Author: Neville

  • The John James Newsletter No 39

     

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    WIRED – Science Graphic of the Week: Scientists Discover the First Protein That Can Edit Other Proteins – 1 day ago

    The John James Newsletter 39

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    The John James Newsletter 39
    3 January 2015

    The USA: Australia’s Dangerous Ally – Malcolm Fraser 

    It is time for Australia to end its strategic dependence on the United States. The relationship with America, which has long been regarded as beneficial, has now become dangerous to Australia’s future. We have effectively ceded to America the ability to decide when Australia goes to war … The idea of American exceptionalism, which has always been present in the United States, has gone far beyond all comprehension in the years of America’s absolute supremacy. It has created a different nation, a different society. Such ideas influence American foreign policy in ways that make it much more difficult to achieve a secure and safe path in the future. Our task is not to embrace America, but to preserve ourselves from its reckless overreach.

    http://nationalinterest.org/feature/america-australias-dangerous-ally-11858

    The Enigma of Hitler 

    “Hitler — You knew him — What was he like?” I have been asked that question a thousand times since 1945, and nothing is more difficult to answer … Hitler’s most notable characteristic was ever his simplicity. The most complex of problems resolved itself in his mind into a few basic principles. His actions were geared to ideas and decisions that could be understood by anyone … His intellectual curiosity was limitless. He was readily familiar with the writings of the most diverse authors, and nothing was too complex for his comprehension … The universality of Hitler’s knowledge may surprise or displease those unaware of it, but it is nonetheless a historical fact: Hitler was one of the most cultivated men of this century. http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v14/v14n3p22_Degrelle.html

    Non-Dollar Trading Is Killing the Petrodollar

    and with it the foundation of US-Saudi policy. It would be ironic, indeed, were the tensions with Russia inadvertently to become the driver of America finally losing its petrodollar card.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40584.htm

     

    The encryption tools spies can (and can’t) crack

    Australia’s electronic espionage agency is a partner in the assault on internet security and privacy, according to Edward Snowden. Skype has been successfully intercepted since at least February 2011.

    http://www.smh.com.au/it-pro/security-it/revealed-the-encryption-tools-spies-can-and-cant-crack-20141229-12f0sh.html

    Delaware-size gas plume illustrates the cost of leaking methane

    The methane that leaks from 40,000 gas wells  forms a giant plume. 8 million metric tons of methane escape each  year, enough to provide power to every household in the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/delaware-sized-gas-plume-over-west-illustrates-the-cost-of-leaking-methane/2014/12/29/d34c3e6e-8d1f-11e4-a085-34e9b9f09a58_story.html

    We Can Ban Fracking, New York Paves the Way

    The story of how fractivists fought and won in New York is awe-inspiring and demonstrates that we should fight for what we want – not just the best that can be negotiated in a backroom deal or what others say is politically feasible.

    http://www.commondreams.org/views/2014/12/18/we-can-ban-fracking-new-york-paves-way

    Chevron halts big Arctic offshore drilling project ‘indefinitely’ due to oil price slide

    http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/chevron-halts-big-arctic-offshore-drilling-project-indefinitely-due-oil-price-slide-1480027

    Big Coal’s 2014 nightmare

    Around the world the coal industry has been confronted with unprecedented opposition while the industry has been engulfed in scandals of its own making, 2015 may well be the year in which Big Coal’s transition towards ‘Little Coal’ accelerates.

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2014/big-coals-2014-nightmare-54327

    A Metaphor: Starving 4 Pound Baby Dies In Car While Parents Eat 

    The US national debt has increased from about 1 trillion dollars in 1980 to about 18 trillion dollars today…The total debt (all government debt plus all business debt plus all individual debt) has increased from about 2.4 trillion dollars forty years ago to nearly 58 trillion dollars today… This is the greatest debt binge in history. In 2015 are events going to accelerate and face us with the consequences of decades of incredibly foolish decisions?

    http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/metaphor-for-america-starving-4-pound-baby-dies-in-car-while-parents-eat-at-golden-corral

  • Is our global emissions figure of 1.5% correct ?

    In respect to the comment that Australia only contributes 1.5% of Global Emissions

    The Exported Coal has not been taken into this calculation, that is is to say mined in Australia

    but reflected in another nations emissions total. It follows that if this exported coal and

    its emissions were included in Australian emissions our Global Emissions would be

    considerably more than 1.5 % and this may not be the correct working figure

    NEVILLE GILLMORE

     

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  • A huge thank you, from me SAM GET_UP

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    A huge thank you, from me

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    Sam – GetUp!

    10:57 AM (0 minutes ago)

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    Dear NEVILLE,

    About this time seven years ago, I was sitting on a dusty keg in GetUp’s first office (it was a free space in the unused top floor of a pub).

    I’d just started as a volunteer, and one of my first tasks was to start collating the images and video footage that would make up our end of year report back to members.

    As I scanned through, I was blown away to see what (at the time) a relatively small number of members like you had achieved that year. It was then and there I saw the power of this movement, and it has been my life since.

    Five years later, watching our end of year celebration video of GetUp members passionately volunteering their time, voice and hard earned money in order to achieve so much on the issues we care about, still moves me like it did that very first time.

    This is your movement, and now it is bigger, stronger and more determined than ever because of people like you.

    Here’s your year as a GetUp member, NEVILLE – I hope you feel as proud as I do of what we’ve achieved together in 2014:

    https://www.getup.org.au/2014-what-we-did-together

    This year we did incredible things, and we did them in trying circumstances.

    In the face of a government which set out to unwind Australia’s groundbreaking climate progress, you hit the streets to show the entire world that if our politicians won’t take action on climate change, we will instead.

    In response to a brutal budget balanced on the backs of those with the least to spare, you raised your voice to remind our leaders in Parliament that Australians believe in a fair go for all, and we won’t let our neighbours fall through the cracks.

    And when our nation stood in its darkest days – locking men, women and children up in inhumane, dangerous offshore detention centres – you lit a candle in compassion for those who died on our watch, in hope and in defiance of the cruelty done in our name.

    So I wanted to take this opportunity to say a sincere and heartfelt thank you. It is an honour to be part of this movement.

    Thank you, for all that you do.

    Sam, for the entire team at GetUp.

    PS – Do you want to show your support for the GetUp community and the issues we fight for all year round? Why not donate $28 or more now and receive one of our brand new fair trade GetUp t-shirts. They come in charcoal and white and we’ve tested them out and are looking forward to sporting them in 2015! https://www.getup.org.au/2014-what-we-did-together

    PPS – Have you seen our 2013-14 Annual Report yet? It shows GetUp member dollars at work in the most recent financial year – and because we always aim to be as transparent and accountable as possible, you will find details of all our finances and expenditure in the report as well. Click here to check it out: https://www.getup.org.au/2014-what-we-did-together

  • You are incredible! What a Year! Citizens Climate Lobby

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    You are incredible! What a Year!

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    Mark Reynolds, Citizens’ Climate Lobby <Mark_Reynolds_Citizens_Climate_L@mail.vresp.com> Unsubscribe

    5:59 AM (2 hours ago)

    to me

    Dear Neville,

    This has truly been a remarkable year, thanks to your work, and the work of more than 11,000 Citizens’ Climate Lobby supporters. Here are just a few of our top accomplishments for 2014:

      • Held more than 1,000 meetings with members of Congress.
      • Expanded our presence into 412 out of 435 congressional districts.
      • Published more than 2,000 letters to the editor.
      • Held 1,000+ outreach events.
      • We’ve significantly expanded our international presence, now active in Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, England, France, Germany India, Italy, Nepal, New Zealand, Peru, Serbia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.S.
      • We released the REMI report in June which shows we’ll not only reduce CO2 emissions drastically with carbon fee and dividend legislation, but also add to our economy.
      • Built support for our Pathway to Paris program, from citizens (volunteers in Australia, Germany, Sweden, Nepal and Bangladesh have been directly engaged) to leadership at multilateral institutions (including UNICEF, UNFCCC, World Bank, and IMF).
      • We wrote official bill language for our proposed carbon fee and dividend legislation.
    CCL volunteer Peter Joseph and his granddaughters show their support for CCL and solving climate change.

    CCL volunteer Peter Joseph and
    his granddaughters show their support for
    CCL and solving climate change.
    • Held REMI briefings in both the House and Senate. The Senate briefing was standing room only, and for the House briefing, we actually had to turn people away!
    • CCL Canada now has allies in all four parties and was invited to dine in the Parliamentary Dining Hall four times in 2014.
    • CCL’s proposal to the MIT Climate CoLab contest for U.S. Carbon Price won the Popular Choice award by a wide margin.

    I am blown away by your courage, tenacity, joy and perseverance. Thank you for ALL that you do!

    With love and admiration,
    Mark

    Mark Reynolds
    Executive Director
    Citizens’ Climate Lobby
    Citizens’ Climate Education Corp.

  • Most detailed study yet of Greenland ice sheet illustrates complex process causing billions of tonnes to melt every year

    RTCC
    Greenland ice loss outpaces climate models

    Last updated on 29 December 2014, 9:41 am

    Most detailed study yet of Greenland ice sheet illustrates complex process causing billions of tonnes to melt every year
    Pic: Christine Zenino

    Pic: Christine Zenino

    By Tim Radford

    Greenland’s ice sheet shrank by an average of 243 billion tonnes a year between 2003 and 2009 – a rate of melting that is enough to raise the world’s sea levels by 0.68 mm per year.

    In what is claimed as the first detailed study, geologist Beata Csatho, of the University of Buffalo in the US, and colleagues report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that they used satellite and aerial data to reconstruct changes in the ice sheet at 100,000 places, and to confirm that the process of losing 277 cubic kilometres of ice a year is more complex than anyone had predicted.

    The Greenland ice sheet is the second biggest body of ice on Earth − second only to Antarctica − and its role in the machinery of the northern hemisphere climate is profound.

    Careful measurements

    It has been closely studied for decades, but such are the conditions in the high Arctic that researchers have tended to make careful measurements of ice melt and glacier calving in fixed locations – in particular, at four glaciers − and then try to estimate what that might mean for the island as a whole.

    “The great importance of our data is that, for the first time, we have a comprehensive picture of how all of Greenland’s glaciers have changed over the past decade,” Dr Csatho said.

    The study looked at readings from NASA’s ice, cloud and land elevation satellite ICESat, and from aerial surveys of 242 glaciers wider than 1.5 km at their outlets, to get a more complete picture of melting, loss and – in some cases – thickening of the ice sheet as a whole.

    Previous studies have focused on the four glaciers. One of them, Jakobshavn, has doubled its speed of flow since 2003, and closer studies have begun to reveal more about the dynamics of individual flows.

    But the real strength of the study is that it establishes the pattern of ice melt in more detail, and suggests that climate models may not give a clear enough picture of the future of the ice cap. To put it crudely, Greenland could lose ice faster in the future than any of today’s predictions suggest.

    Meanwhile, a team from the UK has been trying to work out what is happening on the surface of the ice sheet. Each summer, of course, some of the ice melts. Some of this gets to the sea, but some freezes again in the natural seasonal order of things.

    But glaciology researcher Amber Leeson, of the University of Leeds, and colleagues report in Nature Climate Change that the “supraglacial” lakes that form each summer could also affect ice flow.

    Their computer simulations suggest that these lakes will migrate further inland as the century wears on and the world continues to warm. Ice reflects heat, water absorbs it. So the process could trigger further melting. Some of this extra meltwater could slide or drain to the base of the glacier, lubricating its flow and accelerating the process yet again.

    Thin pancake

    “Our research shows that, by 2060, the area of Greenland covered by them will double,” Dr Leeson said. “When you pour pancake batter into a pan, if it rushes quickly to the edge of the pan, you end up with a thin pancake. It’s similar to what happens with ice sheets. The faster it flows, the thinner it will be.

    “When the ice sheet is thinner, it is at a slightly lower elevation and at the mercy of warmer air temperatures than it would be if it were thicker, increasing the size of the melt zone around the edge of the ice sheet.”

    In the last 40 years, the band in which such supraglacial lakes can form has crept 56 km inland. By 2060, the simulations now suggest, it could reach 110km inland, doubling the area of coverage and delivering yet more meltwater to fuel further warming.

    Once again, the research suggests that current models underestimate the rate of ice loss.

    This article was produced by the Climate News Network
    – See more at: http://www.rtcc.org/2014/12/29/greenland-ice-loss-outpaces-climate-models/#sthash.ok7Mzwq0.dpuf

  • Solar PV Micro Grid Market Moving Into Commercialization

    Long-term horizon, growth, momentum, deep value
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    Summary

    • Micro grids enable distributed energy generation at a localized scale with the objective to: deliver efficient, reliable electricity while offsetting or eliminating fuel fossil consumption.
    • The market for micro grid will grow from $10billion annually in 2013 to $40billion by 2020.
    • Decreasing solar PV module prices and investments in battery technologies are leading to new micro grid solutions and market opportunities.

    Micro grids can be classified as one or more generating energy sources supporting a local independent grid. Although there are many views of what a micro grid is they consist of energy production or generation sources, a consumption or demand load and some form of storage technology. Micro grids enable distributed energy generation at a localized scale with the primary goals to deliver efficient, reliable electricity while offsetting or eliminating fuel fossil consumption. Micro grids range in generating capacity from kWs to MWs covering a number of military, telecommunication and village power applications. Most common generating sources are diesel generators and solar PV modules with batteries being the primary storage technology. Today, lead acid is the primary battery chemistry although lithium ion is quickly catching up and various new forms of next generation battery technologies will begin to emerge in the next years. The market for micro grids will grow from $10billion annually in 2013 to $40billion by 2020. The primary drivers for the growth are coming from the collapse of solar PV module cost and the lowering cost of efficient storage technologies. Combining low cost solar PV with battery systems is a combination that is opening up a wave of new applications.

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