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  • Battery-powered intercity trains possible, says government study

    Battery-powered intercity trains possible, says government study

    Research for Department of Transport reveals trains could travel 600 miles on single charge if fossil fuel prices trigger demand
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    Peter Walker

    guardian.co.uk, Sunday 3 February 2013 13.51 GMT

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    Research indicated battery-powered trains could travel up to 600 miles on a single charge if fuel costs and environmental issues required it. Photograph: Dual Aspect/Alamy

    If for some an intercity express will always resemble an oversized toy then this is perhaps just one stage further towards an extravagant childhood dream: a battery-powered train capable of travelling 600 miles on a single charge.

    Such a technology is now possible, if not immediately likely to pull into a local station, according to government-commissioned research. The study was ordered by the Department for Transport with the significantly more serious purpose of examining ways trains could run on difficult-to-electrify lines if fossil fuel prices and environmental worries make diesel power too expensive.

    The experts, working on behalf of the Transport Research Laboratory, looked into two options, the first of which would see a relatively small battery – still weighing up to two tonnes – with a shorter range, which would be mechanically swapped at stations.

    The other notion was seen as more feasible: a single, eight-tonne battery, which could propel a train service for around 600 miles at a time, using a super capacitor or flywheel for the varying power requirements of the route.

    Using digital models of real, if shorter, rail trips – Stratford-upon-Avon to Birmingham, for example – the experts were able to model how such a train could run. The conclusion – battery power is “a feasible option for providing electric traction on parts of the rail network where full route electrification is not viable”.

    The big caveat, one known all too well by owners of electric cars, is the lifespan of the hugely expensive battery, with the eight-tonne rail version anticipated to cost around £0.5m a piece. While a diesel train would cost around £160,000 a year to run on a daily 600-mile service, the battery version would be more than £240,000 a year, of which £150,000 alone would be set aside for battery replacement.

    Diesel prices would need to more than double for battery-only trains to become viable, said John Molyneux from the rail arm of the Lloyd’s Register group, who led the report.

    “I don’t think we’ll see these trains in my lifetime,” he said. “But they may eventually come, out of necessity rather than of choice. It would be because of fuel prices and the environment.”

    Battery technology could improve, but less quickly than some people thought, he said: “It’s all relative. Lithium ion has been around for 20-odd years and there isn’t much that’s better than that. And it’s still got its problems. With any next-generation batteries you’re still limited by electro-chemistry, which is a big limitation. You can’t get much better than we have now.”

    However, one more immediate use of the technology could be smaller batteries to propel trains through short sections of difficult-to-electrify routes.

    “The problem with electrification is things like tunnels, bridges and stations,” he said. “They’re the killers because you’ve got to break the overhead and you can’t have a continuous run.

    “One thing we looked into was whether we could supply enough power on a small battery just to get you through the critical bits. Like an electric-electric hybrid. But there’s got to be an awful lot of will driving even that.”

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  • Galaxy poll shows voters are in the mood to punish Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s early election call

    Galaxy poll shows voters are in the mood to punish Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s early election call

    SIMON BENSON, NATIONAL POLITICAL EDITOR
    The Daily Telegraph
    February 03, 201311:00PM
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    Labor heading for heavy loss -…
    Julia Gillard

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    Labor heading for heavy loss – Newspoll

    The latest Newspoll shows ALP’s support is bleeding away and the party is heading for defeat in September.

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    Prime Minister Julia Gillard is greeted by new Minister for Defence Materiel Mike Kelly. Picture: Ray Strange Source: The Daily Telegraph

    A MAJORITY of Australians don’t believe Julia Gillard’s explanation for the bizarre decision to call the election date eight months in advance – and now appear determined to punish Labor at the September 14 poll.

    An exclusive Galaxy Poll conducted for The Daily Telegraph will reveal the move did nothing to lift support for either the PM, or Labor.

    With a two party preferred vote of 54/46 in favour of the Coalition – a 4 per cent swing against the government since the 2010 election – Labor could expect to lose at least 14 seats.

    The poll results follow a horror start for Labor to the un-official election campaign, which started with the arrest of suspended Labor MP Craig Thomson last Thursday and ended with the resignation of two senior cabinet ministers over the weekend.

    What do you think? Comment below

    The results of a national poll of 1015 voters reveals the PM’s extraordinary announcement last Wednesday was welcomed, but failed to translate into a lift in support for the government.

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    Labor says ‘campaign on track’»

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    Labor heading for heavy loss – Newspoll»
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    Most voters now appear in no rush to go to the ballot box, with 55 per cent saying that now the date had been set, they were happy to wait until September 14 rather than go to an early poll.

    Only 38 per cent wanted an election to be called now in a dramatic shift in mood compared to last year. The majority wanting an immediate march to the polls, not surprisingly, were Coalition supporters

    However, few voters of either persuasion appear intent on rewarding the PM for subjecting them to an eight-month campaign.

    Nor do they believe her motive was to provide the country with stability and certainty – rather to insure the government against resignations or a leadership challenge.

    Re-enforcing the view that the PM has a significant battle ahead of her to restore trust with the community, 53 per cent of voters said they didn’t believe her explanation. Only 41 per cent accepted the PM’s claims.

    With a primary vote of just 35 per cent, whatever bounce the government had been hoping for as parliament resumes this week has been dashed.

    Galaxy CEO David Briggs said Ms Gillard should be relieved that the polls results weren’t worse.

    “This poll confirms that the Coalition commences the campaign with a handy lead and Labor can be grateful that their horror week has not put them further behind,” Mr Briggs said.

    “The calling of the election by Julia Gillard has not produced the circuit-breaker Labor required and with primary support for the party below the vote achieved at the last election they continue to trail the Coalition by a wide margin.”

    The past three Galaxy polls since November 2012 have shown little change in the numbers and still show Labor three points short of the primary vote that delivered a hung parliament in 2010.

    The Coalition’s primary vote remained at record highs of 48 per cent, while the Greens dropped back to 10 per cent, and Independents and others still at 7 per cent.

    But while the Coalition’s lead remains strong, Mr Abbott’s popularity may still present a problem for his party room. The Opposition Leader and the PM now share dismally low personal numbers, with 57 per cent of voters claiming to be dissatisfied with both leader’s performances in the job.

    Ms Gillard continues to receive stronger support among Labor voters than Tony Abbott does among Coalition voters.

    Mr Briggs said the polls confirmed long held assumptions that people had switched off politics some time ago and showed no sign of tuning back in. Ms Gillard will address a jittery Labor caucus today, having spent the weekend dealing with the resignation of Attorney-General Nicola Roxon and Higher Education Minister Chris Evans.

    Treasurer Wayne Swan quashed suggestions he was considering retirement and confirmed he would contest the seat of Lilley in September.

    95 comments on this story

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  • Labor to give juries a say in sentencing

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    Labor to give juries a say in sentencing

    ABCUpdated February 4, 2013, 10:31 am

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    The State Opposition will allow juries to recommend sentences for serious crimes, if it wins the 2014 election.

    Opposition leader Daniel Andrews says the proposal would be trialled for a year in the County and Supreme Courts and would only apply to indictable offences.

    He says jurors would help ensure that sentencing meets community expectations.

    “It’s a recommendation. It’s not binding,” he said.

    “The ultimate decision remains with the judge but if the judge was to vary the sentence and [it was] not in line with the jury, the judge would have to explain why that’s the case.

    “We think this is a balanced, fair and common sense idea.”

    Attorney General Robert Clark says the New South Wales law reform commission rejected a similar proposal in 2007.

    “This is a half-baked proposal by Labor. It will simply bring the law system to a grinding halt,” he said.

    Mr Clark has defended the Baillieu Government’s record on law and order, saying the coalition had already abolished suspended sentences for serious crimes, implemented four-year statutory minimum terms for gross violence offences and axed home detention.

    The new federal Attorney-General, Mark Dreyfus, says he supports the plan saying juries have a valuable contribution to make.

    “I think it’s a very useful idea. I think we underestimate the worth of juries,” he said.

    “Juries represent people. They bring the law in touch with community views. I think that is important and I’ve always resisted attempts to reduce the role of juries.”

    The president of Liberty Victoria, Jane Dixon, says any changes to the legal system would need extensive community consultation.

    “There’s some logic to what they’re suggesting but it’s just not as simple as it sounds,” she said.
    “You would expect for a such a radical change they would need to have a widespread consultation process.”

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  • CBD crush after train disruption

    CBD crush after train disruption

    Date February 4, 2013 – 9:58AM 946 reading now

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    Megan Levy

    Breaking news reporter

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    Long bus queues occurred in the CBD this morning after trains to North Sydney were disrupted. Photo: Matthew Huckstepp
    Do you know more? Email us, message us on Twitter @smh or text 0424 SMS SMH (+61 424 767 764) with information and images.

    Police had to be called in to keep commuters off roads in Sydney’s CBD after thousands of commuters had their Monday morning journey disrupted by an overhead wiring problem on the North Shore Line.

    Officers set up barriers surrounding Wynyard railway station after an overhead wiring problem at Waverton stopped all north-bound trains on the North Shore Line between Wynyard and Chatswood.

    Commuters faced long bus queues in the Sydney CBD today after North Shore Line trains were disrupted. Photo: Matthew Huckstepp

    Buses replaced trains between those stations, but commuters reported huge queues and delays of up to 30 minutes to catch replacement buses on Clarence Street.

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    While trains resumed running between Wynyard and North Sydney just after 8.30am, a replacement bus service was still operating between North Sydney and Chatswood as at 9.30am.

    At 9.35am, one commuter, Michael Slezak, had been waiting at North Sydney for 35 minutes but said he had barely moved in the line to get on a replacement bus to Chatswood.

    “It’s pretty nuts. I’ve never seen anything like it,” Mr Slezak said.

    Mr Slezak said replacement buses had been arriving, but they had been delayed by peak hour traffic and struggled to move the volumes of commuters displaced from trains.

    “They hardly make a dent,” he said, estimating he would face another one- to two-hour wait to get to work at Chatswood.

    Flow-on delays of 20 minutes were reported in both directions on the Western, Northern, Bankstown, Airport and East Hills Lines, and the Newcastle and Central Coast Line.

    Transport Management Centre spokesman Brett Moore said trains resumed between Wynyard and North Sydney just after 8.30am.

    “City-bound trains on the North Shore Line are unaffected and continue to operate as normal,” he said.

    “Shuttle train services are operating from Chatswood to Hornsby and from Chatswood to Epping.”

    He said passengers could use their train tickets for travel on STA Sydney Buses and Sydney Ferries on Monday morning due to the disruption.

    There was no forecast as to when normal train services would resume from North Sydney to Chatswood, Mr Moore said.

    A NSW Police spokeswoman said officers were called to set up barriers near Wynyard station as a safety precaution to keep people from spilling on to the road.

    – With Jacob Saulwick

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/cbd-crush-after-train-disruption-20130204-2dt8b.html#ixzz2Jskzks3p

  • Remaining Conscious and Resilient inTumultuous TimesJohn James

    Remaining Conscious and Resilient inTumultuous TimesJohn James @ The Yoga Shed Richmond 2-4pm Sunday 17 March 2013The Earth is our Mother, yet we are systematically making it impossible for Her to support us. What we are doing has been clear to every thinking person for decades.We are far from reining ourselves in and our onslaught on Her Love is gaining pace.The child has been given the Keys to the Kingdom and is trashing the Homestead.Preparing for the Great WinnowingJohn James @ The Yoga Shed Richmond 2-4pm Sunday 17 March 2013As all that we hold dear is dissolving around us we need to know ourselves so that we may becomethe Mother we are losing. Of course we will need a new way to live, to grow our own food and darnour own socks, and above all stop consuming like there is no tomorrow.For that is what we have been doing. Driving our kids to school when they should walk; flying to London for a wedding; replacing a perfectly good bathroom as its out of style; and filling our valleys and rivers and the air we breathe with the waste that is poisoning Our Earth.Our Mother will have Her Revenge.What it means to play God with our planetJohn James @ The Yoga Shed Richmond 2-4pm Sunday 17 March 2013Can we as humans become responsible? Do we have it in us to Stop and Reverse? Are we suffering from ‘moral injury’ as we remain silent on our deepest beliefs about right and wrong?Individually we can be miraculous, but have we the strength to act collectively? Where doesresponsibility stop and greedy self-interest take over? Do we have the resilienceto stand up for our future when the rest are hell-bent on running in the opposite direction?Why do humans not realise that NOTHING is more important than changing our ways?The science is clear: are you?Talk and discussion with John James @ The Yoga Shed 2-4pm Sunday 17 March 2013The Yoga Shed Shop 4/328 Windsor St Richmond (behind the shops adjacent to Green Hills Organics)Cost $40 or donation

  • Foot in mouth, Jules pulls finger out

    Foot in mouth, Jules pulls finger out

    Date February 3, 2013 Category Opinion
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    John Birmingham

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    Illustration: Reg Lynch

    What was Julia Gillard thinking? I’ll tell you what she was thinking: ”Omigod, no, Tim, not the one about the Asian doctor lady finger, nooooooo …”

    And so, we’re all off to an election two-hundred-and-umpty-something days from now because if the Orange Roughy hadn’t come up with a suitable diversion the very internet itself would have melted into a glowing slagheap with the ferocious stupidity of the reaction to the First Bloke’s somewhat stupid but kind of snort-worthy little off-joke.

    I feel for the Bloke, who’s probably a red-hot goer in the conversational biz when he’s standing behind you with a pair of sheep shears and you’re safely strapped into your barber chair. But like most human beings who fear public speaking more than death itself, the Bloke made the crucial mistake of going off-script in a moment of terror.

    And then there we were, all perched over his writhing carcass as it glistened with panic sweat, ready to hack and tear away at it like vultures. All this fiasco needed to reach escape velocity was a great crisis moniker. I wanted ”Dategate” but none of my so-called colleagues were interested, so now we have the longest election campaign in the history of everything because Julia Gillard had to do something to pull his finger out of places it shouldn’ta oughta been.

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    Nice to see, then, that the most notable reaction to her overreaction in setting out on this Long March was an immediate power dive into utter madness, with Malcolm Turnbull tweeting that the date was an affront to Jewish voters everywhere because the election would totally bork this year’s Yom Kippur celebrations. Shame, Roughy, shame. Turnbull may possibly have been extracting the urine but if so he was shaded by Twitter’s ShockJockWatch quoting the talkback caller who complained that the Roughy chose ”a Jewish holiday but would she have chosen an Islamic holiday?” It’s all downhill from here, my friends.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/foot-in-mouth-jules-pulls-finger-out-20130202-2dr3e.html#ixzz2JpAzROm4