Author: Neville

  • Nearly half of the world’s food ends up as waste, report finds

    Nearly half of the world’s food ends up as waste, report finds

    Figures from the Institution of Mechanical Engineers show as much as 2bn tonnes of food never makes it on to a plate
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    Rebecca Smithers, consumer affairs correspondent

    guardian.co.uk, Thursday 10 January 2013 06.00 GMT

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    Between 30% and 50% or 1.2-2bn tonnes of food produced around the world never makes it on to a plate. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod for the Guardian

    As much as half of all the food produced in the world – equivalent to 2bn tonnes – ends up as waste every year, engineers warned in a report published on Thursday.

    The UK’s Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IME) blames the “staggering” new figures in its analysis on unnecessarily strict sell-by dates, buy-one-get-one free and Western consumer demand for cosmetically perfect food, along with “poor engineering and agricultural practices”, inadequate infrastructure and poor storage facilities.

    In the face of United Nations predictions that there could be about an extra 3 billion people to feed by the end of the century and growing pressure on the resources needed to produce food, including land, water and energy, the IME is calling for urgent action to tackle this waste.

    Their report, Global Food; Waste Not, Want Not, found that between 30% and 50% or 1.2-2bn tonnes of food produced around the world never makes it on to a plate.

    In the UK as much as 30% of vegetable crops are not harvested due to their failure to meet retailers’ exacting standards on physical appearance, it says, while up to half of the food that is bought in Europe and the US is thrown away by consumers.

    And about 550bn cubic metres of water is wasted globally in growing crops that never reach the consumer. Carnivorous diets add extra pressure as it takes 20-50 times the amount of water to produce 1 kilogramme of meat than 1kg of vegetables; the demand for water in food production could reach 10–13 trillion cubic metres a year by 2050.

    This is 2.5 to 3.5 times greater than the total human use of fresh water today and could lead to more dangerous water shortages around the world, the IME says, claiming that there is the potential to provide 60-100% more food by eliminating losses and waste while at the same time freeing up land, energy and water resources.

    Tim Fox, head of energy and environment at the IME, said: “The amount of food wasted and lost around the world is staggering. This is food that could be used to feed the world’s growing population – as well as those in hunger today. It is also an unnecessary waste of the land, water and energy resources that were used in the production, processing and distribution of this food.”

    In order to prevent further waste, governments, development agencies and organisation like the UN “must work together to help change people’s mindsets on waste and discourage wasteful practices by farmers, food producers, supermarkets and consumers,” the IME said.

  • A heavy price to pay for the light rail revolution

    A heavy price to pay for the light rail revolution

    EXCLUSIVE by Andrew Clennell
    The Daily Telegraph
    January 10, 201312:00AM

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    Artist’s impression … Sydney City Council’s vision for the light rail. Source: The Daily Telegraph

    NSW Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian / Pic: Justin Lloyd Source: The Daily Telegraph

    THE city’s major artery, George St, will be dug up during the next state election campaign in order to build two new light rail lines at the same time.

    The move by Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian comes despite initial plans to build the lines in separate stages.

    The eastern suburbs light rail line to the SCG, NSW University and Randwick Racecourse was to be built first, giving the government the option of dumping the more contentious CBD line which opponents fear will cause traffic chaos. But Ms Berejiklian yesterday confirmed the line would be built from Central to Circular Quay at the same time as the one from Central to Randwick.

    Work is set to begin in 2014 – the year before the next election – starting at both Circular Quay and Randwick/Kingsford.

    “The government will build the entire line at the same time. It is more cost effective and less disruptive than splitting the project in two,” Ms Berejiklian said.

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    IN the biggest city transport overhaul since trams were ripped up in the 1950s, light rail will run down George St and out to Randwick by 2019.
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    Heavy times for Sydney light rail»

    TRANSPORT Minister Gladys Berejiklian is staking her reputation on a third push for George St light rail after it was knocked back.
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    “Construction will take place in stages, with streets closed in sections to minimise disruption to residents, businesses and commuters.”

    Government officials are privately saying money raised from cuts to RailCorp’s heavy rail services will be used to fund the $1.6 billion light rail projects.

    Is the new light rail project a good idea? Tell us below

    The light rail proposal boasts it will “reduce 220 buses per hour entering the CBD in the morning peak”.

    But it also cites journey times of 24 minutes from Kingsford or Randwick to Central, when it now takes bus services 19 minutes. The government also said it would take 15 minutes to get from Central to Circular Quay on the tram, when it now takes eight minutes on the train.

    Deputy Opposition Leader Linda Burney said: “The O’Farrell government needs to guarantee no commuter will be forced to endure a longer trip to work as a result of its plans to cancel existing buses to make way for light rail.”

    Ms Berejiklian argued light rail would have much more capacity than the train through the city and would be more reliable than buses.

    “There simply won’t be the capacity for trains alone to cope with demand,” she said.

    “Light rail will be much more reliable than current buses are, with 97 per cent of all services running within two to three minutes of timetable. Light rail vehicles also have a higher capacity, carrying 300 people compared to 60 on a bus.”

    Ms Berejiklian would not comment on claims the light rail project would be funded from RailCorp cuts, saying: “Light rail will be funded from the transport budget, third-party contributions and a PPP arrangement.”

    Under the plan, about 40 per cent of George St would be closed to traffic between Bathurst and Hunter streets.

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  • How camaraderie counts when fire danger looms

    How camaraderie counts when fire danger looms

    Date January 9, 2013 – 7:23PM 15 reading now
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    Gemma Khaicy

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    “I thought down there I could make a cup of tea for everyone” … Sussex Inlet resident Janice Carradus. Photo: Edwina Pickles

    As the fires around Sussex Inlet burned on Tuesday night and nearby roads were closed, one couple received an automated call to evacuate and had to quickly decide what to bring along.

    Amidst important documents, jewellery and clothes Janice Carradus packed two kettles to take to the evacuation centre at the local bowling club, leaving the mixmaster behind at her husband’s request.

    “I thought down there I could make a cup of tea for everyone,” she said.

    At one stage the Sussex Inlet Bowling Club was filled with about 130 people who had left their homes, many from the Inasmuch Retirement Village where older residents took precautions by leaving early.

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    Approximately 28 people stayed overnight and the atmosphere was calm according to Alan Schofield, who supervised the evacuees at the bowling club.

    “Not knowing what was happening was the hardest part,” he said. People wanted to know how close the fires were burning.

    Over at the Sussex Inlet RSL Club the crowd was larger and a lot rowdier with about 600 people and animals all over the centre – including dogs, cats and a chicken.

    Anxious about the situation, children were kept distracted by playing hide-and-seek while RSL workers and The Salvation Army handed out free soft drinks and food.

    “We had a lot of kids in the snooker room,” said RSL attendant Tracy Moore. “People were all over the spot.”

    Many of the evacuees were tourists staying in nearby caravan parks and about 80 people stayed overnight, sleeping on the floor and around the poker machines.

    Although people were getting alerts from the police, there was a lot of confusion and concern. Another RSL attendant, Andrew Ferguson, left to evacuate his own house with his wife and little girl at 3pm. When he returned at 5pm, the place was filling up.

    “There was a lot of camaraderie and everyone was helping each other out,” he said.

    Out on the water in a boat nearby, tourist Lynda Stedman could see the fires burning and was called back to shore. It wasn’t the first holiday to disrupt her family: “I was stuck in the QLD floods last year and this year it’s bush fires. Next year, we’re not going anywhere!”

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/weather/how-camaraderie-counts-when-fire-danger-looms-20130109-2cgov.html#ixzz2HWLg0GcC

  • Abetz slams Greens for backing hoax

    Abetz slams Greens for backing hoax

    Date January 9, 2013 – 2:49PM 112 reading now
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    Jonathan Swan, Judith Ireland and Damien Bright

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    Senator Eric Abetz has slammed the Greens over support for an anti-coal hoax. Photo: Simon Bennett
    ASIC goes after Whitehaven hoaxer

    The Coalition have labelled the Greens the ”epitome of extremism” for the party’s support of the anti-coal hoax.

    Leading the attack, the leader of the opposition in the Senate, Eric Abetz also said the Greens had a ”disrespect for the rule of law” for congratulating an activist being investigated for a hoax that temporarily wiped more than $314 million off the value of a coal company.

    Greens leader Christine Milne. Photo: Jeffrey Chan

    “It’s taken less than a fortnight after supposedly revising their platform for the Greens to again reveal their extreme political tendencies,” Senator Abetz said in a statement.

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    He linked the Greens to “extreme elements with communist connections”.

    “With the Greens it is always a case of the ends justifying the means,’’ he said.

    Hoaxer Jonathan Moylan. Photo: Kitty Hill

    On Tuesday Greens leader Christine Milne and her colleague Lee Rhiannon endorsed a controversial hoax, in which an anti-coal mining activist, Jonathan Moylan, issued a fake media release from ANZ Bank pretending that the bank had withdrawn a $1.2 billion loan facility from Whitehaven Coal because of ”unacceptable damage to the environment” caused by the company’s Maules Creek coal project.

    Mr Moylan says officers from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) have raided his camp in northern NSW and seized his laptop and phone. He is now obtaining legal representation.

    He has admitted that to highlight environmental concerns he tricked investors by designing a fake ANZ press template, website and dummy email inbox online and by impersonating a company spokesperson.

    Following the prank, shares in Whitehaven, which counts struggling coal baron Nathan Tinkler as its biggest shareholder, fell from $3.52 to $3.21 in rapid time before the stock was put into a trading halt.

    Asked if he had qualms about lying to the public to achieve environmental ends, Mr Moylan, who belongs to the anti-coal mining group Frontline Action Coal, said: ‘‘Our primary concern is the impact of this mine on the environment at the end of the day.’’

    On Tuesday, Senator Milne described Mr Moylan’s hoax as being ”part of a long and proud history of civil disobedience, potentially breaking the law, to highlight something wrong”.

    Her comments followed a tweet by her colleague Senator Rhiannon, who wrote: ”Congrats to Jonathan Moylan, Frontline Action on Coal, for exposing ANZ investment in coalmines.”

    Senator Milne’s statement and Senator Rhiannon’s tweet come as the Greens try to appeal to new constituencies and recast themselves as less ‘‘extreme’’ in an election year.

    Last month, the party revealed a new platform of policies aimed at presenting a smaller target to critics.

    Senator Rhiannon has previously seen controversy over her support for an anti-Israel boycott policy in the 2011 NSW state election.

    Last year, she apologised after it emerged she helped to ghost-write an opinion article, attacking her party for accepting a $1.7 million donation from the web entrepreneur Graeme Wood.

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    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/abetz-slams-greens-for-backing-hoax-20130108-2cerk.html#ixzz2HSPuMRDR

  • Temperatures to rise by six degrees in Middle East countries

    Temperatures to rise by six degrees in Middle East countries

    World Bank report says there will be lower rainfall, higher temperatures and continuing desertification in the region
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    Laurence Caramel

    Guardian Weekly, Tuesday 8 January 2013 14.00 GMT

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    Drought has become an acute problem for many countries in the Middle East. Photograph: Christine Osborne/Corbis

    Countries in the Middle East and north Africa will be among those hardest hit by global warming, unless the upward trend for greenhouse gas emissions can be checked, the World Bank warned last month at the Doha climate change conference.

    There will be lower rainfall, higher temperatures and continuing desertification, said Rachel Kyte, World Bank vice-president for sustainable development, during her presentation of the report on Adaptation to a Changing Climate in the Arab Countries.

    According to the forecasts, average temperatures could rise by 3C between now and 2050. But night temperatures in city centres could increase by double that figure. The report notes that over the last three decades 50 million people have been affected by climate disasters. Severe flooding is now a recurrent event. But the increasing scarcity of water resources is the biggest challenge for countries in the region, which already have some of the lowest per capita reserves in the world.

    Kuwait and Qatar depend on desalination plants for almost 40% of their needs. With demand for water forecast to increase by 60% over the next 30 years, due to population growth and changing ways of life, the World Bank fears there is a high risk of shortages and conflict. Measures to adapt to climate change are still limited, even if a regional strategy for reducing the risks of natural disasters has been adopted.

    The lack of reliable data is a stumbling block for any preventive measures. The launch of a research centre, announced by Qatar last month, could help remedy this situation. Funded by the Qatar Foundation, in partnership with the Potsdam Institute, the centre will focus on the impact of climate change on countries in the Gulf.

    However, this positive move will not be enough to cover up the fact that Qatar, much as the other oil-producing countries in the Gulf, has still not made any commitment as part of the UN climate talks.

    Saudi Arabia – though it refutes this suggestion – continues to play along with those angling for a business-as-usual agreement.

    “We take climate change seriously and will reduce our CO2 emissions,” said an adviser to the Saudi oil minister, citing the kingdom’s plans for carbon capture and storage facilities, and measures to boost energy-efficiency and develop solar power. “The world will not be able to do without fossil fuels in the coming decades. We aim to produce ‘climate-friendly’ oil and gas that cause less pollution.”

    This story appeared in Guardian Weekly, which incorporates material from Le Monde

  • Greens MPs congratulate hoaxer whose deceit triggered sharemarket turmoil

    Greens MPs congratulate hoaxer whose deceit triggered sharemarket turmoil

    Date January 9, 2013 28 reading now
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    Jonathan Swan, Judith Ireland, Damien Bright

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    “Companies that are driving climate change will increasingly come under scrutiny and be exposed for their investments” … Senator Christine Milne, Greens leader. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

    THE Greens leader, Senator Christine Milne, has endorsed a controversial hoax by an anti-coal activist, saying his actions were ”part of a long and proud history of civil disobedience, potentially breaking the law, to highlight something wrong”.

    Her comments came after a tweet by her colleague Lee Rhiannon, who publicly congratulated Jonathan Moylan, an activist under scrutiny for impersonating a bank and temporarily wiping $314 million off the value of Whitehaven Coal.

    ”Congrats to Jonathan Moylan, Frontline Action on Coal, for exposing ANZ investment in coalmines,” Ms Rhiannon tweeted on Tuesday night.

    Hoaxer … Jonathan Moylan. Photo: Stefan Moore

    Mr Moylan orchestrated an elaborate hoax on Monday in which he tricked investors into thinking that a recent $1.2 billion loan arranged by ANZ for Whitehaven had been cancelled on ethical grounds.

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    Shares in Whitehaven, which counts the struggling coal baron Nathan Tinkler as its biggest shareholder, fell from $3.52 to $3.21 in rapid time before the stock was put into a trading halt.

    Mr Moylan designed a fake ANZ press template, website and dummy email inbox online and impersonated a company spokesperson to callers, including Fairfax Media. Moylan is now obtaining legal representation, and has received calls from ASIC.

    Senator Milne’s statement and Senator Rhiannon’s tweet come as the Greens try to appeal to new constituencies and recast themselves as less ”extreme” in an election year.

    Last month, the party revealed a new platform of policies aimed at presenting a smaller target.

    Senator Rhiannon’s tweet has raised eyebrows on the social media site and exposed her to ridicule.

    ”Oh dear … what a ludicrously ignorant & idiotic tweet … from an office holder no less!” the commentator Rita Panahi wrote.

    Brisbane tweeter Cameron Lloyd asked Senator Rhiannon: ”What about mum & dad investors that lost money? Their fault for investing in coal?” Simon Black, also from Brisbane, said: ”I know greens can be a bit out there but openly endorsing breaking the law is breathtakingly odd.”

    But Senator Milne expanded upon her colleague’s comment.

    ”The two hottest days in Australian history have just been recorded and fires are burning around the country,” she said.

    ”Companies that are driving climate change will increasingly come under scrutiny and be exposed for their investments and actions, and Jonathan Moylan is drawing attention to these companies. As with asbestos and tobacco, coal is going to come under increasing pressure”.

    The Greens communications director, Tim Hollo, also defended Senator Rhiannon, replying to one of her critics on Twitter: ”On the day @BobBrownFndn took on the leadership of Sea Shepherd, it’s weird to attack @leerhiannon for defending the hoax”.

    Mr Hollo was referring to the announcement that former Australian Greens leader Bob Brown is to take over running the Antarctic anti-whaling campaign by the hardline conservationists Sea Shepherd.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/greens-mps-congratulate-hoaxer-whose-deceit-triggered-sharemarket-turmoil-20130108-2ceu6.html#ixzz2HQW5I6oR