green Markets. A community of epicureans, traditionalists and environmentalists is growing around the appreciation of local fare. As Cheryl Nechamen, an activist who organizes her community to try the 100-mile diet, says, “It touches a lot of different people for a lot of different reasons.”
SUSAN COSIER is a science, health and environment reporter from Brooklyn, NY.
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Turnbull launches windfarm working group
"While primary responsibility in these matters rests with state and territory governments, there should be a more consistent approach than currently exists across Australia," Mr Turnbull said.
Members of the working group represent a balance of community, rural, local government and wind energy industry interests. The members are:
- Denis Smedley, a senior executive of the Department of the Environment and Water Resources (Chair)
- Ms Liz Johnstone, senior planning adviser at the Municipal Association of Victoria
- Andrew Richards, chair of the Australian Wind Energy Association, a vice president of the Business Council for Sustainable Energy, and Executive Manager, Corporate Affairs and Marketing, Pacific Hydro
- Brett Thomas, managing director of Melbourne arm of Acciona, a world leader in renewable energy
- Tim Le Roy, spokesperson for the Tarwin Valley Coastal Guardians
- Yvonne Wenham, spokesperson for Friends of Future Generations (SA)
- David Clarke, a farmer from Waubra, Victoria
- Di Jay, CEO of the Planning Institute of Australia
- Colin Griffith, CEO, Australian Council of National Trusts