Monday, 25 February 2019

Climate Change Deniers have anti-science funding

Climate Science Denier says DESMOG
"In 2016, retired Princeton physicist Professor Will Happer accepted an invitation from conspiracy theorist G. Edward Griffin to give a keynote at his conference to talk about the “positive effects of CO2.”

Griffin thinks the science behind global warming is a scam. He also thinks there is “no such thing” as the HIV virus and that some plane contrails are part of a political plot to spray the population with poisons.

Sunday, 24 February 2019

Climate actions in Greens NSW Forest Policy

Logging old trees increases transpiration when new trees grow as replacements.
Labor fails our forests too.
NSW Greens Forest Policy (Ratified)

Ratified at SDC Feb 23, 2019

Principles

The Greens believe:

1. Australia is globally significant for its biodiversity and forests are a key element in this biodiversity.

2.Wild forests, native forests, rainforests and multi-aged and old growth forests are significant in maintaining water quality and quantity, protecting threatened species and their habitat.

Check out Australian places, inundation projections.

Coffs Harbour, higher ground, after 10m sea rise


Click here to go to Coastal Risk Australia site

See also 

See article re James Hansen's predictions

 

Australian headlines are designed to scare people into not acting on climate change : The Guardian


As other nations reduce emissions, demand for these products falls regardless of what we do.
Global Heating

"As we head into another cycle of climate change politics beware the economic doomsayers"


"Thirdly, because Australia exports a lot of coal and other emissions-intensive products to other countries, what they do matters an awful lot to the Australian economy. As other nations reduce emissions, demand for these products falls regardless of what we do. It has been established for some time that a significant part of the economic impacts of climate change on Australia comes from things we can’t control and this is generally presented in the results (see here for an example). While he does not report this, Brian Fisher knows this because he spearheaded economic analysis in the 1990s that was targeted at convincing Japan, one of our major coal markets, it would be too costly for them to reduce emissions."  .......
 

"Lastly, whenever these headlines are blasted across the papers one point is always lost: these results don’t include the cost of climate change itself. This summer, we have again seen a glimmer of what climate change will mean for Australia. Recent economic analysis indicates the benefits of limiting global warming far outweigh the cost of doing so, in one case by 70-1 (a good summary is here). (Again, this is something Fisher has considered in the past as he once said it would be cheaper to move people from the Pacific and put them in condos on the Gold Coast than act on climate change.)" ......

Read the complete 21/2/2019 The Guardian article

Saturday, 23 February 2019

Coal, conservatives, and craziness: Financial Review

renewable power with storage is cheaper and quicker to build
Coal Mining
Privately owned electricity generators in Australia don't want to invest billions of dollars in new coal-fired power plants for the simple reason that renewable power with storage is cheaper and quicker to build. The idea that it doesn't make sense to place a 50-year bet on coal-fired generation in Australia, but it does in developing countries, is simply bizarre.

If AGL, the largest consumer of coal in Australia, can't make coal-fired powered stations stack up financially — even with near zero coal transport costs — how can anyone believe that coal will make sense in developing countries that have to cover all of the costs of getting their coal from Australia to Asia?

Read the Financial Review article 

See also: Australia's biggest companies failing to plan for climate change risks: report: ABC NEWS

#coal  #coalmining  #coal mining  #economy  #australia  #energy production  #climate change

Monday, 18 February 2019

Australia's biggest companies failing to plan for climate change risks: report: ABC NEWS

Australia's biggest companies are ignoring calls from regulators and investors to do more to mitigate the risks of climate change, with a new study finding that many of the nation's top 100 companies still do not identify climate change as a material business risk.

"Australia's biggest companies are ignoring calls from regulators and investors to do more to mitigate the risks of climate change, with a new study finding that many of the nation's top 100 companies still do not identify climate change as a material business risk."

 ................................

 "In October, the Australian Institute of Company Directors' (AICD) survey of more than 1,200 company directors found they had for the first time nominated climate change as the number one issue they want the Federal Government to address in the long term.

Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) chief
#climate change  #global warming  #climate angel  #fossil fuels  #Australia
Climate Angel
executive Simon O'Connor said investors were increasingly setting decarbonisation targets for their investment portfolios.

"Many responsible investors are rightfully concerned about this low level of disclosure," he said.
"More and more responsible investors are considering divestment from fossil fuel companies as an option on the table."

Read the ABC News story 


#climate change economic impact    #climatechange  #climate activism   #Australia

Young people are about to utterly transform climate politics: Medium

real climate action demands a giant building boom
Climate Justice

"Inter-generational justice demands bold, rapid climate action; real climate action demands a giant building boom."

"Young people have a massive self-interest in pushing that boom to happen as fast as possible — a self-interest every bit as strong (and far more ethical) as the self-interest that older people pursue through gradualism and delay.

As young people become more and more powerful in the climate movement, fault lines are going to open. Those cracks are visible now. Older leaders are just in the habit of ignoring them.

The climate movement of the 2020s will be fierce and focused on building the new world we need.

The conflict between old movement interest groups and that new call for action at scale and speed is going to be a — maybe the — major climate story in the coming decade."


#YIMBYS  #climateaction   #building   #youth  #climateconflict   #youngpeople