Author: Neville

  • Flinders Island has a plan to be powered exclusively by renewable energy.

    Flinders Island has a plan to be powered exclusively by renewable energy.

    The plan, for three or four wind turbines and a mini hydro storage system would cost up to $25 million.

    A privately-run turbine is currently producing 25 per cent of the island’s energy.

    Flinders Island Council general manager Raoul Harper says residents want to make that 100 per cent.

    “Being in the top five wind resource areas on the planet the concept of continuing to burn diesel to power the island does seem absurd really.”

    Mr Harper argues in the long run the project would be cost effective because the government would no longer need to pay Hydro Tasmania $3 million a year to supply diesel.
    The council is seeking Federal Government funding through its new renewable energy agency.

  • 7 States Sue EPA Over Methane from Oil and Gas Drilling

    7 States Sue EPA Over Methane from Oil and Gas Drilling

    Tags:Environmental Protection Agency, greenhouse gas emissions, methane

    inShare.

    Seven states in the northeastern part of the United States have officially announced plans to sue the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for its alleged violations of the Clean Air Act in failing to address and limit methane emissions resulting from drilling for natural resources like oil and gas.

    In a press release issued earlier this week, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman outlined the complaint, which focuses on methane emissions from resource-heavy states like Pennsylvania and Virginia. Joined by Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont, the state of New York is leading the cause, demanding that the EPA take immediate action to reduce methane emissions that threaten to increase the already troubling effects of anthropogenic climate change. (Read More: U.S. Oil Production Surges to Highest Level in 15 Years)

    For its part, the EPA has already announced new rules to be implemented in 2015 that would require firms drilling for gas and oil to install new equipment and enforce new rules that would limit the amount of methane added to the atmosphere. Regarding this complaint, the EPA has promised a response; with a 60-day notice of the seven-state coalition’s intention to sue currently on the books, the agency will have to do so quickly in order to avoid a potentially messy lawsuit.

    While the complaint in question references only those methane emission that result from the oil and gas industry, the largest source of that greenhouse gas in the United States in accounting for 37 percent of all emissions, the trend towards focusing on methane could lead to the EPA forcing new rules on the raising of livestock, which accounts for 21 percent, and landfills, which account for 16 percent. (Read more: Global Carbon Dioxide Emissions — Facts and Figures)

    Overall, methane is responsible for just 3.8 percent of total greenhouse gas emission in the U.S., with carbon dioxide ranking as the greatest threat.

    Accurate, Expert Analysis. Get the Inside
    Scoop Before It’s News. And it’s 100% Free.

    Subscribe Now

    One response to 7 States Sue EPA Over Methane from Oil and Gas Drilling

    By Steve Last on December 14, 2012 at 2:08 pm

    It makes fascinating reading for me to read that a number of States are planning: ” to sue the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for its alleged violations of the Clean Air Act in failing to address and limit methane emissions resulting from drilling for natural resources like oil and gas”. I presume that the emissions are due to a lack of suitable regulations to make the drilling companies flare off the gas that is produced during drilling, rather than allowing it to escape to the atmosphere? It does seem negligent to allow such escapes as I don’t think that flare off this gas would be particularly hard to do, nor expensive in the scheme of things.

    [link] [reply]

  • Ten now feared dead from Cyclone Evan

    Ten now feared dead from Cyclone Evan

    MICHELLE COOKE

    Last updated 14:37 15/12/2012

    Share

    Samoa Meteorological Service

    WILD WEATHER: Cyclone Evan crossing Samoa. It is now headed for Fiji.

    South Pacific
    Drowning victim ‘a true gentleman’Apia slammed as cyclone hits SamoaMother of bride and friend drown in RarotongaTropical cyclone heading to SamoaFiji deeply fragmented, report saysSimpson’s producer buys Sea Shepherd a boatFiji dictator to keep tight control on constitutionAustralian teen dies during ‘schoolies’ partyFiji removes Queen from bank notesBody found on Tonga drugs yacht identified

    Ads by Google

    Watch Full Episodeswww.TelevisionFanatic.com
    Turn Your Computer into a TV! Watch Full TV Episodes w Free App
    .

    UP TO 10 people in Samoa are feared to have been left dead in the wake of Cyclone Evan.

    Samoan authorities today confirmed that three people are confirmed dead following the mass flooding which hit the islands on Thursday.

    Another seven are still missing; including several children.

    The New Zealand Government has sent its condolences to the people of Samoa, as well as arranging an aid package for the island nation.

    “Our heartfelt condolences go out to the people of Samoa as they begin to come to terms with the loss of life and damage caused,’’ Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully said.

    “At the request of the Samoan Government, New Zealand will provide P3 Orion to undertake aerial surveillance and environmental health assessment expertise.

    “We have also made available $50,000 to assist with the on-the-ground response.’’

    McCully said an initial assessment suggested there had been damage to outlying buildings, critical infrastructure and power lines, with flooding, many fallen trees and power outages.

    CYCLONE EVAN HEADS TO FIJI

    As Samoa starts picking up the pieces in the wake of Cyclone Evan, Fiji is preparing to face the full force of the storm, due to hit the country tomorrow afternoon.

    The cyclone is heading for Fiji’s second-largest island, Vanua Levu, Taveuni and nearby smaller islands including the Northern Lau group, fijivillage.com reported.

    A strong wind warning and damaging heavy swells warning were in effect for these islands. The cyclone was expected to reach average winds of 165 kilometres per hour but they could go as high as 230 kilometres.

    The cyclone was expected to reach Fiji tomorrow afternoon.

    Fiji’s government authorities had asked the public to begin preparing for Tropical Cyclone Evan and not leave it to the last minute.

    Ad Feedback

  • Extreme weather more persuasive on climate change than scientists

    Extreme weather more persuasive on climate change than scientists

    AP poll shows that events like superstorm Sandy are succeeding with climate sceptics where scientists have been failing
    Share71

    inShare.5
    Email

    Suzanne Goldenberg US environment correspondent

    guardian.co.uk, Friday 14 December 2012 16.52 GMT

    Homes left in the wake of superstorm Sandy in Seaside Heights, New Jersey. Photograph: Mike Groll/AP

    As one of the Marx brothers famously said: who do you believe, me or your own eyes?

    Climate sceptics, it turns out, are much more likely to believe direct evidence of a changing climate in the form of extreme weather events than they do scientists, when it comes to global warming.

    A poll released on Friday by the Associated Press-GfK found rising concern about climate change among Americans in general, with 80% citing it as a serious problem for the US, up from 73% in 2009. Belief and worry about climate change were rising faster still among people who do tend not to trust scientists on the environment.

    Some of the doubters said in follow-up interviews that they were persuaded by personal experience: such as record temperatures, flooding of New York City subway tunnels, and news of sea ice melt in the Arctic and extreme drought in the mid-west.

    About 78% of respondents overall believed in climate change, a slight rise from AP’s last poll in 2009. The result was in line with other recent polls.

    Among climate doubters, however, 61% now say temperatures have been rising over the past century, a substantial rise from 2009 when only 47% believed in climate change.

    The change was not among the hard core of climate deniers, but in the next tier of climate doubters, AP reported. About 1 in 3 of the people surveyed fell into that category. “Events are helping these people see what scientists thought they had been seeing all along,” Jon Krosnick, a Stanford University psychologist who studies attitudes to climate change and consulted on the poll, told the news agency.

    The AP-GfK poll was conducted between 29 November and 3 December by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,002 adults across the country. Results for the full sample have a margin of error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points; the margin of error is larger for subgroups.

  • Costa, Obeid and the water firm

    Costa, Obeid and the water firm

    Date December 15, 2012 60 reading now
    Read later

    Linton Besser, Kate McClymont

    inShare.
    Pin It
    Email article
    Print
    Reprints & permissions

    .

    Happier times …Michael Costa and Eddie Obeid at the NSW ALP conference in 2008. Photo: Jon Reid

    A WATER services company linked to the family of ALP kingpin Eddie Obeid gave shares worth as much as $3.75 million to the former treasurer Michael Costa three years after he stopped a public tender that threatened the company’s future.

    The share package came with his appointment last year as chairman of the company, an appointment brokered by Mr Obeid and one of his sons.

    A Herald investigation has also established that Mr Obeid lobbied his colleagues on behalf of the company, Australian Water Holdings, as it pushed for a billion-dollar privatisation of part of the state-owned Sydney Water Corporation.

    The revelations come as an inquiry by the Independent Commission Against Corruption continues to unearth evidence to suggest the Obeids ran a vast but secret enterprise that capitalised on Mr Obeid’s political power.

    Advertisement

    The family’s multimillion-dollar interests in coal leases, harbour-front cafes and even a health services company were all furthered by Mr Obeid, who used his influence as head of the ALP’s dominant parliamentary faction to lobby ministers.

    As a cabinet minister, Mr Costa was lobbied by Mr Obeid in relation to two of these ventures – and now he has confirmed that Mr Obeid also approached him in relation to Australian Water Holdings, a private water company.

    Since the mid-1990s, it has received about $580 million from Sydney Water to manage the installation of infrastructure in Sydney’s north-west growth centre. The Herald has learnt that the Obeid family has a close association with the company courtesy of its boss, Nick Di Girolamo, a former partner at the Obeids’ law firm of choice, Colin Biggers & Paisley.

    Mr Di Girolamo is a close friend of Eddie Obeid jnr and has known the Obeid family since childhood when he went to school with Mr Obeid’s sons at St Patrick’s College in Strathfield.

    He denied that any of the Obeids had any interest in Australian Water: ”I have never been involved in a transaction with the Obeids. I have never had anything to do with the Obeids.”

    But Mr Di Girolamo conceded he had met Mr Obeid snr several times to discuss the company, that he had employed Eddie Obeid jnr for up to 18 months and at the end of 2010 had received a personal loan from Eddie jnr for an undisclosed sum.

    He said that at first he saw Mr Obeid snr ”to say, mate, I have an issue with Sydney Water” but later said they discussed the potential for a public private partnership.

    ”I was running it past him [Eddie Obeid snr] in terms to say, from a policy perspective [a PPP] was something that your government would see favourably, you know,” Mr Di Girolamo said.

    ”He said, ‘I think it’s good

    policy’.” Mr Obeid jnr had been employed ”helping us with some developers” because ”he has contacts up in Queensland”, Mr Di Girolamo said.

    ICAC has heard evidence that before a coal tender was announced for the Bylong Valley (where the Obeids had bought a farm), the Obeids nominated Mr Di Girolamo at a meeting to act as a front for their stake in a company designated to win the tender.

    Mr Di Girolamo said he had never been asked to act in this way by the family. In the end, it was another Colin Biggers & Paisley lawyer, Greg Skehan, who acted as a front for the family in a coal company that won an exploration licence.

    Mr Skehan is also a shareholder in Australian Water Holdings, but says: ”As the public records show, I am a non-executive director and a very minor shareholder of Australian Water Holdings”.

    Another shareholder is Joseph Georges, a Strathfield real estate agent who has elsewhere acted as a front for the Obeids, disguising the Obeids’ interest in the Elizabeth Bay Marina. Mr Georges declined to say whether his investment in Australian Water was on behalf of the Obeids: ”I will keep you guys guessing.”

    In a recent book, the former planning minister Frank Sartor wrote that Mr Obeid’s son Moses ”had been a paid consultant to a company called Australian Water Holdings” and that ”Obeid and his son lobbied in support of AWH for some years”. Mr Di Girolamo said Moses Obeid had never been associated with the company.

    From about 2006, a dispute erupted between Sydney Water and the company over the project management fees it was charging, and the company’s claim that its original 1992 agreement ensured the government could not award this work to anyone else.

    Executives at Sydney Water became increasingly concerned at the enormous fees Australian Water was charging. For example, its management fees for the month of October 2008 accounted for about 87 per cent of the $750,000 Sydney Water paid the company. ”The real problem was that there was this ongoing obligation on Sydney Water to give this one company all the work in the north-west,” a source said.

    ”[The government] wanted to go to market. It was outrageous.”

    In April 2008, Sydney Water advertised a public tender for a contract that would traditionally have been awarded to Australian Water, posing a direct threat to the company.

    Mr Di Girolamo immediately met Mr Costa, who as treasurer had ultimate responsibility for Sydney Water.

    Sydney Water had advice from Clayton Utz that the work should be publicly contested. Mr Costa then sought another legal opinion from the solicitor-general.

    It said a court was ”more likely” to find for AWH and, in line with its recommendations, Mr Costa ordered the parties attend mediation. The tender never proceeded.

    Three years later, in November last year, Mr Costa was appointed chairman of AWH, replacing Liberal Party heavyweight Arthur Sinodinos, and issued with 6,250,000 shares, or 5 per cent of the company.

    He said: ”This notion that there is some nexus between activity that occurred in 2008 and then subsequently [when I was approached] in 2011 is absurd,” and the Herald does not suggest otherwise.

    Mr Costa said his appointment came about after Eddie Obeid jnr called him and asked him to meet him and Eddie Obeid snr to discuss the opportunity. They urged him to call Mr Di Girolamo and take the job, he said. ”Eddie junior was the one talking … obviously they think [sic] it is a good idea.”

    Mr Costa paid only $1 for the shares but other investors, who had previously bought convertible notes, were issued shares a short time later valued at between 16¢ and $1.92 a share. But on Wednesday, Mr Di Girolamo told the Herald: ”The valuation that we always thought the company was fair was about $75 million”. This would value Mr Costa’s shares at $3.75 million.

    Mr Costa and the company’s chief financial officer, Robert Groom, have since disputed their chairman’s valuation, claiming Mr Costa’s shares are worth only $500,000.

    Mr Costa resigned from the company in early November.

    Nathan Rees said that in 2008, when he was the water minister, Mr Obeid asked him to meet Mr Di Girolamo.

    And his successor in the portfolio, Phillip Costa, said that during a Parliament House dinner in 2009, Mr Obeid ”told me that his son had an interest in it [Australian Water Holdings]”.

    He said Mr Obeid’s comments led him to assume ”there was some moves afoot to try to avoid us going to tender.

    ”As a consequence I didn’t want to pursue it any further. I shut down the conversation. I didn’t want to go any further down that path. I knew at that stage there was some legal procedure [on foot] by Sydney Water.”

    The real potential to earn serious money was AWH’s repeated attempts to persuade the government to privatise Sydney Water’s activities in the north-west of the city.

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

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/costa-obeid-and-the-water-firm-20121214-2bf8e.html#ixzz2F4njbY1i

  • Fiji braces for strengthening Cyclone Evan

    Fiji braces for strengthening Cyclone Evan

    ABCUpdated December 15, 2012, 8:26 am

    tweet2

    Email
    Print

    Video Player Controls
    Play
    Mute
    Volume Down
    Volume Up
    Seek Back 5 seconds
    Seek Forward 5 seconds
    Next Video
    Open Info
    Open Hotkey Menu

    Cyclone batters Samoa

    A state of disaster has been declared in Samoa, lashed by a cyclone for the second time in two days.

    Related Links

    : Disaster declared after deadly Samoan cyclonev

    : Deadly tropical cyclone hits Samoa

    : Cylone Evan batters Samoa

    : PICS: Deadly Samoan cyclone

    Evacuations have begun in Fiji ahead of the arrival of Tropical Cyclone Evan which has caused widespread damage in Samoa.

    The cyclone expected to hit Fiji on Sunday is forecast to intensify into a category four or five storm as it approaches.

    A state of disaster has been declared in Samoa after the storm left a trail of destruction and claimed at least two lives, with unconfirmed reports of many others missing.

    Addressing the nation ahead of the storm, Fiji’s interim leader Commodore Frank Bainimarama said the cyclone would affect the entire country.

    “It has winds up to 180 kilometres per hour which may intensify and, if the weather forecasters are correct, it will affect Fiji in a very damaging way bringing about destructive winds and flooding,” he said.

    “Fellow Fijians I cannot stress how serious this is, every Fijian will be affected.”

    Mr Bainimarama urged people to remain calm, look after the elderly and disabled, cancel social events, secure their properties and avoid travel and alcohol until the threat is over.

    The country’s permanent secretary for information, Sharon Smith-Johns, says many people have fled to higher ground.

    “There are people that have already taken precautions, that they know that they live in flood-prone areas and they’re moving to higher ground or moving in with relatives.

    “There is quite a lot of movement around Suva especially today and around and in the rural areas.

    “All we can do is be prepared here – lucky we’ve had a weeks notice of this all the agencies have been deployed, emergency services on standby, evacuation centres are open, rations have gone out now it’s just a matter of continuing to clean up our own backyards and putting cyclone shutters up and waiting.”

    Ms Smith-Johns says the country is on high alert.

    “Fiji is now on high alert we know that the cyclone is moving towards the Fiji group,” she said.

    “We know that it’s going to be upgraded to a category four cyclone with winds gusting probably about 200 kilometres per hour, so we’re very much just waiting for the arrival.”

    GALLERY: People stand on a destroyed bridge in Samoa’s capital Apia, Friday, after cyclone Evan ripped through the South Pacific island nation. Photo: AAP

    ‘State of disaster’

    The Samoan Government has declared a state of disaster after Evan made landfall on Thursday, causing widespread damage, cutting power, causing flooding and ripping trees out of the ground.

    Locals say it is the worst storm to hit the region in recent years.

    Muli Pola from Samoa’s Meteorology Division says the storm warning remains in effect with concerns it may turn back toward and make landfall on the islands.

    Greg Grimsich, from the United Nations, says with damage much worse than expected international aid groups are ready to help if required.

    “There’s a number of power lines down, roads damaged, we’re having a lot of difficulty communicating by mobile phones because the lines are actually quite jammed at the moment,” he said.

    “We had a large number of people displaced from their homes near the coast and near the river, there were still up to 2000 people in evacuation centres and there was a need for food and water that they’re running low on.”

    Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs travel advice said the cyclone had damaged Faleolo International Airport and the Australian High Commission in Apia would be closed until further notice due to storm damage.”
    Many places in Samoa have only just rebuilt after being devastated by a tsunami in 2009.