Author: Neville

  • [New post] Seat #4: Mitchell THE TALLY ROOM

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    [New post] Seat #4: Mitchell

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    The Tally Room donotreply@wordpress.com
    9:31 AM (22 minutes ago)

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    New post on The Tally Room

    Seat #4: Mitchell

    by Ben Raue

    Mitchell1-2PPMitchell is a marginal Labor seat in southern Adelaide, held by Sibbons. Mitchell covers Sheidow Park, Trott Park, Old Reynella, Seaview Downs, Dover Gardens, Seacombe Heights, Seacombe Gardens and Sturt, and parts of Darlington, Bedford Park, Clovelly Park, Mitchell Park, Oaklands Park and Warradale.

    Mitchell was held prior to the 2010 election by Kris Hanna, first as a Labor MP, then as a Green and then as an independent. In 2010, Hanna increased his primary vote but fell into third place behind the Liberal Party, which saw the ALP regain the seat.

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  • Air Pollution from Asia Affecting World’s Weather

    Science News

    … from universities, journals, and other research organizations

    Air Pollution from Asia Affecting World’s Weather

    Jan. 21, 2014 — Extreme air pollution in Asia is affecting the world’s weather and climate patterns, according to a study by Texas A&M University and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory researchers.


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    Yuan Wang, a former doctoral student at Texas A&M, along with Texas A&M atmospheric sciences professors Renyi Zhang and R. Saravanan, have had their findings published in the current issue of Nature Communications.

    Using climate models and data collected about aerosols and meteorology over the past 30 years, the researchers found that air pollution over Asia — much of it coming from China — is impacting global air circulations.

    “The models clearly show that pollution originating from Asia has an impact on the upper atmosphere and it appears to make such storms or cyclones even stronger,” Zhang explains.

    “This pollution affects cloud formations, precipitation, storm intensity and other factors and eventually impacts climate. Most likely, pollution from Asia can have important consequences on the weather pattern here over North America.”

    China’s booming economy during the last 30 years has led to the building of enormous manufacturing factories, industrial plants, power plants and other facilities that produce huge amounts of air pollutants. Once emitted into the atmosphere, pollutant particles affect cloud formations and weather systems worldwide, the study shows.

    Increases in coal burning and car emissions are major sources of pollution in China and other Asian countries.

    Air pollution levels in some Chinese cities, such as Beijing, are often more than 100 times higher than acceptable limits set by the World Health Organization standards, Zhang says.

    One study has shown that lung cancer rates have increased 400 percent in some areas due to the ever-growing pollution problem.

    Conditions tend to worsen during winter months when a combination of stagnant weather patterns mixed with increased coal burning in many Asian cities can create pollution and smog that can last for weeks. The Chinese government has pledged to toughen pollution standards and to commit sufficient financial resources to attack the problem. “The models we have used and our data are very consistent with the results we have reached,” Saravanan says.

    “Huge amounts of aerosols from Asia go as high as six miles up in the atmosphere and these have an unmistakable impact on cloud formations and weather.”

    Zhang adds that “we need to do some future research on exactly how these aerosols are transported globally and impact climate. There are many other atmospheric observations and models we need to look at to see how this entire process works.”

    Yuan Wang, who conducted the research with Zhang while at Texas A&M, currently works at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory as a Caltech Postdoctoral Scholar.

    The study was funded by grants from NASA, Texas A&M’s Supercomputing facilities and the Ministry of Science and Technology of China.

    S

  • Memo to Morrison: we can handle the truth

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    Memo to Morrison: we can handle the truth

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    GetUp!
    7:29 PM (1 hour ago)

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    NEVILLE,

    Making headlines today: allegations that asylum seekers were beaten and mistreated Australian Navy personnel1, and international concerns over the welfare of more than 1000 children currently being held in detention. But no matter how alarming the accusations get, the Abbott Government’s response is the same: silence.

    It’s quite a change from a last year. When in opposition, then-Shadow Immigration Minister Scott Morrison would cry “boats” as loud and as often as he could. Tony Abbott even stood in front of a mobile billboard that gleefully publicised every new boat arrival. But now they’re in Government, they’ve shed the “shadow” from their titles – and cast them over our country’s asylum seeker policies. Just before Christmas, our Immigration Minister cancelled his weekly media briefings, substituting them with a mere departmental press release. No opportunity to ask questions, and the journalists who do aren’t getting any answers.

    This leaves us with only one option – to go after the answers ourselves. That’s why GetUp members are getting behind a bold new plan to crowdfund the stories and information the government doesn’t want Australia to hear.

    Learn more and join in now: https://www.getup.org.au/help-end-the-secrecy

    Sure, we’ve seen plenty of scary looking front pages about boat arrivals splashed across the tabloids. What’s harder to find out is what’s happening next: who’s being held in detention right now? How long for? How many are children? Are any of their claims being processed? Is it true that women have been humiliated into having to ask officials for sanitary products one at a time? Or that more than 100 men have been cramped into hot corrugated iron sheds in crushing heat?

    We wouldn’t allow people convicted of crimes to be locked away without any transparency as to how they are treated or how long they’re incarcerated for, because that’s just not how we believe a civilised society behaves. So why should it be acceptable for those seeking refuge in Australia to be locked away for years under such secrecy, and at huge taxpayer expense? These aren’t enemy combatants or prisoners of war. They’re asylum-seekers.

    With so many questions going unanswered, this we know: there is much more to this story than ‘stop the boats’. Let’s find out:

    https://www.getup.org.au/end-the-secrecy

    The Government’s continued secrecy surrounding asylum seekers has made it close to impossible for journalists to do their job, or for the public to scrutinise their actions – but we’ve spoken to a number of journalists who are willing to dedicate themselves to finding out what’s really going on. Funding investigations in the current climate of extreme secrecy and barriers to information won’t be easy or cheap. The Nauru Government has played their hand in this: increasing the cost of a journalism visa to Nauru by a staggering 3900% to $8000, well beyond the reach of most media outlets.

    That’s just one reason why we’re crowdfunding the resources journalists need to find the stories that powerful forces are working so hard to silence. We’re in confidential discussions with journalists right now, and the more that GetUp members chip in, the more we’ll be able to do. Will you help fund this groundbreaking campaign today?

    https://www.getup.org.au/end-the-secrecy

    We have both the right and responsibility to hold our government accountable – a principle Minister Morrison certainly would have agreed with before he was elected and decided to rewrite the rules.

    Thanks for being part of it,

    The GetUp team

    PS: On this day 60 years ago, Australia became one of the first countries to sign onto the UN Refugee Convention, created after the second World War to ensure that people fleeing war and persecution would never be turned away again. Australia honoured that spirit until relatively recently, and no matter how cynical our politics gets, we can do so again. Chip in to be part of this groundbreaking citizen-sponsored campaign here and now.

    Sources

  • 2013 fourth hottest year on record for planet: reports

    By North America correspondent Ben Knight, wires

    Posted 7 hours 24 minutes ago

    America’s two top scientific agencies have released separate reports on last year’s climate, confirming the global warming trend is continuing.

    The American space agency, NASA, releases a climate report each year – alongside a separate report from its sister agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

    The two agencies collect their data separately and their reports show slightly different results. But the trend is clear.

    At least nine of the warmest years on record have happened since 2000.

    According to NOAA, 2013 was the fourth warmest year for the planet since records began in 1880.

    Ocean temperatures were half a degree Celsius above the 20th century average.

    NASA says carbon dioxide is at its highest level in the atmosphere in 800,000 years, having risen from 285 parts per million in 1880 to 400 parts per million last year.

    Unless current trends change, the world should expect each of the coming decades to be warmer than the last, NASA climatologist Gavin Schmidt says.

    He describes the warming of the past few decades as “unusual,” and urges people not to judge whether climate change is happening or not based on random weather events like cold snaps.

    “The long-term trends in climate are extremely robust,” he said.

    “People have a very short memory when it comes to their own experience of weather and climate, and the only way that we can have a long-term assessment of what is going on is by looking at the data.”

    Last year also marked the 37th year in a row with higher than average global temperatures.

    El Nino could create hotter 2014

    A key difference between last year and other top years of the past decade is that 2013 had no El Nino effect to warm the equatorial region, a weather phenomenon that would have been expected to cause an uptick in global temperatures.

    Forecasters say El Nino could return in 2014, with the potential to make this coming year even hotter than last.

    Another concerning effect of global warming is the melting of sea ice in the Arctic, which is expected to cause sea level rises over time that will endanger coastal communities around the world.

    “Arctic sea ice is down considerably, especially over the past 10 to 11 years,” the director of NOAA’s Climatic Data Center, Tom Karl, said.

    Last year marked the sixth smallest sea ice extent in the Arctic on record, while the Antarctic saw the opposite trend, and sea ice was above average.

    While most of the world experienced above-average annual temperatures, a few small regions in the central United States, eastern Pacific and South America were cooler than average, according to NOAA.

     

  • NASA scientists say 2013 tied with 2009 and 2006 for the seventh warmest year since 1880,

    NASA Science News for Jan. 21, 2014

    NASA scientists say 2013 tied with 2009 and 2006 for the seventh warmest year since 1880, continuing a long-term trend of rising global temperatures. With the exception of 1998, the 10 warmest years in the 134-year record all have occurred since 2000, with 2010 and 2005 ranking as the warmest years on record.

    FULL STORY: http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2014/21jan_2013/

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  • New Zealand migration to Australia

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    New Zealand migration to Australia

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    Thomson, Kelvin (MP)
    9:47 AM (10 minutes ago)

    to Kelvin
    Please find attached and above an article in today’s Herald Sun on New Zealand migration to Australia.
    You are welcome to leave comments athsletters@heraldsun.com.au
    Regards
    Kelvin