Author: Neville

  • The gift of death – Monbiot

    The gift of death – Monbiot

    Published December 12, 2012. | By John James.

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    Pathological consumption has become so normalised we scarcely notice it

    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 11th December 2012

    There’s nothing they need, nothing they don’t own already, nothing they even want. So you buy them a solar-powered waving queen; a belly button brush; a silver-plated ice cream tub holder; a “hilarious” inflatable zimmer frame; a confection of plastic and electronics called Terry the Swearing Turtle; or – and somehow I find this significant – a Scratch Off World wall map.

    They seem amusing on the first day of Christmas, daft on the second, embarrassing on the third. By the twelfth they’re in landfill. For thirty seconds of dubious entertainment, or a hedonic stimulus that lasts no longer than a nicotine hit, we commission the use of materials whose impacts will ramify for generations.

    Researching her film The Story of Stuff, Annie Leonard discovered that of the materials flowing through the consumer economy, only 1% remain in use six months after sale(1). Even the goods we might have expected to hold onto are soon condemned to destruction through either planned obsolescence (breaking quickly) or perceived obsolesence (becoming unfashionable).

    But many of the products we buy, especially for Christmas, cannot become obsolescent. The term implies a loss of utility, but they had no utility in the first place. An electronic drum-machine t-shirt; a Darth Vader talking piggy bank; an ear-shaped i-phone case; an individual beer can chiller; an electronic wine breather; a sonic screwdriver remote control; bacon toothpaste; a dancing dog: no one is expected to use them, or even look at them, after Christmas Day. They are designed to elicit thanks, perhaps a snigger or two, and then be thrown away.

    The fatuity of the products is matched by the profundity of the impacts. Rare materials, complex electronics, the energy needed for manufacture and transport are extracted and refined and combined into compounds of utter pointlessness. When you take account of the fossil fuels whose use we commission in other countries, manufacturing and consumption are responsible for more than half of our carbon dioxide production(2). We are screwing the planet to make solar-powered bath thermometers and desktop crazy golfers.

    People in eastern Congo are massacred to facilitate smart phone upgrades of ever diminishing marginal utility(3). Forests are felled to make “personalised heart-shaped wooden cheese board sets”. Rivers are poisoned to manufacture talking fish. This is pathological consumption: a world-consuming epidemic of collective madness, rendered so normal by advertising and the media that we scarcely notice what has happened to us.

    In 2007, the journalist Adam Welz records, 13 rhinos were killed by poachers in South Africa. This year, so far, 585 have been shot(4). No one is entirely sure why. But one answer is that very rich people in Vietnam are now sprinkling ground rhino horn on their food or snorting it like cocaine to display their wealth. It’s grotesque, but it scarcely differs from what almost everyone in industrialised nations is doing: trashing the living world through pointless consumption.

    This boom has not happened by accident. Our lives have been corralled and shaped in order to encourage it. World trade rules force countries to participate in the festival of junk. Governments cut taxes, deregulate business, manipulate interest rates to stimulate spending. But seldom do the engineers of these policies stop and ask “spending on what?”. When every conceivable want and need has been met (among those who have disposable money), growth depends on selling the utterly useless. The solemnity of the state, its might and majesty, are harnessed to the task of delivering Terry the Swearing Turtle to our doors.

    Grown men and women devote their lives to manufacturing and marketing this rubbish, and dissing the idea of living without it. “I always knit my gifts”, says a woman in a television ad for an electronics outlet. “Well you shouldn’t,” replies the narrator(5). An advertisement for Google’s latest tablet shows a father and son camping in the woods. Their enjoyment depends on the Nexus 7’s special features(6). The best things in life are free, but we’ve found a way of selling them to you.

    The growth of inequality that has accompanied the consumer boom ensures that the rising economic tide no longer lifts all boats. In the US in 2010 a remarkable 93% of the growth in incomes accrued to the top 1% of the population(7). The old excuse, that we must trash the planet to help the poor, simply does not wash. For a few decades of extra enrichment for those who already possess more money than they know how to spend, the prospects of everyone else who will live on this earth are diminished.

    So effectively have governments, the media and advertisers associated consumption with prosperity and happiness that to say these things is to expose yourself to opprobrium and ridicule. Witness last week’s Moral Maze programme, in which most of the panel lined up to decry the idea of consuming less, and to associate it, somehow, with authoritarianism(8). When the world goes mad, those who resist are denounced as lunatics.

    Bake them a cake, write them a poem, give them a kiss, tell them a joke, but for god’s sake stop trashing the planet to tell someone you care. All it shows is that you don’t.

    www.monbiot.com

  • Methane Gas Leaks Undermine Shift to Natural Gas

    Methane Gas Leaks Undermine Shift to Natural Gas

    January 2, 2013 by Range

    Science

    Natural-gas wells such as this one in Colorado are increasingly important to the US energy supply. Credit: David Zalubowski/AP Photo

    Scientists report that there are alarmingly high methane emissions from oil and gas fields, undermining the environmental benefits of natural gas, which is transforming the current US energy system.

    The scientists, who hold joint appointments with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the University of Colorado in Boulder, reported their findings at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union last month. Back in February 2012, a study¹ indicated that up to 4% of the methane produced at a field near Denver was escaping into the atmosphere. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, and it could be leaking from fields across the US at similar rates, offsetting much of the climate benefit from shifting from coal- to gas-fired plants for electricity generation.

    The new data from Colorado supports this earlier work¹. Preliminary results from a field study in the Uinta Basin of Utah indicate even higher rates of methane leakage, at about 9% of the total production. This is nearly double the cumulative loss rates estimated from industry data, which are higher in Utah than in Colorado.

    It’s still unclear whether the high leakage rates in Colorado and Utah are typical across the US natural gas-industry, but if this is the case the situation could be dire. The NOAA researchers collected the data as part of a broader analysis of the air pollution in the Uinta Basin, using ground-based equipment and an aircraft to make detailed measurements of various pollutants, including methane concentrations.

    The new study relies on carbon isotopes to differentiate between industry emissions and methane from cows and feedlots, which align with the findings from earlier this year. A study² by the EDF and Princeton University suggests that shifting from coal-fired generators to natural gas has immediate climate benefits, as long as the cumulative leakage rate is below 3.2%. The benefits will accumulate over time, and are even larger if gas plants replace older coal plants. The EPA estimates that 2.4% of total natural-gas production was lost to leakage in 2009.

    References
    1.Pétron, G. et al. J. Geophys. Res. 117, D04304 (2012).
    2.Alvarez, R. A., Pacala, S. W. Winebrake, J. J., Chameides, W. L. & Hamburg, S. P. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, 6435–6440 (2012).

    [via Nature]

  • Carbon budgets, climate sensitivity and the myth of “burnable carbon”

    Single mums bristle at Macklin gaffe

    SUE DUNLEVY
    News Limited Network
    January 03, 201312:00AM

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    • Jenny Macklin salary: $900 a day
    • Jenny Macklin parliamentary expenses: $1577 a day
    • Unemployment benefit: $35 a day
    • Average left after paying rent: $16.50 a day

    Bandt’s dole challenge
    Macklin says dole is enough to live on
    Single mum Wendy Tucker, at home with da

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    Bandt’s dole challenge

    Acting Greens leader Adam Bandt has challenged Minister Jenny Macklin to spend a week living on the dole with him.












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    Macklin says dole is enough to live on

    As changes to Government payments for single parents take effect, the Minister for Families, Jenny Macklin, says she could live on the dole












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    Single mum Wendy Tucker, at home with daughter Jessie, 10, will be affected by the Government’s cuts to single parent payments. Picture: TobyZerna Source: News Limited

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    SHE claims she could live on the $38-a-day dole payment, but cabinet minister Jenny Macklin spent $1577 a day on travel, comcars and hotel rooms last year.

    These ministerial expenses were on top of the $903 a day salary she earns.

    Single mums pushed on to the dole from January 1 yesterday expressed outrage at Ms Macklin’s assertion she could get by on the government allowance.

    Greens MP: Minister can join me in trying it for a week

    Sydney woman Wendy Tucker, who works two-and-a-half days a week as a bookeeper, will lose $170 a fortnight under the changes that will see her stripped of her single parent payment.

    “I’m feeling completely desperate after my car was written off a couple of weeks ago,” she said.

    “The minister gets $903 a day. I could live like a queen on that.”

    Single mothers were given just five weeks notice of the cutbacks by Centrelink and they have hit while children are on school holidays, Ms Tucker said.

    Jobs were also hard to find as many companies had shut down for Christmas, she added.

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    Greens acting leader Adam Bandt yesterday challenged Ms Macklin to join him in trying to live on the dole amount for a week in February.

    “To show how hard it is for many people to make ends meet, I will try living on Newstart for a week in February and I invite the minister to join me,” he said.

    Housing Minister Brendan O’Connor slammed Mr Bandt for being “patronising”, but Combined Pensioners Association president Pat Warriner said she would “love to see the minister try it for a month”.

    Council of Single Mothers and their Children spokeswoman Terese Edwards said almost half the single parents hit by the cuts were already working and stood to lose the most cash under the changes – up to $233 a fortnight.

    Around 10,000 single mums will lose their benefits altogether and miss out of the pensioner concession card that gave them and their children access to cheap medicines, electricity and telephone costs, she said.

    Australian Council of Social Services chief Cassandra Goldie said she didn’t see the need for the minister to prove she could live off the dole.

    “Frankly the evidence is in already,” she said. “Three parliamentary inquiries have said Newstart is inadequate, research has found on average someone on Newstart has $16.50 a day to live on after you take out housing costs.”

    The minister did not make any comment yesterday but parliamentary records show she racked up more than $290,000 in work-related expenses in the first six month of 2012.

    She has responsibility for indigenous affairs and travels to remote regions as part of her job, which pushed up her expense bill. And an eight-day visit to Canada to speak at the World Indigenous Housing conference in June cost $52,000.

  • 16 sued over $13m Cascade Coal deal

    16 sued over $13m Cascade Coal deal

    Date January 3, 2013 110 reading now
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    Linton Besser

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    Facing the music … Eddie Obeid is at the centre of the ICAC’s inquiry into corruption. Photo: Dean Sewell

    SOME of Australia’s wealthiest coal barons and two of its most high-profile stockbrokers are being sued in the Federal Court for ”misleading and deceptive conduct” over millions of dollars secretly funnelled to the family of the ALP powerbroker Eddie Obeid.

    Multi-millionaires Denis O’Neil and Neville Crichton have filed a writ in the Federal Court in Sydney alleging that $13 million they paid for shares in Cascade Coal – the coalmining company now at the heart of the most explosive corruption inquiry in decades – was instead directed elsewhere.

    Evidence heard at the Independent Commission Against Corruption suggests this money has gone to the Obeid family.

    The lawsuit blames 16 individuals and companies, including the Obeid family itself, prominent stockbrokers Brent Potts and Peter Gray, who assisted in the share purchase in November 2010, as well as Travers Duncan, John McGuigan, John Atkinson, John Kinghorn and Richard Poole, the five men who were running Cascade Coal.

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    Mr Duncan made more than $500 million in 2009 when he sold another mining interest to a Chinese company, and Mr Kinghorn made $500 million in a controversial float of Rams Home Loans in 2007.

    Since November, the ICAC has heard evidence that inside information was allegedly used to corrupt a coal tender run by former minister Ian Macdonald to benefit Cascade Coal, which won the tender, and the Obeid family, which took a secret 25 per cent share of the company.

    Even though Cascade had been valued at $25 million, the plan was for the company to then be acquired by the publicly-listed White Energy for $500 million, reaping massive profits for all involved. All five of the Cascade directors were also directors of White Energy. However the plan went awry after an independent White Energy director, Graham Cubbin, and the stock exchange began probing the transaction.

    Cascade’s solution was to rid itself of the Obeids’ secret shareholding, agreeing to pay them $60 million – half of which is yet to be paid. The inquiry has heard that the Obeids still have a 9.3 per cent interest in Cascade Coal.

    Now, Mr O’Neil and Mr Crichton have alleged that the $13 million they invested was used not to take up shares in Cascade, but to instead pay out a third party, and it follows evidence heard at the ICAC of a complex web of companies used to hide this transaction because its ultimate beneficiary was the Obeid family.

    One of the lawsuit’s respondents is Southeast Investment Group Pty Ltd, a company run by Sevag Chalabian, a solicitor retained by the Obeids to hide their interest in the transaction.

    Mr O’Neil and Mr Crichton say they were told the capital raising that enabled them to buy into the company was to be used to ”reduce third party debt and creditors”, and that in return their respective companies would be allotted shares via a nominee company.

    Mr O’Neil’s company Adden-brooke Pty Ltd put in just under $8 million; Mr Crichton’s company Ateco Automotive NZ Pty Ltd almost $5 million.

    But in what they have described in court documents as a ”breach of trust”, this money was instead transferred to Amanda Poole, the wife of Cascade director Richard Poole, and to Mr Chalabian, ”for those monies to be paid from Southeast to entities and/or persons whose identity [they] are currently unable to ascertain”.

    The first directions hearing has been scheduled for February 8.

    Do you know more? investigations@smh.com.au

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/16-sued-over-13m-cascade-coal-deal-20130102-2c5ji.html#ixzz2GrEgUJEL

  • Oil ship runs aground in Alaska

    Oil ship runs aground in Alaska

    Drill ship, the Kulluk, carrying about 155,000 gallons of fuel, drifted in stormy weather before being driven on to rocks
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    Reuters

    guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 1 January 2013 12.06 GMT

    The drill ship Kulluk is towed by the tugs Aiviq and Nanuq. Photograph: AP

    A large drill ship belonging to the oil company Shell has run aground off Alaska after drifting in stormy weather, company and government officials said.

    The ship, the Kulluk, broke away from one of its tow lines on Monday afternoon and was driven, within hours, on to rocks just off Kodiak Island, where it grounded at about 9pm Alaska time, officials said.

    The 18-member crew had been evacuated by the coastguard late on Saturday because of risks from the ongoing storm.

    There was no known spill and no reports of damage, but the Kulluk had about 155,000 gallons of fuel on board, said coastguard commander Shane Montoya, the leader of the incident command team.

    With winds reported as reaching 60 miles an hour and Gulf of Alaska seas of up to 12 metres, responders were unable to keep the ship from grounding, he told a news conference late on Monday night in Anchorage.

    “We are now entering into the salvage and possible spill-response phase of this event.”

    The grounding of the Kulluk, a conical, Arctic-class drill ship weighing nearly 28,000 gross tonnes, is a blow to Shell’s $4.5bn (£2.8bn) offshore programme in Alaska. Its plan to convert the area into a major new oil frontier has alarmed environmentalists and many Alaska Natives, but excited industry supporters.

    Environmentalists and Native opponents say the drilling programme threatens a fragile region that is already being battered by rapid climate change.

    “Shell and its contractors are no match for Alaska’s weather and sea conditions either during drilling operations or during transit,” Lois Epstein, Arctic programme director for the Wilderness Society, said in an email.

    “Shell’s costly drilling experiment in the Arctic Ocean needs to be stopped by the federal government or by Shell itself given the unacceptably high risks it poses to both humans and the environment.”

    The Kulluk’s woes began on Friday, when the Shell ship towing it south experienced a mechanical failure and lost its connection to the drill vessel.

    That ship, the Aivik, was reattached to the Kulluk early on Monday morning, as was a tug sent to the scene by the operator of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System. But the Aivik lost its link on Monday afternoon, and the tug’s crew could only try to guide the drill ship to a position where, if it grounded, “it would have the least amount of impact to the environment”, Montoya said.

    Shell used the Kulluk in September and October to drill a prospect in the Beaufort Sea. It was being taken to Seattle for the off-season when the problems began.

    Susan Childs, emergency incident commander for Shell, suggested a significant spill from the ship was unlikely.

    “The unique design of the Kulluk means the diesel fuel tanks are isolated in the centre in the vessel and encased in very heavy steel,” she said.

    Shell was waiting for the weather to moderate to begin a complete assessment of the ship, she said. “We hope to ultimately recover the Kulluk with minimal or no damage to the environment.”

    The Kulluk was built in 1983 and there were plans to scrap it before Shell bought it in 2005. The company has spent $292m since then to upgrade the vessel.

    Shell’s Arctic campaign has been bedevilled by problems. A second drill ship, the Discoverer, was briefly detained in December by the coastguard in Seward, Alaska, because of safety concerns. A mandatory oil-containment barge, the Arctic Challenger, failed for months to meet coastguard requirements for seaworthiness and a ship mishap resulted in damage to a critical piece of equipment intended to cap a blown well.

  • House Passes Fiscal Deal, Averting Tax Increases and Spending Cuts

    BREAKING NEWS Tuesday, January 1, 2013 11:19 PM EST
    House Passes Fiscal Deal, Averting Tax Increases and Spending Cuts
    Ending a climactic fiscal showdown in the final hours of the 112th Congress, the House late Tuesday passed and sent to President Obama legislation to avert tax increases on most Americans and prevent large cuts in spending for the Pentagon and other government programs.
    The measure, brought to the House floor less than 24 hours after its passage in the Senate, passed 257 to 167, with 85 Republicans joining 172 Democrats in voting to allow incomes taxes to rise for the first time in two decades. The bill is expected to be signed quickly by Mr. Obama.
    READ MORE »
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/02/us/politics/house-takes-on-fiscal-cliff.html?hp&emc=na
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