Author: DokterW

  • Capital investment constrains BioSolar

    Young Entrepreneur of the year, Leigh Storr, is pleased to be in the fastest growing sector of the fastest growing industry.

    “The only constraint on our growth, right now, is a lack of investment capital,” he told Westender.

    “In America investors would be throwing money at a company like BioSolar, in Australia, the financial institutions see rapid growth and call it risk.”

    According to Storr, the secret to his growth is high-quality panels, components and installations and a focus on affordability. He achieves that by providing customers with a payment plan to keep up-front costs down, and rigorous attention to cashflow in his business.

    “Many solar companies are selling incentives and are vulnerable to the whims of government policy. As governments slash incentives, our business has soared.”

    He explains that customers have simply done the numbers on their power bill.

    “If power prices continue to rise at 12.5% p.a. over the next ten years, the average Australian will spend an entire year of their work life, just paying for electricity.”

    BioSolar now employs over 400 people and has invested in a workplace culture that has earned it the nickname ‘Google of the Gabba’. It has a vegan cafe, cinema and gym on premises and an independent yoga studio on-site. The company has a major operational centre in Darra and offices in NSW and Victoria.

    Storr believes the current focus on propping up the fossil fuel industry will cost the Australian economy dearly as other countries shift to cheap, distributed energy and unleash innovation.

    Before the end of the year, BioSolar will be selling low cost battery technology and generators that will allow homes and businesses to be independent of the grid (read about Guerrilla Disconnection below).

    He points to companies like Google in the USA who are independent of the grid, precisely because they need to guarantee their electricity supply and control their electricity costs.

    Consumer protection by Guerrilla Disconnection

    The challenge for the electricity industry, recently exposed by Four Corners and The Monthly, is that the cost of the infrastructure for fossil fuel generated electricity is increasing as fewer customers need it. As a result the service charges on your electricity bill have increased much faster than the charges for the electricity itself. Not content with printing false statements blaming these costs on environmental regulation in large red letters on their bills, electricity companies are now lobbying governments to further penalise owners of solar panels with higher connection charges. The price paid for solar generated electricity is already a ridiculously low 4 cents per kilowatt and the amount of electricity that can be supplied to the grid has been capped by export limiters.

    The best protection for consumers, according to BioSolar owner and CEO, Leigh Storr, is to disconnect from the grid altogether.

    He said that consumers can achieve this, by simply notifying their provider of an imminent disconnection date, online. On that date, the consumer throws the switch on the export limiter and the utility records no further use.

    “What are they going to do? Drive around and issue fines for people who have the lights on without being registered to a fossil-fuel-powered generator?”

    He thinks the crunch will come in 2017 when the cost of being connected to the grid will exceed the cost becoming self-sufficient.

  • Red Bull Flying Bach comes to Brisbane, contest has ended

    Red Bull Flying Bach returns to Australia and will be back in New South Wales and Victoria, and debuting in Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia in September and October.

    Best explained as classical music meets urban dance moves. Breakdancing choreographed to Bach’s composition of the ‘Well-Tempered Calvier’, which dates back to 1722.

    Watch the videos below to see what to expect and take part in the contest to win a double pass ticket to this extraordinary show.

    Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 will be showing at QPAC in Brisbane September 24–26.

    Westender’s Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 Contest

    Westender has six double pass tickets to give away for the shows in Brisbane. To enter you must answer the two questions below correctly to qualify. The contest ends 11.59 pm 17.08.2014 and winners will be contacted and announced within a week from that date.

    Questions

    1. What is the name of the breakdance crew that is part of Red Bull Flying Bach?
    2. What is the Aboriginal name for where the West End area of Brisbane is located?

    Send your answers to jimmy@westender.com.au with name and phone number. Email subject should be as followed: Westender Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 Contest
    !email subject text must be exact as shown above!

    Contest Rules

    1. Only one (1) double pass ticket per winner
    2. Only one (1) attempt per person, no repeated tries at the questions

    More info about Red Bull Flying Bach 2014

    Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 Australian tour dates:
    • State Theatre, Sydney: 4 shows, 9–12 September
    • Crown Theatre, Perth: 4 shows, 17–20 September
    • QPAC, Brisbane: 3 shows, 24–26 September
    • Arts Centre, Melbourne: 4 shows, 1–4 October
    • Festival Theatre, Adelaide: 3 shows, 7–9 October

    Ticket information:
    Tickets are on sale now, prices starting from $89: www.redbullflyingbach.com

    Social Media
    Twitter: www.twitter.com/RedBullAU #FlyingBachAU #GivesYouWings
    Instagram: www.instagram.com/RedBullAU #FlyingBachAU #GivesYouWings
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/redbull

  • You too can make it in the music industry

    There is no point denying it. We humans love music. So much that if you play your cards right you can earn enough to make it your sole income. But, that takes a lot of hard work to accomplish.

    Which is why Little BIGSOUND was started in 2011.

    It provides a forum for young music lovers to learn from those whom have become successful within the music industry. A forum to teach aspiring music lovers how to turn their passion for music into profit.

    As Harvey Mackay (motivational speaker) once said, find something you love to do and you’ll never have to work a day in your life.

    If you are between 15–25, want to make it in the music industry and have nothing planned on July 21 (if you do cancel it and instead) head on over to The Edge at Southbank to partake in this year’s Little BIGSOUND 2014.

    For seven hours you can learn from 25 music industry professionals and enjoy three live acts at the event.

    Event Info
    Little BIGSOUND 2014
    When: July 21, 8 am to 3 pm
    Where: The Edge, Southbank
    Ticket price: $44
    More info about the event and how to obtain tickets: Here & Facebook

  • Pretty City rocking it at The Bearded Lady

    Clear your schedule on Saturday 12 July. Melbourne fuzz-rock trio Pretty City is playing at The Bearded Lady in West End. Your ears will never forgive you if you miss out on these guys.

    Named after the awesome bourbon Bearded Lady the trio has picked the perfect place in West End to play their tunes. The Bearded Lady will offer a kick-arse setting for their fuzz-rock sound.

    I usually don’t listen to this kind of music, but I know great music when I hear it. It’s the kind of music that puts a smile on your face and makes you bob your head and think, ah yeah, give me some of that bourbon and lets rock!

    So you better have cleared that schedule on Saturday 12 July, mate. All I want to see on it is Pretty City at The Bearded Lady. Your weekend can’t get much better than that — good music at an awesome bar in the best suburb in Brisbane.

    Not convinced yet?

    Have a listen to Pretty City’s Piece Of The Puzzle and Roll On.

    Then visit The Bearded Lady’s website to check out other gigs and photos of the place.

  • Civic Video – End of an era

    Craig Civic VideoCivic Video has provided the West End community with home entertainment for more than eight years — the last video rental store in West End will sadly be closing its doors.

    Craig and Paula Sheehan opened Civic Video September 2006 in West End.

    In mid–2014 Civic Video lost the fight with Internet technology. Craig Sheehan tells the Westender they thought Civic Video would be viable three to five years, as the Internet was affecting the video rental market from the very start. “I used to look at the Internet as a threat, and then I just looked at it as the environment which I operate.” It is actually the loss in consumer confidence, Craig continues, that has affected Civic Video the most.

    “People are saving money, not spending money. A lot of retailers are feeling that.” Australia’s economy is not “a disaster, other than what our politicians tell us … and the mainstream media play on that.”

    Civic Video is not just a loss of a place for the community to meet, but also a loss of employment for locals, especially for the West End youth. Craig is not too worried about his future.

    He is more worried for his employees, which he is working hard to find new employment for in West End. He remembers something that happened the first year or two that made him understand why West End is such an amazing community to operate a business in.

    “[One of] our members of staff, didn’t turn up [one day]. [A weekend] afternoon I got a phone call from one of our customers I knew personally and he said, Craig, your store is not open and people are taking DVDs out of the return bin.”

    “For the next week we tracked how many movies that had been stolen — none.”The return bin was full and people were taking out the DVDs to return them later.

    “People here [in West End], there is a sense of community, a sense of honesty.”

  • Brisbane Youth Service wins national competition

    Elizabeth Bennett from Brisbane Youth Service receiving the 2014 Sanofi Pasteur Vaxigrant Awards.
    Elizabeth Bennett from Brisbane Youth Service receiving the 2014 Sanofi Pasteur Vaxigrant Awards.

    Brisbane Youth Service is one of the five winners of the 2014 Sanofi Pasteur Vaxigrants.

    At the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners PHAA 14th National Immunisation Conference Brisbane Youth Service received a $20,000 educational sponsorship from Sanofi Pasteur in Melbourne 19 June.

    Brisbane Youth Service had entered the category for applying innovation in areas of low immunisation.

    With the educational sponsorship Brisbane Youth Service will be able to provide preventative treatment against human papilloma virus (HPV) and hepatitis B diseases to an estimated 400 homeless or at risk young people who are not eligible under the Federal Government School Immunisation Program for HPV or Queensland Immunisation Program for hepatitis B.

    Allowing them to focus on services such as Pap smear, HPV vaccination and hepatitis B vaccination and aim to reduce incidences of cervical cancer, warts and hepatitis infection to reduce waiting lists at public hospitals.

    Sanofi Pasteur Medical & Regulatory Affairs Director Dr Andrea Forde said in a media release, “It’s a real privilege to sponsor Vaxigrants and we congratulate all five winners this year.”

    “In Australia we generally have high rates of immunisation, but there are some communities and areas where the awareness of vaccines, and the diseases they prevent, could be stronger. We look forward to seeing the winning entries put their ideas into practice.”