Author: Neville

  • The bulldozers are moving in and so are we 350 0rg

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    Simon Copland – 350.org Australia <simon@350.org>
    12:15 PM (34 minutes ago)

    to me

    Dear friends,

    Happy New Year! We hope you’ve all had a great break and are prepared for a momentous 2014.

    Here in Brisbane, as in many parts of Australia, we’ve sweltered from yet another scorching heatwave with temperatures soaring to 50 degrees in some parts of the country. The Bureau of Meteorology officially declared 2013 Australia’s hottest year on record and yet the mercury looks set to rise even higher in 2014.

    But despite the heat, the fossil fuel industry is going full steam ahead with its plans to build mega coal mines around Australia.

    This week, we’ve heard that bulldozers have started felling trees in the Leard State forest, in preparation for construction of the Maules Creek coal mine. That means that the time to step up is now. Join in to stop this mine from going ahead.

    Please join the campaign to stop this mine, whether it is heading to the forest now and joining the blockade, or coming to the mass convergence on the January long weekend.

    If built, the proposed Maules Creek mine would release carbon emissions almost equivalent to New Zealand’s entire energy sector. It will pump thousands of tonnes of coal dust onto neighbouring communities, drain the water table by several metres and cause the destruction of 1600 hectares of unique bushland and farmland, 544 hectares of which is classified as critically endangered.

    For four years now the community have been fighting this mine at every stage. It has been inspiring and deeply moving to watch but now it’s time for us to add our support. Community members have taken their concerns to all Governments, campaigned to stop ANZ from funding the mine, and more recently taken legal action to protect the forest. Yet, unfortunately, at each turn, these concerns have fallen on deaf ears. At each turn the fossil fuel industry has had its way.

    The only thing now standing between the forest and the bulldozers is community action.

    Today, preparing for the bulldozers to move in, campaigners from all around the country are joining hands with the local community to stop the construction. Protesters have blockaded the entrance to the mine, turning back vehicles seeking to clear the forest for construction of rail infrastructure.

    They’re taking a stand but they can’t do it alone. We need you to join them in guarding the forest and stopping the mine.

    This fight needs us all. If you are free now, we need your help straight away to help build the initial blockade. If you are new to this type of action, then join the January long weekend convergence – when hundreds will come together to learn about the forest, the campaign and how to stop the destruction. Training and preparation will start from January 25, leading to a large peaceful action on January 28.

    This weekend will just be one part of the campaign to stop the mine over the coming months. So if you can’t make it, sign up, and we’ll let you know about how you can be involved in the future.

    Governments have failed. The court has ruled against us. Major banks have lent the project money. All that stands between bulldozers and Leard State forest now is us.

    It’s time for us to step up our efforts to stop this mine. We look forward to seeing you there. 

    Warm wishes,

    Simon, Blair, Charlie, May, Josh, Aaron and the ever-growing 350.org team!

    P.S. If you can’t make it to the forest, don’t worry. The blockade team will need lots of support, whether it is through fundraising or other activities. Sign up now and we’ll let you know how you can help out.


    350.org is building a global movement to solve the climate crisis. Connect with us on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for email alerts. You can help power our work by getting involved locally, sharing your story, and donating here. To change your email

  • Kelvin Thomson MP Media Release & Blog: Extraordinary Call for Increase to Migrant Worker Program

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    Kelvin Thomson MP Media Release & Blog: Extraordinary Call for Increase to Migrant Worker Program

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    Cianflone, Anthony (K. Thomson, MP) <Anthony.Cianflone@aph.gov.au>
    11:14 AM (32 minutes ago)

    to Tim

     

     

     

    KELVIN THOMSON MP

    Member for Wills

    MEDIA RELEASE

    Monday 13th January 2014

     

    Extraordinary Call for Increase to Migrant Worker Program

     

    It is astonishing that the Australian Industry Group is calling for an increase in Australian migration from 190,000 to 220,000, through an increase to our permanent Migrant Worker Program. First it is astonishing that they think the number should be lifted by 30,000, when as recently as twenty years ago the entire permanent Migrant Worker Program was less than 30,000.

     

    Secondly it is astonishing that they want to increase the number of migrant workers when we are already unable to find jobs for Australian workers, including those who have come here on previous permanent Migrant Worker Programs. Last month unemployment increased by 3,400 to 712,500 Australians who cannot find work, and this number is forecast to increase.  Official forecasts are that the jobless rate will rise within about 18 months to 6.25%, and stay there through to the end of 2016-17. More Australians will be out of work than at any time during the past decade, and far more than during the Global Financial Crisis.  The forthcoming closures of Ford and Holden, job losses at Qantas, concerns for jobs at SPC Ardmona and Alcoa, the resources industry construction workforce winding back – all the indicators are that many Australians, including migrant workers, are looking for work or will be looking for work in the near future. They are entitled to our first consideration.

     

    The Australian Industry Group says that increasing migrant numbers is needed to “support positive growth in our population”, and refers to relatively low levels of natural population growth. This is incorrect. For each of the past thirty-six years I have gone back to check this, births have exceeded deaths in Australia by over 100,000 – we have natural population increase by over 100,000 every year without any migration at all. In any event, population growth is not a good thing. It is putting great pressure on our environment, quality of life, housing affordability, traffic congestion etc.

     

    The permanent Migrant Worker Program, referred to as “Skilled Migration”, should be used to bring workers with skills that it is not possible to find in Australia,  not used as a catch all scheme – recently we even saw calls to bring in truck drivers from overseas.  It should not be used to drive population growth, not used to put downward pressure on wages and conditions, and not used as a substitute for genuine action to train and skill young Australians. If we are fair dinkum about reducing unemployment, and fair dinkum about increasing workforce participation, we will reduce migrant worker programs, not increase them, and build and use the skills of out-of-work Australians.

     

    –       To leave your comments and views please visit Kelvin’s Blog: http://kelvinthomson.blogspot.com.au/2014/01/extraordinary-call-for-increase-to.html

  • What’s cranking the heat up in Eastern Australia

    Across south-eastern Australia this morning, people are waking up to forecasts of scorching heat for the week ahead. Players and spectators heading to the Australian Open should prepare for some baking…

    Monday’s heatwave forecast – with even worse heat predicted for the south-east this week. http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/heatwave/

    Across south-eastern Australia this morning, people are waking up to forecasts of scorching heat for the week ahead. Players and spectators heading to the Australian Open should prepare for some baking hot days at the tennis: 35°C today, rising to 41°C on Tuesday, with temperatures in the high 30s or low 40s expected to linger until the weekend.

    Coming after a relatively mild summer weekend, many of us will be wondering why it’s got so hot, so quickly.

    That was the question my colleagues and I asked ourselves a year ago, when we began looking at the causes of severe heat waves. In particular, we wanted to know what made the 2009 summer heat wave – which set new records for the most days above 40°C in many parts of south-eastern Australia, and which killed hundreds of people – quite so deadly. Were there any hidden culprits behind the record-breaking spell of fierce heat?

    What we discovered was that a seemingly unrelated tropical cyclone off the Western Australian coast contributed to making the south-eastern Australian heat wave worse.

    And what’s about to happen with this week’s heat is a textbook example of what we found.

    Watching wild weather in the west

    Tropical Cyclone Dominic over the Western Australian coast, late January 2009. Wikimedia Commons/NASA
    Click to enlarge

    This week, a tropical low is forecast to intensify over northern Western Australia, and a trough will extend from north-west to south-east across the state. Whether or not a tropical cyclone develops, the effects of these low pressure systems will be felt as far away as Melbourne and Hobart.

    Our recent research in the internationally peer-reviewed journal Geophysical Research Letters explains how tropical lows and tropical cyclones affect heat waves in south-eastern Australia.

    In late January 2009, Tropical Cyclone Dominic hit the Western Australian coastline, causing minor structural damage and bringing down power lines in the small Pilbara town of Onslow. Flooding of a nearby river resulted in significant crop damage, and caused a train to derail near Kalgoorlie.

    But as cyclones go, Dominic wasn’t so bad: at its peak, the cyclone only reached category 2 status, well below the most severe category 5 level.

    Yet as our research showed, even at that level, the cyclone over in Western Australia still had powerful downstream effects for the extreme heat wave across South Australia, southern New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania in late January and into early February 2009.

    During this heat wave, Ambulance Victoria was swamped with a record number of emergency calls, while the Adelaide morgue ran out of room.

    Melbourne’s iconic Nylex clock on the city’s hottest day on record: 7 February 2009, when the temperature climbed to 46.4 °C. Wikimedia Commons/Melburnian
    Click to enlarge

    Later, the Victorian Department of Health estimated that 374 “excess deaths” occurred in the week of January 26 to February 1 2009. Although it is not possible to directly attribute mortality solely to the heat wave, there was a clear spike above the normal death rate, highlighting the health risks of heat waves, particularly for elderly people.

    So how did Tropical Cyclone Dominic increase the intensity of that heat wave? And how do tropical lows in Australia’s west – like the one we’re seeing again this week – affect the weather as far away as south-eastern Australia?

    When the pressure’s on

    It turns out that the position of the tropical cyclone, rather than its size or severity, is what really makes a difference.

    It doesn’t even need to be a full-blown cyclone; as we’re currently seeing, even a tropical low can have a big impact on south-eastern Australia’s weather.

    Heat waves in Victoria are associated with slow-moving high pressure systems, or anticyclones. These surface highs hang around over the Tasman Sea for several days, bringing hot northerly winds from the interior of the continent.

    During heat waves in Victoria, there is also a similar anticyclone at higher levels in the atmosphere.

    These upper level anticyclones form when very long, planetary-scale waves in the atmosphere (known as Rossby waves) break to the south of Australia.

    Our recent research showed for the first time in Australia how those upper level anticyclones have been present in all of the most severe heat waves in Victoria over the past two decades.

    How cyclones work

    The circulation around tropical cyclones at low levels is cyclonic, as air spirals in a clockwise direction (in the Southern Hemisphere; it spirals the other way in the Northern Hemisphere) into the centre of the storm where the pressure is lowest.

    At upper levels, the air flows out again from the centre, and its nature changes to anticyclonic, switching to rotate in an anti-clockwise direction.

    The UK Met Office explains how cyclones and anticyclones work (note that in the Southern Hemisphere, the air flows in the opposite direction).

    This outflowing air can intensify heat waves over Victoria in two ways. The first is when the outflow “nudges” the upper level jet stream, the band of strong westerly winds that circle the globe at mid-latitudes in both hemispheres.

    When the outflowing air from the tropical cyclone nudges the jet stream south of western Australia, the disturbance generates more waves. This results in a stronger upper level anticyclone over Victoria.

    The second way in which the intensification can occur is a direct result of the anticyclonic properties of the outflowing air. The outflowing air can be carried by the winds directly into the upper level anticyclone over Victoria.

    The more intense the upper level anticyclone over Victoria, the more persistent it will be. This makes it more likely that a heat wave will form as higher temperatures continue for several days.

    You can imagine this as being a bit like putting a pebble into a stream. The larger the pebble, the harder it will be for the water to shift it, and the more likely it is that the pebble will remain in place for a while as the water flows around it.

    The cyclone effectively makes the pebble that is the anticyclone a little bit bigger, so that it stays stationary for longer.

    Our improved understanding of how heat waves form should help weather forecasters better predict when extreme heat waves will hit Victoria.

    It will also help in studies of how the intensity and duration of heat waves might change in the future due to climate change.

    But in the short-term, when the heat is on at Rod Laver Arena this week: take a look way out west – and watch out for those cyclones.

  • Extraordinary Call for Increase to Migrant Worker Program KELVIN THOMPSON MP

     Monday, January 13, 2014

    Extraordinary Call for Increase to Migrant Worker Program

    It is astonishing that the Australian Industry Group is calling for an increase in Australian migration from 190,000 to 220,000, through an increase to our permanent Migrant Worker Program. First it is astonishing that they think the number should be lifted by 30,000, when as recently as twenty years ago the entire permanent Migrant Worker Program was less than 30,000.

    Secondly it is astonishing that they want to increase the number of migrant workers when we are already unable to find jobs for Australian workers, including those who have come here on previous permanent Migrant Worker Programs. Last month unemployment increased by 3,400 to 712,500 Australians who cannot find work, and this number is forecast to increase.  Official forecasts are that the jobless rate will rise within about 18 months to 6.25%, and stay there through to the end of 2016-17. More Australians will be out of work than at any time during the past decade, and far more than during the Global Financial Crisis.  The forthcoming closures of Ford and Holden, job losses at Qantas, concerns for jobs at SPC Ardmona and Alcoa, the resources industry construction workforce winding back – all the indicators are that many Australians, including migrant workers, are looking for work or will be looking for work in the near future. They are entitled to our first consideration.
    The Australian Industry Group says that increasing migrant numbers is needed to “support positive growth in our population”, and refers to relatively low levels of natural population growth. This is incorrect. For each of the past thirty-six years I have gone back to check this, births have exceeded deaths in Australia by over 100,000 – we have natural population increase by over 100,000 every year without any migration at all. In any event, population growth is not a good thing. It is putting great pressure on our environment, quality of life, housing affordability, traffic congestion etc.

    The permanent Migrant Worker Program, referred to as “Skilled Migration”, should be used to bring workers with skills that it is not possible to find in Australia,  not used as a catch all scheme – recently we even saw calls to bring in truck drivers from overseas.  It should not be used to drive population growth, not used to put downward pressure on wages and conditions, and not used as a substitute for genuine action to train and skill young Australians. If we are fair dinkum about reducing unemployment, and fair dinkum about increasing workforce participation, we will reduce migrant worker programs, not increase them, and build and use the skills of out-of-work Australians.

  • Iran to start destroying some enriched uranium when nuclear deal begins on January 20 Posted 1 hour 5 minutes ago Iran uranium plant Photo: Iran will destroy its stockpile of higher levels of

    Iran to start destroying some enriched uranium when nuclear deal begins on January 20

    Posted 1 hour 5 minutes ago

    A deal between Iran and six major powers, intended to pave the way to a solution to a long standoff over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions, will come into force on January 20.

    “Beginning January 20th, Iran will for the first time start eliminating its stockpile of higher levels of enriched uranium and dismantling some of the infrastructure that makes such enrichment possible,” a statement from the White House said.

    US president Barack Obama says he is under “no illusions” as to how hard it will be to reach a comprehensive resolution.

    Under the deal reached in November, Iran agreed to curb parts of its nuclear drive for six months in exchange for receiving modest relief from international sanctions and a promise by Western powers not to impose new measures against its hard-hit economy.

    Such relief would include suspension of some restrictions on trade in gold, precious metals and petrochemicals, and in the auto industry.

    The deal allows third-country purchases of Iranian oil to remain at current levels. About $4.6 billion in oil revenues will also be allowed to be transferred to Iran.

    Western nations and Israel have long accused Iran of pursuing a nuclear weapons capability alongside its civilian program, charges denied by Tehran.

    Senior diplomats meeting in Geneva have been working on how to implement the deal.

    US secretary of state John Kerry says the next stage in talks will be “very difficult”.

    Mr Obama added in the White House statement: “We have made concrete progress. I welcome this important step forward, and we will now focus on the critical work of pursuing a comprehensive resolution that addresses our concerns over Iran’s nuclear program.

    “For the sake of our national security and the peace and security of the world, now is the time to give diplomacy a chance to succeed.”

    AFP/Reuters

     

  • Business group calls for immigration increase to 220,000

    Business group calls for immigration increase to 220,000

    By business editor Peter Ryan and staff

    Updated 7 minutes ago

    A business lobby group is urging the Federal Government to boost Australia’s immigration intake by more than 15 per cent next year.

    The Australian Industry Group wants the Government to increase the immigration intake from 190,000 this financial year to 220,000 in 2014-15, with a particular focus on skilled migrants.

    The Ai Group’s chief executive Innes Willox says now is the right time to accelerate skilled migration given Australia’s ageing workforce and skills shortages in industries including mining, construction, engineering and health.

    “The Australian Workplace Productivity Agency has identified that Australia will need an increase of about 2.8 million people with quite specific skills over the next decade to fill some of those gaps,” he said.

    “We need to find ways to fill those gaps, and obviously we can train our own, but the quickest stop gap measure is to import skills.”

    The Ai Group says further increases from the 220,000 level may be needed in future years, despite unemployment currently sitting at 5.8 per cent and tipped to rise well above 6 per cent by Treasury, the Reserve Bank and many private sector forecasters.

    Mr Willox says while there are Australians without work, there are not enough skilled workers for a range of specialist occupations, with the Ai Group singling out residential construction as an area of acute shortages.

     

    He says increasing education and training is a desirable long-term solution, but immigration is a useful stop gap measure.

    “That’s definitely something we should be doing but that takes time,” Mr Willox argued.

    “Employers are increasingly concerned about the skill levels of graduates both from universities and schools, and this is something that we need to address.

    “We’ve seen Australia slipping down the tables when it comes to those basic skills around our science, technology, engineering, mathematics skills.”

    Topics: business-economics-and-finance, immigration, federal-government, unemployment, australia