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news and views to 6th July 2009 latest Australian and international News and Views - below this introductory section - the news that most often doesn't get into the mainstream media, especially in Australia |
| FACTS and NEWS Australia | for July we focus on CORPORATIONS Corporations are set up so that no individual person is responsible, - nobody is actually "in charge". The job of a corporation is to make money for its shareholders. “[A corporation] is compelled to cause harm when the benefits of doing so outweigh the costs,” which are often based on cold and abstract calculations of cost-benefit analyses",( - Bakan, describing Enron) This setup means that a corporation cannot afford to genuinely seek social justice, environmental care, worker safety etc. Any harmful effects of the corporations activities must be offloaded onto others - the taxpayers, the community, future generations.
The result? Corporations simply do not act with common sense. So - we have executives paid enormous salaries so that they close their minds to reality, and lie, even on oath. Tobacco executives lied in court about cigarettes and cancer, asbestos executives hid the truth about mesothelioma. No surprise that we find now the lies about the nuclear industry. Loyalty to the corporations is the first duty of a corporate executive.
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latest action postings * PEACE CONVERGENCE STOP THE TALISMAN SABRE WARGAMES -- Solidarity Vigil
go to action Australia
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3CR podcasts Beverly Four Mile and Mount Gee potential uranium mining projects. - Adnyamathanha Elder and Spokesperson, Geraldine Anderson
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| Psychopathic Character of CorporationsDr. Robert Hare, internationally renowned expert on psychopaths and consultant to the FBI, says that corporations are not unlike psychopaths in many respects. He found that key psychopathic traits matched corporation’s institutional character: irresponsible, manipulative, grandiose, lack of empathy, asocial, unable to feel remorse, and often refusing to accept responsibility for their own actions. Like psychopaths, corporations “present themselves as compassionate and concerned about others when, in fact, they lack the ability to care about anyone or anything but themselves,” writes Bakan...............................According to Bakan, the underlying reasons for Enron’s collapse were due to “characteristics common to all corporations: obsession with profits and share prices, greed, and lack of concern for others, and penchant for breaking legal rules.”...............individuals within corporations may not always be psychopaths themselves and they usually have normal lives with family and friends, but they have very few options on goals that they can pursue within corporations. Epoch Times - Pathological Nature of Corporations Not Changed, Say Scholars |
10 significant Australian, news items, - to 6thJuly 2009 TOPICS: Senator Fielding duped?, renewables cheaper, geothermal spin, aboriginal homelands, remote communities, nuclear hypocrisy, energy future, solar, Mega Uranium, Yeelirrie uranium, Olympic Dam expansion,,,,,,,,,........... - more at headings upper left of this page |
A selection of latest international news items - to 6th July 2009- TOPICS : ExxonMobil spin, France ,cancerheatwave, greenwash, radiation standards, Central Asia, US Energy Bill, Germany, Navajo, Mega uranium, indigenous,,.,,,.............,,,for more go to Christina Macpherson's blogs at nuclear-news.net |
ExxonMobil 'funding climate sceptics' ABC News 3 July 09 By Europe correspondent Emma Alberici The world's biggest oil company, ExxonMobil, has given hundreds of thousands of dollars to groups that continue to question the cause and effects of global warming. The Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics (LSE) claims ExxonMobil has reneged on a promise to end financial support to the groups. It also claims a conference of climate change sceptics in Washington, recently attended by Australian Family First Senator Stephen Fielding, was sponsored by one of the groups that received funding from the oil giant............ ..........."Two of the main organisations are the Heritage Foundation and something called the Atlas Economic Foundation," Mr Ward said. "Now the reason I single them out is that they have been sponsors of a recent conference of so-called sceptics which took place in Washington, and that is mostly a gathering of lobbyists and other people who reject the evidence on climate change. "Of course it was also the conference which Senator Fielding recently attended. |
These include the National Centre for Policy Analysis in Dallas, which received $75,000, and the Heritage Foundation in Washington, which received $50,000............. ..............According to Bob Ward, policy and communications director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics, the NCPA and Heritage Foundation have published "misleading and inaccurate information about climate change"..............................The Heritage Foundation's December "web memo" said: "Growing scientific evidence casts doubt on whether global warming constitutes a threat, including the fact that 2008 is about to go into the books as a cooler year than 2007."............................Mr Ward said: "ExxonMobil has been briefing journalists for three years that they were going to stop funding these groups [but] … they are still doing it. If [it] wants to fund climate change denial then it should be upfront about it and not tell people it has stopped." Exxon still aids denialist lobby |
commercial company is funding misinformation campaigns because there is abundant evidence that their products are having an adverse effect." Mr Ward says he is still waiting for a response to the latest letter he sent ExxonMobil back in May. ExxonMobil 'funding climate sceptics' - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) |
across much of France surging above 30C this week, EDF’s reactors are generating the lowest level of electricity in six years, forcing the state-owned utility to turn to Britain for additional capacity. Fourteen of France’s 19 nuclear power stations are located inland and use river water rather than seawater for cooling. When water temperatures rise, EDF is forced to shut down the reactors to prevent their casings from exceeding 50C.France imports UK electricity as plants shut – Times Online |
More intelligent use of the existing energy grid could slash greenhouse gas emissions and cut household power bills by up to $60 a year, the report from the University of Technology Sydney shows………………… It found building baseload power using coal was much more expensive than focusing on energy efficiency and tapping into a network of small “co-generation” power sources sprinkled in the suburbs. That conclusion was reached without factoring in the increased costs to fossil fuel generators that would be imposed if Australia brings in a carbon trading scheme. Carbon trading is expected to raise the costs of greenhouse-intensive power like coal even more |
In the radiation report, in which Lemstra reviewed 1,725 articles related to radiation studies, he concluded that nuclear power plant workers have a “relative excess risk” of getting cancer. In epidemiology, excess risk is defined as the difference between the proportion of subjects in a population with a particular disease who were exposed to a specific risk factor and the proportion of subjects with that same disease who were not exposed. In the case of nuclear power plant workers, that risk factor is low-dose radiation.
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Geothermal Energy - Is Santa really coming to town?
rosetta moon June 30, 2009The Australian Government is sponsoring ‘Hot Rocks’ or “Enhanced Geothermal Systems” as the new clean and green kid on the alternative energy block, but what is the reality in terms of the risks versus the benefits, and are shareholders being told the whole story, or perhaps the gilded lily version omitting some vital facts, adjusting the ethical investment equilibrium…. somewhat? Today, that big hole in the sacred grounds of Paralana begins and yet have all the questions been answered? The answer is ‘No’ and the Coober Pedy Times must be congratulated for raising the issues and the bar in relation to the assessment of these supposedly ‘green’ projects |
Heatwaves can crimp nuclear power output across Europe LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Forecasts for warmer temperatures this week in parts of Europe raise the possibility of summer heat waves that can heavily strain the ability of the energy sector to keep supplies flowing. -- French temperatures have been at above 30 degrees Centigrade in some regions and are expected to remain at those levels until the end of the week. Forecasts show tempertures will dip by around 5 degrees next week. -- France, which relies on atomic power plants for 80 percent of its electricity, is especially vulnerable to heat waves. With 14 of its 19 nuclear plants located by rivers, rising temperatures over a longer period of time can trigger cooling problems due to local laws that prevent plants from discharging water in rivers above certain temperature levels. -- Lower output from reactors located near rivers because of cooling problems usually coincides with surging demand as people crank up air conditioners during the summer........................... GERMANY -- Temperatures in Germany are running between 26 and 31 degrees Centigrade...................- Some of the plants are on small rivers, which means the ability to draw cooling water from the rivers is reduced when water levels decline in heatwaves. Heatwaves can crimp power output across Europe | Markets | Markets News | Reuters |
| In the modern day media obsessed with all things green and good sometimes its too easy to miss the ‘Fracking’ obvious when it comes down to the truth about the long term value of these supposedly ethical projects.
How is the truth and well being of the land being altered when financial inducements are part of the site clearance process and what is the ultimate effect on the indigenous communities targeted in the pursuit of these commercial endeavours? The Times says:
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Nuclear industry accused of hijacking clean energy forum Critics say France is using debate about where to base new Irena global renewables body to co-opt organisation The Guardian Terry Macalister 28 June 09 The nuclear power industry has been accused of trying to muscle in on plans to establish a global body to represent the renewable energy industry at a key meeting in Egypt tomorrow. France – a major user and exporter of nuclear technologies – is accused by critics of trying to win the top job inside the renewable organisation so it can move the International Renewable Energy Agency (Irena) towards being a promoter of "low-carbon" technologies – including atomic power.......................... The renewable agency will have a mandate to disseminate knowledge, develop regulatory framework and to actively promote the widespread adoption of renewable energy technologies around the world. It comes ahead of vital new talks in Copenhagen at the end of this year about how to tackle global warming and amid excitement that the US and China are finally starting to play more constructive roles compared with the past. Nuclear industry accused of hijacking clean energy forum | Business | The Guardian |
Australia: Labor moves to shut down remote Aboriginal settlements World Socialist Website By Susan Allan 27 June 2009 The federal and Northern Territory (NT) Labor governments last month unveiled a series of free-market measures that will deepen the poverty and suffering in indigenous communities.Working Future, announced by the NT government on May 20, seeks, under the auspices of the federal government’s NT intervention, to force the estimated 10,000 Aboriginal people living in some 580 remote “homeland” settlements into 20 special settlements or so-called “economic hubs”. The homeland communities have been defined as “non-viable”..........................In reality, Working Future is aimed at clearing the way for mining, pastoral and tourism interests at the direct expense of Aboriginal communities.........................Henderson declared that the hubs would be successful only “if private businesses can get secure tenure on Aboriginal land”. Private investors, he said, would be given security of land tenure and generous tax incentives. All of the hubs are located on traditional Aboriginal lands and government funding is conditional on traditional owners and land councils signing long-term leases in favour of the territory government................................
Major mining, agribusiness and tourist corporations have long demanded unrestricted access to Aboriginal land, an end to communal ownership and a ready supply of cheap labour. he move to disperse homeland settlements replicates proposals elaborated in 2007 by Helen Hughes from the Centre for Independent Studies, a right-wing free-market think tank.....................Australia: Labor moves to shut down remote Aboriginal settlements |
In the most extreme case, the new standards permit radionuclide concentrations seven million times more lax than permitted under the Safe Drinking Water Act and would permit public exposure to radiation levels vastly higher than EPA had previously deemed unacceptably dangerous. The public did not get to comment on these changes. What exactly is the radioactive waste that is now being discharged into the Connecticut River. When will our Vermont Department of Public Health start reporting on the trends of cancer incidence rising in Vermont? And Entergy and the NRC thinks its OK to continue to build up the stockpile of the radioactive waste here in Vermont because no one else will accept it No answer on waste issue: Rutland Herald Online |
The ‘Working Future’ scheme is headed by the proposal to develop 20 remote Northern Territory (NT) communities into regional hubs and will cost more than 160 million Australian dollars over five years.............. ........... Detractors anticipate the plan will adversely impact communities living on homelands - the traditional clan lands of indigenous Australians. ......... .......... Tom Calma, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social justice commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission - an independent statutory body responsible to Australia’s parliament - argues that creating the regional centres should not be done at the expense of homelands. ...................... The movement of people back to their homelands began in the 1970s. There are now more than 500 NT homelands inhabited by about 10,000 people, out of a total remote indigenous population of 40,000. |
The meeting brought together over 100 representatives from the region, international organizations, donors and others to discuss the problems associated with the uranium tailing deposits – left over from mining during the Cold War in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan – which contain more than 800 million tons of radioactive and toxic waste. These countries have not been able to deal with the problem adequately due to lack of resources and capacity .UNDP Administrator Helen Clark said the legacy of nuclear waste and related environmental management issues has a direct impact on human development in the region.As most of the uranium tailing sites are located in densely populated and natural-disaster prone areas of Central Asia’s largest river basins, they represent a major potential risk to the region’s water supply and the health of millions of people,” she said in a statement to the forum. “Many more are likely to suffer if uranium contamination moves downstream to other areas,” she added. High-level forum stresses need to tackle radioactive waste in Central Asia
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Putting it simply, the Federal bureaucrats are ‘assessing the potential of uranium as one of Australia’s future energy sources’..................The Federal Labor government is seriously looking at nuclear energy as a possible means of ensuring Australia’s energy security over the long term............................ Most are well aware of their political campaigns against nuclear energy, attacking those that say we have to keep an open mind; yet quietly behind the scenes are doing all the home work required to prepare for a nuclear energy future in Australia! Will this be the new “three more uranium mines” policy? Saying one thing and doing another « Steve Blizard's Blog |
Dennis Kucinich Lays Out Why He Voted Against Clean Energy Act THE CLEVELAND LEADER June 27, 2009 -Cleveland area Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) laid out the reasons he opposed and voted against H.R. 2454, The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009. The vast majority of fellow Democrats voted in favor of the measure which passed the House and is on the way to the Senate for a vote. Kucinich stated in a press release: “I oppose H.R. 2454, the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009. The reason is simple. It won’t address the problem. In fact, it might make the problem worse. “It sets targets that are too weak, especially in the short term, and sets about meeting those targets through Enron-style accounting methods. It gives new life to one of the primary sources of the problem that should be on its way out– coal – by giving it record subsidies.............. ...........Nuclear power is given a lifeline instead of phasing it out. Nuclear power is far more expensive, has major safety issues including a near release in my own home state in 2002, and there is still no resolution to the waste problem. A recent study by Dr. Mark Cooper showed that it would cost $1.9 trillion to $4.1 trillion more over the life of 100 new nuclear reactors than to generate the same amount of electricity from energy efficiency and renewables. Dennis Kucinich Lays Out Why He Voted Against Clean Energy Act | Cleveland Leader |
products and industries now estimated to be worth $6.3 trillion dollars worldwide. But without an emissions trading scheme or renewable energy target in sight, Australia isn't even in the race. With no legislative mechanism, we have no means of generating serious investment in emerging renewable energy industries that could provide thousands of jobs and reduce carbon pollution. It also leaves jobs in traditional industries in limbo. Coal and steel industries need a framework to adapt |
Business Mirror 28 June 2009 THE one-year-old German-Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GPCCI) expects a lot of joint ventures happening between companies of the two countries in the development of renewable energy here, particularly geothermal, wind and solar. Klaus Schroeder, president of the GPCCI, said this “green partnerships” will now be the trend because Germany is the leader in renewable-energy technology, while the Philippines has just passed its Renewable Energy Act.The Philippines is the first to put that into law in Asia, so it’s a great opportunity, and that is why going green is our focus. It [partnership] has already started, and more are coming,” he told the BusinessMirror.German-RP chamber to focus on renewable-energy projects in RP |
their processes to rapidly changing global circumstances.. .................On the best available data, Australia could star in six green industries: renewable energy (solar, wind, ocean); energy efficiency in homes, factories and commercial buildings; sustainable water systems; biomaterials made from starch, sugar and cellulose; green buildings through design, construction and retrofitting; and waste/recycling..... ........New player the US has become the world's biggest investor in green industries, recently ploughing $24 billion into wind and biofuel technology. All this despite, and because of, the financial crisis......... Australian businesses can clean up in the energy revolution | watoday.com.au |
.........The effort is part of a five-year plan that expires |
Australian Solar Rebates Status Summary Energy Matters 29 June 09 ".................... Solar hot water rebates throughout Australia remain unchanged. Federal government rebates of up to $1600 are available to install solar and heat pump hot water systems. Additional funding may be accessed through various state schemes and Renewable Energy Certificates also continue to accompany qualifying systems. Read more at Australian Solar Rebates Status Summary : Renewable Energy News |
in 2012 in which a numb er offederal agencies joined together to address uranium contamination and its effects on the Navajo people. Navajos who toiled in the mines and their dependents have suffered or died from cancer, lung and kidney disease, and other health problems caused by exposure to low levels of radiation over time............ ....................With more than 500 abandoned uranium mines across the vast reservation, EPA officials acknowledge that the issue of uranium contamination is bigger than assessing and rebuilding structures. Navajo homes razed - uranium contamination |
Mega Uranium plans to employ Aborigines THE AUSTRALIAN Amanda O’Brien | June 26, 2009 "CANADIAN mining company Mega Uranium has unveiled a plan to have indigenous workers making up half of the 250-strong workforce at its proposed new uranium mine in Western Australia within four to five years……………..working with the Aboriginal people to provide them with hopefully long-term capability to get to 50 per cent of the workforce and also take over the property after we leave.” (i.e. be left with the mess?) Uranium miner plans to employ Aborigines | The Australian |
Possibly why Mega Uranium has a court order against them in South Africa stopping them from selling any company assets in Africa.nuclear Australia |
Tough check on U-mine urged The West 26th June 2009 (image from Bloomberg)
Green groups and unions are pushing for an unprecedented level of environmental scrutiny over plans for WA’s first uranium mine, calling for a public inquiry with the powers of a royal commission to assess BHP Billiton’s proposed Yeelirrie project in the Goldfields. The WA Conservation Council lodged an appeal yesterday against the level of assessment set for the project by the Environmental Protection Authority, saying the watchdog needed to invoke previously unused powers under its legislation to ensure all possible impacts of the controversial proposal were subjected to an effective investigation. |
Other tribes, such as the Navajo and Hopi in New Mexico, have been exposed to radioactive material as well. Furthermore, the July 16, 1979, spill of 100 million gallons of radioactive water containing uranium tailings from a tailing pond into the north arm of the Rio Puerco, near the small town of Church Rock, New Mexico, also affected indigenous peoples in Arizona.
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BHP has also lodged documents with the Federal Department of Environment which are open for public comment................ ..............The WA Conservation Council, Australian Conservation Foundation, Wilderness Society and UnionsWA will launch a joint campaign today calling for an environmental public inquiry under section 42 of the Environment Protection Act. |
The Guardian has learnt that the government has approached companies including the US groups Bechtel and CH2M Hill, as well as the UK’s Amec, to fill the senior posts. The companies involved are eager to secure lucrative contracts to help build the UK’s first new reactors for decades.Government and industry sources admitted the secondments posed potential conflict of interest problems. It is also understood that the inspectorate has recruited technical staff from Areva,…………………………There are concerns that the potential conflicts of interest could compromise the safety of the new nuclear reactors if the companies helping the inspectorate have a vested interest Fears for safety as nuclear watchdog hires staff from firms pitching to build reactors | Environment | The Guardian |
Your opinions are invited, for publishing on this site. We do not intend to publish anything in favour of the nuclear industry. It already has huge funds spent on promoting itself and on lobbying politicians and others. Please email christinamacpherson@gmail.com |