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Now our planet itself is in peril. Not simply the Earth, but the fate of all its species, including humanity. The situation calls not for hand-wringing, but rather informed action.

Optimism is fueled by expectation that decisions will be guided by reason and evidence, not ideology. The danger is that special interests will dilute and torque government policies, causing the climate to pass tipping points, with grave consequences for all life on the planet.

The President-elect himself needs to be well-informed about the climate problem and its relation to energy needs and economic policies. He cannot rely on political systems to bring him solutions - the political systems provide too many opportunities for special interests.

Here is a message I think should be delivered to Barack Obama. This is a first draft. Criticisms would be much appreciated.

Climate threat. The world's temperature has increased about 1°F over the past few decades, about 2°F over land areas. Further warming is "in the pipeline" due to gases already in the air and the inevitable additional fossil fuel emissions.

Effects already evident include:

1. Mountain glaciers are receding worldwide and will be gone within 50 years if CO2 emissions continue to increase. This threatens the fresh water supply for billions of people, as rivers arising in the Himalayas, Andes and Rocky Mountains will begin to run dry in the summer and fall.

2. Coral reefs, home to a quarter of biological species in the ocean, could be destroyed by rising temperature and ocean acidification due to increasing CO2.

3. Dry subtropics are expanding poleward with warming, affecting the southern United States, the Mediterranean region, and Australia, with increasing drought and fires.

4. Arctic sea ice will disappear entirely in the summer, if CO2 continues to increase, with devastating effects on wildlife and indigenous people.

5. Intensity of hydrologic extremes, heavy rains, storms and floods on the one hand, and droughts and fires on the other, are increasing. Some people say we must learn to live with these effects, because it is an almost god-given fact that we must burn all fossil fuels. But now we understand, from the history of the Earth, that there would be two monstrous consequences of releasing the CO2 from all of the oil, gas and coal, consequences of an enormity that cannot be accepted. One effect would be extermination of a large fraction of the species on the planet. The other is initiation of ice sheet disintegration and sea level rise, out of humanity's control,eventually eliminating coastal cities and historical sites, creating havoc, hundreds of millions of refugees, and impoverishing nations.

Recent evidence reveals a situation more urgent than had been expected, even by those who were most attuned.

Click here to read more

 . . read more
The first solar panels have been installed on top of the papal audience hall at Vatican City. Pope Benedict XVI's has made conserving the Earth's resources an important concern of his papacy. . . read more

Predictions of global oil production peaking, and then running out, have been around almost as long as oil was discovered in the second half of the 19th century. Time and again, such dire predictions turned out to be false, largely because of the Peak Oil’s apparently sound but actually deceitful logic: while it is true that, as Peak Oil maintains, oil is a finite natural resource that is bound to run out some day, it does not follow, again as Peak Oil argues, that therefore oil is or must be running out soon.

A major flaw of Peak Oil is that it is based on a static, or technology-neutral, assumption: it implicitly assumes that limits to oil are set as natural, innate, and immutable. Yet, limits to oil, like those to most other resources, are determined as much (if not more) socially as they are naturally. Research, development, and technological advances have made (and will continue to make) both the amounts of oil reserves and of oil production much more fluid or elastic than perceived by the champions of Peak Oil.

Another equally-flawed proposition of Peak Oil is that it implicitly views the limits of oil supply independent of substitutes or alternative sources of energy. These include solar, wind, non-food bio-fuel, and nuclear energies. They also include natural gas. Further, they include “unconventional” oil: Tar Sands, Heavy Oils, and Oil Shale. Although, with the exception of natural gas and nuclear technology, the use of these substitutes is sill quite expensive, and therefore, limited, technological advances are bound to reduce their cost and increase their sue. [More]

 . . read more
Help Renew Australia's Economy . . read more
Ecologist Richard Heinberg, author of The Party's Over, Power Down, The Oil Depletion Protocol, and Peak Everything, talks about energy wars, global climate change, the false solutions of natural gas, coal and nuclear power and points the way to a peaceful post-carbon future through efficiency, conservation and localization of decentralized renewable energy sources.  . . read more

Last week I urged Barry O’Farrell (NSW Opposition Leader) to vote against the sale/privatization of the NSW Electricity industry and “to rock a bad government and to prove that the “business party” can plan for a greener future”. I was glad to see Barry do it but I don’t think he expected that within one week Michael Costa, the Treasurer-bully that was pushing the sale would be kicked out and Morris Iemma, the Labor Premier himself would resign. One week! From “just…one vote, Barry”!

Now the Labor parliamentarians are preparing to build a new government team but what will they have learnt from ex-Premier Iemma’s shipwreck? Will they see the need for an intelligent union-Labor Party strategy that actively transforms the electricity infrastructure of New South Wales and prepares for a greener future or will they see Iemma’s fall as a chance to reinforce the old status quo of an ever growing coal power industry that puts all its “green eggs” into the “waiting for Carbon Capture & Storage” basket?

In Germany this week at Schwarze Pumpe they’re opening a pilot CSS plant but the small amount of CO2 is being compressed into canisters and the expense is right off the chart. In Australia Tim Flannery just gave a speech explaining that growing trees and capturing CO2 in charcoal into the top soil will, for the next 10 years (& perhaps longer), be the only real way of CCS (Carbon Capture & Storage) and that worldwide the trees and charcoal could capture over 18 gigatonnes per year. That’s the scale of CO2 reduction that we need to be working on now. Will the new New South Wales government really face the facts and stop waiting for the tech CCS that will not come?

 . . read more

New South Wales will later this week reach a window of opportunity to scale down coal burning power stations and take the path to real CO2 reduction in Australia. The Labor state government, led by the State Treasurer Michael Costa, is trying to gain parliamentary approval for a sale (privatization) of the states electricity power grid (from generating power stations to retail distribution and billing authorities). Enough members of the government are ready to vote against the government to stop this if the Liberal Party opposition is willing to vote against it.

Coal power stations need to be, one at a time, closed as wastage is reduced and other generation systems are brought on line. There will be no significant carbon capture in the next twenty years, except by planting trees & biomass. Corporations that buy today’s coal power stations or build new versions of the same are going to lose most of their multi-billion dollar investment. They will be left to go broke like the builders of road tunnels that people don’t want to pay to use. Malcolm Turnbull knows the details on this but seems controlled by the UIC. A Liberal Party opposition that actually cares about business stability will not support a sell-off that will end in tragedy with the Australian public demanding coal power close down and business clinging to a costly investment.

This week Barry O’Farrell, the Liberal state leader, has the chance to rock a bad government and to prove that the “business party” can plan for a greener future. He could protect business from short-term-greed-long-term-pain and open a political front to a younger greener electorate that is so tired of Labor’s short term thinking. In just one week Barry, supported by Malcolm, could rewrite politics in Australia and reveal all the inadequacies in Labor’s response to Climate Change. It just takes one vote, Barry.

 . . read more
Both U.S. presidential candidates, Barack Obama and John McCain, say global warming is a problem, but are their proposals enough to make a difference?  . . read more

From outside of America it is obvious that the Military Industrial Complex (MIC) is a bad thing because it is economic insanity to spend ten times more than is “needed” for defense. Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright asked what have we got these weapons for if we don’t use them. To make the MIC richer, to create giant profits, that’s the main reason. Wars are just the excuse to justify the money flow.

In Australia (& Britain) we think we’re smarter than that but both our progressive governments ask what have we got this coal for if we don’t use it. Coal made Britain great and it’s making Australia very rich and inside both countries there is a powerful web of union, political, financial & industrial groups that have grown rich and are committed to keeping the coal power economy going. Power as a metaphor for power. In both countries this web is at the centre of the “Union Industrial Complex” (UIC) that runs the countries. Anglo-Australian companies like BHP are in there with their $15 billion profit. UIC leaders like Michael Costa want to prove Climate Change is false by making a new 40 year commitment to coal.

But there are also nice, reasonable people, like Penny Wong (Minster for Climate Change), who say we must find a carbon capture solution because the world is going to burn more coal (5th Aug 08). Read that again. False logic. A safe cheap method of massive carbon capture may be scientifically impossible (especially in the short term) but, like the MIC, the Union Industrial Complex doesn’t care about results - it just wants huge profits and it’s in control.

 . . read more
Australian Minister for Climate Change Penny Wong, along with the University of NSW Climate Change Research Centre's Dr Ben McNeil, try to explain government policy at a recent climate change forum in Sydney.  . . read more
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Now our planet itself is in peril. Not simply the Earth, but the fate of all its species, including humanity. The situation calls not for hand-wringing, but rather informed action.

Optimism is fueled by expectation that decisions will be guided by reason and evidence, not ideology. The danger is that special interests will dilute and torque government policies, causing the climate to pass tipping points, with grave consequences for all life on the planet.

The President-elect himself needs to be well-informed about the climate problem and its relation to energy needs and economic policies. He cannot rely on political systems to bring him solutions - the political systems provide too many opportunities for special interests.

Here is a message I think should be delivered to Barack Obama. This is a first draft. Criticisms would be much appreciated.

Climate threat. The world's temperature has increased about 1°F over the past few decades, about 2°F over land areas. Further warming is "in the pipeline" due to gases already in the air and the inevitable additional fossil fuel emissions.

Effects already evident include:

1. Mountain glaciers are receding worldwide and will be gone within 50 years if CO2 emissions continue to increase. This threatens the fresh water supply for billions of people, as rivers arising in the Himalayas, Andes and Rocky Mountains will begin to run dry in the summer and fall.

2. Coral reefs, home to a quarter of biological species in the ocean, could be destroyed by rising temperature and ocean acidification due to increasing CO2.

3. Dry subtropics are expanding poleward with warming, affecting the southern United States, the Mediterranean region, and Australia, with increasing drought and fires.

4. Arctic sea ice will disappear entirely in the summer, if CO2 continues to increase, with devastating effects on wildlife and indigenous people.

5. Intensity of hydrologic extremes, heavy rains, storms and floods on the one hand, and droughts and fires on the other, are increasing. Some people say we must learn to live with these effects, because it is an almost god-given fact that we must burn all fossil fuels. But now we understand, from the history of the Earth, that there would be two monstrous consequences of releasing the CO2 from all of the oil, gas and coal, consequences of an enormity that cannot be accepted. One effect would be extermination of a large fraction of the species on the planet. The other is initiation of ice sheet disintegration and sea level rise, out of humanity's control,eventually eliminating coastal cities and historical sites, creating havoc, hundreds of millions of refugees, and impoverishing nations.

Recent evidence reveals a situation more urgent than had been expected, even by those who were most attuned.

Click here to read more

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12 oct

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I really like the quality of your content. It's remarkably consistently intelligent. Since I live in the American West a great deal is irrelevant for me personally, but its still worthwhile for the rest. Thank you :) - Anna 

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 Re: Bush: "Don't turn inwarddue to crisis"

Great slice and dicing of an addled administration in its age of collapse. A few rapier hits with Track Changes and Bush and Rice stand naked in cyberspace. Pity they can't hear the laughter. Can we have some more...? - Trish

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 Re: Fidel Castro's Blog

The international community is very close to resume diplomatic relations with Cuba. It will be interesting to see how it plays out. http://m